CULIN] DOUBLE BALL: CHIPPEWA 651 
Cat. no. ;2$;. Two wooden billets (figure 852), similar to the pre- 
ceding, but 44 inches in length, diameter 1} inches, unpainted, 
and tied together with a strip of the same bark. 
Collected in 1903 by Dr William Jones. 
Curprewa. Fort William, Ontario. (Cat. no. 73%, <$$;, Ameri- 
can Museum of Natural History.) 
Double ball (figure 853), two buckskin-covered bags made in one 
piece, 184 inches in length; with a stick, a sapling, 44 inches in 
length, painted red. 
Collected in 1903 by Dr William Jones. 
Turtle mountain, North Dakota. (American 
Museum of Natural History.) 
Cat. no. 73%. Two buckskin-covered bags (figure 
854), made in one piece, 20 inches in length, having 
Greek crosses made of green beads sewed on the 
opposite faces. Accompanied by a stick 264 inches 
in length, wrapped from the upper end with black 
Fig. 853. Pig. 854. 
Fig. 83. Double ball and stick; length of ball, 18; inches; length of stick, 44 inches: Chippewa 
Indians. Fort William, Ontario; cat. no. 7$4,, 72x, American Museum of Natural History 
Fic. 84. Double ball and stick; length of ball, 20 inches; length of stick, 26} inches; Chippewa 
Indians, Turtle mountain, North Dakota; cat. no. ;$3,, American Museum of Natural History. 
cloth for the greater part of its length, and ornamented with a 
band of red and three bands of white beads. 
Cat. no. 7345. A double ball, similar to the preceding, but decorated 
with white, red, and blue beads. 
These were collected in 1903 by Dr William Jones, who states that 
the goal is the bent limb of a tree or a stick that will hold the bag. 
the goals being from 100 to 200 yards apart. The stick is called 
wipawaganak: the bag, papasikawanag, meaning thing that is 
kicked. The game is called by the same name as the bag. 
