fEst.W-31-28] Published Daily Except Saturday and Sunday [5c Per Copy] KNTEKED AS SECOND CLASS MATTER AUGUST 20‘:y. AT THE POSTOFFICE AT TRYON, N. C. UNDER TIIE ACT OF ^ MARCH 3, 1879 THE TIIVOV 'Mi I!IJLIM\ The World’s Smallest pailNewspaper. Seth M. Vining, Editor Vol. 26—No. 102 TRYON, N. C. TUESDAY. .TUNE 23RD, 1953 CURB REPORTER Weatner Monday: High 91, low G3, Rel. Hum. 55 ... 28 business houses had a double page ad in Monday’s Bulletin congratulating B. Frank Carruth on the opening of Carruth’s Furniture Store in Landrum, S. C. The spirit of co operation and joint advertising by Landrum merchants are helping to bring the community forward. The new building is located on Highway 17G and is modern in every way. \ The public is invited to the opening. Attractive free door prizes are be- I ing offered to visitors Wednesday, j Mr. Carruth is one of Landrum’s j most successful business and civic I leaders. He will continue to operate ' his other stores nearby on the | same side of the street . . . Sr i^uke s Hospital is listed again this j year on the fully approved hos- i pitals accredited by the American College of Surgeons. St. Luke’s Hospital is the only hospital with 1 that high rating between Spar- 1 tanburg and Asheville (north and 1 south) and the only one that good 1 between Rutherfordton on the east j and Chattanooga, Tenn., on the west. This is a tribute to the men and women of the hospital board, I staff and auxiliary and to the I hundreds of donors who make the. hospital possible . . Francis A. I Weaver, an ancester of the Me- | Farlands here, was postmaster at Horse Creek, N. C., in 1847 on a 1 spot near the Weaverbarton Farm which still carries part of the name, Horse Creek still flows through the propertv from Sunkawaken Falls. Polk County had just been organ- j ized for the first time, only to be , abolished in 18 49. j The Willows will be closed for j two weeks from June 26th until | July 10th. Trvon Players Win At Linville Bridge Tournament Miss Jane Brown and Jim Jack son won the qualifying events of the LinvJle bridge tournament dur ing the week-end and brought home silver trophies. They were fifth in the finals of 60 pairs. The three session tournament took place at Eseeola Lodge in Linville in which players from North and South Carolina, Vir ginia, West Virginia and Tennes see participated. csianisias yzetwertynski, direc tor of the games, stated that the tourney was a “great success.” Winners: First, Ed Jaffre, B. Evers, of Charlotte; second, Mrs. G. W. Graham and Mrs. Frank Cald weH, Charlotte: third, Mrs. Walter LeSueur and Mrs. A. D. White, Asheville; fourth, Mr. and Mrs. Chester D. Ward, Spartanburg; fifth, Miss Jane Brown and Jim my Jackson, Trvon; sixth. Mrs. F. Fountain and Mrs. M. M. Wily, Knoxville, Tenn. Consolation games were won by Mrs. S. Cramer, Charlotte, Mrs. S. C. Woolcott, Asheville, Mrs. J. P. Little, Charlotte and Mrs. Phil Jackson, Gastonia. LIONS MEET TONIGHT Dr. Gordon Graham will be in charge of the Program at the Dions Club tonight at 7:30 at Oak Hall. Attend? Cafeteria School Mrs. J. W. Taylor, manager of the Tr.von school cafeteria, has returned from the Managers School Cafeteria Workshop held at the Woman’s College of the University of North Carolina at Greensboro.

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