[150.1] Von Wlislocki, in iii. Am Urquell, 11.
[150.2] iii. Am Urquell, 197; i., 19; ii., 27; Töppen, 45; Strack, 25; ii. Witzschel, 283; Grimm, Teut. Myth., 1802. In Alabama, the splinters are buried at the foot of the tree. v. Journ. Am. F.L., 21.
[151.1] ii. Bull. de F.L., 8.
[151.2] Aubrey, Miscellanies, 138. Compare the direction in Maine, New England, to cure a wart by crossing it with a knife until the blood comes, and then cross the bark of an apple-tree with the bloody knife. v. Journ. Am. F.L., 320.
[151.3] Black, 39. He notes a further modern degradation of the rite in Scotland, where it was not thought necessary even to touch the tooth with the nail. Compare the practice with regard to warts. Northall, 139.
[151.4] Kuhn, Märkische Sagen, 384.
[151.5] ii. Bull. de F.L., 7; Harou, 32.
[151.6] Grimm, Teut. Myth., 1802.
[152.1] Von Wlislocki, Siebenb. Sachs., 107.
[152.2] H. Volksmann, in iv. Am Urquell, 278.