THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: Al'OUST 25. 1007. Freighting in the Good Old Days Before the Advei"ofthTi?aHroad lit Vrn't'ii l. ... - . . Jf rouj'a Mr of i,i ,.aw wants to ......... niKiiiuni, iip bpip iorin with iv.ore up lo ff rkxiupnt ft Portion tlir. ... . u - 1 l I lid I 1119 rsllroad has developed the count rv. H -wMom occurs to . him that mavhe the railroad deVeW.ned wit h the country, and he forget, that before even the railroad w.s the country hud It romtner. e. that there wm going to and fro of cnravans. and that ware and commodities were transported from one end of the world to tha other, and buHmm of al sorts ma. thrifty. Not an it la now. maybe, but still with such activity .. kept money in cir culation, gave many men employment and enabled loma to iihim Competencies that, while not mu,:h to apeak of as comparod with tha billionaire bank roll, were suf ficient to satisfy the more modest wants of their owner. Kven y-t some old boy will tell you now and then of the good times before the railroad csme. Then some of those more venturesome spirits who pressed forward ahead of the Iron horse until there was. little or no territory left unsullied by his hoot, lament the time and places Into which, the locomotive was Hot driven. It was a golden pro for ad Venture and for life In Its nakedness. Close to the earth, and devoid of the frills and furbelows of modorn existence, but en dowed with a charm that can never be Understood by those who have been hedged bout forever by the. conventions nf so ciety based on the presence of the steam road and Its accompanying- Jlmltatlon. on individual conduct Me Who stood t'p Straight. While there was a freedom of personal action beyond the conception of the man of today. In those times men had to stand tip quite straight.. Certain primitive no tions of right and wrong prevailed, and these were generally founded on substan tial principles of equity and right. Justlci was sometimes crude, but It was Impartially done, and In a spirit that took away its roughnesa to a large degree. The victim was seldom heard to complain, usually for the reason that he jiad taken his case be . fore a Higher Bar, and was through with things mundane. Notions of "meum et tuum" were most pronounced, and prop erty rights were sacred.' Kven an Indian had a show for Tils owrvin those days. It was early borne In upon the man who en gaged In the life that his physical well being depended solely on himself; that he need not be Imposed on, but he was not to Impose upon anyone else. This waa the simple basis of most of the proceedings between man and man. and along the great routes of travel and .In the mining camps and river towns, where the roads termi nated the conditions were generally under atood and respected. So well established was the rule that In one aectlon of the country, where settlement was extensive before the coming of the railroad, locks and petty thieving were, equally unknown. It Is recalled that on '! the occasion of the first slugging by a footpad, which came some weeks after the railroad had begun running Its trains regularly Into one of the towns, the general cry went up, "Well, we'll have to commence locking ourj doors Bow, since the railroad ) has readied us." " ' Trmffle Was General Etch Then. Lewis and Clark went up the Missouri river, and Zebulon Pike'followed the'Ar kansas for the purpose of establishing rade routes. The water' courses had lived for many years with the batteaux of the fur traders, but a livelier commerce was -'"to spring up. Closely following Pike" we're the freight trains of ,U old 6ntA Fa trail, merchants of St. Louis and, other river metropoli reaching out for closer relations with the Mexicans. This trade had reached a very reapectabk-growth at h time of the Mexican war. Then, came the Callfornlan excitement, and the-Overland trail came Into existence. pike's Peak or Bust" waa the cry that carried thousands of adventurers. Argonauts', look ing for the Golden Fleece, Across the'bral rl. as true a sea and fraught with Ldan ffers equal to thoaa encountered by Odysseus anS.hls fellows during their wanderings. The- land to which these men . ventured tn arch of gold gave them absolutely niillng In the way of clothing or ro vlljons; all they ate, drank or wore had tottbe freighted - In. Frc From '49 to were till golden days of the trail. Santa Fe. Ofl Hand, Oregon! What romance la there tollhes names. Parkman tells the story. many writers have given us accounts he adventures, hardships and pleasures olBth trails, but no one has yet recorded thp romance of those great avenues of eqVnmerce along which flowed the at ream of) traffic between the older east and newer west during those two momentous decade of the country's history. In some future day It will attract the pen of a Prescott, a Mottley or a Fiske, and will be blaxoned as It deserves to be on the annals of the world. But It should be borne In mind always that there was even then traffic that assumed proportions such aa to at tract the attention of the great men of the east, and they debated for many years the construction of a railroad that should link the east and the west. It . was for busi ness already established that they were reaching out; at no time did the develop ment of Nebraska and Kanaas to their present state of productivity and wealth ocour to tha pioneer railroad builders. Most of the states' surface was hopelessly condemned as being a part of the Great American Desert. A Omaha aa lsastortaat Point oa Trail. Omaha was an Important point on the Overland trail and the Oregon trail, too.. Jefferson City waa the first hea4 of the Santa Fe trail, and then West port, now forgotten and swallowed up In Kansas City' great pes. The Hanni bal ic St. Joseph railroad, switched the business to 'St. Joseph, and the Chicago as Northwestern brought Jt again .to Omaha. This was the last head of traffic on the OvwUnd and Oregon trails, although the Pony Express ran from tft. Joseph almost to the time the railroads -ended It forever.' Omaha' prestige a an outfitting point was established early In the history of the town, and fiom the late 'SO' throi g! the '$0' It was headquarter for big freight outfits ai'd for many entailer ventures. Ekpr-.se companies did but I nets here, and a con stant stream of gold dust flowed through tb,e town from the Rocky mountains tird the far-off placer beds of California. Kevada, Utah and Oregon, and late Wyoming. Montana. Idaho nd the Blaek Hills dt South Dakota. contiibuted. It would be Interesting to know Just how ruaiiy millions of gold dust were carrlt J tlrough this city during the freighting lift) s. but this will nevef be arcurutely fig ured. It la certain that an mormons sum WV taken out by returning Argonauts and lii'the ordinary course of business. Many of, the older residents of tiie city engaged lit freighting between the river and the Hocky mountain tinning camps, going to Denver, Suit Lake. Virginia City, Mont., ahd other of the then far-away placea w,here gold and sliver were being dug from the rocks. Almost any man who lived here during the 'UJe can till you stories all night long about the days when Omaha was headquarters for the Rocky Mountain trade, and when never a locomotive had been heard to sererh on this side of the river. The wey of the trails lay along the great water course of the west, and the coun try traversed Is among the most beautiful of all the wotld. How the name of "the fJreat American Desert" ever came to le given' to any part of that great plateau that sweeps up from the valley of the Mis souri to the foothills of the Rockies Is be yond comprehension. Rome few miles of It, In extreme western Nebraska and Kan sas and eastern Colorado may, perhaps, hsve looked bleak after a hot summer had burned off the vegetation of early" spring, but It never resembled a desert. Oit the rontrsry, for hundreds oi miles the read led through rolljng lands whose sur face was covered with the rankest growth of grass, and where In spring and early summer nature spread a carpet of tha most brilliant of flowers. These prairie swarmed with life. Herds of buffalo and deer, antelope and elk; coveys of part ridge and grouse, song birds and beasis of prey were numerous, and such nulssnct as rattle snakes and skunks abounded to the discomfiture of the unwary. Kverjr nlle of the slow progress of the great caravans was fraught with Interest, If n't danger. On all sides nnture showed her self In her most alluring form, and It is not to be wondered at thst the Indian re sented the Intrusion of his white brother Into the lsst of his hunting groumN. It was this opposition to progress that led to mnrh of the excitement of the journey. At no time was the trail absolutely- safe from Interference on the part of the wsr Uke tribes of the plains. Pawnee. Cheyenne, Oglalla and Brule Sioux, Bt'ackfoot, t'te and Comanche, each with. his. share of dominion over the plain... well de marked, united In opposition to the white, and forgot for the moment their hereditary enmity to make common cause In the effort to exterminate the pale face. Many a ghastly tale of the trail Is pre served In commemoration of the seal with which these aborigines pursued their vin dictive hntred of the whites. "Sandy" For evthe's stand at Reerher Island against the Cheyenne under Roman Nose la clauslc of the west, but It has been repeated many times by tho embattled freighters under the direction of some' wagon boss. The Indians never let up, and never omitted to cut off the venturesome outfit that had the temerity to travel so few in numbers as to make it available for massacre. To this element of danger and uncertainty was added the instability of the great rivers' of the plains, and no wagon master was ever sure of his passage of the ford until he had gotten his last wagon safely over. The life was far from monotonous, even in the most piping time of peace. Is It any wonder that the great trails of the west called Irrestlbly to the young and vigorous manhood of the country a Makeap of the Oatflt. , Freight trains were divided Into . two classes, "bull" outfits and "mule" outfits. Horses were catalogued With, the latter. In the early days of the trails the '"but!" outfits had It all to themselves. Light travelers had horses, but they did not dare wander far from the main body on account of the ever-present marauding ..Indian. Their days were spent In hunting and Ash ing and exploration of the country within a limited range on either side of the main traveled route. As the population of the west Increased the demand for better traf fic accommodations . brought the "mule" outfits Into service, and these with, the stage coach reduced the time consumed In the journey. The gpVemmeat did it share by establishing posts for J the army at convenient distance along the trails and furnishing armed escorts for wagon trains., and stage coaches at times especially perilous. ' . A "bull" outfit might consist of any where from one to a dosen teams "of oxer?. ea.cn of from ten to fourteen "yoke," while a "mule" outfit would have ' the same number of teams of from six to ten "span" of mules. It la recalled that now and then some unusually ambitious driver had as many as fifteen "span" In his team. . This number was unwieldy, though, for the ex tra trouble In driving and caring for them was .not compensated for by the added load pulled. Three ' wagons were usually In cluded In the load, the' "lead,"' "swing" and "trailer,"isomet!mes two "swing" wagkna being use. This was the case In the big teams. The load varied. In the lead wagon from 6.000 to 8,000 pounds would be put, In the swing wagon from 3,000 to 4,000 ' A Dayat HI K-.t w.mr f h --t. f.l. I. the meeting of homefolks and A I the atlrrtnir un nf nlii-ttm mem-- orles. Perhaps you did not think of this when the crowd- was milling around like a lot of restless cat tle, and the. crash of brass bands fwaa adding to the'; general din.' But whan you have left the fair behind and have settled back: into the harness of your work-a-day life, these things come home to you, and you begin to'seeand to-afneo Xhe ether and tha better -sider-of this an nual gathering. You .ecall the fact that the fair was something more than a crowd and a horse race. And If you have come up from the farm, and find yourself-shut In by brick wall and bounded by stone walk and granite pavement, you begin to understand that the fair was Ilk , breath from country lanes and the quiet by-ways of life. You scent the fodder In the shock and the leafy green 'of autumn tinted woods, and a great longing comes over you to go back to nature and re fresh your soul. - ''About the .time these ideas begin to takehold upon your Inner self, the click of the typewriter over by the office win dow merge tnto the noise that comes up fiora the buny .street, ,and your mind drifts sway from corttfacts aiid discouhta bs easily and aa Idly aa a fallen leaf drifts down a woodland sin am. Yourar dimly the droning voloe of the man at a nearby d. sk. dictating letter to John Doe "In rtply to your farir of even date" and then the dingy Wall, have faded into the sheen of a, gieeVtvKl and the blue of a summer' sky. Tou're hack at the fair with the horneiolks. and the burden of the years has slipped aWay from your tired shoulders. t- , s Walk over this way "a hit and we shall e if the thing thst go to niake up the state fair are really so different from what tate.falr are really o different from the old time country . fair ' enlarged and made over. Tleee exhibits to..:V from the farm. This corn amf wheat, trlesa. yellow pumpkins are grown on the black soli of the broad prairie lan4s. Bee that fat watermelon, the big. round fellow In the corner! Don't you remember th bend in the creek down by tba Klvelt place, juat over the line of the south eighty? t'an't you feel again the dew from the grass on your bare feet when you crossed the road In the early morning to bring beck one of those portly melons? That was , an armful of Joy you lugged through the stubble of the wheat fieli and laid tenderly lu tha newly turned furrow. And then you swung the line over your shoulder and clucked ) .. . . sAir' " .'.i! 'V' W , ?. t l':.L-?l';-.:.... - t snd In the trailer from l.Soo to i.OM). " This would give maximum load of about four teen tons. The "grub" wagon was an ex-' tra, tho cooking outfit and provisions being carried In a wagon usually attBched to tha rear end of the lightest load In the outfit. Several of these outfits together made up a "train," and a most Importing spcctaola It, was, winding slowly across the prairie, making ten or twelve or mnybe fifteen miles on a good day and two or three or even less on a day of bad muds. Cross ing the streams took time, and Interference from the Indians often delayed them still more. Sixty to seventy-five days to Den ver, six months to Salt Lake City or Vir ginia City, Mont., and even longer to Cali fornia was the rule. " Spirit of Caste ftrons . It would be hard to exnsgerate the lordly contempt with whlcji tho "mule skinner" , looked down upon te "bullwhacker." From his lofty perch on the, near wheeler he . gased with a pitying commiseration on the patient plodder who trudged alongside the slow moving ox team guiding it with word - of mouth, commands Issued In stentoriun tones and backed up by stinging reminders from the most portent lous of whips. For the "mule skinner" was a Jerk line pilot. That is to say, he controlled the move ments of hl8.feam by a single line, running through rlrujs on the hemes from the near wheeler to the. near leader, and along which he communicated his desires by means of Jerks, cryptic enough to tho uninitlate, but wonderfully expressive to the properly trained leat? mule, who would unerringly interpret the signal and "gee" or "haw" as suited the purpose of the driver. This lordly aristocrat of the trail never forgot his own Importance, either on the road or off, and maintained his caste with Jealous care. -But he suffered In turn, for the princely cow puncher enter tained for the mule skinner all the con tempt the latter had for the bullwhacker. la. fact, 'the, cow puncher had for these and the farmer, whom he Included' under a -most expressive designation, a feeling of undisguised disdain that not Infrequently led .to. sudden ..death. But this Is a little aside from the story, The miner, In turn, ' professed to understand neither, while the gambler swindled each with utmost In difference as to hi social condition, and. It might be added, with unerring certainty. Singular as It may eem, the soldiers, on whom devolved the safety of all, was placed literally at the bottom of the heap. Skill of the Bnll-Whaeker. If the bull-whacker did not pretend to the social eminence of the cow-puncher or the mule-skinner, he at least was entitled to some distinction. He had necessarily to develop a certain degree of skill In the handling of his charges that amounted to a title to honor, even It it were denied him. - r i i m hi i j 1 - r - ' J- ' . ... - ... . ... ' : ...... ... -a- - .... , State Fair is Like to Frank and Old John, and the smooth turning black soil, fresh from the plow, covered over that cool feast and kept It safe. You haven't forgotten that! You can't forget It, If you have ever been a boy on the farm! You can still see that furrow In the rich loam, and that big melon, and you can feel again the hot ray of the afternoon sun when you went back to dig up that banquet bf Juicy swe'et ness. You never find a melon like that now-a-days; no, sir, they don't grow any more, -or If they do, the bare-footed boys on the farm hide them away. And it has been many long years since you ate the heart from an "old yellow core. Wonder where they have all gone? Here Is another has-been from some old fashioned garden. An old-time gourd, one of the sort we made into dippers and hung by the old well the dug well rock-walled and furnished with a pair of real moss covered buckets. Did you ever come in from the field, hot and dusty, and lean far over the curbing of the well to catch a glimpse of a sun-tanned face In the cool depths of the water? How the drops glit tered and splashed on the rocks as you pulled "up the brimming bucket. Adam's ale, we called It then, and never since V2J?'&? I"! .v-'. " l"i l f v " .r ' a w it r, L --s;- . V';-" ; i ' : m -A - r ar-. :j k -A, - .wm.-. . . THB HOO IN HIS HARVEST OF . et ' ONB OF MULH1 The ox he drove was seldom of the variety that has been poetically described as pa tient and plodding, wide-eyed and all that sort of thing. - He was generally a long horn, born In the wild and come up through a series of experiences from In fancy to oxhood that developed any In herent vlcjousness and general cussednes thatsmight have lurked In his nature. Pro fessor Slialer of Harvard once wrote that the horse and the ox were Inexcusably ' stupid, or they would never have allowed themselves to become domesticated and re duced to the condition of burden bearers, for man. This Is true of the ox who made up the bull team. He was stupid, but at times the suspicion that some gleam of realization of his situation must have peneX trated his dull brain was Justified, for he showed a perverseness that was all but Inspired, and was surely Inspiring, at least as far as profanity may be deemed the result of Inspiration. Probably the most picturesque forms of sulphurous blasphemy known to the tongue were those devised, frequently Impromptu, for the purpose of dealing with a bull team In a moment of fractlousnese. -But It was another sort of skill that marked the humble bull-whacker. Inremalty ofthe Driver. It required Ingenuity and understanding of no mean order to get the twenty or more yoked oxen under way and set them to pulling so that a load could be started and kept in motion. It required much more than ordinary ability to turn a cor ner with one of those unwieldy teams, and the general handling of one brought con tinually Into play judgment and knowledge of the beasts that almost marked the suc cessful bull-whacker as a specialist, ftven the manipulation of his huge whip was an accomplishment that would attract atten tion. Its dimensions weie most formidable, have you tasted drink so sweet or satisfying- Wouldn't you like to fill another gourd with - that pure, cold water, and drink a toast to the days' that are past and gone forever? You can close your eye and see the year go marching by In dim and shadowy procession all the years of life eome of them wasted years, but all beyond recall. Let's get out in the open and be jostled Again by the crowd; there are so many ghostly memories here. But we can spare a moment to see tho apples. Heaps of crimson and gold and green, piled high and smiling up at us Just as they used to tantalize our childish eyes and appetites. See that plate of Jon athans and the deep blush that a prying summer sun has painted on their ruddy cheeks! Don't you remember the tree in the far corner of the orchard, and how we climbed to its topmost bough when the leaves were turning brown and the haze of Indian summer hung upon the hill tops? Helgh-ho! Other days; other days! The Cattle Shaw la On. Over this 'way the cuttle show Is on. Look at the sleek, well-kept kine descended from famous families, and bearing their honors with the modesty that comes of mm. t - . FAT. THB THB LATER-DAT BULXi OUTFITS GOINO OUTFIT OK ITS WAT ACROSS THB PLAJNi .J -e fJ-W . -iv STAGE COACHES WKRBJ THB "FLTKRS" OF TUB BULL TRAIN DATS. 1 a OX CARTS READY and, properly handled. It was capable of producing terrible results. In the hands of a man of brutal instinct Its effects were often such as would secure the perpetrator today an exemplary term In prison. A rip six or more Inches long through an ox's hide or a piece of skin an Inch square or larger lifted was the common result of a snap from that terrific lash. It Is to the credit of the drivers, though, that that did not frequently occur. But the hissing of the lash and Its sharp, pistol-like crack was generally enough to awaken the sleep iest steer that ever tugged In unwelcome yoke. Half a dozen of these brawny bull whackers tn a tournament of whip-cracking could easily give one who only heard the result a notion that a miniature battle waa a Breath from Country Lanes true worth. These are the kings and queens of the pasture and the meadow lot. Here comes a long string of proud aristocrats reds and whites and roans Durhama, we called them, when the western range waa free and the herder circled far and wide to gather In the strays. There are white faced beauties, too. tracing back to Here fordshire, and bonnie black, whose sires once knew the heather of Scotch .high lands. Worth a king's ransom are these herds. Take note of the level backs, the spreading ribs, the great heart girth, for these are the beef breeds. You admire their fine lines and beautiful coats, but none of these can ever take the place In our hearts held sacred to the memory of Longlegs and Old Tut. They boasted no Illustrious lineage nor pedigree In ponder ous herd 'book, and they might have changed hand for a paltry thirty piece of sllveV, but. oh, the sweet, rich milk they gave and what pet we made of thoae old, homely cows! After they had acquired the dignity that comee with age and large, responsibility, they led the herd to pas ture in the morning and home again at night. And It waa worth while to meet' Old Tut at tha bar and put your arm i BEATTXa OF THE" HOMES' HOOFS' TFON' THB'tiCXcK. INTO CAilT. ,, ... 1 - TO START A STREET SCENE IN OMAHA In progress. The accuracy with which the blow might be directed was llulu short of marvellous. Life that Has Gone. But this phase of western UJe has van ished before the hoot of the Iron horse. Along the trail where ,once the bull trains toiled a snail's pace from civilization to frontier the modern train de luxe now flits on Its mile-a-minute schedule, while pas senger give seldom a thought to the life that has gone, for the reason that they know nothing of It. Freight trains are handled on a time schedule that was con sidered fast even for express trains twenty-five years ago, and tha stage coach and about her neck while you told her the troubles of the day. Not that she ever said a word, but there was a look of un derstanding In her calm, untroubled eyes that was better than a world of wordy counsel; And patience was writ large across her broad and kindly face. HI Spllrlns Ilaat Up Cronies. Old HI Splivins knows about cows. He has studied them at first hand and looked carefully into their way and habit. He has looked longer and with more care since he lost an eye hooked out by a brlndle heifer. His says he has no use for pedigreed stock at fancy prices. He wants good, plain cattle that wilt grow into beef and give plenty of milk. Cows are like women, avers the sage ana one-eyed HI, In that they can be petted and fixed up until their usefulness Is spoiled. HI always comes up to the fair and takes a keen delight in hunting up a company of cronies as-old and as quaint as himself. He likes to hark back to the old days, and perhapa you heard what he said about going In swimming. Well, it came about 'in tills way. Hi admits that he Is getting old, but he doesn't brag about It. He J. j.. ; " Lis s ,,-as. " t n -C SWW-a - - -,"v IN THE SIXTIES. the immense freight wagon have Joined "the other discards of civilization. In a very, few remote regions, seldom resorted to,-tHa transportation business Is carried on by the picturesque methods of a generation ago, but for the most part the railroad has conquered. Until the very last of tha old-timers has passed In his checks, thouglk, the claim of the railroad that It developed the country will i.ot go unchallenged. -Tha railroad has been an lndispensible faetop In the Immense growth of the middle westj but It waa the growing traffic of this region that first brought the railroad here. ,tq compete with the bull-whacker and the mule-sklnner. These served their purpose and served it well and deserve to be re membered for what they did. M'C ' says that the saddest day of his life wis when he realized that he didn't want to to In swimming any more. Ttme was when he would break out of schooT on a warm afternoon In spring and beat the crowd to the swimming hole. Used to scatter big wardrobe all the way from the achool haus. to the creek, but that dldn t count If you hit the water first. Wardrobe, were extensive In those days, anyway, and , few pieces, more or less, didn't matter. You recall those old swimming hole. the creek and the keen delight of a plunge Into their clear depth.. They gr. "th. only real fountain, of youth, the kind that , Ponce da Leon .ought in vain, and that every country boy ha. found. HI believe in going back to nature. Say. that a bath tub 1. too- cramped for him and that the money now being spent on the Panama canal would dig a million swim ming holes and fill them full of clear water and happy boys. HI looks at a good many things on the bias, having only one aide light, so to speag, but you will have to admit the justice of his swlroV ming hole contention. When you have looked over tha sheep in their winter coat of Dure wool an have paused to see th biggest hog in hi- V. ..... . A , .W. I . ib iiw-i v. iiik norse mows claim your attention. You cannot over look the horse show at the fair; he get right Into the spot light and he is dec orated with ribbons -that vie for color wlih Joseph's coat. But If you have any defi nite Idea of utility you will pass on down ' the line to where the mule is on parade. ' You find him here In force anil you will d. ; well to stand afar off, out of range of that ' long hind leg that owns the hitting power j of a Jeffries and the force of a plledriver. ' He Is man's most patient and long-s iffer Ing friend. Urst In peace -and Indispensable In war. Sometime he make a kick, but who shall arise and say that It la without juat cause or lacking In effect? Of all our -domestic animal he 1 the only one with out pride of ancestry or bop of posterity, and yet this long-eared orphan always' claims our warmest sympathy. He Is st truly a beast of burden, a patient plodiler of the fields, willing ever, and aa strong aa th leathern thong that bind him t j til tbankleea task and hold him tn an en 1 leas bondage. Ever and again he droop bl long ear and relieves h pent-up feel. Ing In a hoarse bray that I unlike an Other sound In all the scheme of nature. A njt vma Vi 1 1 a t t r. . . ir Kl,nl L . . . i, i . walling protect against the unkind de- . oreea of fat or only a long-drawn, jeering (ODntlnuefl an Page Five.) '".. V ' i i . ' r" ' ' ' '''l") t - -.. sr .: . :. i -V