NOZ 3 SMITHSONIAN EXPLORATIONS, I9Q15 99 
dialect. The revision of this material marked the completion of the 
work on the Calapooya (Kalapuya) languages which Dr. Frachten- 
berg began during the previous summer. It may not be out of place 
here to mention the fact that Louis Kenoyer is the last surviving 
member of the Atfalati (or Wapato Lake) tribe of the Kalapuya 
family. 
During the latter part of August Dr. Frachtenberg attended the 
Fic. 122.—Thomas Payne, the present 
nominal Chief of the Quileute. 
frst Indian Fair, which was held at Siletz, Oregon, by the various 
Indian tribes living at that agency. During this trip 52 Athapascan 
and Shastan songs were collected. 
In the month of November Dr. Frachtenberg commenced his 
ethnological researches of the Chimakuan family. Up to the present 
writing a preliminary survey of the morphological and syntactic 
structure of the Quileute language had been made, and 30 native 
myths and tales were collected. 
