158 ANTIQUITIES ОЕ THE OUACHITA VALLEY. 
Fic. 137.— Vessel Хо. 118. Keno Place. Ета. 138.— Vessel No. 174. Keno Place. 
(Full size.) (Height 8 inches.) 
Vessel No. 118. A diminutive bottle of coarse, yellow ware, with a rudely 
executed scroll decoration (Fig. 137). 
Vessel No. 174. А bottle of yellow ware (Fig. 138), having an incised design, 
five times shown, consisting of two concentric circles in cross-hatch between cres- 
centic figures also in cross-hatch, each series of crescentic figures, above and below, 
forming a five-pointed star. 
Vessel No. 254. A bottle of dark ware, compressed vertically as to the body, 
to form an equatorial angle. The neck, slightly flaring at first, then contracting, 
ends in a horizontal lip. The decoration, present on the upper portion of the body, 
consists of the usual scroll (Fig. 139). 
Vessel No. 169. A bottle of common, yellow, porous ware, probably a com- 
pound form, with flat base and a fairly-long neck (Fig. 140). The decoration, rudely 
executed on the middle and upper parts of the body, is made up of mushroom-like 
figures, erect and inverted alternately, partly surrounded by cross-hatch bands. 
Vessel No. 136. The body of a bottle, of brown ware, with an evenly executed 
scroll decoration (Fig, 141). | | 
Vessel No. 28. А bottle of soft, yellow ware, 4.2 inches in height, having on 
the body two scrolls of red pigment, and two of white pigment, the red and the 
white scrolls partly interlocking. The neck is coated with red pigment. This little 
vessel may well be an importation from the Arkansas river region, where bottles 
with just such decoration are so abundant. 
