Escapes Indian Attack
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chunk 1726 · paragraph 0
Escapes Indian Attack
Ike W. Stevens, a miner and hunter well
known in Clifton, recently had a narrow escape
from Indians. The Gallup Register says: Ike
Stevens, a prospector, well known in Clifton,
Arizona, and Alma, New Mexico, arrived in
Gallup on Saturday evening last, accompanied
by Piochete, a Navajo Indian. Mr. Stevens was
passing through the Navajo reservation from
Bloomfield ferry to Gallup, with a pack train
of three burros and a saddle horse, and reports
that when thirty miles east of Gallup, he was
fired upon by ambuscaded Indians, whose
weapons were bows and arrows. One arrow
struck him in the back near the shoulder blade,
embedding itself in the flesh so firmly that it
took a stout man with pinchers to extract it. Mr.
Stevens succeeded in escaping from the attack-
ing party and reached Piochete’s place where
he found protection, the Indians giving him
every assistance, and coming with him as guard
to this place. Piochete says that the party who
attacked Stevens are ex-United States scouts,
who were employed by the government during
Geronimo’s raid. He states further that there
is a large party of bad Indians in the vicinity
where Stevens was attacked, and thinks it un-
safe for a single white man to pass over the
road at present.