TV jvoe7YV5NSys5irsS3jn j F i UURGESS IM umber and Strain Filter lrm vm and Sewer Pipo Brass Goo Pumps an Boiler Trimmings Ef mates Fumued Free Base mt o tht Postoftiee Building McCOOK NEBRASKA E F OSBORN Drayman Prompt Service Courteous Treatment Reasonable Prices GIVE ME A TRIAL This is the face of the man who burns coal buoght at the BULLARD LUMBER CO Phone No l McCOOK NEBRASKA let us estimate on our next bill None too large or too small to fill Complete stock grades high prompt deliveries prices low everything right I I I True Davis Orfice First Dour South of DeGroffi Phone 13 Both Boys Saved Louis Hocin h lunding merchant of Norway MiVh write Three bottles of Fo a Honey md Tnr tbsolutoly cured mv try of a Fevere cough and a rmirzh burs bny who was so ill with a cold Unit the doctors cave him up was cured hv takine Foleys Honey and Tar Nothing else is as safe and cer tain in results A McMillen Mr F G Fritz Oneonta N Y writPF My little girl was greatly bom fitted by taking Foleys Orina Lax ative and I think it is tho best remedy or constipation and liver trouble Foley- Orina Laxative is mild pleasant and effective and cures habitual consti pation A McMillen W F Everist r use in the can- Pure in the baking Never Fails HVlHnla9l Try This In November Thousands upon thousands of fam I Hies who have not been regular eat ers of Quaker Oats will begin on the llrst of November and eat Quaker Oats once or twice every day for thirty days of this month the result in good health and more strength and vigor will mean that every other month in the year will find them doing the same thing Try itr Serve Quaker Oats plenti fully and frequently for the thirty days of November and leave off a cor responding amount of meat and greasy foods Youll get more health more vigor and strength than you ever got m thirty days of any other kind of eating While you are trying this see that the children get a full share Quaker Oats is packed in regular size packages and large size family packages 7 JOHN E KELLEY ATTORNEY AT LAW and BONDED ABSTRACTS McCook Nkbraska JiaARent of Lincoln Land Co and of McCooi vHtr H orkfl Ofiico in PoRtoHlcp hnilHinp BEGGS5 BLOOD PURIFIER CURES disease with Pure Blood sffk Sk w my W L Lozier W M Vastine Billiard Lumber Co M 0 McCLURE Manager Phone No 1 Get our prices consid er quality and we will get your business jou S30P OrjAY UBUI 31U JO 3DBJ am SI smi D E Eikenberry The United States Investment Co Colorado Irrigated Lands a Specialty Dealing in All Kinds of REAL ESTATE Main Office at Monte Vista Colo yMyiwrr vvivyviTrTirTyrrirv9fnfniinr v vv vv wwpwiwvvvviivii V Fraxklix Pres R A Gkeex Cshr - Jas S Doyle Vice Pres G H Watkixs Asst Cshr The Citizens National Bank of McCook Nebraska Paid Up Capital 50000 Surplus 25000 DIRECTORS V Franklin Jas S Doyle R A Green G II Watkins Vernice Franklin tiMy ijii 1 jL L iLLiiiVJjtiiijiti 1 1 UWHWUPi 11 llMipaareeraHHaraaK Last Rates of the S eason 2500 TO CALIFORNIA These very low one way rates are in effect until October 15th The Burlington runs daily through tourist sleepers to Los Angeles and San Francisco via Denver scenic Colorado and Salt Lake City 2500 TO WASHINGTON OREGON AND THE NORTH WEST until October 15th You have the choice ot two Burling ton through trains via Billings to the coast one via the Great Northern one via the Northern Pacific All classes of through equipment including tourist sleepers HOMESEEKERS EXCURSIONS October 15th and 19th to the far west and northwest Inquire about Mondell 320 acre homestead lands WINTER TOURIST RATES Ask nearest agent about win ter tourist rates to south and southeastern resorts The United States Land and Irrigation Exposition at Chicago Nov 20th to Dec 4th will be of vital interest to the farmer rg UL D F Hostettee Ticket Agent McCook Neb L W Wakeley G P A Omaha - XttiMri ErfirAiSWJKiK oooooooooocoooooooooooo o o o o o o o o o o o o o o THE Pif1BFfflStrT Bv Dr FREDERICK A COOK Copyright 1909 by the New York Herald Company R 31stered In Canada In Accordance With Copy right Act Copyright In Mex ico Under Laws of the Republic of Mexico All Rights Reserved o ooooooooooooooooooocoo Plie Cook expedition vis equipped at Gloucester -Mass and was iwnl to start on July 3 1107 Or Cooiv and Kuilolph 1VancKe veie put ashoie at AnnootoK Ueinland with ample sttma and during the winter made pi epi ration- toi the olai dasli Ju Fol li 1W t tie main expedition started tor tlie pule with elev en men JO doss and eleven heavily load ed bleds Going a little north ot west the patty on March Is leached the north ern end ot iluibttiK lsland Heie the ex pedition divided six men returning The teal race to the pole now began On eh IS twenty six miles weie made and the next day twenty one Then two more ot the men returned leaving only two young Eskimos to aceompjn ur look with two loaded sledges and dogs On March 20 sixteen miles were covered twenty nine miles on the lilst twenty two the following day and atterwaid Jor several days an average ot seventeen or eignteen Near the northern eilge ot Grant Land a great open lead wa encountered which was crossed with some pei il on the young ice Some days later after a seveie storm the ice split open under the igloo and Dr Coolt in his sleeping bag sank Into the crevice behirf dragged to safety by the young ICsUimos The advance was halted by stoims in one of which the dogs were buried and in another the men themselves To the west a new land named Bradley Land by Cook was sighted extending from bS de grees 20 minutes to S3 degrees 51 minutes and close to the one hundred and second meridian Dr Cooks own account of ms dash from Bradley Land to the pole is given belowJ VER tho newly discovered coast linos was written Bradley Land in honor of John 11 Uradley the honefactor of the expedi tion As we passed uorth of this land there was nothing substantial upon which to lis the eye There was at no time a perfectly clear horizon but the weather was good enough to permit frequent nauti cal observations Thus day after day the marches wore forced the incidents and the po sitions were recorded but the advou tures were promptly forgotten in the mental bloaoh of the nest days effort The uight of April 7 was made notable by the swing of the sun at midnight for a number ot nights it made grim faces at us in its setting A teasing mist drawu as a curtain over the nor rn sea at midnight had given 1 1 jBffiHaafflaiffia FREDERICK A COOK curious advantages for celestial stag ing setting into this haze we were unable to determine sharply the ad vent of the midnight sun Now the great bulk was drawn out egs shaped with horizontal linos drawu through it Again it was prey ed into a lasin with tiaming fires burning behind a curtain ot trusts blue at other times appeared like a huge vase and it requited veiy little imagination to tee purple and violet flowers The change was ofr niw magic but the last dNpi r imtriahly a face distorted itces ot men or ani mals woii mide to sim mir fancy We bad therefore lolloweil the suns northward advance I ioai it- tiiM poop at midday above the m ush i e of tht polar gateway to its weep of the northern ice at midnight From the end of the polar niglii late in Fobru ary to the fi of the di uhie days and midnight -tins ve lied c reed a trait through daikuoo blond hardening tempeiaiuif snd oer breaking ir regularities if rn ui v is world of ice to an at - tin mile- the pole Now r nil i at inidiighi quite ii ers cliMM i ji sun unmistakably iud its ikv glerv was in1 to el liie of shiv ioii ui April S placed cam a tsie si dig roes i min utes longiiude 11 1 iegiees J minutes In spile of what seemed like long marches we had advanced only 10G miles in nine days Much of our hard work was Iju in circuitous twists around troublesome pressure lines and high irregular fields of very old ice The drift ice was throwing us to the east with sufficient force to give us some anxiety but with eyes closed to danger and hardships the double days of fatigue and glitter quickly followed one another The temperature ranging between 36 and 40 degrees below zero F kept persistently near the freezing point of mercury and though the perpetual Btin gave light and color to the cheer less wastes we were not impressed with any appreciable sense of warmth ooooooooc O O o o O o O o O o O o m9 B u S3 OvOOCO000 o Bradley land Passed Steam From Frozen Seas Half the Food Allowance Used Mad dening Effect of Polar Glit ter Despair of Ahwelah Beyond Is Impossible 0 would take us to the pole in thirteen days There were food and fuel enough to risk this adventure In the diary of the succeeding days doings there appear numerous tabu lations of work and observations In the new cracks the thickness of the ice was measured The water was ex amined for life Atmospheric surface water and ice temperatures were tak en the barometer was noted the cloud formations weather conditions and ice drifts were tabulated I watched daily for possible signs of dangerous failure in strength for serious disability now meant a fatal termination A disabled man could neither con tinue nor return but every examina tion gave another reason to push hu man endurance to the limit of the strain of every fiber and cell The hatd work which followed under an occasional burst of burning sunbeams brought intense thirst Forcing the habit of the camel we managed to take enough water before starting to keep sufficient liquid in the veins for the days march but it was diihcult to await the melting of the ice at camping time In two sittings evening and morn ingeach took an average of three quarts of water daily This included the tea aud also the luxury of an oc casional soup There was water about everywhere in heaps but it was in crystals and before the thirst could be quenched several ounces of pre cious fuel which had been carried thousands of miles must be used And still this water so expensive and so necessary to us ultimately became the greatest bane to comfort It escaped through the pores of the skin satu rated the boots forced a band of ice under the knee and a belt of frost about the waist while the face was o o o o o o o o o o o o o oocooooooooOoooooOo ledeid the sunbeams seemed lo make the frost of the air pierce with a more painful sting There was a weird play of orgies seemingly most impressive at this time clouds of steam rose from the frozen seas in marching over the golden glitter snow scalds the face while the nose is bleached with frost In imp a grip of the knife left pain ful burns from cold metal To the frozen linger the water was hot With wine spirits the tire was lighted while Dil delighted the stomach In dreams heaven was hot the other place was cold t All nature was false We seemed to be hearing the chilled flame of a new hades In our hard life there was nothing genuinely warm Tho congen ial appearances were all deception but leati offered only cold comfort There was no advantage in suicide Wo should have onjoved this curious experience hut with endless bodily dis comforts combined in aeig muscles and an overbearing langui n here could be no real joys from the glories of na ture The pleasure was reserved for a later retrospect We now changed our working hours from day to night beginning usually at 10 and ending at 7 The big march es and prolonged hours of travel with which fortune favored us earlier wore no longer possible Weather condi tions were more important in deter mining the days run than the hands of the chronometers When the storms threatened the start was delayed and in strong blows the march was shortened but in one way or another we usually found a few hours in each turn of the dial dur ing which a march could be forced be tween winds It mattered little wheth er we traveled night or day all hours and all days were alike to us for we had no accustomed time of rest no Sundays no holiday no landmarks or mileposts to pass To advance and ex pend the energy accumulated during one sleep at the cost of our pound of pemmican was the one sole aim in life The observations of April 11 gave latitude 87 degrees JO minutes longi tude i3 minutes ID seconds Tho pack disturbance of Bradley Land was less and less noted in the northward move ment The fields became heavier lar ger and less crevassed We had now passed tho highest reaches of all our predecessors and had gained the inspiration ot the far thest north for ourselves The time was at hand however to consider seri ously the necessity of an early return Nearly half of the food allowance had been used In the long marches supplies had been more liberally used than anticipated and now our dog teams were much reduced in numbers A hard necessity had forced the cruel law of the survival ot the fittest for the less useful dogs were fed to the steady working survivors Owing to the food limits and the advancing sea sou we could not prudently continue the outward inarch a fortnight longer We had dragged ourselves 300 miles over the polar sea in twenty four days Including delays and detours this gave an average of nearly thirteen miles daily on an air line in our course There remained an unknown line of 100 miles before our ambitions could be satisfied The same average ad vance which we had made on the pack nearly always incased In a ma oS icicles from the breath a necessary part of our hard lot in life and we learned to take the torture philosoph ically From the eighty seventh to the eighty eighth paiallel we passed for two days over old lee without pressure lines or hummocks Theie was no dis cernible line of demarcation for the fields and it was quite impossible to determine if wc were on land or sea ice The barometer indicated no ele vation but the Ice had the hard wav ing of glacial uc with only superficial otvva es The water ob tained from tliK uas not but all of the upper surface of the ice of the polar sea make- similar water The nautical observations did not com to indicate a drill but nevertheless the combined tabulation do not warrant the positive assertion ot oil her land or sea for this area The ice gave i cheering prospect A plain of purple and blue ran in easy undulations to the limits ot vision Xwftswwv ww 1 WHftlVI rfV V v -a wy wi v wimy s e v ls mm SViiSnhJ V S VJs DR COOK IN ARCTIC COSTUME without the usual barriers of uplifted blocks Over it a direct air line course was possible Progress however was quite as difficult as over the irregular pack The snow was crusted with large crystals An increased friction reduced the speed while the surface too hard for snowshoes was also too weak to give ji secure footing Tho loneliness the monotony the hardship of steady unrelieved travel were now keenly felt It is not often that mans horsepow er is put to tho test as ours was We were compelled to develop a working energy to the limit of animal capacity Day after day we had pushed along at the same steady pace over plains of frost and tlnough a mental desert As the eye opened at the end of an icy slumber the fire was lighted little by little tho stomach was filled with liquids and solids mostly cold enough to last for the day for there could be no halt or waste of fuel for midday feeding We next got into harness and paced off the days pull under the lash of duty Wo worked until stand ing became impossible longer in light winds shorter in strong winds but al ways until the feet became numb and heavy Then came tho arduous task of build ing a snow house In this the eyes no longer able to wink closed but soon the empty stomach complained and it was filled up again not with things that pleased the palate only hard fuel to feed the inner fires while the ear sought the soft side of ice to dispel fatigue no pleasure in mental recrea tion nothing to arouse the soul from its icy inclosure To oat to sleep to press one foot ahead of tho other was our steady vo cation like the horse to the cart but wo had not his advantage of an agree able climate and a comfortable stable at night Words and pictures cannot adequate ly describe the maddening influence of this sameness of polar glitter com bined with bitter winds extreme cold and an overworked body To mo there was always the inspiration of antici pation of the outcome of ultimate suc cess but for my young savage com panions it was a torment almost be yond endurance Their weariness was made evident by a lax use of the whip and an indifferent urging of the dogs They were however brave and faith ful to the bitter end seldom allowing selfish ambitions or uncontrollable passions seriously to interfere with the main effort of the expedition On the morning of April 13 a strain of agitating torment reached a break ing point For days there had been a steady cutting wind from the west which drove despair to its lowest reaches No torment could be worse than that never ceasing rush of icy air Ahwe lah bent over his sled and refused to move Ilis dogs turned and looked in quiringly I walked over and stood by his side Etukishuk came near and stood motionless staring blankly at the southern skies Large tears fell from Ahwelahs eyes and piled a little frost of sadness in the blue of his own shad ow for several minutes Not a word was uttered but I knew that each felt that the time had come to free the fet ters of human passions Slowly Ahwe lah said Unne sinig pa It is well to die beyond Is impossible Received on nccount Paid out Cash Credit Hlipaete for Bnlo at tho Tribune ollico Per 1000 60c Mike Walsh DEALER IN POULTRY ifc EGGS Old Rubber Copper and Brass Highest Market Price Paid in Cash I Now location Just across rirfrmlr Dr J O Bruce OSTEOPATH Telephone 55 McCook Neb J flfflrt n fltflcXliiirrtrt fllntn Avft 3 frfcdUM tM iitVA MiAtiitM il il irtrttl AAm Dr Herbert J Pratt UinISTUREI OltAIJCVTK Dentist Ollicc 2I 1MiiiiavorMcConneirs Driif Store ilcCook Nob Telephones OHice lt lteiilence Itlacn 111 Office over McAdams Store Phone 19 - it b j mm DENTIST phonb 112 OUlca Rooms 3 anil 5 Walsh Iilk McCook JDr J A Colfei DENTIST Room Postorfich Building Phone 378 McCOOK NEBRASKA iC TffrrTirTtYiTvti n i p fly y y R H Gatewood DENTIST Office over McMillen a drug store Phono 1G3 McCook Nebraska iiMV i1 tit1 i1 f1 i1 in fiWdlrini Micldleton Ruby PLUMBING and STEAM FITTING All work guaranteed Phone 182 McCook Nebraska H P SUTTON McCOOK JEWELER MUSICAL GOODS NEBRASKA Quickly Cured Chanberlasns in a na t a c jftsftser i -- -- y A Lumber and Coal Thats All h Urz ftfi ttczi iLaa ii gjit zs22ETi Can alvays be depended upon During the summer myrrhs children are subject to ixnvel di ordr rs and should receive the most careful attention as any tmnsttnral lnojen s of r nowels is noticed Chamberlains Colic Cholera and Diarrhra llemedy should bf given Cots Lut 21 cents u botth tnd it is economy to always keep a botrlt Y u do not Ichtf it y be ntvaed but when yot do want it yor wartitbauiv CtC v xtt today But we can meet your everv need in these lines from our large and complete stocks in all grades Barnett Lumber Co Phone 5 i3 F 1 V DR EARL 0 VAHUE DENTIST