224 GAMES OF THE NORTH AMERICAN INDIANS  [xra. ann. 24 
Navaho game. The sticks are tossed up in a small native basket. The counts 
are as follows: All painted sides up count 4; three painted sides up, 3; two 
painted sides up, 2; one painted side up, 1. 
Zuni. Zuni, New Mexico. (Cat. no. 22594, Free Museum of Science 
and Art, University of Pennsylvania.) 
Fig. 303. Fig. 304. 
Fic. 303. Wooden dice for basket-dice game; length, 1} inches; Zuni Indians, Zuni, New 
Mexico; cat. no, 22594, Free Museum of Science and Art, University of Pennsylvania. 
Fic. 304. Basket for dice; diameter, 10} inches; Zuni Indians, Zuni, New Mexico; cat. no. 22594, 
Free Museum of Science and Art, University of Pennsylvania. 
Five wooden blocks (figure 303), 1 by 13 inches and one-fourth of an 
inch thick, painted black and marked with incised lines on one 
side, the other side being left plain, accompanied by a Zuni 
basket, 104 inches in diameter (figure 304). Collected by the 
writer in 1902. 
The name of the game was given as thlaspatsa ananai; that of the 
basket, tselai. 
Men and women play. Two persons engage, and money is bet on the game. 
The counts are as follows: Five black up counts 10; five white up, 5; four 
white up, 4; three white up, 3; two white up, 2; one white up, 1. The game 
is 10. 
Fig. 306. 
F1G. 305. Wooden dice and tossing instrument; lengths of dice, 1} and 24 inches; Zuni Indians, 
Zuni, New Mexico: cat. no. 3044, 3045, Brooklyn Institute Museum. 
Fia. 306. Wooden dice; diameter, 1} inches; Zuni Indians, Zuni, New Mexico; cat. no. 3046, 
Brooklyn Institute Museum. 
— New Mexico. (Brooklyn Institute Museum.) 
Cat. no. 3044. Three diamond-shaped pieces of wood (figure 305), 
21 inches long, painted black on one side and red on the other; 
called moiachua tslemmai, star boards. 
Cat. no. 3045. Two flat wooden blocks (figure 305), 14 by 1% inches, 
painted red on one side and having a black stripe on the other; 
called tslemmai kokshi, good boards. 
