Newspapers / The Tryon Daily Bulletin … / Aug. 21, 1945, edition 1 / Page 1
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Published Daily Except Est. 1-31-28Saturday and Swnday_ Vol. 18—No. 142 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. Seth M. Vining, Editor. 5c PER COPY TRYON, N. C. TUESDAY, AUGUST 21, 1945 CURB REPORTER Weather Monday: High 8-3, low 59 .... Jap surrender papers to be signed in 10 days. Tokyo says some Jap army groups might re volt .... Quizling trial under way .... WPB wipes out 210 controls over industry. Bans lift ed on radios, refrigerators and trucks, photographic film, and 200 other items. Things are beginning to hum all over the world. It is good to see Chevrolet advertisements appearing in the Bulletin again. Enoch Prather says his organiza tion is making plans to take care of all Polk County Chevrolet needs. ... A tropical storm is due to hit Florida today .... Col. Arthur Smith has left at Arledge ■' wrdware a collection of old pis —antiques. Some are one, barrel, two barrels, and six barrels. . . . . Miss Barbara Lincoln, riding in Belgium in an American Red Cross truck met an American Army Major who asked her where she was from. He says she said, “Asheville.” Then the officer asked, “Do you know anything about Try on?” He turned out ,-to be a former Chattanooga representa tive of the Southern Mercerizing Co., and wrote W. C. Ward about meeting Miss Lincoln .... For the third time Arthur Godfry has mentioned Tryon on his morning CBS broadcast. Monday morning he gave quite a lengthy account of letters he had received from _Continued on Back Page_ ROBERT A. WARD Hendersonville.—Robert Alonzo Ward, 59, railwayman, died at a local hospital Monday morning from injuries suffered in an auto mobile accident Sunday afternoon in Hendersonville. According to Henderson County Coroner J. F. Brooks, a car driven by Mr. Ward collided with one re ported to have been driven by U. G. Anders, at the intersection of First avenue east and Grove streets. Mr. Ward suffered head injuries which were not thought serious, but he was taken to the hospital and never regained con sciousness. Mr. Ward, who for 43 years had been a railroad man, was the switch tender for the Southern Railway on Saluda mountain. H,e was a native of Henderson county.. Funeral services will be held from the Thomas Shepherd Memo rial chapel at 3 o’clock (today) Tuesday afternoon, with the Rev. Bee Early, of East Flat Rock, and the Rev. Kane Starnes of West Asheville officiating. RECTOR’S BUY HOME Mr. and Mrs. Byron Rector have bought from Mrs. Bertha Nessmith her Dogwood Terrace home- on Berry street, now occupied by Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Covington. Mr. and Mrs. Covington have bought Mrs. G. E. Morton’s house in Valhalla. Twelve million pounds of dry salt pork will be offered for sale by the CCC in an effort to relieve acute civilian shortages of meat in the Southern States. .
The Tryon Daily Bulletin (Tryon, N.C.)
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Aug. 21, 1945, edition 1
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