INDEPENDENCE
The trail outfit reached the railroad
a day in advance of the beeves. Shipping orders
were sent to the station agent in advance, and on the
arrival of the herd the two outfits made short shift
in classifying it for market and corralling the different
grades of cattle.
Mr. Stoddard had been located at Trail
City. Once the shipment was safely within the
corral, notice was wired the commission firm, affording
time for reply before the shipment would leave in the
morning. An early call at the station was rewarded
by receipt of a wire from the west. “Read
that,” said the foreman, handing the telegram
to Joel; “wants all three of us to come into
the city.”
“Of course,” commented
Joel, returning the message. “It’s
clear enough. There’s an understanding
between us. At the earliest convenience, after
the delivery of the herd, we were to meet and draw
up the final papers. We’ll all go in with
this shipment.”
“And send the outfits across country to Trail
City?”
“Throw the remudas together
and let them start the moment the cattle train leaves.
We can go back with Mr. Stoddard and meet the outfits
at the new trail market.”
“That’s the ticket,”
said the trail boss. “I’m dead tired
of riding horses and eating at a wagon. Give
me the plush cushions and let me put my little feet
under a table once more.”
The heavy cattle train was promised
a special schedule. The outfits received their
orders, and at the usual hour in the morning, the
shipment started to market. Weathered brown as
a saddle, Dell was walking on clouds, lending a hand
to the shipper in charge, riding on the engine, or
hungering for the rare stories with which the trail
foreman regaled the train crew. The day passed
like a brief hour, the train threading its way past
corn fields, country homes, and scorning to halt at
the many straggling villages that dotted the route.
It was a red-letter day in the affairs
of Wells Brothers. The present, their fifth shipment
of the year, a total of over nineteen hundred beeves,
was en route to market. Another day, and their
operations in cattle, from a humble beginning to the
present hour, could be condensed into a simple statement.
The brothers could barely wait the intervening hours,
and when the train reached the market and they had
retired for the night, speculation ran rife in planning
the future. And amid all their dreams and air
castles, in the shadowy background stood two simple
men whose names were never mentioned except in terms
of loving endearment.
Among their many friends, Quince Forrest
was Dell’s hero. “They’re all
good fellows,” he admitted, “but Mr. Quince
is a prince. He gave us our start in cattle.
Our debt to him—well, we can never pay it.
And he never owned a hoof himself.”
“We owe Mr. Paul just as much,”
protested Joel. “He showed us our chance.
When pa died, the settlers on the Solomon talked of
making bound boys of us. Mr. Paul was the one
who saw us as we are to-day.”
“I wish mother could have lived
to see us now—shipping beeves by the train-load—and
buying cattle by the thousand.”
An eager market absorbed the beeves,
and before noon they had crossed the scale. A
conference, jubilant in its nature, took place during
the afternoon, in the inner office of the commission
firm. The execution of a new contract was a mere
detail; but when the chief bookkeeper handed in a
statement covering the shipments of this and the previous
year, a lull in the gayety was followed by a moment
of intense interest. The account showed a balance
of sixty-odd thousand dollars in favor of Wells Brothers!
“Give them a letter of credit
for their balance,” said Mr. Stoddard, amid
the general rejoicing. “And get us some
passes; we’re all going out to Trail City to-night.
There’s a few bargains on that market, and the
boys want to stock their range fully.”
“Yours obediently,” said
the old factor, beaming on his patrons. “And
if the boys have any occasion to use any further funds,
don’t hesitate to draw on us. The manner
in which they have protected their credit entitles
them to our confidence. Our customers come first.
Their prosperity is our best asset. A great future
lies before you boys, and we want a chance to help
you reach it. Keep in touch with us; we may hear
of something to your advantage.”
“In case we need it, can you
get us another permit to bring Texas cattle into Kansas?”
eagerly inquired Joel.
“Try us,” answered the
old man, with a knowing look. “We may not
be able to, but in securing business, railroads look
years ahead.”
A jolly party of cowmen left for Trail
City that night. Morning found their train creeping
up the valley of the Arkansas. The old trail market
of Dodge, deserted and forlorn-looking among the wild
sunflower, was passed like a way station. The
new market was only a mile over the state line, in
Colorado, and on nearing their destination the party
drew together.
“I’ve only got a remnant
of a herd left,” said Mr. Stoddard, “and
I want you to understand that there’s no obligation
to even look at them. Mr. Lovell’s at his
beef ranch in Dakota, and his men have not been seen
since the herds passed north in June. But I’ll
help you buy any cattle you want.”
In behalf of the brothers, Joel accepted
the offer. “These Texas cattle,”
he continued, “reach their maturity the summer
following their fourth year. Hereafter, as fast
as possible, we want to shape up our holdings so as
to double-winter all our beef cattle. For that
reason, we prefer to buy two-year-olds. We’ll
look at your remnant; there would be no occasion to
rebrand, which is an advantage.”
The train reached Trail City on time.
The town was of mushroom growth—a straggling
business street with fancy fronts, while the outer
portions of the village were largely constructed of
canvas. The Arkansas River passed to the south,
numerous creeks put in to the main stream, affording
abundant water to the herds on sale, while a bountiful
range surrounded the market. Shipping pens, branding
chutes, and every facility for handling cattle were
complete.
The outfits were not expected in for
another day. In the mean time, it became rumored
about that the two boys who had returned with Mr.
Stoddard and his trail foreman were buyers for a herd
of cattle. The presence of the old cowman threw
a barrier of protection around the brothers, except
to his fellow drovers, who were made acquainted with
his protégés and their errand freely discussed.
“These boys are customers of
mine,” announced Mr. Stoddard to a group of
his friends. “I sold them a herd at Dodge
last year, and another at Ogalalla this summer.
Range on the Beaver, in northwest Kansas. Just
shipped out their last train of beeves this week.
Had them on yesterday’s market. From what
I gather, they can use about three thousand to thirty-five
hundred head. At least their letter of credit
is good for those numbers. Sorry I ain’t
got the cattle myself. They naturally look to
me for advice, and I feel an interest in the boys.
Their outfit ought to be in by to-morrow.”
Mr. Stoddard’s voucher placed
the brothers on a firm footing, and every attention
was shown the young cowmen. An afternoon and a
morning’s drive, and the offerings on the trail
market had been carefully looked over, including the
remnant of Mr. Stoddard. Only a few herds possessed
their original numbers, none of which were acceptable
to the buyers, while the smaller ones frequently contained
the desired grade and age.
“Let me put you boys in possession
of some facts,” urged Mr. Stoddard, in confidence
to the brothers. “Most of us drovers are
tired out, disgusted with the slight demand for cattle,
and if you’ll buy out our little remnants and
send us home—well, we’d almost let
you name the price. Unless my herds are under
contract, this is my last year on the trail.”
The remnant of Mr. Stoddard’s
herd numbered around seven hundred head. They
were largely twos, only a small portion of threes,
and as an inducement their owner offered to class
them at the lesser age, and priced them at the same
figures as those delivered on the Beaver. On
range markets, there was a difference in the selling
value of the two ages, amounting to three dollars
a head; and as one third of the cattle would have
classed as threes, Joel waived his objection to their
ages.
“We’ll take your remnant
on one condition,” said he. “Start
your outfits home, but you hang around until we make
up our herd.”
“That’s my intention,
anyhow,” replied Mr. Stoddard. “My
advice would be to pick up these other remnants.
Two years on a steer makes them all alike. You
have seen cripple and fagged cattle come out of the
kinks, and you know the advantage of a few cows; keeps
your cattle quiet and on the home range. You
might keep an eye open for any bargains in she stuff.”
“That’s just what Jack
Sargent says,” said Dell; “that we ought
to have a cow to every ten or fifteen steers.”
“Sargent’s our foreman,”
explained Joel. “He’s a Texan, and
knows cattle right down to the split in their hoof.
With his and your judgment, we ought to make up a
herd of cattle in a few days.”
The two outfits came in on the evening
of the fourth day. The next morning the accepted
cattle were counted and received, the through outfits
relieved, the remudas started overland under a detail,
and the remainder of the men sent home by rail.
In acquiring a nucleus, Wells Brothers fell heir to
a temporary range and camp, which thereafter became
their headquarters.
A single day was wasted in showing
the different remnants to Sargent, and relieved of
further concern, Mr. Stoddard lent his best efforts
to bring buyer and seller together. Barter began
in earnest, on the different fragments acceptable
in age and quality. Prices on range cattle were
nearly standard, at least established for the present,
and any yielding on the part of drovers was in classing
and conceding ages. Bargaining began on the smaller
remnants, and once the buyers began to receive and
brand, there was a flood of offerings, and the herd
was made up the second day. The ——
Y was run on the different remnants as fast as received,
and when completed, the herd numbered a few over thirty-four
hundred head. The suggestion to add cows to their
holdings was not overlooked, and in making up the
herd, two fragments, numbering nearly five hundred,
were purchased.
“The herd will be a trifle unwieldy,”
admitted Sargent, “but we’re only going
to graze home. And unless we get a permit, we
had better hold over the line in Colorado until after
the first frost.”
“Don’t worry about the
permit,” admonished Mr. Stoddard; “it’s
sure.”
“We’ll provision the wagon
for a month,” said Joel, “and that will
take us home, with or without a bill of health.”
The commissary was stocked, three
extra men were picked up, and the herd started northward
over the new Ogalalla trail. A week later it crossed
the Kansas Pacific Railroad, when Joel left the herd,
returning to their local station. A haying outfit
was engaged, placed under the direction of Manly,
and after spending a few days at headquarters, the
young cowman returned to the railroad.
The expected permit was awaiting him.
There was some slight danger in using it, without
first removing their wintered cattle; and after a
conference with Manly, it was decided to scout out
the country between their range and the Colorado line.
The first herd of cattle had located nicely, one man
being sufficient to hold the dead-line; and taking
a pack horse, Joel and Manly started to explore the
country between the upper tributaries of the Beaver
and the Colorado line.
A rifle was taken along to insure
venison. Near the evening of the first day, a
band of wild horses was sighted, the trail of which
was back-tracked to a large lake in the sand hills.
On resuming their scout in the morning, sand dunes
were scaled, admitting of an immense survey of country,
but not until evening was water in any quantity encountered.
The scouts were beginning to despair of finding water
for the night, when an immense herd of antelope was
sighted, crossing the plain at an easy gallop and
disappearing among the dunes. Following up the
game trail, a perfect chain of lakes, a mile in length,
was found at sunset. A venison was shot and a
fat camp for the night assured.
The glare of the plain required early
observation. The white haze, heat waves, and
mirages were on every hand, blotting out distinct objects
during the day. On leaving the friendly sand hills,
the horsemen bore directly for the timber on the Republican,
which was sighted the third morning, and reached the
river by noon.
No sign or trace of cattle was seen.
The distance between the new and old trail was estimated
at one hundred miles, and judging from their hours
in the saddle, the scouts hoped to reach the new crossing
on the river that evening. The mid-day glare
prevented observations; and as they followed the high
ground along the Republican, at early evening indistinct
objects were made out on the border of a distant mirage.
The scouts halted their horses.
On every hand might be seen the optical illusions
of the plain. Beautiful lakes, placid and blue,
forests and white-capped mountains, invited the horsemen
to turn aside and rest. But the allurement of
the mirage was an old story, and holding the objects
in view, they jogged on, halting from time to time
as the illusions lifted.
Mirages arise at evening. At
last, in their normal proportions, the objects of
concern moved to and fro. “They’re
cattle!” shouted Manly. “We’re
near a ranch, or it’s the herd!”
“Yonder’s a smoke-cloud!”
excitedly said Joel. “See it! in the valley!
above that motte of cotton-woods!”
“It’s a camp! Come on!”
The herd had every appearance of being
under control. As the scouts advanced, the outline
of an immense loose herd was noticeable, and on a
far, low horizon, a horseman was seen on duty.
On reaching the cattle, a single glance was given,
when the brands told the remainder of the story.
A detail of men was met leaving camp.
Sargent was among them, and after hearty greetings
were over, Joel outlined the programme: “After
leaving the Republican,” said he, “there’s
water between here and home in two places. None
of them are over thirty miles apart—a day
and a half’s drive. I have a bill of health
for these cattle, and turn the herd down the river
in the morning.”
The new trail crossing was only a
few miles above on the river. The herd had arrived
three days before, and finding grass and water in abundance,
the outfit had gone into camp, awaiting word from home.
There was no object in waiting any great distance
from headquarters, and after a day’s travel
down the Republican, a tack was made for the sand hills.
A full day’s rest was allowed
the herd on the chain of lakes. By watering early,
a long drive was made during the afternoon, followed
by a dry camp, and the lagoon where the wild horses
had been sighted was reached at evening the next day.
It was yet early in September, and
for fear of fever, it was decided to isolate the herd
until after the first frost. The camp was within
easy touch of headquarters; and leaving Sargent and
five men, the commissary, and half the remuda, the
remainder returned to the Beaver valley. The
water would hold the cattle, and even if a month elapsed
before frost lifted the ban, the herd would enjoy
every freedom.
The end of the summer’s work
was in sight. The men from the Republican were
paid for their services, commended for their faithfulness,
and went their way. Preparations for winter were
the next concern; and while holding the dead-line,
plans for two new line-camps were outlined, one below
the old trail crossing and the other an emergency shelter
on the Prairie Dog. Forage had been provided
at both points, and in outlining the winter lines,
Joel submitted his idea for Manly’s approval.
“Sargent thinks we can hold
the cattle on twenty miles of the Beaver valley,”
said he, sketching the range on the ground at his feet.
“We’ll have to ride lines again, and in
case the cattle break through during a storm, we can
work from our emergency camp on the Prairie Dog.
In case that line is broken, we can drop down to the
railroad and make another attempt to check any drift.
And as a last resort, whether we hold the line or
not, we’ll send an outfit as far south as the
Arkansas River, and attend the spring round-ups from
there north to the Republican. We have the horses
and men, and no one can throw out a wider drag-net
than our outfit. Let the winter come as it will;
we can ride to the lead when spring comes.”
The future of Wells Brothers rested
on sure foundations. Except in its new environment,
their occupation was as old as the human race, our
heroes being merely players in a dateless drama.
They belonged to a period in the development of our
common country, dating from a day when cattle were
the corner-stone of one fourth of our national domain.
They and their kind were our pioneers, our empire
builders; for when a cowman pushed into some primal
valley and possessed it with his herd, his ranch became
an outpost on our frontier. The epoch was truly
Western; their ranges were controlled without investment,
their cattle roamed the virgin pastures of an unowned
land.
Over twenty-five years have passed
since an accident changed the course of the heroes
of this story. Since that day of poverty and uncertain
outlook, the brothers have been shaken by adversity,
but have arisen triumphant over every storm.
From their humble beginning, chronicled here, within
two decades the brothers acquired no less than seven
ranches in the Northwest, while their holdings of cattle
often ran in excess of one hundred thousand head.
The trail passed away within two years of the close
of this narrative; but from their wide acquaintance
with former drovers, cattle with which to restock their
ranches were brought north by rail. Their operations
covered a wide field, requiring trusty men; and with
the passing of the trail, their first sponsors found
ready employment with their former protégés. And
to-day, in the many irrigation projects of the brothers,
in reclaiming the arid regions, among the directors
of their companies the names of J.Q. Forrest
and John P. Priest may be found.
A new generation now occupies the
Beaver valley. In the genesis of the West, the
cowman, the successor of the buffalo and Indian, gave
way to the home-loving instinct of man. The sturdy
settler crept up the valley, was repulsed again and
again by the plain, only to renew his assault until
success crowned his efforts. It was then that
the brothers saw their day and dominion passing into
the hands of another. But instead of turning
to new fields, they remained with the land that nurtured
and rewarded them, an equally promising field opening
in financing vast irrigation enterprises and in conserving
the natural water supply.
Joel and Dell Wells live in the full
enjoyment of fortunes wrested from the plain.
They are still young men, in the prime of life, while
the opportunities of a thrifty country invite their
assistance and leadership on every hand. They
are deeply interested in every development of their
state, preferring those avenues where heroic endeavor
calls forth their best exertion, save in the political
arena.
Joel Wells was recently mentioned
as an acceptable candidate for governor of his adopted
state, but declined, owing to the pressure of personal
interests. In urging his nomination, a prominent
paper, famed for its support of state interests, in
a leading editorial, paid one of our heroes the following
tribute:—
“... What the state needs
is a business man in the executive chair. We
are all stockholders in common, yet the ship of state
seems adrift, without chart or compass, pilot or captain.
In casting about for a governor who would fully meet
all requirements, one name stands alone. Joel
Wells can give M—— a business administration.
Educated in the rough school of experience, he has
fought his way up from a poor boy on the plains to
an enviable leadership in the many industries of the
state. He could bring to the executive office
every requirement of the successful business man,
and impart to his administration that mastery which
marks every enterprise of Wells Brothers….”
The golden age is always with us.
If a moral were necessary to adorn this story, it
would be that no poor boy need despair of his chance
in life. The future holds as many prizes as the
past. Material nature is prodigal in its bounty,
and whether in the grass under our feet, or in harnessing
the waterfall, we make or mar our success.