. Bulletin. Ethnology. BDLL. 30] PKHITLLUWAAITTHE PLUMMETS 267 To Commissioner Manypenny, who was with him when he died, he presented his pipe and tobacco pouch, desiring him to take them to Washington. He was buried, Sept. 9, in the Catholic cemetery at La Pointe. A Chippewa chief of the St Croix band, also named "Peezhickee," or Buffalo, signed tlie treaties of Prairie du Chien, Wis., Aug. 19, 1825; Fond du Lac, Wis., Aug. 5, 1826, and St Peters Wis., July 29,1837. (c. T.) Pkhulluwaaitthe {Pkqul-W-wa-ai-V q'i). A former Yaquina village on the s. side of Yaquina r., Oreg.—Dorsey


. Bulletin. Ethnology. BDLL. 30] PKHITLLUWAAITTHE PLUMMETS 267 To Commissioner Manypenny, who was with him when he died, he presented his pipe and tobacco pouch, desiring him to take them to Washington. He was buried, Sept. 9, in the Catholic cemetery at La Pointe. A Chippewa chief of the St Croix band, also named "Peezhickee," or Buffalo, signed tlie treaties of Prairie du Chien, Wis., Aug. 19, 1825; Fond du Lac, Wis., Aug. 5, 1826, and St Peters Wis., July 29,1837. (c. T.) Pkhulluwaaitthe {Pkqul-W-wa-ai-V q'i). A former Yaquina village on the s. side of Yaquina r., Oreg.—Dorsey in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, iii, 229, 1890. Pkipsissewa. See Pipsissewa. Pkuuniukhtauk {PJcu-u^-ni-uqt-au¥). A former Yaquina village on the s. side of Yaquina r., Oreg.—Dorsey in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, iir, 229, 1890. Plaikni (P'laikni, ' uplanders'). A col- lective name given by the Klamath to all the Indians on Sprague r., above and be- low Yaneks, on the Klamath res., s. w. Oreg. They comprise the majority of the Modoc, many Klamath, and the Shosho- nean Walpapi and Yahuskin settled in these parts.—Gatschet in Cont. N. A. Ethnol., II, pt. I, XXXV, 1890. Uplanders.—Gatschet, ibid. Plaquemine. See Persimmon. Plaques. See Receptacles. Playwickey ('town of the turkey'). A former Delaware village in Bucks co., Pa. It probably belonged to the Una- lachtigo division, and may have been on Neshaminy cr. Planwikit.—Brinton, Lenape Leg., 39,1885. Play- wickey.—Deed of 1737 quoted by Day, Penn., 507, 1843. Pluggy's Town. A former village, named from its chief, which occupied the site of Delaware, Delaware co., Ohio, in 1776. It belonged to a marauding band of In- dians, who seem to have been chiefly Mingo. See Butterfield, Washington- Irvine Corn, 9, 1882. Plummets. A group of prehistoric pen- dant-like objects of stone, bone, shell, hematite ore, copper, and other materials the origin and use of which have been much discussed (see Problematical objects). The name plummet is ap


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