" Come, let us take his cauoe and go quickly. So they rau and jumped
into the canoe and went off, but the man saw them and ran, tbrowinp:
a hook which caught the canoe, but as he was pulling it ashore the
boy took a stone from the bottom of the canoe and broke the hook.
Then they proceeded again veiy fast. Then the enraged man resorted
to another expedient : Laying himself down upon the shore he began to
drink the water from the lake, which caused the boat to return very
fast. The man continued to drink, until he grew very big with so much
water in him. The boy took another stone and threw it and hit the
man so it killed him, and the water ran back into the lake. When they
saw that he was dead they went back, and the boy said to the two dogs,
"You bad dogs, no one will have you now ; You mu&t go into the woods
and be wolves"; and they started for the woods and became wolves.
Then the boy and his sister went to the island. The boy went to the skeleton, which said, " You are a very smart boy to have recovered your sister — bring her to me. This the boy did, and the skeleton continued, " Now, gather up all the bones you see and put them in a pile; then push the largest tree you see and say, 'All dead folks arise'; and they will all arise." The boy did so, and all the dead arose, some having but one arm, some with but one leg, but all had their bows and arrows.
The boy then said to his sister, "Come, let's go home." When they arrived home they found their own uncle ; he looked very old. For ten years he had cried and put ashes upon his head for his little nephew, but now he was very happy to think he had returned.
The boy then told the old man all that he had done, who said, "Let us build a long house." And they did so, and put in six fire-places. Then the boy went back to the island for his people and brought them io the house, where they lived peacefully many years.
THE HUJTER AND HIS DEAD WIFE.
Once upon a time there was a man and his wife who lived in the forest, very far from the rest of the tribe. They used to go hunting to- gether very often, but after a time there were so many things for the wife to do that she staid at home and he went alone. When he went alone he never had good luck. One day the woman was taken sick, and in a day or two she died. The man felt very badly and buried her in the cabin. He was very lonesome ; and after a day or two he made a wooden doll about her size and dressed it in the clothes she used to wear. Then he put it down in front of the fire-place and felt better. Then he went hunting; and when he came back he would go up to the doll and brush the ashes off from the face, for as the wood fell down the ashes would rattle onto the face. He had to do his cooking, mending, and making fire, for now there was no one to help him; and so a year