Newspapers / The Tryon Daily Bulletin … / Jan. 11, 1943, edition 1 / Page 1
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5c PER COPY $2.00 PER YEAR ■N TERED AS SECOND-CLASS MATTER AUGUST 20, 1928, AT THE POSTOFPICB AT TRYON, N. C. UNDER THE ACT OF CONGRESS, MARCH 3 1879_ the trm minium The World’s Smallest Daily Newspaper, Seth M. Vining, Editor. Vol. 15. Est. 1-31-28 TRYON, N. C., MONDAY, JAN. 11, 1943 CURB REPORTER Weather during the weekend: Saturday high 48, low 34, rain .2. Sunday high 48, low 27, and the sun is shining bright. January Jasmine is in bloom . . . Thomas Fearey Judson, son of Mrs. B. Fearey Judson of Gillette Woods, is now with the Eastman Kodak Co., at Kingsport, Tenn. His family will join him later .... New Bulletin subscriptions for * Sea 2|c Cecil W. Hayes, A. M. M. Service School, Class 3-M 62 W.-19, U. S. Naval Air Station, Jackson ville, Fla.: W. K. Davenport, Landrum, S. 0.; J. S. Arledge, Saluda, N. C.; Mrs. B. Fearey Judson, Possum Trot; S|Sgt. E. R. ^flticher, Sqdn. K. Stuttgart Army Field, Stuttgart, Ark. (Wrtes that it wiH be good to see the Bulletin again. Since leaving Houndo have had more flying at Pittsburgh, Kan. Hope soon to be ordered to Greenville, S. C.) Spurgeon Arledge, Jr., who has been in Nashivlle, Tenn., leaves today for Charlotte to enter the Navy. He will be 3[c metalsmith. His new address will be given when he is settled. Address of P. D. Karsten, Jr., is A[S V-ll, Co. E-2, U. S. N. T. S., Room 119, McFaddin Hall, Cornell Uni versity, Ithaca, New York. Janies Baker Gibson of Landrum ' s now attending the Officers flight school at Burlington, Vt. . . Wal ter Cantrell, the woodworker, is Continued on Back Page_— Farm Mobilization Day, Tuesday, January 12th As representative of the U. St Department of Agriculture, all Farm Security Administration em ployees have been instructed to cooperate with local War Boards and other agricultural workers in carrying out President Roosevelt’s proclamation designating Tuesday, January 12th, 1943, as “Farm Mobilization Day.”' All the faci lities and services of the FSA will be available to farmers re quiring such services to put them selves in better shape to increase their production in 1943. FSA will continue to make loans to en able farmers to increase food production. Loans will include money to buy additional cows, hogs, chickens, farm machinery —..Continued on Back Page_ WOMEN WANTED FOR F. B. I. WORK On Wednesday, January 13, 1943, Walter C. Robinson, Special Agent, Federal Bureau of Inves tigation, Charlotte, N. C., will in terview female applicants at Hen dersonville for immediate employ ment in the FBI at Washington. D. C., at an entrance salary of $1,440.00 per annum, with unlimit ed opportunity for advancement. Applicants should be citizens, high school graduates, between the ages of 16 and 40, in good physi cal condition. All those who are interested in assisting in the war effort are urged to contact Mr. Robinson at 9 a. m., at the Pose Office in Hen dersonville. Applicants should bring* with them a small photo graph approximately three by five inches.
The Tryon Daily Bulletin (Tryon, N.C.)
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Jan. 11, 1943, edition 1
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