494 GAMES OF THE NORTH AMERICAN INDIANS’ [eru. any. 24 
Two men play. The ring is called sow-lai-kai-kas and the darts 
are known as tuk-tai-pow-ma. The counts depend on the way in 
which the darts fall in the ring—1, 2, 5, 10, 15, 20, according to the 
beads to which they are adjacent. 
————— : ee =| 
Fic. 645. Beaded game ring and darts; diameter of ring, 4 inches; length of darts, 11 inches; 
Umatilla Indians. Oregon: cat. no. 37539, Free Museum of Science and Art, University of 
Pennsylvania. 
SHASTAN STOCK 
t- to 7#4,, Ameri- 
ACHOMAWI. Tat creek, California. (Cat. no. ;2%% 
san Museum of Natural History.) 
Fic. 646, Bark game disk; diameter, 10 inches; Achomawi Indians, Hat creek, California; cat. 
no. ;#§;. American Museum of Natural History. 
Bark disk (figure 646), 10 inches in diameter, a bow and ten arrows. 
Collected in 1903 by Dr Roland B. Dixon, who describes the disk as. 
used as a rolling target. 
