920 THE OJIBWAY NATION. added, “with your war clubs—make a straight path to the wigwam of the pale face, and demand the land of the weeping Huron. I will sit upon the edge of this rock, and await your return.” The old man sat down, and the canoes moved East- ward, in search of the foe. The Western shore of Michigan was also thronged by the canoes of the Men- omonies, Pottawatamies, Sacks and Foxes,—the South- ern Hurons came with other tribes across the St. Clair, and overran the South. Tradition informs us that seven hundred canoes met at Keweté.wahonning, one party of whom was to take the route to Mahamooseebee, the second towards Wah- weyagahmah, (now Lake Simcoe), the third was to take the route towards the river St. Clair, and meet the Southern Hurons. I will here remark that they had several reasons for waging war against the Iroquois.— First, for having broke the last treaty of peace by the murder of some of their warriors ; second, to clear the way of trade between the Ojibways and the French, (the Iroquois then lived along the Ottawa river), and third, to regain the land of the Western Hurons, and, if possible, drive the Iroquois wholly from the peninsula. The warriors who took the Mahamooseebee, had several engagements with them, but outnumbering