Silver City Enterprise — 1888-1890 (full OCR, Internet Archive) — 1890-05-30
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Chunks (4)
chunk 2617 · paragraph 0
Indians Out
Ben Crawford Killed In Graham County
Information was received at Fort Bayard
Tuesday evening of the killing of Ben Craw-
ford, ex-sheriff of Graham county, by Indians
in southern Arizona. So far the details are
quite meager, but seem to be reliable. Ben was
traveling through the mountains, and he and
his companion were both killed.
A telegram received yesterday by Col. A.
E. Head, at Deming, states that Indians ran off
five horses from the herd on the Animas, near
the Gray ranch. The men, employed by the
company, were holding 1,600 head of beef
steers for shipment, the horse herd was a short
distance away; the Indians fired on the horse
herder cutting his saddle and trappings with
bullets and driving him off. The men on the
beef herd were too busy with the steers to inter-
fere with the Indians. They took what horses
they wanted and hunted new pastures.
A dispatch from Tombstone dated May
26th, say that the body of Robert Hardie, a
well-known lawyer of Los Angeles, was brought
in there from the Chiricahua mountains, where
he was killed by hostile Apaches Sunday after-
noon. His companion, Mr. Francis Haynes, of
Philadelphia, had his horse shot from under
him, and escaped by mounting his companion’s
horse. The Indians fired from ambush. The
facts will be reported to President Harrison.
( IB )
The Judge Vindicated
chunk 2618 · paragraph 7
hostile Apaches Sunday after-
noon. His companion, Mr. Francis Haynes, of
Philadelphia, had his horse shot from under
him, and escaped by mounting his companion’s
horse. The Indians fired from ambush. The
facts will be reported to President Harrison.
( IB )
The Judge Vindicated
A Lucid Explanation of Last Week’s
Accusation
Central City, N. M., May 27, 1890
To the Editor of the Enterprise :
Sir: — Your issue of the 23d inst. contained an
article under the head of “Information from a
very reliable citizen of Silver City, that the
justice of the peace of Central was carrying the
law out with excessive stringency, etc.” The
facts in the case in question are : On the night
of the 10th, a complaint was filed with me by
the constable, charging certain parties with
misdemeanor. It then being too late in the night
for action, on the morning of the 17th, warrants
were issued, parties arrested, brought into
court, tried and convicted as charged. One of
the parties convicted refused to pay their fine
or go to jail, but locked themselves up in their
room. The constable then told me that he would
have to break the door open in order to execute
a commitment then in his hands.
My reply to him was: “You are the officer
and you are responsible for the person charged
and should know what to do.”
chunk 2619 · paragraph 11
d themselves up in their
room. The constable then told me that he would
have to break the door open in order to execute
a commitment then in his hands.
My reply to him was: “You are the officer
and you are responsible for the person charged
and should know what to do.”
In the meantime a gang of lewd women
had gathered in front of the justice’s office,
and in the crowd was Mr. Bruesch, who was
intoxicated at the time, had been drinking from
saloon to saloon with your reliable informant,
(but Bruesch paying for the drinks every time.)
I told these women to go away and not interfere
with an officer in the execution of his duties,
and also told Mr. Bruesch the same. Then and
there Mr. Bruesch refused to go away. Then I
ordered him to be arrested and brought into
court. He came into the court room cursing and
swearing and telling how things were done in
Prussia. The court then politely informed Mr.
Bruesch that he must take off his hat and stop
cursing and swearing or that the court would
be compelled to fine him (Bruesch) for con-
tempt. To this Mr. B paid no attention, what-
ever. The court then fined him $5 for contempt,
but Mr. B. continuing, the court then fined him
$5 more. This not having accomplished, the de-
sired effect, the court again was compelled to
impose a third fine of $5. This did not seem
quite adequate to the occasion and the court
told him that if he still continued to curse and
swear that it would have to give him thirty
chunk 2620 · paragraph 12
re. This not having accomplished, the de-
sired effect, the court again was compelled to
impose a third fine of $5. This did not seem
quite adequate to the occasion and the court
told him that if he still continued to curse and
swear that it would have to give him thirty
days in jail. Then the court heard no more
from Mr. B. while in the court room. After
leaving the court room, Mr. B. and your reliable
informant were around in the street creating
disturbances and I had to threaten to send Mr.
B. to jail before he would behave himself.
Mr. Bruesch is the town butcher and if he
had been in his shop attending to his own busi-
ness, this circumstance would not have hap-
pened, and Mr. B. might have been a wiser and
wealthier man.
As to the threats made by one of your at-
torneys as to what he intended to do, he should
remember that he is not in Georgia. — Henry
Woods, Justice of the Peace, Central, N. M.