Newspapers / The Tryon Daily Bulletin … / Nov. 18, 1935, edition 1 / Page 1
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ENTERED AS SECOND-CLASS MATTER AUGUST 20, 1928, AT THE POST OFFICE VT THYON, N. C., UNDER THE ACT OF CONGRESS. MARCH 3, 1879 (!% (Jrmnt Vol. 8 TRYON, N. C., MONDAY, NOV. 18, 1935 Est. 1-31-28 Gov. Nellie T. Ross To Visit In Tryon Postmaster W. H. Stearns has received a letter from J. A. Game well of Wofford college stating 4«brrt former Governor Nellie Tay Ross of Wyoming, will pay a .sit to Tryon’s handicraft shops on Tuesday afternoon. Mrs. Ross is now director of the U. S. Mint. She will speak at 8 o’clock Tues day night in Spartanburg at the Wofford college auditorium. Her subject will be “The Drama of Government.” Mrs. Ross was the first woman governor in the Unit ed States. She has been a leader in American politics for a number of years and is the first woman director of the mint. She will arrive in Spartanburg, at 11:45 to morrow morning and will come here sometime during the afternoon if the weather is fair. Large Crowd Attends First Prize Drawing ^^The largest crowd seen on the acant lot in many a day was at the first drawing of the $300 prize money on Saturday afternoon at 4:30. The number of tickets was so great that the barrel made to hold them was not large enough and a temporary pasteboard box was substituted. Little Miss Gelolo Iris Kell, blindfolded, drew out the lucky tickets. First prize of $20 in cash went to Clarence' Lankford df Tryon, son of Mr. and Mrs. James Lankford. The second prize of $10 in cash went to Dewey Laughter of Saluda. The drawing was quickly done as the winners -Continued on Back Page——» Gantt Services This Afternoon Funeral services for Dr. L. Rosa Hirschmann Gantt, proVninent phy sician of Spartanburg and (Tryon) who died Saturday at a hospital in Philadelphia, will be held this af ternoon at 4 o’clock at the Temple B’nai Israel, conducted by Rabbi Jacob S. Raisin of Temple Beth Elochim, Charleston, the oldest reform temple in the United States. Interment will follow in Oakwood cemetery. Active pallbearers will be L. A. Meyerson. Harry Price, S. Shapi ro, Abe Smith, Max Marks and A. H. Morris. Dr. Gantt, a practicing physi cian in Spartanburg for 35 years had been taken to Philadleohia for treatment several weeks ago, and apparently was improving when suddenly stricken. She was born in Charleston and was the first woman graduate of the Medical college of South Carolina. Afc^r graduation she mo*ved to Spartanburg to specialize in her profession as an eye, ear and throat specialist. She was married to Colonel Robert J. Gantt in 1903. Besides her husband, she is sur vived by two sisters, Miss Cecile Hirschmann of New York City and Mrs. Samuel Wineberg of Sumter. —Spartanburg ETerald. Kiwanis Tuesday The Tryon Kiwanis club will meet on Tuesday at 1 p. m., at Oak Hall hotel. K. A. Bowen has charge of the program. Hoyt O. Prince will give the current events.
The Tryon Daily Bulletin (Tryon, N.C.)
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Nov. 18, 1935, edition 1
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