Steve Upton, one of Georgetown’s popular…
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Entities extracted from this source (3)
Frank Whitneyperson
4 claims cited from this source
Steve Uptonperson
4 claims cited from this source
Owen Hayesperson
1 claim cited from this source
a.k.a. Hayes, Owen
Chunks (2)
chunk 1502 · paragraph 2
have the oppor-
tunity, if detected in his crime.
Steve Upton, one of Georgetown’s popular
young men, was a visitor to this city last week.
His old partner, Frank Whitney, fell a victim
to the dreaded yellow fever at Colon, Central
America, last summer. Frank was one of the
brightest young men that ever lived in this
section, and the news of his death will be re-
ceived with sincere sorrow by his many friends.
Mr. Upton also had the fever but is now in
better health than ever before. The boys were
in the employ of a New York mining company,
and together visited several of the mining sec-
tions of South America. Mr. Upton is delighted
with the Argentine country, but says that
Buenos Aires is a very unhealthy city. In Uru-
guay, owing to the almost continual warfare,
there are ten women to one man, and a traveler
is compelled to hire a body guard to keep the
girls away. Steve didn’t like it there.
Cooney Camp
Killed hy a Tree. — Contradicting a
Correspondent
Cooney, N. M., Feb. 18, 1888
To the Editors of the Enterprise :
Owen Hayes, an-old-timer of this part of
the country, while chopping a saw-log on Silver
creek on the 14th of this month, met with an
accident that caused his death three days later.
The particulars are as follows:
chunk 74 · paragraph 53
money from
the drawer. It is to be regretted that some of
these sneak thieves are not caught in the act
and shot down. A man who will enter a house
for the purpose of robbery would not hesitate
to commit murder, should he have the oppor-
tunity, if detected in his crime.
Steve Upton, one of Georgetown’s popular
young men, was a visitor to this city last week.
His old partner, Frank Whitney, fell a victim
to the dreaded yellow fever at Colon, Central
America, last summer. Frank was one of the
brightest young men that ever lived in this
section, and the news of his death will be re-
ceived with sincere sorrow by his many friends.
Mr. Upton also had the fever but is now in
better health than ever before. The boys were
in the employ of a New York mining company,
and together visited several of the mining sec-
tions of South America. Mr. Upton is delighted
with the Argentine country, but says that
Buenos Aires is a very unhealthy city. In Uru-
guay, owing to the almost continual warfare,
there are ten women to one man, and a traveler
is compelled to hire a body guard to keep the
girls away. Steve didn’t like it there.
Cooney Camp
Killed hy a Tree. — Contradicting a
Correspondent
Cooney, N. M., Feb. 18, 1888
To the Editors of the Enterprise :