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Thoroughly disheartened, Roman Chiquito…

📅 1891newspaper📜 public-domainid: s_silver-city-enterprise-1891-05-08-009-hi_1h98jti📄 TEI
🔗 View originalhttps://archive.org/details/silvercity1891
Primary copy hosted at archive.org — opens in a new tab.

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chunk 701 · paragraph 549
and when Roman, through his white friends, remonstrated the agent gave as an excuse that “Roman Chi- quito was a promising young man and that his spiritual welfare demanded that he should not be removed from the christianizing influences surrounding him on the reservation” ( !) Thoroughly disheartened, Roman Chiquito removed with his family to Three Rivers, still on the reservation, but thirty miles from the agency; here he set up his tent, opened a farm and endeavored to earn his own living. His family beside himself, consisted of a younger brother named Carpio who was subject to spells of violent insanity, and two sisters. The younger of these, a beautiful girl named “Bo- nita,” was the belle of the Mescalero tribe. Roman and his family were soon on terms of friendly intimacy with his neighbors at Three Rivers, one of these Mr. Patrick Coglan, a stock raiser, had in his employ as chief herder a Mexican named Nicolas Acosta, who was a warm friend of Roman and his family and fre- 'quent visitor to Roman’s tent. One afternoon and while Roan was absent, Acosta, in returning from the range stopped at Roman’s tent and was

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