(Est. 1-3P28) - Published •Daily Except Saturday .and Sunday 5c Per Copy ENTERED AS SECOND CLASS MATTER AUGUST 20, 1928, AT THE POSTOFFICB AT TRYON, N. C. UNDER THE ACT OP CONGRESS, MARCH 3, 1879 THE TOOK DULY BI1LLETIK The World’s Smallest daily er. Seth M. Vining, Editor (Vol. 23—No. 240) TRYON , MONDAY, JANUARY 8, 1951 Weather Friday: High 60, low 29, rel. hum. 53; Saturday high 63, low 20, rel. hum. 72; Sunday high 55, low 36, ra n .28, rel. hum. 72 . . . Un'ted Nations continue retreat in Korea .... •Miss Iris Jackson has returned from Asheville where she attend ed the three day victory celebra tion of the First Baptist Church which paid c^f the mortgage on its building. Many noted Baptist lead ers throughout the state were pres ent including Dr. E. Gibson Davis, a former pastor. Miss Jackson is a former member of tihe church, and her sister, Mrs. F. H. Snipes, of Knoxville, Tenn., a former church secretary when Dr. Powell was pastor, also came over for the celebration. Mr. and Mrs. Richard R. Wil liams, formerly of New York and New Canaan, Conn., who bought the Hope Washburn house, have moved in and are making Tryon the;r permanent home. Tryon High School boys and girls play Chesnee in Tryon Tues day night at 7:30. Columbus plays Chesnee Town Teams tonight at Chesnee. In the Tryon High games with Landrum Friday, Landrum girls won 34-14 and Tryon boys won 55-28. Ann P’ttman was high for the girls and Bob Ramsey for the boys. HAROLD P. ERSKINE Harold Perry Erskine, 71, of New York and Tryon, sculptor and architect, passed away Friday, January 5th at Lenox Hill Hos pital, New York City, after sever al months illness. Mr. Erskine was born in Racine, Wis., in 1879. He was graduated from Williams College and the Ecole des Beaux Arts in Paris, and studied at the Columbia Uni versity School of Fine Arts. Of the various distinguished or ganizations to which he belonged the two dearest to his heart were the Delta Psi Fraternity, and the Century Club of New York. While still a young1 student he designed the Congregational Church of Tryon. In 1936 he won an award in competition for a facade of polychrome sculpture for the Dry Dock Savings Bank. His work included a portrait bust of Carl Akeley in the American Mu seum of Natural History; the Walter J. Travis Memorial at the Garden City Golf Club; a war me morial for the St. Anthony Club, the Wilton Merle-Smith Memorial for the Central Presbyterian Church in New York City; the Founders Memorial of the National Chi Psi Fratern;ty in Ann Arbor, Mich. Mr. Erskine also did num erous portrait and garden sculp tures. He formerly was a member of the firm of Hazzard, Erskine & Bladgen, New York City architects. A big-game hunter, Mr. Erskine oresented many of h’s African tro nhies to the American Museum of Natural History, as well as the lifesize bust of the late Mr. Akeley, African explorer and naturalist, which he made in 1924 and ex hibited in the Natfonal Academy .Continued on Back Page_