Search America's historic newspaper pages from 1770-1963 or use the U.S. Newspaper Directory to find information about American newspapers published between 1690-present. Chronicling America is sponsored jointly by the National Endowment for the Humanities external link and the Library of Congress. Learn more
Image provided by: University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Library, Chapel Hill, NC
Newspaper Page Text
I Sins | # fr : \ Settle fi Ail- 1 «* I >v<s Many others will buy a much «r larger space than this to wish «£ >’ ou a Morrv Christmas and 'igy '*appy New Year, but no one can possibly wish you any more happiness, or be more thankful 'S- h>r your patronage than we arc. * £ f 'I \ Vance Cleaning Co. § .v a * & l*lease accept this hearty, sincere £ greeting- that your CHRISTMAS £ may be merry and your NEW jS! £ YEAR filled with happiness. £ 4? At this season of the year we & f want to stop lonir enough in our business activities to express our "•& blanks for the many kindness(»s & ? tMat have bt‘en shown us durin°' £ the past year, and extend each of i# •z you i>Teetinirs of the season. i!R | S. Hayes Grocery 1 v Phones 247-248 « ; ._~— • a & ~ —— , —____ .\i-« v a *s* -v ft * at >2 \ .-..is £ g* • ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦ 4£* •" 'rf Av*. | A Wish For Christmas | .V A « * 4? ft "a ft "a 2 •.' ■% ; >5, a! a ; - at 4* 1 - 4* • /*: :. is ' \ •• 1 . A warm lire and a creaking* board. Lights and music ss; «; «uhl song. Jest and story. Cheerful voices and wide- jgi *< ! V eyed children. Bright thoughts. Romance, Security and a contented heart. This is our Christmas wish for ftC ?■: . 4? ft you, and to it we add the hope that 1936 will bring you 4? 4&* a opportunity to achieve and enjoy in no small measure. : £\ ft 1 4$ ft 4?! VYe wish, also, to thank our many patrons for the wond- ft • «. t 4^ ft erful Christmas business we have received and hope "a ft ’rf .ft that your Gift from our store was a real surprise, and & just what you wanted! ft 4? *0 ** ft at ti* * 0 * rarammrasiraaMiiuiw §! ft a ft 4# ft 4? 1 Watkins Hardware Co. | >. 1 ' ft 4?;« ft ' .4? ! ' ft 2f V ♦♦♦♦♦♦ *2*s ■ ' ft 1 "jfl 1 ft -3?; HENDERSON. (N. C.) DAILY DISPATCH, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2 4, 1935. A imvvvm ili% #»■■■* ■■»#» sbf mi 11DnCD 11n vTA luC ’i B v B Bftß Jp Bt mgm Hpp BBi B B vHK B B f JB IjjJ 4^ ADAM BLISS chati nit ;<.*> ’ HBMINIiWA V come through \«*t boss?” Sergeant Hoks askerl, sit'ing down to finish tits coffee. Larrubce frowned as he j, u t {he key in ha j'oeke! and the vase on Mi* stnk. I'lie petals of -the rose which had I •••on a bud two days ago. silt hr red off on the tile "Noi vet He's still sticking to his story that Monday .evening when he crime home from his office at 6 o'clock, he put his overcoat in 'he hall closet nriaer the stairs. The Bloxes were in the, side pocket as usual As fie hasn't had occasion to use the coat since, lie didn’t notice that the gloves were gone. Stolon, be sr»>s. lie may bo right, and he may he wrong 1 don’t know what to believe. This case is driving me goofy " If it was getting on his nerves what about mine? With Grace col inpsing la st my lit when sbe heard the news about Delia. broken ir, a blunt fashion b\ l.urrabee when he " ent back to the living room Grace so ill ties morning that I had told her to s’,ay in bed as long ns she ould the whole morning if she wished Me. with breakfast on my hands, lunch and dinner, too. if she didn't onto down The house to be straightened up—and Delia’s mother to reoeivf when she came this after noon I low ev* i. t ivi e d be no regular dinner ton-- hi, t derailed We oil If lii t sll , low n ;i i the 1 1 iaiii -- room ’•'blf ill io n i lav until this Ihni" wa • ‘learo.j up Jhl g, t up some on of a buffet dinner for to nl'-ht. pm n ai the .limp ■ room and I'd e\ <-■: \ l in.| \ help himself that is, if the' wai'P-d to From M|.- w a’■ ’hr or •U[.a id • of Hi, 1 1 \ i nr* room had; laketi I..ii raiie, s news last night. I ] hdn * think any of tl:<y"i were going :o fee i like dinner tonight Or break,.-i: t of him it. for that "nl’.'r I 1 1 i• sst i ion- mt,, the i> my t oom wit Ii i .arralu-e lap I had iu.-ird 'bout 1,1.-- leunl .sjiell later a detailed report. Grrnc had fainted, p'ump on the! boor, and si ruck her head a terr.bie b!m\ Lu< v liad sr-toamed 1 heard the s< ’ I o*l i n .i T tllf floor piiuiif’ where I was oallin;: Western I'lnon with a telegram t'ui Mrs Can tall ! Mrs. Sttii inoiii hadn't done ap> t idn;>. j l.arrabce admit *.<) tn. i look, : at ; him With Wide •■larili" eyes tlv eojo: ! 'raining from her !a<-o dan, t had started to orv Mpe I ’ambi idc, had • a*id over and o\er again how t« rril.ie ! d war- Conrad Withers had .Jt..|ped | his clgaret on the rug. and no ,o,r ' bad noticed it burtilnr- through the pile until latr-r. when Sergeant r;.•- j stamped out the vmoul, let-in- tire The rug was ruined There was •< I b*te in if as big as a s;me,-r. and the ••k floor underneath it was scorched.! too PVon now thera »u an odoi ! The growth of a deer's antlers is a. mystery and a wonder comparable to the mysteries of the migrations of the HI or the social organization of the ants. iot ourut-d N»rni h in the room That was at II List ntyht. nJ now j it was 7 the in-Mt morning | n the I Hieantiiiie I’d iiad about an hour of I troubled, delirious sleep, what with waiting on Gra- e and thmking about winil had liappened in the last tv.o days. If my hah hadn't been gray already, it certainly would have turned now There was Andrew 1 »;ii icri dead. Murder, d billed by my new- carving knife. There was Delia Randall, whom no one could want to harm, dead. Killed with my old carving knife. Ir my house. "Why should anyone want to \il! her?" I had uttered my thoughts aloud not expecting an answer, but Kanabec was replying "I think Delia was convenient for the murderer. Mrs. Penny There is such a thing as ’he lust to kill, you knciw, and once having tasted of murder, the slayer wanted another victim. Del'a was handy. She was alone upstairs in Iter fourth floor 'oom. The murderer probably heard us take her up there bv the back way. and the murderer, as you know, had a new weapon this time. "It was easy to slip up the back -stairs alter we were gone, persuade Delia to open Lite door under some pretext, then kill her. When she was dead—for Doc Maxwell said she died instantly, it was nothing for the mur derer to hurry out of the room, lock the door, hide ’he key and go down by the back strut's again, into Ids or her own room Probabtr the { whole opornt on of going upstairs and murdering Delia took only 10' min rites if th:,t long "I never dreamed that murder i would be committed itgrrii ~j soon t thought that, with the knde a" I'tartd. the murderer wot Id vcaU urriil < everyone was ,< i ep Thi- time tin murderer wa-- wiser than w#> wore, lie struck while there was time, be fore the hue an-t < ry for the knitv j' •tai'tcd M\ the time we -■•tarto,! to! search, the dec) was done, tire knife well eonooajra] in Doha’s heart. My i short -sigh ted tic's, that’s all" I didn t agree with him l-.ven if he had started to senn it as soon wo got Delia upstairs, h<> wouldti f '•a.ve been ptu--!; enon-.:h i’>\ th. time la g,n ho men to-,>th,-r. Del a would hate been dead anyway •'Delia s murder, then was without motive?" 1 asked "I'm -m-lincd to think •~> That nj was done becaute n! a lint » t > kilt 1 hat Ita* ivt y killed one*, out mu: r j , lerer rtrnek again beeaure Iv btp'l ’ to Some urge tve can? define the , hr' to kill \\ , ran t look i n t,-, horn' ,'idal bralnr. and ■ m nr* out mu: d f rer Is. ;* vteil dffjtted mental race 1 "Darien v rnurep-r perhaps, was j : tone with purpose,, although w l,at ’he put;,use was, stumps trie On<r ; -,i homicide statts 'ds work there’s no : Motpois him until he's caught and < locked up IJut there’s no occasion | tCovi/itvhtJ ! rfvNevvf^l ybrfeli f * Hdv »|3]«PS A wJoll i HI-"--- 1 Now York. Dec. 21—Off the Arm: Charles Scribner Grant and Lewis Vandergrift Lee. descendants of the opposing generals in the War Between tlie States, are roommates at Dart mouth and are frequently to be seen over holidays arm-in-arming it through the flick-flack of Manhat tan . . . Thomas Edgelow, the fie lionecr, is an authority on the ro mantic past of Grenwich Village, where he lives and he likes to re ' mind friends that the arty settlement was built in 1922 because there had j been a yellow fever epidemic in New York and folks wanted ..a retreat in | the “suburbs.” Exchange with an attendant at the j Uquariuiru “How’s business?’’ j “Without the penguins, business | would be a flop.” ... There is a long er line at noon waiting for a glimpse | of the penguin pool than is to be seen •seeking tickets for a “Jumbo” niati- I nee . . . Cminne Griffith, that lovely lady of the supet'-silents, is headed for ! Broadway stardom after the New ! Year . . . Carlyle Blackwell, anoth er flicker veteran, is hound the same route ... Alice-Leonc Moats contends in the current issue of the Saturday Evening Dost that celebrities are shy souls and not to he spied abroad as we ro mantic chattel ists imply. ... Excuse me. Miss Alice, hut baloney! . . . Celebrities are the most hysterical of exhibitionists and if you drop into the Stork Club. “21”, The House or Morgan or Reuben’s of a dawning you’ll probably be stepped on by a couple who will hand you calling cards and demand a mention in your next article. ... In Reuben’s, for in stance, the other a. m„ I spotted Jane Cawl, June Knight, Irving Berlin and Ray Bolger ... All in the space of 10 minutes ... Maybe you don’t step out late enough in your search for the gold-fish lads and lassies ... When Douglas Fairbanks films j “Marco Folo” he will do it in China, i aboard a huge yacht upon which a j complete movie studio has been built j . . . Opening scenes will be shot in j Venice, Marco’s home town . . . I i wonder how Ethel Merman manages i to keep awake with such heavy eye- j lashes ... I also wonder if they’re the stuck-on variety, but that’s not gallant. I know ... i a m told that when Hauptmann was apprised his Supreme Court plea had been denied tie didn’t gulp, blink or show any emotion whatsoever ... If so, h~c shoutd r'cccivc this year’s Iron Alan award ... Since a crop cover is important to protect soil against erosion, plant the roughest land to timber use more of j the rougher land now in crop for pas ture introduce more legumes into ro tation practice strip-cropping on long slopes. j lot furtliet alarm Mrs. Penny Rola suujg to stay in the kitchen null vnu all day. Ik s suit's to be pet •cutal custodian or all the kni\ea in the house If >ou want one you’ll have to ask him. There’s not going to he a weapon, a murderous weapon, around. Even manicure implements have been removed from all tit* rooms ” “Any grumbling, boss?" cauie fro<w Go-f- who was on bis second cup <jC coffee " Only from Mrs. I’pharri. Sbr re fused st first to give up her sewing scissors. Says she needs ’’hem to flntsli n jacket she’s making. I took them away from her. though.” Lucy —the only one who objected. I trembled, although ! hope not vis ibly As soon as I decently could g*-t to a phone without being overheard I intended to call Dr. Rudemar to see *f he were back in town If he wa*. I wanted him to come out right: away "Our murderer doesn't seem to like anything smaller than a carving knife, boss. What do you think of getting a great big one and planting it on the buffet—right where our murderer will see it at dinner. Then, if it disappears, search everybody and arrest the one with the knlfg." Ross expounded his plan eagerly. Larrabee lrowned. "I've thought of that. I've thought of everything My brain is weak from wondering and planning what to do No, your pian is full of dan. gcr. Ross. What if we did do it, planted the knife? What’s to pre vent the murderer from striking again before we can make' a search ? "It's too dangerous. I den t want to -re another carving knife sticking in somebody's heart in this house Uut murderer Is cle\er. with a keen, alert bralri lie is probably waiting tor another Lance. Our murderer is sneaky, wily, in addition to being « lever You notice he doesn't buy knives Too smart. Steal them in tca t. and docs it so cleverly that no one realizes when they are stolen "Vo. I m no l going to plant any kntv-:- around this house I'm go! rtf to lin’d the murderer instead I'v* ''O' til's to go on’- he drew the key I font his pof-ket - -"that's something Mot*- than I’ve had before Some, bo :v in the kvin« room might haw ■eon this key being dropped In the i-ud \n.-e Certainly, somebody up. preached »he . vate during the two hour attda half Mrs Pen n\ v board ers were la ’ hat room The \a- f- W Mi, on an end 'able b\ the .]a-. en port \f.\t to it war an ash tmv and a tarvy box of mat.-hr, r;n, i W.a- there all the «Vben l>« com-is ba-k from headouarter? |it ask him Burke came in from headquarter* am! thri e were three officer sitt ng around my k p-he n la b; P d* in -n-r '.•offer and eating the toast 1 rn-me (TC Bh] COKTIKi: /:/>! Wc thought the flay had come when mi man beings no longer had the right o play the god; but dictators and heir ways prove that day is not here ft. ¥■: % I TO YOU I 1 AND YOURS: I « % | . 3 1 A Merriest I £ * | Merry Christmas f —And— ’ 1 |R » I A Happiest 1 1 Happy New Year I !| ■ S We Wish You A Double Portion of Everything Good You Could Wish For Yourself. 40 iS ** | DEPARTMENT STORE | 5 * w FOR A BETTER SCOTCH & SODA' ■^oV6|S€| •Stf I Best Wishes I ji F ° r a i 1 Hkrrtf (fuislnuis I « » ££ .?j May the Christmas carols of hope -|j K *£s and cheer ring through your jf| home during Christmas and the M New Year. May every heart be -jjp .if lnippy from the time the Children if & IK awaken in the wee hours on g Clnistmas morning until long 3 & alter every Mother and Father if if are soundly asleep that night, and may every day of the hoii- M S days and all of the 366 days of & : £ the coming year be just like it. # if We want you to know that we if K appreciate you and your patron- fK "IK age during the past and hope that ££ jy we will merit more of it in the fu :£ tuie. We send this message, not if jf-j. if as a matter of form or custom’ # \jjjf but because we mean every K ■ # KL word of it. 1 Parker’s Drug Store § 2 “The Rexall Store’’ M W'V && **< 1 . vVAVA>;»;v>K>;v>i»;»HVA> : Av;vv;vv;i>iv>^v;v>’»;«gy;v>;vv.vVAv;»i« PAGE THREE