Newspapers / The Tryon Daily Bulletin … / June 17, 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 EJjp (Ergon Bmig jßulktm (The World's Smallest Daily Newspaper) Ic PER COPY Seth M. Vining, Editor Vol. 13. Est. 1-31-28 Try on Scouts at Gamp m I The following Boy Scouts of ryon Troop No. 1 under the lead ership of Henry McGeachy are at the Piedmont Council Boy Scout camp on Lake Lanier this week: Holland Brady, Phil Morris, Dick Arthur, Brock Henry, Paul But ler, Tom Melton, Bob Bishop,, Bill Bishoja, Mlarvin Edwards, Hazel Gibson, Bob Burley, Joe Derby, Harrison Bridgemsan and Bob Dick. Kiwanis Tuesday An interesting program has been arranged for all Kiwanians on Tuesday at 1 p. m., at Hotel Tryon. Hoyt 0. Prince will have charge of the program,. James Arledge James Arledge, 63, resident of the White Oak township of Polk County, died at his home Saturday night following a two-day illness. Funeral services were conducted Sunday afternoon at the Silver Creek Baptist church, of which he was a member, by the Rev. Robert Earlv, the Rev. M,. J. Long and the Rev. H. Mi. Hester. Interment was in the church cemetery. Surviving are three sons, Harley Arledge. Jonathan Arledge and M,artin Arledge, all of Mill Spring; three daughters, Mjrs. Nellie Ed wards, Miss Ethel Arledge and Mrs. Johnnie Crain, also all of Mill Sipring; one half-brother, Whitler Arledge of Tryon, N. C.; and a half-sister, Mrs. Nora Hipp of Saluda, N. C. $1.50 Year In the Carolinas TRYON, N. C., MjONDAY, JUNE 17, 1940 Dußose Heyward Du Bose Heyward, 56, widely known Southern author, died of a heart attack at the hospital here Sunday afternoon. Heyward came to Tryon Sunday from his summer residence in Hendersonville to take a treatment at the hospital here. He was on his way back to Hendersonville when he was stricken and was brought back here, where he died soon afterward. The body was taken to Charles ton, S. C., Heyward’s native heme, for funeral services and burial. Rites will be held there at St. Philips’ church Tuesday. Surviving Dußose Heyward be sides his wife, herself a playwright who colloborated with him in the dramatizing of “Porgy” and in other works, are a daughter, Jeni fer Dußose Heyward, 10, and a sister, Mrs. Jennie Haskell, of Summerville. Best known for “Porgy,” which was a successful novel, play and opera, the latter with music by George Gershwin, Dußose Heyf ward was Charleston’s foremost literary man of his generation. He was born in Charleston, the son of an aristocratic family whose forebears were signers of the Declaration of Independence. When he was two years old, his father died in an accident. He was the only man of the household of four, including his grandmother; his mother, Mrs. Jane Screven Du- Bose, who died about two years ago; a younger sister and himself. Fev. J. A. Brock of Spindale is conducting revival services this week at the Tryon Second Baptist church. Services start each night at 7:30. Public invited. lc PER COPY
The Tryon Daily Bulletin (Tryon, N.C.)
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June 17, 1940, edition 1
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