9 (Est. 1-31-28) Published Daily Except 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 THE mom PJSflf BULLETIN The World’s Smallest daily Vol. per. Seth M. Vining, Editor 24—No. 266 TRYP „.Vd.. THURSDAY, SEPT. 27, 1951 Our congratulations to Mr. and Mrs. P. P. Patton on their 37th wedding anniversary tomorrow. It is also Mrs. Patton’s birthday. She came to Tryon today to auto graph the few remaining histor ies left for sale at the Chamber of Commerce office . . . Plans have been. completed for the wed ding of Miss Marie Arrowood and Mr. Walter Fortune which will take place Saturday afternoon at 4 o’clock at the Tryon Second Baptist Church with the Rev. Robert A. Brooks officiating . . . Parcel post rate increases will be come effective Monday. The in crease will be about a fourth more than present nrices . . . This is National Dog Week and many grocery stores are advertising dog foods. Tobi, the black cocker owned by Dr. and Mrs. George F. Taylor is recuperating from an illness at the Taylor hospital in Hen dersonville . . . . Tonight is the | night of the duplicate bridge tout f nament at Oak Hall hotel and Fri t day night at the same place the i annual meeting of the Tryon Cham | ber of Commerce lyill be held. I SALUDA NEWS LETTER Mr. and Mrs. Ray Davis of Mount Holly were guests' of the Rev. and Mrs. Earl Hanself last week-end. Rev. Mr. Hansell is in _Continued, on Back Page_ MRS. E. B. ALLEN KILLED AT RAILROAD CROSSING Mrs. E. B. Allen, 80, of Kell Apartments, Tryon, was killed this morning by the westbound pas senger train at the Trade Street crossing near the depot. The MtFariand Funeral Home has the body awaiting information from relatives. mrs. Alien naa peen aown town doing her morning shopping*and was enroute home when hit by the train. The railroad signal bell was ringing constantly, but a lQcal freight train was in front of the depot w\th all indication that the freight was causing the bell to ring and she probably had no idea another train was coming from her left. She was killed instantly. Mrs. Allen, the widow of a prominent Congregational minis ter, had made her home in Tryon for the past two winter seasons at the Kell Apartments. Prom June to September she lived in her summer home at Beulah, Michigan, where members of her family visit ed her. The deceased is survived by lour daughters and two sops, as follows: Mrs. Harold Gray. Inter locked Mich.; Mrs. Max Haswell, Saline Valley Farms, Saline, Mich.; Mrs. Lawrence Schauffler, 32 Curtis Place, Fredonia, N. Y.; Mrs. Donald S. Bourne, 614 State St., Osage, Iowa; Donald C. Allen, 327 Burns Sft. S. E., Washington, D. C., and Robert Allen of Ohio. Mrs. Allen’s father, the Rev. O. S. Bryant, was pastor of the Congregational Church in Tryon many years ago. Since her return to the community she was a faith ful attendant at the church and Sunday school and was interested —Continued On Back Page_