Page:Journal of American Folklore vol. 12.djvu/328

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��Index.

��myths; the Woman who Fell from Heaven, 120; the Great Island, 122; the Twins born ; the Deer and the Rain- bow ; or, how the animals got into the sky, 123. Cooke, E. J., English Folk-Tales in Amer- ica: The Bride of the Evil One, 126.

Dances, Si.

Days and Festivals :

Christmas, 50; Easter, 106; Hallow- een, 49, 56; Holy Thursday, 163; Palm Sunday, 162.

Dixon, R. B., The Color-Symbolism of the Cardinal Points :

Difficulties arising from imperfect infor- mation, choice of colors, 10 ; factors in the choice, sun-colors of East and West, 11 ; effect of geographic position, climate as factor, 12; color of north, various, re- ligion as factor, comparisons of color- systems, 13; shifting and reversal, 15; diversity, not uniformity, characteristic of symbolism, 16.

Dorsey, George A., The Ocimbanda, or Witch-Doctor of the Ovimbundu of Por- tuguese Southwest Africa:

Importance of the witch-doctor, 183; art acquired by apprenticeship, outfit, 184 ; basket-shaped gourd used in divination, images employed in ceremony, method of diviner, 1S5 ; antelope horn, small charms, 1S6; poison test, 187; remedies used, 188.

Dramatization, 95, 162, 164.

Edwards, G. D., Items of Armenian Folk-

Lore collected in Boston :

Dreams, 97; superstitions, 9S ; diseases,

100 ; riddles, 101 ; games, club fist, 102 ;

candle game, customs, 103 ; Easter, 106. Eskimo, 17, 166. Ethical conceptions, 1.

Fewkes, J. W., Hopi Basket-Dances :

Variants of basket-dance, Si ; dates, public Lalakonti at Walpi, 82 ; public Lalakonti at Oraibi, 84 ; public Lala- konti at Cipaulovi, 85 ; altar of the Cipaulovi Lalakonti, 86 ; Owakulti, Ko- honono basket-dance, 87 ; Tanoan vari- ant of coronet, 89 ; coronets of two women in the Mamzrauti, 90 ; relation of the Bulintikibi to the Hopi ritual, 91 ; con- clusion, 93; nature of the cult introduced,

94-

Figures and Symbols, 10, 233. Folk- Lore Scrap Book :

Ghosts as guardians of hidden treasure,

��the boy and the ghost, 64 ; penalties for injuring Chinese scriptures, and rewards for their distribution, 65 ; extracts from the Yii-li or Precious Records (continued from No. XLIII.) ; Rewards for prevent- ing suicide, 66 ; edict of the President of the Sixth Hall of Judgment in Hades, 67 ; Irishman stories : The Irishman and the pumpkin, The sea-tick and the Irishman, The Irishman and the moon, 226 ; The Irishmen and the watermelon, The Irish- men and the deer, 227 ; Two Irishmen at sea, The trick bone of a black cat, 228; How to conjure, Remedies to cure conju- ration, A word of courtship, Why the wren does not fly high, Brer Rabbit beats Brer Fox, 229 ; Osakie legend of the Ghost Dance, by W. Jones, 2S4 ; Passion Play at Coyoacan, 286; cures by conjure doctors, 2S8 ; modern conjuring in Wash- ington, 2S9.

Games, 74, 102.

Gatschet, A. S., Various Ethnographic Notes :

African masks and secret societies, 20S ; Mumbo Jumbo, 209 ; the deities of the early New England Indians, 211 ; the Kalapuya people, 212.

Gatschet, A. S., Water-monsters of Ameri- can aborigines :

Animal prodigies universal, made up of human and brutish elements, 255 ; horned snake of Wabenaki, 256; snake of Mic- macs, 256; Potawatomi serpent of Lake Manitou ; "tiger" of Peorian Indians, 257 ; dwarfs, river fairies, wood-spirits of Creeks, of Siouan family, of Winneba- gos, of Cherokees, 25S; of Iroquois, horned snake of Creeks, horned alligator of Kiowas, monster of Indians near Wil- lamette River, 260.

Hawaii, 233.

Horsford, Cornelia, A Tradition of Shelter Island, N. Y., 43.

Indian Tribes :

Apache, 13, 16, 219. Aztec, 294. Blackfoot, 24. Cherokee, 13, 258. Cheyenne, 24. Chinook, 213. Creek, 12, 258, 259. Hopi, 12, Si. Iroquois, 28, 259. Kalapuya, 212, 259, 260.

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