ANTIQUITIES OF THE OUACHITA VALLEY. 13 
Vessel No. 138. A bottle of coarse, vellow-brown 
ware, with flat base and 
having as decoration on the body a double 
row of concentric circles connected by 
parallel, incised lines, vertically and laterally. Around the neck are curious hook- 
shaped figures of a kind sometimes found on Southern pottery (Fig. 70) 
Vessel No. 130. A pot (Plate III) which at one time has been covered with 
red pigment over the entire exterior and the inner side of the neck, though at 
present the coloring material is decidedly worn, allowing the yellow ware to show 
through in places. The decoration consists of a design made up in the main of 
incised circles and spirals. There are four holes for suspension on two opposite 
sides of the vessel. 
Ето. 71.—Vessel No. 249. Glendora. (Height 8.4 inches.) 
Vessel No. 249. А bottle of light-brown ware, with tripod support, а not un- 
usual form in the middle Mississippi region, to the northward. The legs, which 
are hollow, have been made separately from the body, and fitted on after the com- 
pletion of the remainder of the vessel. Several small holes have been pi 
through the vessel at each of the points of union with the legs to €— ара qnn 
to serve as receptacles for liquid, in conjunction with the body of the bottle. There 
is a rude, incised and punctate decoration (Fig. 71). 
10 JOURN. A. N. 8. PHILA., VOL. XIV. 
