1 Est ■ENTElfi Published Daily Exeunt. Saturday and Sund^ AS SECOND CLASS MATTER AUGUS" 1928, AT THE POSTOFFICE 1-28] [5c Per Copy] AT TRVON, N. C. UNDER THE ACT O' ^NGRESS, MARCH 3, 1879 THE TRYOil MLY BULLETIN The World’s Smallest daily Zspaper. Seth M. Vining, Editor Vol. 2©—No. 144 TRV’dgfl*. C._THURSDAY, AUGUST 2071953 CURB REPORTER Weather: Sunday high 94, low 61, Rel. Hum. 67; Monday high 87, low 65, rain .11, Rel. Hum. 71; Tuesday high 84, low 64, rain .07, Rel. Hum. 84; Wednesday high 74, low 65, rain .08, Rel. Hum. 84. . . . . Russia says it has tested the hydrogen' bomb . . . Iran’s prime minister, Mossadegh kicked out of office and the ruler or king called Shah, has been called back after a few days of exile. . . Heavy rains in upper South Carolina has brought relief to farms and water supplies .... Parts of Polk County also received good rains, Tryon not enough. . . If you plan to protest the condemnation of lands in Polk County by the Wild life Resources Commission send your protest to the N. C. UTILI TIES Commission and not the Wildlife Commission as stated in Wednesday’s Bulletin. Protest should be filed by Aug. 21. A hear ing will be given on Aug. 26 at .1 p. m.. at the Hearing Room in the Citv of Raleigh. Marv Laurens Richardson is chief clerk of the Utilities Commission . . . . Sheriff Loyd Panther thinks he will win in the long run; and he may legally and technically. If he is innocent every law abiding citizen should support him, re spect him and admire him for his determined fivht to hold the office with which the people entrusted him If he is fruiltv he has al ready lost something more precious than the office he holds. We are inclined to look up to our war heroes and to honor them when ever possible. We feel thev should be a little better than the aver age citizen for they are trained in the sacredness of dutv and the dignity of their job. Their fine ...Continued cn Back Page_ I MRS. NEWMAN PASSES Mrs. Salome Thompson New man, 82, of Saluda died Wed nesday at 6 p. m., at St. Luke’s hospital after a long illness. She was a native and lifelong resident of Polk County, a mem ber of the Saluda First Baptist Church and the daughter of the late Jack and Caroline Holbert Thompson. She was the widow of Robert L. Newman, former Saluda chief of police. Surviving are two sisters, Miss Monterey Thompson of Saluda and Mrs. Rebecca Overman of Ashe boro; and two grandchildren, Oehler Newman of Columbia, S. C., and Mrs. Ralph Newman Rich ardson of Irmo, S. C. * • Funeral services will be held Friday at 2:30 p. m. in Friend ship Baptist Church. The Rev. F. M. Huggins and the Rev. Ed Corn will officiate and burial will be in the church cemetery. Pallbearers will be J. S. Arledge, W. G. Egerton, Roy Ward, M. C. and Rufus Staton and Herbert Thompson. Honorary pallbearers: R. L. Savage, Joe Anderson, Carl Pace and W. F. Forrest. I MRS. LILLY BOOTH i Mrs. Lilly Booth, 91, died Wed j nesday morning at St. Luke’s Hos | pital after a long illness. I Mrs. Booth was born in Water i bury, Conn., but had made her home here with her son-in-law, Dr. E. M. Wylie, for three years. Ko funeral services in Tryon. Burial will be in Connecticut. | McFdfland Funeral Home is in j chferge of local arrangements.