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Authors: Ben K. Green

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Joe Henson operated the Stockton Pharmacy on the south corner of the same block. He, too, had offered much encouragement. Since the town was crowded because of the airfield and office space was next to impossible, both he and Gallemore had offered to take my calls and stock any kind of drugs that I would use.

Othro Adams was in the livestock commission and irrigation farming business. His office was in the Springhurst Hotel and opened off the back side of the lobby and onto a side street. Othro was a good operator and wanted me to stay in Fort Stockton and offered to share his office space with me. His particular interest was sheep and this was a big sheep country, and he asked in a very respectful manner, “Doctor, what do you know about sheep?”

“Well,” I said, “I kept a thousand head of sheep for about five years in one of my ranching operations.”

He kept a straight face, but his eyes laughed when he said, “If a man caught on slowly, he wouldn’t learn much from just a thousand sheep in five years.”

I had gotten acquainted with a lot of people in the sixteen days that the weather was bad but hadn’t made any decision until I struck up a conversation in front of the
Stockton Pharmacy with an old rancher who was not particularly interested in the development of the country or the welfare of the livestock and had no concern for the success or well-being of his fellow man. His voice was toned pretty close to that of a bullfrog, his eyes were squinted, and from his dress, you would have assumed that his world’s gatherings didn’t amount to very much.

He said, “I seen you round here several days. What’s yore business here?”

I told him that I was just passin’ through and had stopped for the weather to fair up, that I had been headed for Chihuahua City to practice veterinary medicine. I said, however, that several people had suggested I set up practice in Fort Stockton.

He gave off a little mournful kind of sneerin’ laugh and said, “This is healthy stock country and there’s no business here for no horse doctor. What few times the country’s had a die-out, there’s always been enough cattle and sheep and horses left to restock in a few years. It’s a pretty good place to live, if you can stand the people in it; and if you want to stay round, it wouldn’t hurt nothin’, but you might have to do some day-work on a chuck wagon durin’ workin’ times to make a livin’ ’cause there ain’t nobody in this country silly enough to pay somebody else to doctor a horse when they can do it themselves just as good as a horse doctor.”

I thanked him for his advice and told him that he had made up my mind. As I walked off, he said, “I’m shore glad you listened and that yore goin’ to move on. Us ranchers don’t need nobody else to be livin’ offn’em.”

He didn’t understand what I meant when I said he had made up my mind.

I moved to a motel up on the highway where I had more room to store my drugs and supplies and get them out of my car. In the sixteen days that I had been there, I had
vaccinated one dog for rabies, and the going price for a small dog that didn’t take much vaccine was $1.50. Up to now this had been my total practice.

For the next few days I put out the word that I had decided to stay, and I began to get a small amount of practice that I think could be termed “test practice.” I took out a horse’s tooth for Boyd Clayton and floated some horses’ teeth for Fred Montgomery. For the rest of the month of January, I did some small chores for Alf TenyCke, Guy Rochell, John Bennett, and others that were just little things they had done in order to give me some practice and get me to stay. I knew this, however, and it showed a good attitude on the part of those who didn’t need anything done on their livestock.

I hadn’t gotten any kind of emergency call that would give me a chance to demonstrate my professional ability. However, during this same period, I had made some awful professional and conversational busts about the poisonous plants that were and had been killing off sheep during the winter ever since man had stocked this country with sheep, cattle, and goats.

One morning in the Stockton Pharmacy J. C. “Con” Cunningham was introduced to me and he immediately brought up the subject of yellowweed, and I told him frankly that I had never heard of it. Some other ranchers joined in the conversation and gave me a run-down on the history of yellowweed.

It is a grayish-green weed with lush, meaty-type leaves that comes in the dead of winter when there is nothing else green. As it matures, it has a large daisy-type bloom with a great excess of yellow pollen that will stain the wool on the face and legs of sheep that are grazing on the plant. Sheep by nature are weed-eaters and green-feeders and start eating
yellowweed as soon as it is big enough to graze in the late fall and early winter. It was explained to me that the first sheep would die about ten to eleven days after they were put on yellowweed pasture, and unless you moved them, if the yellowweed was abundant enough, practically all would be dead in less than thirty days.

Mr. Cunningham stayed longer than the rest, and I, in spite of all my ignorance of these desert plants, immediately said, “It sounds simple to me, and I’ll just give Mr. Henson back here a prescription for enough to treat a few sheep if you’re interested.”

His eyes brightened and a big smile crossed his face and he said, “Doctor, I’ll be glad to try anything that you would prescribe.”

We walked back to the prescription department and Mr. Cunningham briefed Joe Henson, the druggist, on what had transpired up at the fountain, and I said, “Yes, hand me a prescription blank.”

I wrote out a prescription for enough medication to fill fifty sheep-size capsules and felt real smart. Mr. Cunningham said, “What do I owe you?”

I said, “Why don’t you wait to see how much good we do the sheep?”

Joe looked the other way—I know now to hide his amusement, but at the time I didn’t think about it. Mr. Cunningham said, “That’s fair enough. I’m glad you’re here.”

As I walked away, I remarked, “If this don’t do the job, I’ll take a closer look at the sheep.”

Little did I know how serious the death loss from yellowweed had been for the many years that sheep had been in the Trans-Pecos Region of Texas, and I had no idea how many people—doctors and others—had tried to treat yellowweed without success.

In a few days I saw Mr. Cunningham and asked about the sheep, and he said they seemed to be doing very well. I felt pretty good about this, so the next time I was in the drugstore, I asked Joe Henson, “Has Mr. Cunningham had the sheep prescription refilled?”

Nobody was around to listen and Joe, embarrassed for me as he was, endeavored to explain to me in a courteous manner that he told Mr. Cunningham that the prescription was too damn simple to do yellowweed any good and that they never had filled it the first time. This came as quite a blow to me; it was the first big, loud-mouthed mistake I had made in my first month in the Trans-Pecos Region.

During this same period of time, M. R. Gonzalez, who was a good citizen, with a grocery store, livestock, and other interests, had a bunch of sick hogs. M. R. had a contract with the airfield to haul the garbage, and he had a hog-feeding operation where he was feeding this garbage. He had gone to Roger Gallemore at the other drugstore for advice, and Roger hastened to inform him that they had a first-rate veterinary doctor who had just moved to Fort Stockton. M. R. was delighted when Roger called me to the back of the drugstore and introduced us.

He was glad to have my services, so we went to the south edge of town to look at his hogs. There were dead ones and some that were dying and some at the stage at which they were almost fat. There must have been about ninety head. The garbage for these hogs was being collected in iron barrels and the acid reaction was causing ferric poisoning; however, at the time I didn’t know about the iron barrels, and in the last stages, all symptoms indicated that they were dying of swine erysipelas.

I did a post-mortem on several of these hogs that were dying and showed M. R. the indication of poisoning in the spleen and kidney, as well as the digestive tract. M. R. was
a very pleasant heavy-set fellow, and he patted me on the back and said, “Doc-tor, you’re sure smart. Now what do you want to do to save my hogs?”

I explained to him that I had the medicine to counteract the poisoning and we would go back to the drugstore and Gallemore would order the vaccine for erysipelas. This suited him fine and that afternoon we caught each one of the hogs and I gave them medicine by mouth.

The next day about the usual number had died, and I gave them more medicine.

The next day I had the vaccine that we had ordered, so we vaccinated them, and I gave more medicine by mouth. In about a week the number that were dying had slowed down, but the percentage was about the same—there were just fewer hogs.

M. R. was a good fellow and a real stayer and never complained, and we treated his hogs until they all died. This was my second bad case in my early practice in Fort Stockton.

One day later, M. R. told me, “Doc-tor, I sure like you and hope you come by to visit even if I don’t have any hogs for you to kill.”

An old man out in the edge of town on the irrigation ditch had a pet monkey that had a rash breaking out all over his body, and I really fixed him up. I gave him some medication and all his hair came off.

It seemed that I had done nothing right—my diagnoses were bad, my treatments were worse, and it was getting a little harder for the druggist to tell the people that there was a veterinary doctor in town. Well, I didn’t feel too bad about the damn monkey because I didn’t think I would have any large monkey practice in the Trans-Pecos Region of Texas.

Frank Smith, the druggist who worked for Roger Gallemore,
had a little mixed-breed pet dog that had recovered from distemper before I got there (otherwise he might not have recovered), but was seriously afflicted with chorea, which is a nervous disorder that is sometimes the aftermath of distemper in dogs and is generally considered incurable. The afflicted dog flinched, jerked, and twitched whether he was awake or asleep, so Frank asked me if I would “do away” with the dog. Well, this wasn’t the kind of practice I had in mind either, but small-animal practice was going to be something that I couldn’t avoid, so I consented to take care of this chore.

I took the little fellow in my car out in a pasture and gave him an extremely large intravenous injection of phenobarbitol, enough to have put a horse to sleep and left him layin’ out in the weeds. In about three days he showed up at home very hungry and for some unexplainable reason, cured of his jerkin’, twitchin’ chorea. This little incident wasn’t interpreted by the dog lovers of the community as a recommendation for me as a small-animal practitioner.

The cases that I have cited are by no means all the professional mistakes that I made, but it will show that I wasn’t making a favorable impression on the region as an outstanding veterinary practitioner. By now I had begun to ponder the reasons for stopping in Fort Stockton, and I was thinkin’ wistfully of Chihuahua, Mexico.

LECHUGUILLA

Early
one morning I met Guy Rochell on the main block of town. He was a very pleasant and sociable kind of fellow who ranched about thirty-five miles south of Fort Stockton on the Sanderson road. He stopped me and we started a conversation.

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