1883.) Anthropology. ; 45I 
lected in the Revue d’Ethnologie, they have been quite over- 
shadowed by anatomical and archzological papers. Indeed, this 
fact was the first cause of the foundation of the Revue d’ Ethno- 
graphie. The papers that have appeared in the review have been 
so important, as a general thing, that the list is appended: 
Cessac, L, de—Fétiches de pierre, &c., de lile de S. Nicolas (Cal.), p. 30. 
Cessac, L, de—Sur les Comanches, p. 94. 
Croix, I. E. de la—Les Sakaies de Perak, Malacca, p. 317. 
§ E—Les initiateurs de l'art oriental, p. 288. 
Duhousset, E.—Les arts décoratifs au Petit-Tibet et au Cachemire, p. 381. 
Fegueux, E.—Les ruines de la Juemada, p. 119. 
_ Hany, E. T.—Figures et inscriptions à El Hadj Meméum, p. 129. 
Hamy, E, T.—La Croix de Teotilhuacan, p. 410. 
Landrin, A—Ecriture figurative et comptabilité en Bretagne, p. 369. 
t, Fr.—Les Truddhi et les Specchie d’Otrante, p. 22. 
: Lenormant, Fr.—L’ethnographie ancienne du Mediterraneén, p. 226. 
: Martin, Ern.—Les funeraiiles d’une impératrice de Chine, p. 230. 
= Montano, J.—Indigenes de la province de Malacca, p. 41. 
l Moura, J.—Le Cambodge préhistorique, p. 505. 
Peney, A.—L’ethnographie du Soudan Egyptien, 1. Le Sennar; Les Tures au Sou- 
= dan. t. Le Kourdofan, p. 397, p. 4 
a! i » À. de—Distribution géographique des Négritos, p. 177. 
z Retzius, A.—Ethnographie finnoise, p. 81. 
l Révoil, G.—Archéologie et ethnographie do Comal, pp. 5 and 235. 
] Rochebrune, A. T. de—Mollusques chez les peuples anciens et modernes, p. 466. 
_ Scheube, Dr.—Culte et fête de lours chez les Ainos, p. 302. 
Schumacher, P.—L’age de pierre chez les Indiens Klamaths, p. 500. 
Vemeau, R.—Inscriptions lapidaires de l'archipel Canarien, p. 273. 
cag most journals of the kind, the correspondence, reviews 
w analyses, notices of societies, expositions, collections and mu- 
~~ are quite as valuable as the original papers. 
MADS OF THE IRoguoIs—It is quite curious how a book 
pra round without being noticed. Mr. Elias Johnson, a 
“You, _UScarora chief, published two years ago, at Lockport, N. 
book entitled “ Legends, Traditions and Laws of the 
or Six Nations, and History of the Tuscarora Indians.” 
et come within the circle of the NATURALIST'S vision. 
cter by a recitation of parallel crimes and atrocities 
eca Here and there the author holds aside the 
dia S pAn dabo and gives us just the faintest glimpse of true 
we. For instance, has any one before hinted that scaffold 
fer po from the fact that resuscitation frequently takes place 
© are supposed to be dead? In many of the villages 
use for strangers, and their hospitality was unbounded. 
t is thrown upon savage mythology by the recital of 
S, as The origin of the continent and of the animals, 
Stonish giants, Atotarho, &c. The subjects of edu- 
