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satisfied to select three or four for present use and 

 liide the others, with my birch-hark, till I could send 

 across for them in the morning ; but a couple of 

 bears, judging from the different-sized tracks, got at 

 my cache during the night, and had the bad taste to 

 maul and pull about what they did not eat, so that I 

 rejected it as unfit for food. Fish I have always 

 found the most tempting bait with which to attract 

 Bruin into a trap, so I built a bower-house and hung 

 up the bait at the end of it, with ray trap nicely cov- 

 ered with leaves ; still all would not do, he ar.d his 

 companion were too wide awake, or had left the 

 neighborhood. This lake I often visited again, and 

 with equal success ; the influences of weather never 

 appeared to affect the fishes' appetites, and they arc 

 always a welcome addition to a backwoodman's faro. 

 In company of a Chippewa Iiidian I also ti-ied fisli- 

 ing through the ice. The method adopted is simple, 

 viz., cutting a hole two or three feet in diameter, 

 over wliich is built a small hut to keep out the liglit 

 and sufiiciently large for tlie fisherman to sit inside, 

 the end of his fish-spear protruding tlirough the top. 

 With an artificial minnow on a few feet of line in the 

 left hand, and weighted so as to make it readily sink, 

 you attract the pike to the surface, when, Avith a 



