Newspapers / The Tryon Daily Bulletin … / Oct. 18, 1945, 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
Est. 1-31-28 ENTERED AS SECOND AT TRYON. N. Published Daily Except _Saturday and Sunday_Vol. 18—No. 179 -CLASS MATTER AUGUST 20, 1928, AT THE POSTOFFICE 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., THURSDAY, OCT. 18, 1945~ CURB REPORTER Weather Wednesday: high 76, S, 47 . . John L. Lewis orders jb than 200 thousand coal mi 3 back to work . In the mean time the young people of this section had better start gathering wood and storing it up for the cold days ahead. There are enough fallen trees and broken limbs to provide heat for many homes. We in Polk County know nothing of severe hardships as compared to people in big cities and in the treeless frozen parts of the na tion. . . A business man looking at the mountains surrounding Tryon Wednesday morning said it was worth living here just to be able to get the view from his home to his office every morning . . Advertisements in tne Bulletin are read almost as eagerly as the news items. People out of town who read the Bulletin often ask ifC'P and so ever found this and tvjJi They are interested in the outcome of these actions. Mrs. Martha Boone found her dog with one Ad in the Bulletin. Robert Franks of Philadelphia had a pi ano in Tryon to sell. A reader in Mew York City read the Ad, and wants to buy the piano for his home in Florida. You never know* how far reaching an Ad is in the Bulletin . . Lieut. Harry Rose, amone the first Americans to en ter Rome, Italy during the recent war, is in America on leave, and is visiting his father, Golf Pro Tom Rose at Oak Hall, before re turning to his home in Atlanta. . "The Fleet Came to Stay” is the name of a special short pic ture to be shown at Tryon Thea ter Friday. Football Here Friday Tryon High School gridders will meet a tough football team from Swannanoa at Harmon Field Friday at 3:30. Swannanoa is undefeated in four games this year, but Tryon plans to upset them. Tryon team is smallest in history of school but showing im provement every day. In the game with WLT Friday Robert Bar ber and Bobby Bishop were sorely missed. They were injured in the Union game two weeks ago and are still on the injured list. The Tryon team showed plenty of po wer in WLT game but fumbles and severe- penalties when in scoring position placed a big part in the 12 to 0 defeat. The line up for Friday’s game will be Fred Farley, c; Bridgeman rg; L. Rhodes, rt; B. Rhodes, re; Derby, Ig; Eargle It; Bishop or Ellison le; Foster qb; Edney, Cap tain, Ih; Barber or Capps, rh; and Lewellyn, fb. These boys are all hard fighters and they promise a good clean game to the local citizens who turn out to give the team moral support. At Rotary Friday Dr. Fred Owen will be in charge of the program, 1 p.m., Oak Hall. Tryon Theater advertised stage show for last Friday, but when the actors arrived they did not measure up to the standards ad vertised, and Manager R. E. Brantley refused to allow them to put on the show. That’s one point to the credit side of Tryon’s Theater.
The Tryon Daily Bulletin (Tryon, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 18, 1945, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75