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Almighty Voice's Rifle
The Blackfoot War Lodge: Its Construction and Use
British Columbia Indian Reserves Mineral Resources Act
Chinook Hymns, 6th Edition
Historical note:
The Chinook Jargon, Past and Present
The Commission of 1885 to the North-West Territories
Conjuring Among the Kiowa
Correspondence and Circulars - Rex v. Angus H. Canadian
Historical note:
Harold Nelson Woodsworth served as an Indian Agent at a number of agencies in Saskatchewan.Culture: Background for Learning
The Development of Ethnological Theory as Illustrated by Studies of the Plains Sun Dance
[Duck Lake Agency] Agent's Notebook
An Indian Agent's notebook from the [Duck Lake Agency]. Note subjects include grocery lists and prices, wartime pricing figures, travel details, medical admissions, legal matters, animal head counts and housing construction.
Historical note:
Harold Nelson Woodsworth served as an Indian Agent at a number of agencies in Saskatchewan.
The Face Pullers: Ch.1 Images - Chief Sleeping Bull in Warriors Dress
The Face Pullers: Ch.1 Images - Red River Cart and Woman - (Washee Joe)
The Face Pullers - Unused Photos- Commisioner Amedee Forget with Chiefs and Elders
Father and Mother of Almighty Voice
Food Plants of the North American Indians
Forest, Lake, and Prairie: Twenty Years of Frontier Life in Western Canada, 1842-62
A Haida Grammar
Images Used: Chapter 2 (A Dying Race): "Autumn Hunter"
Images Used: Chapter 2 (A Dying Race):"Gentleman Joe"
An Indian on the Problems of His Race
"Indian Wigwams and Northern Camp-Fires": A Criticism
Indians - Six Nations
An Iroquois Condoling Council: A Study of Aboriginal American Society and Government
Kamloops Wawa, Issue 124
Kamloops Wawa, Issue 125
Kamloops Wawa, Issue 126
Kamloops Wawa, Issue 127
Historical note:
Photoengravings of Mgr. De Mazenod and the Late Most Rev. A. Tache, O.M.IKamloops Wawa, Issue 128
Kamloops Wawa, Issue 129
Kamloops Wawa, Issue 130
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Photoengravings: Coldwater Scenery (p. 100); and The Indian Chiefs of British Columbia (p. 106).Kamloops Wawa, Issue 131
Kamloops Wawa, Issue 132
Historical note:
Photoengravings: Douglas Lake Indians (p. 132); and Group at North Bend, B.C. (p. 134).Kamloops Wawa, Issue 132/133 Supplement
Kamloops Wawa, Issue 133
Kamloops Wawa, Issue 133, Specimen Copy
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Photoengravings: The Indian Chiefs of British Columbia (forty men and eight missionaries); St. Louis Mission - Sechelt Village; St. Louis Mission, Kamloops BC.Kamloops Wawa, Issue 134
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Photoengraving: Rev. Father Martinet (p. 164).Kamloops Wawa, Issue 134 Specimen
Historical note:
Photoengraving: The Indian Chiefs of British Columbia.Kamloops Wawa, Issue 135
Language, Legends, and Lore of the Carrier Indians
Life Among the Red Men of America
Micmac Customs and Traditions
Mother, Son and Wife of Almighty Voice Standing Beside Grave of Almighty Voice
The Navaho Indians and the Ghost Dance of 1890
Nipawi, on the Saskatchewan River, and its Historic Sites
This history deals primarily with the fur trade and the numerous posts in the "Nipawi", or Fort a la Corne and Nipawin areas along the Saskatchewan River from the 1750s to the 1790s. It contains historical and field research by Morton on the various French, Northwest Company, Independent, and Hudson's Bay Company posts found in this region of what is today Saskatchewan. Morton also discusses the war between the Cree and the original Atsina, or Gros Ventre, inhabitants of the area, as well as trade between First Nations and Europeans.
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