ARRIVAL IN DUNEDIN
ELLSWORTH HAS NO PLANS (By Telegraph.-—Press Association.) j DUKEDIN, January 28. I With her ironwork' rust-stained and her copper sheathing scarred by the I ice-floes^of the south, the' Wyatt Earp arrived at Dunedin this morning. f!lt was the bitterest moment of my life," Mr. Ellsworth said to a reporter, "to como so near success and have it snatched from us at tho last minute. In her- trials the machine had gono beautifully. Everything was ready for the dash across. , "I have no plans for the future, and don't know if I'll go back to Antarctica. Until I get back to America I can't decide anything. "The blow fell suddenly. An hour or two more and we would have been in the air, and the disaster would haye 1 been averted. In fifteen minutes five miles of the barrier crumpled." '
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Evening Post, Volume CXVI, Issue 24, 29 January 1934, Page 9
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142ARRIVAL IN DUNEDIN Evening Post, Volume CXVI, Issue 24, 29 January 1934, Page 9
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