Prairi eland Talk . . . ‘Honesty’ Increases Temptation By ROMAINE SAUNDERS. Retired. Former Frontier Editor LINCOLN—Assuming that Nebraska patriots are dishonest, maybe the governor goes at the • taxation situation at the wrong end with his “op eration honesty” scheme. Trim down the top Heavy government oversight of our lives and thus * reduce the need for assessing pens and pencils. Any incentive there may be to shortchange the assessor might thus be eliminated. The way the taxpayer is being hit he can hardly be condemned for holding out on the assessor. And now that the arrangement is what amounts to the property owner assessing himself, that becomes a real temptation. I recall when the late Rate Shaw was assessor down there in Swan precinct nobody was ex Romaine pected to list anything for tax Saunders ation that went to makeup the household comforts or little personal belongings. Somehow enough money flowed into the county treasurer’s office from the citizens of the county to pay the salaries and other claims. Prairieland Talker has had the thankless job of precinct assessor a few times. I recall one instance when on the rounds assessing in Francis precinct in Wheeler county, as I was leaving one place I was handed an onion as an expression of what that gent thought of the assessor. But even he, as all the others, made an hon est return of assessable property. As long as it comes to nothing more serious than an onion, the assessors and tax collectors are safe. Just to what extent are parents responsible for “juvenile delinquency”? I was passing a home yesterday when the mother in that home came out and in a harsh, scolding voice blew up at her lit tle girls standing by a log that had been left lying where the tree had fallen when cut down. The children were doing nothing to harm anything or anyone, but the mother went after them rough shod instead of in a kindly, pleasant way showing them what she wanted them to do. Children re sent such treatment, though at the time not able to define their childish reactions. Resentment grows with repeated experiences, then rebellion, this logically ending in “delinquency.” Who is the delinquent—the child or the mother? Four Lincoln youths drove to Omaha Sunday evening and spent the night there releasing their urge to “do something” by starting parked cars down hills to see the smashup at the bottom of the hill. The escapade landed them in jail. Maybe that was another thrill. Perhaps these boys could have fathers who have been remiss in their duties as parents. The calling of parenthood is a job. A little girl went to her father with a book and ask ed him to read her a story. Dad was reading the paper and didn’t want to be bothered. After a time the little girl asked again for a story but the story was never read. The little one went to bed and in the night became fatally ill. The next night that father sat the night through by his dead child wih a story book she had asked him to read from. * * * A large group representing the state farm bureau took over the Lincoln hotel late in No vember and spent four days visiting and discuss ing matters pertaining to agriculture. The gather ing resembled a group of corporation magnates, secretaries and stockholders. Caution was manifest respecting the touchy subject of price supports, the president of the bureau in his talk leaning toward the principle of supply and demand to govern prices. Neligh sent a delegate, Arthur Weatherbeck, who appeared to be qualified to hold the handles of a plow. I Another leaf tom from the calendar. Flowers are no more only as the florist can provide. The wind blows out of the north today as if to sweep along the march of time. Scarcely a twig with faded leaf clings to denuded trees, dun-colored stalks are all that remain of corn fields and the landscape stretches brown and sear to the distant horizon. Thrush and barn swallow and bluebird and robin are gone and the little brown winter birds have come, cock a friendly eye at you as you Step out the back door expecting a crumb to be dropped for them. Summer is gone, the bright days with the floral bloom and green ver dure have merged into the season of changing colors, flaming sunsets after the short day and the long winter’s night time spreads its mantle dot ed with countless stars over our heads. But the cedar and the pine tree defy alike winter frosts and summer heat and wave their emerald plum age as seasons come and go. The clock ticks a warning that blizzard days are ahead and Prairie land Talker recalls his contemplated departure for the sun-drenched Pacific slopes when winter lays the white blanket over prairieland. • * * Is the Honorable Adlai carrying the torch for the downtrodden or merely trotting about in defense of his friend of the fair deal? As the raving against "McCarthyism" goes on, the sus picion lingers that there must be something to cover up. • * • Will Davis and wife came over from Sioux Falls, S.D., where Will had been employed as a printer, to spend the first week of December, 1905, at the parental home of Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Davis, before going to Sheldon, la., where they made their home for a time. Will acquired skill as a compositor in the old Frontier plant when the type cases stood by the south windows that look ed out upon a disorderly but at times interesting back yard of Noah and Sina Gwyn’s and later the battle ground of Con Keys and his lady love. Will visited O’Neill again in the late 1930’s and at that time was making his home with Mrs. Davis at Oakland, Calif. . . A story came from Washing ton on December 5 of that year stating that Pres ident Theodore Roosevelt had removed James C. Pettijohn as register of the land office at Val entine and demanded the immediate resignation of A. L. Towle as receiver. Mr. Tov/le had pre viously been an official in the government land office in O’Neill. And a story came out of Valen tine at that time of a wonderful new river that had formed in the sandhills and was flowing southeast, a half mile wide in places. A John Ma her story. * * * Twenty-six letters and a few punctuation marks—all printers, writers and speakers have to work with, but see what has been done with these! Books, papers, printed matter, orators, spellbinders and just every day trade talk and social flatteries fill the world with human wisdom and nonsense, tell of the activities of life, the good, the noble, the sin and the shame as man kind writes the daily record. I go to a funeral this afternoon, the last rites for a 91-year-old pilgrim of earth who leaves no estate that can be converted into money but what transcends money value, his son and daughter have the heritage of the example of a noble life of one who had been careful in word and deed. The 26 letters we use sometimes unadvisably day-by-day were not used by this old patriarch as long as I knew him to dip into the gutter or defame another. * * * That Missouri couple who go to the death chamber a day this month to lay each his life upon the altar as a sacrifice to their evil deeds trace their crimes back to the bottle. The nation licenses the bottle and demands the life of the human product of the bottle. Consistency, thou art a jewel. Editorial . . . Short View of White Case The Harry Dexter White furore has subsided somewhat, but it appears to us the lines have been drawn for the 1954 off-year elections provid ed Harry S. Truman continues in role of titular head of the democratic party. The republicans, of course, prefer it that way. And they’ll try to sell the idea they’re cleaning “communists, cronies and crooks out of govern ment.” This will detract from some of the do mestic issues, including balancing the budget and relatively lower prices for agricultural products. Democratic leaders, on the other hand, will have to defend Trumanism and, very likely, will stand four-square for high supports. Our guess is they’ll tend to ignore the national budget as was characteristic of the 1933-’52 regime. Truman defenders most frequently ask: “Why haul the White case out of mothballs now? Did Atty.-Gen. Herbert Brownell time it to turn the tide after the republicans lost important con gressional seats in the East?” The Omaha World-Herald summed up the answer in a pithy four-line paragraph the other day: Critics object that republican exposure of the White case is badly timed. Does this mean one should not report flames in the living room dur.ng fire prevention week? President Eisenhower, apparently, doesn’t want the commie question to be an issue next year or in 1956. But it’s obviously out of his hands with hard-hitting Sen. Joseph McCarthy (R-Wisc) bearing down with intensified vigor. Joe said the republican administration will be remembered as the one that drove the commies, crooks and otmies out and the Roosevelt-Truman-Acheson Hiss crowd as the administration that took them 12L McCarthy hints there are other shockers a con\in’m his probing—and that suggests the White case happens to be only one in a long series in flushing the reds out of government. And, if this be the case, Brownell’s socalled “timing’’ is not too important. McCarthy claims some 1,500 se curity risks already have been dropped from the government payroll. Poor J. Edgar Hoover, the G-man who was appointed under a republican president (Coolidge) and put in a long stretch of service (20 years) for the democrats (Roosevelt-Truman), got into the White case rather spectacularly. The head of the federal bureau of investigation, who has earned tremendous bipartisan respect for himself and his agency and has always managed to stay aloof from politics, apparently was pushed right into the middle of the White case. Traditionally the FBI has been an investi gative agency under the department of justice and has neither attempted to make policy or evaluate its findings. But Brownell’s blast and Truman’s rebuttal forced Hoover out into the open with the FBI’s findings on White (and other subversives) and brought Hoover before the congressional com mittee, all of which proves Truman’s white house knew all along how the FBI stood on White and some other important security risks and “sleazy characters.” These are a few short-view observations since the Harry Dexter White issue came to the fore more than a fortnight ago. History, no doubt, will duly record the rest of a sordid, odoriferous story. Comes now the official word from Lincoln that the state highway department will receive bids in March, 1954, for letting contracts for the hardsurfacing of U.S. highway 281 both north and south of O’Neill as well as a stretch of state highway 95. This will mark the first major road improvement in the O’Neill region for lo many years—nonetheless the word is being received with rejoicing. Grit Magazine reports Helen Keller, 73, is planning to visit other countries and begin work on a new book. Miss Keller, who now lives in Westport, Conn., is writing the book on her teach er of many years, Anne Sullivan, who was with the deaf and blind Miss Keller from 1888 until 1946. Only 17 shopping days until we can exchange all those gifts we’re going to get. Ord Quiz: Pretty girls can get by without too much mathematical prowess. CARROLL W. STEWART, Editor and Publisher Editorial ft Business Offices: 122 South Fourth St. Address correspondence: Box 330, O'Neill, NeLr Established in 1880—Published Each Thursday Entered at the postoffice in O’Neill, Holt county, Nebraska, as second-class mail matter under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1879. This newspaper is a member of the Nebraska Press Association, National Editorial Association and the Audit Bureau of Circulations. Terms of Subscription: In Nebraska, $2.50 per year; elsewhere in the United States, $3 per year; rates abroad, provided on request. All sub scriptions are paid-in-advance. Audited (ABC) Circulation—2,200 (Mar. 31, 1953). Out of Old Nebraska . . . Foolhardy Young Officer Ambushed 80 Soldiers Die at Hands of Indians By JAMES C. OLSON Supt„ Stale Hist. Society A serious problem facing sol diers stationed at military posts on the plains was that of securing wood, both for construction and tor fuel. In many instances, wood was so scarce that the early posts were built of sod or adobe. The adobe structures lasted very well as is evidenced by those still in existance at Ft. Robinson and at Ft. Hartsuff. Wherever possible, though, wood was used. in in* vcuuduic ouuk, me rnaian wars of 1864, Capt. Eugene F. Ware tells of going up into the canyon near Cottonwood Springs to secure cedar logs for use in construction of the buildings at Ft. McPherson. He describes the organization of the wood details: “Six of our men had worked in the pineries and were excellent axe-men. They went to work as three couples to fell. Their axes were sharp, the weather stimulat ing and they tumbled the trees rapidly. Other squads trimmed the branches; others with a cross cut saw worked in constant re liefs, cutting the logs the right length. Our quarters had been planned to be built of 20 foot logs. These logs were about a foot in diameter. We had our pick. After getting down a lot of the logs, we organized squads with our team mules to sneak them out of the canyon. The men made rapid work, and every night every man who had worked in the canyon got. a good snifter from my barrel of 1849 whiskey.” The soldiers at Ft. McPherson had it relatively easy as far as wood was concerned. Cotton wood and cedar grew in plenti ful quantities in the immediate vicinity of the fort. Those at other posts were not so fortunate and wood trains had to be sent quite a distance to se cure necessary wood. Assignment to the wood detail was more than an interesting break in the mon otony of garrisbn life—it was highly exciting and at times ex tremely dangerous. The slow moving wood trains provided an easy mark for Indians and in hostile country, a guard detail had to be sent along with the wood trains. Even when the train operated under heavy guard, dis aster might occur. One of the most notable inci dents involving a wood train was the Fetterman massacre of 1866. A wood train sent out from Ft. Phil Kearny on the Little Piney in Wyoming sent word back that it was being surrounded and need ed help. Capt. William J. Feter man with mounted infantry, ac companied by cavalry under Lt. H. S. Bingham, was sent to the scene. Captain Fetterman’s force proved insufficient, however, and Colonel Carrington, then at the post, had to come cmt with a. large force to rescue the guard detail. Even so, Lieutenant Bing ham and two men were lost in the skirmish. Captain Fetterman, smarting under this defeat, was anxious to wreak vengeance upon Red Cloud’s warriors, who were mak ing every effort to close the forts on the Bowsman Trail and stop white traffic north of Ft. Lara mie. Captain Fetterman, unfam iliar with Indian warfare or the ! ways of the frontier, had boast ed that he could ride safely | through the Indian country with ! 80 men. When on ihe morning of Dec ember 21, 1866 fhe wood train again signaled an Indian alarm. Captain Fetterman insisted, as senior captain at Ft. Phil Kear ny. that he be allowed to lead the expedition against them. He had just 80 men in his party—the number he had de clared would be sufficient to carry the day. Moreover, he had very specific orders from Colonel Carrington not t° go beyond a point known as Lodge Trail Ridge. In disobed ience of those orders, however, he allowed himself to be enticed beyond Lodge Trail Ridge and into an ambush. He and his men fought gallantly but not a man survived. Thus the difficulties of a wood train—combined with the rash ness of a brave but foolhardy young officer—provided the set i ting for one of the greatest tra gedies of the frontier. Orchard Cadet Makes Dean's List— ORCHARD — Cadet Robert L. Lafrenz, son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Lafrenz of Orchard, was recently named on the dean’s list for outstanding achievement and proficiency in academic subjects at the U.S. military academy, West Point, N.Y. As a second classman (junior), Lafrenz studies the mechanics of sclids and fluids, electricity, so cial sciences, military instructor training and tactics. The curriculum at West Point is designed to provide a broad oasic background in the technical sciences and the liberal arts. Stopover Here— Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Ray of Loveland, Colo., and Mr. and Mrs. McCoy Rhodes and family of Cody arrived Wednesday eve ning, November 25, and enjoyed Thanksgiving at the home of Mr. arid Mrs. Elgin Ray and daugh ter, Mary. The Hugh Rays re mained here for several days. They were enroute back to Love land after having spent 10 days I in Wisconsin visiting relatives. Gillespies Entertain— Thanksgiving dinner guests in the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Gillespie and family were Mrs Della Eby and her son, Robert, of Omaha. Robert arrived Wednes day night, November 25, accom panied by Robert Cavanaugh of Omaha and Thell Gubber of St George, Utah. They spent Thanks giving at the Charles Cavanaugh home. ......■- T BIGLIN'S Funeral Directors O’NEILL Day Ph. Night Ph. 38 487-R or 200 EDW. M. GLEESON DENTIST 2d Floor Gilligan Rexall Bldg. 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