| "...Cook attempted
to deceive the world with malice aforethought and in cold blood that he
might win fame and fortune...his own acts of folly and
deception, utterly discredited and held in disgrace by his own countrymen, who
are, frankly ashamed of him, wish he should shut up, keep out of the way, nor dare to
appear In any public capacity...
(Fess)
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Mr. FESS. Mr. Speaker, I would not take notice of the pretensions of Dr.
Cook were they limited to a mere newspaper publicity campaign, but in view of
the fact that some material in the interests of his North Pole contentions has
been incorporated in the CONGRESSIONAL RECORD during the present session, much
of which is misleading and some with no basis of fact, and which he appears to
be using as an advertisement in furtherance of his activities upon the
vaudeville stage by attempting to give the impression to those unfamiliar with
our procedure here that his polar claims are under investigation by Congress and
receiving its serious consideration. I as a member of the Education Committee
before which his representative appeared, propose, as a guide to the unwary and
in the interests of historical accuracy, briefly to outline what has occurred
that there may hereafter be no warrant, without gross perversions of fact, to
continue to use Congress as an accessory to his advertising propaganda, and as a
result of which he has already succeeded in misleading some most excellent
people, who, without themselves investigating the facts have been impressed by
his plausibility. And I shall also at the same time—as we are all so prone to
forget—incorporate a few of the salient facts with which we were once all
familiar, but which may have escaped the memory of some.

American History Must not be Perverted.
And in what I am about to say I shall voice my sentiments not only as a Member
of Congress, but in the spirit of an educator—a college president, a teacher of
history, and as a citizen jealous -that there should be no perversions of our
American history. I may add that while Dr. Cook has called upon me, and both he
and his representative have pressed his claims upon my attention, it has never
been my privilege to meet Admiral Peary. Therefore I do not speak from the
standpoint of personal friendship for the discoverer of the North Pole, but I
honor him for the luster he has shed upon the American Nation by his
achievements, and trust that a clear statement of the case will aid in
preventing further misrepresentations (such as the latest to the effect that the
Congress is investigating Dr. Cook's claims) and may lead those who are not
experts in Arctic matters and not familiar with the facts to remember that it is
well to be upon their guard lest, as has recently been said, “the skill and
acumen of a practiced faker" be at work—qualities that are subtle and not always
readily discernible.
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