[Note: this transcription was produced by an automatic OCR engine]
2 > t v r .1 t ti - <~.;, I;
A » 1 ~ 1. mi 9;‘ THE NALAWAN SOCIETY 405 home to their own village, but some days later they return once t int the carvings and to make the masks (tzmes mbal- more o pa mbal) of the N alawan (Pl. XIV, 2). These being ï¬Ånished, they again h In while in the village of the candidate the dance nimbumbal go 0 e, is begun after sunset and continued through the night, the A‘ , 1-,‘ ,» F ,_o , /§-"...'Â¥ II} d “Q / . @ (H) (bl Fm. 24, Twotypesoi nitevisiorthebhalawanNisamp: (a) m'i:uiscarvedintree- fern, painted black, white, and yellow. (b) tausiln mm as drawn by Amanrantus, performers being rewarded for their pains in the rnoming by the gift of a mbuas oros pig. But the preparations are not yet over. Some days later the candidate, with his introducer and iriends, proceeds to erect the nisamp, which is equivalent, functionally, to the naainggol of the earlier grade. This structure is exactly the same in appearance to the mbang up erected for entrance to Nimangki M bat Ru. Outside it decorated bamboos