. Notes of sites of Huron villages in the township of Tiny, Simcoe County, and adjacent parts. Prepared with a view to the identification of those villages visited and described by Champlain and the early missionaries . Indian Chief Pipe. (Front view.) Fig. 2. Indian Chief Pipe. (Side view. The next pipe of this class is a veritable souvenir of Sleepv specimen may not indicate good humor or laughter, but a war-whoop, orperhaps a sleepy yawn. In any case, it is the effort of an artist who evidentlybelonged to the impressionist school. Pipes of this kind are not by any meansrare in t


. Notes of sites of Huron villages in the township of Tiny, Simcoe County, and adjacent parts. Prepared with a view to the identification of those villages visited and described by Champlain and the early missionaries . Indian Chief Pipe. (Front view.) Fig. 2. Indian Chief Pipe. (Side view. The next pipe of this class is a veritable souvenir of Sleepv specimen may not indicate good humor or laughter, but a war-whoop, orperhaps a sleepy yawn. In any case, it is the effort of an artist who evidentlybelonged to the impressionist school. Pipes of this kind are not by any meansrare in the Huron country. The third specimen has the physiognomy of an Indian who, if not awarrior, had at any rate a face so bold as to make the most courageous of usshudder when we look at his portrait. His grim visage has a likeness to theOld Man of the Mountain, whose face we are called upon to see in the profileof a high, rocky cliff in the White Mountains of New Hampshire. His Dant-esque features have a stony stare, and his chin, which protrudes much beyondthe normal amount, gives the owner the expression of strong executive power,not always wielded for good, as some of his other features would Fig. 3. AVide open mouth pipe. (Top view.)A war whoop, or a sleepy yawn ? Fig. 4. Side view of the preceding pipe.


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Keywords: ., bookaut, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjecthuronindians