100 GAMES OF THE NORTH AMERICAN INDIANS  [nru. ann. 24 
Cat. no. 59412: Set of four wooden dice (figure 105), 9 inches in 
length, one side convex and marked with incised black lines, as 
shown in figure. The reverse grooved, three painted red and 
plain, and one black and marked with cross lines at the end and 
middle. Accompanied by a tablet of sandstone (figure 106), 4 
inches square, marked with incised lines, and four counting 
sticks, 7 inches in length, painted red, and twelve, 9 inches in 
length, painted yellow (figure 107). 
Fig. 105. 
Fig. 104. Stick-dice game; length of dice, 8} inches; length of hide, 32 inches; Pawnee Indians, 
Oklahoma; cat. no. 59415, Field Columbian Museum. 
Fia. 105. Stick dice; length, 9 inches; Pawnee Indians, Oklahoma; cat. no. 59412, Field Colum- 
bian Museum. 
Fia. 106. Stone tablet for stick dice; 4 inches square; Pawnee Indians, Oklahoma; cat. no. 59412, 
Field Columbian Museum. 
Fig. 107. Counting sticks for stick dice; length, 9 and 7 inches; Pawnee Indians, Oklahoma; 
eat. no. 59412, Field Columbian Museum. 
Cat. no. 59419. Rattan basket (figure 108), 8} inches in diameter ; 
six peach-stone dice, three burned entirely black on one side, 
three with crosses on one side, the reverse plain, and four red, 
four green, and four yellow counting sticks, all 12 inches in 
length. 
A number of other peach and plum-stone dice in the same collec- 
tion are in sets of six, two kinds in each set, all plain on one face 
and marked, three alike, on the other, chiefly with stars. 
All of the above were collected in 1901 by Dr George A. Dorsey. 
Pawner. Pawnee reservation, Oklahoma. (Cat. no. 70721, Field 
Columbian Museum.) 
