FORT ROCK, LAKE COUNTY; 1910s — 1960s:
The legendary lies and
tall tales of Reub Long
No audio (podcast) version is available at this time.
By Finn J.D. John
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At the top, one of them struck a match, dropped it in the crater, paused to confirm it was taking effect, and scrambled away hastily so as not to get caught too near the scene of the “crime.” If anyone had happened to be looking his way, he might have been swiftly busted. Thick black smoke immediately started pouring out of the top of the miniature volcano. But, luckily for our perpetrator, no one was. For some time the picnickers carried on as usual. But then …. “Suddenly a picnicker turned white, pointed a shaking finger at the black smoke, and dashed for his horse,” Russ writes. “All hell broke loose. The boys didn’t dare tell about it for forty years. Suppose, in a crisis like this, you took the horse and dashed away, leaving wife and children with a buggy (and nothing to pull it). She might forgive you, but you’d know what she was thinking when she looked at you with contemplative eyes …. A whole book could be written about the things that happened. Some neighbors gained stature, and several marriages resulted. A few divorces, too.”
“In this country that isn’t any great thing to hold against a man,” Reub recalls, “but it got so he was drunk while holding court, which didn’t add much to the dignity of the trial.” Prompted by this obvious display of public inebriation, the local pro-Prohibition party recruited and put forward a “dry” candidate to challenge “Judge Jim Beam” for his seat. “Before election, it was the custom of the Cattlemen’s Association to hold a big picnic on the courthouse lawn so voters could come out of the canyons and mountains and meet the candidates,” Reub writes. “The judge, against all reason, chose this time to get drunk.” Standing before the gawping cattlemen and cowboys on the porch of the courthouse, swaying gently back and forth and slurring his words, the judge gave a speech that can only be described as — well, as Raymond Chandler used to say, let’s just take it straight from the neck of the bottle: “Voters, my heart bleeds for you as you go to the polls next week to make the fateful cross on the ballot that will decide who will preside at your district court,” the judge thundered thickly. “It bleeds because you must decide between a drunkard, and a damned fool. But as you stand in the booth, confronted by this dilemma, I hope you can remember one thing — a drunkard is sometimes sober.” The following week, the drunk judge was re-elected by a large margin.
It seems he bought a ranch that had been a successful, going concern, but had been vacant for a while. During that time, the rats had moved in, and the place was utterly infested with them. Reub could not seem to get rid of them. “I tried poisoning, shooting, trapping — all the things I knew about,” he wrote. “The rats outsmarted me on every turn.” Then one day while he was griping about his dilemma to a neighbor, the neighbor suggested what you might call a folk remedy — that is, if you were feeling charitable; if you weren’t, you might call the neighbor’s suggestion something else. He said if Reub would just catch a full-grown rat, whitewash him and turn him loose again, the other rats would think he was a ghost and would all leave. “That didn’t seem to be the sort of thing a person could believe with all his heart,” Reub added dryly, “but the remedy was cheap and I was desperate.” So Reub caught one of the rats, a nice big one, and alerted the neighbor. They brought the rat out to the road for the whitewashing, and soon a large group was assembled there: Reub and his two hired hands, the neighbor and his hired hands, and “a couple other amateur rat specialists.” “At that point, several technical points arose,” Reub wrote. “Such questions came up as whether the whitewash should go on with the grain of the hair, thereby getting a smooth, slick job, or whether against the grain, thereby being more thorough, but leaving him rough and unattractive. Should we let the whitewash dry before turning him loose? Should we mix white of egg, flour paste, or anything in the whitewash to make it sticky?” While they were all there clustered around the rat and struggling with these scientific questions, a big, fancy red car pulled up to the group. The driver stopped and stuck his head out the window, trying to get a glimpse of what the fuss was about. “What in hell is going on here?” he asked. “I said carelessly, ‘Oh, we’re just whitewashing a rat,’” Reub wrote. “He said incredulously, ‘You’re what?’ — I said, as though it was an everyday occurrence and I was a little impatient with him, ‘Just whitewashing a rat.’” The stranger said nothing more, and when Reub looked up again he was racing off into the distance … most likely, just as fast as his fancy red car would go.
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