. Bulletin. Ethnology. BULL. 30] PINTAHAE PIPES 257 Pintahae. A Saponi town visited by Lederer in 1670; according to Lawson (Hist. Car., 1709), the residence of the "; Pintce ('confluence of Pin river'). A village of the Nikozliautin on Stuart lake, Brit. Col., at the mouth of Pintce r.; pop. 42 in 1906. Pinchy.—Harmon, Jour., 205, 1820. Pintce.— Morice in Tnms. Roy. Soc. Can., x, 109, 1892. Pinthlocco. A former Creek town on Pinthlocco cr., in Coosa co., Ala.— Royce in 18th Rep. B. A. E., Ala. map, 1899. Pintiats {Pin^-ti-ats). A Paiute band formerly living in or near Moapa val


. Bulletin. Ethnology. BULL. 30] PINTAHAE PIPES 257 Pintahae. A Saponi town visited by Lederer in 1670; according to Lawson (Hist. Car., 1709), the residence of the "; Pintce ('confluence of Pin river'). A village of the Nikozliautin on Stuart lake, Brit. Col., at the mouth of Pintce r.; pop. 42 in 1906. Pinchy.—Harmon, Jour., 205, 1820. Pintce.— Morice in Tnms. Roy. Soc. Can., x, 109, 1892. Pinthlocco. A former Creek town on Pinthlocco cr., in Coosa co., Ala.— Royce in 18th Rep. B. A. E., Ala. map, 1899. Pintiats {Pin^-ti-ats). A Paiute band formerly living in or near Moapa valley, s. E. Nev.; pop. 47 in 1873.—Powell in Ind. Aff. Rep. 1873, 50, 1874. Pintos (Span.: 'the j^iebaldones'). A tribe living in 1757 on the n. side of the Rio Grande, opposite Reynosa, in Texas. Across the river, in Tamaulipas, lived the Alapaguemes (Pedro de Estrada, in Cuervo, Revista, 1757, MS. in Archivo Gen., Hist., lvi). At the same time a part of tlie tribe was under a mission at the villa of San Fernando, near by. In 1780 Cabello said they were at the mis- sion of Nuevo Santander (Rep. on Coast Tribes, MS. in B(?xar Archives). The tribe was reported to have been always Iieaceful. (h. ) Pinutgu {PVnutg{i^, 'Penateka Coman- che '). A contemptuous term applied by the Cheyenne to those of their own tribe who remained quiet during the outbreak of 1874-75. (.1. M.) Outlaw.— in Field Columb. Mus. Piib. 103, 62, 1905. Pioge. A prehistoric Tewa pueblo at the site of the village of Los Luceros (now called Lyden) on the e. bank of the Rio Grande, in the s. e. part of Rio Arriba co., N. Mex. The present inhabitants of San Juan claim it as one of their ancient set- tlements, whence their ancestors settled in the locality which they to-day occupy. Consult Bandelier (1) in Ritch, New Mex., 202,1885, (2) in Arch. Inst. Papers, iv, 63, 1892. Piomingo. See Colbert, WiUiam. Pipe, Captain. See Hopocan. Pipes. A tube in which tobacco was smoked is to-day called a pipe


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