416 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY [bull. 34 



Kohl, J. G. Kitchi-Gami. LomL, 18()(). 



Ojibwa, mainly: Numerous references to dwellings, dress, food, drinks, habits, 

 sports, morals, marriage, children, the aged, mental traits, endurance, medicine-men, 

 their means and methods, sweat baths, tobacco, poisons. 



Krause, F. Die Pueblo Indian er. Abhandl. k. Leop.-Cor. d. Akad. d. Naturf., 

 Halle, 1907, lxxxvii, no. 1, 1-218. 

 Pueblos: Climate, dwellings, clothing, food, medicine-men and societies, child- 

 birth. Compilation. 



Kroeber, a. L. The Arapaho. Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., N. Y., xviii, 1902, 

 1-150. 

 Includes notes on marriage, habits during menstruation and nursing, men living as 

 women, insanity. 



KuYKENDALL, G. B. Medicine among the al)()iigincs. Med. and Surg. Reporter, 

 Phila., 1875, xxxiii, 181-186. 

 Indians about Fort Simcoe, Washington; ( )l)servations on medicine-men, notions of 

 disease, treatment, actual cautery, feeding the sick, surgery, diseases, parturition, 

 attention to the new-born, old age, killing medicine-men. 



Lacombe, p. La medecine chez les sauvages de I'Amerique du nord. Union 

 med. du Canada, Montreal, 1874, in, 327-331. 

 Indians of the Northwest: Observations on diseases, medicine-men, remedies, 

 poisons. 

 Lafitau, J. F. Moeurs des sauvages americpuuus. 2 vols., Paris, 1724. 



Numerous notes of medical interest. 

 LaFlesche, Francis. Who was the medicine-man ? 32d Ann. Rep. Fairmount 

 Park Art Assoc, Phila., 1904. Reprinted, Hampton, Va., 1905, 1-13. 

 An interesting account of the Omaha medicine-men by a member of the tribe. 

 Lake, A. D. The civilized Indian, his physical characteristics and some of his dis- 

 eases. Trans. Med. Soc. N. Y., Albany, 1902, 285-291. 

 Iroquois: Remarks on the effects of changed life on the Indian and his diseases. 

 Lamb, D. S, Precolumbian syphilis. Proc. Assoc. Amer. Anat., Wash., 1897, ix. 



Observations on mound bones showing signs of syphilis. 

 Leon, N. Apuntes para la historia de la medicina en Michaocan. Morelia. 188G, 

 1-17. 

 Some data from earlier writers relating to matters of medical interest among the 

 Tarasco: Medicine-men, remedies, how and for what used, bibliographical references. 



Biblioteca Botanico-Mexicana, Mexico, 1895, 1-372. 



Bibliographical, biographical, and critical catalogue of authors and writings referring 

 to Mexican plants and their applications, from the Conquest to the present time. 

 A valuable bibliography. Arrangement l>y authors; no subject index. 



Los Tarascos. An. d. Mus. nac. de Mex., Mexico, Oct., 1904, 2 ep., i. 



References to Tarasco medicines, diseases, and medicine-men, based on the writings 

 of earlier authors, especially page 457 et seq. Enumeration of native vegetal reme- 

 dies, page 462 (^t seq. 



Lewis and Clakk. History of the expedition to the sources of the Missouri river, 

 thence across the Rocky Mountains and down the Columbia river to the Pacific 

 ocean. Several editions. 

 Numerous notes of direct medical interest besides observations on dwellings, dress, 

 food, and lial)its. 



LiNAS, A. De la medecine et des medecin-; chez les Iroquois et les Peaux-Rouges. 

 Gaz. hebd. de med., Paris, 18G2, ix, 641, 689. 

 Abstracts from Domenech's Voyage pittoresque dans les grands deserts du nouveau 

 monde. Paris, 1862. 



