200 ISOLATED
TRAPPED BY FLAMES
SOME IN GRAVE DANGER
AUSTRALIAN FIRES
(By ' Telegraph—Press Association —Copyright.) (Received January 11, 1.10 p.m.) SYDNEY, This Day.
The "Daily Telegraph's" Melbourne correspondent says that raging forest fires have completely isolated 200 men, women, and children at two timber-milling centres. One hundred of these are at the Ada Mill, near Powelltown. They have not been heard of since Sunday, and the gravest fears are felt for their safety. The other 100, at Erica, are considered to be safe. MELBOURNE, January 10. • Fanned by a strong, hot northerly wind, the bush fires raged with renewed vigour in about 20 areas in Victoria today. ' Tens of thousands 'of acres throughout the countryside are now a blackened ruin. The destruction of houses now amounts* to hundreds, but no exact figure is available. Further loss of life is feared, but, because of the destruction of communications, news from the affected parts is difficult to obtain. Many settlements in the timbered country are surrounded by a wall of raging. flames, and the only hope of the inhabitants rests in the dug-outs which were constructed at all mill settlements after the 1926 fires, when 40 lives were lost. The affected area now extends to Healesville, a popular hill resort 40 miles from Melbourne, to Kiewa in the far north-east of the State. The ranges for 300 miles between are all blazing. RECORD TEMPERATURES. With a shade temperature of 113 degrees in the city, the highest point has been reached since the records started 77 years ago. Parts of the country registered 118 degrees. The task of the fire-fighters is almost hopeless, as many fires are burning on 25-mile fronts. When the fire reached Healesville a desperate radio appeal was broadcast for volunteer fire-fighters, and soon truckloads of men set out on a 40-mile dash. The township of Gisborne, on the Bendigo Road, is also threatened. Powelltown, where 29 lives were lost in 1926, is again in the danger zone. Tonight a strong wind is still blowing, carrying the blazing embers for miles, and starting new fires in places distant from the main outbreaks. Desperate efforts are being made to reach townships v that are cut off in an endeavour to ascertain the fate of the inhabitants, but walls of fire have for the most part prevented any communication.
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Bibliographic details
Evening Post, Volume CXXVII, Issue 8, 11 January 1939, Page 9
Word Count
387200 ISOLATED Evening Post, Volume CXXVII, Issue 8, 11 January 1939, Page 9
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