Page:Journal of American Folklore vol. 12.djvu/329

 Index.

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��Kiowa, 259. Massachusetts, 211. Maya, 13, 15, 16. Miami, 258. Micmac, 256. Montagnais, 25. Mississaga, 25. Navaho, 2, 12. Nipissing, 25. Ojibwa, 26. Omaha, 13. Oregonian, 214. Ottawa, 28. Peoria, 257.

Pottawattamie, 154, 257. Sac and Fox, 284. Sia, 13, 15. Siouan, 258. Trique, 38. Wyandot, 116. Zuni, 13, 15. See also " Record of American Folk- Lore."

Journals, Indexed, 7S, 158, 305.

Kroeber, A. L., Animal Tales of the Es- kimo :

Animals frequent in Indian mythology, but absent in Eskimo, 17; genuine ani- mal tales few, marriage between animal and human being a favorite theme, tales similar to European beast-fables, 18; Es- kimo animal tales proper form a class by themselves, 20; animals not associated with cosmogony, totemism wanting, 21 ; list of Eskimo animal tales, 22.

Kroeber, A. L., Tales of the Smith Sound Eskimo :

I. The Tutuatuin, 166; II. Inukpan;

III. The woman who married a Tuneq;

IV. The Tornit and the Adlit, 167; V. The woman who married a dog, 168; VI. The origin of the narwhal, 169; VII. The man who married a goose, 170; VIII. Quatipalung; IX. The origin of the bear; X. The origin of the snow-bunting and the ptarmigan ; XI. Naulaxssaqton, 172 ; XII. The Pleiades; XIII. The raven,i73; XIV. Terieniaq; XV. The gull; XVI. The Uingniaqsuqssuin; XVII. The black bear, 175; XVIII. The Aglirtoq woman and the bear ; XIX. Qigexssuung; XX. The bear, 176; XXI. Kiviung ; XXII. Igi- massuxssuq, 177; XXIII. Qauaxsaqsuq; XXIV. The tortured girl, 178; XXV. Akssait Iqoxie (He cut off her fingers) ; XXVI. The sun and the moon, 179;

��XXVII. Aningan; XXVIII. Irdlirviri- sisong, 180; XXIX. Qalutaling ; XXX. Fragments, 181.

Local Meetings and Other Notices :

Annual Meeting of the American Folk- Lore Society, 1899, 230, 287 ; Baltimore Branch, 147, 296; Boston Branch, 71, 149; Cambridge Branch, 148; Cincinnati Branch, 150, 297; Presentation to the Folk-Lore Society of objects illustrating Mexican folk-lore, 230 ; International Con- gress of the History of Religions, 231 ; International Congress of Folk-Lorists, 297 ; Twelfth International Congress of Orientalists, 299; Congress on Basque Studies, 297.

Louisiana, 146.

Luck, 45, 132.

Magic and Witchcraft, 50, 93, 109, 132, 145, 1S3, 201.

Matthews, Washington, The Study of Eth- ics among the Lower Races :

European prejudices, 1 ; absence of definite standard, use of myth and tradi- tion for determining ethical ideas, 2 ; Na- vahoes, absence of punishment among, 3; sacredness of kinship, 4; Navahoes not untruthful, 5 ; savages shocked by civi- lized customs, no system of rewards and punishments in future life, 5 ; sense of shame, 6 ; unselfish morality, 7 ; good manners of aborigines, 8 ; courtesy, 9.

Medicine, popular, 47, 62, 100, 186.

Mexico, 12, 13, 161, 230.

Nature, phenomena of :

Earth, 40; four directions, 10, 13; fire, 104 ; lightning, 46, 91 ; moon, 39, 47, 48, 179 ; rainbow, 123 ; raincloud, 83, 84, 94; seasons, 265 ; stars, 173 ; sun, 11, 39, 106; 179, 212 ; thunder, 46.

Newell, W. W., Early American Ballads, 241:

Ancient English ballads, older than the fifteenth century, continued composition of ballads in inferior style, 241 ; local bal- lads of New England, W. M. Beauchamp on, account of the death of a child, 242; The Lancaster maid, 245 ; The Lady in the west, 247 ; Polly's love, 248 ; variant of theme, 249; confession of a criminal, 250; Creation, 250; Beautiful Katie and the gray mare, song of Lovewell's fight, 253 ; manuscript ballad of 1755, 2 54-

Newell, W. W., The Legend of the Holy Grail :

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