Annual Report of the Commissioner of Indian Affairs to the Secretary of the InteriorThe Office., 1930 |
No grāmatas satura
1.–5. rezultāts no 18.
. lappuse
... . June 14 , 1858 Do. California . Arkansas Nov. 8 , 1858 Do. May 4 , 1859 Do. 2 Ewing and all following Secretaries of the Interior . III Commissioners of Indian Affairs - Continued Foreword Reorganization and decentralization_.
... . June 14 , 1858 Do. California . Arkansas Nov. 8 , 1858 Do. May 4 , 1859 Do. 2 Ewing and all following Secretaries of the Interior . III Commissioners of Indian Affairs - Continued Foreword Reorganization and decentralization_.
. lappuse
United States. Bureau of Indian Affairs. Commissioners of Indian Affairs - Continued Foreword Reorganization and decentralization_ Construction__ . Appropriations . Personnel . Commissioner Dole , William P .. Cooley , Dennis N Bogy ...
United States. Bureau of Indian Affairs. Commissioners of Indian Affairs - Continued Foreword Reorganization and decentralization_ Construction__ . Appropriations . Personnel . Commissioner Dole , William P .. Cooley , Dennis N Bogy ...
3. lappuse
... Continued progress in the general medical work of the Indian field service has been effected during the year . The number of Indians seeking medical and hospital relief for conditions requiring these services is constantly on the ...
... Continued progress in the general medical work of the Indian field service has been effected during the year . The number of Indians seeking medical and hospital relief for conditions requiring these services is constantly on the ...
7. lappuse
... continued and suplemented during the year . The increased appropriations mentioned have begun to yield results , and while a large part of the improvement to date has necessarily been on the material side - better feeding and clothing ...
... continued and suplemented during the year . The increased appropriations mentioned have begun to yield results , and while a large part of the improvement to date has necessarily been on the material side - better feeding and clothing ...
11. lappuse
... continued . All Navajo schools now have native weavers who teach blanket weaving to the girls . Pottery is taught at Albuquerque and Santa Fe and also in the Maricopa , Hopi , and Pueblo day schools . Many of the Indian boys and girls ...
... continued . All Navajo schools now have native weavers who teach blanket weaving to the girls . Pottery is taught at Albuquerque and Santa Fe and also in the Maricopa , Hopi , and Pueblo day schools . Many of the Indian boys and girls ...
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Bieži izmantoti vārdi un frāzes
according to tribe acres Agency and Reservation allotments allottees Apache appropriations approximately beds boarding contract Catholic Cheyenne Choctaw COMMISSIONER OF INDIAN construction Creek Dakota District East South Central ended June 30 enumerated at Federal Federal agencies according fiscal year ended Five Civilized Tribes Flathead forest Goshute grades Hopi Hospital INDIAN AFFAIRS Indian boarding schools Indian children Indian lands Indian Reservation Indian school Indian Service June 30 jurisdiction where enrolled Klamath Klamath Reservation Lac du Flambeau ment Navajo Nonreservation Oklahoma Paiute personnel Pima population in continental ported ported ported Pueblo Pueblo Pueblo purchase Quapaw Quinaielt reimbursable REPORT OF COMMISSIONER Reservation Chippewa Reservation Mission Reservation Sioux Residing at jurisdiction Sanatorium Seminole Sex Sex Sex Sex Sex Total Shoshone South Dakota Subagency TABLE 2.-Indian population Tenino Tenino Warm tion Total Male Female tribal funds tribe Sex Sex United States enumerated vation Walker River Washington Western Navajo Yakima
Populāri fragmenti
24. lappuse - ... States v. County of Kootenai, Idaho (290 Fed. 628), it being also held that patents so issued did not convey the legal title and that the lands were not subject to taxation during the years the invalid patents were outstanding. Many of the fee patents erroneously so issued have since been canceled under authority of the act of February 26, 1927 (44 Stat. 1247), as amended by the act of February 21, 1931 (46 Stat.
30. lappuse - An Indian, as defined by the Indian Service, includes any person of Indian blood who through wardship, treaty, or inheritance has acquired certain rights. The Census Bureau defines an Indian as a person having Indian blood to such a degree as to be recognized in his community as an Indian. Furthermore, the population enumerated at the Federal agencies is not necessarily domiciled on or near the reservations.
16. lappuse - The act making appropriations for the Department of the Interior for the fiscal year 1931...
32. lappuse - ... jurisdiction. Of the 32,447 Indians residing elsewhere on April 1, 1930, 41 were living in the New England States, 208 in the Middle Atlantic, 3,633 in the East North Central, 9,234 in the West North Central, 437 in the South Atlantic, 93 in the East South Central, 2,166 in the West South Central, 5,120 in the Mountain States, and 6,024 in the Pacific States, and for 5,491 Indians the residence was either not reported or unknown. Oklahoma has far more Indians than any other State. If the Federal...
32. lappuse - Indian population not actually enumerated (termed an estimate) is 118,733, which is compiled as follows: California, Sacramento Agency, part of, 1930 estimate 8, 761 Michigan, 1927 census 1, 192 New York...