CULIN] HOOP AND POLE: CHEYENNE 445 
CHEYENNE and Arapano. Oklahoma. (Cat. no. 203789, United 
States National Museum.) 
Hoop (figure 578), 12 inches in diameter, laced with rawhide, the 
leather passing forty-eight times around the edge. Half the net 
on one side of the principal division is painted blue and the 
other half red; the colors are reversed on the opposite side. 
Collected by E. Granier. 
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Fig. 578. Fig. 579. 
FiaG. 578. Netted hoop; diameter, 12 inches; Cheyenne and Arapaho Indians, Oklahoma; cat. no. 
203789, United States National Museum. 
Fie. 579. Netted hoop; diameter, 13} inches; Cheyenne Indians, Oklahoma; cat. no. 165845, United 
States National Museum. 
Curyvenne. Oklahoma. (Cat. no. 165845, United States National 
Museum.) 
Hoop, a bent sapling laced with a net of rawhide, as shown in figure 
579; diameter, 134 inches; the thong passes over the edge thirty- 
six times. Collected by Rev. H. R. Voth. 
Two other Cheyenne gaming hoops in the United States National 
Museum (cat. no. 152814), diameters, 12 and 13 inches, collected by 
Mr Mooney, appear to be modeis. The net is irregular, and does 
not seem to be put on with the system and care that characterize the 
old hoops. 
Darlington, Oklahoma. (Cat. no. 18735, Free Museum of 
Science and Art, University of Pennsylvania.) 
Hoop, a bent sapling 7 inches in diameter, with a network of raw- 
hide. A red down feather is attached to the hoop by a sinew. 
The netting, which is coarse, passes over 
Apparently a model. 
Collected by Mr George E. Starr. 
the hoop eighteen times. 
Oklahoma. 
Mr Louis L. Meeker thus describes the hoop game, ha-ko-yu-tsist : 
