FIG. 26.—SHOWING THE GENERAL PLAN OF THE TI DAIRY.

A. Mani. B, C, D. The three persin. E. The idrkwoi. F. The lamp. G. The pelkkatitthwaskal. H. The tòralthwaskal. I. The patun. J, K. The pohvelkars. L. The screen in front of the dairy.

I did not discover whether there were any differences between the internal arrangements of the conical dairies and those of the dairies of the ordinary form. Breeks has given a description of the conical dairy at Anto, and from this it would seem that the dairy is divided into two rooms by a [[88]]partition extending to the roof, the two rooms communicating by a door. There are two possibilities as to procedure. It is possible that only one room of this dairy is used for the ceremonial and that it is again divided by an incomplete screen into inner and outer rooms, or it may be that the dairyman churns in the inner room. I have no information on this point, but the general nature of the churning procedure at the ti dairy makes it highly probable that the former supposition is correct and that the inner room is divided into two parts.

In the plan on p. [87], I have adopted the arrangement in which the patun, or screen, is attached to the left-hand side of the building, but this is certainly not the case in all dairies. In some dairies also the fireplaces are on the other side.

The Contents of the poh

(a) In the inner room. One mani.
Three persin.
Two tòrzum.
Two kòghlag.
One persinkudriki.
One pohvet or pohpet.
One kwoi.
One kwoinörtpet.
Several tedshk.
(b) Between inner and outer rooms. Pelk, or lamp.
Idrkwoi.
(c) In the outer room. Two fireplaces Pelkkatitthwaskal.
Tòratthwaskal.
Several alug.
Uppun.
Mòrkudriki.
Karpun.
Turavali.
Guduboi.
Unused kòghlag.

Another vessel, the mòrpun, is kept in the sleeping-hut, where two or more horns are also kept which are blown by the kaltmokh every night before going to rest.

The things of the inner room correspond in general to those of the patatmar in the ordinary dairy, and the things of the outer room correspond to those of the ertatmar. The [[89]]things of the outer room are sometimes called the alugpur, just as those in the village dairy are called ertatpur, but I did not hear of any corresponding term for the things of the inner room. I have no record of the place where the fire-sticks (nirsi) are kept, but they will almost certainly belong to the outer room, since, in the village, they belong to the ertatmar.