cuLIn] HIDDEN-BALL GAME: HOPT 359 
The external surfaces are marked with burned designs of rain 
cloud and five-pointed star, eagle and butterfly, bear’s paw, and eagle 
and Sho-tuk-nung-wa, the Heart of the Sky god. 
Horr. Oraibi, Arizona. (Cat. no. 67056, Field Columbian Mu- 
seum. ) 
Set of four wooden cylinders, 14 inches in diameter, three of them 
34 inches in height, with top carved to represent a cloud terrace, 
Fig. 474. 
Fig. 472-475. Wooden tubes for hiding game; height, 6 inches; Hopi Indians, Oraibi, Arizona: 
cat. no. 22550, United States National Museum, 
and one 3 inches in height, with a deep groove cut near the upper 
part, within which is tied a string of beads, thirty-four of blue 
glass and five of coral (figure 476). This last cylinder has a 
hemispherical opening at both top and bottom, while the others 
have such an opening only at the bottom. Collected by Rev. 
H. R. Voth. 
Oraibi, Arizona. (Cat. no. 67055, Field Columbian Mu- 
seum. ) 
