folk Three Cents Copy. INDEPENDENCE IJW ALL THINGS. Subscription Price. $1.00 Per Year in Advance. VOL XV. COLUMBUh, POLK COUNTY, N. C, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1909. NO. 18. mm. 1 COOK, OF BROOKLYN, behches NORTH POLE Hessage Sent to Wife Announc ing Succsss and Safety. AMERICAN'S WONDERFUL FEAT gartMnp Cold of the .Tourney to the North Described Men and Dogs Perish on the Way lkimos Turn Back. Other Efforts Made to fleach the Pole. The following table of statis tics shows former efforts to reach the North Pole and their results: Miles From Pole. 713 654 635 5S7 500 460 455 260 241 Tear. 159 1700. 1S"B . 1S27 1S76 1882, 1 S 9 ". 1900 Kxnlorer. . Barentz . Hudson . Phipps . . Scoresby . Parry . . Latitude Reached. . .79.40 . .80.23 . .80.48 . .81.30 . .82.45 .Nares 83.20 .Greely S3. 24 .Nanser ...86.14 .Abruzzi . . .S6.33 L Brussels, Belgium. The observa tory here received the following tele gram, dated Lerwick, Shetland Isl ands: "Reached North Pole April 21, If 08. Discovered land far north. Return to Copenhagen by steamer Hans Egede. "FREDERICK COOK." The American officials at the ob servatory state the dispatch is surely In ten day the party only pro gressed two degrees of latitude, being frequently compelled to turn back and make long detours around im passable ice barriers. The party was now reduced to twenty dogs. Many fell from weak ness and were devoured by the hungry survivors in the pack. Within 100 miles of the goal the icefield became heavier, the obstacles greater, but there were no deep rifts. The party saw no sign either of land or of an open polar sea; only ice, ice, ice everywhere. The temperature was seldom above fifty degrees below zero. The actual Pole was reached on April 21. Most careful observations were taken. J Nothing was to be seen but the il limitable fields of ice no evidence of land, or life, or water. The party remained thirty-six houps taking observations at the Pole. On the return trip the expedition was reduced to half rations and only two faithful Eskimos survived. All the ammunition was gone before the Greenland shores were reached May 21, 1909. A Citizen of Brooklyn. Brooklyn, N. Y. Dr. Frederick A. Cook has taken part in half a dozen notable exploring expeditions in his life time, in Arctic and Antarctic re gions, and in mountain climbing. In this last his greatest feat was the ascent of Mount McKlnley, in Alaska, in 1906, after unsuccessful attempts in 1903 by himself, and before that by several geographical societies. From his boyhood Dr. Cook has been interested in scientific achieve ments. He was born at Callicoon Depot, Sullivan County, New York, June 10, 1865, the son of Dr. Theo dore Albert Cook the family name was originally Koch, but was changed after coming to this country. He re ceived his education in the public schools of Brooklyn and in Callicoon, and was graduated in medicine from the University of New York City in 1890. In 1892 he married Mary tion that ever penetrated northern latitudes, could only get within one hundred- miles of the earth's apex, I cannot conceive how Cook has done it on his nerve, so to speak. How could he persuade the natives to go with him as carriers, for carriers he must have had cr starve? Food and fuel sufficient to last for months must have been taken along, and how and where would he get the funds to buy the food or the men and dogs to car ry it?" DOWIE'S SUCCESSOR JAILED. Voliva Says He'll Stay Six Months Bather Than Pay Judgment. Chicago, 111. Wilbur Glenn Voliva, successor to the late John Alexander Dowie as head of the Dowie religious cult, was placed in' the ricHenry County Jail, at Woodstock, 111., in default of payment of a $10,000 Judg ment rendered against him by Judge Wright in favor of Philip Motherill, a farmer of Montana. The judgment was obtained on a slander charge brought by Motherill. Voliva declared he would stay in jail the entire six months rather than pay the judgment. DESTROYER'S GREAT RECORD. Flusser Does Three Knots Faster Than Any Ship in U. S. Navy. Rockland, Me. A record three knots faster than that of any ship in the United States Navy was scored by the Bath built torpedo boat de stroyer Flusser in a standardization trial, the first of her official accept ance trials on the Rockland mile course. Her fastest mile was made at the rate of 33.7 knots an hour, while another was at the rate of 33.4 knots. The average of her five top speed runs was 32.7 knots. KILLED BEFORE FIRST FLIGHT. Louis Raynaud, Aeroplane Inventor. Struck by a Passenger Train. New Orleans, La. Louis Raynaud, the inventor of an airship, which was to have . its initial flight herer and a party of three others, return", ing home in a wagon from a day's work on the aeroplane, were struck by a New Orleans and Great North ern passenger train at Gentilly road and Bruxelles street here. Raynaud died shortly after being taken to the Charity Hospital. Two of his com- ' panions were slightly injured. i : Francis H. Leggett Dies Suddenly. Francis H. Leggett, a prominent wholesale grocer of New York City, died suddenly in an ambulance while being taken to the North Hudson Hospital in Union Hill, N. J., from the West Shore Railroad ferryhouse at Weehawken. The cause of his death was presumed to be heart disease. DR. FREDERICK A. CCCK, DISCOVERER OF THE NORTH POLE. authentic and that the North Pole has been reached for the first time and by an American. Lerwick, Shetland Islands. Dr. Cook says that the most important iiscovery made in his journey of fcore than '200 miles farther north than any human has ever gone before Is a now strip of land more than 30, 000 square miles in extent, inhabited ff polar animals and game of consid erable variety. B( fore reaching the Pole Dr. Cook Mered almost killing hardships from hunger and cold. Fidell Hunt, who is now a resident of Brooklyn. Chief Engineer MelviUe's Opinion. Philadelphia, Pa. 'If Dr. Cook has discovered the North Pole it is nothing, less than a miracle," said Rear-Admiral Melville?, retired, him self well posted on the difficulties of exploration in northern latitudes. "Without backing, money, outfit and equipment. I don't see how Cook could have ever reached the Pole, let alone live through the return innrnev." said the Admiral. "If .Prom Eskimos who accompanied . peary, with the best equipped expedi lue i-.piorer it was learnea tnat tne party lived upon immense catches of "ear meat which resulted from the pat hunt of Eskimos on the Green 'anl iore just before Cook's party arrived at Annootok. Large quantities of these stores re .aid at a point 700 miles from P le. During the long winter ieds were prepared, equipment instruments packed for the jour- ross the iqe packs, which was :in at least a month before the idwn of light in the spring of Colorado Corporation Tax Valid. At Denver, Col., Judge Lewis, in the Federal Court, held the Colorado State tax of $2 a year for every $1000 of capital stock of foreign corpora tions valid. The Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad complained that the tax was an interference with interstate commerce. Suffocated by Own Invention. Milton J. Kent, of Warren and Orleans streets, Newark, N. J., went to the house at No. 454 Fourth ave nue to exterminate roaches by a pat ent gas and was suffocated by his own preparation. He was dead when found by his partner who went to search for him when he did not return. England Depends on Navy. Admiral Lord Charles Beresford told Canadians at Montreal "our peo ple in England have a weary look," and that the continuance of the Brit ish Empire depends on its supremacy on all seas. Baseball Fan Dies Cheering. Cheering vigorously for a player who had just knocked a home run in an amateur ball game Robert Myers, sixty-five, dropped dead of heart dis ease at Chicago. High nd lev to'i fir? 1)08. com -rL doze; i by ov ebn Mies' fcusk torn kjht the f teser Of th actual start by pr. Cook, ac nied by ten Eskimos on a heavily laden sledges, drawn r a hundred dog3, was made on ivy 19. He next four weeKs nearly 200 was accomplished. Numerous 'ixen, several bear and hare 1 illed and eaten during this . The cold was frightful. The : fell at times to more than ' degrees below zero. than twenty dogs died from ire, and four of the Eskimos ' d and turned back, taking two ieds and some of the supplies la t- V;-, m. o more weeks Dr. Cook and hful followers left him say y reached the latitude of 84 LaV Hec-' longitude 86 deg. 36 sec. habit- s found UP to this point, in Hobif by much game. Bevond this Luciiea me Arctic waste ior o JO miles of ice, where no as?, Seis ns seemed to live, except foun(i a ew marks of which were MAP OF THE NORTH POLAR REGION. Showing the route which Dr. Cook intended to take and the points reached by other explorers. : PEARY AT POLE TOO Dispatches Flash Over the Wires Monday. REACHES GOAL APRIL 6, 1909 Several Messages Sent Including One to Mr3. Peary Leave No Doubt of Their Meaning Did Not Know of Dr. Cook's Discovery. PROMINENT PfcOPLE. New York, Special. From out the Arctic 4arkness there were flashed Monday the messages which stun ned the scientific world and thrilled the heart of every layman. From the bleak coast of Labrador Peary gave to the' world the news that he had attained his goal in the far north, while at the same moment in far off Denmark Dr. Frederick A. Cook, of Brooklyn, was being dined and lionized by royalty for the same achievement. Undeniably Yankee grit has . con quered the frozen north and there has been created a coincidence such as the world will never see again. The Americans have planted the flag of their country in the land of ice which man has sought to pene trate for four centuries and each, ignorant of tbe other's conquest, has flashed within a period of five days a laconic message of success to the waiting world. The following telegrams tell the fact that there is a story coming. New York, Special. Peary has succeeded. "Indian Harbor, via Capo Ray, N. F., September 6. . "To Associated Press, New York. "Stars and Stripes nailed to North Pole. (Signed) "PEARY." "Indian Harbor, via Cape Ray, N. F., September 6. "Herbert L. Bridgeman, Brooktyn, N. Y. "Pole reached. Roosevelt safe. "(Signed) "PEARY." "Indian Harbor, via Cape Ray, N. F., "I have the pole April 6.- Expect arrive Cheateau bay September 7. Secure control wire for me ther.s and arrange to expedite transmission of bis: story. (Signed) "PEARY." April 6, 1909 the date that Peary planted the flag at the Pole and April 21, 1908, the day that Dr. Cook unfurled the stars and stripes a year before, consequently become the car dinal dates upon which exploration of the far North will rest hereafter. Though separated by nearly a year, the same feat was accomplished by two Americans, neither of whom was aware of the movements of the other. Cook says that he found no traces of Peary in the moving ice and ad cording to word which was received here through Capt. Robert Barttett, of Peary's ship, the Roosevelt, late Monday night, Peary likewise- found no signs of his reputed predecessor. "However, this phase of Peary's ex perience will net be thoroughly clear ed up until a statement is obtained from his own lips. A Washington dispatch says : Commander Robert E. Peary, al most three years ago prophetically outlined his view of the value and in terest attached to the achievement he announced in the dispatches Mon day. The penetration of the frozen heart of the Arctic circle, the news of Peary's feat following close upon the heels of Dr. Cook's planting of the American flag at the same spot, evoked enthusiastic plaudits in Wash ington. Everywhere among armb and navy officers and scientists and official Washington, generally, only words of praise were spoken. Dr. Cook was intensely interested at the cablegrams and said: "That is good news. I hope Peary did get to the Pole. His observations and reports on that region will confirm 1 mine. 11 -v , Asked if there was any probability of Peary 's having found the tube con taining his records, Dr. Cook replied : "I hope so, but that i doubtful on account of the drift." He added: f " Commander Peary would ' have reached the Pole this year. Probably while I was in the Arctic region last vear his route was several hundred miles, east of mine. We are rivals, of course, but the pole is good enough for two. "That two men got to the Pole along different paths," continued the explorer, "should furnish large additions- to scientific knowledge. Prob ably other parties will reach it in the next ten years, since every explorer is helped by the experience of his predecessors, just as Sverdrup's ob servations and reports wer.s of im measurable help to me. I can say nothing more, without knowing fur ther details, than that I am glad-of it " J. P. Morgan, who ha been oni Ing a yachting trip, returned to N xors uuy. Former Solicitor-General Hoyt was selected as the State Department's new counsel. John T. McCutcheon, the artist and cartoonist, of Chicago, went to Africa to paint wild animals. Governor Hughes, of New York, en tertained Governor Fort, of New Jer sey, at Saranac Inn, N. Y. President Taft and Secretary Knox began work on the new Far Western bureau of the State Department. Mark Twain was ordered by his doctor to cut down his smoking. He is suffering from "tobacco heart." Ricardo Jiminez, who was favored by President Zelaya, of Nicaragua, was elected President of Costa Rica. Jens Sverson Westengard, of Chi cago, has been appointed general ad viser to the Siamese Government at Bangkok. Dr. T. G. Bonney was elected presi dent of the British Association for the Advancement of Science for the year 1910-'ll. Collector Loeb, of New York City, boarded the 'liner George Washington to see that the customs laws were en forced strictly. Justice Gaynor returned to New York City from Europe. He would hot say whether he would accept a nomination for Mayor. Bishop Fallows, ' of Chicago, ex pressed the conviction that communi action with spirits is possible and soon would become frequent. The British Government decided to offer Sir Wilfrid Laurier the position of First Governor-General of South Africa as a tribute to his reconcilia tion of races in Canada. NEWSY GLEANINGS. An earthquake at Panama did not damage the canal. A serious epidemic of typhoid fever broke out in Cobalt. Ontario. The Waters-Pierce Oil Company announced its property in Texas as for sale. President Diaz started a fund for the relief of Monterey, Mexico, with a subscription of $30,000. The mutineers at Athens over turned the Cabinet and obtained their demands without bloodshed. A breakfast in honor of the aero nauts was given at Rheims, France. Cordial speeches were made. The new City Directory showed 41,292 more names for Manhattan and the Bronx than last year. A cave-in at Scranton, Pa., did $200,000 damage. Most of the Four teenth Ward settled eight feet. The Hudson-Fulton Commission is sued an official circular announcing the program for the celebration. The latest estimate of the damage by flood at Monterey, Mexico, is 1400 dead, 15,000 homeless and $12,000, 000 property loss Joe Kane, eleven, confessed to kill ing Frances Lord, aged three, at Bur lington, N. J., and said he did not know why he shot her. Brave and cool headed nuns led 600 children to safety from a fire that destroyed St. Malachy's Orphan Asylum at Rockaway Park, L. I. The police of Bar Harbor, Me., closed a cottage where gambling had been carried on and drove those who conducted the place out of town. It was said that New York City curb brokers would be prosecuted for circulating misleading information regarding mining stocks through the mails. Work on a New Railroad. Asheville, Special. Shanties have been built along the route, and before the end of the week work will begin on the Smoky Mountain Railroad, which will extend fourteen miles up Hazel Creek through one of the finest timber tracts in this region. The road is being built by the Ritter Lum ber Company. Barbee is Acquitted. Durham, Special. Reuben Barbee gained his freedom Saturday evening at 7 :30 after the jury had been out an hour and forty minutes. The verdict came as a general surprise, the com mon prophecy being that a mistrial or some secondary verdict would fol low. It took but little argument to reach the conclusion that Solomon Shepard's evidence had muddled the waters enough to give the defendant his liberty, and twice Barbee goes free on murder charges. R.NG FOR CHICKS. Growing chicks need considerable range, and it is difficult indeed to raise them in srmll pen?. If they, must be confined within certain lim its, the yards should be of large pro portions that there troay be green food growing :n tvem all the time, or, failing in that, the green food must be sup-died each day. Farmers' Home Journal. Says the Camden Post: It is to be' presumed that the eight promin ent men indicted by tho Federal Grand Jury in New York City in con nection with th? Sugar Trust's cap ture of Adolph Segal's new Philadel phia refinery will claim that they are victims of pubi c clamor. They may interpose between themselvBS ?nd the sword of justice the statute of limi tations and possibly may escape pun ishment. The public has reason to be sceptical of the effectiveness of this belated, attempt to enforce the Anti-Trust law. Are a Necessity j in the Country Home. The farther you are removed from town to railroad station, the more the telephone will save in time and horse flesh. No man has a right to compel one of the family to lie in agony for hours while he drives to town for the doctor. Tel-j ephone and save half the suffering. ( Uur r ree book tells how to or ganize, build and operate tele phone lines and systems". Instruments sold on thirty days' trial to responsible parties. THE CADIZ ELECTRIC CO., 201 CCC Building, Cadiz, Ohio. 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