. Bulletin. Ethnology. WEST Virginia; Metal; Work OF Whites, (length, Sin.) See. GEORGIA; Clav; Length, (moore) NORTH CAROLINA; STEATITE. (length, 11 IN.) S. W. Soc. Archajol. Inst. Am., 1905; Scott in Am. Anthrop., ix, no. 3, 1907; Smith in Am. Anthrop., viii, no. 1, 1906; Squier and Davis in Smithson. Cont., i, 1848; Archseol. Reps. Ontario, app. to Rep. Minister of Education; Thruston, Antiq. of Tenn., 1897; West, Aborig. Pipes Wis., 1905. (j. D. M.) Pipestone. See Catlinite. Pipiaca. A Maricopa rancheria on the Rio Gila, Arizona, in 1744.âSedelmair .(1744) cited by Bancroft, Ariz, and N. M


. Bulletin. Ethnology. WEST Virginia; Metal; Work OF Whites, (length, Sin.) See. GEORGIA; Clav; Length, (moore) NORTH CAROLINA; STEATITE. (length, 11 IN.) S. W. Soc. Archajol. Inst. Am., 1905; Scott in Am. Anthrop., ix, no. 3, 1907; Smith in Am. Anthrop., viii, no. 1, 1906; Squier and Davis in Smithson. Cont., i, 1848; Archseol. Reps. Ontario, app. to Rep. Minister of Education; Thruston, Antiq. of Tenn., 1897; West, Aborig. Pipes Wis., 1905. (j. D. M.) Pipestone. See Catlinite. Pipiaca. A Maricopa rancheria on the Rio Gila, Arizona, in 1744.âSedelmair .(1744) cited by Bancroft, Ariz, and N. Mex., 366, 1889. Pipsissewa. A popular name for Chima- phiki umheUata, first mentioned by Dr B. S. Barton, in his Collections towards a Materia Medica of the United States (1798), and since variously corrupted to pkipsessiwa, psiseva, jyipsisseway, etc. The plant once enjoyed a great reputation as a lithontriptic among some of the Wood Cree, who raised it to the dignity of an animate object and spoke of as pipisisi- kiveu, ' it reduces it (stone in the bladder) to very fine particles.' Pipsissewa beer is a decoction of ChhnaphUa, with the ad- dition of sugar to sweeten it, ginger to fia- vor it, and yeast to produce fermentation. This drink has been used in scrofulous affections. (w. e. g.) Piqosha. The Hide Carrying-strap clan of the Hopi. Hide Strap clan.âVoth, Traditions of the Hopi, 22, Piqb'sha.âIbid., 37. Piqua (contr. of Bi-co-we-tha, of indefi- nite meaning, but referring to ashes). One of the five principal divisions of the Shawnee. Their villages at different peri- ods were Pequea, in Pennsylvania; Lick Town, on Scioto r. in Pickaway co., Ohio; Piqua, on Mad r., and Piqua, on Miami r., Ohio. On being driven from the last place by the Kentuckians they removed to Wapakoneta and St Marys r. (J. m. ) Bi-co-we-tha.âW. H. Shawnee iii Gulf States Hist. Mag., I, 415, 1903. Paquea.âSchoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, i, 90, 1851. Pecawa.âDrake, Ind. Chron., 1S9, 1836. Pecuwe


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