ecLin] HIDDEN-BALL GAME 337 
sist of beans or sticks, and number from fifty to one hundred and 
two, or one hundred and four. 
As mentioned in the introduction, the hidden-ball game was one of 
the five games sacrificed on the altar of the War Godin Zuni. A set of 
cups (figure 445) for this purpose in the museum of the University 
of Pennsylvania (cat. no. 22682), collected by the writer in Zuni in 
1902, consists of four wooden tubes, each 1} inches in diameter and 22 
inches in height. They are painted white, with black tops, and have 
pink plume feathers stuck in the top of each. As also noted, similar 
cups, surmounted with effigies of birds, are seen on the Hopi Oaaél 
Fic. 447. Blue Flute (Cakwalenya) altar; Hopi Indians, Mishongnovi, Arizona: from Fewkes. 
altar (figure 1). They occur also on the Soyaluna altar at Walpi, 
plate vi, as figured by Doctor Fewkes.* 
Four flowerlike wooden cups—yellow, green, red, and white—appear 
at the base of the effigy on the altar of the Drab Flute at Oraibi, 
while sixteen cups of the four colors are stuck like flowers on two 
“The Winter Solstice Ceremony at Walpi. The American Anthropologist, v. 11, p. 79, 
1898. 
24 ErH—O05 M 22 
