Published Daily Except (Eat- 1-31-28_Saturday and Sunday 5c Per Copy ENTERED AS SECOND CLASS MATTER AUGUST 20, 1928, AT THE POSTOFFICE at -tryon, n. c. under the act of CONGRESS, march 3, 1879 TIE TRYON DAILY BULLETIN The World's Smallest daily Newspaper.Seth M. Vinihg, Editor Vol. 24—No. 240 TRYON, N. C-. WEDNESDAY, AUG. 22, 1951 Weather Tuesday: High 95, low 62, Rel. Hum. 68 . . ..Friday will 1 be a big day. in Tryon with' the opening of the new Cassels 5&10c Store, according to a double page advertisement in today’s Bulletin. I There will be hundreds of free j gifts to draw folks from all over j this gection. Ballenger’s is also j putting on a half-price sale. Good j time for other stores to put on I sales and give more inducements for the thousands of people expect ed in towh. Schoo^ clothes are to be bought, and school supplies, too. Time to get ready for many things. The grocery stores will ad vertise their specials Thursday and t^WiU bring many folks to the . . . . ine iryon unam- j ber of Commerce is helping to pay the expenses of Graves Taylor’s radio broadcasts from Detroit and Cleveland, and 'people who have heard them up there write that they are good and they have in duced many visitors to come to this section. Mr. and Mrs. Andrew C. Dunn of Plymouth, Mich., who have been taking The Bulletin for a number of years to keep up with Tryon with ah eye to a permanent home, have been spend ing a few date at Buckingham Inn. They think The Bulletin should be sent to a lot of people all over the nation instead of -Continued on Back Page_i WELFARE AT KIWANIS Miss Jeannette MacGregor, Supt. Polk County Welfare Department, spoke to the Kiwanis Club Tuesday at Oak Hall hotel on the welfare program in Polk County. Miss Mac Gregor said that. 365 families were receiving assistance in Polk Coun ty at tjie present time. The speak er told of new legislation that af fected the welfare program. For the first time, aid is available to the totally and permanently dis abled who haven’t fitted into any of the categories that would en able them to ^receive assistance. Another law that has received quite a bit of attention is the lien law, which places a .lien on the estate of anyone receiving old age as sistance after October 1st, which must be paid before any property goes to the heirs. Miss MacGregor said that the department, often had to appeal for private funds to help out because the county didn’t have enough money to do all that was needed to be done. HUBEJt-iPARKER The following announcement has been received by Tryon friends: “Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Eddy Parker, junior, have the honour of announcing the marriage of their daughter, Caroline ‘Stone, ti> Mr. Michael Wright Huber, on Saturday. July the twenty-eighth, nineteen hundred and fifty-one, St. Aidan’s Chapel, South Dartmouth, Massachusetts.” « r • The bride is a granddaughter of the late J. H. Perkins who owned the. -Cotton Patch in the Hunting Country and she was an annual visitor here every spring where she took pert in the Riding & Hunt Club activities.