BULL. 30] 



HUDDOH HUICHOL 



575 



Huddoh. A local name of the hump- 

 backed salmon [Salmo proteus); also 

 known as haddo, from huddo, the name 

 of this tish in Niskwalli (Rep. U. S. 

 Comm. Fish., 1872-73, p. 99), of the Sa- 

 lishan stock. (a. f. c. ) 



Hudedut {HMediit'). A former Takil- 

 man village at the forks of Rogue r. and 

 Applegate cr., Oreg. 



Howtetech.— Latham in Tran.s. Philol. Soc. Lond., 

 76, 1856 (misprint). How-te-te'-oh. — Gibbs in 

 Schooluraft, Ind. Tribes, in, 423, 1853 (possil)ly the 

 same, or mistaken for the Kikaktsik). Hu-de- 

 dut'.— Dorsey in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, iii,235, 1890. 



Huehuerig-ita. A former Opata pueblo 

 at Casas Grandes, at the w. foot of the 

 Sierra Madre, Chihuahua, Mexico. It 

 was already deserted in the 16th century. 

 Bandelier, Gilded Man, 142, 1893. 



Huelemin. A former Chumashan vil- 

 lage near Santa Barbara, Cal. — Taylor in 

 Cal. Farmer, Apr. 24, 1863. 



Huenejel. A former Chumashan vil- 

 lage near Purisima mission, Santa Bar- 

 bara CO., Cal. — Taylor in Gal. Farmer, 

 Oct. 18, 1861. Mentioned as if distinct 

 from Huenepel. 



Hueneme. A former Chumashan vil- 

 lage on the coast, a few miles s. of Saticoy 

 r., Ventura co., Cal. 



Hueneme, — Taylor in Cal. Farmer, July 2-4, 1863. 

 We-ne'-mu. — Henshaw, Buenaventura MS. vocab., 

 B. A. E., 1884. 



Huenepel. A former Chumashan vil- 

 lage near Purisima mission, Santa Bar- 

 bara CO., Cal. — Taylor in Cal. Farmer, 

 Oct. 18, 1861. Mentioned as if distinct 

 from Huenejel. 



Huepac. A Teguima Opata pueblo and 

 the seat of a Spanish mission founded in 

 1639; situated in Sonora, Mexico, on the 

 E. bank of Rio Sonora, below lat. 30°. 

 Pop. 268 in 1678, 71 in 1730. In addition 

 to its civilized Opata population it con- 

 tained 10 Yaqui in 1900. 

 Guipaca.— Kino, map (1702) in Stocklein, Neue 

 Welt-Bott, 1726. Huepac. — Davila, Sonora Histor- 

 ico, 317, 1894. Huepaca.— Orozco y Berra, Geog., 

 344, 1864. San Lorenzo Guepaca. — Ibid., 343. San 

 Lorenzo Huepaca.— Zapata (1678) quoted by Ban- 

 croft, No. Mex. State.s, 514, 1884. 



Huertas {Las Ilnertas; Span.: 'the 

 orchards' or 'kitchen gardens'). A clus- 

 ter of ruined pueblos 4 m. below Socorro, 

 N. Mex. (Abert in Emory, Recon., 495, 

 1848); probably originally inhabited by 

 the Piros. 



Hueso Parado (Span.: 'bone set up' or 

 'standing Iwne'). A former Pima and 

 Maricopa village on the Pima and Mari- 

 copa res., Gila r., Ariz.; pop. 263 Pima 

 and 314 Maricopa in 1858. 

 El Juez Farado. — Bell in Jour Ethnol. Soc. Lond., 

 1, 231, 1869 (misquoting Bailev). El Juez Tarado.— 

 Bailey in Ind. Aff. Rep., 207, 208, 1,S,5S. Hueso 

 Parrado.— Taylor in Cal. Farmer, June 19, 1863. 



Huexotitlan. A pueblo in Chihuahua, 

 Mexico, and the seat of a Spanish mission 

 with a mixed population of Nevome, 

 Tepehuane, and Tarahumare. Its in- 

 habitants are now civilized. 



Huejotitan. — Present name. Huexotitlan, — Ban- 

 croft, No. Mex. States, I, 598, 1884. San Geronimo 

 Huexotitlan.— Orozco y Berra, Geog., 324, 1864. 



Huhilp {HuIi-llp, 'on the edge'). A 

 village of the Fountain band of Upper 

 Lillooet, on Fountain cr. , an e. affluent 

 of upper Fraser r., Brit. Col. — Dawson in 

 Trans. Roy. Soc. Can. for 1891, sec. ii, 44. 



Huhlitaiga ( Ilu Hi-talga, ' war ford ' ) . 

 A lower Creek village on Chattahoochee 

 r., about the present Georgia- Alabama 

 boundary, the inhabitants of which in or 

 prior to 1799 removed to Oakfuski, set- 

 tling on the opposite side of the 'Talla- 

 poosa. 



Hohtatoga. — Swan (1791) in Schoolcraft, Ind. 

 Tribes, v, 262, 1855. Ho-ith-Ie-ti-gau.— Hawkins 

 (1799), Sketch, 4.5, 1848. Hothletega.— Bartram, 

 Travels, 462, 1791. Hothtetoga. — Swan misquoted 

 by Gatschet, Creek Migr. Leg., i, 131, 1884. 

 Hu'li-taiga. — Ibid, (correct form). 



Huhliwahli ('to apportion war'). A 

 former Upper Creek town on the right 

 bank of Tallapoosa r., 5 m. below Atasi, 

 in Macon co., Ala. It obtained its name 

 from the privilege of declaring war which 

 was accorded to it, the declaration being 

 sent from this town to Tukabatchi, thence 

 to the other villages. (a. s. g.) 



Cawalla.— H. R. Ex. Doc. 276, 24th Cong., 1st sess., 

 150,1836. Chiwalle.— Ibid. ,131. Cleewallees.— U. S. 

 Ind. Treat. (1797), 68, 1837. Cleu wathta.— Par- 

 sons in Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, iv, 575, 1854. 

 Clewalla.— U. S. Ind. Treat. (1827), 420, 1837. 

 Clewauleys. — Swan (1791) in Schoolcraft, Ind. 

 Tribes, v, 262, 1855. Clewella.— Devereux in H. 

 R. Doc. 274, 25th Cong., 2d sess., 8, 1838. Cle- 

 wulla.— Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, iv, ,578, 1854. 

 Cleyali.— Alcedo, Die. Geog., i, 589, 1786. Cluale.— 

 Bartram, Travels, 461, 1791. Cuwally. — Wood- 

 ward, Reminiscences, 14, 1859. Elewalies. — 

 Weatherford (1793) in Am. State Pap., Ind. Aff., 

 I, 385, 1832. Hoithlewalee.— Flint, Ind. Wars, 205, 

 1833. Ho-ith-le Waule.— Hawkins (1799), Sketch, 

 32, 1848. Hothleawally.— Woodward, Reminis- 

 cences, 76, 18.=)8. Hu'li Wa'hli.— Gatschet, Creek 

 Migr. Leg., i, 131, l.ssJ. Rolling Bullet.— Wood- 

 ward, op. cit. Sdewaetes.— Weatherford (1793) in 

 Am. State Pap., Ind. Aff., i, 385, 1832. Teguales.— 

 Barcia (1693 i, Ensayo, 313, 1723 (calledaTalapoosa 

 town). Tekeewaulees. — Doyell (1813) in Am. State 

 Pap., Ind. Aff., i, 841, 1832. Thlea Walla.— Wood- 

 ward, Reminiscences, 14, 75, 1858 ("Rolling 

 Bullet"). 



Huhliwahli. A town in the Creek Na- 

 tion, on North fork of Canadian r., above 

 Hillabi, Okla. 



Hu'li-Wa'li.— Gatschet, Creek Migr. Leg., ii, 185, 

 1888. 'Liwa'hli.— Ibid. 



Huhunata {Hu-hu'-na-la), A former 

 Chumasiian village near Santa Inez mis- 

 sion, Santa Barljara co., Cal. — Henshaw, 

 Santa Inez MS. vocab., B. A. E., 1884. 



Huiauulch. — A Clallam village, the mod- 

 ern Jamestown, 5 m. e. of Dungeness, 

 Puget sd.. Wash. 



Hui-au-ultc— Eells, letter, B. A. E., May 21, 1886. 

 Jamestown. — Ibid. 



Huichol. A tribe of the Piman stock, 

 numbering 3,000 to 4,000, living in the 

 rugged Sierra Madre of n. w. Jalisco, 

 Mexico. Their neighbors on the e. are 

 the Tepecano, on the w. the Cora; in the 

 N. their territory was formerly bounded 

 by that of the Tepehuane, and in the s. 

 by the Jalisco tribes proper, but these 



