408 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY [bull. .•',4 



Bailey, E. H. S. The delicacy of the sen.se of taste among Indians. Proc. A. A. A. 

 Sci. 1893, XLii, 311, Salem, 1894. 

 A short abstract. Tests made at Haskell Ijy chemicals of different taste. 

 Bandelier, a. F. Aboriginal trephining in Bolivia. Amer. Anthrop., Wash.,, 1904, 

 n. s., VI, 440-446. 

 Notes on the writer's finds of trephined skulls, and on trephining practised by the 

 natives of Bolivia to this day. 



Barrows, D. P. The ethnobotany of the Coahuilla Indians of southern California. 

 Chicago, 1900, 1-82. 

 Dwellings, foods, food plants, drinks, narcotics, medicines, diseases. A detailed 

 account of value. 



Batista, P. Native midwifery in South America and Mexico. St. Louis Jour. 

 HomcBop. and Clin. Reporter, 1894-5, i, 332. 



Bell, R. The medicine-man, or Indian and Eskimo notions of medicine. Canada 

 Med. and Surg. Jour., Montreal, 1885-6, xiv, 456, 532. 

 Cree Indians: Notions on the subjects of medicine, medicine-men, treatment, 

 witchery, remedies, poisons, labor, surgery, sweat bath. 



Eskimo: A few words only on diseases, treatment, and remedies. 

 Benedict, A. L. A medical view of the American Indians of the Northeast. Med. 

 Age, Detroit, 1901, xix, 767-771. 

 Nothing original except a reference to a supernumerary tooth in an Indian skull 

 (p. 770), and a few remarks on bones. 



Beshoar, M. Medical customs of the Mexicans and Rocky Mountain Indians. Trans. 

 Colo. Med. Soc, Denver, 1897, 166-169. 

 A few remarks on Mexican physicians. Not a word on Indians. 

 BissELL, G. P. Description of proceedings of the Clalam squaws of Puget sound, in 

 some cases of difficulty in accouchement. Cal. Med. Jour., Oakland, 1889, x, 

 227-228. 

 A few notes on labor, head deformation, and procedure of the Indians in a case of 

 abnormal delivery. 



Boas, Franz. The Central Eskimo. 6th Rep. B. A. E., 1884-5, 399-669, Wash., 

 1888. 

 Includes observations on dwellings, dress, food, habits, social life, parturition, 

 attention to the new-born, puerperium, medicine-men, treatment of diseases. 



The doctrine of souls and of disease among the Chinook Indians. Jour. 



Amer. Folk-Lore, Boston and N. Y., 1893, vi, 39-13. 



A number of Chinook texts relating to the subjects expressed in the title. 

 Borden, W. C. The vital statistics of an Apache Indian community. Boston Med. 

 and Surg. Jour., 1893, cxxix, 5-10; also Sanitarian, N. Y., 1893, xxxi, 224-237. 

 Statistics, for a period of five years, on Apache prisoners at Mount Vernon barracks, 

 Ala. Births, deaths, causes of death. 



Boteler, W. C. Peculiarities of American Indians from a physiological and patho- 

 logical standpoint. Maryland Med. Jour., Baltimore, 1880-1881, vii, 54-58. 

 Bourke, John G. The medicine-men of the Apache. 9th Rep. B. A. E., 1887-8, 

 443-603, Wash., 1892. 

 Treats of the subject in general, including many references to other writers. Medi- 

 cine-men and medicine-women, remedies, modes of treatment, fetishes; bibliography. 



Distillation by early American Indians. Amer. Anthrop., Wash., 1894, vii, 



297-299. 



Notes on native liquors, i)rincipally Mexican. 



