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Tuesday, May 31, 2011

11 Foods That Can Help You Lose Weight.

http://shine.yahoo.com/channel/food/11-foods-for-faster-easier-weight-loss-2489734/#photoViewer=1

Avocado made the list. 

Avocado

This green goddess of heavenly, creamy taste can help you whittle your waist. It's true! Researchers suspect that the unsaturated fat in avocados may ratchet up body levels of the hunger-halting hormone called leptin -- a hormone that lets your brain know that you're full, so you stop eating.

http://shine.yahoo.com/channel/food/11-foods-for-faster-easier-weight-loss-2489734/#photoViewer=5

Thursday, May 26, 2011

Who was William A. Clark?

I am not going to answer this question.  It would take to long, there is too much rumor and mystery and I don't really know anyway.  But his daughter died yesterday and prolonged the mystery.  This is a great human interest story if you just follow it a little bit.  A woman dies at age 104 in 2011 and the most recent photo of her was taken in 1933, 78 years ago.  I will put in a paragraph about her father, William A. Clark and then a link to the rest of the story. 

Anna Clark and her daughter Huguette took up residence in the Fifth Avenue apartment in 1927, taking the entire 12th floor, which had been marketed as "the finest apartment in the world." Anna Eugenia La Chappelle had been the teenage ward who became the mistress and then second wife of the widower U.S. senator, who hid her away in Paris. They supposedly married in 1901 in France, though it wasn't announced until 1904 and no record of the marriage has been produced. Anna was 23, younger than the four children from his first marriage, and William was 62, older than his mother-in-law. The couple had two daughters, Andrée in 1902 in Spain, and Huguette in Paris on June 9, 1906.


Here is also a link to some videos where Huguette was featured on the Today Show. 
http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/26184891/vp/38484280#38484280

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Three room mansion. I was a decade too late.

Per my blog post of May 12, Leon sent me an email with more information about the railroad tie house masquerading as a mansion.  Apparently it was built in the 1950s rather than the 1960s as I guessed.  Here is what Leon said:

Nick,
      In regards to the the three room Mansion at Woodside.  When I was 12 years old, 1954,  Dad and I think Earl and I were going toward Woodside on the Castle Dale road in a one and one half ton stock truck.  I looked out the side when we were in Oil Well Wash and saw someone down in the wash.  Dad stopped and it was James "Shorty" Lanier.  Shorty had taken his family in the family car to see Grandpa Curtis, who had already moved his camp to another location, in Humbug.  Shorty had gotten the car stuck 2 or 3 days previous and was walking out trying to find help.  He had gone down into the wash in hopes of finding a pool of water.
      Dad drove on to Woodside where he had homesteaded 160 acres and left me, and I think a couple or horses, while he, Earl and Shorty went back to Humbug to rescue Shorty's family.  Dad said he had a hard time keeping the children from drinking too much water at once and that when they saw him all they could say was "water, water, water,"  only it was pronounced as a child would say it like "wahtah" or something like that.
      He left me on the side of the hill by the ditch that crosses the road on the way to the house, only back towards Woodside itself.  There was no house.  I think he had made a square ditch to pour the cement into.  This location was anondoned for the present location of the house.  Starting when I was 13, 1955, I spent every summer and most week ends at Woodside and the house was built then.  So it was built between the summer of 1954 and summer of 1955.  The grainery and sheds including chicken coop and all of the corrals were there in the summer of 1955 also.  As you stepped into the house there was a hole in the cement floor and it was said that it was because the cement had frozen when it was laid.  So I assume that the floor was laid that winter sometime.  I don't know this for sure, but I think that Bill Martin helped Dad build the house.  I think sometime after that they had a falling out as Bill Martin never came around anymore after that.
      Verl said that one time after he got his drivers licence he asked Dad if he could go out for the night and Dad said he could go and stay out all night if he wanted, but first thing in the morning they were taking a load of railroad ties to Woodside to start the house.  I think this was when we were living in Carbonville.  Verl got is drivers licence in 1952.  Or at least he turned 16 in 1952.  So that would have been 1953 or 1954
              Leon

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Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Friday, May 20, 2011

My dad's mansion was a house built out of railroad ties.

I believe when it came to home construction my dad did have some talent.  I'm not sure when, probably in the 1960s he built a house at Woodside.  Just a simple three room home with one of the rooms being a combination living room, kitchen and bedroom.  Then there were two separate bedrooms.  What is unique is that he built the house out of railroad ties that the railroad let him have.  I don't think he paid anything for them but if someone knows better then I they can correct me.  As it turns out this little simple house is nothing to scoff at.  A house made out of railroad ties is up for sale for over $400,000 and I have provided a link to prove it.  Apparently Max wasn't the only one that made a house out of railroad ties.  It's been done since pioneer times. 

http://realestate.msn.com/blogs/listed.aspx?feat=5dc701ef-e9fb-4020-b55d-9091bb1d8677&GT1=35000

Mother Earth News even has an article about another home made out of railroad ties.  It is 2200 square feet and has three bedrooms. 

http://www.motherearthnews.com/Modern-Homesteading/1971-03-01/Build-Home-From-Railroad-Ties.aspx

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Rheumatism Home Remedies

So my rheumatism is really bothering me and I decide to do a search for a rheumatism cure.  I came across this great site that tells what rheumatism is, why we get it and some great home remedies.  I hope I can find something that works.  Here is what it says and the link which has more information.   

Derived from a Greek word 'rhuema', which means swelling, rheumatism is essentially a condition in which a person experiences severe pain in bone, muscles and joints, along with swelling. It mostly affects people above 45 years of age and is found in both men and women. There are basically two types of rheumatism - muscular rheumatism, which affects the muscles, and articular rheumatism, which affects the joints. Some of the causes of rheumatism are poisoning of blood with acid wastes, physically stressful work, damp weather conditions and acid-alkaline imbalance. Heredity factors, hormonal disorder and infection in teeth are some of the other causes of rheumatism. However, rheumatism can be cured with some natural remedies. In the following lines, we have provided the best home remedies to treat rheumatism.

http://www.iloveindia.com/home-remedies/rheumatism.html

Monday, May 16, 2011

Poker Pete Chronology

This of course is not a complete chronology or time line of the life of Hans Peter Olsen otherwise known as Poker Pete.  This is just a collection of bit and pieces that appeared in the local newspapers that made mention of Pete Olsen.  A couple of items are repeated having appeared in previous posts.  The first item is as complete as I could make it as I couldn't read much of the article.  Apparently I wasn't able to find another more readable source. 


Hans Peter Olsen
"Poker Pete"
____________________


                Down at Woodside there has been _____ board fence built in front of ______ of business of Peter Olsen _____ the officials of the Rio Grande _____ have taken the notion they _____ drive out of the country,____some of the section men _____ known to have drank in _____ conducted by Olsen _____ has the railroad com _____ struct the premises of Olsen _____ the company isn't getting _____ to do its work, it is the _____ fault.

Eastern Utah Advocate
January 11, 1900 
___________________


                Orson Robbins has sold his saloon business at Huntington to Pete Olsen of Woodside. 

Emery Country Progress 
January 12, 1901
____________________


                Peter Olsen of Woodside was in Price last Tuesday and paid his respects to "the great moral and religious" while in town.  He says times are very quiet there now, but thinks they will be better with the coming of spring. 

Eastern Utah Advocate
March 9, 1905
___________________


                The following Emery County citizens drew prizes in the big land drawing at Provo last week. 
                Out of 60 whose names and numbers given below not over a dozen will go onto the reservation to look it over and of this dozen it is likely that more than half will exercise their right to claim a selection: 
                . . .
                48_0  Peter Olsen, Woodside. 

Emery Country Progress 
August 26, 1905 
____________________


                A saloon license was granted to Peter Olsen of Woodside for the ensuing quarter on the payment of $100. 

Emery Country Progress
April 11, 1908  
____________________




MINING ON CEDAR MOUNTAIN

   According to reports someone has started a little mining boom around Cedar Mountain.  Chris Larsen and Ervin Draper of Castle Dale were over in that direction a few days ago delivering a few tons of oats to Peter Olsen at Woodside.  They noticed about a dozen men prospecting and working in the district and ascertained that a few Denver men were in the party for the purpose of examining the territory with the view of prospecting and developing same.  Considerable work has been done there in the past by various parties and ore has been found that runs very high in silver and lead with some gold and copper.  Ex Sheriff Hardy of Sale Lake City and the Hecker Mining Company have also done considerable exploitation work and obtained fairly good results but the distance from the railroad and the heavy freight charges from Desert Switch to a smelter point have discouraged the proposition of mining very extensively.  With some method of treating the ore locally there is enough of it already exposed and of good value to warrant mining operations on an extensive scale. 

____________________


                Peter Olsen of Woodside had a narrow escape from being killed by a train at Price Saturday morning.  Olsen came in on No 7 and while alighting from the train missed his hold and fell under the wheels.  A bystander saw his peril and pulled him out just in time to save him from being run over.  It was a narrow escape and one Olsen does not care to experience again. 

Eastern Utah Advocate 
July 21, 1910 
___________________


                CASTLE DALE, Oct 21.  The following have been appointed judges of election for the election November 8th. 
                Green River - Frank Cook, F. A. |Bricker, T. D. Spalding. 
                Woodside - S. M. Miller, Alfred Peterson, Peter Olsen. 
                Desert Lake - H. G. Mills, Samuel Wells, Joseph Smith .
                Cleveland - Adolph Axelson, W. E. Cowley, Louis P. Oveson. 
                Huntington - District No. 1, William Howard, J. V. Leonard, E. G. Geary.  District No. 2, Christoher Wilcox, Henry Stevensen, Heber Leonard. 

Eastern Utah Advocate 
July 27, 1910 
____________________


OLSEN IS ACQUITTED

Green River Editor Sore On the
Good "Bishop of Woodside"

                After hearing positive proof by direct testimony of three witnesses, who swore that they had bought liquor of "Poker Pete" Olsen at Woodside, the case against Olsen was dismissed last Thursday by T. S. Turner, justice of the peace in this precinct, who sustained the argument of W. H. Frye of Price, attorney for the defendant, who maintained that all evidence not favorable to his client was irrelevant, incompetent and immaterial, says Green River's Dispatch. 
                Prosecuting Attorney Powers could not produce documentary evidence that Woodside is in 'dry' territory and in the absence of this testimony Judge Turner refused to admit the evidence.  Court records showing that Olsen had been convicted for the same offense before were shut out and notwithstanding that the judge had himself assessed the bootlegger a fine only a few weeks previous, he gave credence to the argument of Attorney Frye and took the stand in the matter as stated Counsel for the prosecution attempted to place witnesses on the stand that Olsen himself had admitted that he violated the law, but this too, was overruled and an old offender was set scotfree. 
                Everybody knows that Woodside is in dry territory and by virtue of the state law providing that no liquor shall be sold outside of cities and towns, therefore the Dispatch feels that in justice to the saloon men of this city who are paying a high license, there should have been a conviction in this flagrant case, the testimony being so positive.                 

Eastern Utah Advocate 
June 6, 1912 



___________________


                In the summer of 1899 he took me down there with him.  After a train ride of several hours we landed at the little settlement of Lower Crossing, a station on the Rio Grande Western railroad.  It was called Lower Crossing because it was the last of several times that the railroad crossed Price River.  The name was later changed from the descriptive Lower Crossing to nondescript "Woodside" by order of the Post Office Department. 
                At that time Lower Crossing consisted of a railroad station, section house and a water tank.  Nearby was a farm owned by three Swiss brothers, Louie, Felix and Bert Pressit.  Over on the riverbank was the only commercial establishment in the settlement, operated by a character known as Poker Pete.  In one room of a two-room cabin, Pete lived; in the other room he kept a small stock of overalls, flour, coffee, tobacco and salt, and a large stock of very poor whiskey and beer.  Prominent in this room was a card table, and Pete's aim in life was to get some wandering sheepherder drunk so that he could skin him out of his winter's wages in a poker game.  After some success in this line, Pete would get the idea that he was a real gambler and needed a wider field for his skill.  But he always came back.  Broke. 

Harvey Hardy, A Cabin on Price River, True West 
December 1964, p. 26.
___________________


PETER OLSEN IS DEAD

Well Known Resident of Woodside Is
Buried at Huntington

                Peter Olsen, ranch man, merchant and livestock man died at his home at Woodside last Saturday evening about 7 o'clock of heart and lung troubles after an illness that had kept him practically to his bed for several weeks.  Deceased was in the fifty-sixth year of his age and had resided in this section of Eastern Utah for about thirty years.  He had been in business at Woodside some twenty years. 
                As a child he came to Utah with his parents Mr. and Mrs. Jorgen Olsen from Denmark and located at Ephraim where the father and mother are buried.  He is survived by one brother, Sophus Olsen, and two sisters, Mrs. William Pehrson of Salt Lake City and Mrs. Martin Jensen of Huntington.  The body was brought to Price Sunday evening and taken to Huntington last Monday for the funeral and burial. 
                Decedent was a kindly man and if he ever did anyone an intentional wrong or had a bad hair in his head it is not known.  His charities were numerous and he will be mostly missed by those who knew him best.  In his business dealings he was straight as a string.  He leaves an estate believed to amount to several thousand dollars including a ranch, stock of merchandise, and some cattle and horses. 

Sunday, May 15, 2011

Poker Pete in True West Magazine

I'm going to make this the 2nd of a 3 part installment on Poker Pete.  The next one will be a time line or chronology of Poker Pete.  This one is an excerpt from a True West article called A Cabin on Price River. 

                At that time Lower Crossing consisted of a railroad station, section house and a water tank.  Nearby was a farm owned by three Swiss brothers, Louie, Felix and Bert Pressit.  Over on the riverbank was the only commercial establishment in the settlement, operated by a character known as Poker Pete.  In one room of a two-room cabin, Pete lived; in the other room he kept a small stock of overalls, flour, coffee, tobacco and salt, and a large stock of very poor whiskey and beer.  Prominent in this room was a card table, and Pete's aim in life was to get some wandering sheepherder drunk so that he could skin him out of his winter's wages in a poker game.  After some success in this line, Pete would get the idea that he was a real gambler and needed a wider field for his skill.  But he always came back.  Broke. 
                The section hands were all Chinese--the old-fashioned variety who wore their hair in long queues down their backs, long shirts outside their baggy pants and heelless slippers.  They spoke no English. 
                A few small cattle outfits came in to Lower Crossing for mail and freight, both of which were handled at the station.  Among these were the Range Valley Cattle Company from over on Range Creek, of which Johnnie Downard was foreman, and a small spread over on Green River owned by big good-natured Tom Dilly.  Tom's place could be reached by a pack trail that went down Price River Canyon where it cut through the Book Cliffs and then went off to the northeast, then down to Green River. 
                In later years I have read some uncomplimentary things about Tom Dilly, but when I knew him I always found him to be a pleasant, likeable fellow.  Several times when we happened to be in the settlement at the same time, we got up dances and had a lot of fun.  The dances were held in an abandoned log cabin schoolhouse on the other side of the river.  Candles furnished the illumination and also the "slickum" for the dance floor.  Music came from Felix Pressit's concertina and Tom Dilly's mouth organ.  Most of the dancers came from farms farther up the river, some from twenty miles away, but we had a good time in our simple way.  One dance was held in cold weather, when the mothers thought it was too cold to leave the babies in the wagons--so they took them over to Poker Pete's and parked them in Pete's bed with Pete installed as babysitter! 

A CABIN ON PRICE RIVER
True West, November-December 1964
By HARVEY HARDY

Saturday, May 14, 2011

Poker Pete Olsen is Acquitted

Sooner or later I was going to get to a story about "Poker Pete" Olsen.  I'll probably feature Poker Pete a couple times in the future.  This one is from a newspaper clipping from 1912 in the Eastern Utah Advocate.

Olsen is Acquitted
____

Green River Editor Sore On the Good "Bishop of Woodside"
____

After hearing positive proof by direct testimony of three witnesses, who swore that they had bought liquor of "Poker Pete" Olsen at Woodside, the case against Olsen was dismissed last Thursday by T. S. Turner, justice of the peace in this precinct, who sustained the argument of W. H. Frye of Price, attorney for the defendant, who maintained that all evidence not favorable to his client was irrelevant, incompetent and immaterial, says Green River Dispatch. 

Prosecuting Attorney Powers could not produce documentary evidence that Woodside is in 'dry' territory and in the absence of this testimony Judge Turner refused to admit the evident.  Court records showing that Olsen had been convicted for the same offense before were shut out and  notwithstanding that the judge had himself assessed the bootlegger a fine only a few weeks previous, he gave credence to the argument of Attorney Frye and took the stand in the matter as stated Counsel for the prosecution attempted to place witnesses on the stand that Olsen himself had admitted that he violated the law, but this too, was overruled and an old offender was set scotfree.

Everybody knows that Wooodside is in dry territory and by virtue of the state law providing that no liquor shall be sold outside of cities and towns, therefore the Dispatch feels that in justice to the saloon men of this city who are paying a high license, there should have been a conviction in this fragrant case, the testimony being so positive. 
__________

Eastern Utah Advocate
June 6, 1912

This Attorney W. H. Frye also figured in the post about the Coach Stallion.  He was one of the purchasers and when it went to court he was also one of the defendants.

Friday, May 13, 2011

Shew Fly No. 1 Claim

The Shew Fly no. 1 is a deposit of fluxing shale and other hardening materials.  This claim was surveyed and corners set on March 9, 1925 by Charles Leger.  This claim was recorded at 11 a.m. in book J-6 on page 11 on April 3, 1925 at the request of J. H. Wade. 

The Shew Fly no. 1 was located  in the north half of the northeast quarter of section 8 township 18 south and range 14 east of the Salt Lake Base Meridian.    This claim also consisted of the south half of the southeast quarter of section 5 in the same township and range. 

The locators of this claim were Joe Curtis, Astell Curtis, Thursa Olsen, Lynn Olsen, Joseph E. Caldwell, Flossy Caldwell, James H. Wade and Ruby Wade.

Sunday, May 8, 2011

Happy Mother's Day

A brief salute to my mother.  One of her brother's got an education.  One got sent on a mission.  My mother got a camera which she took a ton of pictures with.  This picture was probably taken with her camera.  My mother. Vesta, once commented that she was told by someone that she, Vesta, reminded her of Vesta's mother Ellen.  My mother. Vesta, took that as the best compliment any one could have given her.  Someone also said speaking of my grandmother Ellen, that if anyone was worthy of the Celestial Kingdom it was Ellen.  I can feel that that is true.  From the little memory I have of my Grandmother Pettersson, she was very spiritual and close to heaven.  I do have ancestors to be thankful for. 

Friday, May 6, 2011

The Lion Hunter

I am telling this story from what I have heard and put together throughout the years.  Hopefully it is accurate.  What we know for sure is that Max did bag a mountain lion on the east side of the Green River.  I believe the following events are what led up to it. 

Apparently there was a man that ran sheep on the east side of the Green River by the name of Johnny Mahleres.  He had a big problem with a mountain lion getting a lot of his sheep.  He was at wit's end I'm sure and didn't know what to do.  He heard about or it was suggested to him that Max Curtis could probably solve this problem for him.  Max was an outdoors man, a good shot and a good hunter.  He was a very experienced sheep herder and knew the country well.  He also had good eyes, being farsighted, which suited him just fine for this type of endeavor.  Max did not work for Mahleres previous to this time to my knowledge.  He was singled out specifically to hunt down a mountain lion.  I don't know how Max accomplished it but he was successful in bagging the problem mountain lion.  I believe this occurred shortly before or after Max was married.  Kathleen seems to remember this event.  Max did not brag about it as much as he could have as this is quite an accomplishment but apparently not too difficult for him.  The one thing that I don't know is whether Max used dogs to help him.  I have no evidence that he did but most lion hunters do use dogs.  Good job Max! 

Wednesday, May 4, 2011

The Ditchdigger

When I was in high school in order to motivate you the teachers would say that you need to get an education so that you wouldn't end up being a ditch digger.  As if being a ditch digger is a bad thing.  Some of them that use machinery today can make some good money. 

Anyway I have been wanting to tell this story for some time.  Joe Curtis apparently was one of the best ditch diggers around.  I have found some documents to back this up so it is official.  He is a good ditch digger.  I know he did other things as well.  He was a farmer, rancher, pioneer, family man, business man and did his share of prospecting.  Joe was one of the first settlers of Woodside credited with that honor partly because he settled with his family present.  In one of my earlier posts I alluded to some of the place names that were named after him.  The Curtis Formation and Joe's Holes are probably the most prominent.  One of the first recorded instances of his ditch digging prowess follows:

     Sylvester and his brothers, George, Nick, Chris, Davis and Silas, built a one-room log house that serves as a schoolhouse, church and amusement hall.  Davis Wilson and William Higby called for the dances and George Biddlecome, with his fiddle, was the musician.  Harmon Curtis, son of Simmon(s) P. and Emeline Curtis of Springville, came to Castle Valley when he was but a boy of sixteen, with his brother Joseph and his wife, who settled a mile or so south of Castle Dale on land purchased from Andrew Rasmussen.  The Curtis brothers helped plow the first irrigation ditch south of Castle Dale.  Harmon Curtis was the first school teacher.  He taught for three years and had from twelve to fifteen students of all ages from Wilsonville and the nearby ranches.  The only desks were homemade benches and the books were brought in from Sanpete County by horseback.  School was only held for about four years. 
Kate B. Carter, Our Pioneer Heritage, Volume 13. p. 495. 

He probably helped plow this irrigation ditch before he moved to Woodside.  The Woodside documentation is next:

      Woodside, on the Price River, lies approximately halfway between the town of Price and Green River. 
     The first settler, Henry Hutchinson, was attracted by gold pay dirt in the Cedar Mountains.  In 1885 Pete Peterson and Sanderson also located here.  The next to come were Scott Miller and Joe Curtis.  Indians told them to turn back or they would starve; but they ignored the Indians and proceeded to take up homesteads, diverting the waters of the Price River for irrigation.  Joe Curtis and Scott Miller both had families. 
Daughters of the Utah Pioneers, Castle Valley, p. 324. 

There are two irrigation ditches at Woodside.  I wonder if Joe helped with them.  From the above information it would seem that he did. 

The third documentation of his ditch digging prowess seals it.  The Castle Dale and Woodside ditches were probably made in the 1880s.  This article postdates them.  It affirms Joe as one of the best: 

                Joe Curtis, of Lower Crossing, was in our town this week.  Joe is not only a good miner but can throw as much mud out of an irrigating ditch as any man in the west. 
Eastern Utah Advocate
January 22, 1891

And a ditch at Desert Lake:

                John L. Thayne and Joseph Curtis are running a four or five-mile ditch from the extreme north end of the Cleveland Canal to carry water to a reservoir north of Desert Lake for culinary and stock watering purposes.  
Eastern Utah Advocate
November 23, 1905

Wow, as much as any man in the west.  He must have been pretty good.  This ditch from the Cleveland Canal to Desert Lake makes at least the third ditch that Joe helped on.  That is pretty good.  My dad used to say when talking about people that they hauled the dirt to make this country.  That would seem to fit Joe very well. 

Sunday, May 1, 2011

Coach Stallion

Coach Stallion

     A party of men composed of J. M. Whitmore, W. H. Frye, G. A. Nixon and S. S. Young of Price and Henry G. Mills & Sons and Joe Curtis & Sons of Desert Lake have purchased a beautiful Coach Stallion at the price of $2,400.   The animal was purchased last Saturday and taken to Desert Lake. 

From Carbon County May 13, 1910

     I find it interesting that James M. Whitmore was involved.  Not only was he probably the largest rancher in the territory, he was also a banker.  I wish I knew more about G. A. Nixon.  This is a good story but apparently it wasn't over and there is a downside.  The following comes from the Eastern Utah Advocate:

DISTRICT COURT SEPTEMBER TERM;
     First National Bank of Denver vs W. H. Frye, J A Curtis Sr, J A Curtis Jr, Guy Curtis, David Mills, J H Mills, Henry J. Mills, Silas S Young and George A Nixon, demurrer

Eastern Utah Advocate
September 26, 1912

     This story continued with an article about a month later:

DISTRICT COURT IN ADJOURNMENT NOW
     First National Bank of Denver, Colo, vs W H Frye, J A Curtis, J A Curtis, Jr, David Mills, Guy Curtis, J H Mills, Silas S Young, Henry J Mills and George A Nixon, action to enforce contract.  Demurrer overruled and defendant given sixty days to answer. 

Eastern Utah Advocate
October 31, 1912

     I noticed the absence of James M. Whitmore in the court case.  My brother Leon told me about Dode working for the railroad when they started to garnish his wages and he quit what was a good job.  Leon said it had something to do about a horse that Dode and Guy had purchased from the railroad.  The horse died a couple of months later and they figured there was something wrong with the horse and didn't finish paying for it.  I'm sure this is all about the purchase of the Coach Stallion.