O74. GAMES OF THE NORTH AMERICAN INDIANS  [BYu. ANN. 24 
Elsewhere“ Father Morice contrasts the hand game with the stick 
game as being played silently, while a tambour- 
ine or some appropriate substitute, such as atin 
pan, is continually beaten as an accompani- 
ment to the former. 
US Umpqua. Oregon. (Cat. no. 3003, Brooklyn 
Fig. 353. Bones for hand Institute Museum. ) 
game; length, 3} inches; S : 5 
Umpqua Indians, Ore- ‘lwo hollow bones (figure 353), 34 inches in 
gon; cat. no. 3003, Brook- length and 14 inches in diameter, both with 
lyn Institute Museum. : O 6 
two incised lines near each end and one 
with two bands of leather set in grooves around the middle. 
CADDOAN STOCK 
Pawnes. Oklahoma. (Field Columbian Museum.) 
Cat. no. 59411. Set of eight sticks of smoothed natural brown wood, 
21 inches in length. 
Cat. no. 59389. Set of ten stick counters, four yellow and four green, 
each with feather tied with thong at top, and two plain sticks; 
all 164 inches in length. 
no. 59416. Long bone pipe bead, 24 inches in length, and eight 
counting sticks, 17 inches in length, four painted yellow and 
four blue, feathered like arrows, both series differently (figure 
354). 
Cat. 
Fig. 354. Fig. 355. 
Fig. 354. Bead and counting sticks for hand game; length of bead, 2} inches; length of counters, 
17 inches; Pawnee Indians, Oklahoma; cat. no. 59416, Field Columbian Museum. 
Fia. 355. Sticks for hand game; length, 1} inches; Pawnee Indians, Oklahoma; cat. no. 71654, 
Field Columbian Museum. 
Cat. no. 71588. Set of eight sticks, 22 inches in length, copies of 
feathered shafts of arrows, four painted blue and four painted 
red, accompanied with a short slender bow. 
Cat. no. 71654. Set of four sticks (figure 355), 1% inches in length, 
marked in pairs alike, one pair with six notches on one side 
«The Western Dénés—Their Manners and Customs. Proceedings of the Canadian In- 
stitute, third series, v. 7, p. 154, Toronto, 1889. 
