[850] From the Algonkin word meaning "real adders" with French suffix.
[851] A decoction made by boiling the leaves of Ilex cassine in water, employed as "medicine" for ceremonial purification. It was a powerful agent for the production of the nervous state and disordered imagination necessary to "spiritual" power.
[852] C. Wissler, loc. cit. pp. 462-3.
[853] A. J. Pickett, Hist. of Alabama, 1851 (ed. 1896), p. 87.
[854] Cf. A. S. Gatschet, "A migration legend of the Creek Indians," Trans. Acad. Sci. St Louis, V. 1888.
[855] F. G. Speck, "Some outlines of Aboriginal Culture in the S. E. States," Am. Anth. N. S. IX. 1907; "Ethnology of the Yuchi Indians," Anth. Pub. Mus. Univ. Pa. I. 1, 1909.
[856] W. H. Holmes, "Areas of American Culture," etc., Am. Anth. XVI. 1914, p. 424.
[857] L'Anthropologie, 1897, p. 702 sq.
[858] 16th Ann. Rep. Bur. Am. Eth., Washington, 1897, p. lvi sq.
[859] Walpi, Sichumovi, Hano (Tewa), Shipaulovi, Mishongnovi, Shunopovi and Oraibi.