Page:Castes and Tribes of Southern India, Volume 3.djvu/314

KEN Rodgers) razors. He believes that he is polluted by the operation which it is his lot to perform, and, on his return home from his morning round, he must bathe and put on washed clothes.  Ken.— Ken (red) and Kenja (red ant) have both been recorded as gōtras of Kurni.  Kenna.— A division of Toda.  Kēpumāri.— It is noted, in the Gazetteer of South Arcot, that "the Kēpumāris are one of the several foreign communities from other districts, who help to swell the total of the criminal classes in South Arcot. Their head-quarters is at Tiruvallūr in the Chingleput district, but there is a settlement of them at Māriyānkuppam (not far from Porto Novo), and another large detachment at Kunisampet in French territory. They commit much the same class of crime as the Donga Dāsaris, frequenting railway trains and crowded gatherings, and they avert suspicion by their respectable appearance and pleasant manners. Their house-language is Telugu. They call themselves Alagiri Kēpumāris. The etymology of the second of these two words is not free from doubt, but the first of them is said to be derived from Alagar, the god of the Kallans, whose temple at the foot of the hills about twelve miles north of Madura town is a well-known place of pilgrimage, and to whom these people, and other criminal fraternities annually offer a share of their ill-gotten gains." Information concerning the criminal methods of these people, under the name Capemari, will be found in Mr. F. S. Mullaly's ' Notes on Criminal Classes of the Madras Presidency.'  Kērala.— Defined by Mr. Wigram* as "the western coast from Gokarnam to Cape Comorin, comprising 