Silver City Enterprise — 1888-1890 (full OCR, Internet Archive) — 1889-06-28
Extraction pendingSubstrate (chunks + embeddings) is persisted, but entity/claim extraction failed on first attempt. The Tuner agent will retry this source on its next weekly run.
last error: window 0/1: All AI providers failed:
❌ ZAI: OpenAI error 429: {"error":{"code":"1310","message":"Weekly/Monthly Limit Exhausted. Your limit will reset at 2026-05-28 00:13:30"}}
❌ CEREBRAS: OpenAI erro
Entities extracted from this source (0)
No entities extracted yet. Extraction is pending — Tuner will retry on its next run.
Chunks (5)
chunk 2134 · paragraph 0
Little five-year-old May Glessener, Albu-
querque, has been suffering for a year with
what her parents and physician had thought
an aggravated attack of catarrh. She has been
doctored for this disease during that time, but
a radical change has been effected. Mrs. Glesse-
ner discovered a shoe button in the right nostril
of the little ones nose. She extracted the button,
since which time the sufferer has lost all her
symptoms of catarrh.
The historic log cabin on the corner ad-
joining the Enterprise office, once the peaceful
home of Billy the Kid, is being fixed up, and
will be occupied shortly, as a boot and shoe
making establishment.
Highly Sensational
Jo E. Sheridan Publicly Assaulted By
Mrs. Nettie Munger
chunk 2135 · paragraph 4
he historic log cabin on the corner ad-
joining the Enterprise office, once the peaceful
home of Billy the Kid, is being fixed up, and
will be occupied shortly, as a boot and shoe
making establishment.
Highly Sensational
Jo E. Sheridan Publicly Assaulted By
Mrs. Nettie Munger
For some weeks past this city has been rife
with sensations, gossip and scandal, to such an
extent that little else has been talked of. A little
of everything, from shooting scrapes down to
trivial society gossip, have occurred with almost
daily regularity, until such things were ex-
pected as daily visitors. On Saturday last, how-
ever, the attempted whipping of Jo E. Sheri-
dan, by Mrs. Munger, created no end of com-
ment, and the community was not slow in ex-
pressing its sentiments in regard to the matter.
At first the woman seemed to have the sym-
pathy, but it rapidly changed to the side of
Sheridan as the facts in the case became better
known.
It seems that Mrs. Munger desired to rent
some rooms, and was shown several by Mr.
Sheridan. The last room shown her was di-
rectly in the rear of Dr. Stephens’ office. Mrs.
Munger claims that Sheridan insulted her. Soon
after this she called Mr. Sheridan out of Hand
& Beall’s office and attempted to whip him
with a rawhide. Mr. Sheridan caught and held
her until a crowd began to gather, when he
made his escape.
chunk 2136 · paragraph 6
ar of Dr. Stephens’ office. Mrs.
Munger claims that Sheridan insulted her. Soon
after this she called Mr. Sheridan out of Hand
& Beall’s office and attempted to whip him
with a rawhide. Mr. Sheridan caught and held
her until a crowd began to gather, when he
made his escape.
On Monday a warrant was sworn out for
the arrest of Mrs. Munger for assault, and on
Wednesday the case came up before Judge
Lucas. Mr. Sheridan was represented by James
Fielder, and the defendant by Frank J. Wright.
Since the above was in type the male
members of the Munger family have apologized
to Mr. Sheridan, stating that they had investi-
gated the matter fully, and that they were
satisfied from the woman’s own statement that
the language used was not insulting, nor was
it intended to be so.
Quite a serious shooting occurred at
Grant’s Station on the A. & P. last week. Earl
Hudson, E. H. Brazile and Richard Wilson, cow-
boys working for J. E. Saint, after loading three
trains of cattle, rode over unarmed to Grant’s
and entering Block & Bebo’s store, began
throwing dice for the drinks. About 8 o’clock
Simon Block ordered them to stop. Hudson
inquired: “Why so? We have paid for all the
drinks.” Block refused to give him a satisfac-
( 17 )
chunk 2137 · paragraph 10
e
trains of cattle, rode over unarmed to Grant’s
and entering Block & Bebo’s store, began
throwing dice for the drinks. About 8 o’clock
Simon Block ordered them to stop. Hudson
inquired: “Why so? We have paid for all the
drinks.” Block refused to give him a satisfac-
( 17 )
tory reply. They had a few more words and
then clinched. Block broke away and ran to
the rear of the store for his gun. Brazile, fol-
lowing, called to him to not shoot, as they had
no weapons. As Block picked up the gun Bra-
zile grabbed Block and held him, to prevent
him from shooting. In the scuffle Hudson got
the gun and knocked Block down. Block got up,
and recovering the gun, shot at Hudson as he
was running out, killing him instantly. Emil
Bebo came out just then with a Winchester,
and shot Brazile in the right shoulder. He
handed the gun to a Mexican, telling him to kill
Brazile. The Mexican fired five shots at the
fugitive but did no harm. His right arm is badly
shattered by the first shot. Wilson has not
been heard of at the ranch, six miles from
Grant’s and it is feared that he too, has been
killed. Block is seriously wounded by a blow
from the gun.
chunk 2138 · paragraph 11
an fired five shots at the
fugitive but did no harm. His right arm is badly
shattered by the first shot. Wilson has not
been heard of at the ranch, six miles from
Grant’s and it is feared that he too, has been
killed. Block is seriously wounded by a blow
from the gun.
All the able bodied citizens of Arizona
having at different times been under arrest, or
been cited to appear and show cause why, they
were not implicated in the notorious Wham
robbery. We would meekly suggest to Marshal
Meade, that Steins Pass, in Grant County, is
not far from the Arizona line, and we would
enquire in the same spirit, why has this fruitful
locality been overlooked?
A. J. Cornell has received the contract for
2500 cords of wood to be delivered to the gov-
ernment at Fort Bayard, at $3.19 per cord.