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54 When a person died and was buried, a kind of spirits called re tse lu nu hi, would often come to the house and make various kinds of noises. These were the souls of persons who had died previously. The family would then prepare victuals and carry onto the mountain, or near the place where their friend was buried, and set it on a rock or some other conspicuous place, & these little spirits would trouble them no more. It is said that a man once died and his spirit afterward kept always about the house till the family prepared victuals & placed them on a rock near his grave, and then the spirit spoke to the person who put the victuals there & troubled the family no more. Witches were living persons assisted by some evil spirit. Anciently, it is said, these were very dangerous, so that it was not safe for persons to be out after dark. They would frequently come about houses, and knock, knock, knock about in various parts of the house. The head of the family+ then filled his pipe with old tobacco, and smoked about in the house & out, blowing the smoke in every direction. At length some of the smoke would get into the witch's throat and produce a strikeout: sneething sneezing, and then all the family were secure. The witch would immediately depart, and in a day or two would be dead, certainly in seven days after inhaling the tobacco smoke. When one was sick in a house, witches would be constantly flocking about it, therefore the old tobacco had to be smoked there continually. Witches would sometimes get in some corner of the house and sing like an owl, and again, make various kinds of noises. citation: Nutsawi. There was a little kind of mice called Nu na ki u neo gi i.e. Die in the road, because they could never cross a path, but died as they got to the middle of the road. They were about as large as the end of a man's finger and generally lived in the ruins of old houses. These, on being found dead in the road were dried and burnt to a coal, and whoever rubbed thei'r eyes with this coal were enabled to see witches, and thus to kill them, because no witch could live over seven days after being thus seen. citation: Nutsawi.