[Est. 1-31-28] Published Daily Except 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 8, 1879 HOMO# DAILY lilLUT! ■The World's Smallest daily Newspaper._Seth M. Vinivy, Ediim Vol. 25 No. 95 TRYON, N. C. WEDNESDAY. JUNE 11 1952 Weather Tuesday: High 84, low G2, rain .54, Rel. Hum. G7 . . . U. S. Senate declines to grant Presi dent Truman authority to seize the steel industry. Told him to use the Taft-Hartley law to work out problem. A dozen North Caro lina Republican delegates ipclud mg btate Chairn?an J. M. Baley, called on General Eisenhower on Tuesday.Inman Rotary Club held their ladies’ night pro gram at Oak Hall Tuesday night. The Rotary Anns came up Tues day afternoon and decorated the dining room with various flowers Cin the Rotsry blue and gold ■s. Each table had its own 1 decoration and gifts for the ladies. Dr. McFall of Asheville was the chief speaker . . . The Kerhulas-Stone wedding is Thurs day the 12th, at the Church of the Holy Cross with Dr. George F. Taylor, officiating . . . General Douglas MacArthur has been named keynote speaker for the Re publican National Convention . . . Tryon Country Club planning golf touramets for July 4th, August 2, and Labor Day . . . Mrs! Grace Craig Lee, president of district 2, Rutherfordton, is a delegate to the Convention of American Nurses Assn., in Atlantic City, June 16-20. Col. Foster Kiwanis Speaker Col. Hart Foster spoke to the Kiwanis Club Tuesday at Oak Hall on the importance of our country’s ideals. Col. Foster rec^ mmended everyone reading the following: Declaration of Independence, The Constitutoin, (Washington’s Fare well Address, ahd Lincoln’s Gettys burg Address. The speaker told of the wisdom of the founders of this nation. He stated that studying the past often enables us to fortell the future. Col. Foster read several excerpts from Washington’s Fare well address to show how it applies today as well as during Washing ton’s time. Col. Foster said that the found ers of the country had learned from the past and provided a system of checks and balances be tween the branches of the govern ment, thus making it hard for one man to gain control. He also prais ed the separation of the church and state and felt that it was j necessary to keep them separate, i This nation must be prepared ! at all times according to the j speaker, and he felt that it was I much better to have our men pre i pared for a national emergency I than unprepared, i Horace Lindsey of Durham and Max Flemmings of Greenville, S. C., were guests of the club. Harold Griffith was in charge of the pro gram. I-■ HOSPITAL NEWS New patients at St. Luke’s Hos pital include Mrs. Edith Gibbs of Columbus; patients discharged in cluded Mrs. Clarence Scoggins and ' Tim Golding.

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