1208 GENEflAL INDEX TO ANNUAL REPORTS [eth.ank.48 



Creek Confederacy, Social Organization and Social Usages of the Indians of the 



(Swanton) 42: 23. 

 Creek Indians, Religious Beliefs and Medical Practices of the (Swanton) 42 : 473. 

 Culin, Stewart. Gaines of the North American Indians 24: 3. 

 Cults, Siouan, a Study of (Dorsey) 11: 351. 

 Culture, Aboriginal, of the Southeast (Swanton) 42: 673. 

 Culture Area, a Prehistoric Island, of America (Fewkes) 34: 35. 

 Culture Grow^th, Zuni, Pueblo Pottery as Illustrative of (Gushing) 4: 467. 

 Curtin, Jeremiah. Seneca Fiction, Legends, and Myths, edited by J. N. B. 



Hewitt 32: 37. 

 Cushing, Frank Hamilton. Outlines of Zuni Creation Myths 13: 321. 



Pueblo Pottery as Illustrative of Zuni Culture Growth 4: 467. 



Zuni Fetiches 2:3. 



Customs, Notes on Fox Mortuary, and Beliefs (Michelson) 40: 351. 



Customs of the Guiana Indians, an Introductory Study of the Arts, Crafts, and 



(Roth) 38: 25. 

 Dall, William H. On Masks, Labrets, and Certain Aboriginal Customs 3: 67. 

 Data, Anthropologic, Limitation to the Use of some (Powell) 1: 71. 

 Day Symbols of the Maya Year (Thomas) 16: 199. 

 Deaf-Mutes, Sign Language among North American Indians compared with 



that among Other Peoples and (Mallery) 1: 263. 

 Denig, Edwin Thompson. Indian Tribes of the Upper Missouri: Report to 



the Hon. Isaac S. Stevens 46: 375. 

 Densmore, Frances. Uses of Plants by the Chippewa Indians 44: 275. 

 Designs on Prehistoric Hopi Pottery (Fewkes) 33: 207. 

 Development, Origin and, of Form and Ornament in Ceramic Art (Holmes) 4: 



437. 

 Dialect. See Language. 

 Dialects of Connecticut, Native Tribes and; Mohegan-Peciuot Diary (Speck) 43: 



199. 

 Dorsey, J. Owen. Illustration of the Method of Recording Languages 1 : 579. 



Omaha Dwellings, Furniture and Implements 13: 263. 



Omaha Sociology 3: 205. 



— Osage Traditions 6: 373. 



Siouan Sociology 15: 205. 



■ Study of Siouan Cults 11: 351. 



Dwellings, Furniture and Implements; Omaha (Dorsey) 13: 263. 



Eastern Mexico, Certain ABticiuities of (Fewkes) 25: 221. 



Economics, Primitive, the Wild-rice Gatherers of the Upper Lakes: A Study in 



American (Jenks) 19: 1013. 

 Eskimo about Bering Strait (Nelson) 18: 3. 

 Eskimo, the Central (Boas) 6: 399. 



Eskimo. See Alaska; Point Barrow; Ungava District; Yukon. 

 Esoteric Fraternities, Mythology, and Ceremonies of the Zuiii Indians (M. C. 



Stevenson) 23: 1. 

 Esthetology, or the Science of Activities Designed to Give Pleasure (Powell) 



19: Lv. 

 Ethnobotany of the Thompson Indians of British Columbia (Teit-Steedman> 



45: 441. 

 Ethnobotany of the Zuni Indians (M. C. Stevenson) 30: 31. 

 Ethnogeography of the Tewa Indians, the (Harrington) 29: 29. 

 Ethnological Results of the Point Barrov/ Expedition (Murdoch) 9: 3. 

 Ethnology of the Kwakiutl (Boas-Hunt) 35: 43, 795. 

 Ethnology of the Ungava District, Hudson Bay Territory (Turner) 11: 159. 



