Newspapers / The Tryon Daily Bulletin … / Oct. 9, 1936, 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 ®rgmt J atlu (The Smallest Daily Newspaper In The World) Vol. 9, Est. 1-31-28 Mrs. L. T. Jackson Mrs. L. T. (Amelia) Jackson, age 93,. died this afternoon at 1:20 o’clock near Mill Spring at the home of her son, former Sheriff Frank Jackson. Funeral services will be held Saturday afternoon in Mill Spring at 3:30 at White Oak Baptist church of which she was a member for 65 years. The ser vices will be conducted by her pastor, the Rev. Chas. B. Trammel. The deceased, who had been ill for the past six months is sur vived by three sons, J. M. Jackson, of Boiling Springs, S. C., B. G. Jackson, of Burton S. C., and Frank Jackson of Mil' Spring: also twelve grandchildren and a number of great grandchildren. She was a native of Polk countv and an influential citizen of Mill Spring community for many years. MRS. LEE Mrs. Eliza Lee died at her home near Landrum this morning after a lengthy illness. Funeral ser vices. will be announced later. Barbecue Stand Opens Near Here on Saturday C. S. Black of Anderson, S. C., and niece, Mrs. A. F. Campbell, of Spartanburg, will ooen a Bar becue stand and Shall Service Station this week - end on the Tryon-Saluda highway at S. G. Blackwell's Smiley Mt. place. Mr. Black has operated Barbecue stands at important stations in Florida. Mrs. Campbell is the owner of several service stations and barbecue stands in South Cai'o lina. TRYON, N, C-, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1936 Dr. Dodge Honored All Tryonites will be interested in the clipping below from the Wil liams College Alumni Review con cerning Dr. Dodge, who with Mrs. Dodge moved to Tryon last win ter and bought a house in Pacolet Hills where they are now living and are making Tryon their home. “An oil portrait of Professor Raymond Dodge, dean of American experimental psychologists, has been presented to Yale University by friends and colleagues of Dr. Dcdge, it was announced in May by the university. The portrait the work of Lloyd Bowers Embry, of the Yale School of the Fine Arts, has been hung in the Insti tute of Human Relations. Professor Dodge, who was the discoverer of the fundamental law of visual perception in reading, the originator of many different scien tific techniques of proceduce, and a contributor to sound psycholo gical theory, retired in June from active service at Yale. A volume of scientific articles is now being prepared by leading psychologists in commemoration of his contribu tions to the field of experimental psychology. Dr. Dodge originated research to study the art of perusing the print ed page. As a graduate studen'; at Halle, where he received his doctorate, he determined to find out what happens to the eye when a human being reads lines of words or other characters. He found that the eye does not glide a’ong in smooth sweeps on the lines of printed characters, but proceeds in short jumps, with a pause of about a third of a second Continued on Page Tivo
The Tryon Daily Bulletin (Tryon, N.C.)
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Oct. 9, 1936, edition 1
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