Northwest History. Aviation 8. Birds, United States.

Hungry Birds Take Relics Of Russians. Hungry Birds Take Relics of Russians JUNEAU, Alaska—(American Wire) — Early Russian traders used red and blue beads in carrying on their trade with coast Indians and Eskimos. Numerous blue beads can still be found around deserted Indian villages. But few red bea...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 1937
Subjects:
Online Access:http://content.libraries.wsu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/clipping/id/86163
id ftwashstatelib:oai:content.libraries.wsu.edu:clipping/86163
record_format openpolar
spelling ftwashstatelib:oai:content.libraries.wsu.edu:clipping/86163 2023-05-15T16:07:23+02:00 Northwest History. Aviation 8. Birds, United States. Spokane Press 1937-01-20 Hungry Birds Take Relics Of Russians. 1937-01-20 http://content.libraries.wsu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/clipping/id/86163 English eng nwh-s-8-9-4 nwh-s-8-9-5 (duplicate) http://content.libraries.wsu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/clipping/id/86163 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/CNE/1.0 Copyright not evaluated. Contact original newspaper publisher for copyright information. Northwest History Aviation box 8 hungry birds relics Russians Juneau Alaska coast Indians Eskimos blue beads deserted Indian villages red beads huckleberries Northwest Pacific -- History -- 20th century Aviation Text Clippings 1937 ftwashstatelib 2021-07-26T19:16:25Z Hungry Birds Take Relics Of Russians. Hungry Birds Take Relics of Russians JUNEAU, Alaska—(American Wire) — Early Russian traders used red and blue beads in carrying on their trade with coast Indians and Eskimos. Numerous blue beads can still be found around deserted Indian villages. But few red beads are ever seen. Birds have mistaken them for huckleberries. Text eskimo* Alaska Washington State University: WSU Libraries Digital Collections Indian Pacific
institution Open Polar
collection Washington State University: WSU Libraries Digital Collections
op_collection_id ftwashstatelib
language English
topic hungry birds
relics
Russians
Juneau
Alaska
coast Indians
Eskimos
blue beads
deserted Indian villages
red beads
huckleberries
Northwest
Pacific -- History -- 20th century
Aviation
spellingShingle hungry birds
relics
Russians
Juneau
Alaska
coast Indians
Eskimos
blue beads
deserted Indian villages
red beads
huckleberries
Northwest
Pacific -- History -- 20th century
Aviation
Northwest History. Aviation 8. Birds, United States.
topic_facet hungry birds
relics
Russians
Juneau
Alaska
coast Indians
Eskimos
blue beads
deserted Indian villages
red beads
huckleberries
Northwest
Pacific -- History -- 20th century
Aviation
description Hungry Birds Take Relics Of Russians. Hungry Birds Take Relics of Russians JUNEAU, Alaska—(American Wire) — Early Russian traders used red and blue beads in carrying on their trade with coast Indians and Eskimos. Numerous blue beads can still be found around deserted Indian villages. But few red beads are ever seen. Birds have mistaken them for huckleberries.
format Text
title Northwest History. Aviation 8. Birds, United States.
title_short Northwest History. Aviation 8. Birds, United States.
title_full Northwest History. Aviation 8. Birds, United States.
title_fullStr Northwest History. Aviation 8. Birds, United States.
title_full_unstemmed Northwest History. Aviation 8. Birds, United States.
title_sort northwest history. aviation 8. birds, united states.
publishDate 1937
url http://content.libraries.wsu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/clipping/id/86163
geographic Indian
Pacific
geographic_facet Indian
Pacific
genre eskimo*
Alaska
genre_facet eskimo*
Alaska
op_source Northwest History Aviation box 8
op_relation nwh-s-8-9-4
nwh-s-8-9-5 (duplicate)
http://content.libraries.wsu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/clipping/id/86163
op_rights http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/CNE/1.0
Copyright not evaluated. Contact original newspaper publisher for copyright information.
_version_ 1766403479250665472