—Doesn't Sound Strange After This Year's Ocean Flights By JOSEPH W. LaBINE In New York a hard-bbiled America one hundred minds were focused on some bergh was piloting his ‘‘Spirit of St. Louis’’ to Paris and fame. That was in 1927, only 11 years ago. A few days ago another trans- atlantic flight ended and only a read about it. ing much attention, Corrigan, the ‘mistake’ flier. people hold their commonplace, and rightly so. This does not dim the ac- complishment of Lindbergh; it merely means that trans- oceanic aviation has grown up, that its carefully planned program of conquering the Atlantic. The Hughes trip was but a fore- runner of this summer's transatlan- journeys that will keep the humming for weeks to come. airships of four nations are flying from Europe to New York over dif- ferent routes in a series of “survey” flights. Great Britain started things off a few weeks ago when the Mer- cury, unique pick-a-back plane, soared away from the mother ship, Maia, over Foynes, Ireland. The Mercury landed at Montreal 22% hours later. Takeoff Load Problem. This ‘““mother-and-papoose-on-her- velopment in recent years. engineers worked on the well-found- take off with much extra load. Espe- cially is this which are held down by suction of the water on their pontoons. So the Maia and the Mercury, locked to- gether, rise from the airport as a The Maia is a land ship, the Mer- cury a seaplane. Azores to New York—the Germans are working with three seaplanes, Nordwind, Nordmeer and Nord- stern. The ships belong to Deutsche Lufthansa and are making 14 round trips this year preparatory to start- ing regular transatlantic mail serv- ce, France is experimenting this sum- mer with the Lieut. de Vaisseau Paris, one of the largest flying boats in the world. Stunt Flying Banned. There is more to this story of aerial navigation than meets the eye, Transoceanic flying hasn't been merely a matter of building one ship larger than the last and seeing how far it would go without refueling. Since Charles Lindbergh first dreamed about it during of aviation have been working to de- velop fool-proof ships that will run mechanically, Until such ships could be per- fected, the United States was justi- fled in frowning on stunt Atlantic ships. That's why Doug Corrigan’s request for a permit last year was denied; it's why Corrigan had depend on a wayward compass to ago. Outside of the weight mentioned above, engineers problem have lantic is beset with atmospheric dis- Especially is this true successful flights. Until a few weeks ago the ceiling for commercial planes was 20,000 feet. Since engineers have long known that Atlantic weather dis- turbances could be overcome by high altitudes, they have been seek- ing some means of reaching these heights under practical conditions. Although oxygen equipment has been available to facilitate great elevations, it weighs so much that pay loads would be cut too low. But from Sweden has come word of a new airplane motor capable of sustained performance at altitudes up to 59,000 feet. If it lives up to its claims, the motor will facilitate flights through the stratosphere where weather is always calm. U. 8. Service Ready. Whatever may have happened to her supremacy on the high seas, America need take no back seat in transoceanic service. While France, England and Germany are busy with their “survey” flights, Pau- American is preparing to inaugur ite regularly scheduled service from New York to London in her mam- moth Boeing “clipper” ships. Just LEFT—Douglas Corrigan, whose “mistake’’ flight from New York to Dublin recently was frowned upon with good reason by U. S. depart- ment of commerce officials. BE- LOW-—-When Howard Hughes and his intrepid crew landed in New York after their record-breaking trip around the world, which au- gured well for the future of trans- how soon the service will start, no- that in a few able to slide about $450 at New York and buy an air ticket for London, arriving there less than 24 hours out of Port Washington, Long Island. Similar accommodations on the liner Queen Mary would be $316, plus tips, plus several days extra Passengers, mail and express will be shuttled between the two conti- nents in the new 83,000-pound flying boats (P. A. A. has ordered six of them) that offer everything from a dining lounge to a bridal suite. The new ‘clippers’ are twice as large as those now making regu- lar, uneventful trips across the Pa- cific, being far and away the most built. The first of them was launched last April and is now undergoing test flights on the Pacific coast. It is larger than the Santa Maria in which Columbus crossed the ocean, and three times the size of the average commercial air transport. It has a wingspread —and hold your breath on this one -just half a city block long, or 152 It's just weeks you Pe ssible may be across the counter Two Deck Airliner. From stem to stern, the new boat has been built to parallel an ocean vessel. It even has two decks, a top one for navigation and lower one for passengers. Up on the flight deck a large crew will be on duty. Ahead, in the cockpit, the smallest part of the deck, are the pilot and co-pilot whose work is largely left to robot instruments. Behind them in the navigation room are the radio man and the navigator, the former in touch with land at all times. Back of the navigator is the engi- neer, possibly the busiest man on the ship. He handles throttles, checks engine performance and goes out in the wing to repair an ailing motor if it needs treatment. And supervising all these men is the flight master, corresponding to the captain on an ocean liner. He man rolled into one. In the entire Pan-American organization there are only 11 masters. Luxury Over the Waves. Down in the passenger deck mod- ern voyagers enjoy all the com- forts of home, and more. Except for a slight vibration and the muf- fled hum of four powerful engines, there is no perceptible sign of flight. Eight rooms are at the public's dis- posal; one of them seats more than a dozen persons comfortably and the others, though somewhat small- er, have big seats against the wall. Thus far it looks like they'll have to omit only one gadget; nobody can figure out where to put the swimming pool! © Western Newspaper Union, ADVENTURERS’ CLUB HEADLINES FROM THE LIVES OF PEOPLE LIKE YOURSELF! “Mountain Doom” By FLOYD GIBBONS | Famous Headline Hunter | I 1 ELLO EVERYBODY: ; | Samuel Johnson of Brooklyn, N. Y., has two hobbies, and | Sam's hobbies are skiing and mountain climbing and two more dan- | gerous sports I don't know of. You know what sort of a game skiing is. | Anyone who has ever seen a news-reel of a bunch of ski jumpers doesn’t | have to be told it's a good idea to pay up your insurance before you try | it. Mountain climbing is a little more than twice as dangerous as skiing. | It's a yarn of mountain climbing with which Sam busts into the club | as a Distinguished Adventurer. For a good many years, Sam has lived abroad, chiefly in Italy. | And one day in July, 1931, way up in the Italian Alps, he had a little adventure that almost culminated in his living nowhere— neither in Italy nor anywhere else. Climbing the Doufoure Peak. On that July day, four Italians—a doctor, a lawyer and two engineers —along with Sam, himself, set out to climb the Doufoure—the highest and most difficult peak in the Monte Rosa chain of Alps. They started out without professional guides, for all of them thought they were suf- ficiently expert at climbing to get along without them. That says Sam, was the first mistake. Sam takes time out here to explain that it was absolutely necessary to reach that peak before eleven a. m. For from that hour to one in the afternoon the sun is at its height, melting the snow and letting loose great avalanches that come crashing down the mountain-side carrying thousands of tons of rock, dirt and ice along with them. “And all at once,” Sam says, to this point, was well re- unfolded before our eyes and of some phe- The five men climbed until daybreak. “the strenuous work had done clin warded by the magnificent spectacle th: The early sun hining on Rosa nomenon the whole mountain chain became a deep rose color—the hue that gives those peaks their name. We kept on going. By seven o'clock, after trying to e two or three feet deep in places, we seemed still to be a great distance from the peak. That didn us. From the position we were in it was next to impossible to judge ¢ tance—or even our direction. But by nine o'clock—"' Lost and Cut Off by Avalanche. nine o'clock peak didn't seem any nearer than it had at seven. They knew they were lost then—and they were thoroughly fright- ened, They were at an altitude of about twelve thousand feet, and a night spent in the intense cold at that level was pretty sure to be fatal. we . A Ar — was si! Monte because make headway in snow that B y A terrific avalanche roared past them, “To build a fire,” says Sam, "is impossible. There is nothing to burn. Nor is there any other protection from the sub-zero temperature, or from the icy blasts of wind that sweep the mountain all through the night.” They climbed for two more hours—and by that time they were all but exhausted. They stopped to rest on a ledge of rock, and suddenly a terrific avalanche roared past them not 2a hundred yards away. [It was eleven o'clock—the deadline for mountain climbers—the time when they ran for cover if there was any cover to run to, “The slide,” says Sam, ‘“‘crossed the path of the trail we had made coming up. If we had been delayed just a few minutes I rather believe our bodies would now be reposing on some glacier under a thousand tons of rock and ice. We didn't dare travel after that. From then until three o'clock we sat huddled on the ledge expecting every moment to be carried away by another avalanche. trying to find the lost trail. We didn't find it—and to make matters worse, the sun was sinking rapidly and it was getting colder by the second.” Took Refuge in a Cave. The situation was serious. Sam and his companions decided some- thing certainly should be done about it. But what? None of them knew. They held a consultation and agreed to hole in for the night—take a chance on being alive in the morning. Three men rose to find a suitable place to dig in, but two of them lay still on the ice—too exhausted to move on. With difficulty the others got them to their feet. Practically carrying them, they moved on across a glacier, looking for 2 cave. Although they didn’t know it then, it was that move that saved all their lives. They found a cave and huddled into it. They didn't dare go to sleep. They'd freeze to death. Their food supply had run out by that time, and the gnawing pains of hunger added to their intense misery. The suffer- ing of that night, Sam says, no one could ever describe. But at six in the morning they saw five black figures moving across the ice toward them. The black figures were five professional guides. someone with a pair of powerful binoculars had seen them as they pushed across the last stretch of glacier. The guides—men of remark- | amputated, another a hand, and a third, all the toes of both feet. Copyright. -WNU Service. Cameras Barred by Village Hating cameras and loathing pho- Staphorst wear old-fashioned, quaint costumes and the houses are painted pale blue. The villagers recognize all this, but resent the invasion of their teurs. The Chinese Li The Chinese li, a measure of length, is the equivalent of one one- hundredth of a day's walk; on the level, this slightly exceeds one-third of an English mile, but in hilly country it might be as little as one- eighth of a mile. Colors of Dawn, Sunset The colors of dawn are purer and colder than those of sunset because the reduced dust content of the at- mosphere causes less sifting of the light rays. \ Many Moth Families Most people call moths butterflies, families. day, while moths are night flyers, the former are common sights to the most casual observer. are, however, telling them apart. Butterflies fold their wings high over their backs when at rest, while moths fold theirs down flat. shaped antennae, while those of moths are feathered. Highest East of Mississippi Mount Mitchell, in the Black mountains of Yancey county, North is the highest point of land in the United States east of the Mississippi river. Marijuana Cured Like Tobacco The leaves of the marijuana weed have seven or more narrow taper ing petals. A drying process sim- ilar to that used in readying tobao- co “cures” the vicious weed for smoking purposes. WHO'S NEWS THIS WEEK By LEMUEL F. PARTON NEW YORK.—England pioneered + the businessman - diplomat— shrewdly and effectively, it would seem. Many of her best fixers and negotiators throughout world hav men whe personal their oper: Best Fixers Have Stake In Deals the outcome of They were not haps, but no more were the t tional diplomats who knew protocol perhaps, but nothing about oil America followed with Nor- man H. Davis, a financier who became an effective European swing man under five Presi- dents, and then came Spruille Braden, engineer and industrial- ist who was our ambassador-at- large in Latin America until he became minister to Colombia last April. President Roosevelt, act as an arbitrator dispute, picks Mr. Br agreair ‘ BETeE 4 Q Braden Wise In Latin Diplomacy iomatic representations at various South Americ He has been working on the Chaco set- tiement for the last three years In his youth, he did ort turn in the mines near Elkhorn, his native town, and then + Yale and became a mining neer. He was a second-string halfback at Yale, but a first string engineer and promoter from the start, elec- trifying Chile for Westinghouse, ganizing the Bolivia-Arge: ploration corporation, bran widely in South American ment and finance. He wanted to be minister tc was consoled with Colombia He is forty-four years old, re- membered in New York as the fastest and hardest-working handball player around Jack O'Brien's gymnasium, in which he combated a tendency to plumpness, creeping up on him a bit in late years. He was married in 1915 to the beautiful and socially eminent Se- norita Maria Humeres del Solar of Chile. They have three daughters and two sons. Their New York res- idence is the former George W. Per- kins estate at Riverdale-on-the-Hud- son. an conferences or- ARL J. HAMBRO, burly presi- dent of the Norwegian parlia- ment, is in America for a lecture tour. There is an interesting cut- back in his career. Predicted At Geneva, in Collapse 1927, he staged Of League a spectacular de- bate with Austen Chamberlain, in which, speaking for the small states, he vehemently in- sisted that the league must find a way to restrain strong aggressors, or else find itself impotent and dis- credited in a few years. With equal vehemence, Mr, Chamberlain proclaimed the trustworthiness of the strong states and their humanitarian aims. Warning Mr. Hambre against overt restraints by the league, he said, “Along that road lies danger.” Mr. Hambro was the most distin- guished recruit of the Oxford group movement in 1935, and has since been a leader of the movement in Norway. Returning from a luncheon attend- | ed by Dr. Frank Buchman, founder | of the movement, in Geneva, he told | of the mystic exaltation of the com- pany and later announced his ad- | herence to the group. Although a conservative, Mr. Hambro is the president of the La- bor party of Norway. For many of the smaller nations in the league. | Arriving in New York, he remarks | dryly that Norway is old-fashioned | —she has a surplus in her budget. i © Consolidated News Features. WNU Service, Platinum Once of No Value Old prospectors like to tell how they picked “native lead” out of their pans and sluiceboxes, and | what they said as they threw it | away. They are still saying things, for this much despised substance was actually platinum, which had little value years ago. Counterfeit- ers used it extensively because of its heavy weight, and gold-plated platinum coins are still in existence. In 1828-45 Nicholas I of Russia is. sued platinum 3, 8 and 12 rouble pieces that are highly prized by the coin collecting fraternity. —Detroit Coin Club.