ENTERED AS SECOND-CLASS MATTER AUGUST 20, 1928, AT THE POSTOFFICE AT TRYON. N. C. UNDER THE ACT 0* CONGRESS, MARCH 3, 1879 THE TRYON DAILY BULLETIN 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 SOLDIER NOTES Chairman Julian Hester of the Polk County Draft Board has re ceived instructions for release to the press which states that every ■registrant can appeal from any of his local board to the State Director of Selective Service. The registrant must ap peal within ten days after mailing of notice of classification. The new men registered under the Selective Training and Service Act cf July Ist will be treated in the same manner as the ones regis tered previously. There will be no distinction. BRYANT - LANGLEY Rev. J. A. Langley and Miss Cleo Bryant, of Dunbar, S. C., were married at the Presbyterian manse at McCcll on Sunday eve ning at 8 o'clock. Rev. E. S. Coates, the bride’s pastor, officiat ed, using the ring ceremony. The bride is the daughter of ■Ylr. B. J. Brvant and the late Mrs. of ’Dunbar. Mr. Langley was pastor of the Clio Baptist church for ten and a half years and recently accept ed a call to the Reedy Creek Baptist church, near Marion, where thev will he at heme after a tw T o-week’s trip to the moun tains.—Pee Dee Advocate. Mr. Langley’s first wife was the former Miss Bessie Jackson, daughter of Mrs. John L. Jackson, and the late Mr. Jackson. She died several years ago. • The Langleys always spent their vaca tions in Trycn and he has preach ed often in the pulpits of Polk County. TRYON. N. C., TUESDAY, AUG. 12, 1941 CURB REPORTER Louis H. Bosse, formerly fore man of The Polk County News under R. D. Lyons and S. T. Wood, was in Tryon today visiting old friends while enroute to Abbeville. South Carolina, from Brevard where he has been spending part of his vacation. Mr. Bosse is 77 years old and has been in the printing business 67 years, start ing at the age cf 10. He said if it hadn’t been for the news paper business, he would have been one of the most ignorant men in South Carolina. While set ting type as a boy he read some of the best copy written by the leading men of those days. In set ting the type by hand he had to set it letter by letter to build the words that gave himself an edu cation. He was working on the Atlanta Constitution when the great Henry W. Grady died. He began his printing career in 1874 on the Spartanburg Herald which then was a weekly paper. He taught the father of the new S. C. Senator Roger Peace how to set type. Mr. Bosse has had an interesting and useful career in being an important link between the thought and the printed word. Through all the trials and tribu lations of 67 years of printing he has emerged cheerful in spirit, loving mankind in general and trying to enjoy in spirit through others all the joys of life ..... Continued on Back Page

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