900 



WALAS WALLIE 



[B. A. E. 



1856 (Yuma name). Hualpais.— Ind. Aff. Rep 

 1863,390,1864. Hualpas.— U.S Stat, xxill, 377, 1885. 

 Hulapais.— Ind. Aff. Rep. 1867, 381, 1868. Hwala- 

 pai.— Ibid., 246, 1.S77. Jaguallapai. — Garces (1776) , 

 Diary, 308, 1900. Jagullapai.— Garc<:'s (1775-76), mis- 

 quoted by Orozco y Berra, Geog., 41, 1864. Jaguya- 

 pay. — Escudero, Not. Estad. de Chihuahua, 228, 

 1834. Jallaguapais.— Garces, op eit.,309. Jaquala- 

 pai. — Font, map (1777), in Bancroft, Ariz, and N. 

 Mex., 393, 1889. Jaquallapai.— Ga'-ces (177.5-76), 

 quoted by Bancroft, ibid., 394. Mataveke-Paya.— 

 Corbusier, MS.,B. A. E., 27, ls73-75(' people to the 

 north' [?]: Yavapai name). Oohp. — ten Kate, 

 Reizen, 160, 1885 (Pima name). Oop.— Ibid, (al- 

 ternative form). Pa xuado ameti. — Gatschet in 

 Zeitschr. f. Ethnol., 86, 1886 ('people far down 

 river': Yavapai name). Seta Koxniname. — ten 

 Kate, Synonymic, 7, 1884 (Hopi name). Tab- 

 kepaya. — Gatschet, Yuma-Sprachstamm, ii, 124, 

 1877 (Yavapai name; abbr. from Matilvekepaya). 

 Tiqui-Llapais. — Domenech, Deserts N. A., I, 444, 

 1860. Walapai kwe.— ten Kate, Synonymic, 7, 

 1884 (Zuni name; fc)('6'=' people'). Waiapais.— 

 Bell in Jour Ethnol. Soc. Lond., I, 243, 1869. 

 "Wal-la-pais. — Powell in Scribner's Mag., 213, Dec. 

 1875. Walyepai.— Kroeber in Univ. Cal. Pub., iv, 

 107, 1907 (Chemehuevi name). Xawalvapay. — 

 Harrington in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, xxi, 324, 1908 

 ('pine-tree folk'; own name). 



Walas ( W(Vlas, ' the great ones ' ) . A 

 gens of the Nakoaktok and of the Mamale- 

 lekala Kwakiutl tribes. — Boas in Eep. 

 U. S. Nat. Mus. 1895, 329, 1897. 



"Walas Kwakiutl ( 'the great Kwakiutl ' ) . 

 A sept of the true Kwakiutl, comprising 

 the Tsentsenkaio, Gyekem, Wanlipoe, 

 TIekem, and Tletlkete gentes. Pop. 30 in 

 1889, the last time they were enumerated 

 separately. 



La'kuilila.— Boas in Rep. U. S. Nat. Mus. 1895, 330, 

 1897 ('the tramps': a nickname). Lock-qua- 

 lillas.— Lord, Natur. in Brit. Col., I, 165, ISdO. 

 Wa'las Kwa-kiutl. — Boas, op. cit., 330. Walis-kwa- 

 ki-ool. — Dawson in Trans. Roy. Soc. Can., sec. ii, 

 65, 1887. Waw-lis-knahkewlth.— Can. Ind. Aff., 

 189, 1884. Waw-lis-knahk-newith.— Ibid., 1889, 270, 

 1890. 



Walasnomoqois. An ancestor of a Kwa- 

 kiutl gens whose name was sometimes 

 given to the gens itself. — Boas in Peter- 

 manns Mitteil., pt. 5, 131, 1887. 



Waleghaunwohan ('boil food with the 

 paunch skin'). A band of the Brule 

 Teton Sioux. 



Those that boil their dishes. — Culbert.son in Smith- 

 son. Rep. 18.50, 141, 1851. Walega-oij-wohai). — Dor- 

 sey (after Cleveland) in 15th Rep. B. A. E., 219, 

 1897. Walexa-c-woha''.— Ibid. 



Walekhe ( Wd-re-k^e). The site of an 

 old village probably occupied by San Luis 

 Obispo Indians, on Santa Maria cr., San 

 Luis Obispo co., Cal. — Schumacher in 

 Smithson. Rep. 1874, 343, 1875. 



Wallaneg. See Woolyneag. 



Wallanmi. A Costanoan village for- 

 merly within 10 m. of Santa Cruz mission, 

 Cal.— Taylor in Cal. Farmer, Apr. 5, 1860. 



Wallawalla ( 'little river') . A Shahap- 

 tian tribe formerly living on lower Walla- 

 walla r. and along the e. bank of the Co- 

 lumbia from Snake r. nearly to the Uma- 

 tilla in Washington and Oregon. While 

 a distinct dialect, their language is closely 

 related to the Nez Perce. Their number 

 was estimated by Lewis and Clark as 1,600 

 in 1805, but it is certain this figure includ- 

 ed other bands now recognized as inde- 



pendent. By treaty of 1855 they were re- 

 moved to the Umatilla res. in Oregon, 

 where they are now (1910) said to num- 

 ber 461, but are much mixed Avith 

 Nez Perces, Umatilla, and Cayuse. In 

 the Wasco treaty of 1855, by which the 

 Warm Springs res. was established, a 

 numl^er of Shahaptian tribes or bands 

 are mentioned as divisions of the Walla- 

 walla which had no real connection with 

 that tribe. ( l. f. ) 



Oualla-Oualla.— Dufiot do Mofras, Oreg., ii, 335, 

 1844. Ouallas-Ouallas. — Stuart in Nouv. Ann 

 Voy., XII, 36, 1821. Wahlahwahlah.— Domenech, 

 Deserts N. Am., ii, 188, 1860. Walawala.— Gallatin 

 in Trans. Am. Ethnol. Soc, ii, 73, 1848. Wal-a- 

 Waltz.— Ga.ss, .Tour., 203, 1807. Wallah Wallah.— 

 Stevens in Ind. Aff. Rep., 426, 1852. Wal-la-wal- 

 la.— Gass, Jour., 205, 1807. Walla- Wallahs.— Wy- 

 eth (1.S48) in Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, i, 221, 1851. 

 Walla-Walla-pum.— Lord, Nat. in Brit. Col., 245, 



WOMAN'S SHIRT — WALLAWALLA 



1866. Wal-la-waltz.— Gas.s, Jour., 203, 1807. Wal- 

 lawoUah.— Cass (1834) quoted bv Schoolcraft, 

 Ind. Tribes, iii, 609, 1853. Wallewahos.— Gallatin 

 in Trans. Am. Antiq. Soc.ii, map, 1836. Wallow 

 Wallow. — Lewis and Clark Exped., Coues ed., 

 969,1893. WoUahwollah.— Ind. Afl. Rep., 252, 18.54. 

 Wollaolla.— Morse, Rep. to Sec. War, 370, 1822. 

 Wollawalla. — Ibid., 369. WoUawoUahs. — Lewis 

 and Clark Exped., ll, 253, 1814. WoUawwallah.— 

 Ibid., I, map, 1817. Wol-law-wol-lah.— Ibid., i, 

 map, 1814. 



Wallets. See Receptacles. 



"Wallie (from ?ra/^iw, 'down below'). A 

 name said to have been applied by Yo- 

 semite Indians to all tribes living below 

 them, as on the Stanislaus and Tuolumne 

 rs., Cal. Probably only the country, not 

 its inhabitants, were actually so called. 

 Most or all of them belonged to the 

 Mo(|nelumnan family. 



Wallas. -Patrick in Ind. Aff. Rep. 1856, 240, 1857 

 (applied to Indians of Tuolumne co., Cal.). Wal'- 



