<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XLI" id="CHAPTER_XLI"></SPAN>CHAPTER XLI</h2>
<p class="center">THE DROUTH</p>
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<p class="cap_1">A CLOUDY and threatening day in May,
there came an inch of rainfall. I had
completed sowing two hundred and fifty
acres of flax a few days before, and soon
everything looked beautiful and green. I felt
extremely hopeful.</p>
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<p>During the six years I had been farming in
Dakota, I had raised from fair to good crops every
year. The seasons had been favorable, and if a
good crop had not been raised, it was not the fault
of the soil or from lack of rainfall. The previous
year had not been as wet as others, but I had raised
a fair crop, and at this time had four hundred and
ten acres in crop and one hundred and ten acres
rented out, from which I was to receive one third
of the crop. I had come west with hopes of bettering
my financial condition and had succeeded fairly
well.</p>
<p>Around me at this time others had grown prosperous,
land had advanced until some land adjoining
Megory had brought one hundred dollars per
acre, and land a few miles from town sold for fifty
to eighty dollars per acre.</p>
<p>Before settling in the west I had read in real
estate advertisements all about the wheat land that
could be bought from ten to twenty-five dollars
per acre, that would raise from twenty-five to forty
bushels of wheat to the acre. While all this was
quite possible I had never raised over twenty-five
bushels<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[Pg 285]</SPAN></span>
per acre, and mostly harvested from ten
to twenty. I had wondered, before I left Chicago,
how, at a yield of thirty bushels per acre (and for
the last seven or eight years prices had ranged from
seventy cents to one dollar per bushel for wheat)
the farmers could spend all the money. Of course,
I had learned, in six years, that twenty-five to forty
or fifty bushels per acre, while possible, was far from
probable, and considerably above the average.</p>
<p>The average yield for all wheat raised in the
United States is about fourteen bushels per acre,
but crops had averaged from fair to good all over
the northwest for some fifteen or sixteen years, with
some exceptions, and the question I had heard asked
years before, "Will the drouth come again," was
about forgotten.</p>
<p>During the three years previous to this time, poor
people from the east, and around Megory and Calias
as well, who were not able to pay the prices demanded
for relinquishments and deeded lands in
Megory, Tipp county, or the eastern states, had
flocked by thousands to the western part of the
state and taken free homesteads. At the beginning
of this, my seventh season in Dakota, the agricultural
report showed an exceedingly large number of
acres had been seeded, and the same report which
was issued June eighth, reported the condition of all
growing crops to be up to the ten-year average and
some above.</p>
<p>It was on Sunday. I had quit breaking prairie
on account of the ground being too dry, and while
going along the road, I noticed a field of spelt that
looked peculiar. Going into the field, I dug my
fingers<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[Pg 286]</SPAN></span>
into the soil, and found it dry. I could not
understand how it had dried out so quickly; but
thinking it would rain again in a few days, it had
been but ten days since the rain, I thought no more
about it. The following week, although it clouded
up and appeared very threatening, the clouds passed
and no rain fell. On Saturday I drove into Ritten,
and on the way again noticed the peculiar appearance
of the growing plants. It was the topic of discussion
in the town, but no one seemed willing to admit
that it was from the lack of moisture. The weather
had been very hot all week and the wind seemed to
blow continually from the south.</p>
<p>In past years, after about two days of south
winds, we were almost sure to have rain. The fact
that the wind had blown from the south for nearly
two weeks and no rain had fallen caused everybody
to be anxious. That night was cloudy, the thunder
and lightning lasted for nearly two hours, but when
I went to the door, I could see the stars, and the
next day the heat was most intense.</p>
<p>The Wesinbergers had said the heavens would
be ablaze with lightning and resound with peals
of thunder but that they were only solstice storms,
coming up in unusual directions, and that such
storms were characteristic of a dry season. Furthermore,
that heavy, abnormal rains would occur in
scattered localities, at the same time, but they
would be few and far apart.</p>
<p>June fifteenth I took my sister to Victor to make
proof on her homestead, and from there drove to
Megory, stopping in Calias to send my wife a telegram
to the effect that I felt I was going to be sick
and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[Pg 287]</SPAN></span>
for her to draw a draft on the Bank of Calias,
and come home. The telegram was not answered.</p>
<p>Next morning my sister left for Kansas, and that
afternoon a heavy downpour of rain fell all over
Megory county and as far west as Victor, but north
of Ritten, where I had my flax crop, there was
scarcely sufficient rain to lay the dust. On that day
the hot winds set in and lasted for seven weeks, the
wind blowing steadily from the south all the while.</p>
<p>I had never before, during the seven years,
suffered to any extent from the heat, but during
that time I could not find a cool place. The wind
never ceased during the night, but sounded its
mournful tune without a pause. Then came a
day when the small grain in Tipp county was beyond
redemption, and rattled as leaves in November.
The atmosphere became stifling, and the scent of
burning plants sickening.</p>
<p>My flax on the sod, which was too small to be
hurt at the beginning of the drouth, began to need
rain, and reports in all daily papers told that the great
heat wave and the drouth in many places were
worse than in Tipp county. All over the western
and northern part of the state, were localities where
it had not rained that season. Potatoes, wheat,
oats, flax, and corn, in the western part of the state,
had not sprouted, and, it was said, in a part of Butte
county, where seed had been sown four inches deep
the year before, there had not been enough rain
since to make it sprout.</p>
<p>The government had spent several million dollars
damming the Belle Fourche river for the purpose of
irrigation, and the previous autumn, when it had
been<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[Pg 288]</SPAN></span>
completed, the water in it had been run onto
the land, to see how it would work, and since had
been dry. No snow had fallen in the mountains
during the winter, and all the rivers were as dry as
the roads; while all the way from the gulf, to
Canada, the now protracted drouth was burning
everything in its wake.</p>
<p>At Kansas City, where the treacherous Kaw
empties its waters into the Missouri, and had for
years wrought disaster with its notorious floods,
drowning out two and sometimes three crops in a
single spring, was nearly dry, and the crops were
drying up throughout its valley.</p>
<p>I spent the Fourth of July in Victor, where the
people shook their heads gravely and said, "Tipp
county will never raise a crop." The crops had
dried up in Tipp county the year before. I read
that the railroad men who run from Kansas City
to Dodge City reported that the pastures through
Kansas were so dry along the route, that a louse
could be seen crawling a half mile away. In parts
of Iowa the farmers commenced to put their stock
in pens and fed them hay from about the middle
of June, there being no feed in the pastures.
Through eastern Nebraska, western Iowa and southern
Minnesota, the grasshoppers began to appear
by the millions, and proceeded to head the small
grain. To save it, the farmers cut and fed it to
stock, in pens.</p>
<div class="figcenter"><SPAN name="i316" name="i316"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/i316.jpg" alt="" /> <p class="ctext">The crops began to wither. <SPAN href="#Page_289">(page 289.)</SPAN></p> </div>
<p>The markets were being over-run with thin cattle
from the western ranges, where the grass had never
started on account of lack of moisture. I watched
my flax crop and early in July noticed it beginning
to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[Pg 289]</SPAN></span>
wilt, then millions of army worms began cutting
it down. On the eleventh I left for Megory
county, with my stock, to harvest the winter wheat
there. It had been partially saved by the rain in
June. The two hundred and eighty-five acres of
flax was a brown, sickly-looking mess, and I was
badly discouraged, for outside of my family trouble,
I had borrowed my limit at the bank, and the flax
seed, breaking, and other expenses, had amounted
to eleven hundred dollars.</p>
<p>About this time the settlers all over the western
highlands began to desert their claims. Newspapers
reported Oklahoma burned to a crisp, and Kansas
scorched, from Kansas City to the Colorado line.
Homesteaders to the north and west of us began
passing through the county, and their appearance
presented a contrast to that of a few years before.
Fine horses that marched bravely to the land of
promise, drawing a prairie schooner, were returning
east with heads hanging low from long, stringy
necks, while their alkalied hoofs beat a slow tattoo,
as they wearily dragged along, drawing, in many
cases, a dilapidated wagon over which was stretched
a tattered tarpaulin; while others drew rickety
hacks or spring wagons, with dirty bedding and
filthy looking utensils. These people had not made
a dollar in the two years spent on their homesteads.
At Pierre, it was said, seven hundred crossed the
the Missouri in a single day, headed east; while
in the settlements they had left, the few remaining
settlers went from one truck patch to another,
digging up the potatoes that had been planted in
the spring, for food.</p>
<p>One<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[Pg 290]</SPAN></span>
day I crossed the White river and went to
visit the Wisenbergers, who lived seventeen miles
to the north. On the way, out of forty-seven
houses I passed, only one had an occupant. The
land in that county is underlaid with a hardpan
about four inches from the surface, and had not
raised a crop for two years. The settlers had left
the country to keep from starving. As I drove
along the dusty road and gazed into the empty
houses through the front doors that banged to and
fro with a monotonous tone, from the force of the
hot south winds, I felt lonely and faraway; the only
living thing in sight being an occasional dog that
had not left with his master, or had returned, but
on seeing me, ran, with tucked tail, like a frightened
coyote.</p>
<p>Merchants were being pressed by the wholesale
houses. The recent years had been prosperous,
and it is said prosperity breeds contempt and recklessness.
The townspeople and many farmers had
indulged lavishly in chug-chug cars. Bankers and
wholesale houses, who had always criticised so much
automobilism, were now making some wish they had
never heard the exhaust of a motor. In addition
to this the speculators were loaded to the guards,
with lands carrying as heavy mortgage as could
be had—which was large—for prosperity had caused
loan companies to increase the amount of their loans.
No one wanted to buy. Every one wanted to sell.
The echo of the drouth seventeen years before and
the disaster which followed, rang through the
country and had the effect of causing prices to slump
from five to fifteen dollars per acre less than a year
before.</p>
<p>Now<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[Pg 291]</SPAN></span>
what made it worse for Tipp county was,
that it had been opened when prosperity was at its
zenith. The people were money mad. Reckless
from the prosperity which had caused them to dispense
with caution and good judgment, they were
brought suddenly to a realization of a changed
condition. The new settlers, all from eastern points,
came into Tipp county, seeing Tipp county claims
worth, not six dollars per acre, the price charged by
the Government, but finding ready sales at prices
ranging from twenty-five to forty-five dollars, and
even fifty dollars per acre. They had spent money
accordingly. And now, when the parched fields
frowned, and old Jupiter Pluvius refused to speak,
the community faced a genuine panic.</p>
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<p>Came a day, sultry and stifling with excessive
heat, when I drove back to the claims. Everywhere
along the way were visible the effects of the drouth.
Vegetation had withered, and the trails gave forth
clouds of dust.</p>
<p>Late in the afternoon clouds appeared in the northwest
and the earth trembled with the resounding
peals of thunder. The lightning played dangerously
near, and then, like the artillery of a mighty
battle, the storm broke loose and the rain fell in
torrents, filling the draws and ravines, and overflowing
the creeks, which ran for days after. All
over the north country the drouth was broken and
plant life began anew.</p>
<p>My wheat threshed about eight hundred bushels,
and when marketed, the money received was not
sufficient to pay current expenses. Therefore, I
could<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[Pg 292]</SPAN></span>
not afford the outlay of another trip to Chicago,
but wrote many letters to Orlean, imploring
her to return, but all in vain.</p>
<p>During the summer I had received many letters
from people in Chicago and southern Illinois, denouncing
the action of the Elder, in preventing my
wife from returning home. The contents of these
letters referred to the matter as an infamous outrage,
and sympathized with me, by hoping my wife
would have courage to stand up for the right. I
rather anticipated, that with so much criticism of
his action by the people belonging to the churches
in his circuit, he would relent and let her return
home; but he remained obstinate, the months
continued to roll by, and my wife stayed on.</p>
<p>I had not written her concerning the drouth,
which had so badly impaired crops. I knew her
people read all the letters she received, and felt that
with the knowledge in their possession that my crop
had been cut short, along with the rest, would not
help my standing. They would be sure to say to
her, "I told you so." The last letter that I received
from my wife, that year, was written early in the
fall, in answer to a letter that I wrote her, and in
which I had sent her some money, with which to
buy some things for my grandmother. When
Orlean had been in Dakota, she had been very
fond of my grandmother, and had asked about her
in every letter, whether the letter was kind or abusive,
as regarded me. My wife's letter, stated that
she had received the money, and thanked me also
stated that she would get the things for "Grandma"
that day. Neither grandmother or I received the
things.</p>
<p>I<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[Pg 293]</SPAN></span>
was so wrought up over it all, yet saw no place
where I could get justice. In order to show the
Reverend that he was being criticized by friends of
the family, I gathered up some half dozen or more
letters, including the last one from Claves and one
from Mrs. Ewis, and sent them to him. The one
from Mrs. Ewis related how he had written to her,
just before he took my wife away, saying that she
was in dire need, and wanted to borrow twenty-five
dollars to bring her home. Needless to say,
she had not sent it, nor assisted him in any other
way, in helping to break up the home. As a result,
she said, he had not spoken to her since.</p>
<p>I learned later that the letters I had sent had
made him terribly angry. I received a letter from
him, the contents of which were about the same as
his conversation had been, excepting, that he did
not profess any love for me, which at least was a
relief; but, from the contents, I derived that he had
expected his act to give him immortality, and
expressed surprise that he should be criticized for
coming to Dakota and saving the life of his child—as
he put it—from the heartless man, that was
killing her in his efforts to get rich.</p>
<p>He seemed to forget to mention any of the facts
which had occurred during his last trip, namely;
his many declarations of undying love for us; of
how glad he was that we were doing so much toward
the development of the great west; and his remarks
that if he was twenty-five years younger it was
where he would be. He also suggested that he
would try to be transferred to the Omaha District,
so that he might be nearer us.</p>
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<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[Pg 294]</SPAN></span></p>
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