Newspapers / The Tryon Daily Bulletin … / Feb. 14, 1941, edition 1 / Page 1
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ENTERED AS SECOND-CLASS MATTER AUGUST 20, 1928, AT THE POSTOFFICE AT TRYON, N. C. UNDER THE ACT OF CONGRESS, MARCH 3, 1879 THE TRYON DAILY BULLETIN SteTH M. Vining, Editor $1.50 Year in the Carolinas Lc per copy (The World’s Smallest Daily Newspaper) lc per copy Vol. 14. Est. 1-31-28 TRYON HIGH DOWNS SALUDA 42 TO 30 A sharpshooting Tryon high. •Jjasketball team got the edge on Saluda cagers last night at Tryon gymnasium and held the lead thruout the game to win handily 42 to 30. The visitors led by Holbert who had a long eye on the basket enjoyed a brief one point lead in the early minutes of the game, which the Tryon boys quickly overcame to lead at the quarter 7 to 13. In the second quarter, the visitors spurted to come within striking distance again as the half ended. At the opening of the second quarter, the Tryon five changing tactics, jumped into an eleven point lead which was maintained for the rest of the game. The en tire Tryon team played excellent ball with McFarland being high man for the night with 11 points, and Jackson totaled 10 Melton, Taylor and Green Splayed excellent floor games. Team line-ups: TRYON (42) SALUDA (30) McFarland Holbert Jackson J. Thompson Vining Michael Melton Burford Taylor Kimball Green L. Thompson x x x x x x x Pace Score at half: Tryon 23; Salu da 19. Referee, Culler (Appa lachian) ; scorer, Eargle (New berry) ; timer, McCallister (Sa luda) . TRYON, N. C., FRIDAY, FEB. 14, 1941 Letters From Britain (The second letter to Miss Mary . Wheeler is from “D”, a gifted young woman who already has behind her a professional career as a dancer. She has many in terests, artistic, social, domestic, and writes from the standpoint of a mother.) Devon, July 20, 1940. “We were so touched to have your letter and to know you were thinking of us and our children. They have not gone yet, there is so long a delay in getting all the papers thru and now we are faced with the fact that all passenger ! ships to Canada and America must go unconvoyed, and one is torn in two deciding whether to send them to safety and risk the danger of the first 500 miles or to keep them here to face one does not know what .... “My mother, who is devoted to the children, is to go w'th them. I feel I can be of use here, es pecially if I know my own chil dren to be safe. Robert and I have billetted 357 children in this small village. We have opened a big hostel for 150 in the ballet school, and the old theatre studio is the school. You can imagine the number of problems connected with all these infants in two hun dred or more different homes. I have two in the house here with mv own two. I have two student lodgers, and ourselves make eight; so I cook and scrub and sew all day and some of the night. ( ‘We have had bombs dropped PLEASE TURN TO BACK PAGE
The Tryon Daily Bulletin (Tryon, N.C.)
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Feb. 14, 1941, edition 1
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