was not satisfied with what he got, so he thought he would
hunt around in the sage-brush and rocks. He got to rambling
around. He little thought that a soldier was in a crevice, just a
few feet from him, waiting to play even with any Indian that
may give him a visit. Ike had secured a blouse, but had not
put it on. He had it on his arm. He turned and was goinp;
back to the group of Indians that was drinking booze. He
jumped on a rock. Below him was a crevice. He did not
Capolis, Chief of the Warm Spring U. S. Indian Scouts. Killed afterwards while in the employ of the U. S. Government as a policeman, by an outlaw, in the Paulina Reserve, Oregon.
look down in the crevice at first, but when he did, he saw a pistol pointed at his stomach. Before he could dodge back, Jim Ross fired the bullet and struck Ike in the stomach. It broke Ike's back. He fell on the edge of the crevice and died without saying a word. The other Modocs rushed up and found Jim Ross. They shot at him many times and left him for dead. The warriors carried little Ike's body off to a cave, put it in there, and filled the entrance of the cave with rocks.