Published. Daily Except I Est.^1-31-281 _Saturday and Sunday[5c Per Copy] ENT^iP) AS SECOND CLASS MATTER AUGUST 20, 1928, AT THE POSTOFFICE AT TRYON, N. C. UNDER THE ACT OF CONGRESS, MARCH 3, 1879 THE Tiny DM BULLETIN The World's Smallest p., « Newspaper. Seth M. Vining, Editor Vol. 26—No. 155 TR $ N, N. C. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1953 ,Miss Weather Thursday: High 93, low 67, rain .05, Rel. Hum. 75 . . . General Dean freed from Red Ko rean prisoner of war camp. The end of exchange of prisoners ex pected this week-end . . . Heat wave easing up some. Showers came to this section Thursday af ternoon and more promised for the next few days . . . Just one more day for shopping in Tryon before Tuesday. Stores will be closed Sunday and Monday on oc county of Labor Day. County Court House offices will also be closed, but the commissioners will meet and the tax sale will be held . . . The sun was so hot in Rutherford ton last Saturday that it expanded the plate glass window of the Carolina 5&10c store and broke it. . ... Now that the Korean war is held up by an armistice, rumors of war are beginning in other places and individual murders are getting the spotlight . . . William R. Shell of Spartanburer has con fessed to the fatal stabbing of his estranged wife .... The queen of the Appje Festival is Miss Lib Carnegie of Rutherfordton. Tryon’s candidate, Miss Sally Goodyear, was a worthy represen tative of the community. Her picture is listed a vain in today’s Asheville Citizen along with eight other attractive girls. Several thousand people attended the con- I -Continued on Back Paye_ COMMUNICATIONS —Continued, from Thursday_ Open letter to the people of Polk and Henderson Counties: Q: How much money will the people get for the land that they are selling? A: Nearly 90% of the land to be purchased has already been optioned. The people who have giv en options on their land will get the full amount agreed upon in th.e option. In those few cases where option agreement is not reached, the value of the land will be judged by a committee of local citizens. Q: How is the proposed refuge to be managed? A: It will be under the manage ment of the State Wildlife Re sources Commission, which agency will assign to it a full time pro tector who will be assisted by local deputies. This is to be done as soon as the establishment, is assured, which it is hoped will' be some time in the next few weeks. Q: Will people be allowed to hunt and fish on the area? A: Since it wil be stocked with deer and wild turkeys, and since these must be given a chance to multiply, the area will be closed to all hunting for a period of at least 5 years from the time of completion of stocking. But the fishing regulations will remain essentially the same as they are now. Q: When the area is open to hunting who will be allowed to hunt? A: It will be open on an equal basis to all licensed hunters. The demand,^ for hunting on Pisgah ahd the other older refuges has been so great as to require setting hunter1 quotas and applications in advance1 to insure safety to the .’a_Continued on Page Two_