718 PICTURE-WRITING OF THE AMERICAN INDIANS. 
No. 30664. It represents an antelope and the whistling sound pro- 
duced by the animal on being surprised or alarmed. It also shows the 
tracks, and supplies the idea of walking not exhibited by the preced- 
ing two figures. 
Fie. 1195. Fie. 1196. 
Fig. 1197.—Dog-with-good-voice. Red-Cloud’s Census. The pecu- 
liar angular divisions of the line may indicate the explosive character 
of a dog’s bark as distinct from a long-drawn howl. Among the many 
lines indicating voice which appear in the Dakota pictographs none has 
been found identical with this, and therefore it probably has special 
significance. 
Fig, 1197. Fic. 1198. 
Fig. 1 198.—Bear-that-crowls. Red-Cloud’s Census. This figure gives 
a marked differentiation. The sound of growling does not appear to 
come from the mouth, but from the lower part of the neck or the 
upper part of the chest, from which the lines here are drawn to ema- 
nate. They are also confined by a surrounding line, to suggest the 
occluded nature of the sound. 
