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The Boy Land Boomer, by Ralph Bonehill
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Title: The Boy Land Boomer Dick Arbuckle's Adventures in Oklahoma
Author: Ralph Bonehill
Illustrator: W. H. Fry
Release Date: February 18, 2007 [EBook #20618]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ASCII
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Produced by David Edwards, Marcia and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
THE BOY LAND BOOMER
OR
DICK ARBUCKLE'S ADVENTURES IN OKLAHOMA
BY
CAPTAIN RALPH BONEHILL
AUTHOR OF
"THREE YOUNG RANCHMEN," "A SAILOR BOY WITH DEWEY," ETC.
[Illustration: "The youth had to cling fast around his neck to save himself a lot of broken bones"]
ILLUSTRATED BY W. H. FRY
H. M. CALDWELL COMPANY NEW YORK Publishers BOSTON
COPYRIGHT, 1902, BY THE SAALFIELD PUBLISHING COMPANY
Made by Robert Smith Printing Co., Lansing, Mich.
--------------- Transcriber's Note: Obvious printer errors have been corrected. All other inconsistencies have been left as they were in the original. ---------------
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
PAGE
"The youth had to cling fast around his neck to save himself a lot of broken bones" Frontispiece
"The next instant the boy was hurled headlong into the boiling and foaming current" 62
"Dick had let fly the jagged stone, taking him directly in the forehead and keeling him over like a tenpin" 179
"In a second more the two men were in a hand-to-hand encounter" 220
PREFACE.
"The Boy Land Boomer" relates the adventures of a lad who, with his father, joins a number of daring men in an attempt to occupy the rich farming lands of Oklahoma before the time when that section of our country was thrown open to settlement under the homestead act.
Oklahoma consists of a tract of land which formerly formed a portion of the Indian Territory. This region was much in dispute as early as 1884 and 1885, when Captain "Oklahoma" Payne and Captain Couch did their best to force an entrance for the boomers under them. Boomers remained in the neighborhood for years, and another attempt was made to settle Oklahoma in 1886, and up to 1889, when, on April 22, the land was thrown open to settlement by a proclamation of the President. The mad rush to gain the best claims followed, and some of these scenes are related in the present volume.
The boomers, who numbered thousands, had among them several daring and well-known leaders, but not one was better known or more daring than the leader who is known in these pages as Pawnee Brown. This man was not alone a great Indian scout and hunter, but also one who had lived much among the Indians, could speak their language, and who had on several occasions acted as interpreter for the Government. He was well beloved by his followers, who relied upon his judgment in all things.
To some it may seem that the scenes in this book are overdrawn. Such, however, is not the fact. There was much of roughness in those days, and the author has continually found it necessary to tone down rather than to exaggerate in penning these scenes from real life.
CAPTAIN RALPH BONEHILL.
THE BOY LAND BOOMER.
* * * * *
CHAPTER I.
DICK ARBUCKLE'S DISCOVERY.
"Father!"
The call came from a boy of sixteen, a bright, manly chap, who had just awakened from an unusually sound sleep in the rear end of a monstrous boomer's wagon.
The scene was upon the outskirts of Arkansas City, situated near the southern boundary line of Kansas and not many miles from the Oklahoma portion of the Indian Territory.
For weeks the city had been filling up with boomers on their way to pre-empt land within the confines of Oklahoma as soon as it became possible to do so.
The land in Oklahoma had for years been in dispute. Pioneers claimed the right to go in and stake out homesteads, but the soldiers of our government would not allow them to do so.
The secret of the matter was that the cattle kings of that section controlled everything, and as the grazing land of the territory was worth hundreds of thousands of dollars to them they fought desperately to keep the pioneers out, delaying, in every manner possible, legislation which tended to make the section an absolutely free one to would-be settlers.
But now the pioneers, or boomers as they were commonly called, were tired of waiting for the passage of a law which they knew must come sooner or later, and they intended to go ahead without legal authority.
It was a dark, tempestuous night, with the wind blowing fiercely and the rain coming down at irregular intervals. On the grassy
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