510 GAMES OF THE NORTH AMERICAN INDIANS _ [eTH. ann. 24 
crosspieces are secured by a stout peg placed between them and 
the stick, and a piece of twig is bent and fastened so that its ends 
project upward for a distance of about 14 inches, just above the 
crossbars. One of the sticks is painted red and has a piece of 
red flannel attached to the bow, and the other is painted blue, 
with a black cloth flag. 
Collected by the writer in 1900. 
The game is called ha-ka’-ku-te, or ha-ka’ Shooting, receiving its 
name from the sticks, ha-kaé. Each man has a stick; the ring, can- 
hde’-ska, is rolled and it must go on one of the points to count. The 
name ha-ka’ means branching, having many prongs, like some deer 
horns.*. My informant defined it as forked. 
Eno.” North Carolina. 
John Lederer ¢ says: 
Their town is built round a field, where in their sports they exercise with so 
much labor and violence, and in so great numbers, that I have seen the ground 
wet with the sweat that dropped from their bodies; their chief recreation is 
slinging of stones. 
John Lawson @ says: 
These Indians are much addicted to a sport they call chenco, which is carried 
on with a staff and a bowl made of stone, which they trundle upon a smooth 
place, like a bowling green, made for that purpose, as I have mentioned before. 
(?) Camden, South Carolina. (Free Museum of Science and 
Art, University of Pennsylvania.) 
Cat. no. 13602. Biconcave disk of white quartzite (figure 675a), 
finely polished, 54 inches in diameter. 
1G. 675 a, b,c. Chunkee stones; diameters, 5}, 4, and 44 inches; Eno (?) Indians, Camden, South 
Carolina; cat. no. 13602, 18556, 13603, Free Museum of Science and Art, University of Pennsyl- 
vania. 
Cat. no. 13556. Biconcave disk of quartzite, stained yellow and 
« Riggs’s Dakota-English Dictionary, Washington, 1890, 
’T¢ is doubtful whether the Eno were of Siouan stock; they may have been Iroquoian. 
° Discoveries of John Lederer, p. 18, London, 1672; Rochester, 1902. 
¢ History of Carolina, p. 57, London, 1714. 
