90 ABORIGINAL SITES IN LOUISIANA AND IN ARKANSAS. 
Mr. MeGuire's exhaustive work! shows no figure holding a biconical pipe 
Burial No. 11, a bunched burial, had with it a bottle, the body and the neck 
being a few inches apart, the proximal end of the neck turned from the body of 
the bottle, showing that the break had occurred before interment. On the body 
and neck of this bottle, in places, is decoration traced with a point in the rudest 
possible manner. Here and there in the lines are traces of red pigment. 
Fic. 39.—Pipe. Vertical section. (Full size.) 
Burials Nos. 12 and 13 lay with the heads directed SSE. 
Burial No. 14. This skeleton, heading SSE., is the one whose grave cut 
through Burial No. 7. On and at the side of this burial (Burial No. 14) bones 
had been piled, covering the skeleton closely from the skull to the pelvis, inclusive. 
Farther down, the bones continued, but were less closely placed. In this col- 
lection of disconnected remains were four skulls. 
‘J. D. McGuire, “Pipes and Smoking Customs of the American Aborigines," Report of 
the U. S. National Museum, 1897. 
