Newspapers / The Tryon daily bulletin. / June 7, 1935, edition 1 / Page 1
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ENTERED AS SECOND-CLASS MATTER AUGUST 20, 1928, AT THE POST OFFICE AT TRYON, N. C., UNDER THE ACT OF CONGRESS, MARCH 3, 1879 3% Vol. 8 TRYON, N. C., FRIDAY, JUNE 7, 1935 Golf Results In the Tryon-Forest City golf tournament Thursday afternoon at the Tryon Country club Forest City won 8-2. Jack O. Lyle and Lefty Taylor of Forest City de feated Nelson Jackson, Jr., and Larry Brooks by three points; Earl Rion and F. P. Bacon of Tryon won over their Forest City oppon ents, G. Williams and M. L. Ed wards by two points. Lefty Flynn and Dr. Bishop lost to Frank Howard and Mark Watson by three points; Julian Calhoun and F. P. Bowes lost to Dr. R. L. Rhinehart and R. R. Blanton by two points. Vacation Bible School The Eirskine Memorial Sunday school will begin a two week Va cation Bible school for all young people of the community begin ning Monday. Children of all de nominations are invited. Lynn Carson In Hospital, Wounded Lynn Carson, well-known colored drayman who was married recent ly th e second time against the wishes of his deceased wife’s chil dren, is in the hospital with a wound said to have been inflicted by his daughter. A member of the family gave out the following written statement: “To whom it may concern: In a family disagree ment over the family chain being broken, Eva Mozell Logan stabbed her father, but not serious, when she and him were scuffling over a small knife which he believed was hers.” SPORTS Tryon Tennis teams lost to Forest City on Wednesday after noon and th e Golf team lost to Forest City on Thursday after noon. Both matches were played at the Tryon Country club. Tryon’s baseball team lost a game Thurs day afternoon to Inman 11-7. The local team will play league rivals Saturday afternoon at Brevard. Not So Bad Through the courtesy of C. P. Rogers The Bulletin has the follow ing interesting information: “According to a booklet, ‘Wes tern North Carolina, A State Within a State’, gotten out by The Asheville Citizen-Times, and cov ering 18 Western North Carolina counties Polk county was third in the ratio of Federal tax returns, having one return for each 126 of population, and was fourth in per capita value of farm crops with a value of $56.00 per inhabitant. The county was eighth in literacy, having 7% of illiterates.” Interesting Card Mrs. C. W. Kittrell writes from Cheraw, S. C.: “I went out to our old family homestead about a hundred or more years old, and took a picture of the last living slave of my grandfather. He is eighty-nine years old and owns forty acres of our old plantation with ai home on it—the old slave home that was on it in my grand father’s day. The homestead tract had sixteen hundred acres on it.” Est. 1-31-2 S
June 7, 1935, edition 1
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