ANCIENT PUEBLOS OF UPPER GILA EEGION. 



99 



those in present use by the Zuni. The Huichol painted arrow with 

 its various attachments is a paho. The arrows made for the family 



worship also bear a close analogy to those 

 pahos made as family offerings by the Zuni. 

 The attachment of bows, shields, food, 

 beads, etc., to the Huichol arrow paho has 

 counterpart in the paho of the Zuni and 

 Hopi and that of the ancient Pueblo de- 

 scribed in this 

 paper, thus several 

 arrow offerings or 

 pahos found in Bear 

 Creek Cave having 

 lashed across the 



Fig. 205. — Ceremonial bow 

 and abeows fkost bear 

 Creek Cave. 



end of the fore- 

 shaft small tubes 

 of reed or cylin- 



FiG. 206. — Ceremonial bow 

 FROM Bear Creek Cave. 



ders of wood (fig. 



203) suggest the "medicine arrows" spoken fig. 207.— ceremonial bow 



of by Cushing in his Zuni Folk Tales.^ ^^^« cigarettes from 



•^ . ° . . Bear Creek Cave. 



There were similar arrows with cane tubes 



on the ends charged with a charm liquid made by the 



grandmother of the war gods from flesh rubbed off her 



1 Zuni Folk Tales. New York, 1901, p. 335. 



