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قراءة كتاب The Land of Lure: A Story of the Columbia River Basin

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‏اللغة: English
The Land of Lure: A Story of the Columbia River Basin

The Land of Lure: A Story of the Columbia River Basin

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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THE LAND of LURE

A STORY OF THE COLUMBIA RIVER BASIN

By ELLIOTT SMITH

Author of "THE BELLS OF THE BOSQUE," "HULL 97."

1920
PRESS OF
SMITH-KINNEY COMPANY
Tacoma, Wash.

Copyright, 1920
By ELLIOTT SMITH


DEDICATED
TO MARIE SMITH—HIS WIFE

Although I was one of those who "Tried, failed and went away to try and forget, if possible," her unfaltering faithfulness, and endurance, made it possible for me to see and feel the things that I have written in this—HER BOOK.

—ELLIOTT SMITH.


Misshapen and dwaft by the pitiless rays of the desert sun.


INDEX TO CHAPTERS

Chapter I. 9
Chapter II. 20
Chapter III. 29
Chapter IV. 37
Chapter V. 42
Chapter VI. 57
Chapter VII. 64
Chapter VIII. 70
Chapter IX. 80
Chapter X. 90
Chapter XI. 96
Chapter XII. 104
Chapter XIII. 113
Chapter XIV. 123
Chapter XV. 136
Chapter XVI. 149
Chapter XVII. 163
Chapter XVIII. 179
Chapter XIX. 193
Chapter XX. 206
Chapter XXI. 223
Chapter XXII. 236

The Land of Lure


CHAPTER I.

The early March wind was blowing with its usual force, and white wisps of clouds were scurrying across the barren waste that lay between the rough canyon, through which the raging torrents of the Columbia River forced its way to the Pacific Ocean, and the range of hills thirty miles farther south. The clouds seemed to mount higher, and take on greater speed, while crossing this scene of desolation, and graveyard of buried hopes, as if anxious to leave behind them the glare of the desert sands, and the appealing eyes of the few unfortunate homesteaders, who were compelled to remain on their claims until they had complied with the demands made by a beneficient Government before they could become sole owners of the spot upon which many of them were now making their last efforts for a home of their own.

The ever present sage brush and tufts of scant bunch grass, dwaft by the ages of drouth and the pitiless glare of the hot sun's rays, bowed before each gust of the sand ladened wind and emitted weird and unearthly sounds, as if the deported denizens of the desert were warning the white man against the hopeless task of trying to wrest from the jack rabbit and coyote the haunts over which they had held undisputed sway for ages.

Deserted shacks, formerly the homes of earlier settlers, broken fences posts, with tangled strands of barbed wire, each told their story of a struggle for existence, defeat and departure, more pitiful than all the stories of Indian massacres ever written. Here was a battle field, the opposing forces being poverty, courage and determination, arrayed against the elements.

Reinforcements, in the way of hardy homesteaders, were being constantly drawn into this unequal contest, armed with no other weapon than the ever abiding hope that nature would so alter her laws as to conform to this particular locality, lured by the sound of those magic words: "A home of your own," were ready to come into this deserted territory

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