630 GAMES OF THE NORTH AMERICAN INDIANS [s7TH. any. 24 
MARIPOSAN STOCK 
Cuuxcuanst. Pickayune, Madera county, California. (Cat. no. 
70895, Field Columbian Museum. ) 
Two mountain mahogany balls, 14 inches in diameter. Collected by 
Dr J. W. Hudson. 
Mrxep Trives. Tule River reservation, California. 
Dr J. W. Hudson describes the following game: 
The ball is called o-lol, and the stick, ka-tal. The goals, to-lin, are two pairs 
of upright sticks, placed at the ends of the course, at a distance of 400 yards. 
Fig. 811. 
Fia. 808. Shinny ball; diameter, 3} inches; Kiowa Indians, Oklahoma; cat. no. 152903, United 
States National Museum. 
Fia. 809. Shinny stick; length, 30 inches; Kiowa Indians, Oklahoma; cat. no. 152908, United 
States National Museum. 
Fig. 810. Shinny ball; diameter, 3} inches; Kiowa Indians, Oklahoma; cat. no. 152904, United 
States National Museum. 
Fig. 811. Shinny ball and stick; diameter of ball, 2} inches; length of stick, 40 inches; Yokuts 
Indians, Tule River reservation, California; cat. no. 70399, 70400, Field Columbian Museum. 
Yoxuts. Tule River reservation, Tulare county, California. (Cat. 
no. 70399, 70400, Field Columbian Museum.) 
Shinny stick, 40 inches in length (figure 811), made of oak, bent and 
fire seasoned at the lower end, with a red stripe near the crook; 
and a ball, 24 inches in diameter, made of an oak knot, rounded 
and seasoned. Collected by Dr J. W. Hudson. 
MOQUELUMNAN STOCK 
Awant. Yosemite valley, Mariposa county, California. (Cat. no. 
70229, Field Columbian Museum.) 
Four mountain mahogany ball sticks, 4 feet in length, with recurved 
ends. Collected by Dr J. W. Hudson. 
