CHKSS AND PLAYIXG-CAKDS. 



7f)5 



I feel quite confident, I saw it also in San Juan (Tewan), though of that I would 

 not be positive. I can not remember seeing the game played in Jemez, Picuris, and 

 Pqjo.ique (Tewau); in Sia (Keresan) or any of the Moqui Pueblos excejit Teliua 

 (which of course is a village of migration from the Eio Grande). In Nambo (Tewan) 

 I never saw it, I am sure. 



Tit:- 91. 

 STAVES AND MARKIX(; STICKS USED IN THE GAME OK CASEHEA-PA-NA. 



Lengths, 4J and 4| inches. 

 Tewa Indians, Taos, New Mexico. 



Cat. No. •.'0153, Museum of Archeology, University of Pennsylvauia. 



Tewa. Taos, New Mexico. (Cat. No. 20123, Mus. Arch., Univ. Peon.) 



Set of three sticks, 4^ inches in length, f inch broad, and A inch thick 



(fig. 91.) One side round with bark and the other flat. One of the sticks 



has eight transverse cuts on the bark side, as shown in the figure, with 



