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The Navy's Air Is Ready for the Big Hop Greatest Air! The ZR-2, Latest Contender for Trans-Atlantic Honors Craft Is Large Dreadnought Is! Enough to Fill To S«ail Aug. 25 Times Square Crew of Thirty Is Prepared Dirigible Is 700 Feet Long for Novel Joy Ride After an das High as the Hotel Weeks of Training, and Astor; Makes 70 Miles an Nobody Is Very Excited Hour; Can Fly Backward By John Gleason O'Brien Lieutenant R. G. Pennoyer executive THE navy's magnificent new air officer. dreadnought, the rigid airship Regular instruction started the ZR-2. will set sail from very Eng¬ after the first land on August 25, and is due diy detachment arrived to settle down at Lakehurst, X. J., four in England, with Flight Lieutenant A. »iays later. The ZR-2 has been under II. Wann serving as chief instructor. construction at Howden, England This instruction consisted of a course where, sigice April, 1920, a detachment of lectures on of officers and men from the navy flying construction, mainte¬ forces has watched the new air mon nance and operation of rigid airships, ster rise from nothing at all until to¬ His majesty's airships the R-32, R-33 day, if dropped down in Times Square, and R-34 were used for instructional it would completely lili it. purposes. The R-32 was assigned ex¬ When the British dirigible R-31 clusively for the training of the. Yank made the first memorable air voyage to flyers. When the Americans landed in of the ZR-2. Commander is America from England, in July, 1919, it Dyer will be observed that the ZR-2 is truly England the R-32 was out of cornmin- riitod one of the most efficient required 108 hours 12 minutes to make engi¬ an air liner and an artistocrat of th? sion and a large part of the work of neers in the and a in the trip. The new American navy specialist the was done navy to He knows sky, ranking far above ordinary recommissioning by the a faster and more regard dirigibles. every United States dirigible,is bigger, inch of wire and navy blimps. The is equipped Navy men. Special in¬ in than her piano every single struction was complete ship every respect item in the newest with a radio set with a sending appa- given all mechanics at British sister, and is to comprised pride the Sunbeam motor expected of the The ZR-2 is about 500.- ratus of about 1,500 miles. It is also works. All officers make the in much less time. The navy. and men trip 000 cubic feet in than equipped with a wireless telephone and spent some time at the royal average citzen, the air¬ larger" capacity watching huge the German L-71, which the radio direction finding set. Not every airship works at Cardington, where the her Zeppelin ocean ZR-2 was ship relentlessly boring way Germans built to bomb New York. Her liner that plows the common¬ built. Lieutenant Pennoyci the is inclined to re¬ through clouds, total length is 700 feet. Say it quickly place main boasts yuch equipment. spent six weeks at Calshot, Hampshire, gard her simply as a huge gas bag to at the school ahd you may not bo impressed, but For the sake of impressing the of naval cooperation ami which is suspended a little box whicb aerial just ponder over it a moment and one reader with the colossal bulk of the air navigation. carries the pilot. That was true of realizes that it would not only till monster, the navy authorities ¡-täte that Tbc British flying men loosened airships in the early days, but not now. and up Times Square, but, with its height of if the ZR-2 were to land in front of the taught the Yanks everything The ZR-2 is an aerial liner in every they 92 feet, come close to being on a level Capitol at Washington there would be knew about handling a big dirigible. sense of the word. She is controlled with the Astor roof. And the only twenty-five feet to spare nt each located in the keclway. This crew dining room. A likely menu Yanks just absorbed that in¬ from the control car situated forward, The new airship is 85 feet thick, which end of the kcelway'j struction like The airship. If she were stood is ¿i corridor the would be: For shredded sponges. course ha« which is similar to the bridge of a is not a slim waist measurement. long extending length breakfast, been exactly on end by the War-rhington Monument of the ship, about eight feet wide and most thorough. The navy flyers :hip. Tho captain controls the ship Her capacity is approximately 2,720,000 the tail of the wheat, bacon and eggs and strawberry have not been how ship would be 150 feel seven feet high. There arc two large only taught to op¬ exactly as does the captain of a sea¬ cubic feet, which her nbout For tomato cold erate a gives higher than the top of the monument. spaces inclosed in this with jam. lunch, soup, rigid airship, but have been going vessel. The communication sys¬ 84 tons gross lift and a dispos¬ keelway, "How would it compare with the Wool- balloon fabric, which arc used ns roast beef and sliced tomatoes with thoroughly instructed in airship con¬ tem consists of engine-room telegraphs, able lift of about 45 which con¬ tons, worth tower?" New Yorkers ask. If quarters. That of the officers is for¬ lettuce; for dinner, clam chowder, roast struction. ship's telephones and voice tubes. All sists of gasoline, oil, crew, cargo or the mighty ZR-2 was stood up »gainst ward, and for the men, aft. The quar¬ beef, sauté potatoes, sphagetti, pickles, The men found time to play in riders to the power units on the en¬ armament. "Some baby," is the manner the «spite Woolworth peak just ninety-two ters an« equipped with comfortable bread and butter, canned peaches and of the difficulty of getting games with gine telegraphs are repeated back to in which the navy flyers refer to her as feet of the tower would remain in view chairs, tables, benches and a Victrola coffee. teams that played American football or the control car before being put into they gloat over her statistics and pon¬ looming above the bulk of the airship. with a good assortment of records. baseball. A navy team met the team txecution. der at the things they are going to ac¬ How they suffer, these poor enlisted To give, an idea of its size in another When the ZR-2 "shoves off" that crew from the U. S. S. Pittsburgh at bayc- From" this it will be seen that the complish with her. men! Something like the men at avia¬ vay-if the outer cover were spread "f enlisted men will bo tho least con¬ ball in the summer and at football the has a "What makes it go?" is usually the tion school at St. Faul during the war, rigid airship advanced long way on the ground it would cover a four- cerned in the entire party. The chances following fall, In August the R. A. F. from tho when first question asked after information who were forced to eat similar fare, day the pilot rodo acre plot. The gas bags which contain arc that for the most part they wilt held a sports day, and the Yanks won ivtride the concerning her size has been imparted. while a sixty-piece brass band fur¬ framework encompassing the hydrogen gas are lined with gold sleep when off duty, and undoubtedly seven events. Little Miss Page Maxfield, the and the Nothing more than six 350-horsepower nished music.but that's another story. the engine operated airship by beaters' skins. Gold beaters' skins are bo bored and feel aggrieved if «some¬ daughter of the commanding officer, use Sunbeam-Coassack motors, located in And may be those youngsters manning the of hands and feet. Tho mon¬ taken from the outer covering of the thing out of the ordinary doesn't hap¬ won the children's race. The Américain ster six cars. Nothing more, nothing less«. the cloud-sweeping ZR-2 won't develop bulk of the ZK-2 tends to deceive intestines of a cow. There is but one pen. A little thing like flying across scored just as heavily in the last nice,, These Sunbeam-Coassack motors, ac¬ healthy appetites! There will be no the observer who watches it thousands gold beater's skin to each cow that is the ocean will scarcely provide them held June 4 of this year. And now. to the whose cocktails needed beyond a breath of the ..f feet in the air. It will well merit cording navy flyers pets And Vach cow with sufficient thrills. within ten are coine slaughtered. guarantees ozone days, they to flying a they are, could lift the earth right out thousands of feet up. closer inspection as one of the mar¬ her gold beater to be the very best, The bunks are placed along the keel- home, and at Lakehurst, N. J.. the.e of its orbit if they were put to it. Ac¬ The of the naval vels of the age when it rides at its most durable and light skin that can way at various intervals. Each bunk history detachment has been erected in anticipatioi of the ZR-2 travels at a which invaded and steel stem at Lakehurst. cordingly, speed be manufactured. There are GOO.OOO of has, in addition to a good mattress and England assisted in their coming a monster hangar. of seventy-five miles an hour when ex¬ the is an these skins used in lining the gas baus blankets, a fur-lined sleeping bag. IIov,-- producing ZR-2 interesting Captain Frank Evans, son of t- ZR-2 Much Bigger Than German tended, and maintains a one. "Fiji cruising-^pced of the ZR-2. The cattle sent to market ever, in tho .summer months this sleep- According to the meticulously ing Bob," will be on the end L-71, Built to Bomb New York of miles an hour. She carries worded receiving fifty 10,- from several of the largest ranches in ing bag is not necessary. statement from the Navy De¬ or. the Jersey side when the 400 of on partment the "United silvery Even the figures to the levi¬ gallons gasoline.reflect that, America would have to be killed to rMlIirj on the States rigid air¬ bulk of the ZR-2 looms far out at relating motrists accustomed to photograph left shoxus^ the huge airship anchored in "And how is the chow on this flying up athan of tho air are when you pour it in build one the size of The ¦*¦ ship detachment arrived at the Royal sea. The at fascinating, at the rate of ten at a time. airship ZR-2. her hongar at England. The interior the under con¬ transport?" many an will hangar Lakehurst ii a 1- one considers the made in gallons structural of the of hangar, ex-doughboy Air Force Airship base, Howden, East othcr mammoth progress which gives her a cruising radius of strenp-th ship depends struction at where wonder. Each car is building project. It ;1 Lakelmrst, N. -/., she will be housed when she power equipped Yorkshire, on 1920." lighter-than-air craft. The ship was six hundred miles at full or in a large measure upon piano wire England, April 20, doubtless familiar to New Yorkeir w 0 «peed, reaches this aide, is shown in the on the The with 7i cooking arrangement, which The built at the Royal Airship Works, ai about nine hundred miles used as stays and braces. If all the picture right. diagram, detachment consisted of twenty-six motor in New The cruising att idea tlic consists of a lead from the exhaust Jersey. huge Cardington, Bedford, England. Com« tpeed. wire in the ZR-2 were gives of great bulk of the trans-Atlantic dirigible. men, and in July, 1920, ii second draft will a j piano put inte pipe of the motor to the cooker. The provide fitting resting place f««r mander H. T. Dyer was the United The on two of the one it Mould be miles of thirty-six men was sent over. Corr.- the propellers power string sixty long hot exhaust flames arc in mightiest dirigible airship in the States of the Bu¬ cars brought con- mander L. Ii. Maxfield will be at the Navy representative arc equipped with reversing gear, There are twenty miles of duralumir The crew which will take the liner navigator and three tact with the world, and to many the real thrill will reaus of Construction and and engineer officer, bottom of the vessel in helm when the ZR-2 Repair which enables the ship to check her channel section used in making the from England to the United Stales watch sixteen mechanics and which points her nose consist of seeing the Stars and oversaw officers, the food is being cooked. The for the U. S. Stripes Engineering who the creating speed at will, or even astern. It of which the hull is consists of a executive ten A. Lieutenant Commandei to the breeze fly girders composed captain, officer, riggers. The crew's quarters aie hot food is served on the tables in the whipping high up on the V. N. Bieg will be chief engineer am monster's back. Body in Tomb Is Preserved France Awaits the Trial of a Modern Bluebeard Peruvian Tribe the women-letters, to Used Wireless ' missing jewelry tempted bring hiir up for murder.! 1,800 Years Landru Accused of and articles of clothing. They also And up («.> -a few days ago he had al- found a notebook which Hundreds of Henry of accounts ways succeeded in reaching into th<* Women Send Him Centuries French Researchers Uncover indicated that Landru had written down maze of complicated red taper of the Ago Death of Eleven Fiancees the amounts he had received from the law to grasp a knot. Vault sale of the effects of his fiancees. Gifts and to Containing Corpse many On«* of the important witnesses foi Photographs Jail >Iess«ages Sent Hundred* Further investigation unearthed dé¬ Landru at the of Beautiful Woman Just PARIS, August 5. marriage from those of the fair sex forthcoming trial will of Miles Incas With bris of half calcinated bones, the objects that had to by as ït Had Been Buried FRENCH judicial and police who sympathize with his position. frag- he ¡Mile. Fernande Segret, a little belonged his left for America, where she had found Device of ments of skulls, human teeth and pieces who victim. He then Mile. an Only authorities are preparing for Landru is an of Parisian girl, will testify thai she brought Segret advantageous position. She had not Consisting enigma French of bone which had been sawed to the same what to be France's from ¦lias known thr- alleged murderer for house that Mme. Unisson had time to adieu to Hollow Trunks of Tree* PARIS. August 1. promises criminal history. The police dossier bones. had say her friends, most sensational and interest- larger Physiologists studied the many sears and his conduct alwayi has inhabited. he said, and CAMVILLE JULLIEN, a mem¬ on his case is filled with astounding bones and had asked him to present murder trial in when Henri concluded that they were been most correct and proper. Landru took cpre at the time to lier friends with her PARIS. August l. ber of the French Academy, ing years charges which, if proved, will put him human but quiet excuses along with mur- fragments, under the law the of the flowers. HOW "modern" the Incas were is recently submitted 90 that Landru, aged fifty-three, alleged down as one of the most infamous. Notebook May Re Evidence suspicion relatives and However, Mme. Buisson's derer of eleven will wore unable to state whether they were friends of Mme. shown by the fact that cen¬ a fiancées, appear murderers, of records of Of Methods NYith Women Buisson, according to friends say that she had no connections body sensational report on European those of men or women. Blood was in court at Versailles in November. tl.o surviving sister. lie sentimen- in America, nor could she turies ago they had a wire** the archaeological findings in the neigh¬ crime. found on tho cellar But from Landru's notebook and in¬ speak English. Henri Landru has been in prison floor, but when t; lized over the dress she had ordered Her papers, Italian less telegraphy. This i- poirtfJ borhood of Clermont-Ferrand (capital Prison guards admit that can¬ indicated formation procured from Mme. Lacoste, passports and let¬ for more than»two and one-half they analyzed animal origin. This !*« r her he ters were out by the Danish traveller Ebbe of the department of Puy-de-Dome, 212 years. not but have doubt that the a sister of Mme. Buisson, one of the marriage; gave to Mme. all found in Landru's posses¬ He is known as the help affirmed Landru's explanation that at ! Worncrup, in the latest number miles "Bluebeard of women, of Lacoste, in the name of Mme. Buisso", sion. southeast of Paris), which, as it heinous crimes charged against the a later time he had killed some missing the story how he Cambáis," the latter a town near dogs at a sum of he a of the Deutsche Rundschau, in his were, to the whole docile man th«'rrc women ami carried ou; his money; gave present to Anne-Marie bring light daily Paris, where the Landru little are wrong. His per¬ tb* villa. ¡met Mme. Pascal, divorcée, who description of Peru. "The Incas," he ' ufe of a small police allege will be Poulet's daughter, and finally he also market-town of the time sonality completely overcomes what Such was purposes patched together. disappeared, did not resemble the "had a Th- converted his rented villa into a ver¬ the alleged "Bluebeard's' tried to work the two sisters into a writes, wireless telegraphy. of Roman Gaul. In the Canton might be called a simian face covered Mme. Buisson nut Landru a staid Mme. Jaume in the least. itable human slaughter house. power over the weaker sex that man) through state of aloofness toward each other. Thirty- apparatus consisted of two hollowed- Martre-de-Ycgre some peopie while with a black beard and heavy black of his matrimonial advertisement published three years old, brunette, elegant and Pathological experts have concluded fiancees had become his mistress Also, he retained all the of out trunks of trees, with openings like working with a pick on a property eyebrows. He is ultra cour- in May 1, under the name «>;' Frem- papers dashing, she lived a pleasurable exist¬ that the "Bluebeard" is not. insane. polite, anticipation of marriage, and oik 1915, .Mme. Buisson that he could those of an hour-glass; even no**' theie struck on something hard, which tcous and meek. He spends hours each She assured him that she Would find. ence at Paris. She met the "Blue- '1 he judicial authorities of Paris are braved the wrath cf her t< ¡yet. his most active in the museum of Lima good speci¬ H'cmed to be the lid of a on his religion make him a During .relations beard" jare Gallo-Roman cuite convinced so as the law day working defensive brief procure a divorce good wife, and regretted through answering the follow¬ mens. that, far from her husband t< with Mme. Buisson, and while corre¬ 'sarcophagus. .Upon lifting the lid they and then begs a book of Balzac front that her fortune was .-«« small along¬ ing advertisement which was placed ir is concerned, Landru is far from insane become Mme. Guillet, as Landru wa with Mme. who "One log served for the tel?-« found a wondrously beautiful woman, the prison library. At other times lie of his. May 23, of that year, she sponding Pascal, also ,an evening paper: sending and can match lus wits against most known to her, say the authorities side has Landru "Gentlemen, forty grams, the other for them. whose flesh was perfectly preserved as will dispense with the book to fashion Eleven estimated lier fortune for him, saying disappeared, met, through «seven years old. 4.000 francs receiving any legal talent retained to ensnare women he lured to the murde a announcement having You strike the hollow and on the day of her death, eighteen cen¬ small paper fans, which he sells to was about 13,000 francs, of which marriage that ap¬ desires marriage with person of log produee him into admissions that may convict. ¡villa, and all the time he had a jit peared March 2. simpli acoustic vibrations. A few strokes with turies ago. Also the tresses of her more for the lega could be counted fur sure. 1917, Louise-Lcc- tastes, asro and situation The trial in November will be held buy paper distracting wife, and two grown sons 10,0,00 upon conforming 'short of black hair seeemed as if poldine Jaunie. Mme. Jaume was Bureau pieces wood C3Ü forth unique unaffected. at Versailles. more than industry. Soon their relations became quite close, til, Paris." During Most of Alleged Victims thirty-eight years old, an ardent j vibrations, so that it is no wonder that The finders, had a If the police have collected the and Mme. Buisson expressed her one On October -1 their relations however, only thirty months in jail Landru has Were Widows or and began can be heard in at Divorcees aim ear«- Christian, lived in a state of sepa- In the they the distance, brief enjoyment of this astoundii g balked the prorsecution many times in proper evidence, psychologist- aie ask¬ in view.to for him and to spring of 1918, when Mme Landru's victims ration from her husband, who \va.i then t.ie receiving apparatus. Besides, the sight, as under the act.on of the Bolar their efforts to bring him to trial. ing what was the power of this human alleged were mostl cherish him.* Pascal fell ill. Landru went often t I widows or divorcées who m Italy. see instrument is constructed possibly 'neat the woman's body in a few When it appeared that all tiie pre¬ over women that caused them to suc¬ were wome However, from June, 191.", to April, her, bringing fruit and presents of some little means and Knelt With Woman to Ask He after many centuries of experience, oments crumbled into dust, so that all liminaries were arranged, the "Blue¬ cumb to the advances of his little black after th 1917, Landru's notebook makes no fur¬ gave her a cold brooch with a peai French custom were oil in eery generation contributing soroe- ¦hat remained was a skeleton wrapped beard" has repeatedly cited some bearded, unattractive face and form? willing to combii ther mention of Mme. Buisson Rumor Blessing Coming Union the center, which he declared ha in their fortunes with been thing of its own to it. The wood is a dress. Further searchings and ex¬ trifling legal technicality which has iiy what power even in pri.-.on can he those of a ne had spread among her friend? thai he The first meeting, to Lan- handed down to him from hi husband. They read the according hard and yet of the same elasticity a? cavations yielded five more i gained him more delay. In March he compel the sympathy of hundreds of appeal of tl had gone to Tunis on but dru's notebook, was made March 11. mother. In March they both went t equally ..the business, violin, wood, and it is in some way .well preserved tombs, in which y.as able to have all the the fairer sex who shower him with "Bluebeard," police will mnintai other indications h iw was IT«} had to call all his Cambáis, and a letter of Mme. Pascal' objects preliminaries in various that in* up powers ol heated and dried. The length ar.J of the greatest archaeological interest up to that date declared null and gifts'.' What mental make-bp allows publications of matrimoni occupying himself with other women, seduction to conquer the heart of thie dated the 27th of that month sent t bureaus, them a I width of the instrument, as well a< its were found, such as coins, vases, pot¬ forced the courts to grant him a him to outwit the best of local legal among the well know Finally the relations to take modest woman, lier friends He friend, contained an enthusiastic d* column in "La Vie began say. curves, are exactly adapted to its pur- tery, baskets, toilet articles, women's change of venue from Pari:* to Ver¬ minds who have sought lor two years Parisienne." A ¡shape again in 1916, when Landru was succeeded, in all events, in scription of the country villa. Follov to all the conquering pose. Nowadays no one can produce .garments, shoes, and even fruits, barf¬ sailles. Again the lfgul sharps of the to bring him into court'.' What will cording evidence, he th* presented to Mme. Buisson'.* isters, her religious scruples which forbade ing that period Mme. Pascal's belonj proceeded to charm them with were anything similar. The hour-glas.: open* ly shriveled up, and a box-tree French government made their ar- be the defense in the voluminous dos- his my Mme. Poulet and Mme. Lacoste, ami te her to consider divorce and second mar lugs moved from Tario to Can twig terious and b;iis. ings, in particular, which are connected till perfectly gre rangements and again came Landru tier he has been preparing for months? personality politeness wi her son, who had come to Paris fron' riagc, for on July 77.";, 1917, she filet with a mass of j such success that from 1.914 through another opening of a lingers The savants who technical objections. of to 19 Bayoniic, Soon, when the ha< ¡a request for divorce at the Palace o: Mme. Pascal examined esc Criminologists Europe he the youth Wrote Three breadth, are most exactly calculated" A few days ;.f;o the courts ruled gained combined fortunes returned to the Letter» on Gaiio-Roman findings arc convinced To Study Case in Court his eleven province, Landru per ¡Justice. Hay of Her Death the against him, however, and the trial victims, \«ho successive suaded Mine. Buisson to Telegrams went from Cuzco to Tis- that miracle of the preservation of from <>f abandon hei Sunday, November 2o. Landru accom On .i will on November .''. Criminologists many capital.- dropped from sight. home April Landru returned gunnaco, or as far as Chile and furth .". the «. ¡n begin and take up residence at. 11: Mme. Jaume to tin- eoe*psca through eighteen Europe are expected in court when A at panied Church o Paris, to tine! his favorite was due to Despite a tremendous ., of cir¬ glimpse the coming trial m Boulevard with him his the Heart sweethea! to Quito, as quickly as the telegrams the neighboring spring Landru ¡roes to trial at Versailles hi be Ney and "ap Sacred and knelt at her sid« Mile. Scgret, On 11 cumstantial evidence reflected in the .. April Landru so of our time, which first must be written from which against him, the only occasion th prentice," a he designated ins .«in ti ask the of escaped carbonic acid gas, November-.and many women. far on blessing heaven upoi the furniture and other I pri oner will enter the court with his which the police have been ai Charles. At. this objects sa and delivered and in .¦ "c" which, being heavier than the air, di The of. time one of tin' sis their coming union. A few moment to have to dispatched own brief, a voluminous one, winch he police story Landru follows: to bring Landru into court for actt ters fell belonged Mme. Pascal. Í ¡cession. With the Incas letters also placed the- grir from the coffins, and Aftei the ill, and Landru, apparently t« later they took the fateful train t> notebook contains the ha.« prepared and which may extend mysterious disappearance prosecution, A minor charge of swi 'captivate following note went by courier actually quicker than preserved the bodies, perfectly fresh, ol «¦¦..( ral women the aide«; definitely Mme. Buisson' Cambáis. 500 the trial over all reasonable sriace ol gendarmes, dling found the defendant the ccnl Furniture, francs; umbrella, they £o The knot- for 1,800 year». The scientific experts confidence, hastened to her sister' The evening of November 7;ti Landr francs; to-day by railway. information friends oí a coat. 8 - time. by furnished.by of crowded francs; iron a .. declared never have courtroom with worn ¡aid. When death arrived he attende« to bed, letters were placed in hollow that before b-en the mis ing women, arrested en sus¬ returned Pari.« to gain possession o francs; carpet, 1'J Hundreds ol Women ¡spectator; predominating. Hero to all the ncccss foi francs; stove, ;and delivered to the running messenger found bodies and object« from that Send on one iry malities of th fiancee's belongings. '1 he 30th h francs, and Mme. (.¡ft* to "Bluebeard" In Jail picion, April 12, 1010, Lucien admitted his change of name and fuñera!. Pascal's artille and then passed from hand to hand, period n »ucl perfect preservation, "«>« i.ia.ii- a new at the Alb aum Li e)h, là ] Guillet, engineer, of Rue líochc spite it deposit franci. for at there v *> a In prisoi the eventually outwitted hi. pro Augui B, Mme. Bui sson and in In- every kilometer alleged "Bluebeard re- chouarl, in Paris. Guillet turned oui cutors. When the entircl; Bank, Dccembei note.- i The very day of her death Mr fresh who stick eivea >.¦ judge asked li drew from thi ': I.\ courier, tnatched the Third daily ¿1ft flowers, pi oto lo be Landtu. Ar« soon ¡is the arrest duccd, edit on his book the receipt of twenty franc Pascal had written Japan'*** Marine why he hud changed his identity nnia her bondi and three letters, m: and ran with it to the next man, who The Ja pa no.is* mercantile marine now graphs and comfoTta from women. Ir became an«l his lia« charged Landn which was the value of an Italian hi of which public photograph ¡replied: "When one is with contained any hint of t ¡stood after the fashion of s relay rae". ranks third among the commercial spite of evidence that he liai woi searched the administration ot-hcr fortum that Mme. Jaume had wit been printed in the newspapers wit by the le* ono brought coming catastrophe. The ran on fleets of the world. almost a pol isn't in the ha The 19th, she left for the villa al first, They the ancient Inca roads, dozen women in 1'arin, on!«, nei <¦;; came to the police, then of Gam her from Italy, where she bad gone t dressed to a former among leaving his card at the police baia and was neighbor, was still in existence to-day. over moun¬ '«. lur« them to the death «.¡lie, Bt Gam« Inhabitants of th<* never heard of since. attempt a reconciliation with her hu; livered | Srnt H ad in Gambais, scene ol tion. I take a false name v.l The by Landru. The second f tain paths, and o»er Opera by buis from when*-* have nevei th>* only evening of September Lnndr band some time before. through valleys in Berlin trans¬ they alleged murder villa. Dctcctlvn I am pursued." The found at the villa, and the third, wi And th- Inca, the Optra parfonmed and he hau Corrcctio retui ned to Pari to sec er d | daring bridges. king mitted « .margad, received I undred« o1 searched thr villa. adj Landru explained to the friends < ten I. by wireless telephone They discovcrei Court ol Appeals nfcquitted him. Si Fweethearl. Mile. April arrived to Mme. Fauc¬ at Cu¿co, ate every day fret»h fish Mnttly beard 800 milt» litten and even ofíers ol Soirrct, and on th Mme. Jaume Hi«1 on away, i romíortíng feminine objecta uppo cd to bclmij; t«. that time the during followii til«- 20th, «after Landru had chan¡ from the pea, which was ia tH J legal sharps have 3c! of thaï mi nth he sold oal ulatiou; month that Mme, Juumc had brought sudden l the date to the. ltith. 'same way over the uiounULiJ.