ont t er HE woe . > “ itatniage Steg ed © halo rata ima oon at. % arr , F per rire , “ . ~ 7 “ : . : aR STR ade eT RNA A GRE NG Wi IIIT ERE NER I ements Ne PaaS aes tt Sen RB re a acne > ind i aeeanaa tate ' _ : es : , X AMINE VOL a: Assurance Company. FIRE AND MARINE. Cash Capital & Assets, $1,176 491.45, INCORPORATED 18235. RisKs' taken on all descriptions of Property at‘lowest rates. PROMPT SETTLEMENT OF LOSSES. HORACE.HASZARD, Agent. Office, South Side Queen Square. duly 10, 1879. CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND — BRITISH AMERICA N' HOUS Street, Charlottetown. aoe, .. ws CHOICEST WINES & LIQUORS. °\ MEW YORK LAGER BEER. FPYABLES set at all hours,-with every hixury of the season. Friese Ovsrmus received daily, §. dows large and comfertal ly: tmriisheds . CoacnEs from this House meet all Trains and Steam boats. First Class BarBer Suor. July 4, 1879—Sm LONE. HOTEL, -TRACADIE BEACH, NORTH SHORE. P, Eb This new and pleasantl situated Hotel is |) iow open, aud will be found the Best. Summer Resort ON THE ISLAND. i can be reached from: the City twice a day by Railt» Bedford, or by earriage; ' . distance d3 miles, or one-and a-half hours” drive. Visitors will find ‘that every care has been}. tuken to provide for their comfort and pleasure. PRICES MODERATE. RB Speci Arrangements may be made for Families. CYRUS TAY, MANAGER. MACLEAN & MARTIN, Newson's Building, Opp. Post Office, Cherlottetoun, P. Be I. A, A. McLEAN. D. C. MARTIN. June 18, 4879.+-ex 2aw * ~ DR. P. WG, CANNING, Licentinte Royal Colleges Physicians and , Surgeons of Edinburgh. LICENTIATE MIDWIFERY. RESIDENCE : Upper Hillsborough St., corner Hillsborough and Euston Streets, Charlottetown. OFFICE HOURS: 8:30 to 11 .a.m,; 7’to 9 p.m, Charlotjetown, Jane 24, 1879.—eod QUEEN INSURANCE CO’Y, OF ENGLAND. CAPITAL, . ... TWO MILLIONS STERLING. NSURANCE effected on all kinds of Build- ings, Merchandise and Produce. Also, on Vessels on the stocks. Special rates for isolated residences. Losses settled promptly. GEORGE MACLEOD (Union Bank), gent for Prince Edward Island June, ‘ert ' al icc ie i a PHOTOGRAPHS ! “—WwoGrORD, Sole Licensee for Lambert's Patents for Pernument Photographs, for City and Queen's County. THEY NEVER FADE, as the old Photographs do. ALL THE OLD SORTS HALF PRICE RICHMOND STREET, Opposite Lonion House — David Wilson.s Old Stand. P. S.—To Tue TRADE. — Photographers wish- ing %o supply their Customers with Permanent P2ctures, can yet their Printing and Enlarging: oll « at reasonable Prices from their own| E,} PROPRIETOR. | , ee te LOOK HERE! BRITISH WAREHOUSE. ' : ———— — — ——— 3) § As we intend to make a change in our business at the end of the year, we are now closing out our Large and Well-Assorted Stock of DRY GooDs At Unusually Low Prices. Which, we are Sure, Wiil Meet the Hard ‘Times. —— —— :0:-—-——— Dress Goods from 6 cents upwards. Grey Cottons from 4 cents uswards. Prints from 6 cents upwards. Hemp Carpeting from {2 cents upwards. Tapesiry from 59 cents upwards Brussels from $!.00 upwards. All other lines we are closing out at Prices that Defy Competition. W.& A. BROWN. Charlottetown, June.30, 1879. RUSTICO BEACH, P. =. ISLAND. ; O TENHE- ABOVE BEAUTIFUL WATERING PLACE HAS BEEN MUCH IMPROVED this Season and is now open for thé accommodation of Guests. For CHARMING SCENERY, INVIGORATING and BRACING ATMOSPHERE, and splendid Surf Bathing, this Hotel has no equal the Dominion. Terms, $2.00 and $2.50 per day, $10 50 per week. ' Special arrangements made for Families, Pic-nic Parties, &c. To get to the Seaside Hotel: get'tickets from all points for Hunter River. . BY TRAIN :—Trains leave Ch’town for Hunter River at 6.20 a. m. ; 10,05-a, m. ; and 5.25 p.m. Trains leave Summerside for’ Hunter River at 9,05 a. Mr, 3 12.49 p.m, and 5.30 _m. Coaches meet trains from all points and convey passengers to the “Seaside.” Charges Moderate—distance between 7 and 8 miles, through & beantifal country. BY COACH, DIRECT :—Coaches leave Cl’ town Wednesday anil Saturday evenings calling for Guests at all points in City limits at G o'clock. Returning arrive at Ch’town about 9Y.o’clock, on Tharsday and Monday morning. Fare, $1.25, distance 184 miles. “Address ; JOLIN NEWSON & Co, Ch’town. July 8th, 1879:+-2m. pat, & arg. J. B- onal - HAS JUST (RECEIVED 3 Cases Gents’ American Felt Hats 1 CASE GENES’ STRAW & CHIP HATS, 30 Dozen Gents’ White & Coloured Shirts. 50: DOZ, GENTS’ LINEN COLLARS (Aew Siyles) 2 Cases Gents’ Paper Collars, 25 DOZ. GENTS’ MERINO & COTTON HOSE, > CASES NEW PRINTS. 9 CASES NEW WHITE COTTONS, 5) Doron Women's & Children's Cotton & Merino Hose, WILL BE SOLD AT THE LOWESTPRICES. J. B. MACDONALD. Queen ‘Street, Charlottetown, June 26, 1879—her “TEA PARTY | FURTHER REDUCTION ae ani Mines (Pictou, N, 8.) | 7 iit ti {LACK and ROUND COAL can now be patch obtained at the above mentioned Mines, ; Slack Coal, only $1.30 per tons Round Raspberry, and = Pine! Coal, $2.00. Apple Syrup : For orders, apply to Séla@ih bottles'and by the gallon. } G. W. DrBLOIS, A * Lemon, Sole Agent for P, E. Island. Orrice: No. 35 Water street. Plain and Faney Biscuits | ortown, June 23, 1879—pats} kea h sp2m “Sold in Boxes & Bbls. and by the pound. Z T Oo LET —— ing Sugar, Raisins, Currants,Pastry Flour, neers of Coffee, Confectionery, Nuts, | Oranges, Potted Ham, Drivelled _ Ham, Potted Tongue, &e BEER & GOFF) 6 Rooms, with large Kitchen and Cellar, situated east end Dorchester street. Immediate possession. WILLIAM DODD, Queen Square, July 7, 1879— a done Megstives. Sample, 25 cts, 35 cts, 60 cts. town, May 16, 1879—3m law dy & wkly | June 23, 1879. A COMFORTABLE ‘HOUSE. containing’ SATURDAY, AUGUST 2, 1879. Our Indians. The old order of things is changing very rapidly in the North-West, and giving place to the new and the better. But as in King Arthur’s day so in ours, those who have lived under the old order are mostly not able to conform to the new order of things. The change bewilders, perplexes and upsets them, and they fight of course vainly against lit, and so, generally die in the contest. | Under the Hudson Bay Company’s rule, jour Indians in the Forth-West were con- tented, and fully as happy as the average human being. Being a trading, not a = onizing corporation, the Hudson Bay Com- ‘| pany’s best policy was, of course, to disconr- age settlement and agriculture, and encour- age the nomadic habits of the Indians, who, ‘indeed, had a few higher aspirations. Now and again a faithful missionary would strive to convince them that the best mode of liv- ing, at any rate for their children, in view of the future, was not that of hunting and fishing and dwelling in small wigwams. <A little was done, no doubt, through such means, but very little, and now the Indians will be foreed to face the then future, which has now become the present, and. live if they can or die if they must under new civ- cumstances. It has been the habit of Canadian writers to compare the pacitie and kindly relations of our Indians with the Government and the white people, with the perpetually conflicting relations of their United States brethren with the Govern- ment and the people of that Republic. The greatly in favor of Canada, and justly so, but not to the extent sometimes claimed. In the United States civilization has ad- vanced much more rapidly than in Canada, and the consequence is that the Indians have been crowded to the West by the white settlers much move rapidly than they were prepared to ge. There was hardly suflicient time to treat for the lands which the Indians not unreasonably re- garded as their birthright, before the settlers entered in and possessed it, and so treaties were always more or less coercive typon the Indians, who retired with wound- ed feelings, and in most cases not without conflict. In later times, thongh,—and these we should keep» most clearly in view, for from these we can gather the lessons which will now be useful te ms—there was much less'exers’ for the tre ment which intensified the bitter feelinys which the In- which has resulted in perpetual warfare. The treaties made between the Indians and the United States Government during the last forty years, have been :mostly just enough, and sometimes even generous, to- ward the Indian from a.whiteman’s stand- point. Reservations, net always the most suitable, perhaps, but still large enough, were set apart fer them, and they were promised yearly annuities and supplies of food and clothing, and implements both for | hunting and agriculture, which altogetlier were caleulated to render them -more com- fortable on limited grounds than they could possibly be though fhunting over all the grounds which they claimed as theirs. But these treaties were never fuiiy observed or preserved by the Government, or rather by the people whom the Government repre- sented in these treaties. ‘The people of the United States who come in contact with the Indians, in accordance with their peculiar view of freedom, regard the Government as a restricting power to’ be escaped from if possible altogether, and, at any rate, whose behests are not worthy of consideration if not thoroughly enforced. Thus as the best of the lands secured by treaty from the In- dians was taken up, the colonists disvegard- ed the treaties, and squatted upon the reservations. The Indians appealed to the Government but the Government in few cases righted them, perhaps because the difliculties in the way of doing so were almost insurmountable, ard so the Indians, despairing of justice from Washington, cid themseltes justice by foreibly: expelling the intruders. This has always led to bloodshed on bothi. ‘sides, part of the colonists by ejecting the Indians from their reservation, and forcing them to occupy another at a distance fer the time being, from the danger of intrusion. The new reservation was only reserved to the Indian mntil the tide of emigration flowed up to'the new border, when the old svenes with the old results followed. “Their supplies and annuities were trusted to cor- rupt agents of the Government for distribu- tion, and, as a check was impossible, the Indians were’ cheated, it is calculated, out of about two-thirds of the supplies for the purchase of which Congress faithfully votes an ample sim every year. Thus, through fraud and misunderstanding, the Indians are foreed into war for a subsistence, often murdering helpless and innocent farmers settled near them out of hate to the race which has so misused them. The Indians have of course in the warfare always suf- fered defeat finally, though their struggles have been heroic. One of the most hereic of these tribes, tired of warfare, retreated across the border into British territory, and have been as peaceful and well in- clined towards the whites as our own In- dians. But ‘their visit has doubtless done much to render necessary an early solution of our own Indian problem, which was at any rate growing more pressing with the rapid opening up of the North-West through settlement, and the location and have not been wanting signs of dissatisfac- tion among our Indians lately, and the | causes, in view of the United States comparisons. have, of course, always been } didns enteriain towards the whites, and. and ended ‘in the Government taking the building of the Pacific Railway. There’! NO, 62, troubles, appear ominous. Surveyors staking out lands for settlements ‘aroused the ‘suspicion of the Indians, and they forcibly opposed them and for a time stopped the work. An attem)t was made at one police station to rob the Government stores, and telegraphic communication with Batuleford was cut off ‘for some days, and it was said that a raid ‘was to he made upon Governor Laird’s residence. As a fact, however, nothing serious has as yet occurred, but there can be no doubt that there are indieations of future trouble if the’ Indians are not dealt with generously and the treaties sacredly preserved. Sitting Bull and his large band of Indians have unintentionally added to our troubles, and they heave thinned out the buffalo and other game, upon which our own Indians relied to a great extent for their living. Now they have had to move south of the line again, and are coming in contact with the United States troops. It is said that Sitting Bull is peaceably incimed, but with such a fire-eater as General Miles in command of the troops sent to watch the Indians, all hope of peace being pre- served must be abandoned unless Sitting Ball moves back across theborder. If he comes back again he cannot be allowed to starve, andat all events our own Indians will have to be looked after. Thus our Indian problem comes up for solution, and our whole future treatment of the Indian’s de- pends greatly upon the manner in which the present settlement is made and carried out. The Prince and the Princess Beatrice. The Prince had an affair of the heart, and with a very illustrious lady, the Princess Beatrice of England. That is to say— to go no further than my information—he had formed a strong affection for the Princess, which was to some extent reciprocated. There was an exchange of rings between the young people,and an exchange of views between the elder people, and the Queen, without saying. niuch as to her own personal tastes, expressed a fear that Parliament would not look with favor on such a match One secret motive of the Prince’s journey was, therefore, to conquer this difficulty by winning popularity with the English people. 1 do not pretend to know anything of the extent to which the Princess was pledged either in heart or word. Bnt you will observe that she ac- companied her mother to Chiselliurst.— London Cor. of N. Y. World. ee > MISCELLANEOUS. Tee Imperial’ Government will be pro- rogued, it is expeeted, on the 16th of Angust. Mr. Tasse, M, P.,,. has. undertaken the editorship of the Gazetie d’ Ottawa, the Freach journal published in Ottawa, Work for the unemployed is offered by the chief contracter of the Western Counties Rail- way, N. 8. He wants 560 laborers at once at Digby, Weymouth and Yarmouth ; wages, 80 cents to $1 per cay. Tre autumnal contests in the United States will be opened by the election this week in Kentucky, which is overwhelmingly Demo- cratic. ‘Ihe elections in Maine in September, in Ohio in, October, and in, New York in No- vember, are to be, it is said, the three pivotal elections in 1879. The new Liberal. member for Glasgow, Mr. Charles Tennant, stands next to Herr Krupp as the largest employer of labor in the world. He has employment for 8,000 men, and at Rollox Chemical Works alone 2,000 are engaged, while the remainder are employed at Jarrow. Chemical Works and similar places at Newcastle-on Tyne and Deptford. “Tittey’s ‘Trtumpn, ’"—This isthe title of Grip’se¢lates’ cartoon, which represents the lion George Brown and Sir Richard ‘Cart- as two disgusted roosters turning away from gazing upon Sir Samuel Tilley’s success in the London money market. The latter stands on 4% nice little pile of’ gold crowing ‘‘cock-a- | doodle-do!’’ No donbt Sir Samuel’s success must have proved very unpleasant intelligence to the knight of the double shield and to the managing Director of the Globe. The Dutch have a curious expression for death. On the coffin ‘in which the Prince of Orange was buried, the date of his birth was inscribed, ‘‘September 4, 1840,” and that he was overleden on the 11th of June, 1879—which signifies that he was overladcn and that he had sunk under the burden. Four hundred Boston roughs visited Marblehead Sunday and began robbing houses. The police attacked them and a fight ensued. The citizens came te the as- sistance of the pelice and the roughs fled. After they had got on the steamer they threw bottles at the crowd on the wharf, seriously injuring several. Father Robert O’Keefe, of Callan, the Irish priest who some ten years ago attack- ed the Church and brought Cardinal Cul- len before the civil tribunals, has submit- ted. He humbly seeks absolution from all the censures and irregularities he has in- curred; and expresses his sincere regret for all ‘the scandal and disedification he has caused, The swiftest railroad trains are run in England, according to a German govérn- ment report, a speed of fifty miles an hour being common between London and Dover, London and York, and London and Hast- ings. Trains go at forty-two iniles an hour on one of the Belgian lines. The fastest ‘in France and Germany do not often ex- \ceed forty, and in other European countrics thirty is the maximum. Sallis Anlinhiititineteeeenenamiee adie ol need ee a ge a ee eee i mre