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COMMUNITY CHEST STUDY 1S STARTED | Committee Maps Program to Go Thoroughly Into Prin- ciples of Plan. THE EVENING ETWO TO ONE CHANCE AMUNDSEN i IS ALIVE, SEEN BY NAVY EXPERT Leader of U. S. Navy Planes in MacMillan Expedition Believes He’ll Find Explorers in Grant Land— Thinks Alaska Hop Too Dangerous. STAR, WASHINGTO! would be less hazardous to alight on land than on rough and broken sea ice Interspersed with open lanes of water. Once landed on terra firma, the party could be reasonably sure of a certain amount of food, because in the Arct where there is land there is life. o land so far discovered in the North is without snow-free surfaces and life- supporting vegetation for land animals and birds. The Arctic is a land-rimmed sea, and land life in some amount has migrated over the sea ice into every known corner of it. There are both water and ice over which life may travel. This is in contrast to the remote and isolated Antarctic, where existing forms of life must either swim or fly D. C., TUESDAY, THREE ARE HELD INDRY BRIBE CASE Police Lieutenant, Dry Agent and Salesman Are Ac- cused in Rochester. MAY 26, LONG ILLNESS FATAL 1925. JOHN D. C. KOOGLE DIES, |SEVERE AFTER-QUAKE WAS CUSTOMS OFFICER|pecORDED IN JAPAN ~ Region Recently Devastated Again Shaken, But No Casualties or Damage Result. Had Been Employe of U. S. Here Since 1890—Was Deputy Collector of Port. I John D. C. Koogle. 66 years old, deputy coliector of customs in charge of the port of Washington, died i his residence, 1825 Kilbourne plac g sterday, after a short illness. 4o A mocintad Koogle had been an employe| TOKIO. May A after in the customs service here since)|quake is reported to have occurred at June 10, 1890, entering in the lower |21 Osiin. Tvot0 grades and gradually being promcted. | . E AR | Fukuchivama and Kinosaki, the re In 1913, when the service was reor ganized, he was appointed deputy col- | Kion severely shaken Saturday | morning. The clocks in Osaka and lector in charge and appraiser for | the port, which at that time became | Kvoto were stopped and the populace badly frightened a subport of the district of Maryland with headquarters in Baltimore. Apparently there were no casualties He was a native of Frederick Coun-| and no damage was don ty. Md., and was a ointed from that! The Fmperor and Empress have State. He is survived by his widow, Dersonally ontributed 37.500 yen toward the sufferers and Mrs. Anna V. Koogle: (wo da Min: Allce V. Millee ana Mt | many contributions are coming Snodgrass, and two sons, F “'I . 2econstru and Chaunc Koogle, all under way, e relief work is con city. Funeral services will be tinuing satisfactorily. The govern at the residence Thursday morning Ment is expected to revoke the taxes at 9 o'clock. Interment will be at|due by the sufferers. 4 Middietown, Md. Mr. Koogle was a| 7T oreign office has received many member of the Royal Arcanu n 1ges of condolence from abroad = A, he American embassy has received numerous cables from the United { States offering contributions if neces Press Comdr. Richard E. Byrd of the 26, heavy United States Navy is America’s expert transoceanic air navi- gator. Comdr. Byrd will be in charge | chance to procure food over the polar sea, so they must come the distance to land before their supply of choco- | late, dried meat and coffee gives out. | great distance in order to connect with of the planes on the MacMillan- | Amundsen would probably set out |the mainland. Navy Arctic expedition this Sum- |for Grant Land, as there are several o mer and may be called upon to res- | caches of food left there by explorers. Route Back Problem. cue the missing men | Let us go back to our first “might” | If Amundsen has found land and has | —that of getting off the course due to |alighted on it he may return by air the great amount of compass varla-|in a short exploration of his find, or {tion and its uncertainty in thewith his airplanes wrecked he may vicinity of the pole. The magnetic [ wait, living off the resources of the North Pole lies near 1.200 nautical | new land until the sea ice is once more miles south of the North Pole proper. | firm. The magnetic lines of force which in-| What route he would then take] fluence the compass needle all flow | southward would depend upon his posi- from the south magnetic pole to the | tion, and it is idle to speculate on north magnetic pole. Therefore there are only a few places on the surface| Iven if three or four months pass of the earth where the compass|before word of Amundsen reaches us needle points to the true North Pole. | there will be no need to suppose he A correction of a few degrees must | perished. Witness the remarkable has | be applied to the compass needle to | ourney of Nansen after he left the Lo|make it point true north | Amundsen? Cer- tain things could not have happened. Indeed, there is 50 much miscon- ception about what the rwe- gian explorer might have done that it may be desirable to cor- | rect some of the unscientific state. ments that have been published this morning 1 at By the Associated Press. ROCHESTER, N, Y., May lowing an investigation into graft among Federal and poli cers, Police Lieut. William J of headquarters, Louis (. Federal dry agent, and Har ley. said to be a salesman, were ar rested early today on ¢ es of con- spiracy to violate the prohibition act and extortion. | It is alleged that Atchley had sev- | eral complaints made by the commit- | tee of twenty-five as to the sale of liquor by roadhouses and easies” and with nf them; also that he had an official Gov ernment information agalnst a Roch- ester roadhouse which had been sent to Assistant District Attorney McGov- ern at Buffalo Tnquiry to determine whether Wash- . inzton should adopt the community chest method of financing its charita- | ble agencies began in earnest when ihe investigating committee named b Commissioner Rudolph met at the Dis- trict Building yesterday afternoon and organized. Charles I Corby was elected chair- man of the committee, C. A. Aspin- wall vice chairman, and Charles C. Glover, jr., secretary. The committee then started upon its task by authorizing creation of two | beommittees, one to gather litera- 1we and information covering the ex- periences of other cities with ihe com- wnunity chest, and the other to get | dJata from the various aritable agen- ington 0 the sums »d by public subscription three years. 26.—Fol- alleged e offi Labar Russell, y L. Atch- BY COMDR. RICHARD E. BYRD, U. 8. N. for The Evening Star.) be at all surprised (o ind Amundsen and his party in Land, hale and hearty, living | ox, when our Navy fiyers go over ant Land this Sum- mer to establish a base on the Polar Sea at Cape Columbi: But what happened (Written exclusiv 1 would not : elie other B of this| is reported already conduct DEAN CALDWELI S. DEAN CALDWELL, | REALTY DEALER, DIES Prominent Business Man, Member of Many Leading Clubs, Was Il Since Last November. (Copyright, 192 paper THINK PLANES ABANDONED. | i i British Experts See Return by Air as Americ; Compass Err £ b Billboard advertising is just be. troduced into Peru. A curious thing about these mag netic lines of force is that the local ‘conditions affect them to some extent and therefore the variation cannot mathematically be figured out with exactness, but must be found by ac tual trial with precise instruments. This local affection of the needle might be as much as 10 degree: Therefore the variation used by Amundsen might have been in errc and could have caused him to mi the North Pole unless he could take accurate observation of the sun from the plane while in flight. This is doubtful. Hush Money Sought. After continued questioning ley is said to have declared that he, Labar and Russell had him to visit roadhouses and speak easies and with the false credentials | offer protection for the sum of $300 Further corroboration of Atchley’s story was obtained from Frank Kolb, | roprietor of Kolb's Inn, who, ac cording to the investigators, declares Labar, accompanied by Atchley, came to his roadhouse a short time ago. Labar admitted this, but denied that he or Atchley had demanded “hush’ money from Kolb. A few days later, Atchley declared, he called and ob tained the $300 “hush” money from Kolb. A Mr eusy, said home and money. HOPE OF AMUNDSEN “Amundsen. with his two planes RETURN REVIVED AS ht e lepror e ot it WEATHER CLEARS | Committee Named. Vice Chairman Aspinwall, who pre- sided, named George H. Myers and tev. John O'Grady as the committee to compile the information regarding the results of community chest oper- ation elsewhere. The subcommittee to get information from the local agencies will be named later by Mr. Corby The ‘committee devoted hours an informal disc the and character vestgation and evidenced planned for 4 GLORIOUS SUMMER—IN THE LAND OF THE SKY A mile high %* All sports & Blankets at night @ Not Serious Plan. The Star and North Newspaper Alliance.) LONDON, May 25.—Capt. Gib Ellis, the airman who last year piloted the Oxford expedition to within a hundred miles of the Pole, is convinced that Amundsen reached his objective I believe Amundsen reached the North Pole, abandoned his planes and is now making his way back afoot Mathematical calculation shows that | across the desert of ice,” he said in an Amundsen should have used a varia-| interview here today. “I don't think tion of between 10 and 20 degrees— | he can ever have seriously hoped to that is, his compass needle was pulled | return by air. The only real landing by that number of degrees to the left | blaces for his flving boats are lanes of of the truth north course. He then had | Water in ice—gaps in the huge ice field %o steer by a compass needle pointing | as broad as a wide street—but these {0 15 degrees instead of zero—which |are treacherous things. A shift in 18 north. This pulling around of the | the wind would close them up in half magnetie needle near the pole varies |an hour, and the airplanes would be rom zero to 180 degrees. In other | crushed to pulp by the ice, words, there is a certain point south | of the North Pole where the compass | needle instead of pointing north will} point south. Due to the local affection of the v ion, Amundsen could easily have misséd the pole by 100 |have landed his food and scientific in miles through no fault in his naviga- | struments and then abandoned the tion. If he had missed it to the south- | two machines. At this moment he is ward, for example, by that distance, | probably on his three-month journey his variation would be approximately | back across 500 miles of dangerous ice 120 degrees when he had finished his | tov ard Spitzbergen. 680 miles from Spitzbergen | “But there is plenty of food. His To get to the pole, then, instead of | party have guns with them, with steering zero, or north, he would have | whigh they can kill the wild things of | miles cruising radius, with only 1 to steer 120 degrees by compass. If it | the Arctic.” miles to from the Pole to Point | happened to be cloudy he could not| Interviewed at Liverpool today, Com aska. Personally, T doubt | get his position by the sun and he|mander Frank Arthur Worsley, who that this would be at-|would be lost. ‘[L. rtained Shackleton's Endurance, said logically could have happened”? We must base our assumptions only upon | what Amundsen likely to do May Have Lost Course. (Special to American COMDR. BYRD. Dean Caldwell uinent real or in this city 1910, died at ter A »vemb Funeral services will be conducted at the residence, 2305 California street, | tomorrow afternoon at 2:30 o'clock. Rev. Dr. James Shera Montgomery, chaplain of the United States House of Representatives, will officiate, as- sisted Rev. Dr. Park P. Flournoy. Interment will be in Oak Hill Ceme-} tery Honorary pallbearers will be as fol- John T ssedy, B. W Morris, John Hailton, Hoyt John- James Hobbs, Thomas Taylor, Bogley, Judge Frank Nebeker Robert Scott native of W s the son Caldwell of shington from Swarthmore jr.. 44 vears old, estate and insurance and Philadelphin Garfield Hospital iliness extending nearly sion it two of pre oper: since vestere Alaska Too Dangerous. .\llnl{\l\ll en, for instance, may have E tried for Alaska, b on't believe | tion to perform its task thoroughly. [it. To do so womd heon & lelieve | The purpose in naming a subcom: | unthinkable risk of the. liyey ot Lin mittee to collect and assemble allishipmates. He is courageous. but| available data on the principles of |not foolishly reckless. Ta. the flea community chest operation was 1o | plice. the o cnable each member of the full com-|is approximately 1800 nijes noe mittee (o have the same information | KKings Huy. Spitsbersen. e whom on which to base his or her decision. | point Amundsen . ]’;|)9‘(i ’§"‘ PR y s o o The subcommittee will seek the|' ry i Ih § he cruising radius of his planes. views of those who have found ob-lloaded as they were. was calb )y Jucclnsl to the comumnity chest Mea| mils, and sn adverse nomd cowd a5 MED »s the experiences of thowe| ot tiis down by 200 or B0 sies o favor it. To come down 200 miles from Alaska Will Allow Ample Time. would be very dangerous, as the ice It was indicated that the committee "3"\“?" up in such an irregular | will allow itself ample time in con S make safe landing prac- ducting the inquiry to go carefully h(_’_p‘"”’j' ble. into every phase of the problem be Amundsen. to Bave. e = fore g 1 g to report its dings. |} - 0 have r ! Alaska M Smutins R e s e gcould have abandoned one plane meeting of the committee and hre.\ul"tl:‘t[ e é\‘;:_‘”:" Holegang S onianitie FLRRCE itee and presldsd| sasoiine. o or his other plane. anclifpicers hadibeon iseleted. el ot i nave takion ol hier coane committee will meet again Thursday, | 4 all his personnel June 4 There would yi e [xhlf"ll‘v'-lll:x\:)lr"rfi for about 1,5 “KING OF BOOKMAKERS™ |uiles o BELIEVED DISCOVERED;&”Z‘;"&"“ hen. what are the things its Forests Wolf, proprietor of a speak she had called at Labar's paid him $300 “hush” o Famous food @ Scenery Abandoned Machines. « Parker, E. - A vacation in The Land of the Sky will give you new life and new energy for | | |5 | ston, . Loy and A Mr. Cald- of the late Samuel Huntington. Pa., He was graduated Coilege in 1907, and in 1910 went into business im self, establishing the Dean Caldwell Agency, with offices in the Woodward Building here and in the Widener Building in Philadelphia He was member of the Chevy Chase Club, the Old Colony Club, Uni versity Club, and the Kappa Sigma National Fraternity. He is survived by his widow and three sons, S. Dean Caldwell, 3d; Charles Adams Caldwell and Paul Davis Caldwell IOWA REPUBLICAN BODY T0 ENTER IN PRIMARIES Anti-Brookhart will Have “Regulars” in State and shington W (Continued from First Page) another year. Greatest diversity of attrac- where in the vast stretches of In the polar basin. The anxiety increased by reports from Spitzb this morning that the weather in North has changed for the worse The possibility of Amundsen hav ing continued his flight to Alaska was discounted by some Arctic ex perts here. They said the distanc for such a flight would require too much expenditure of gasoline It was pointed out that if Amund sen encountered storms in the vicinit of Danes Island upon his retur flight | he might land either in northern | Spitzbergen or cl nge s course and find safety in Franz Josef Land. In the latter event it might be some | time before Amundsen could com municate with the outside world, be cause Franz Josef is composed of many small . with no hab ftations except most southern part was n he ns in America. Resorts and hotels to fit all tastes in Asheville, Hendersonville, Brevard, Waynesville. Black Mountain, Blowing Rock. Tryon., Chimney Rock, _ he would gladly participate in an Might Miss Spitzbergen. Amundsen rescue expedition. Worsley then, he would make for | is a member of the Algarsson polar Spitzbergen from this false position. |expedition, which plans to go north He might miss the island and get out | ward in a dirigible airship of the Brit- over the Greenland Sea with his gaso- | Z ish “blimp” type. Its departure line giving out. It is possible he is | scheduled for early May, has been de. now floating around in the North At-|laved, but Worsley thinks it may still lantic Ocean. If his error has been | reach Spitzbergen in time to help to the northward he might have made |search for Amundsen. “If Amundsen some island in the Franz Joseph | landed on a smooth ice floe, he may Archipelago, several hundred miles | JEE | Linville, and other charming mountain ,Buspect's Bank Deposits Have Run | in Excess of $16,000.000 Dur- ing Past Four Years. that towns. Write for interesting booklet to S. E. BURGESS, Division Passenger Agent, 1510 H St. N. W,, Washington, D. C. The Land of the Sk} In the Southern Appalachian Mountains Amundsen could have lost hi CINCINNATI, May 26— Federal [£9Urse. due to the unknown and rap revenue agents who have been in-[ ¢I¥ changing variations of the com- vestigating the income tax returns of (P58 around the North Pole. Cincinnati handbook operators ex- | One of the planes might have have been forced to make a long ski pressed the opinion last night that|h#d a forced landing because of mo. | east of Spitzbergen and near Russia run to the Pole, and good news may they had discovered the “king of book- [ {0 Stobpage, and, landing on the ice, | Without enough gasoline to get back [still come during the next five days,” makers” in this vicinity, whose total | cked up the boat in such a | to_his base. Worsley said, “‘though the chances of bank deposits for the last four years [!D the plane was unable to If any one in the party ha simple an outcome are not alto have amounted to between $16,000,000 | This was just what happened jured his companions. of course, gether great.” and $19.000.000. with the NC-1 and NC-3 Stick to him., but their loyalty, The bookmaker, who maintains a|NAVY'S transatlantic flight. The | course, will cut down their palatial home in the Avondale section, | NC-4 did not land upon the ocean,|travel. The ex: s will occas is said to have hundreds of agents and |4nd this was the first plane to cross | ally come to open leads of water from “branch offices” which receive bets on | the Atlantie. hen. the second |3 few feet to hundreds of y horse races and transmit them to|Amundsen plane, landing upon the | These leads open up cor headquarters. His name was withheld, { i€ or in an open lead of water, may | the movement of the ic in accordance with ri the In- [have hit an unseen hunk of ice ana |® few hours freeze over. By the Associated Press Committee in the National Elections. By the Associated Press DES MOINES, May The Re- publican State central committee, | which has filed a contest of the elec SEATTLE, Wash., May ) on of Senator Smith W. Brookhart, apt. Roald Amundsen may already | Jowa, junior nator, has decided to have landed on the northern coast of | setively ente primary cam; gns Alaska. but it may be weeks before |hereafter and work “for the nomina the world will know, persons familiar | tion of candidates for whom Repub s been in- will | of | s0 MAY BE IN ALASKA. Amundsen Had Store of Gasoline Near Point Barrow. to in 26 Feels No Alarm. Frequent. convenient train service Commander K. Pestrud. Norwegian naval attache here, who accompanied Amundsen on his South Polar expedi- tion 1912, v said he thought there was no reason yet for worry about the Danish explorer. "I don't | | i | Southern Railway System ¢ from . but within | When the | ternal Revenue Department. According to Collector Charles M Dean, this operator is the lapgest dis wlso 10t rise 3. Amundsen may have landed cracked up so that she could | ad is wide Amundsen will probably | over, rather than | a flimsy canvas | wait for it to freeze in|trust his party to deny that it might be possible for Amundsen to get to the Pole, remain there a few hours. and be back within with the region pointed out to The, ice in the Arctic-Ocean is just break ing up. No vessels having wireles: licans can vote,” it was reported au | thoritatively here vesterday. In the contest the committee claims boat. | Amundsen has no radio on his| nes. If he had come down within v rescue distance of Spitzbergen | | he would have reached there by this | | time, so he must be more than a hun dred miles away. The chances are two to one that Amundsen is alive. 1025, Consolidated Press Asso All rights reserved.) are known to be north of Nome. The farthest north radio station is at Ko- tzebue, about 200 miles north of Nome and about 1,300 miles from the North Pole. Between Point Barrow, which is the northernmost tip of Alaska and ap *in the State Legislature, where proximately 450 nautical miles nearer | numerous members last Winter openly the pole than Nome, and the pole is a | denounced the ceniral committee and vast “blind spot” of more than a mil- | sought its election in _the primaries. lion square miles. == Fuel Store in Alaska. ‘apt. Amundsen first made prepa-| rations for a flight across the Pole in 1918. His original plans contemplated hopping off at Wainwright, 20 miles | S : east of Point Barrow, whence he ex-| TR CpTto be eent ohit fn faibidives pected to fiy to Spitzbergen in about | i = s age) S, 0| 59 hours. e is eved to have | 1‘1‘:;“:‘1:;“ :};::sl nec a:\if} r:)cultx)-mor_\:\ left a large store of gasoline on the| | present instance the observa-|,,rth coast of Alaska. If he can| come {tions called for will be at least as|reach that point with his plane un polar fiyers? great, and with cloudy weather might | . e r at Nome or | They started under e 1t Aying: | e grisneitno: oritlives; day R | aad Be sy soees 5 Nowe o | conditions last Thursc afternoon, | | o e 5 E Kotzebue at any time. If Amundsen e (Copyright, 1925, by North American News- [jands on the desolate, ice-gripped and it is altogether unlikely that they | by Morih o e e { to 1 that these intrepid adventurers | failed to reach the Pole. Once there, | e DONHR Codst of AN tinanls o con | are somewhere down on the polar ice | they would almost certainly have a | GRANT DENIED C. & P f;‘““‘ffln:“:fih;;mfnm‘“ i ‘“‘ within 400 miles of the F - | look into the edge, at least, of the 8 aching e o | wealth asserted at an Empire day din g poleand they = = i 1 Pispatch to The Star CUMBERLAND, Md.. May 26.—The are %robably struggling up to the | blank spaces between the Pole and ner in Melbourne ay that al- | Germany’s minister of labor is dis franchise requested by the Chesapeake e o limit of human endurance to reach | Alaska. This is probably the explana-| though the people of Australia believed | jand before their month’s supply of | tion of their delayed return. | Bree cussing with labor and employer rep. in the empire and were thoroushly | o4 gives out, pulling their sledge of | With rival expeditions planning to | resentatives a return to the eight i = - hour day. and Potomac Telephone Co. to operate in this city, following the expiration of the old franchise in October, was Ioval to it, they never would tolerate | quppiies over the ice and taking to|find new land there, neither Amundsen | again voted down by the mayor and Senator Brookhart was elected as a Republican, but had previously di- vorced himseif from the party by de- nouncing its national leaders Pre-primary activity also is to be di- especially toward placing ‘reg covered since the investigation was begun, several weeks ago. Mr. Dean said that when the book maker learned that his accounts were | being investigated he appeared at the | collector’s office and attempted to ef-| fect a comprom This was refused, however, pending further investiga- tion. After this has been done, he! said, the entire matter will be sub mitted to the commissioner of internal revenue at Washington, who will de- termine the tax and penalties (o be as. what he thought was the v icinity of the pole to verify his supposed posi tion from an astronomical sight of the sun. as is done at sea to fix a ship’s position, and in landing may have cracked up his machines so that they could not rise. 4. Amundsen may have discovered new land and placed his machines in | 1 open bay for the purpose of ex- | ploration and also to locate astron. | ally the latitude and longtitude Uf‘ ar island. Should this be the | b he probably is still there gex ploring virgin land. He would take | his time in this case and return after | 'EMP'RE VPARL’AMENT his unparalleled adventure with a | OPPOSED IN AUSTRALIA = te to el o 1 day.” he said, “but if it were done it would be a matter for wonder. 1 prefer to consider possibilities that are much more likely. Certainly at this moment there is no justification for | undue adarm ! “Assuming thag everything went all right after Amundsen’s start, he would | have reached the Pole in seven or eight hours. But what would happen then? When he went to the South Pole it took him two days to verify his position. He has to prove that he actually has reached the North Pole, {and it might easily be that at the out | set he was 50 or 60 miles away from it when he landed. At the South Pole | 2 (Copyright ciation. THINKS LAND FOUN Dr. Bowman Believes Flyers Started Exploring Toward Alaska. BY DR. ISAIAH BOWMAN, Director of the American Geographic Society. NEW YORK, May -What has become of the Amundsen-Ellsworth Do You Want a Motor Boat or Canoe for the Summer? Can Live on Land. 5. Amundsen might have run a polar snowstorm that forced a | landing and smashed his machines Or fog might have separated the planes and taken them way off their ourse. At any rate, the chances are A Star classified advertise- ment under “Wanted Miscel- laneous” will likely find one for at an attractive price. People Loyal to Britain, But In- into tolerant of Rule by Lendon. i you Premier Declares. ¥ | Other articles needed for the home such as lamps, books, musical instruments, radios, etc., frequently secured by Wanted Miscellaneous” adver- tisements in The Star. B: the Associated Press | NEW YORK. May ~Prime Min- | tster Bruce of the Australian common.- | | are vestel the idea of an empire Parliament sit- | {pot canvns Tost wnend, O e nint e el ting ingd.ciaon to control the destinien | oren loads! of Pwater. nhf}m’-ei‘rz1xp|y_muuh_m to 5o further. " This was announced in a cable mes. | 40Wn near the pole the nearest point ,”“,‘I““Q“ _r|rm_r ang ‘\;Cl';‘l ;:‘: n}\]el:};, sage from Melhourne given out here | Of 1and would be either Cape Colum-| WOP/L, % (HEFGRES ™ (- dOubtedly it this afternoon by J. A. Elder, Aus. |Pi2, Grant Land, or Cape Morris Jes- g tralian commissioner to the United | SuP» Hazenland, the two northern- Statea most points of land in the world— | Alesiralia was capable, the premier |2bout 400 miles from the pole. swid, of controlling her own destinies. | The explorers are supplied with What Australia wanted, the premier | Fifles and ammunition and could live on musk ox and seal should they added, was closer consultations and | co-operation in trade relations. Lven.|reach land. 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