BOLL. 30] 



JOSQUIGARD JULIAKEHAAB 



635 



their leader, won unstinted praise from 

 their conquerors. The promises made to 

 Joseph and his people were ignored, and 

 the Indians,numbering431, were removed 

 to Ft Leavenworth, Kans., and afterward 

 to Indian Ter., where they remained for 

 several years, always yearning for the 

 mountains and valleys of Idaho. In 1883 

 a party of 33 women and children were 

 allowed to go back to their old home, 

 and were followed the next year by 118 

 others. Joseph and the remaining mem- 

 bers of his band, however, numbering 

 150, were not permitted to return to Idaho, 

 but were sent to the C'olville res.. Wash. 

 He lived to visit President Roosevelt and 

 Gen. Miles at Washington in Mar., 1903, 

 butdiedatNespelim, on the Colville res., 

 Wash., Sept. 21, 1904. According to the 

 Indian agent he had become reconciled to 

 civilization in his last years, lending his 

 aid in the education of the children of 

 his tribe, and discouraging gambling and 

 drunkenness. 



Josquigard. A former village, presum- 

 ably Costanoan, connected with Dolores 

 mission, San Francisco, Cal. — Tavlor in 

 Cal. Farmer, Oct. 18, 1861. Cf. Joqmznra. 



Jotars. An unidentitied tribe of Texas, 

 mentioned in the Mezieres MS. of 1779, 

 together with the Kichai and Nasoni, 

 from whom an epidemic had spread to 

 the Tawakoni, Caddo, and other tribes. 

 The Jotars lived in a locality remote 

 from Nacogdoches, j^robably toward the 

 N. w. (h. e. b. ) 



Jova. A formerOpata division inhabit- 

 ing principally the vallev of the stream on 

 which Sahuaripa (lat. 29°, Ion. 109°) is 

 situated, in Sonora, Mexico, and extend- 

 ing E. into Chihuahua, to and including 

 the village of Dolores on a s. tributary 

 of Rio Aros. Its members are now 

 completely Mexicanized. The language 

 spoken differed dialectically from the 

 Opata proper and the Eudeve. The Jova 

 settlements were Arivechi, Chamada, 

 Natora, Ponida, Sahuaripa (in part), San 

 Mateo, Malzura, Santa Maria de los Do- 

 lores, Santo Tomas, Satechi (?), Servas, 

 Setasura, and Teopari. (f. w. h.) 



Jaba.— Davila. Sonora Hist., 316, 1894. Joba.— 

 Ibid., 317. Jobal.— OrozcoyBerra, Geog., 315, 1864. 

 Jobales. — Ibid. Jova. — Ibid. Ovas. — Ibid. Sahua- 

 ripas. — Ibid. 



Joytudachi. Apparently a former vil- 

 lage of the Opata in the Sierra de Baserac, 

 one of the x. w. spurs of the Sierra Madre, 

 in N. E. Sonora, Mexico. — Bandelier in 

 Arch. Inst. Papers, iii, 58, 1890. 



Joyvan. Mentioned by La Harpe ( Mar- 

 gry, Dec, vi, 277, 1886), "together with the 

 Quidehais, Naouydiches, Huanchanes, 

 and others, as a wandering tribe, appar- 

 ently w. of southern Arkansas in 1719. 

 Unidentified. 



Juajona. A former rancheria, j^robably 

 Papago, near San Xavier del Bac in s. 

 Arizona; visited by Kino and Mange 



in 1699. — Mange quoted by Bancroft, 

 Ariz, and N. Mex., 358, 1889. 



Juan Bautista. A Kawia village of the 

 Cabezon division, in San Bernardino co., 

 Cal.— Burton in II. R. Ex. Doc. 76, 34th 

 Cong., 3d sess., 117, 1857. 



Juanenos. A Shoshonean division on 

 the California coast, named from San Juan 

 Capistrano mission ( (|. v. ), at which they 

 were principally gathered, extending n. 

 to Alisos cr. and s. to a point between 

 San' Onofre and Las Flores crs. Their 

 language forms one group with those of 

 the Lui.senos, Kawia, and Aguas Calien- 

 tes (q. v.). According to Ames (Rep. 

 jNIission Inds., 5, 1873) there were only 40 

 individuals in the neighborhood in 1873; 

 of these most are now dead and the re- 

 mainder scattered. 



Gaitchim. — Gatsclu't in Rep. Chief of Engrs., pt. 3, 

 555, IsTti. Juanenos. — Kroeber, inf'n, 19U5 (so 

 called bv the Indians and Spaniards). Ketela. — 

 Hale, Ethnog. and Philol., 222, 1846 (sig. 'my 

 langiiage'). 



Judac. The largest of three large Pima 

 rancherias on Gila r., s. Ariz., in the 18th 

 century, now^ prol)al)ly known by some 

 other name. — Villa-Senor, Theatro Am., 

 pt. 2, 404, 1748. 



Judosa. A village or community e. of 

 the mouth of Trinity r., Tex., in a region 

 generally controlled l)y tril)es of the At- 

 tacapan family in the 17th century. 

 Jacdoas. — Uhde. Liinder, 159, 1861. Judosa. — De 

 I'Isle, map (1700) in Wlnsor, Hist. Am., n, 294, 

 ]^86. 



Jugelnute. A Kaiyuhkhotana division 

 on Shageluk and Innoko rs., Alaska; pop. 

 150 in 1880. It included the villages of 

 Anilukhtakpak, Inselnostlinde, Intenlei- 

 den, Khuligichakat, Kuingshtetakten, 

 Kvigimpainagmute, and Vagitchitchate. 

 Chageluk settlements. — Petroff in 10th Census, 

 Alaska, 12, 1884. Inkalit-Ingelnut.— Schott in 

 Erman, Arehiv, vii. 480, 1849 (misprint). Jugel- 

 nuten. — Holmberg, Ethnog. Skizz., 7, 1855. 

 Jugelnuts. — Keane in Stanford, Conipend., 517, 

 1.S78. Ounagountchagueliougiout. — Zagoskiii in 

 Nonv. Ann. V<iy-. '^lli s., xxi, map, 18.50. Shage- 

 look — Whymper, Alaska, map, ]S(i9. Shageluk.— 

 Sehwatka, Rep. on Alaska. 101, 1S85. Shaglook, — 

 Whvmper, Alaska, 26.5, 1869. Takai'-yakho- 

 tan'a.— Dall in Cont. N. A. Ethnol., I, 26, 1877 

 (Athapascan name). Yugelnut — Zagoskin (1842) 

 quoted byPetrofTin 10th C'eii.sus, Alaska, 37, 1884. 



Juiclmn. A Costanoan division or vil- 

 lage in California, speaking a dialect very 

 similar to that of the Mtitsun. — Arroyo 

 de la Cuesta. Idiomas Californias, MS. 

 trans., B. A. E, 



Jukiusme. The ^loquelumnan Indians 

 on whose land the San Rafael mission, 

 Cal. , was built. Their language was iden- 

 tical with the Chokuyem, and their name 

 may be a distorted form of the same 

 word. 



Joukiousme.— Dnflot de Mofras, ExpL, ii, 391, 1844. 

 Jouskiousme. — Shea, Catholic Miss., 109, 1855. 

 San Rafael Indians. — PowersinCont. N. A. Ethnol., 

 lit, 195, 1877. Yonkiousme. — Latham in Trans. 

 Philol. Soc. Lond., 82,1856 (misquoted). 



Jnlianehaab. A Danish colony and Es- 

 kimo settlement on a small island, lat. 

 60° 43^ s. Greenland. 



