Newspapers / The Tryon Daily Bulletin … / June 3, 1953, edition 1 / Page 1
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THE WM DAILY BULLETIN The World’s Smalles o ly Newspaper. Seth M. Vinina. Editor ♦« Published Daily Except _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 ON, N. C. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 3RD. 1953 Vol. 36—No. 88 "V I Weather Tuesday: High 85, low | 55, Rel. Hum. 36 . . . Nice weather I for June . . . Today’s Charlotte j Observer has three pages of its j vacation section about Polk Coun- J ty. They contain mostly ads. . . . j Two New York book publishers, | Fred P. Murphy and Elsworth j Howell, are guests of Mr. and Mrs. James G. Ferguson at Hearthstone Ridge. Mr. Murphy, a graduate of Cornell and a Rotarian, is chair man of the board of the American Corporation and of the Grolier Society, publishers of Book of Knwledge and Encyclopedia Ameri cana. Mr. Howell is vice president , oi tne company and will return to New York Thursday ... In addition to the coronation another big event of the week was the climbing of Mt. Everest, highest mountain in the world, by a Brit- i ish group. The mountain is over I 29,000 feet high, located in the ! Himalayas in India . . . The fol- ! lowing editorial from The Ashe- j ville Citizen gives something of the significance of the coronation which has claimed the attention of so much of the world: ' (Editorial in Asheville Citizen) The film voice of a slim girl in her imperial robes rang ar6und the world yesterday to echo in the chambers of time: r “The things which I have here -Continued on Back Page_:u Coroner’s Jury Hearing Changed To Thursday At 2 The coroner’s inquest into the death of Edward Ball, Tryon Thea tre manager, has been changed to Thursday afternoon at 2 p. m., in the County Court House in Colum bus. The hearing had tentatively been set for Friday at 2:30 p. m. Polk County Coroner Otis Dalton stated to a Bulletin reporter on Wednesday morning that the hear ing had been changed “due to the fact that Solicitor C. O. Ridings was unable to attend the hearing1 on Friday.” Coroner Dalton also stated that the ernpaneled jury would either release J. L. Rhodes, prominent Tryon political leader now being held in Columbus jail, on a murder warrant in connection with the case or would recommend that he be held for the August term of the grand jury. In a long distance telephone con versation with Solicitor Clarence Ridmg Wednesday at 10 a. m., he is quoted as saying that “there will be no change in the date of hearing,” which is now definitely set for Thursday at 2 p. m. HOSPITAL NEWS The following patients were ad mitted to St. Luke’s Hospital: Ed ward G. Wagner, R-l, Tryon; Mrs. Freda Porter, Mrs. Jennie G. Tay lor and Dr. David Wenstrand all of Tryon. Patients discharged: Mrs. J. N. Jackson and Mrs. Ned Pittman and baby daughter of Tryon. Mr. and Mrs. Troy Morris of R-l, Tryon are the parents of a girl born June 2nd, at 4:15 a. m. In 1952 26.6 million cows were on U. S. farms.
The Tryon Daily Bulletin (Tryon, N.C.)
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June 3, 1953, edition 1
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