TABLES 



2. 

 3. 

 4. 

 5. 



6. 

 7. 

 S. 



9. 

 10. 

 11. 

 12. 



13. 

 14. 

 15. 



16. 

 17. 

 18. 

 19. 



20. 

 21. 



23. 

 24. 

 25. 

 26. 



27. 

 28. 

 29. 

 30. 

 31. 

 32. 



33. 

 34. 

 35. 



30. 



37. 

 38. 

 39. 

 40. 



41. 

 42. 



43. 



Births and deaths, 1921-30, exchiding still- 

 births 7 



Indian population by sex and age 9 



Population by age, sex, and class 9 



Distribution of Indians by households 9 



Location of Indian and Ladino coffee and truck 



lands 41 



Location of Ladino coffee land 41 



Panajachel truck acreage 45 



Truck-land use of Ladinos and resident and 



nonresident Indians 46 



Resident Indian truck crop patterns 4S 



Comparison of land distributions ._ 62 



Size of Indian delta lots 60 



Distribution of all Pauajachelefio land, areas 



reduced to value 68 



Pawned land .. 81 



Rental costs in 1930 82 



The use of time 86 



Community service 86 



Time of officials SO 



Personal and social activities 87 



Time devoted to agriculture and domestic ani- 

 mals by sex and age 88 



Average day of average Indian .. 94 



Time devoted to trades, professions, and special 



occupations 05 



Income from trades, professions, and special 



occupations ._ 95 



Persons with special occupations 96 



Full-time laborers 99 



Local Indian labor in Ladino fields 100 



Cost and gross and net return per aero of milpa. 



1936 108 



Labor required to grow 10 cuerdas of milpa 109 



Cost of growing onion products (per acre) 1 10 



Labor required to grow onions from seed 1 1 1 



Labor required in growing onion seed 11 1 



Cost of growing garlic... 1 13 



Man-days required and cost of growing beans 



in garden bed 113 



Returns from vegetable growing 114 



Cost of growing pepinos 115 



Cost of an acre of coffee 115 



Time consumed in and income from fruit 



growing, 1936 115 



Total cost of agricultural products 116 



Value of agricultural products 1 16 



Time devoted to agriculture 117 



Value of dome.stic animals owned 118 



Combinations of domestic animals 118 



Estimated costs of and returns from domestic 



animals, 1940 121 



Households habitually represented by vendors 



in various markets 123 



PAGE 



44. Produce brought to the Panajachel market 



by local Indian women (1937) 124 



45. Summary of Panajachel vendors in weekday 



market (1937) 125 



40. Constitution and source of produce of vending 



groups in outside markets 126 



47. Summary of time devoted to marketing 132 



48. Time spent vending in the local market 132 



49. Time devoted to visiting outside markets 132 



50. Vendors in the Panajachel market 136 



51. Annual average prices in Guatemala City 139 



52. Hogs slaughtered in SoloLl 142 



53. Onion prices 143 



54. Kinds of houses 145 



55. .\verage cost of Indian houses, 1937 146 



56. Materials and time used in building a mass- 



adobe house 146 



57. Value of Indian houses, 1937 147 



58. Time devoted to kitchen work, 1936 149 



59. Panajacheleno weavers 152 



60. Time consumed in domestic production, 193G-. 154 



61. Costumes 159 



02. Probable costumes of those on whom census 



information is lacking 160 



63. Cost of clothing 161 



04. .Average cost of annual costuming 162 



65. Consumption of food in three families 166 



06. Seven-day food intake (1944) of six families 



(in net grams) 106 



07. Food consumption 168 



68. Household furnishings and supplies, and 



tools 175 



69. Ceremonial, fiesta, and miscellaneous ex- 



penses, 1936 177 



70. Expenditures of officials for rituals 179 



71. Expenditures for public rituals 180 



72. Personal expenses, taxes, etc 182 



73. Summary of expenditures in 1936 182 



74. The balance of payments 184 



75. Comparison of average food intake in rural 



Guatemala per nutrition unit per day 185 



70. Wealth of Panajacheleno households involved 



in land pawnings 192 



77. Wealth of households renting agricultural land.. 193 



78. Distribution of Panajachel textile workers 195 



79. Indians regularly employed lay Indians in 



Panajachel 196 



80. Distribution of domestic animals 199 



81. Wealth of 10 households 199 



82. Rooms and living space of 10 households 199 



83. Xumber and kinds of beds in 10 households — 200 



84. Seven-day food intake (1944) of six families 



per nutrition unit per day 201 



85. Panajacheleuo costume distribution 202 



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