Newspapers / The Tryon Daily Bulletin … / Feb. 4, 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 POSTOFFICE AT TRYON, N. C. UNDER THE ACT OF CONGRESS, MARCH 3, 1879 THE mm MILYMMEM The World’s Smallest Daily Newspaper, Seth M. Vining, Editor. Vol. 16. Est. 1-31-28 TRYON, N. C., THURSDAY, FEB, 4, 1943 CURB REPORTER Weather Wednesday: High 55; low 25. . . . Chaplain Henry J. Davis has changed his Bulletin address to 218 Oakland Ave., Spartanburg. TiCpl. John Thomp son of Fort Bragg, 79th F. A. Btry. F., was here on a visit to his mother, Mrs. Elizabeth H. Thompson, when she died Tuesday afternoon at St. Luke’s hospital. . . . Oldest cloth in Tryon is prob ably a piece of homespun Tom Costa had in his office the other day. It was said to be over 2,000 years old and was taken from a mummy in Egypt by Robert Franks, Tryon archaeologist. That’s a good ad for homespun cloth. Page the Appalachian Handweavers! . . . Cablegram Major Bill Ward, Jr., to parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. C. >^rd, Sr., states that all in his unit are somewnere in the Pacific and that all are OK. Frank Wall and General Barrett’s son are in the same unit .... Blue Ridge Weavers next to Tryon Theatre has a large display window show ing pictures of Polk County men in the armed forces.. Look them over and see if your service man or woman is among the group. The sight of them makes you proud of every one of them and inspires you to help keep ’em flying, sailing, rolling or whatever is necessary to their branch of ........Continued on Back Page_ Tryon Rotary Club Meets At Oak Hall Senator F. P. Bacon will be in charge of the Tryon Rotary pro gram when the club meets Fri day at Oak Hall hotel at 1 p. m. Funeral Services Today For Mrs. J. T. Thompson Funeral services for Mrs. J. T. Thompson, who passed away Tues* day afternoon at St. Luke’s hos pital will be conducted at 2 o’clock today (Thursday) afternoon at the Pacolet Baptist church of Lynn, by the Rev. Malcolm Ross, the Rev. B. G. Henry and the Rev. C. E. Vermillion. Interment will be in the Tryon cemetery. Active pallbearers will be Rus sell Thompson, James Littlefield, J. E. Ballew, Duford Lawrence, Vance Phillips and Carl Barnett. ABOUT SCHOOL BUSES From all sides one hears wor ried, anxious parents talking about the ODT regulations regarding the school bus. They agree that in a thickly settled community with homes close together, children could group together, be protected from the weather and conserve gas. But out in sparsely settled communities it causes unjust hard ships, requiring children to walk to certain stops, then carry them right back by their homes or stops, exposing them to the weath er for long waits, as the buses do not run regularly. Others walk long distances to meet a bus, yet the little red school house was given up for bus service. And _ Continued on Back Page—
The Tryon Daily Bulletin (Tryon, N.C.)
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Feb. 4, 1943, edition 1
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