Newspapers / The Tryon daily bulletin. / Feb. 6, 1939, edition 1 / Page 1
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ENTERED AS SECOND-CLASS MATTES AUGUST 20, 1928, AT THI '.'OST OFFICE AT TRYON, N. C., UNDER THE ACT OF CONGRESS, MARCH 3, 1879 Wqt ®rgmt j3ailg lc Per Copy (The World’s Smallest Daily Newspaper) Per Coi*t lr Vol. 12. Est. 1-31-28 TRYON, N. C., MONDAY, FEOB. 6, 1939 CURB REPORTER 'Aren’t these spring showers! But they don’t stop the Tryon j Hounds from their regular hunts. ! And the flowers are coming out j in bloom and new green leaves and buds are shooting forth . . . . ’ Town of Tryon is completing a ! sewer line below Kennedy Heights ; near George Bell’s. Another line near the Richardson’s and Brooks in Gillette Woods has been com- | pleted. This little town’s muni- i cipal workmen are busy nearly i all the time at something and i when a water pipe breaks it means j work at night too, in emergency. I The income and outgo are both I important. Tryon’s water supply J „ is listed among the purest . ... \ /_7Tryon stores are advertising rain- j Vrjfcoats, overshoes, umbrellas, etc., 1 today .... Looked in at Tryon’s | Flower Shop Sunday night; very | pretty .... Rhetta Bolinger of j Asheville is advertising her dis- i play of Spring designs and models j of Tioga yarns (whatever that is) j at Melrose Lodge for three days J this week until Thursday at 2 p. ! m. ... . The Lefty Flynns had ! tea with Jan Masaryck, the noted [ Czech, on their visit in New York j last week .... And Sue Sprague who is a native of Sauk Center, Minn. (Sinclair Lewis’ “Main Street” hometown), is now teaching in Minneapolis, and when Lewis was there with Kis play recently Continued, O* Back Page i Dr. Vincent Speaks Here On Friday Dr. George E. Vincent, former president of the Rockefeller Foun dation and of the University of Minnesota, an author of several books including “Social Mind and Education,” and one of America’s best public speakers, will address a joint meeting of the Tryon Ro tary and Kiwanis clubs on Friday at 1 p m., at Sunnydale Log Cabin. Rotarians and Kiwanians bringing guests are requested to notify thier club secretaries im medidately in order that sufficient plates may be provided. The price for luncheon is 75c. Dr. and MTs. Vincent are spending some time in Tryon at the J. H. Perkins home, The Cotton Patch, in the Hunting Country. Raleigh, Feb. 5. —Showdowns on virtually all controversial sec tions of North Carolina’s record setting budget are expected this week in meetings of legislative money committees. The result of the showdowns, reliable sources said, probably will determine the policy of ad ministration supporters on such proposals as a tenth salary in crement for teachers, establishment of a twelfth grade in the schools, and issuance of $5,000,000 worth of bonds to improve primary highways. Those three proposals are ad vocated by Governor Hoey in his biennial address to the law-makers, but the governor also asserted that his recommendations were not te be considered as “must” measures.
Feb. 6, 1939, edition 1
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