ENTERED AS SECOND-CLASS MATTER AUGUST 20, 1928, AT THE POST OFFICE
AT TRYON, N. C. UNDER THE ACT OF CONGRESS, MARCH 3, 1879
ffip ®rgtm ( Bmlg
/The World’s Smallest Daily Newspaper)
Vol. 11. Est. 1-31-28
At The Churches
CONGREGATIONAL, Erskine
Memorial. Rev. C. Arthur Lincoln
O. D., Minister —11 a. m.. Palm
Sunday service. Sermon: “Trium
phant Living.” Audiphones for the
deaf. 9:45 a. m. Sunday school,
Nelson Jackson Jr., Supt. 10:00
a. m. Adult Bible class led by
Rev. Charles G. Sewall in study
of “Literary Value of the Old
Testament.” Tuesday 3:30 p. m.
Inter-Church Lenten Bible study
class led by Rev. C. Arthur
Lincoln in the sun room of the
Oak Hall hotel. Subject. “Char
acter Studies in the Life of
Christ—H's Originality, Humility
and Greatness.” The public is.
invited. Friday 1:45 p. m. Good
Friday service with sermon by
the pastor.
METHODIST. M. A. Lewis,
Pastor. Byion Rector, Sunday
school Supt. April 10: Sunday
school 10 a. m. Preaching by the
Jng the Church.” Epworth League
*at 6:30 p. m.
CATHOLIC. St. John’s Churclv
—Holy Mass Sunday morning qt
8 o’clock. Father Florian, Cele
brant. j
EPISCOPAL. Church of /the
Holy Cross. Rev. John A. Pinck
ney, Rector—April 10th, JPalm
Sunday. Holy Communitn 8 /a. m.
Sunday school 10 a. m. Mdrning
prayer 11 a. m. The Right Rev
erend Frank Hale Touret, D. D.,
will preach the sermon at the 11
a. m. service. Services for Holy
Week: April 10th, 16th, Monday
Tuesday and Wednesday. Litany
at 5 p. m. Maundy Thursday,
Holy Communion 10 a. m. Good
Continued on Back Page
TRYON, N, C., SATURDAY, APRIL 9, 1938
Confidential News
From China
My dear Mr. Vining:
Today has been quite an excit
ing day in my history, for I not
only received one of my husband’s
very rare letters from “No Man’s
Land”, and a lot of my precious
belongings sav/d from the invad
ers’ eager H&nd. out also the
Tryon Daily Bulletin’s Tenth
Anniversary number of January
31, I found as I returned
from town. The dentist had been
doing his worst, and as I folded
myself up to rest, I chose rather
to read the “Bulletin” instead of
a new copy of “Asia”, with all its
r ecounts of things we are living
1 hrough. If my husband were
here and could read your greet
ings and congratulations, he sure
ly would do it with a memory of
i-feasant days in Tryon. He lives
in an occupied city .where the
] ropagandizing papers say, “Shops
are opening and conditions are re
turning to normal.” I, along with
wives from other occupied centers,
am in ***** . If you could
read the letters brought yester
day by a friend, you would know
the stark truth, and it isn’t lovely.
The spring, summer and next
winter can hold nothing but star
vation, misery and death in mind
and body for millions of people.
Once in a very great while a
letter comes through the courtesy
of the Japanese consulate. When
affairs of state are a little less
pressing, and a personal letter
is remembered to be delivered. Now
and again an * * * * press man is
friendly enough to take the re
sponsibility of a letter to a wife
Continued on Page Three . _