615 GAMES OF THE NORTH AMERICAN INDIANS _ [E5TH. ANN. 24 
Arapano. Wind River reservation, Wyoming. (Cat. no. 36974, Free 
Museum of Science and Art, University of Pennsylvania.) 
Ball covered with buckskin (figure 789), flattened, with median seam, 
one face painted with a cross, dividing it into quarters, the 
other with a similar cross, the quarters each containing two dots, 
with a T-shaped mark between; diameter, 4 inches. Three 
metal dangles are attached to the center of one face. There is 
a thong loop for suspension. Collected by the writer in 1900. 
Wind River reservation, Wyoming. (Free Museum of Science 
and Art, University of Pennsylvania. ) 
Cat. no. 36976. Shinny stick (figure 791), besh, curved at the end 
and painted red and blue; length, 40 inches. Ball (figure 790) 
covered with buckskin, with median seam, one face painted red 
and one green; diameter, 34 inches. 
Fig. 791. 
Fig. 789. Shinny ball; diameter, 4 inches; Arapaho Indians, Wind River reservation, Wyoming; 
cat. no, 36974, Free Museum of Science and Art, University of Pennsylvania. 
Fic. 790. Shinny ball; diameter, 3} inches; Arapaho Indians, Wind River reservation, Wyoming; 
eat. no. 36976, Free Museum of Science and Art, University of Pennsylvania. 
Fie. 791. Shinny stick; length, 40 inches; Arapaho Indians, Wind River reservation, Wyoming; 
cat, no. 36976, Free Museum of Science and Art, University of Pennsylvania. 
Fic. 792. Shinny ball; diameter, 3} inches; Arapaho Indians, Wyoming; cat. no. 200764, United 
States National Museum. 
Cat. no. 36975. Shinny stick, besh, curved at the end and painted 
with bands of red and green; length, 34 inches. 
These were collected by the writer in 1900. 
Wyoming. (United States National Museum.) 
Cat. no. 200764. Beaded ball (figure 792), made of buckskin, slightly 
flattened, with buckskin thong for suspension; diameter, 34 
inches. The ball is completely covered with a ground of white 
glass beads divided by two intersecting lines of red beads into 
four segments, each of which contains a design in colored beads, 
probably representing conventionalized animal figures. The de- 
signs on opposite sides are alike. 
