Newspapers / The Tryon Daily Bulletin … / Sept. 13, 1937, 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 ®ht' (Erumi Jailg (The Smallest Daily Newspaper In The World ) Vol. 10. Est. 1-31-28 Prominent Lawyer At the Kiwanis Club J. Hertz Brown, prominent Spartanburg attorney and auth ority on Constitutional law, will |<jjiddress the Tryon Kiwanis club on Tuesday at 1 p. m., at Hotel Tryon. The address will be the chief feature of the club’s obser vance of Constitutional Week which is part of the Kiwanis club program every year throughout the United States. (Harmon Field Note Due Soon.) Methodist Revival Got off to a good start. Some of our people will be better citi "ens, better churchmen and hap pier more useful Chrisians when this meeting is history. Will you be one of these? Better decide now. Christ can use all fully surrendered people. He calls for the dedication of the entire man including pride, ambitions, desires, even our opinions. To be •mappy and useful in His kingdom means we must come to Him as little children, willing to go where He leads. There is no other way to a religious experi ence that gives a deep satisfaction and peace.— (Contributed). (Harmon Field Note Due Soon.) Married Saturday Justice of tbe Peace R. A. Leonard performed a marriage ceremony Saturday afternoon about 3:30 uniting Theodore M. Jones of Saluda and Miss Kate S. Dußosh of Florence, S. C. TRYON, H C., MONDAY, SEPT. 13, 1937 “CURB” REPORTER The printer missed a line on Friday in writing about M. A. Richards. The line called atten tion to the fact that Mark is look ing younger, healthier with a hap pier ring in his voice .... Chinese and Japs are fighting fiercest bat tle of war around Tientsin, China. . . . The Japs are now predicting a long war . . . Germany and Italy are in a quarrel with Russia . . . The Sunday school lesson in last week’s Polk County News says: “A Nation Needs Religious Homes.” . . *. The Tryon Chamber of Commerce is endorsing the movement to widen the Pacolet River bridge . . . One week of school is gone, only 35 more . . . . Phil Windsor is wearing a monocle. . . . Mjrs. Florence Averill has moved her sewing department to the Helen Harwood Shop . . . . “Our antagonist is our helper. This amicable conflict with diffi culty obliges us to an intimate ac quaintance with our object and compels us to consider it in all its relations.” —Anon .... The good news of Tryonites coming home from their summer vaca tion is putting the joy of antici pation in the hearts of many friends. Charles G. Sewall writes that they will be on their way to Tryon from Maine by the 19th if all goes well. That means that Mirs. Sewall is improving. The Continued on back vaae
The Tryon Daily Bulletin (Tryon, N.C.)
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Sept. 13, 1937, edition 1
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