Newspapers / The Tryon Daily Bulletin … / Jan. 22, 1943, edition 1 / Page 1
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5c PER COPY $2.00 PER YEAR ENTERED AS SECOND-CLASS MATTER AUGUST 20, 1928, AT THE POSTOFFICB AT TRYON, N. C. UNDER THE ACT OF CONGRESS, MARCH 3, 1879 the rnoai daily mum The World’s Smallest Daily Newspaper, Seth M. Vining, Editor. Vol. 15. Est. 1-31-28 TRYON, N. C., FRIDAY, JAN. 22, 1943 Weather Thursday: High 53, low 14 . -. . . Mrs. Sadie Patton of Hendersonville, member of the North Carolina State Historical Commission, and a prominent writer, was in Polk county this week gathering information for future historical work. She is now working on data of Sidney Lanier .... Subscriptions enter ed for T|Sgt. Norman J. Collins, care Postmaster of New York, ad dress censored as he is in North Africa; Miss Evelyn Cromer, 2211 Buncombe Road, Greenville, S. C.; Mrs. Psyche Frederick, Oak Hall, James P. Egerton, Mill Spring, N. C.; Cpl. Jack Walker, 14037931, 343 Service Sqdn., APO 624, New York City; address changed for IG. I. Henderson, S. P. (M) 3|c, |are Post Office, N. C. T. C. Camp Peary, Williamsburg, Va., Frank T. Arthur, 1725 E. Fifth Street, Charlotte, N. C.Polk Coun ty Superior Court meets next week and the Curb Reporter has been listed as one of the jurors. All friends of the Bulletin are asked to please send in little news items about themselves and their friends. Don’t send something “just to fill up the paper.’’ We never have any trouble filling up the paper with something. People don’t have time to read long article. If you don’t read the other 'fellow’s long articles you know he doesn’t read yours, so why make printers and proof readers do a lot of unneces _ Continued on Page Two ! JAMES H. SETTLE Inman, S. C., Jan. 21.—James Horton Settle, 62, well-known In man orchardist and planter, died at 8 o’clock Thursday following a long illness. Funeral services will be conduct ed at 2 o’clock Saturday afternoon at the First Baptist church of Inman by the Rev. J. E. Lehman. Survivors include his wife, Mrs. Leila Wilson Settle; three chil dren, Allen Settle, overseas with the army air forces, Mrs. James Daniel of Detroit, Mich., and Horace Settle of Inman; his fath er, W. E. Settle; three sisters, Mrs. G. P. Wolfe, Mrs. T. B. Har mon and Miss Edna Settle, all of Inman; and four brothers, H. H. Settle, W. R. Settle and G. F. Settle, all of Inman, and Zara Settle of Spartanburg. INVENTORY CONTROL Charlotte, N. C., Jan. 21.—Get the goods on the nearest counter! That’s one purpose of the War Production Board’s new inventory control order. With gasoline rationed, rubber more precious than rubies, trains and streetcars already bulging, it’s important to shop near home. WPB’s inventory control pro gram seeks to make this possible by insuring that consumers goods are not permitted to pile up in the larger stores while the counters of smaller merchants increasingly resemble Mother Hubbard’s cup board. Selection offered in the neigh borhood store will still tend to be smaller than in the great met ropolitan department store. But selection will be smaller every where, even in the country’s great Cov tinned on Back Page
The Tryon Daily Bulletin (Tryon, N.C.)
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Jan. 22, 1943, edition 1
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