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REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1887.

of the buffalo in supplying all these wants of the red man, and it costs several millions of dollars annually to accomplish the task.

The following are the tribes which depended very largely — some almost wholly — upon the buffalo for the necessities, and many of the luxuries, of their savage life until the Government began to support them:

Sioux 30,561 Kiowas and Comanches 2,756
Crow 3,226 Arapahoes 1,217
Piegan, Blood, and Blackfeet 2,026 Apache 332
Cheyenne 3,477 Ute 978
Gros Ventres 856 Omaha 1,160
Arickaree 517 Pawnee 998
Mandan 283 Winnebago 1,222
Bannack and Shoshone 2,001 ———
Nez Percé 1,460 Total 54,758
Assinniboine 1,688

This enumeration (from the census of 1886) leaves entirely out of consideration many thousands of Indians living in the Indian Territory and other portions of the Southwest, who drew an annual supply of meat and robes from the chase of the buffalo, notwithstanding the fact that their chief dependence was upon agriculture.

The Indians of what was once the buffalo country are not starving and freezing, for the reason that the United States Government supplies them regularly with beef and blankets in lieu of buffalo. Does any one imagine that the Government could not hare regulated the killing of buffaloes, and thus maintained the supply, for far less money than it now costs to feed and clothe those 54,758 Indians?

How is it with the Indians of the British Possessions to-day?

Prof. John Macoun writes as follows in his "Manitoba and the Great Northwest,” page 342:

“During the last three years (prior to 1883] the great herds have been kept south of our boundary, and, as the result of this, our Indians have been on the verge of starvation. When the hills were covered with countless thousands (of buffaloes) in 1877, the Blackfeet were dying of starvation in 1879."

During the winter of 1886–87, destitution and actual starvation prevailed to an alarming extent among certain tribes of Indians in the Northwest Territory who once lived bountifully on the buffalo. A terrible tale of suffering in the Athabasca and Peace River country has recently (1888) come to the minister of the interior of the Canadian government, in the form of a petition signed by the bishop of that diocese, six clergymen and missionaries, and several justices of the peace. It sets forth that “owing to the destruction of game, the Indians, both last winter and last summer, have been in a state of starvation. They are now in a complete state of destitution, and are utterly unable to provide themselves with clothing, shelter, ammunition, or food for the coming winter." The petition declares that on account of starvation, and con-