Newspapers / The Tryon Daily Bulletin … / May 14, 1941, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of The Tryon Daily Bulletin (Tryon, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
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 (The World’s Smallest Daily Newspaper) lc PER COPY Seth M. Vining. Editor Vol. 14. Est. 1-31-28 JOHN S. MELTON John Shell Melton, 70, of Edney ville, a native of Cooper’s Gap • and who had made his home in **Sk>lk County nearly all his life, J;d on Tuesday evening at the Sanatorium. Funeral services will be held on Thursday afternoon at the Cooper’s Gap Baptist church conducted by the Rev. Ben Huntley. The deceased is survived by six children as follows: Mrs. Bessie Laughter of Inman, S. C.; Mrs. Myrtle Mills of Mill Spring, N. C., route 2; Mrs. Ollie Dimsdale of Spindale; Deputy Sheriff J. M. Melton of Mill Spi’ing route 2; Harold and Joe Melton of Edneyv.lle. MAKES GOOD RECORD In April of this year Mack Helton, brother of Miss Bessie Helton, Lynn' school teacher, was graduated from the Sunny View high school with a perfect record jXvf attendance for 12 years. He ApAs not absent or tardy during whole time. He is 17 years old and has a talent for mechanics and will go to Charlotte for special training. MISS DORR Miss Virginia Dorr, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Stephen H. Dorr of Tryon passed away at Doctor’s Hospital in New York City on Tuesday, May 13th. Funeral and interment in New York. Miss Dorr visited her parents here last Christmas and had been to Tryon a number of times. Prime Minister Church of Eng land to quiz Hess personally. $1.50 Year in the Carolinas TRYON, N. C., WED., Our London Letter Druids Garth, Stoke Bishop, Bristol. April 14. Dear Mr. Vining: This letter is to wish you all at Tryon a happy Easter. I know it wont get to you till the middle of August, but the wishes by then will have grown even warmer I expect! Not a very nice Easter as re gards weather, but the nastier the weather the nicer the bombers, so we haven’t complained much! I wish you could see me when the sirens go! I will send you a photograph some time. I put on an orange pair of trousers, a jer sey, a long blue dressing gown, a short army coat of my husbands’ with a hot water bottle tucked somewhere inside, and a tin hat on my head. It is almost un believable! I then sit on a sofa in the front hall with a rug over my knees, and look as though I were on a steamer and not feeling any too happy about it either! However, we’re all becoming amazingly used to the noise. The great thing is to put up such a barrage one can’t tell what’s com ing up and what down. But oh my, the boredom! Spring has reached us with a mass of fcrcythea and almond blossom, and I have a swell time whisking about the countryside, distributing the clothes you people so lavishly send up. By the way, I wish you could hear us cheer Franklin D. Roosevelt whenever he appears on the screen—or any one American for that matter. Mr. CONTINUED ON BACK PAGE lc PER copy MAY 14, 1941
The Tryon Daily Bulletin (Tryon, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 14, 1941, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75