Entered as second-class mail matter August 20 at the Post Office at Tryon N. C. undet the Act of Congress. March 3, 1879. 1c %ite Urytrn pstiltr pulJctin lc Vol. 4. TRYON, N.C., MONDAY, FEB. 9 1931 Kiwanis Meets Tuesday ■ 1 P. M. -at Mimosa . Last fall a lady found a golf club in Gillette Woods. The Bulletin advertised it No response- 'The owner of the club had playing for a while and didn’t miss it Warm weather brought out a desire to play and the loss was discovered. A lady friend remembered reading the Ad in the Bulletin several months ago, so the owner came in this morning and was happy to get her club back, and it cost only thirty cents for the Ad. So please remember this: The Bulletin does not cover "Dixie like the dew” but goes to places we never heard of be fore. From the most isolated parts of Polk county and down below Lan drum people come in to ask about things advertised in the Bulletin. Mr. T.H.Coggy received a card the other day from a friend in Warwick, N. Y who had read our Anniversary edition, hfr. Weigel reports having read it on his tour of the Pacific Ocean. Everywhere it goes it is an ad vertisement to this section if our Ads show progress and our news civic and social activity, The golf club incident also shows how well people remember even the sma//est items itt the Bulletin. . ' , Forest Fare Being Checked The Spartanburg Herald editorial which was published in Friday’s Bulletin has brought protests from Tryon Citizens who state that efforts had been made to extinguish /he fire, and in many places completely checked, but the fire was so big and burning in so many places that it all could not be put out at once. Many counties in Western North Carolina have been damaged by fire within 'the past few weeks. •.. Miss Anne Nash, Garden Speaker ' ' Spartanburg Herald v The Gardeners held a delightful meeting Friday morning with Miss Anne Nash of Tryon, as guest of honor. MissVNssh, who has one of the most charming of Tryon gardens, gave a talk on the lessons she has learned in gardening. She told of her experiences in clearing away part of a pine ridge to builcr her garden, of the difficulties she encountered and surmounted and of the pleasures a garden can bring. It was unusual the amount of teal gardenly advice and good counsel on landscaping, on -the delight of keeping a privacy with hedges and walls, on the need of a resting place in which to enioy the beauty that has been created. It was a charming talk and one which the clud was fortunate t 6 hear. /"> . ' r /:'v- ■' i . ti ' • t ' c . A ''' ' ' Est. 1-31-28