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AMUNDSENESCLE PARTY QIS HONT Expedition Returning to Tromsoe, Convinced Ex- plorer Has Perished. By the Associated Press | OSLO, Norway, July 28.—Convinced that Roald undsen, Lieut. Leif Dietrichsen and their four French com- | panions have perished. the Norwegian newspaper searching expedition is re- 1 g to Tromsoe from the Spitz- rea. With them is Capt. Oscar who was supply officer of the | en rescue party. He. too. Is that his erstwhile comrades owever, still hold ! he missing seaplane. | by’ Comdr. Rene Gil- | ut. Albert de Cuverville | t. Emile Valette as radio| and Gilbert Brazy as me-| RESCUED SWEDISH FLYER GIVES DETAILS OF EXPERIENCE ON ICE { {Despairing oE ABeing Véavcd and Fearful of Floe Breaking Up. Men Finally See Plane Land. cake—was opened, tears came to my eves " T had smoked my very last pipeful of | tobacco that day. Although my pipe had previously always been my com- forter and good comrade I now had let | cigarettes take its place. As 1 men- | tioned in a previous article packages of cigarettes had been dropped by Swedish Hansa machines. They were | dry and in excellent condition | The night of July 1. it was very cold with 313 degrees below zero. To the | great delight of all of us I could now report that a landing with a light ma- | ehine was possible. The wind was from the southeast. and a fine dust- | like snow was falling. The wind was refreshing and when now and again the light improved we could see that we were drifting farther and farther from the big island Takes Morphia to Sleep. For several nights and days I had had This is the seventh and concluding | articie written for The Star and the North American Newspaper Alliance by Capt. Einar-Paal Lundbors, in a series i 'which he has described his heroic etploft in rescuing Gen. Nobile from the fce-bound ‘Aretic camp of the Ttalia survivers. n this series Capt. Lundbors Zave. {or the frst time, the sraphic de- 305" of the rescue BY CAPT. EINAR-PAAL LUNDBORG. Roval Swedish Flvias Corps | Cable Dispeich to The Star and the No Newspaper Alliance. | Teserved ) STOCKHOLM, Sweden, July 28—On the morning of June 30 the persistent fog which had discouraged and de- pressed us, became much lighter. Viglieri was able to take our position with his sextent chronmeter. We then learned that during the six days of dense fog and moderate rifted about half a de- | York has been imported to France in | trymen of these mis- | Wind we had di gree in a south-southeasterly direction sing ndventurers refuse to give them TS WM& JOTIIOGM clearer we saw up. |in the distance, below low clouds, & Other Planes to Aid. big island. We also caught a glimpse o a al French hydroair-|of the islands of the northwestern planes are to be joined to the search |stony Jowlands. soon. They were brought to Tromsoe | Gen. Nobile informed us by wireless today on the French transport Durance. | that two Italian planes and one large They have an action radius of 300 miles | Swedish plane would come to us with each and are in charge of one officer. | « good things that we would three mechanics and three radio opera- % Isave. ‘onr dos: ioe, We t cheered Biagi. He sat for hours, by gian expedition ' his radio. as the planes were to be r Amundsen and | girected by our transmitter. with the fishing| The fog bagan to grow dense again, ip _now is off | however. and there came & new m Wisting and | sage from Nobile telling us that al- members of the expedition believe that | though all three machines had been Amundsen’s plane fell into the sea yp they had had to turn back at somewhere between that island and| Cape Leighsmith owing to the fog. South Ape or South East Land of the Depression descended once more upon Spitzbergen Archipelago. {us. We had really become spoiled, and e . | bitter words were said of the airmen’s DOUBTS REPORTED DISPUTE. |manner of handling their machines. | e | The whole management of the relief | He Saw No Evidence | expedition was severely criticized. oo | arent s ot aats were v | STOCKHOLM, Sweden, July 28ion the south side of the floe, while | (P).—Lieui. Emar Lundborg, Swedish|ynwering pack ice began to tumble fiyer, who rescued Gen. Umberto Nobile | myic increased the water hazards from on June 24, said in an interview t0day !tne fige. I saw land and wanted to | that from his observations of the Nobile | g5 to it. This was a desire which group off Foyn Island he formed the | coemed impossible to conquer. impression that there had bsen no dis- | i04 the danger. but only agreement beiween Gen. Nobile and Dr. | common sens® was speaking. ¥inn Malmgren, noted Swediah meteor- |drawn frresistibly toward land. Per- | . REEE haps this condition might be called The lieutenant quoted Prof. F. Be- pack ioe sickmess. 1 can find no bet- hounek, Czechoslovakian scientist, as!fer word for this terrible feeling. The missing Malmgren, who later was to die, had been as much drawn to Foyn Jsland as I now was to the big island’ 1 could see. | Nobile Rejects Plan. I wirelessed Gen. Nobile describing | he situation and asking whether we | should not start toward lend—at least. | jall of us who desired to do so. I added { that there were three of us who would like to make the attempt, but I men- The ret has been so Guilbaud tor tug Veslekari. The Bear Island ond Capt Swedish Fiyer S set out for land on May 30, Dr. Maim-| gren had told him he was feeling better. In fact Prof. Behougek regarded the position of those staying behind as more | desperate than that of the walking | par Prof Behounek added that the fare- well between Nobile and Malmgren was | very cordial, The weather was now clear, now snowy | sleep, £o in the morning, after hav- nnoz m\" chocolate, I tried two morphia tablets from the medicine box of my wrecked Fokker. I immediately dozed flff] thought of Dr. Malmgren and hew | wonderful it was that up here far away from Sweden one of my countrymen had obtained fresh food for his ("ummd- es and for myself while he had wand- ered awey possibly without food. per- haps to meet his death. It was Malmgren who had shot the bear. Vigliert's twenty-eighth birthday the remainder of the bear meat was eaten. | A pleasing fact was that the radio was | again functioning satisfactorily. ‘The | birthday and the radio’s good behavior were made excuses for a celebration that night. and we each received an extra mouthful of chocolate. But it| Was scarcely worth the trouble to| stretch out our hands for such a tiny| bit, not to mention those miserable | crumbs which one of us later won by | ballot and which were watched with | greedy eves by the rest of us until they disappeared. That night 1 sent & message to my | wife through the steamship Citta di Milano, &s I thought this would re- | assure and please her. On the night of July 2 we were | fairly close to Foyn Island again. The barometer was falling badly, and our | curve, which was noted down every| hour, showed a steep downward move- ment. But our connection with the | outside world was good and we re-| ceived so many cheerful messages that | our spirits were not dampened by bad weather prospects. | Half a Gale Blowing. On July 4 half a gale was blowing. | with fog and low temperature. That | day we drifted 20 English miles south | southeast. Owing to the continual | changing of the wind canals were forming all the time on the windy side | of the floe. When towering masses of ice fell over with tremendous crashes. | Reserve in order to tighten credits at | near ‘the legal limit of 35 per cent- Regarding the M rescued by the Krassin, Lundborg said he ¢id not claim the right to sit in Judgment on men who had undergone Such great suffering as preceded their rescue That should be left to the, inquiry to determine the fate of Dr.| gren. NOBILE IS CHEERED. |® tl Explorer Gets Friendly Greeting In Danish Capital. i COPENHAGEN. Denmark, July 28 (. ~—A small crowd cheered Gen. Umberto Nobile and his comrades when they meteorologist of the Italia expedition. was also roundly cheered. He was the| guest for the night of the Czecl - vakian Minister. g ROSSLYN CROSSING OPEN AGAIN TODAY Removal of Trolley Tracks ii Work of Widening Lee Highway to Be Completed. Bpeciai Dispsich 10 The Star. CLARENDON, Va., July 28.—With the completion of the work of remov- ing the Washington & Old Dominion Railway tracks 2t Rosslyn crossing of the Lee Highway the highway will be opened to traffic tomorrow as far as| Virginia avenue, Lyon Village. Having completely removed historic Spout Run Bridge, which has closed the highway from Lyon Village to the Thrifton road, about 2,000 feet, work is 1o be rushed in preparation to re- | place the old structure with a m concrete bridge. o Owing 10 trouble the State is havin in getting the required right of way, J'. C. Albright, division State engineer, states that engineers are placing their stakes from the center of the present | road. It had been hoped, aceo 10 Albright, that it would be pr;:m: to greatly reduce the many curves, but not being able to get the needed right of way very little change will be made Avolding further court proceedings that would cause any change in the @etours for the bus lines caused by the clowing of a section of the Lee High- way, Frank Lyon. president of Lyon & Piteh. developers of Lyon Village, said todey that he has been assured by B. M. Hedrick. supervisor from Arlington district, that Arlington County at the meeting of the board of supervisors Monday will take over Virginia avenue &nd Oak streets as county roads and ;n;lh'zl:’\ them. Both are in Lyon Vil age and are being s lage and are being used as detours for AUTO HURTS FOUR OF MOVING FAMILY Aczident at Triangle, Va John Cavnar When Wife and Two Children Are on Way Here QUANTICO, Va.. July 28.-—John Cav ner. @ newspaper syndicate service opera‘or of Richmond, and his wife and twe children were injured today in an eutomoblle accident near Triangle, Va on the Weshington-Richmond Highway They were brought 1o the Marine Hospital here, where their injuries were treated. The family were moving from Ricbmond 1o Washington, where it is said Cavnar expected o engage in busi- ®ess. On the machine, which Cavnar wes driving, were some of thelr home flects. Of the two children, a boy of & years was the most serfously hurt, but physicians at the hospital said hi injuries are mot of & fatal nature noeident was said 1o have been due o a sideswipe of another car at curve, the occupants of Cavnar’s ma- ehine being thrown 1o the ground After treatment at the hospital Mr. and | Mrs. Cavnar and the elder of their two ehfidren departed with thelr effects in enother sutomobile for Washington their weecked machine remaining in rarege nesr the scene of the accident ‘Triangle but & few miles from Wusnten. a sharp | tioned no names. My first proposal was that the Swed- | ish Hansas should drop provisions and | tools at the first opportunity at a stated | place on the big island, so that if we | stllned \w]mlredh there we ,:me;ld u;ry- ! only small burdens. We should thus| = el t seve o | B bt Bl Ahanr e The'Sing ol o how abont aven Kilameters vith firm ground underfoot. Thi> Was| from Cape Leighsmith. In the fore- main thing until the Russian ice-| noon the wind siackened completels breaker Krassin could pick us up. OT|and at 11 o'clock the weather was until a bydroplane was able to land in | peautiful and brilliant again. The the opening in the ice near us. was shining and the air w Nobile quickly replied, rejecting my | gelightful. | proposal in decided terms. ‘We remain- | Dyring the preceding days and | ed where we were, and my two proposed | nights I had worked hard, filling all | e I e o oy | the big holes In the ice fioe. Now my s ey ell pand_stronk. | strength was failing. 1 could get liitle equi md“‘ "'m' better than my companions assistance from my tired comrades, and for the march I had proposed. But the always incdlculable drift of the ice, together with the fact that the ice was now beginning to break up, would cer- | tainly have prevented us from ever reaching land. | "We now put thought of walking to| |land completely out of mind. The | southeast wind gave us hope that it | would carry us closer to land and to |the Krassin, which, after all, seemed {our one big chance. The condition of the ice floe, now a foot deep in water, Jed me to advise the Finnish Junker | machine against attempting to land on |the foe. T wouldn't for anything in| the warld bave taken & step that might | {have brought us another comrade in|tnet—_he who formerly ha | | stk me i B y had worked so | Take the Sun. i | With the southeast wind we had ex- | | pected the weather to clear. were disappointed. But during the remainder |of my stay on the ice the clouds re- | mained sufictently thin from early morning until moon for us take our position. |” "The procedure for this was as follows | At 5 in the morning, Greenwich time, {there was a brief conversation in | Prench among Viglier!, Behounek and 1 “Can the sun be seen?” 1 Yes, faintly, at intervals.” | “Wiill you, Prof. Behounel sist with the chronometérs’ “Yes, captain.” | Very wel 1, then 1 will go out.” “I'm ready.” “Thirty degrees, fourteen minutes, | twenty-five minutes, fourteen and one- | | Afth seconds.” “How many have we now?” ix. Finished?” | “Yes, captain.” | A little later on Viglieri would come in after the instruments out there had been carefully covered, and from a {torn forlder take out logarithms and other tables, whereupon he started cal- | culating. That would be about 10| o'clock. 1 may say here that we were jone hour and 54 minutes ahead of | Greenwich mean time, which was care- {fully taken down at 8 o'clock every levening. At noon we took a sight of |the sun to fix our position, which we | marked carefuily on Viglieri’s chart, | Al day long we held monotonous | discuseions in which various possibil- | ities were considered. About noon on 30th news reached us from Chiet | Captl. Tornberg that a Swedish sports | plane was on the way to us. Viglier! and 1 discussed the landing’ of this | machine and decided that a light plane like a sports model might come down | without risk. Our spirils rose in con- sequence only to be cast down again some hours later when really bad weather set in with snow, a thaw and onas | Carlson, that & landing was possible on {our floe, and hed received in reply [ o Dhioi 46 Rkt "‘l;r;‘dl;;;laknd,“ 1 was again very happy. 1 NApsac] side; o | Deep gloom prevailed among us all. | grams and st npc:nmlkullfi\"mily:’dl'l |1 feit posttively suicidal when on the | message from the chief that on (he | night between June 30 and July 1, as 1| following night Schyberg would try to was walking alone across the floe, 1|fetch me with a Moth machine found that in the present state of the | I laughed and cried in turn. But 1| | ice no Janding could be thought of. At quickly read In the faces of my com- certain places there was more than |panions that they didn’t feel so hopeful half & meter of water below very thin (as I of being rescued during the night. ice. 1t was only by concentrating my | I informed (hem, however, that the thoughts on my wife at home that I|Swedes would establish a base near | w42 able o refrain from ending my C.km" Brunn, to which we would be e taken first, that we might ? | ,oDnly 8 week had rll[mlldhm(: 1 had | transported farther e e B made my unfortunate landing, wreck- In spite of this, it was with diffic ing my plane on the ice after 1 had re- | that Il’l got my worn-out Lu:m‘::,u"l:xy) turned from taking Gen, Nobile to|help me complete the work on the ice safety. And when I compared my rela- | field. At 10 o'clock at night we gave tively short stay on the floe with the |up. Completely worn out, we sal on five weeks, imprisonment there of my |the wing of the Fokker and ate choco- comrades 1 was nshamed of myself foi [late and apples and had a gulp of the such weak cowardly thoughts. brandy the SBwedes had droppe Within our tent the ground had be- | Twelve o'cloc} | come unbearably soft, Rags were put | SUll no plane on the ground, but these were already | Finally, at | thoroughly soaked and didn't keep any | dots coming over the water out of the tent. On this day, for |east Land, They dinner, which still consisted of bear's | nearer. mest, we received a great treat. One Soon a little Moth machine came lemon was given e man, ‘These | down on the fee without hesitation. It were very in' atl] hi o g i ad an @ma ooy lad of | On i or were piled up higher than ever, we were seized with nerves and fresh de- spair. On July 5. at 5 in the morning, | the drift of ice toward the big island | stopped, although the wind was very | strong. I was very much afraid the sun would spoil my work. i We were sitting on the wings of my crippled Pokker, and were again dis- cussing the possibilities of walking to- ward land. The Swedish and Italian airmen who had been expected to reach us early today had not turned up in spite of the beautiful weather. The | wireless again was noc acting properly | Rations were becoming _insufficient. We for a long time had been frozen, dirty and ragged. Our nerves were now strained to the breaking point. In consequence we no longer ex~ changed opinions in friendly tones. We began to quarrel. To cap all this Biagi was lying 11l with fever, in the Hear Plane Near. | One of us demanded excitedly that | we should all try to reach land. An- other replied that this proposal was unmilitary. This caused a discussion whether military form had any justi- fication among six men shipwrecked not far from the North Pole. Ceccloni shook eur last hope—our confidence that the Krassin would | rescue us. For several days he had done nothing but express great doubt :P&l‘; lll:‘e lhlpk ‘!nuld be able to pene- e pack ice kindly M»{ In the end I felt dizzy, and, despair- ing of all hope, I went into the tent. There I dozed until about 4 o'clock. Then I was awakened by Biagi, who said an alrplane could be heard I believe this sound saved us all from | .ml;drr;rulml‘( something worse, on't know how [ntl'hr b | quickly I got out saw the machine ov ML ver near Cape To my great despair, however, T saw | (that it was steering away in the direc-| | tion of the Big Island Buddenly it turned toward us, and in a few minutes it was circling over our ice floe. We showed it our positign by & smoke signal. The plane, a Swedish Hansa, flew over our floe four times. It dropped us provisions, and, most im- portant of all, accumulators, W» needed these badly for our wircless. | With a pang we saw the machine | ngain steering away westerly. 1 knew, of course, that my Bwedish comrades would do everything they could for me, | but 110 matter-—awny they flew, Came Back Again, In about an hour we again heard the throb of a motor, Soon a Swedish | | triple-engined machine flew over our | camp. It dropped further supplies, in- |cluding my much-desired knapsack, with tent, chocolate, brandy and everything complete. i | hen 1 signaled the ohserver, Lieut laclers of North- ew nearer and by marks fortnight before, 1 had had pl STOCK OF FRENCH GOLD HELD AMPLE Recent Shipments From U. S. Declared No Cause for Apprehension. BY GERVILLE REACHE. (Copyright. 1028, by Consolidated Press.) PARIS, 28.—The United States has been disturbed by the heavy gold shipments to France, and apprehension reached a culminating point this week just after the shipments were being dis- continued There seems to be some confusion in | America between these transfers of the llow metal and the purchases of gold by the Bank of France. Between December, 1 1928, the Bank of France purchased $318,000,000 worth of gold, but since that time It has acquired no further gold from the American market. Natur- | ally the gold previously bought in New | small lots so that every week, as a new | shipment was announced, the American market became more and more uneasy. | It is worth noting, howerev, that the last purchase—-$6..000,000, la: | was made at the request of the Federal New York. Interest Rate Was Rising. At that time the Federal Reservi could not sell further Government | paper without risking driving the inter- | est rate higher, and simultaneously. while money was flowing into Wall Street, it was getting scarce throughout | the rest of the country where the inter est rate on commercial loans and farm- ers credits was rising. Such monetar: . and May. | tansions was particularly dangerous on | N the eve of the election campaign. The increasing of the discount rate by the Federal Reserve Bank added to the moral of the gold shipments—which practically was too small to have any | appreciable effect—sufficed to halt the | artificial speculative boom in Wall Street, the dangsr of which was point- | ed out by this writer at the time. | In less than a year the gold holdings of the Federal Reserve have declined $477,000,000, with a consequent restric- tion of credits and notably a dimuni-| tion of brokers’ loans. What has been insistently ask: week in both.Paris and New York is will the gold purchase of the Bank n[‘ France continue much longer?” As| stated above, purchases have ceased since May and as the increased Federal | Reserve discount rate has checked Wall Street's ardor and the torrid vacation season puts the brakes on speculation. it seems unlikely that further sales of gold will be made for the purpose of | \ restraining credits. The Bank of France | w1l scarcely need any additional gold coverage before Autumn anyway French Obligations. It is possible that as Winter ap- proaches the eight obligations of the French banks will increase for various reasons. Should there be merely a tem- porary demand for francs, no new gold would be required, but if, on the other | hand, demand brought the coverage too now actually about 40 per cent—it would seem only natural that the bank should use its large stock of foreign paper to maintain the gold coverage at approximately the present level by new purchases of the metal. HONOR FOR PULASKI PLANNED IN VIRGINIA Resolutions to Be Presented to As sembly Propose Sesquicenten- nial Commission. By the Associated Press. RICHMOND, Va., July 28.—Resolu-| tions providing for the observance and commemoration of the 150th anni- versary of the death of Brig. Gen Casimir Pulaski on October 11, 1929, and providing for a commission to be | known as the Virginia Pulaski Sesqui: centennial Commission have been re- | coived by Gov. Harry F. Byrd from | Ignatius K. Werwinski, United States | commissioner of decds for Indiana. | The resolutions have been sent to Gov, Byrd in connection with plans for | a country-wide commemoration of | October 11, 1929, as the sesquicentennial of the death of the Revolutionary War hero. Gen. Pulaski won distinction in a victory over the British at Brandy- | wine. He was mortally wounded two years later in the siege of Savannah. | Gov. Byrd is requested to refer the resolutions to the next session of the General Assembly. | BYRD SEEKS NORWEGIAN | SKIPPER FOR POLE TRIP| | | Capt. Oscar Wisting, Now Search- ing for Amundsen and Party Off Spitzbergen. By the Associated Press. BERGEN, Norway, July 28.-The services of Capt. Oscar Wisting, now in Spitzbergen engaged in searching for | his friend, Roald Amundsen, are being sought for the South Polar expedition | of Comdr. Richard E. Byrd of the United States Nav: The Whale Oll Co. here has been asked by Comdr. Byrd to ascertain whether Capt. Wisting would be willing to join the expedition The veteran Norwegian skipper went | to Kings Bay as base officer for the rescue expedition organized by Amund- sen to search for the missing balloon party of the Nobile venture, When Amundsen and his five companions in the French seaplane falled to reach Spitzbergen, Capt. Wisting turned his attention toward searching for his own companions. He has been crulsing Spitzbergen waters in the Svalbard, the official boat of the Governor of the Archipelago. CHURCH BENEFIT SET. Speeial Dispateh to The Star SUITLAND, Md., July 28,—Next Sat- urday afternoon the second annua tournament will he held on the Suit- iand Hall grounds for the benefit of the Forestville Catholic Church. Lib- eral eash prizes are offered winning riders and there will be competition for the Buckley and Voigt cups. ‘Tilting will begin at Ewn'l'lnl‘k and the coronation ball will be held at 8:30 o'clock In the evening, when the Queen of Love and Beauty and her three maids of honor will be crowned by the vic- torfous knights, Mae Crosier is chairman of the com- mittee In charge of the tournament and the fudges will be Henry Kerby and Milton Magill. A chicken dinner will be served from 2 to 8 o'clock, e S RS the machine his directions, I then took leave of my companions for only a few hours, as 1 then belleved and off we went across the ice and toward the islands where the Bwedish base was situated. 1 only wish it had been possible to take the men of the Italin with us. But clrcumstances made it necessary to defer their removal, It is diffioult to descrihe my feelings during this fiight, having left these men behind me, But T understand what Nobile must have felt when, almost a Was not slow to follow 77 N\ \ \ . % 2 ZZ 2 2 7 Never before have we been able to offer such tremendous valus. save our customers thousands of dollars. ; Qur August Sale will M anufacturers have given us their products at a fraction of their former cost. You profit by their loss—exceptional reductions. of the hundreds of bargains. self. $1.00 Delivers Any Article Steel Bed Outfit 51875 This bed outfit complete w ith spring and mattress at this special price. Gas Range $29.75 White enemel styles with gas- saving burners and large oven. A Coxwell $1675 Spring col tion and fine holstering make a_wonder value. up- it Chiffonier 58.75 There Is plenty of drawer space in one § of these roomy models. 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