USA TODAY International Edition

Couple who vanished are found in glacier melt

- Matthew Diebel

The bodies of a Swiss couple who disappeare­d 75 years ago in the Alps have been found at the edge of a melting glacier, local media reported.

Marcelin and Francine Dumoulin, the parents of seven children, went to milk their cows in a meadow in the Valais canton on Aug. 15, 1942, then vanished without a trace. “We spent our whole lives looking for them, without stopping. We thought that we could give them the funeral they deserved one day,” their youngest daughter, Marceline Udry- Dumoulin, 79, told Le Matin, a newspaper in Lausanne.

“For the funeral, I won’t wear black,” she said. “I think that white would be more appropriat­e. It represents hope, which I never lost.”

Police said ID papers were found on the bodies, which were discovered by a worker near a ski lift at an altitude of 8,600 feet.

The bodies, as well as a book, backpack, watch and other items, were taken to a Lausanne medical institute for DNA testing, Valais police said in a statement.

Bernhard Tschannen, director of Glacier 3,000, a cable car company, said the bodies were found next to each other, well- preserved by the ice. “The mummified bodies were of a man and a woman wearing clothes dating from the prewar period,” he told the Tribune de Geneve newspaper.

The couple, who were 40 and 37 when they disappeare­d, left behind five sons and two daughters. “It was the first time my mother went with him on such an excursion. She was always pregnant and couldn’t climb in the difficult conditions of a glacier,” Udry- Dumoulin said.

“I can say that after 75 years of waiting this news gives me a deep sense of calm,” she said.

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