Monday. Jtalr 23, 1958
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE SEVEK
Climbers Seek Evidence To Prove Pole, McKinley Claims by Coo!
Four men somewhere on ?h :
slopes of to-.venr.g Mr. McKi.-.l'-y
rray have with r-i .'.' r::.;.::"n
nw drd by a B'.: tb::- .V.Y.. .r'in
an to viridics'e r.'-r ..'! futhr-r's
honor.
An c : pr : " or. -:' b f-.n
tr:r; to ,-cslf- 'r K;nl v :
2b 27ti-foo rx ;'!-; b::b-f-' it.
N nr :' A 'i.'. rif .-. . t f" r :!' m
moont;,ir. -o;::,. i. V.
of 'r.r i'.r r. .our. ' '. r::rr.:.o;v i -.Vrs.
Ib-b.'.f Co'-.-: Yf"' r. b;rrjb
trr of I j r . FroHor ;f A. Cook,
uho-o fi,,:: - ho '.v:! '1:0 lirvt
'he f.r-t to rlirrbn Ml. MrKinh-y
r s'.f t,'-' n h '! 'i).-i!it'-cl
Cook r!;iirri h" was first to
b.r- ltoM 'fi'-'-ik '.Vi 5brb':yi
hor. !')':'; w;.s olfi' i;i!Iv r r o;
nizo'i nn'il Arl:n:r;il Honor: K
Pf-ary a'lackorj it Mrs. Vftt r
said in Buffalo tiv.t Peary at
tarked h'-r father h-c;t'is- 'h
'Poary; r'-tnrmd Irom 'ho North
Polo to f:nH rr.v fa': r-r r.;,ri bri:'
en birr: 'br-rr-
Mr?. VoMr-r ?ri:d r.rr fa'hr-r ;,:rj
o.koct tr.f
:-"Jck bc-ca'
-Th( r fo
my father Cook's picture that he
Pole journey ! took atop the mountain.
was tr.e only jhe expedition now on Mt.
McKinley, headed by mining en-
n ma xi
rate ': .
.m.
turned to the
e in one. false
!.t 'o demon-'h-r
fake-d the
d he ing?. i on the climb up the mountain into tne oil development busin-
With Gonnason are Dr. Otto ; signed statements that his story
was false.
Cook served as surgeon and
anthropologist on Peary's first
GOP Said To Run Ike
'Even if He's Stuffed'
Washington (U.R) Sen. Wil-
ci:
.-;;;d 'the Peary
'"lie Browne and
er. who had been
jok's narty that al
to rlm.n tne mountain
Ala..-,
i'.-.l.-bi
Trot. 45. a surgeon from Se.
tie; Dr. Paul GerMman. 31. a
nnrbntririsn of PilVnlllin V;-h
gmeer Walter L. Gonnason of ; anfj Bruce R. Gilbert. 25. a Yak
Seattle, set out to follow Cook's , ima Wash. fruit erovvcr.
rr.tiio ! n tl-io m nnntain Pnritn. I
eraohs made at points along the I AU 1he n arc experienced ; for the "Erik," expedition that
wav will be compared with those j mountain chmoers. I went to Greenland to rescue
n-.ade by him. I The Prary-Crv-k controversy : Peary, who was stranded.
a:ry s retusai i The Brooklyn Dhvsician led
North Greenland expedition in ed l0 14 yea"s and nlne montns
ess in Texas. He was indicted j Ham E. Jenncr (R-Ind. was quot
on charges he exaggerated the ed Sunday as saying the Kepub
, ,. . ' licans will run President Eisen-
prospects of his company ana , hower pr rccIection ..i th
in November. 1S23, was scntenc-1 have 1o stuff him."
1891 and in 1901 was surgeon
wa
a resu.t
Mrs. Vetter has no illusion
that the terrain will be the same I
nniir it i a in vpars atrn Sinep i
" '
. i ,i .u i, uj iv-iidifieu.
"O Pring OdCK lutll. k luuiu uflvc uajig,cu uiu- ;
i n-j i h,. nletelv hv the action of land-! Cook Pardoned
in Leavenworth.
The remark was attributed to
Jenner by Sen. Warren G. Mag-
He was released in 1938 and : nuson (D-Wash.V
on May 16. 1940. was granted a
"to be the second man to reach
the North Pole," M
iler-c.M.i i i:
'nember- of C
' r .on pted
.oack to
;iroof he
jf turneb w ith a photograph ! slides and glacier movements. Before the feud had run it?
made ;,;. ;t 2b miles from the i But she said she is willing to 1 course, ail live men w no accnm
full pardon by President Roose-
! velt. He died a few months later.
ai A orb
two Eskimo- re;,r hed '
Pole on April 2 b !b!i;i-.
year bf'forr- b : : . s
roe,,;.-,:ed arrr. al da'i
7, 19bfe
Journey attacked
"Although Peary a!!' mpfert to
discredit every phase cf my
father's polar journey. Mr.,. Vet
ter said, "he and his advisor
made Mb McKinley the focal
point of their ai'ack.
"Peary knew Ihat lie could nol
Liflle Child Found
Afier Might in Wilds
Boulder. Colo. U P Little
Sandy Barcus. 2!;. Superior
Colo., who spent 25 hours wan
tiering in fret zing weathe:
through the rain swept Rockies
near the Continental Divide was
resting safe and unharmed m
Boulder Communitv hospital to
day. Scoutmaster f; len Vriw erf and
members of his Bouldi r Troop
77 found the girl Sunday after
noon. She slipped away Satur
day noon while on an outm-;
with her mother and father. Mr
and Mrs. William Barcus Jr..
near Nederland. Colo.
Barefoot and cold only in a
thin dress, the toi was shivering
with cold when she was found
at the edge of Middle Boulder
creek. When questioned, she
would only repeat "I'm looking
for my mommy."
US Nuclear BIssfs
Reported by Japan
Tokyo tU.P Japanc-e
scientists said today the United
States set off another nuclear
explosion in the current test
series in the Pacific proving
grounds Sunday.
They said the 10th of the
series was detonated early Sun
day in the Eniwetok-Bikini test
grounds, and the ninth early
Saturday morning.
A spokesman for the govern
ment's Central Meteorological
Observatory in Tokyo said ultra
sensitive instruments at the ob
servatory and in weather sta
tions at Yonago, Kagoshima and
other places recorded "umisal"
atmospheric pressure shocks as
a result of the explosions.
Leading Oregon
Churchman Dies
Portland t'U.R' One of Ore
gon's leading churchmen died
here yesterday as a result of the
heat wave that has blanketed
the state for the past several
days.
The Rev. John Dawson, senior
presbyter of the Episcopal dio
cese of Oregon, died in a local
hospital, the result, doctors said,
of heat exhaustion.
The 87-year-old prelate was
horn in Ireland and came to thr
United States at an early age.
He had been'a resident of Mult
nomah county for the past 52
years.
He was ordained in 1891 and
became a priest in 1S92. He
served as rector at St. George's
in Roseburg for a time before
becoming rector of the Church
of the Goon Shepherd in Port
land, w h e r e he served many
ve.tr;.
Two Children Perish
In Idaho Barn Fire
Burley. Ida. Two
Indian children burned to death
near here last night in a barn
not far from their grandparents'
farm.
Jerry Abrahamsen. 6. and his
si.-ter. Barbara Jean. 4. were ap
parently playing in a nearby
barn when the fire broke out
Firefighters battled the blaze for
two hours, not knowing the chil
dren wore inside the building.
Their bodies were found as the
firemen searched through t h e
ash.es.
The Weather Bureau says the
common practice of measuring
the moisture contents of snow
as 10 per cent oi its depth i
fauity. The bureau says the mois
lure content can co f;vm three
to 30 per cent ci the sr.ow
depth.
two American expeanions to - at ,hp , ,,f TS a, .
v . .iei f ,1-een ano. in lH.-i ana ihh4.
and in 1897-99 was .surgeon for
the Belgian antarctic expedition.
Years after it was generally
assumed that Peary had proved
chelle. N. Y.
His daughter, the wife of El
liott J. Vetter, a lumber company
executive of Buffalo, N.Y., has
;pent most of her adult life try-
iK
on
it
duplicated i abide by the expedition's find- panied Cook part of the way Cook's claims faked, Cook went ing to clear her father's name
A reporter noted that Magnu
son previously had quoted a Re
publican as saying. "They're go
ing to run Ike if they have to
stuff him." Asked who said it.
Magnuson named Jenner. He
said he thinks the Indiana Re
publican made the remark either
on the Senate floor or in a news
paper interview.
Canadian Swimmer
Spans Lake Ontario
Toronto (U.R1 Johnny
Jaremy. a husky 36-year-old To
ronto steainfittcr, today became
the first man to swim across
Lake Ontario.
Jaremy covered the 32-mile
distance from Niagara-on-The-Lake.
Ont to the Toronto Har
bor entrance in 21 hours and 13
minutes, which was 17 minutes
more than the only previous
lake conqueror. Marilyn Bell of
Toronto.
Miss Bell performed the epic
feat Sept. 9, 1954.
Use Mail Tribune Want Ads
Dead line Sunday Classified Is at
noon Saturday; 10 a.m. Monday for
Monday; other days 5:30 previous day.
i iffl 'iwrriTn,iryiii trmifci- il i Mhnrmtui ammr r-
AIJJJUMWIJUIUIJMJWIIJ ! J"HS.il.UMll
' VA ,;Y - , .
rtiml--trrrT-r,,- r-"",
SA 1
ALL THE DEPEi
LESS THAN YOU'D
ti
QUALITY OF GENERAL ELECTRIC
EXPECT TO PAY FOR UMK!
BUY NOW AND SAVE ON THIS SALE PRICED SPECIAL!
"1
U . Z'K . f :
V
1
-4
-1
1
Ml
AT FAR
RANDS!
AUTOMATIC DISHWASHER
SALE PRICED
III dJ
$9.33
fl MONTH
1,
rmVin lirfii i'Mfl ni.HK.' -r' tfiinifr-r lilmlMiri Vlli JfcT
FREE
HOME
TRIAL
"MohHs-aid"
Needs No Installation
With the G-E Mobile Maid . . . Dishwashing's as easy as this:
King-Size Capacity holds
glasses, dishes, silver yes, pots
and pans, too!
Completely Automati c pre-
rinses, washes, rinses, dries.
Ideal for Apartments, Bungalows,
Rented Homes, Every Home.
1
2
3
Roll Mobile-Maid over to your sink . . . snap
handy faucet connection onto your faucet . .
and it'; all reday to do your complete dish
washing job.
Just brush off loose food to prepare dishes for
Mobile-Maid. NO PRE-RINSING REQUIRED.
Load all dishes and utensils on the new, easy
to-load adjustable racks. Easily accessible,
j they require no moving or sliding to take
your full load . . and can be adjusted to hold
your tallest glasses, largest plates.
When Mobile-Maid does your dishwashing,
everything is sparkling clean hygienicallyl
clean washed in water tar hotter than
hands can stand.
Try Out a
"Mobile-Maid
Then, !f You
Wish, You Can
Switch to This
Built-in Model!
Available In Six Colors
and with Wood Fronts
MODEL
SU-60 N
YOU'LL ALWAYS BE
BOUGHT A G-E FROM HOME APPLIANCE
- -" y
H sale -priced se DISHWASHER
J$ mSb , Two-Power Pre-Rinses!
i:tSi'c -"v &xr'r J a I Yr-
1 j MJitr
T. r - ..--V: . . .l . - - ----- iiiiri-filiMi-i il' MiaiiiflTr Y HirJ
i ii m m M:i