botwell and his investors would have been infuriated but james averell was right. the carbon county journal noted a few years later that there was a, quote, shack where its newspaper was published. botwell and his customers needed customers, the paper was there to advertise the tent. twice each year ranchers got to get it to wind up the cattle. in the spring they cut house out from the rest. they separated from others and drones and some to the road and shift to market. to the sweet water ended july 19th, 1889, with the branding eight miles west of watson's cabins on horse creek on what is now the dumbbell ranch. durbin's son and botwell had been talking for months about what to do about james averell and ella watson. on july 20th, durbin's son, botwell, and maclean wrote east toward horse creek, the rest were on horseback. they stopped at the office of the sweetwater chief where they found conner talking with his newspaper editor and a six. a road to what some's ranch with a tour down her fence and let her cattle out and threaten to kill her unless she got in the