liONNERJEA] IISTDEX TO AUTHORS AND TITLES 1213 



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



Mexico, North of, Indian Linguistic Families of America (Powell) 7: 1. 



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



— Notes on the Fox Society Known as "Those who worship the Little 



Spotted Buffalo" 40: 497. 



Preliminary Report on Linguistic Classification of Algonquian Tribes 



28: 221. 



The Autobiography of a Fox Indian Woman 40: 291. 



The IMythical Origin of the White Buffalo Dance of the Fox Indians 



Together with Four Minor Sacred Packs Appertaining to the Ceremony 

 40: 23. 



The Traditional Origin of the Fox Society known as " Singing-around 



Rite" 40: 541. 



Middle Tennessee, Two Prehistoric Villages in (Myer) 41: 485. 



Mide'wiwin, or "Grand Medicine Society" of the Ojibwa, the (Hoffman) 7: 



143. 

 Migration Traditions, Tusayan (Fewkes) 19: 573. 

 Mindeleff, Cosmos. Aboriginal Remains in Verde Valley, Arizona 13: 179. 



Casa Grande Ruin 13: 289. 



Cliff -ruins of Canyon de Chelly, Arizona 16: 73. 



Localization of Tusayan Clans 19: 635. 



Navaho Houses 17: 469. 



■ Repair of Casa Grande Ruin in 1891 15: 315. 



Mindeleff, Victor. A Study of Pueblo Architecture: Tusayan and Cibola 8:3. 

 Mississippi Valley, Ancient Pottery of the (Holmes) 4: 361. 

 Mississippi Valley, Animal Carvings from Mounds of the (Henshaw) 2: 117. 

 Missouri River Region, Uses of Plants by Indians of the (Gilmore) 33: 43. 

 Mohegan Medicinal Practices, Weather-lore and Superstition (Speck-Tanta- 



cjuidgeon) 43: 264. 

 Mohegan-Pequot Diary (Speck) 43: 199. 

 Mooney, James. Calendar History of the Kiowa Indians 17: 129. 



Myths of the Cherokee 19: 3. 



Sacred Formulas of the Cherokee 7: 301. 



The Ghost-Dance Religion, with a Sketch of the Sioux OutlDreak of 



1890 14: 641. 



Morris, Earl H. Preliminar}- Account of the Antiquities of the Region Ijetween 



the Mancos and La Plata Rivers in Southwestern Colorado 33: 155. 

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

 Mortuary Customs of the North American Indians (Yarrow) 1 : 87. 

 Mound Explorations of the Bureau of (American) Ethnology (Thomas) 12: 3. 

 Mounds, Burial, of the Northern Sections of the United States (Thomas) 5: 3. 

 Mounds in Northern Honduras (Gann) 19: 655. 



Mounds of the Mississippi Valle}', Animal Carvings from (Henshaw) 2: 117. 

 Mountain Chant, a Navajo Ceremony (Matthews) 5: 379. 

 Muniz, M. A., and McGee, W. J. Primitive Trephining in Peru 16: 3. 

 Murdocli, John. Ethnological Results of the Point Barrow Expedition 9: 3. 



Editor. Ethnology of the Ungava District, Hudson Bay Territory 



(Turner) 11: 159. 



Myer, William Edward. Indian Trails of the Southeast 42: 727. 



Two Prehistoric Villages in Middle Tennessee 41: 485. 



Mythical Origin, the, of the White Buffalo Dance of the Fox Indians (Michelson) 



40: 23. 

 Mythical Sand Paintings of the Navajo Indians, Ceremonial of Hasjelti Dailjis 



and (J. Stevenson) 8: 229, 



