Published Daily Except i Est.1-31-281 Saturday and Sunday[5c Per Copy] AS~SECOND CLASS MATTER AUGUST 20, 1928, AT THE POSTOFPICE _at tryon. n. c. under the act of congress, march 3, 1879_ THE TH10AI DAILY BULLETIN The World’s Small?6 _§ ily Newspaper._Seth M. Vining, Editor Vol. 26—No. 156 Jj YON, N. C. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1953 Weather Friday: High 78, low 70, rain .05, Rel. Hum. 85; Satur day high 78, low 70, rain .44, Rel. Hum. 74; Sunday high 73, low 58, rain .11, Rel. Hum. 83. . . . . Today all America honors labor with a holiday which re minds us of this quotation, “An honest man is the noblest work of God.” A mark for us all to shoot at . . . Apple festival ends today in Hendersonville. Parade will be gin at 2 p. m. Queen to be crown ed at 8 p. m., by Senator Lennon. . . . Pro-Western Germans win election in favor of U. S. Sunday. . . . Adams-Millis defeated Beacon Bees in baseball Sunday 8-0. BRIDGE WINNERS Winners at the Duplicate Bridge Tournament Friday were as fol lows: Mr. and Mrs. R. B. White, first; Col. J. O. Safford and S. Czetwer t^nald. second; Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Kerby, third; G. I. Hen derson and George Unhoch, fourth; Mrs. Sam Vance and Mrs. S. Czetwertynski, fifth. A regular game will be played next Friday, Sept. 11. A master game will be played on Sept. 18. Lt.-Col. and Mrs. Wm. A. Schil let.ter have returned to Fort Jack son after a visit at their Tryon home. Col. Schilletter will be re tired from the army in December. MRS. W. A. NEWELL Mrs. William A. “Mose” Newell, 86, pioneer kindergarten educator in the U. S. and founder of the Methodist social service in the Southeast died Friday at 4 p. m. at the home of her daughter in Greensboro. Burial services were held at the family cemetery at Boger in Cabarrus County beside her husband, who was formerly pastor of the Tryon Methodist j Church, principal of Tryon school and superintendent of Methodist districts. Mrs. Newell was the former Miss Bertha Payne of Racine, Wis., an aunt of Ralph Erskine, Mrs. Carroll P. Rogers and Mrs. M. Parish-Watson. She first came to Tryon on a visit in 1896, and marriedT to Mr. Newell in Tryon in 1909. She and her husband be came leaders in religious and social service work in the various com munities in which they lived while he was a Methodist minister, but they always maintained a home in Tryon until a few years ago shortly after the death of Mr. Newell in 1940. Their home is now owned by Mrs. Jessie Daniel Ames. They also built the H. L. Fite house and the Mark E. Smith house. Before coming to Tryon Mrs. Newell was a professor in the Un;versity of Chicago. For many years she was superintendent of the Bureau of Christian Social Relations. She advocated the ex tension of sick and visitation to training in social work, world fellowship and race relations, and w^s a leader in many other civic affairs on a national scale. Besides her nieces and nephew in Tryon she is survived by one daughter. Mrs. Robert H. Shep herd of Greensboro and a nephew .in Wisconsin.