Page:Journal of American Folklore vol. 12.djvu/377

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In Memoriam : Walter James Hoffman. 45

3. Ein Beitrag zu dem Studium der Bilderschrift. Das Ausland

(Stuttgart u. Munchen), 1883, pp. 646-651, 666-66g.

4. Selish Myths. Bull. Essex Inst. (Salem, Mass.), vol. xv. (1884)

pp. 23-40.

5. Bird Names of the Selish, Pa Uta, and Shoshoni Indians. Auk

(Boston), vol. ii. (1885) pp. 7-10.

6. Pictography and Shamanistic Rites of the Ojibwa. Amer.

Anthrop., vol. i. (1888) pp. 209-229.

7. Folk-Lore of the Pennsylvania Germans. I. Journ. Amer. Folk-

Lore, vol. i. (1888) pp. 125-135.

8. Folk-Lore of the Pennsylvania Germans. II. Ibid., vol. ii.

(1889) pp. 23-35.

9. Folk-Lore of the Pennsylvania Germans. III. Ibid., pp. 191-

202.

10. Notes on Ojibwa Folk-Lore. Amer. Anthrop., vol. ii. (1889)

pp. 215-223.

11. Grammatical Notes and Vocabulary of the Pennsylvania Ger-

mans. Proc. Amer. Philos. Soc. (Phila.), vol. xxvi. (1889) pp. 187-285.

12. Folk-Medicine of the Pennsylvania Germans. Ibid., pp. 329-

353-

13. Remarks on Ojibwa Ball-Play. Amer. Anthrop., vol. iii. (1890)

PP- 133-135-

14. Mythology of the Menomoni Indians. Ibid., pp. 243-258.

15. Poisoned Arrows. Ibid., vol. iv. (1891) pp. 67-71.

16. Shamanistic Practices. Univ. Med. Mag. (Phila.), vol. iii. (1890-

189 1) pp. 73-79-

17. Shamanentum bei den Ojibwa und Menomoni. Globus (Brauns-

chweig), vol. lxi. (1892) pp. 92-95.

18. The Midewiwin, or "Grand Medicine Society" of the Ojibwa.

Seventh Ann. Rep. Bur. Ethnol., 1891 (Washington, 1892), pp. 143-300. Plates ii.-xxiii. Figs. 1-39.

19. Notes on Pennsylvania German Folk-Medicine. Science (N. Y.),

vol. xxi. (1893) p. 355.

20. The Beginnings of Writing. N. Y., 1895.

21. The Menomoni Indians. Fourteenth Ann. Rep. Bur. of Ethnol.,

1 892-1 893 (Washington, 1896), pp. 1-328. With plates i.-xxxvii. Figs. 1-55.

22. The Graphic Art of the Eskimos. Rep. U. S. Nat. Mus., 1895

(Washington, 1897), pp. 739-968. With 82 plates and 154 figures in text.

Dr. Hoffman's German ancestry and residence in Pennsylvania make his studies (Nos. 7-9, 11, 12, 19) of the speech, folk-lore, and

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