498 GAMES OF THE NORTH AMERICAN INDIANS  [ETH. ann. 24 
is thrown at the wheel by hand. The special arrow is called mé6t6wu. There 
is no special name for this game, but they say “ play with the wheel,” or * shoot 
the wheel,” mét6wu. 
Mono. Hooker cove, Madera county, California. (Cat. no, 71452. 
Field Columbian Museum.) 
Fic. 652. Lance-and-peg game; length of lances, 6 feet; length of peg, 3 inches; Mono Indians 
Madera county, California; cat. no. 71432, Field Columbian Museum. 
Four lances (figure 652), about 6 feet in length, with butts unpeeled, 
and a small cylindrical wooden block, 3 inches in length. Col- 
lected by Dr J. W. Hudson, who describes them as implements 
for the lance-and-peg game. 
Fic. 658. Netted game hoop and feathered darts; diameter of hoop, 7 inches; length of darts, 
12 inches; Paiute Indians, southern Utah; cat. no. 9428, 9429, Peabody Museum of American 
Archeology and Ethnology. 
Parure. Southern Utah. (Cat. no. 9428, 9429, Peabody Museum 
of American Archeology and Ethnology.) 
Small hoop made of a bent twig, about 7 inches in diameter, cov- 
ered with a net of yucca fiber, as shown in figure 653, and two 
feather darts, 12 inches in length, consisting of pins of hard wood 
