Page:Journal of American Folklore vol. 12.djvu/317

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Bibliographical Notes.
305

JOURNALS.

1. The American Anthropologist. (New York.) Vol. I. No. 2, April, 1899. Hawaiian games. S. Culin.—The winter solstice altars at Haro Pueblo. J. W. Fewkes.—The Nanticoke Indians of Indian River. Delaware. W. H. Babcock.—The harmonic structure of Indian music. J. C. Fillmore.—Anthropologic literature.—Current bibliography.—Notes and news.—No. 3, 1899. The Alaska cult of the Hopi Indians. J. W. Fewkes.— Origin of the name Indian." F. F. Hilder.—Anthropologic literature.—Current biblio- graphy.—Notes and news. A Texas Indian myth. White Russian folk-music.

2. The American Antiquarian and Oriental Journal. (Chicago.) Vol. XXI. No. 4, July–August. Initiation among the Australian blacks. J. Fraser.—An old Kwanthum village,—its people and its folk. R. R. C. Webber.—No. 6, November–December. The cliff-dwellers and the wild tribes. S. D. Peet.—Notes on the Indians of Washington. J. Wickersham.

3. Le Courrier du Livre. (Quebec.) Vol. IV. No. 39, July, 1899. Canadian exile's song. B. Sulte.

4. The Land of Sunshine. (Los Angeles.) Vol. XI. No. 2, 1899. Among the Yaqui Indians in Sonora. V. Granville.—No. 4, September. (Continued in No. 5.)—My brothers keeper. C. F. Lummis.—The myth of "queen" Xochitl. O. Wallace.

5. The New World. (Boston.) Vol. VIII. No. 29, March, 1899. How gods are made in India. E. Washburn Hopkins.

6. The Southern Workman and Hampton School Record. (Hampton, Va.) Vol. XXVIII. No. 8, August, 1899. Folk-lore and ethnology. A "crazy spell."—Chills cured. Palsy cured.

7. Folk-Lore. (London.) Vol. X. No. 2, June, 1899. Ethnological data in folk-lore: a criticism. G. L. Gomme.—Ethnological data in folk-lore: a reply. A. Nutt.—Folk-lore from the Southern Sporades. W. H. D. Rouse.—Christmas mummers at Rugby. W. H. D. Rouse.—"Sqakthtquaclt," or the Benign-Faced, the Oannes of the Ntlakapamuq, British Columbia. C. Hill-Tout.—Reviews. Works of E. Hull, The Cuchullin saga; H. A. Tunod, Les chants et contes des Baronga; C. de Vaux. L'abrégé des nerveilles; K. L. Parker. More Australian legendary tales: B. Spencer and F. J. Gillen, The native tribes of Central Australia: F. H. Groome. Gypsy folk-tales: A. M. Alcover, Aplech de rondayes mallorquines; E. C. Ellice, Place-names in Glengarry; F. E. Hynam, The secrets of the night.—Correspondence. Kitty-witches. Mr. St. Clair's "Creation records." Death-warnings. Wind and weather holes.—Miscellanea. Superstitions relating to the newt. A Sicilian festival. Burial customs.—Bibliography.—List of members for 1899.—No. 3, September. The powers of evil in the outer Hebrides. A. Goodrich Frere.—The tar-baby story. A. Werner.—Japanese myth. W. G. Aston.—Reviews. Works of T. Abercromby. The pre- and proto-historic Finns: P. Sébillot. Littérature orale de l'Auveigne: E. Clodd, Tom Tit Tot; A. B. Gomme. Traditional Games; R. Brown. Semitic influences in Hellenic mythology: J. Curtin, Creation myths of primitive America: A. Lang, Myth, ritual, and religion: R. Blakeborough, Wit, character, folk-lore, and customs of the North Riding of Yorkshire; Bye-gones relating to Wales and the Border counties.—Correspondence. Christmas mummers. White cattle in British folk-tales and customs. Lincoln Minster. Lincoln College, Oxford, and the Devil. Wall-burial. The little red hen. Days of the week. Miscellanea. Some Wexford folk-lore. More notes from Cyprus. Cure for ague. Superstition regarding women. Exposition Universelle.—Bibliography.