New: Boardroom MCP Engine!

Owen Hayes, an-old-timer of this part of…

📅 1888newspaper📜 public-domainid: s_silver-city-enterprise-1888-02-24-004-country_160mh3f📄 TEI
🔗 View originalhttps://archive.org/details/silvercity1888
Primary copy hosted at archive.org — opens in a new tab.

Entities extracted from this source (3)

Chunks (3)

chunk 1503 · paragraph 7
, 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: The tree was standing about one hundred feet up from the creek on a very steep moun- tain. Mr. Hayes intended the tree to fall down the hill, but through a mishap it fell in an oppo- site direction, the top of the tree striking a large boulder above, breaking off the top of the tree and permitting the heavy trunk of the same to dash down the mountain, catching and dragging Hayes fifty feet or more, when he was hurled over a precipice fifty feet. The poor man man- aged to make his way to Cooney’s house when Dr. Kimble was summoned. However, no in- juries of a fatal character were discovered excepting a fracture of the right arm and one rib. Up to the third day Mr. Hayes was con- sidered in a fair way to recover, but on the evening of the 18th he became worse and died in convulsions while being turned over in bed by Jas. Lynch. Shortly after his death there was circulated a report that his wounds were not sufficiently critical to cause death. Hints of poison were freely mentioned to the effect that it had been administered through mistake. Deputy H. E. Penney at once summoned the following jury: James Lynch, T. F. Cooney,
chunk 75 · paragraph 58
tinual 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 76 · paragraph 59
, 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: The tree was standing about one hundred feet up from the creek on a very steep moun- tain. Mr. Hayes intended the tree to fall down the hill, but through a mishap it fell in an oppo- site direction, the top of the tree striking a large boulder above, breaking off the top of the tree and permitting the heavy trunk of the same to dash down the mountain, catching and dragging Hayes fifty feet or more, when he was hurled over a precipice fifty feet. The poor man man- aged to make his way to Cooney’s house when Dr. Kimble was summoned. However, no in- juries of a fatal character were discovered excepting a fracture of the right arm and one rib. Up to the third day Mr. Hayes was con- sidered in a fair way to recover, but on the evening of the 18th he became worse and died in convulsions while being turned over in bed by Jas. Lynch. Shortly after his death there was circulated a report that his wounds were not sufficiently critical to cause death. Hints of poison were freely mentioned to the effect that it had been administered through mistake. Deputy H. E. Penney at once summoned the following jury: James Lynch, T. F. Cooney,