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  1. 1
    2 digital object(s)
    Library / Indian Affairs Annual Reports, 1864 to 1990
    Item ID number:
    32627
    Year:
    1936
    ... fur is causing white trappers in many areas to invade more and more those trapping areas on which the Indians depend, so that results unsatisfactory to both 
  2. 2
    2 digital object(s)
    Library / Indian Affairs Annual Reports, 1864 to 1990
    Item ID number:
    32621
    Year:
    1936
    ... fur catch, only in part offset by higher prices. The fishing Indians of the Pacific benefited from larger catch and higher prices except in the Skeena 
  3. 3
    2 digital object(s)
    Library / Indian Affairs Annual Reports, 1864 to 1990
    Item ID number:
    32643
    Year:
    1936
    ... fur-bearing animals. A considerable number find employment in the lumber camps and others as day labourers. In the southern part of the province the Indians 
  4. 4
    2 digital object(s)
    Library / Indian Affairs Annual Reports, 1864 to 1990
    Item ID number:
    32644
    Year:
    1936
    ... fur companies, although their revenue from the latter sources, which was formerly considerable, has dwindled due to the introduction of air transport and 
  5. 5
    2 digital object(s)
    Library / Indian Affairs Annual Reports, 1864 to 1990
    Item ID number:
    32626
    Year:
    1936
    ... fur may be replenished. This, in other words, is a rotation system which is an economic device similar in principle to rotation of crops. As these questions 
  6. 6
    2 digital object(s)
    Library / Indian Affairs Annual Reports, 1864 to 1990
    Item ID number:
    32736
    Year:
    1936
    ... fur et à mesure que la colonisation progressait vers le nord et vers l'ouest. D'après les premiers traités ou actes de cession conclus avec les Indiens, on 
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