Newspapers / The Tryon Daily Bulletin … / May 23, 1931, edition 1 / Page 1
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Entered as second-class mail matter August 20, at the Post Office at Tryon, N. C. under the Act of Congress, March 3, 1879 t&fyr tErjrdtt Hail# %\xihtm .TRYON, N. C. SATURDAY, MAY 23, 1931. Vol. 4 The Blackstock Road Spartanburg Herald While Federal highway No. 176 between Spartanburg and Landrum is under construction this summer, the detour will be byway of what we know in this county as the Blackstock road, one of the historic roads of the Revolutionary days of this county. That old road followed the ridge between the watershed of the Tigers and Pacolets and ran across Spar tanburg county without “crossing water.” Sections of it are still known as the “Blackstock road” and it is one of these sections that the public will travel over this summer and fall, as it follows the state highway de tour to the mountains At The Churches PRESBYTERIAN: 1.1 a.m. at Tryon. Subject: “Grounds for Confidence.” METHODIST: No service due to Baccalaureate sermon. EPISCOPAL: Holy Communion 8 a.m. Morning prayer and sermon 11 a.m. \ CONGREGATIONAL: 11 a.m. Dr. J. B. Clark, preaching. “Singing” Dog T onight Beans Tryon Richards, three and half year old Fox terrier, will entertain the seventh grade at their party tonight at the Country Club by “sing’ing.” This dog has been trained by its owners, Mr. and Mrs. M.A. Richards to “sing” by the instrument, Rolmonica. Trout Season Open On account of arrests being made by the county warden, an appeal was made to director Hargett at Raleigh and he writes: “It is not illegal to take Trout in the streams of Polk County at this season of the year by any kind of pole and line, rod and reel fishing.” So go ahead ana fish. Trgon’s Loss Florida’s Gain The New York Times of yesterday states that Joseph Widener, president of the Jockey Club, will spend $500,000 this summer improving the Miami race track. Florida just recently passed a bill allowing horse racing. Mr. Widener and associates had planned to put up a race track here if the legislature had passed the racing bill and would probably had to spend a million dollars since there is no track already available. Advo cates of the bill claim that horse racing is nothing like the old time race track, that it is on a high plane and an asset to the community. Est. 1-31-28
The Tryon Daily Bulletin (Tryon, N.C.)
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May 23, 1931, edition 1
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