Newspapers / The Tryon Daily Bulletin … / Sept. 29, 1936, 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 t ®rgmt 'Ernlg (The Smallest Daily Newspaper In The World) Vol. 9, Est. 1-31-28 FOOTBALL The next game of football for the Tryon-Saluda team will be with the Roebuck high school. Nothing is known of the compara tive strength of the visitors, but they are always counted on to give a good fight. During the pre vious games the locals have some times been upset. The Tryon team has been hard at work this week ironing out the rough spots that appeared last Friday. More plays are being added and a more varied running attack developed. The reserves are being steadily groomed in order to take part. The game will start at 3:30, Harmon Field, Fri day, October 2nd. J. Foster Searles Has Article In P. G. News J. Foster Searles, who has been traveling the past two years in India and Africa, has written a very interesting article for this week’s issue of The Polk County News which will give his views of the relation of the British people to the people of India. This will be the first of a series of articles about his travels. Lady Astor Here Soon Lady Nancy Astor, who arrived in America last week from Eng and for a visit to her old home place in Virginia, will arrive in Tryon on Friday for a visit with her sister, Mrs. M. B. Flynn, at Little Orchard. TRYON, N. C., TUESDAY, SEPT. 29, 1936 HEADLINES After working for several weeks securing necessary information and evidence, federal narcotic agents yesterday morning made a widespread raid and rounded up 17 alleged addicts and traffickers in narcotics. The Asheville raid was a part of the general drive staged through out the nation by 2,500 narcotic agents ordered by the treasury de partment to bear down on viola tors or narcotic and liquor laws. Marshfield, Ore., Sept. 28. Twenty thousand residents of flame - ravaged southwestern Ore gon placed on winds tonight the fate of their homes as they heard grimly that nine lives and possibly 15 had been lost when forest fires laid waste the village of Bandon. With so many fires burning in a 400,000-acre area, forest officials, both federal and state, said it was “impossible” to say how many acres had been damaged. “The park is very wonderful and the scenery is unrivaled,” Josiah William Bailey, North Carolina’s senior U. S. Senator, told The Asheville Citizen over long distance telephone from Gatlinburg, Tenn., last night fol lowing a day spent in traveling in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. This is Senator Bailey’s first visit to the Great Smokies. Floods in Texas drive thousands out of lowlands. Four known to be dead as crests of rivers flow through many towns. 2,500 routed in Waco.
The Tryon Daily Bulletin (Tryon, N.C.)
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Sept. 29, 1936, edition 1
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