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Journal of American Folk-Lore/Volume 11

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4737593Journal of American Folk-Lore — Volume 111898William Wells Newell

THE JOURNAL OF

AMERICAN FOLK-LORE

VOLUME XI




BOSTON AND NEW YORK
Published for The American Folk-Lore Society by
HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN AND COMPANY

LONDON: DAVID NUTT, 270, 271 STRAND
LEIPZIG: OTTO HARRASSOWITZ, QUERSTRASSE, 14


M DCCC XCVIII

Copyright, 1899,
By THE AMERICAN FOLK-LORE SOCIETY.

All rights reserved.


The Riverside Press, Cambridge, Mass., U.S.A.
Electrotyped and printed by H. O. Houghton and Company.

Vol. XI. OCTOBER—DECEMBER, 1898. No. XLIII.

THE

JOURNAL OF

AMERICAN FOLK-LORE

EDITOR

WILLIAM WELLS NEWELL

CONTENTS
PAGE
1. American Indian Games. (Illustrated.) Stewart Culin 245
2. Myths of the Jicarilla Apaches. Frank Russell 253
3. The Pretty Pa-Tree 272
4. Popular American Plant-Names. VIII. Fanny D. Bergen 273
5. Animal Tales from North Carolina. Emma M. Backus 284
6. Record of American Folk-Lore. A. F. C. and I. C. C. 293
7. Folk-Lore Scrap-Book 298
8. Bibliographical Notes 302
Books—Journals
9. Officers and Members of the American Folk-Lore Society 312
10. Subscribers to the Publication Fund 318
11. Index to Volume XI 319
BOSTON AND NEW YORK
Published for The American Folk-Lore Society by
HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN AND COMPANY

LONDON: DAVID NUTT, 270, 271 STRAND
LEIPZIG: OTTO HARRASSOWITZ, QUERSTRASSE, 14


Copyright, 1898, by The American Folk-Lore Society

SINGLE NUMBERS, $1.00 ANNUAL SUBSCRIPTION, $3.00

Entered at the Post Office at Boston as second-class matter

DEPARTMENT INDEX.

Folk-Lore Scrap-Book. Cheyenne Marriage Customs.—The Yu-li or Precious Records (Chinese Taoist Scriptures).

Bibliographical Notes. Dennett’s Notes of the Folk-Lore of the Fjort.—Lawrence’s The Magic of the Horse-Shoe.—Seklemian’s The Golden Maiden.—Greenough’s Canadian Folk-Life and Folk-Lore.



THE JOURNAL OF AMERICAN FOLK-LORE.


THE JOURNAL OF AMERICAN FOLK-LORE (Quarterly), issued by The American Folk-Lore Society, is designed for the collection and publication of the folk-lore and mythology of the American Continent.

The subscription price is Three Dollars per annum. A limited number of copies of the completed volumes (Vols. I.–X., 1888–1897) remain on hand, and may be procured of the publishers, on payment of the annual fee for each volume. A cover, suitable for binding, is prepared, and will be forwarded by the publishers, through the mail, on receipt of 30 cents a volume.

The American Folk-Lore Society was organized January 4, 1888. The Society holds annual meetings, at which reports are received and papers read. The membership fee is three dollars, payable on the 1st of January in each year. Members are entitled to receive the Journal of American Folk-Lore. Subscribers to the Journal, or other persons interested in the objects of the Society, are eligible to membership, and are requested to address the Permanent Secretary to that end.


OFFICERS OF THE AMERICAN FOLK-LORE SOCIETY (1898).

President—Henry Wood, Baltimore, Md.

First Vice-President—Charles L. Edwards, Cincinnati, O.

Second Vice-President—Alice C. Fletcher, Washington, D. C.

Council—Alice Mabel Bacon, Hampton, Va.; Robert Bell, Ottawa, Can.; Daniel G. Brinton, Philadelphia, Pa.; Heli Chatelain, Angola, Africa; †Roland B. Dixon, Cambridge, Mass.; James W. Ellsworth, Chicago, Ill.; †Alcée Fortier, New Orleans, La.; Stansbury Hagar, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Otis T. Mason, Washington, D. C.; John H. McCormick, Washington, D. C.; †Frederic W. Putnam, Cambridge, Mass.; Gardner P. Stickney, Milwaukee, Wis.

Permanent Secretary—William Wells Newell, Cambridge, Mass.

Treasurer—John H. Hinton, 41 West 32d Street, New York, N. Y.

† As Presidents of Local Branches.