Newspapers / The Tryon Daily Bulletin … / Feb. 3, 1941, edition 1 / Page 1
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ENTERED AS SECOND-CLASS MATTER AUGUST 20, 1928, AT THE POSTOFFICE AT TRYON, N. C. UNDER THE ACT OF CONGRESS, MARCH 3, 1879 (Elje ®rgon Batljj lc per copy (The World’s Smallest Daily Newspaper) lc PER COPY Seth M. Vining, Editor $1.50 Year in the Carolinas Vol. 14. Est. 1-31-28 MARION HENSON Marion Henson, 28, son of Mrs. Henson and the late Mr. Hen j Mi of Tryon, died suddenly at me home of his mother here on Sunday morning. Funeral services were conducted at the Landrum Baptist church this afternoon at 2:30 o’clock with the Rev. A. T. Howard officiating. Interment in the Landrum cemetery. Besides his mother, the deceas ed is survived by two sisters: Lilly, of Asheville and Minnie Henson of Tryon; ;three brothers, Floyd, William and Albert Hen son. all of Tryon. Special Program At Stony Knoll Library, Feb. 9th Dr. C. Arthur Lincoln, pastor Erskine Memorial Congregational church, Tryon, will speak at a special program at Stony Knoll y library, Mill Spring on Sunday 9th, at 3 p. m. This will be an unusual oppor • tunity for the colored people of Mill Spring. Interested friends thruout the county are invited. White friends of Tryon, Colum bus and Mill Spring have special invitation. KIWANIS TUESDAY P. L. Barnette will be in charge of the Tryon Kiwanis club pro gram on Tuesday at 1 p. m., at Hotel Tryon. American cash income from farm marketings and government payments in December amounted to $837,000,000 as compared with $801,000,000 in December of 1939. TRYON, N. C., MONDAY, FEB. 3, 1941 NOTES ON PROGRESS IN DEFENSE The Democratic machine, like .the “mills of the gods,” grinds slowly but hopefully, and it be gins to look as if the President’s lend-lease bill will soon become a reality. The opposition has simmered down, and the hot air floating around the Capital is somewhat drier in quality, more like the air of Tryon. The oppo sers who have opposed chieflly for the sake of argument have been duly answered. The faithful “editor of news”, Kaltenborn, was helpful in a re cent broadcast when he pointed out that most of the powers asked for were in fact already possessed by any President of the United States, and had been duly exercis ed by many of them in sending out armed forces to Mexico and various places to settle affairs that needed military backing. Any one desiring to read the lend-lease bill in full will find a copy at the Mountain Industries, on South Trade street, also a summary of it by Livingston Hart ley. But it should be sufficient for most of us, if we really have faith in our Government, to read the report in the papers of the Foreign Relations Committee, who have made their examinations painstaking and thorough, pa tiently hearing testimony that of ten seemed unnecessary since the bill had been carefully prepared to meet the shock of all the objec tors. Wouldn’t it be a fine ges-' ture toward these really serious men to express a little more continued on back page
The Tryon Daily Bulletin (Tryon, N.C.)
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Feb. 3, 1941, edition 1
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