Newspapers / The Tryon Daily Bulletin … / May 22, 1935, edition 1 / Page 1
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ENTERED AS SECOND-CLASS MATTER AUGUST 20, 1928, AT THE POST OFFICE AT TRYON, N. C. ; UNDER THE ACT OF CONGRESS, MARCH 3, 1879 ffirmut Jlatly Vol. 8 TRYON, N. C., WEDNESDAY, MAY 22, 1935 Today’s Headlines Jane Adams, noted social work er is dead. Labor leaders to fight President Roosevelt’s relief wages which range from sl9 to $94 per month which a,re high enough to keep a man from starving and yet low enough to keep men from leaving industrial jobs. Spanish aviator flies Atlantic from Africa to Brazil. The Ford Motor Co., has announced a $6 per day mini mum for all employees and means an increase in wages for Ford em ployees of $2,000,000 per month. Section 4301 (a) of the Code for North Carolina, INJURY TO TREES, WOODS, CROPS, etc., NEAR HIGHWAY; DEPOSIT ING TRASH NEAR HIGH WAY. Any person, not being on his own lands, or without the consent of the owner thereof, who shall, within one hundred yards of any State Highways of North Carolina or within a like distance of any c-ther public road or highway, will fully commit any damage, injury, or simulation to or upon any tree, wood, underwood, timber, garden, crops, vegetables, plaints, lands, springs, or any other matter or thing growing or being thereon, or who breaks, injures or removes any tree, plant, or flower within such limits, or shall deposit any trash, debris, garbage, or litter within such limits, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon conviction fined not exceeding fifty dollars ($50.00) or imprisoned nbt ex ceeding thirty days. This act shall not apply to offi cers, agents and employees of the State Highway Commission or county road authorities while in the discharge of their duties. A Visitor Writes Os Tryon A few weeks ago the writer left Tryon after a visit of two weeks. That stay hdd been a sort of pil grimage for fifteen years before he had come there to tarry a day or so had stayed a fortnight and had left with a determination some day to return. It proved to be about 5,500 days before he did. Life is like that. But distance often gives a clear er view, distance both in space and in time, and now after some weeks and separated by many hundred miles, I am going to try to review the impressions that seem to give the picture of Tryon’s peculiar and compelling, a1 m ost mysterious charm. For there is something not a little mysterious or even mysti cal about it. There are other mountains as lovely, other air as invigorating, other people per haps as hospitable and as charm ing, but in Try-on the sum of all can net be arrived at by any sort of arithmetic. Like the strength of a rope of many strands it is more than the sum of each. Some thing is added. And that something is that rare thing, that prize of all the artists and saints, the simple quality elf simplicity. One way of ex pressing it is the word, purity, as purity of line or of tone; or, as Jesua put it, that purity of inten tion a;nd singleness of purpose which to its possessors alone gives the true vision of the divine. And I’m sure that all lovers of Tryon will agree that there is that qual ity of simplicity there, a direct ness, a clearness of line, a single ness of purpose that is unusual in this complex wofrld dusty and Continued on Page Three Est. 1-31-28
The Tryon Daily Bulletin (Tryon, N.C.)
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May 22, 1935, edition 1
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