80 ANTIQUITIES OF THE OUACHITA VALLEY. 
Vessels Nos. 219 and 136. These beautiful bowls, shown on Plate V, covered 
inside and out with polished, red pigment of an exce ‘lence unknown to regions lying 
northward, though the use of pigment was so exte nsive there, show no de ҮЙІНЕН 
The decoration on both, incised, is a combination of the 
through lapse of time. 
Fig. 82.—Vessel No. 136. Decoration. (About two-thirds size.) 
scroll, on a cross-hatch field in the case of the smaller bowl, and in a field of 
actual lines on the larger vessel. Traces of white pigment are evident in the 3 
incised lines of the smaller vessel. А diagram bearing the decoration on the larger 4 
bowl (Vessel No. 136) is shown in Fig. 82. The decoration on the smaller bowl E 
closely resembles designs already shown as coming from Glendora cemetery. 
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