THE TRIM DAILY BULLET!
Ihe World’s Smallest daily Newspaper. Seth M. Vining, Editor
Vol. 25—No. 288 TRYON, N. C. MONDAY, DECEMBER 1. 1952
[Est. 1-31-28]
Published Daily Except
Saturday cmd Sunday
ENTERED AS SECOND CLASS MATTER AUGUST 20, 1928, A^* THE
_AT TRYON, N. C. UNDER THE ACT OF CONGRESS, MARCH 3,
Per Copy]
POSTOFF5CE
1879
Weather Friday: High 53, low
33, Rel. Hum. 32; Saturday high
48, low 25, Rel. Hum. 41; Sunday
high 51, low 31, Rel. Hum. 43.
Rainfall for month of November,
2 99 inches .... Sister Kenney,
the Australian polio leader was
buried Sunday . . . Election in
Saar gives the land to France
instead of Germany. . . Banker
Winthrop Aldrich named ambas
sador to Great Britain by General
Eisenhower . . . Big fire at White
head Machine Works near Char
lotte interrupted TV and telephone
reception in this area from 5:30
M:30 o’clock Sunday . . . High
Patrolman W. R. Boyles
■d Monday that auto license
tags are now one sale at Hender
sonville Monday through Friday
from 9 a. m., to 4 p. m. . . Mr.
find Mrs. Krnest Is. Kellogg of
Washington, D. C., spent the
Thanksgiving holidays at their
plantation near Gowansville and
occupied the Charles D. Hare
house in Tryon while the Ha^es
were visiting in Chicago . . . Mr.
and Mrs. ,T. C. Thorne who have
h«en at Malibu, Calif., have re
turned to this sectioin to make
their home and are staying at
nresent in Rutherfordton until
they get located.
The Skyuka Chapter Eastern
Star will meet tonight at 8 at
the Masonic Hall.
Miss Mary Adams Weds
Mr. Robert T. Burnett
Miss Mary Hortense Adams,
daughter of Mrs. Cuyler Culver
Adams and the late Mr. Adams,
was married Saturday evening at
8 o’clock to Mr. Robert Trafford
Burnett, of New York City, son
of the Rev. C. Percy Burnett of
Charlotte, N. C.. and the late Mrs.
I Burnett. The Rev. Mr. Burnett
j was for many years rector of the
j Church of the Holy Cross in Tryon.
j The ceremony was performed in
the chapel of Holy Cross by the
rector, the Rev. Charles L." Me
Gavern.
The bride was given in marriage
by her brother, Mr. Cuyler Culver
Adams Jr., of Minneapolis, Minn.
She wore her paternal grand
mother’s wedding gown of ivory
brocaded satin and duchess lace.
On the front of the full trained
skirt was a spray of miniature
gardenias and sweetheart roses
and a nosegay of the same flowers
topped the white Prayer Book
which she carried. Her pale pink
French illusian veil fell from a
j coronet of lace and orange blos
i soms.
Mrs. Louis de Sassaure Simonds
Jr., of Charleston, S. C., the only
sister of the bride, served as her
I matron-of-honor. Mrs. Simonds
! wore a floor length ruby red taf
feta gown with matching bolero,
and carried a nosegay of brandy
wine pink roses. The bridesmaids
were Mrs. Cuyler C. Adams Jr.,
sister-in-law of the bride, Miss
Constance Hardinge of Bristol,
Va., and Miss Mary Quarles, of
Plainfield, N. J., who wore brandy
wine pink taffeta gowns and car
ried ruby red roses. All of the at
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