offer cakes instead of horses, viii. 95 n. 2;

their expulsion of Satan, ix. 156;

their Midsummer festival, x. 181

Chero, the, of Mirzapur, their contagious magic of footprints, i. 209

Cherokee Indians, their myth of the Old Woman of the Corn, vi. 46 sq.;

their lamentations after “the first working of the corn,” vi. 47;

annual expulsion of evils among the, ix. 128.

See also [Cherokees]

—— hunters pray to the eagles they have killed, viii. 236; ask pardon of the deer they kill, viii. 241

—— mythology, viii. 204 sq.