(Est. 1-31-28) ENTERED AS SECOND _AT TRYON, N. Published Daily Except Saturday and Sunday_5c Per Copy 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. Vininq, Editor Vol. 25—No. 24 TRYON, N. C., TUESDAY, MARCH 4TH. 1952 Curb Reporter Weather Monday: High 41, low 37, rain. 65, Rel. Hum. 88 . . . The Dog Show results will have to wait another day ... A picture ''"‘■fe6 ®weatt twins and their dogs at the Dog Show by Hugh Norton appeared in Tuesday’s Asheville Citizen . . . The Gospel of St. Matthew is the title of the lecture to be given by Dr. George Farrand Taylor tonight at 8t at the Episcopal Parish House . . . Dr. - A. V. Dye will address the Lanier Club Wednesday at 3:30 at the Congregational Church House .... The Pre-Clinic date at the Tryon Colored School has been changed to Tuesday, March 11. at 1 t>. m. . . . Congratulations to the Columbus Capitols on the wonderful performances they have given in their basketball games this -<T»ar. The Spartanburg Herald of Tuesday has a picture of Jean Canps who was high scorer for the girls this season .... ^Ae Columbus Capitol girls were upset last night in the finals of the Spartanburg YMCA Basket ball tournament in Spartanburg by Inman 16 to 14. The Columbus girls ended a successful season in which they won 12 and lost one. Tournament opens tonight in Co lumbus with Tryon vs. Saluda (girls); Mill Spring vs. Tryon fboys) ; Mill Spring vs. Green Creek (girls). First game begins at 7 with the others to start 10 minutes after the close of the preceeding game. The Green Creek pirls and the Trvon boys are the defending champions. DAILY BULLETINS—5c each GRAYSON NEWMAN Joseph Grayson Newman, 73, pioneer Polk County horseman and owner of Newman Stables here for 44 years, died at 4:30 p. m., Monday in his home aPer an illness of three months. He was born in Polk County and was a member of the Silver Creek Baptist Church. Surviving are his widow, Mrs. Angie Cannon Newman; two daughters, Mrs. Ralph „Lane of Charlotte, and Mrs. Victor Brown ing of Spartanburg, S. C.; two sons, Horace, of Tryon and Walter of Bent Creek Ranch; two broth ers, Lynn and Columbus Newman both of Lynn; two grandchildren, and two great-grandchildren. * uneral services will be held Wednesday at 2:30 p. m., at the Tryon Presbyterian Church with the Rev. Warrington Preston and Dr. George F. Taylor, officiating. Burial will be in the Columbus Presbyterian cemetery. The body will be at the McFarland Funer al Home until the hour of service. Pallbearers will be R. L. Far thing, W. C. Lawson Jr., A. L. Covington, E. B. Fisher. Marshall Ballew and W. P. McCall. Honorary pallbearers: Fred Pwann. Herbert Butler, A. H. Wil liams. Dr. M. C. Palmer, Chas. J. Lvnch, S. A. Bingham, Carter P. Brown, J. A. Reynolds. B. L. Bal 1 eager. Guv Taylor. T. E. Kell, Tsham Henderson. Morgan H. Mor ris and Hubert Foster. According to the 1930 census there were 272 522 milk cows and calves on Tar Heel farms. Twenty years later the number had in creased to 391,819.

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