ANTIQUITIES OF THE OUACHITA VALLEY. 141 
Fic. 144.—Vessel No. 358. Keno Place. (Height 7 inches.) 
Vessel No. 471. A vase, probably unique, of compound form, representing a 
short-necked bottle imposed upon a vessel of eccentric shape, having a series of four 
projecting lobes, above and below (Fig. 143). The ware is most inferior. The 
decoration, faintly and rudely executed, consists partly of the scroll and partly of 
parallel lines and punctate markings. 
Vessel No. 358. A bottle of inferior, light-brown ware, with tripod support, 
somewhat similar to a bottle found by us in the Glendora cemetery. The legs, 
which are hollow, communicate with the body of the vessel by means of series of 
small perforations at the points of union, as in the case of the Glendora bottle. 
The decoration, coarsely executed, consists of the usual disks and scrolls (Fig. 144). 
