162 GAMES OF THE NORTH AMERICAN INDIANS  [2TH. Ann. 24 
Cat. no. 38610. Sandstone slab, 114 inches long, inscribed with a 
cross-shaped figure, with five lines on each arm and a circle at 
each end and in the middle (figure 195). Collected by the writer 
in 1901. 
Fig. 194. Fig. 195. 
Fig. 194. Cane dice and stone board; length of board, 9 inches; Hopi Indians, Oraibi, Arizona; cat. 
no. 38611, Free Museum of Science and Art, University of Pennsylvania. 
FiG. 195. Cane dice and stone board; length of board, 11} inches; Hopi Indians, Oraibi, Arizona; 
cat. no, 38610, Free Museum of Science and Art, University of Pennsylvania. 
Cat. no. 38609. Stone slab engraved with diagram as shown in figure 
196. Collected by the writer in 1901. 
These are counting boards for the game of totolospi. The first is 
played by two men and the second by four. The moves are made 
according to the throws with cane dice. The first is accompanied by 
three slips of cane 4 inches in length, painted red on the inner, hollow 
Fic. 196. Cane dice and stone board; length of board, 12} inches; Hopi Indians, Oraibi, Arizona, 
cat. no. 38609, Free Museum of Science and Art, University of Pennsylvania. 
side. The second also has three dice, with the convex side marked * 
with diagonal burned lines. The counts are as follows: 
Three white up counts 2; three red up, 1. The players start with their man 
on the circle nearest to them, advancing line by line across the board. The one 
who gets first to the opposite side wins. The circles are called hwalmai, and 
the spaces tuwoila. 
Horr. Walpi, Arizona. 
Mr A. M. Stephen in his unpublished manuscript gives tecomakin- 
tota as the name of a Hopi man’s game, corresponding to the Navaho 
woman’s game of tsittile. 
