176 * BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY [ BULL. 65 
A flat skin wallet, 114 inches wide, made of pieces of the hides of 
small animals, was found in Cave I (A-2397). It is sewed together 
with fiber string and the hair sides are out. 
“Double-head” bags (fig. 86).—Both our examples of this type are 
fragmentary, but their nature can be determined with certainty. 
Zach was made by sewing together the trimmed pelts of two prairie 
Fic. 84.—Cedar-bark bag. 
dogs in such a way that the neck of the bag was formed by the heads 
of the animals, its mouth by their mouths. The two skins had 
originally been laid hair side to hair side and sewed together with 
coarse fiber thread in a wide running stitch. The whole had then 
been turned inside out to hide the seam and bring the fur to the 
exterior. Hough* notes (from Tulerosa) “ the skin of a small animal 
having the loops of yucca fastened to the margin by which it 
11914, p. 86, 
