Newspapers / The Tryon Daily Bulletin … / March 25, 1940, 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 (Elf t (Ergon JJatlg (The World’s Smallest Daily Newspaper) 1C PER COPY Seth M. Vining, Editor Vol. 13. Est. 1-31-28 Entertainment Schedule For Horse & Hound Show The Entertainment committee has announced the following 1 social ajhevents in connection with the Hor3e Hound Show: Tuesday, April 16th, at 8 p. m.: Buffet supper at Sunnydale. Open to all. Kindly make reservations with Mr. and MTs. Kerhulas. Price $1 per person. Judges and out-of-town exhibitors are guests -■ of the Tryon Riding & Hunt Club. There will be mountain music and residents are urged to help make this a good time for the friends of the Horse Show. Tuesday, April 16th, at 9 p. m.: Horse Show ball at Oak Hall. Music bv Stringfellow. Judges and out of-town exhibitors and their fami lies are guests. Others pay admis sion. Wednesday, April 17th, imme diately following the Horse Show refreshments at Erskine Farm. Limited to Judges, Exhibitors, Hunt Members, Chairmen of Com- including families of each. W) Wednesday, April 17th. at 8 p. ”'m.: Buffet supper, by invitation of Mr. and Mrs. Walter C. Hill at their home. Many Levels. Officials, Hunt Members, Chairmen, Exhibi tors and others will be invited. Thursday, April 18th, at 1 p. m.: Hunt breakfast at Pine Crest Inn. By invitation of Mir. and Mrs. Carter P. Brown. The Entertainment committee consists of Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Erskine, Mrs. Margaret Culkin Banning of Duluth, Minn.; Mrs. Arthur W. Farwell of Geneva, 111.; Mrs. J. H. Perkins. Greenwich, Conn.; Mrs. Charles B. DuCharme, of Detroit: Mrs. Dudley Smith, Jr., Mrs. M B. Flynn, Mrs. Jeffer son f’oe. Worcester, Mass.; Mrs. Continued on Page Three $1.50 Year In the Carolinas TRYON, N C., MONDAY, MARCH 25, 1940 Our London Letter 32, Cambridge Square, W. 2. March 3rd. Dear Mr. Vining, There seems to be an impression in America that we are starving. English people* returning from the States find their cabins bursting with hams and tongues and tins of every known preserve rather than the more usual flowers or candy. It is true that we have to cook with margarine, and bacon and sugar are rationed, but personally, I don’t remember having eaten so much in my life —with one excep tion. That was when 1 stayed with the Lefty Flynns in Tryon in 1935. No, working all dav seems to give me an appetite, and I just say hang to my figure and go ahead! With the first signs of spring creeping over the country we are filing much more cheerful and alive. It seems unbelievably bliss ful to be able to sit in the car and not lose all sensation in one’s feet. The war is so stagnant we find we can forget about it for hours at a time. The “Altmark” inci dent thrilled us, with its smacking of piracy and the Boys Own Paper. For so long now we have been told that we are a decadent and crumbling empire it gives us heart to see that the Navy, at any rate, hasn't altered so much since Nel son’s time. The sailors from the Battleships Exeter and Ajax had a triumphant march through Lon don, and everybody went out to cheer and get a lump in the throat. Somehow, those few hundred men looked sort of pathetic, and we all lost our hearts to them. Otherwise, our days have been uneventful. We worry over the Finn's, and wonder whether our Please Tvm To Back Page lc PER COPY
The Tryon Daily Bulletin (Tryon, N.C.)
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March 25, 1940, edition 1
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