Published Daily Except
[Est. 1-31-28]Saturday and Sunday[5c Per Copy]
ENTERED AS SECOND CLASS MATTER AUGUST 20, 1928, AT THE POSTOFFICE
AT TRYON, N. C. UNDER THE ACT OF CONGRESS, MARCH 3, 1879
THE TliVIH DIM BULLETIN
The World’s Smallest daily Newspaper.
Seth M. Vining, Editor
Vol. 25—No. 68 TRYON, N. C. MONDAY, MAY 5TH~
1952
CURB REPORTER
Weather Friday: high 87, low
50, Rel. Hum. 37; Saturday high
87, low 56, Rel. Hum. 46; Sunday
high 87, low 48,' Rel. Hum. 34. . .
May is the busiest month for bird
"se, nesting is in full swing, eggs
being incubated and soon the
arent birds will be feeding the
voung. A glorious period. Already
the air is filled with bird songs.
On Tuesday morning at 9 o’clock
the Tryon Bird Club will go on a
bird walk at the George Holmes
r>iace on Godshaw Hill. Anvone
interested is invited. The wildlife
in Trvon is nothing to be ashamed
of. The State Wildflower Assn,
just completed its second meeting
here Saturday and Sunday and
had picnic lunch and visit at Pear
son’s Falls and went on exploring
expeditions all over this section.
Manv are coming back later for
individual trips, says Secretary
Cooksey of the Chamber of Com
merce. . . Tryon lions Club will
meet Tuesday night at Oak Hall. .
Supreme Court ruled that U. S.
n’t raise steel wages without
sent of industry.
Job open to carry the .U. S.
mail between the post office and
the depot, taking mail to the de- j
not and taking it off the trains
and to the post office every time
a train runs. The hours run from
about 9 a. m. to about 7 at night
and later if the train is late. The
nay under the nresent contract
's $60 per f month. You furnish
your own car. gas, etc. If inter
ested in hidding on the job pros
nectors may get aDplication forms
f^-om Postmaster G. I. Henderson.
Those who see George Carson’s
oar loaded with mail and held on
bv ropes to keep it from falling
off can understand why. He bid
too low to get the job four years
ago.
HOSPITAL NEWS
Now Patients at St. Luke’s Hos
pital include Mrs. Jeannette Rob
erts, Mrs. Richard Cunningham
of Tryon; Mrs. John Eversman,
Flat Rock; Stewart Holbert, Mrs.
Thomas Ford, Landrum.
Patients discharged include Mrs.
Herbert Case and twin sons, Clint
Rav and George Lee Case of
Saluda who were born on Wednes
day, April 30th. Others discharged
were Mrs. Joe Thomas, Miss Vir
tell Williams, Ronald Bishop, Mrs.
Hub Thompson, Mrs. J. J. Pittman,
Mrs. Vernice Mills, John Butler.
HAROLD PIERCE
Funeral services for Harold
Pierce, 29, of Mill Spring, will be
conducted Monday at 3 p. m. at
Grove Baptist Church in upper
Greenville County. The Revs. Cur
tis McCarley, Broadus Belue and
Robert Brooks will officiate and
burial will be in the church ceme
tery.
Mr. Pierce was killed Saturday
afternoon when the car in which
he and another man were riding
side-swipped a wrecker and a
truck near Inman.
Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy Salsich have
as guests, Mr. and Mrs. Guy E.
Diehl of Duluth, Minn.
Mrs. Robert Larson of El Paso,
Texas is visiting her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. W. E. Sassoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Jerome DuCharme
and sons Skipper and Christopher
of Detroit, and Harold DuCharme
of Tampa, Fla. are guests of Mrs.
C. B. DuCharme.
Mr. and Mrs. George Dusenbury
are in Hot Springs, Va., today,
where Mr. Dusenbury will address
a convention of the American
Business Papers.