Newspapers / The Tryon Daily Bulletin … / Feb. 26, 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 lc per copy (The World’s Smallest Daily Newspaper) lc PER COPY Seth M. Vining, Editor $1.50 Year in the Carolinas Vol. 14 Est. 1-31-28 TRYON, N. C., WED. FEBRUARY 26, 1941 Tryon High Downs Sunny View 41 to 19 The Sunny View high basket (4^P rs were again taken into camp the Tryon high quintet Tues day night at the TryoA gym by a 41 to 19 score. The Tryon five jumped into an early lead and kep 6 it doubled all the way. The all around play of the local team with their fast pass work proved the margin of difference. The floor work of Melton and Taylor stood out in the victory for Tryon. Vining topped the scorers with 17 points. The line-ups: Tryon (41) —McFarland, Jack son, Vining, Melton, Taylor, Beat son, Baker, Byers, Dick, Arledge. Sunny View (19) —Helton, Wil son, C., Connor, Wilson, Arledge, Wilson, Carl, lynch. Referee: Culler (Appalachian); timer, Jackson (Virginia); scor er, Beatson( Tryon). (4B Score at half, Tryon 22; Sunny —view 11. - ■ ■-■■■ ■ 1 r The South Has Problems And Opportunities Rev. Howard Kester of Black Mountain was the guest speaker at the Tryon Riwanis club on Tuesday at 1 p. m., at Hotel Trv on. He pointed out that the South „ with all its advantages in climate and natural resources was neglect ing its opportunities by allowing roil erosion, neglecting to raise food and feed, and by not secur ing enough industries to support the idle population. He said there could be no healthv nation Continued on Back Page Letters From Britain Second letter to Miss Wheeler from “K ”, a girl in government service. 1 The Crescent, South Shore Blackpool, Lancs. 16, 11, 40 We are stolidly carrying on— nothing but the end of the world can stop us now. It was murmur ed here and there that those who endured the bombing of London for three months would cry for mercy and peace at any price out of pity for the suffering. But it’s had the opposite effect. It’s arous ed them to a finer fury than they have ever known before, and they joke with it. A man in a cold, joking way, with nothing left to lose, can make a deadly enemy. London still carries on, and is by no means off the map. Her mothers and children have been evacuated and are settled in homes all over the country, and with surprisingly little friction. It’s made me think of your coun try a lot—this meeting with so many different kinds of people. Our little island has been settling down for nearly one thousand years. Unless I’ve forgotten my history, the Norman Conquest in 1066 was the last invasion we had. We are about the size of one of your states, smaller than most of them. Yet, as a Londoner, L go to Devon—the country peo ple speak a “brogue” that Is hard to understand—they have an out look that is different—Cornwall again different. Yet they are the - Please Turn to Page Two
The Tryon Daily Bulletin (Tryon, N.C.)
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Feb. 26, 1941, edition 1
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