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About Weekly Chemawa American. (Chemawa, Or.) 189?-198? | View Entire Issue (Feb. 13, 1903)
8 THE CHEMAWA AMERICAN. (Continued from page one.) hearts will lia'en to our words and assist us in protecting us by g od laws, and re quiring ihe same to be enforced. There are four principal things wtiich the Indians desire the help of the Govern ment, viz: lt. Th it the fishing an 1 hunting grounds of ll.eir fithers he reserved for them and . their children, and that the whiles who have driven theui off of the same be ordered .by the 'government to leave them.. The Indians' Chief me h id of support is by li hing aud hu ting , and that is the nly wiv in .t of tliem cm live, as only a small number are educate I suf ficiently to go out into the towns of the land an 1 c6m pete with whites. 2nd. The Indians of Alaska pray t'l it the United States Government will Bet apart certain reservations for them and their children where they and their children can each have a home allotted to them, the same privi ges that the iidians.nf the United 8ta'es enjoy . We ask. this in re turn for a'l of Alisk which has p is-sed ia to the 'hands of the whites, without a murmur from us. We have given up a great deal and now we only ask the great and good Father at Washington to give us back a little of the land, in return for the much we gave him, and protect us from the encroiohments of grcdy white men who would drive us into the Sea in order to advance their interests. 3rd. Many of the Alaski Indi in are poor and destitute, and have to, beg from their friinds in order to live. We ask the government lo help the old and the desti tute, and to establish Industrial B mrding schools amODg the Indians of Alaska so as to' fit them for citizenship and self-support. , We need schools and education as much as the Indians of the United Sta'es. We are now a part of the United Stales, and we 'want to learn how to live like the good ' white men and adopt their laws and cus '.toms There are hundreds of Indian b tys " and girls in Alask who never saw a school.. Only a few are able to attend the mission schools, aud the oue small gov ernment school at Sitka, and the mist of the children mu -t groAf up in ijjn ir.mce superstition an I poverty. Weas't that il,e' United States will help the Al iska Indians just s it he'ps th South D ikota Indians and those of other psrts of the cou ,trv. We have never gone on the war path or given the gverntnent any trouble, and we feel we can app a ju -t'y f ir lielo m I pr,). teoti m as we bvong to Washington ju-t as much as any other Indians living iu the StaUs. 4i h. We ask th t laws will ba m vie and enforced which wi 1 compel the I idia'isof Alusk i tn give up their heathenish and superslili ills customs am mg tli-inselves as we want to live like white people and be governed by white man's liws. One evil custom, (as well as many others) I desire to speak abou. Th.it isin case of deat h, of a hu band or wife, the parents of the o ie dead siezes all i he prop Tty, s i t'.e iinma diate surviving members ol V e family, in cluding the children, are left destitute and beggars This is a very u -just cmt-im and works lurdsnip aud misery amo ig the In di in-s. There are m my ether evil an 1 supersti tious customs still in exis:pr.ce among our peop'e, and we the Chiefs want the white min's law t ) help us stop them. Therefore, I h ive com9 to Wa h'ngtnn to speak and to 1 ty our case before tin C n gresMiien of the government, to implore their aid in giving the Alask i Indians hi.mes and schools ami pro'eding Ihem by 1 .w from cue encroachmeut of avaricious while men. his (Signed) Chief Johnson X mark. Interpreter: Ji shua Johnson Johu Dennis Witness to the above Thos. W. Po'ter, Supt.8alemInd.Scb.