BY
JOHN G. BOURKE,
Captain, Third Cavalry, U. S. Army.
CONTENTS.
| Page. | |
| Chapter I. The medicine-men, their modes of treating disease, their superstitions, paraphernalia, etc. | 451 |
| Medicine-women | 468 |
| Remedies and modes of treatment | 471 |
| Hair and wigs | 474 |
| Mudheads | 475 |
| Scalp shirts | 476 |
| The rhombus, or bull roarer | 476 |
| The cross | 479 |
| Necklaces of human fingers | 480 |
| Necklaces of human teeth | 487 |
| The scratch stick | 490 |
| The drinking reed | 493 |
| Chapter II. Hoddentin, the pollen of the tule, the sacrificial powder of the Apache;with remarks upon sacred powders and offerings in general | 499 |
| The "kunque" of the Zuñi and others | 507 |
| Use of the pollen by the Israelites and Egyptians | 517 |
| Hoddentin a prehistoric food | 518 |
| Hoddentin the yiauhtli of the Aztecs | 521 |
| "Bledos" of ancient writers—its meaning | 522 |
| Tzoalli | 523 |
| General use of the powder among Indians | 528 |
| Analogues of hoddentin | 530 |
| The down of birds in ceremonial observances | 533 |
| Hair powder | 535 |
| Dust from churches—its use | ... BU KİTABI OKUMAK İÇİN ÜYE OLUN VEYA GİRİŞ YAPIN!Sitemize Üyelik ÜCRETSİZDİR! |