Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image

PHILLIPAR TRAGEDY

<2> DISTURBS FRANCE SEARCHING INQUIRY DEMANDED By Telegraph—Copyright —Press Assn. .LONDON, May 22. Public opinion throughout France is gravely disturbed by the Phillipar tragedy and there is an insistent demand for a most searching inquiry into the cause of the fire and the handling of the situation after the fire was discovered. This will undoubtedly take place when Captain Cicq and his officers return. Captain Vicq’s disclosure that the flames broke out simultaneously in several widely, different points is regarded as mysterious, especially as the naval engineers who built the ship deny the possibility of simultaneous short circuits or even any short circuits owing to the careful insulation of the wires. The Messageries offices at Paris are still haunted by friends and relatives anxious about the 48 missing. £30,000 IN GOLD INGOTS ABOARD PARIS, May 20. The Phillipar, which drifted 16 0 miles before foundering, had aboard gold ingots worth £30,000 from Colombo. She was gutted fore and aft, and no wreckage was left afloat. The fierce heat prevented the salavage tug Preserver from taking hold. Thirty-six are now computed as missing, but survivors at Djibouti say that a lifeboat capsized near Cape Guardafui and the calm sea may have enabled some of the occupants to reach the shore. DEATH OF WOMAN PASSENGER DJIBOUTI, May 20. A woman; passenger has succumbed to her injuries.

This article text was automatically generated and may include errors. View the full page to see article in its original form.
Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WPRESS19320523.2.39

Bibliographic details

Waipukurau Press, Volume XXVIII, Issue 126, 23 May 1932, Page 5

Word Count
226

PHILLIPAR TRAGEDY Waipukurau Press, Volume XXVIII, Issue 126, 23 May 1932, Page 5

PHILLIPAR TRAGEDY Waipukurau Press, Volume XXVIII, Issue 126, 23 May 1932, Page 5