newsparade \ rj|ytT nemo I Moon Theatre Admission- II and 16c TODAY ONLY Warren \Villiums, I‘atricia Kllis, Genevieve Tobin, Lyle Talbot —in “TIIK CASK OF THE LtJCKY LKOS” Comwly Wednesday—One Day Only Louisa M Aleotts—in “ little; MEN” II you liked “Little Women” by all means see this. mmammmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmammmmammmmm i "hit THE DECK sfjL ' WITH DANCING * SAM S MIDSKIP- 4/ « E A GALE 1 OF f I ife. ■2^ h Kt2QXL^IUUU*tikU THEATRE ' 8 j 3 DAYS —Thurs., Fri. and Sat, I ___ j. ' & Normandie, new -a.se on relief, j and must he absorbed by private in j dustries. And it is these people we arc most concerned about at pres | ont. j Next to this com as in onr duties I which arc most important at Uiis time lis social security, which is soon to | come before our legislators in the form j of un-employment insurance and old | age pensions. And through the om j ployment service must come the or- I deriy i-egis'ering and recording the | actiV'fi of Ihe wnrKor which will < import. •Hit ’(i ihe employer as well ias the employ:e in the administra i tion of a sotu t policy >r the benefit of all conee. oed With the above facts in view we make an appeal to all employers to I use the service, which is free of i charge. By so doing you will as ! sist those in charge of the empley ! ment offices who are here to help thouiands of unieniployed w/brkers. who are registered with us, to be ! placed in gainful occupations, and |at ltie same time lessen the relief load which is burdening our tax payers voday. Relief to this condition will come i when th no has been an adjustment | in the labor market, and every work | or has been fitted in, to be occupation for which-he is best suited. To do this , the employment office will take an | important, part with the cooperation I of the people. In conclusion we wjsh to say the ) telephone number of your local em ; ploynio/ht office is 479-W. Your calls | for help will be greatly appreciated, j and you will find a helping hand | ready to assist you in the selection of I a suitable person for your needs. By giving us a call may save you i much time and worry. Besides help us to build up a service and which HENDERSON, (N. C.) DAILY DISPATCH, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 31. 1935. OF 1935 IN PHOTOGRAPHS No. 6-June will he a credit to our section as well as useful and important in this day day of re-edjlistment of industrial and social life. We have registered with us workers j gMURDERUPSTAIR% CHAPTER 40 "DELIA WAS right then, wasn't, she?" i questioned, picking up the j letter that concerned Grace. “Mrs. j Starmont did come into the kitchen yesterday between 5 arid C o’clock?’ •‘.She did,# Mrs. Penny.” admitted Grace, “but 1 lied because 1 didn’t want her accused of taking that knife.” “P.y the way. about this Mrs. Uippe for whom you worked? Is she | still in Europe?’’ I hoped she was- ■ in some inaccessible place whore Par- | robot couldn’t get hold of her. “►she died there a few years ago. j 1 saw the notice in the papers." That was a relief. Now Larrabee , couldn’t question, her. 1 could give j him her letter of recommendation about Grace without fear. 1 started to the door but Grace wasn't ready to go yet. "Mrs. Penny, there’s something I ; want to tell you. I didn’t say any- j thing about it last night because 1 j felt too had to talk. You're not go- I ins lo like what I’m going to sav.” i “Well V" “It's about Mrs. Upborn and I thought you should be the first to know I stiffened W hat did Groce know I about Lucy" Wiij did she think l should be the lifs'l lo know? Was j' k about Dr. Giidcrnu? Was it some- ! thing Lucy , had done- the night j Andrew Darien was killed when j Grace was sleeping in the room next j-' to hers? "1 didn’t say anything to you yes ter*lay afternoon because Delia was! tlu re and she- would have told Lieu- | tenant Larrabee. Hut Mrs. Lpliarn i was in the ki-ehen about five min tites in all. talking to me. showing! me the jacket. Yon know she’s al- J ways friendly.'’ Grace was right. ' Lucy is friendly. Often in an after- j noon, she looked in the kitchen and ! chatted with Grace and Delia. “Delia was upstairs between 5 and 6:30, straightening ?>p. so she wasn’t there when most of the people came in and went oog Weil, Mrs, tlplinrn * opened the knife drawer. I saw her do it. I- didn’t think anything about It at the Time, because site pokes around while she’s talking, and it seemed natural to me. When the knife was missing t thought about 1 It. and was—afraid Not that Mrs. Upham would —kill anyone. ythe wouldn't as far as I know, but open ing - the drawer " “You may he mistaken, Grace.” “No. I distinctly saw her open ihe drawer, and then close it.” “You didn't' see her take anything from It?" "No. but she had the jacket over her arm. She could have liiddefy t.Ho knife under the jacket and I Wouldn’t have known the difference. I’m not saying- she did. because I didn’t see her. Hut I thought you Ought to know." Yes. I ought to know. I heard my self saying, faintly. I also heard my self say that Mrs. Upham wouldn’t Take the knife under any circum stances. she had probably opened drawers hundreds of t.imes in the kitchen and closed them again. That it meant nothing. All the while I *ras thinking of what the doctor had loid me about Lucy, and hoping that Grace wouldn’t see the anxiety that :must be written all over my face. “And another tiling. It may not be important, but Delia was in love with Mr. Hemingway ” : “Delia —in love!” I exclaimed. Grace nodded. ■ "She used to rave and rave about him—silly like, about him being her Ideal. When he smiled at her she was awfully happy. 1 think it was the first time she’d ever been in love. :1 told her time and rime again she'd have to fight it—and she said she’d try. I didn’t want her to get into .troubie —she was such a child, and I jdidn’t trust Mr. Hemingway. Delia wasn't , attractive, but—-well, you never can tell about men." i “Did Mr. Hemingway ever give Ther any encouragement?” “t don’t know. Tuesday morning, before the —before we found out about Mr. Darien, Delia was singing end whistling all the time she area ; ' A :v '• '• , \. .• •• • • iift V; fr L • : — — : Death toll of 12e.lia was too honest to steal, but she took them to sew* on the buttdn —sort of wanted to do something for Mr. Hemingway. 1 guess. A fool ish idea, but she. was foolish about her love for Mr. Hemingway. She’d done that before —taken things.fronf his room and Ins laundry bag, mended them and put them back. She always wanted to do things 1 for him. if you know what 1 mean, kike a Childs she’d'come and tell me what she had done." * * “Hut. she didn’t sew the’ on, Grace, did shoV’ ; l knew she hadn't because the gloves had been tound in her room with the button still missing; Grace didn't know that. Because the only persons who knew were the police, myself and Mr. Hemingway, lie had been questioned about the gloves In Delia’s room. And although he ad mitted they were his, he claimed hei didn't- know how they got there. "&he hadn’t yesterday afternoon; because she said she’d rummaged around in your sewing bitnc and couldn't find a button to match. She wanted to go out and buy one, but of course she couldn't—with what had happened and all. Yesterday afternoon she still had the gloves in the jTocket of’ her' uniform." 1 considered what Grase had told me. It had seemed foolish to me when Darrabee grilled Mr. Heming way about the gloves. Why. if he had murdered Delia, had he left his gloves behind as a clue? No sense to that. If he had worn liis gloves into her room to do away with flngerpnnts, had murdered Delia, he most certainly would have taken the gloves away with him. No mur derer would be so careless as to leave his own gloves In a room of death. But now it was different. Delia was the one who had taken the gloves from Hemingway's overcoat pocket In the hall closet From (Copyright} clerical workers; - stenographers fend typist; salesmen anu saleswomen; operators of heavy machinery; truck drivers; laborers, white and colored; cooks, maids, yard men and janitors; Monday evening until yesterday afternoon they had been with the gir\ Wasn’t it natural that the gloves should have been in her uni form pocket when Larrabee and 1 took tier upstairs? 1 hadn’t noticed them, but they must have been there. They might have fallen to the floor when she undressed. They might have been disturbed by the murderer. A new thought came to ray mind, and 1 put another question to Grace. “Do you think that: Delia would have admitted Mr. Hemingway to her room?” “I don’t know that, Mrs. Penny. You mean last night** And that tn* murdered her?” “I mean just that." Larrabee and 1 had discussed the'"*' admittance of someone into the room. Someone Delia knew. Be cause L didn't know of Delia’s a flee 7 tibn tor* Hdmfttgway, I didtt’i oon aider that she had let a man into her room. Besides I was grasping a straw that would lead me away from tAicy. denything. j "Delia wa3 ifr her nightgown when we found her. Grace. WojuLl she have let in Mr. HemingWjay. dressed ip her nightgown?” “She didn’t have a wrapper or?a bathrobe. Mrs. Penny. Maybe ysu didn’t knqw; bbt she didn’t. She wjis making one but it wasn’t finished.” I didn’t know, but I was glad to find out. That explained quite k hit. I continued: < -: J “You knew her better than I did. Do . you think if Mr. Hemingway kndeked on her door, called to her. thkt she would have gone to the door dfessed in her nightgown?” "She might have gone to the door, opened it a little to talk to him. I’m almost Sure she would answer him, Mrs. Penny. Then he might have pushed the door wider-and entered. Yes, I think that is possible.” ” That was assuming Mr. Heming way didn’t know his gloves were in Delia’s room. If Grace was right, he didn’t. I was sure Grace was right. It was simpler, much simpler to imagine him going into Delia’* room without knowledge of the gloves. The gloves had bothered me a good deal. ‘‘l’m going to tell Lieutenant Lar rabee this, Grace, because I think he ought to know—at least about the gloves, and Delia taking them, lie can draw his own conclusions. He’ll ask you questions about Delia, ar.d I want you to tell him what you've told me." (TO BE CONTINVEfrt > j®| ' JBffifeaß Hannon Waky, I .-ft, i-j convicted of kidnap / JPf% r" \ haeuser and sentenced J| Mrs. Margarfet Wa* , in prison. William C ’- —, . carpenters; brickmasons; farmers. There are registered in this office all class of workers needed. Eligibility Rule Is Given for 1936 Cotton Contracts “ State College Station, Raleigh, Dec. j 31.—Cotton must, have teen planted t on the land in at least two years j since 1930, one of which must have : been 1931 or 1935, to make a farm eligible for contracts in 1936, accord ing to the regulations governing eli gibility as embodied in the new four i year cotton contract to be offered to producers shortly, J. F. Criswell, in charge of the cotton adjustment pro gram in Nort v ' Carolina, has announc ed. If the entire cotton base was rent i ed to the Secretary of Agriculture in ! 193 t and 1935 that would be equiva lent to planting for the two years re quired. cr credit would be given for planting for one year if the cotton base was rented in either 1934 or ,1935. If uncontrolable natural causes prevented planting in either 1934 or 1935 or both, credit for planting ! would be given for one year but in that event cotton must have been j planted during another year sitice 1930 to make the farm eligible for a contract in 1936. A farm must also have a base acre age of one whole acre or more, to | qualify for a 1936 contract, Criswell concluded. 1835 —Gen. Duncan L. Clinch, with 200 regulars and 460 volunteers, beat the Indians at Ouithlacoochle, Fla., in the first year of the stubborn 7- year war with the Seminole Indians of Florida. VANCE THEATRE NEW POLICY ANNOUNCEMENT J Beginning Wednesday, January Every Wednesday Bargain Day Everybody tor MATINEE and NIGHT The VANCE in now HEATED with “FORCED DRAFT HEAT” “We Guarantee You Comfort” - -1- ..." 7- Z C. C. Whitacre of Wake Forest has entirely taken over the Vance Theatre and will appreciate the Patronage of the people of Henderson. We will endeavor to give you the best entertainment possible on our screen and the best STAGE SHOWS available. Mr. B. W. Birchfield will remain with the Theatre as local Manager. ~ Wednesday—-One Day Only ciisiii«EiMr "in a ■ ■ Monastery TOtlfil Garden” Show Starts Wednesday 1:00 T. JVL LAST TIMES TODAY Barbara Stanwyck—-in “Red Salute” i . . PAGE THREE W~ ’ :4sißUc 3 : 7 :■*&>: J Stanley Baldwin sue- . ceeds Ramsay Mac- Don aid as British prime minister Eva Coo ilies in elec tric chair at Sing Sing for the murder of he-v han d y m an, Harry Wright. I 1860 Frederick G. Bonfils, publish- I er of the Denver Post, born at Troy. Mo. Died Feb. 2. 1933. AMVSE M E N T S ■Bhe ~ STEVENSON T II E A T R E i BAST TIMES TODAY JAMES CAGNEY —In— “FRISCO KID” j Added: l’athe News—Comedy Cartoon Midnight Show I Tonight at 11P. M.. Showing:—(On The Stage) “VARIETY | GIRLS REVUE” On The Screen “TWO FISTED” With Bee Tracey ! Tomorrow “The Pay Off” with •Tames Dunn, Patricia Elite Jack Pot $50.00 We Use-Local Labor )