Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 102, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 September 1932 — Page 1

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FARMERS ARE IN SPOTLIGHT AT STATE FAIR Hoosier Tillers of Soil Are Honored at Annual Exposition Here. FEATURE RACE BOOKED Amusements and Sideshows Draw Crowds as Last Days Are Reached. The man who makes the Indiana state fair possible today forgot whether his cow, Flossie, or his big boar, Hot Shot, were wearing decorative blue or red ribbons and remembered only that he was being honored. It was Farmers’ and Ex-Board Members’ day at the fair. The farmers came to learn from others of the soil Ihe best manner In which to raise forty bushels of wheat to an acre. They sat on benches and spun Warns of making both ends meet despite hard times. ‘ Guess there's a heap of folk in this world worse off than we are. We always got a lots to eat. And we’ve had hard times so long that It just comes second natnre with ps,’’ one agrarian philosophized. Best Pace on Schedule The fair was to put on its best harness race act in t,he afternoon with the running of the $12,000 Frank P. Fox stake for 2-year-old pacers. In the meanttme, the farmer’s best indoor and outdoor sport, swapping either of cattle or stories, was in full bloom. “I’ll trade you that ewe of mine that won the blue ribbon and $25 •t-boot’ for that sow of your'n,” was the offer as a pair of overalled men hung over a sheep pen. “You're on,” was the reply with a shake of the hand as the deal was made. Figure Out Beef Trices Boys of 4-H calf clubs mentally were figuring the chances for selling their beef Thursday and Friday when city packers bid for the right to turn their prize yearlings into steaks for Indianapolis tables. The Indiana Farm Bureau’s quartets fought for supremacy in song in a contest staged this morning in front of the grand stand. Family picnics have increased with each fair, officials report, and today was one of the main days for rating the entries that farm wives placed in the culinary classes at the fair. The Muncie girls’ band and the Indiana university band gave concerts. I. V. Building Dedicated More and more as the fair swings into its last days, the amusement rides and sideshows are receiving precedence over the exhibits. “Some folk come every day and make the fair in sections. They see the exhibits first and gradually work their way down to the amusement section.” one fair official declared. Tuesday’s highlight was the dedif'ation of the new Indiana university milding. Governor Harry G. Leslie was praised by President William Jxiwe Bryan of Indiana university for his stand for education while *t the helm of the state. Politics Are to Rule Politics will rule the benches, booths and grand stand boxes at Thursday's fair when Governor's and legislators’ day is celebrated. It is the one day when a Democrat can be seen with a Republican without charge that he is being influenced by a big-money lobby. Major portion of the cattle, swine, sheep and equine judging will be completed today and Thursday. Fair visitors may take Fair-ground-Illinois cars to the gates or go by auto north on Meridian street lo Thirty-eighth and east on Thir-ty-eighth to the grounds. MERCURY TO MOUNT, SAYS WEATHER MAN Temperature of 52 Today 12 Degrees Below Normal for This Date. After two days of unseasonably rool weather, temperatures will be higher in Indianapolis Thursday, according to the local weather bureau. Temperature of 52 at 7 this morning was 12 degrees below the normal for the date. Lowest Tuesday was 6 below normal. No reports of frost in Indiana have been received by the bureau, although temperature of 43 was reported from some northern points in the state.

At the Fair TODAT Farmer*’ and ex-board members’ day. Horse and cattle judging, Coliseum. Sheep judging, sheep arena. Swine pudin*. swine arena. Harness races, vaudeville, band concerts, afltrnoon and night grandstand. Horse show, vaudeville, band concerts. night. Coliseum. Dog sh (, Do* and Cat Show buildings. THURSDAY Governor’s day and legislators' day. Horse and cattle judging, Coliseum. Sheep judging, sheep arena. Swine judging, swine arena. Harness races, vaudeville, band concerts, afternoon and night, grandstand. Dog show, Dog and Cat Show buildin*. Horae show, vaudeville, hand concerts, Coliseum night. Times Brown Derby coronation, race track, night.

The Indianapolis Times

VOLUME 44—NUMBER 102

Rudy Vallee .‘Makes Up’ With Wife By United Press RENC, Nev., Sept. 7.—Fay Webb Valec and her radio crooning husband, Rudy Vallee, effected a reconcilation by long distance telephone Wednesday night, and the petite Fay will not go ahead with her plans for divorce, Hymon Bushel, Vallee’s attorney, told newspaper men here today. SEAR YANKED OFF DRY SQUAD Raiding Sergeant Is Given Brightwood District. Sergeant Wayne Bear, whose booze resort raiding kept municipal court judges busy for several months, no longer is a police dry squad head and now is a district sergeant, assigned to Brightwood. When Bear returned Sept. 1 from vacation, he was informed he and his squad had been taken off the dry detail, leaving only one squad commanded by Sergeant John Eisenhut. FARM PICKETS WIN Fleet of 22 Trucks Forced to Turn and Retreat. By I nil rd Press SIOUX CITY. Sept. 7.-Armed sheriff’s forces clashed with farm pickets on a highway near here today, but the deputies hesitated to use their guns, and the farmers came off victorious. A fleet of twenty-two trucks that the deputies were trying to escort to the market here was forced to turn around and retreat in the face of a crowd of approximately 500 pickets, who guarded a barricade across the highway.

CONSTANCE BINNEY AND ATTORNEY ARE WEDDED Former Actress Divorced Boston Banker-Husband Last July. By United Press NEW YORK, Sept. 7.—Mrs. Charles E. Cotting, the former Constance Binney, and Henry J. Wharton Jr. of Philadelphia were married here Tuesday. She was divorced from the Boston banker-husband last July. Wharton is an attorney, son of a Philadelphia coal operator and member of a family socially prominent. TRIPLETS BORN IN STATE Boy and Two Girls at Evansville Reported “Doing Well.” By United Press EVANSVILLE, Ind., Sept. 7. —Mrs. Louis Evans and triplets, born at Walker-Welborn hospital Tuesday night, were reported "doing well” today. The triplets—a boy and two girls —weighed nearly four pounds each.

1933 Tax Levies Under the classification Legals in today's Want Ads owners will find the complete tax levy for 1933. Many ideally located rooms and houses also will be found there. Turn back today. Times Want Ads are easy to read and worth reading. In Today’s Times Want Ads.

Penniless Doctor Slays Wife While She Sleeps

*Why? Psychoanalyst Might Know,’ He Replies to Police Query. By United Press BOSTON, Sept, 7.—Dr. Towneley Thorndike French, 57-year-old nonpracticing and penniless physician, smilingly suggested to police today that ’ perhaps the psychoanalysts can explain” why he killed his wife as she slept, and then kept lonely vigil beside her lifeless body for thirty-six hours. The doctor, a cripple, limped into a La Grange street police station Tuesday night, placed a revolver from which a single shot had been fired on the desk, and said: “There's some trouble at 4 Melrose street. I shot my wife. She's dead in a room there.” A patrolman sent to that address confirmed the statement. The body of the doctor's third wife, clad in a yellow nightgown, lay in bed. She had been shot through the head. Meantime, at the police station, Dr. French, regarded as a prodigy at Harvard medical school from which he was graduated in 1896, was telling, dispassionately, how for the last seven years his wife, working as an elevator operator In a down-

INDIANAPOLIS, WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 7, 1932

10,000 HEAR THOMAS FLAY OLDJARTIES Nation’s Ills Are Blamed on Capitalistic System by Socialist Candidate. HOOVER IS SCORCHED Roosevelt Branded Amiable Man Who Goes as Wind Blows. • BY BEN STERN A record-breaking protest i vote in Indiana in the November election was visualized today by party leaders and observers, after 10,000 persons jammed Cadle tabernacle Tuesday night to hear Norman Thomas, Socialist candidate for President. This was contrasted today with the audience of a bare 200 which heard Thomas here in 1928. Thomas attacked both Republican policies and Democratic promises and held out the Socialist party and its platform as the only concrete method of bringing America out of the depression. Hits Capitalistic System Blaming the ills of the nation on the “present fast-dying capitalistic system, the crazy tax system and the lop-sided tariff,” Thomas pointed out the incongruity with the statement: “You are able in Indiana to send troops to the coal fields when you are not able to find money to send bread.” He referred to the action of the special legislative session in voting SIOO,OOO to send national guardsmen to the coal regions and failing to pass any unemployment relief measures. Thomas also stressed the point that many believe the next step for this nation is a dictatorship. “A cry goes up for a Mussolini—and that cry may not go unanswered,” he asserted. Assails Hoover ‘Relief’ Criticising the ineffectuality of Hoover relief panaceas, he charged that “$80,000,000 in the pockets of the workers of Chicago would do more good than the $80,000,000 loaned to Charley Dawes.” With Thomas on the program were Forrest Wallace of Veedersburg, senatorial nominee; Fowers Hapgood, Governor choice; Ed Henery, secretary of state Socialist organization, and other party leaders. Thomas paid tribute to the memory of a Hoosier, Eugene V. Debs, who prior to his death was the outstanding Socialist leader of the country. “Indiana is also, I am well aware, today the state of an assorted lot of Democratic and Republican politicians who have no claim to any stature of greatness,” Thomas said. “A year or so ago I listened to Senator James Watson —who I hope shortly will be Ex-Senator Watson —in Washington answer a demand I had made as one of the committee for our Socialist program for (Turn to Page Z) BANDITS SHOOT TWO Take $3,000: Girl and Man Wounded by Gunmen. By United Press NORTH CHICAGO, 111.. Sept. 7. Four nervous bandits terrorized ten employes of the Lake County bank today, shot a girl and a man, and j escaped with $3,000. Those injured were Miss Moneta Steffan. 29. a bookkeeper, who was shot In the mouth, and Howard Davis, assistant teller, shot in the face. Hourly Temperatures 6a. m 52 10 a. m 64 7a. m..... 52 11 a. m 65 Ba. m 59 12 (noon).. 65 9 a. m 63 1 p. m 68

town department store, had been his sole support. Six weeks ago she was laid off, he said, and since then they had been virtually penniless. “Why did you kill her?” police asked. ‘‘Why?...Why?...” the doctor pondered. “The passing of a human being always is mysterious... mysterious,” he said. "You ask me why? Perhaps the psychoanalysts can tell you.” Finally, he said he killed his wife “because I was tired of seeing her live in abject poverty.”

SAFE AFTER ESCAPING BRIGANDS, DIPLOMATS BARE TALE OF PERILS

BY JOSEPH H. BAIRD United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, Sept. 7.—Sev-enty-two hours of misery and peril behind them, while captives of Persian brigands, three American diplomats were safe at Teheran. Persian, today, resting after hiking over rough Persian mountain trails, while clad only in underwear. A word picture of the diplomats’ trials while in the hands of Lurs bandits was received in Washington today from Minister Charles C. Hart, who had imperial Persian troops intercede to save the lives of the three diplomats. There were returned, physically unharmed, save for lacerated feet.

Fair tonight and Thursday; somewhat warmer Thursday.

TRAGEDY RULES HER LIFE Harlow’s Happiness Hunt Is in Vain

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Top—Jean Harlow, her stepfather, Marino Bello, and her mother. Below (left to right)—Charles McGrew, Jean’s first husband; Jean Harlow at 14; Paul Bern, whose suicide adds anew chapter to tfie film star’s own role in tragedy.

KIDNAPING OF GIRL IS LAID TO PRIEST

Minister Is Sought as Abductor of Young Illinois Teacher. By United Press OTTAWA, 111., Sept. 7—Deputy sheriffs waited today at the Home of Alexis, near here, for the Rev. William Courtney, 40, described by Sheriff E. .J.. Welter of La Salle county as a Catholic priest, to serve him with a warrant charging him with kidnaping a 22-year-old school teacher. Meanwhile, Sheriff Welter went to a country school near Streator to question pupils about the disappearance Tuesday afternoon of the teacher, Collette Haley. The warrant was sworn to by James F. Haley, Streator, brother of the missing teacher, who declared his sister had been kidnaped by Courtney. Miss Haley had disappeared from her home a week ago and gone to Chicago. She stayed at a West Monroe street room until Sunday, when she returned to her home in Streator. She was teaching in the country school in Eagle township Tuesday, when, her pupils said, a man called her outside and she went away with him. Courtney had not returned to his' home and officers had heard no reports of his whereabouts. DAUGHTER IS SHOOED BY ‘BOBBY’; CERMAK ANGRY London Should Come to Chicago to Learn Police Courtesy, Says Mayor. By United Press LONDON. Sept. 7.—London should go to Chicago to learn police courtesy, Mayor Anton Cermak of Chicago said today after a policeman at St. James’ palace had pushed Mrs. Frank Jirka, his daughter, roughly into line as the mayor and his party were watching the changing of the guard. “My daughter was furious,” the mayor said. “I can guarantee that no such treatment would be tolerated in Chicago.” The policeman was directing the usual crowd that watches the changing of the guard. FURNITURE 1$ STOLEN S6OO in Goods Loot From Warehouse, Company Manager Tells Police. Theft of furniture valued at S6OO from a Gordon Furniture Company warehouse at 380 South Senate avenue, was reported to police today by Stanley Lippon, company manager.

T AST Thursday the three men ' —Robert B. Streeper of Columbus, 0.. American consul at Teheran; Cyril L. F. Thiel of Chicago, and Thomas A. Hickok of Rochester, Pa., consul and viceconsul, respectively, at Jerusalem —started out from Kermanshah to complete a leg of their journey from Bagdad to Teheran. Military guards held them up near Sahneh, warning them of danger from the Lurs, but allowed them to continue their journey next day. Ten miles form Sahneh the brigands swooped down on the unsuspecting Americans. They were

Illegal Armor Despite a telegraphed protest against a ruling signed by 450 members of the Associated Miners Union, Attorney-Gen-eral James M. Ogden today said he would inform Homer D. Ingram, Vermilion county prosecutor, that transportation of miners to and from work in an armored car is illegal unless done by a peace officer. Ingram requested a ruling on the armored car use by Vern Bennett, secretary of the miners union, which is not affiliated with the United Mine Workers, principal mine organization. Ogden said his ruling would be unofficial, as he can give official opinions only on request of state officials.

ADOPT WET PLANK Connecticut G. 0. P. Ignores Threats of Drys. By United Press NEW HAVEN. Conn., Sept. 7. For the first time, the Republican party of Connecticut today favored outright repeal of the eighteenth amendment in its platform adopted by the state convention in the face of third party threats by dry members of the party. Immediate modification of the Volstead act ’ was supported. WAGE CUT IS FORESEEN “Inevitable” in Pennsylvania Anthracite Fields, Feeling of Official.s. By United Press NEW YORK, Sept. 7.—Thirty officials of the United Mine Workers of America meeting in secret session today decided that a wage cut for the 140,000 miners in the anthracite fields of northwest Pennsylvania was inevitable. SIGN ‘REBEL’ CONTRACTS Six Small Mines to Reopen in St. Clair County, Illinois. By United Press BELLEVILLE, 111., Sept. 7.—Six small St. Clair county coal mines were preparing to reopen today with members of the Progressive Miners’ Union, “rebel” organization, working under the $6.10 wage scale, according to S. L. Jones, Belleville, sub-district representatives of the new miners’ group.

robbed, cuffed around, stripped to shirts and shorts, and forced to run and walk, alternately, over twenty-five miles of rough, mountain road. “If Persian troops try to rescue you,” the captors said, “we’ll kill you.” n m DUSK descended over the mountains. The Lurs stopped to divide their loot. Suddenly, Persian troops appeared, opened machine-gun fire on the bandits. The diplomats escaped in the confusion. But they were not yet safe. While approaching the Persian

Entered as Second-Class Matter at Postotfice, Indianapolis

This is the first of four stories on the unusual life of Jean Harlow, the famous platinum blond of the movies, and her tragic romances in real life. BY DAN THOMAS NEA Service Writer Hollywood, sept. 7.—The famous platinum tresses of Jean Harlow—the admiration of men and the envy of women wherever movies are shown—repose today on a head bowed with grief for, at an age when many other girls are leaving college, a tragic romance has crossed her all-too-eventful young life for the second time. The story, briefly, is this: At 16 she was a bride; at 17 she was a divorcee; at 21 she was a bride again and now, only a few weeks later, she is a widow—left bereft by a brilliant, but moody, movie-director husband twice her age, who placed a pistol to his temple and pulled the trigger after writing her a farewell note in which he assured her of his great love for her. What does the future hold in store for this most gorgeous of all movie blonds whose private life has been scarely less colorful than her swift rise to stardom on the silvery screen? Only the future can answer that, though the past may give a grim hint of a star-crossed life doomed to be darkened by unhappiness and tragedy. The suicide of Paul Bern, her director-husband in their "honeymoon nest" in a Hollywood canyon was only another unhappy chapter in the life of the celebrated young actress. Singularly enough, it had all the elements of a stark drama of the films which Bern, with his ingenuity as a director, cold have plotted and in which Jean Harlow, as an actress, could have played the leading role. For Bern could have cast himself in the role (which was his own) as a tremendously successful, but nevertheless unhappy, mart of 41 who never had known a real love affair until a charming young actress only half his age crossed his path. Bern could have shown himself (which was true) as a poor boy, son (Turn to Page 2) BULLET IS ‘BOOMERANG’ Brother Fires at Fox; It Bounces Back and Kills Madison Man. MADISON, Ind., Sept. 7.—Curtis Duncan, 34, was killed near here 1 when his brother, Alva, fired at a fox. The bullet ricocheted from a rock and struck Duncan in the head. YEGG PLEADS GUILTY Dewitt Parker Faces One-to-Ten-Year Term in Prison. Dewitt Parker of Beech Grove, alleged safe cracker, faced one to ten years in prison today after he pleaded guilty to grand larceny in criminal court. He was charged with stealing an electric drill from Fred Snodgrass of 2514 Bethel avenue.

troops, the American were fired on. Presumably, the Persians thought they were part of the bandit group. So the diplomats again took to the hills and spent a chilly night. Early next morning the Americans found a Persian scout who guided them to a military encampment. “The Governor at Kermanshah, a former Kadjar prince,” Hart reported, “was courteous, regretful ana helpful. “The Governor said that word of the capture was received at noon, Friday, and that all available troops, some three regiments, were ordered out immediately.

MOTIVE FOR JEAN HARLOW MATE’S DEATH MAY BE TOLD BY SECOND ‘INTIMATE’ NOTE Paul Bern’s Personal Physician Sends Cable From Honolulu That He Knows Reason for Suicide of Star’s Husband. ACTRESS QUIZ IS UNSUCCESSFUL Platinum Blond Denies Any Knowledge of Terrible Wrong,’ and Makes Attempt to Fling Self From High Balcony. BY RONALD W. WAGONER United Press Staff Correspondent HOLLYWOOD, Sept. 7.—Paul Bern’s personal physician has offered to explain the film producers mysterious death, something the silver-haired Jean-Harlow could not do during a day climaxed, it was said, by her hysterical attempt to fling herself from an upper floor balcony. Meanwhile, a police official disclosed reports of a second suicide note, a note more intimate and enlightening than the one which referred to “abject humiliation” and the “comedy of last night.” And John Gilbert, who was an attendant at the wedding of Bern and the glamorous platinum blond, revealed that he had prevented an earlier attempt by Bern to kill himself—an attempt that followed the death of Barbara La Marr, whom Bern comforted during the last days of her life.

Paul Bern’s younger brother, Henry, tearfully told reporters that Paul had supported, until he died, a woman who suffered a mental derangement while living with him. This story was in line with many BARES SECRET OF OLD LOVE Harlow’s Mate Supported ‘Deranged’ Woman. By United Press KANSAS CITY, Mo., Sept. 7. Paul Bern, brilliant movie executive, dead in Hollywood by his own hand, supported until his death a woman, with whom he once lived, and who suffered a “derangement” while she lived with him, it was revealed here today. A younger brother of the dead man, Henry Bern, told of the secret in the life of the husband of Jean Harlow, who shot himself Monday. Miss Harlow, the brother said, knew of her husband's relationship with the unnamed woman, and many of his friends also knew of it. “Paul had no secrets,” Bern said, as he paused here en route to Hollywood by air. “It was long ago. The woman had a nervous breakdown, a derangement. “Paul had nothing to do with it. It wasn’t his fault. But he placed her in a sanitarium, and cared for her as he might have had she been his wife. He has kept her there since that time. Paul was not conventional. He was above the conventional in virtue. He was a good man.” upswing~7s promised Ray Lyman Wilbur Returns to Capital, After Trip in West. By United Press WASHINGTON, Sept. 7.—A conviction that the long-awaited economic upswing has begun, was expressed today by Interior Secretary Ray Lyman Wilbur, close friend and adviser of President Herbert Hoover. The interior secretary is just back from a six weeks’ trip which took him to the Pacific coast. RITCHIE TO STUMP'HERE Josephus Daniels Also to Aid Campaign on Indiana Fields. Two more “big guns” in the Democratic oratorical battery have signified their intention of coming into Indiana in behalf of the ticket, R. Earl Peters, state chairman, announced today. They are Governor Albert Ritchie of Maryland, who expects to be here in October, ano Josephus Daniels, war time secretary of navy, the latter part of this month. Auto Burns; Woman Dies LOGANSPORT, Ind., Sept. 7. Fire which demolished the auto of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Tucker after it overturned near here caused the death of Mrs. Tucker.

“T TPON learning of the capture, the governor immediately telegraphed a report thereof to the foreign ministry at Teheran, and, on learning on the following noon of the escape of the three Americans, he again reported the fact to the foreign ministry.” Hart, before he entered the diplomatic service, was a Washington newspaper man, and, on such occasions as the one last week, he exercises his old reportorial skill for the state department. He enjoys the reputation of writing the most colorful, interesting dispatches cf any officer in the foreign service.

HOME EDITION PRICE TWO CENTS Outside Marion County, 3 Cent*

others to the effect that Bern’s kindly, helpful disposition led him to help many in need. In a cablegram from Honolulu, Dr. Ed B. Jones, Bern’s personal physician in Hollywood, sent the following message to Louis B. Mayer, head of Metro-Goldwyn studios, according to police: “Understand motive. Will leave at once to testify for you and Miss Harlow if necessary.” “Typical Suicide” Wound Dr. Jones, it was explained, attended Bern for several weeks prior to his departure for Honolulu on a vacation trip. Dr. Frank R. Webb, assistant county autopsy surgeon, performed an autopsy on the body. He said Bern’s death was due to a “typical suicide wound.” His examination, he added, disclosed “no acute condition of disease.” Miss Harlow’s condition, which has bordered on complete nervous collapse since her husband’s nude body was found before a mirror in their Hillside home Monday, caused physicians and her relatives grave concern. Detectives visited her Tuesday night, and found her hysterical as she declared she knew no reason why Bern shot himself to end their married life of two months. “I Don’t Know,” Says Star It was said that, hysterical, the platinum blond star leaped from her bed at her home of Marino Bello, her stepfather, and dashed toward a: balcony on the second floor. Her nurse and members of the immediate family circle restrained her. and, finally, quieted her with the aid of sedatives. Detectives Lieutenants Frank Condaffer and Frank Ryan attempted to press Miss Harlow for her version of the meaning of the suicide note in which Bern wrote of his “abject humiliation,” and referred to "the terrible wrong” he had done her. “I don’t know, I don’t know,” the star moaned as tears streamed down her face. Her answer was the same when detectives asked her if she knew what her husband meant when he wrote of “the comedy of last night.” ’ I can’t understand why this terrible thing should have happened to us,” Miss Harlow cried. “As for the note left by Paul, I have no idea what it means. ‘Begs Off’ on Dinner Party “This ‘frightful w'rong’ he apparently believed he had done me is all a mystery. I can’t imagine what it means. “There was nothing between us that I can think of that would have caused him to do this.” Miss Harlow then retold her story of her last meeting with Bern. She said she stayed at her mother’s home Saturday night because she had worked late at the studio. On Sunday, she said, she worked most of the day, and then drove to the Benedict canyon home where she had lived with Bern since their marriage on July 2. She and Bern talked about a dinner party to be held that night at Mrs. Bello’s home, and she left in her car for her mother’s residence. "Paul was to follow but he did not appear,” she said. “I telephoned to him, and he begged off, saying he was tired. He told me to stay all night with my mother. That was the last time we ever spoke.” Miss Harlow was interviewed by Condaffer and Ryan in the presence of Louis B. Mayer, Meyer Silverberg, Mayer's attorney, Bello and Dr. Harold B. Barnard, one of her physicians. The detectives said later they believed it doubtful that Miss Harlow's condition will permit her to obey a subpena calling her as a witness at an inquest over Bern's body set for Tuesday by Coroner Frank Nance. ZEP SPANS SEA AGAIN Graf Lands at Friedrichshafen After Flight From BraziL By United Press FRIEDRICHSHAFEN, Sept. 7. The Graf Zeppelin landed today, completing a return flight from Pernambuco, Brazil, in eighty-seven hours.