ENTERED AS SECOND-CLASS MATTER AUGUST 20, 1928, AT THE POST OFFICE AT TRYON, N. C., UNDER THE ACT OF CONGRESS, MARCH 3, 1879 ®lje (Erynn Vol. 8 TRYON, N. C., TUESDAY, JUNE 18, 1935 Est. 1-31-28 COMMUNITY LETTERS Mrs. Howard Bissell in Buffalo, N. Y., and Fred S. Ford of Detroit, Michigan, renewed their subscrip tion to The Bulletin today. Try onites who have business affairs that keep them out of town show their interest in Tryon by keeping their subscription renewed for The Bulletin or The Polk County News *wnd some have both papers sent to /them. Every time you give The Bulletin a news item you not only help the paper to be more interest ing in Tryon but you help to keep hundreds of out-of-town friends interested in you and Tryon. Mrs. Anne Bosworth Greene, who leaves today," is having The Bulletin for warded to her in Vermont; Bishop Touret is getting it in Massachu setts; Mjrs. Banning and the Wash burns in Minnesota; Miss Colgate in New Hampshire; the J. C. Kim berlys in Neenah, Wisconsin; Miss Cornelia Williams in Maryland: Mrs. H. M. Fraser . in Floirida; Kales, Cr.aipo, Flint, and Beaumont in Detroit; Pinckney Williams in Indiana; T. H. Coggey in New Jersey; Mrs. A. J. Dempsey in Kansas; Mrs. Leonard Carpenter in Canada; and many others. Re member when you send in a news you sire writing to your /friends elsewhere. Mrs. John M. Morehead and son of Charlotte have taken Dr. Haisch’s log cabin on Melrose Avc.j for the summer. Little Miss Annie Sims of Green wood, S. C., is visiting Miss Hope Schilletter. Miss Betty Doubleday left today to spend the summer at a camp in New York. J. Hugh Rabun of Asheville is visiting Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Creasman. Strange As It Seems “In ‘Strange as It Seems’ fea ture run in many dailies by John Hix there recently appeared a statement to the effect that a pine raid an oak in Tryon grew together ill four different places. Since it has appeared in print the office of Tryon’s enterprising daily, The Bulletin, which enjoys the distinc tion of being the “littlest” daily printed ,has been deluged with telephone calls wanting to know where the freak tree growth is located. “On the surface it appears that in a small town like Ihe charm ing mountain crty just above Spartanburg such a curiosity would be easily located, or it might be that like the four-leaf clover le gend it escaped the eyes of those who sought it everywhere except at home. Anyway The Bulletin stands in line to get at the root of the matter, for its patrons and readers want to get a line on the combination tree —an oak and a pine mingling together in unison is something decidedly out of the ordinary in plant life.”—Spartan burg Journal. And the Journal didn’t know that -one of Spartanburg’s leading citi zens, A. M. Law, owns these unusual trees in Tryon. Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Blackwell and children and Mr. Blackwell’s par ents, Mr. and Mrs. F. O. Black well, leave Welnesday for Engle wood, N. J. While in Englewood Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Blackwell will be the guests of Mr. and Mrs. F. O. Blackwell for two months. During their absence Dr. Elfrink and son. Bill, who are at the H. C. Metcalf home in Columbus will occupy the J. S. Blackwell home in Gillette Woods.