<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_VI" id="CHAPTER_VI"></SPAN>CHAPTER VI</h2>
<p class="center">"AND WHERE IS ORISTOWN?" THE TOWN ON THE
MISSOURI</p>
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<p class="cap_1">IT came a few days later in a restaurant
in Council Bluffs, Iowa, when I heard
the waiters, one white man and the other
colored, saying, "I'm going to Oristown."
"And where is Oristown?" I inquired,
taking a stool and scrutinizing the bill of fare.
"Oristown," the white man spoke up, drawing away
at a pipe which gave him the appearance of being
anything from a rover to a freight brakeman, "is
about two hundred and fifty miles northwest of
here in southern South Dakota, on the edge of
the Little Crow Reservation, to be opened this
summer." This is not the right name, but the
name of an Indian chief living near where this is
written.</p>
</div>
<p>Oristown is the present terminus of the C. & R.W.
Ry. and he went on to tell me that the land in
part was valuable, while some portions were no
better than Western Nebraska. A part of the
Reservation was to be opened to settlement by
lottery that summer and the registration was to
take place in July. It was now April. "And the
registration is to come off at Oristown?" I finished
for him with a question. "Yes," he assented.</p>
<p>At Omaha the following day I chanced to meet
two surveyors who had been sent out to the reservation
from Washington, D.C. and who told me to
write to the Department of the Interior for information
regarding<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</SPAN></span>
the opening, the lay of the land,
quality of the soil, rainfall, etc. I did as they suggested
and the pamphlets received stated that the
land to be opened was a deep black loam, with clay
subsoil, and the rainfall in this section averaged
twenty-eight inches the last five years. I knew that
Iowa had about thirty inches and most of the time
was too wet, so concluded here at last was the place
to go. This suited me better than any of the states
or projects I had previously looked into, besides, I
knew more about the mode of farming employed in
that section of the country, it being somewhat
similar to that in Southern Illinois.</p>
<p>On the morning of July fifth, at U.P. Transfer,
Iowa, I took a train over the C.P. & St. L., which
carried me to a certain town on the Missouri in
South Dakota. I did not go to Oristown to register
as I had intended but went to the town referred to,
which had been designated as a registration point
also. I was told by people who were "hitting" in
the same direction and for the same purpose, that
Oristown was crowded and lawless, with no place
to sleep, and was overrun with tin-horn gamblers.
It would be much better to go to the larger town on
the Missouri, where better hotel accommodation
and other conveniences could be had. So I bought
a ticket to Johnstown, where I arrived late in the
afternoon of the same day. There was a large crowd,
which soon found its way to the main street, where
numerous booths and offices were set up, with a
notary in each to accept applications for the drawing.
This consisted of taking oath that one was a
citizen of the United States, twenty-one years of
age<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</SPAN></span>
or over. The head of a family, a widow, or
any woman upon whom fell the support of a family,
was also accepted. No person, however, owning
over one hundred and sixty acres of land, or who had
ever had a homestead before, could apply. The
application was then enclosed in an envelope and
directed to the Superintendent of the opening.</p>
<p>After all the applications had been taken, they
were thoroughly mixed and shuffled together. Then
a blindfolded child was directed to draw one from
the pile, which became number one in the opening.
The lucky person whose oath was contained in
such envelope was given the choice of all the land
thrown open for settlement. Then another envelope
was drawn and that person was given the
second choice, and so on until they were all drawn.</p>
<p>This system was an out and out lottery, but gave
each and every applicant an equal chance to draw
a claim, but guaranteed none. Years before, land
openings were conducted in a different manner.
The applicants were held back of a line until a signal
was given and then a general rush was made for
the locations and settlement rights on the land.
This worked fairly well at first but there grew to be
more applicants than land, and two or more persons
often located on the same piece of land and this
brought about expensive litigation and annoying
disputes and sometimes even murder, over the
settlement. This was finally abolished in favor
of the lottery system, which was at least safer and
more profitable to the railroads that were fortunate
enough to have a line to one or more of the registration
points.</p>
<div class="figcenter"><SPAN name="i056" name="i056"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/i056.jpg" alt="" /> <p class="ctext">Became number one in the opening. <SPAN href="#Page_56">(page 56)</SPAN></p> </div>
<p>At<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</SPAN></span>
Johnstown, people from every part of the
United States, of all ages and descriptions, gathered
in crowded masses, the greater part of them being
from Illinois, Iowa, Missouri, Minnesota, North
Dakota, Kansas and Nebraska. When I started
for the registration I was under the impression that
only a few people would register, probably four or
five thousand, and as there were twenty-four
hundred homesteads I had no other thought than
I would draw and later file on a quarter section.
Imagine my consternation when at the end of the
first day the registration numbered ten thousand.
A colored farmer in Kansas had asked me to keep
him posted in regard to the opening. He also
thought of coming up and registering when he had
completed his harvest. When the throngs of people
began pouring in from the three railroads into
Johnstown (and there were two other points of
registration besides) I saw my chances of drawing
a claim dwindling, from one to two, to one to ten,
fifteen and twenty and maybe more. After three
days in Johnstown I wrote my friend and told him
I believed there would be fully thirty thousand
people apply for the twenty-four hundred claims.
The fifth day I wrote there would be fifty thousand.
After a week I wrote there would be seventy-five
thousand register, that it was useless to expect to
draw and I was leaving for Kansas to visit my parents.
When the registration was over I read in a
Kansas City paper that one hundred and seven
thousand persons had registered, making the chance
of drawing one to forty-four.</p>
<p>Received a card soon after from the Superintendent
of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</SPAN></span>
the opening, which read that my number
was 6504, and as the number of claims was approximately
twenty-four hundred, my number was too
high to be reached before the land should all be
taken. I think it was the same day I lost fifty-five
dollars out of my pocket. This, combined
with my disappointment in not drawing a piece
of land, gave me a grouch and I lit out for the
Louisiana Purchase Exposition at St. Louis with
the intention of again getting into the P——n
service for a time.</p>
<p>Ofttimes porters who had been discharged went
to another city, changed their names, furnished
a different set of references and got back to work
for the same company. Now if they happened to
be on a car that took them into the district from
which they were discharged, and before the same
officials, who of course recognized them, they were
promptly reported and again discharged. I pondered
over the situation and came to the conclusion
that I would not attempt such deception, but avoid
being sent back to the Chicago Western District.
I was at a greater disadvantage than Johnson,
Smith, Jackson, or a number of other common names,
by having the odd French name that had always
to be spelled slowly to a conductor, or any one else
who had occasion to know me. Out of curiosity
I had once looked in a Chicago Directory. Of
some two million names there were just two others
with the same name. But on the other hand it
was much easier to avoid the Chicago Western
District, or at least Mr. Miltzow's office and by
keeping my own name, assume that I had never been
discharged,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</SPAN></span>
than it was to go into a half a dozen
other districts with a new name and avoid being
recognized. Arriving at this decision, I approached
the St. Louis office, presented my references which
had been furnished by other M—pls business men,
and was accepted. After I had been sent out with
a porter, who had been running three months, to
show me how to run a car, I was immediately put to
work. I learned in two trips, according to the report
my tutor handed to the chief clerk, and by chance
fell into one of the best runs to New York on one of
the limited trains during the fair. There was not
much knocking down on this run, but the tips,
including the salary were good for three hundred
dollars per month. I ran on this from September
first to October fourth and saved three hundred
dollars. I had not given up getting a Dakota Homestead,
for while I was there during the summer I
learned if I did not draw a number I could buy a
relinquishment.</p>
<p>This relates to the purchasing of a relinquishment:</p>
<p>An entryman has the right at any time to relinquish
back to the United States all his right, title,
and interest to and in the land covered by his filing.
The land is then open to entry.</p>
<p>A claimholder who has filed on a quarter of land
will have plenty of opportunity to relinquish his
claim, for a cash consideration, so that another
party may get a filing on it. This is called buying
or selling a relinquishment. The amount of the
consideration varies with quality of the land, and
the eagerness of the buyer or seller, as the case may be.</p>
<p>Relinquishments<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</SPAN></span>
are the largest stock in trade
of all the real estate dealers, in a new country.
Besides, everybody from the bank president down
to the humble dish washer in the hotel, or the chore
boy in the livery, the ministers not omitted, would,
with guarded secrecy, confide in you of some choice
relinquishment that could be had at a very low
figure compared with what it was really worth.</p>
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<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</SPAN></span></p>
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