ENTERED AS SECOND-CLASS MATTER AUGUST 20, 1928, AT THE POST OFFICE AT TRYON, N. C. UNDER THE ACT OF CONGRESS, MARCH 3, 1879 ffirumt 2Bml|i (The World’s Smallest Daily Newspaper) Vol. 11. Est. 1-31-28 CURB’ REPORTER There are 45,000 post offices in the United States. . . .Postmaster Younts of Charlotte has been ap pointed general chairman of a nation-wide celebration of air mail service May 15-21 .... Secretary Mionganthau is releasing $30,000, 000 in gold to help business re covery. The public debt is now 37 billion dollars .... An Artie wea ther expert predicts a cold late spring for the United States. It is said this would mean high river s and many icebergs in the Atlantic . . . .The Tryon Horse and Hound has never been rained out, Ebut this year the show is to be neld on the 13th. . . .“Aristocratic Pigs” will be presented tonight at the Green Creek school, benefit Home Economics Dept. . . .Every time you trade with a Bulletin ad vertiser you help Tryon and your self Bowling is getting to be one of the most papular sports in Tryon for men and the TYMA is drawing many of the masculine gender who need the recreation and fellowship Ten years ago Jim Kinloch was manager of the N. C. State baseball team; Evans Woolen, Indiana’s candidate for president was a guest at Mimosa Inn and made a talk to the Rotary and Kiwanis; Mrs. Leonard Car penter has just returned from at tending a wedding in the Orient. TRYON, N. C., TUESDAY, FEB. 15, 1938 Miss Twining Miss Almira Catlin Twining died last night at her home in Gil lette Woods. A native of Washington, Penn sylvania, her adult life was spent in Waterbury Conneticut, the home of "her Mother’s family. There she and Miss K. D. Hamilton had lived for twenty-five years before coming to Tryon in 1930. Miss Hamilton and Miss Twining had lived together for forty years, and Had just this last year completed their new home, Peaceful Port, here in Tryon. A service will be held here at the Church of the Holy Cross, on Wednesday at 3:00 p. m. Burial will be from Trinity Church, Waterbury, Conneticut on Thurs day. It is requested that flowers be omitted. Y T Headlines O. O. Mclntyre, noted New York columnist, died Monday morning about 2 o’clock. He would have been 54 on Friday. Supreme Court rules that South Carolina can regulate size and weight of trucks passing through the Palmetto state which limits trucks to 90 inches in width and gross weight ot 20,000 pounds. $75,000 fire destroyed a school building for deaf at Morganton, N. C., on Monday afternoon. U. S. Senate votes 56-31 for farm bill which will regulate crop control. Japanese pushing toward Chin ese canital.