. Sport and adventures among the North-American Indians [microform]. Hunting; Hunting; Indians of North America; Adventure and adventurers; Chasse; Chasse; Indiens d'Amérique; Aventure et aventuriers. h I i. hi r 100 OUR not) nnoxr. tln^M, iiiid hrhuvnl in micli a «li(;iiitii>i| muv until li(« wm iittucknl, that tliry ait u nili* left liiin atitiii* anit wrnt away> Wlu'ii a luttiilirr of h'm tht^n ntolicil out at him from a hoi^e wo hnpiNMurtl to Uv \)Mn\\nt, hu would itit down in tho middle of th(* roud and look wtrai^ht hcforn him, allowin}( tht'in to conu! np all rouml liiin, and neve


. Sport and adventures among the North-American Indians [microform]. Hunting; Hunting; Indians of North America; Adventure and adventurers; Chasse; Chasse; Indiens d'Amérique; Aventure et aventuriers. h I i. hi r 100 OUR not) nnoxr. tln^M, iiiid hrhuvnl in micli a «li(;iiitii>i| muv until li(« wm iittucknl, that tliry ait u nili* left liiin atitiii* anit wrnt away> Wlu'ii a luttiilirr of h'm tht^n ntolicil out at him from a hoi^e wo hnpiNMurtl to Uv \)Mn\\nt, hu would itit down in tho middle of th(* roud and look wtrai^ht hcforn him, allowin}( tht'in to conu! np all rouml liiin, and never moving, and their piicc would UHually K^'t per(*epti))ly Nliover ax they ;(ot nt*ar him, and they were very often watintied with a look at iihout three feet distance ; hut if they touched him there wan a Mudden traii>4forrnation Ncene: tin; nearettt do|; was Nci/.ed and Nhaken lik(* a rat, no re^anl bein^ paid to tho others, who >vere pr(d):ihly hitinf( him hehitid meanwhilu ; thru anotlu'r was treated in the sann* way, and then another, when they f^enerally turiu'd tail and lied. However much hu waM hurt hiniseir \w. never uttered a Honnd or McemtMl to can; anything about it. Moo/u was u splendid do^^ for hoj^s, holdint; the larj^i'st with ease, and by kcepiu}^ always close alon^^side the ho^ avoided his tusks. It was hu much trouble to get hitn otl'when he onee had Imld, that we used to bent him when he went after hogs, on which he became so crafty that he would drive one into n Mtream or pond, wheie we could not follow him, and there be would hold th(< hog's head under water \intil he had drowned him. He would throw the largest bull in a moment, catching him by the nose, and an Irish water-spaniel, which K had brought from Knglaiid, used to ussiist him by holding on to the tail, and this he would do so firmly, that I have seen him dragged fifty or sixty yards over the prairie before he would let go his hold. While at Clear Creek we bad an invitation from a


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, booksubjecthunting, booksubjectindiansofnortham