cULIN] HIDDEN-BALL GAME: ZUNI 373 
Collected by Col. James Stevenson and designated as an especial 
hereditary set of the tribe. 
Cat. no. 69268. Four wooden cylinders (figure 493), 8} inches in 
height and 2} inches in diameter, with a cylindrical cavity in 
one end 2 inches deep and 1% inches in diameter, the other end 
charred for a distance of 1£ inches, the other external surface 
originally painted white; accompanied with a stone ball, a white 
concretion,? 14 inches in diam- 
eter. Collected by Col. James 
Stevenson. 
Cat. no. 69269. Four wooden cyl- 
inders, 64 inches in height and 
12 inches in diameter, with a 
cylindrical cavity in one end 
4 inches in diameter, the up- 
per ends blackened to the depth 
of one-fourth of an inch, the 
body whitewashed. Collected Fig. 493. Wooden tubes for hiding Be ies 
by Col. James Stevenson. height, 8] inches; Zuni Indians, Zui, New 
Cat. no. 69270. Four wooden cyl- — Mexita: cat, no. 69288, DE ae 
inders, 7 inches in height and 
14 inches in diameter, with a cylindrical cavity in one end 1} inches 
deep and 14 inches in diameter, the upper ends painted black to a 
depth of about 1 inch. Collected by Col. James Stevenson. 
Cat. no. 69271. Four wooden cylinders, 64 inches in height and 1% 
inches in diameter, with a cylindrical cavity in one end 1 inch 
deep and 14 inches in diameter, the upper ends blackened to a 
depth of one-half of an inch; accompanied with a bundle of 
counting straws of broom grass. Collected by Col. James 
Stevenson. 
Cat. no. 69272. Four wooden cylinders, 6 inches in height and 13 
inches in diameter, with a conical cavity in one end, the upper 
ends painted black to the depth of 12 inches. Collected by Col. 
James Stevenson. 
Mul 
Zox1. Zuni, New Mexico. (Cat. no. 32599, Free Museum of Science 
and Art, University of Pennsylvania.) 
Four wooden tubes, 22 inches in diameter and 12} inches in height, 
painted black at the top, the body of the cylinder showing traces 
of white; accompanied with a stone ball (figure 494) 14 inches 
in diameter and a bundle of counting straws (figure 495) 144 
inches in length. Collected by the writer in 1902. 
This set is similar to one in the United States National Museum 
(cat. no. 69351). 
“Quartz grains cemented together by calcium carbonate, like so-called Fontainebleau 
limestone. 
