Newspapers / The Tryon Daily Bulletin … / Jan. 26, 1940, edition 1 / Page 1
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ENTERED AS SECOND-CLASS MATTER AUGUST 20, 1928, AT THE POST OFFICB AT TRYON, N. C. UNDER THE ACT OF CONGRESS, MARCH 3, 1879 ®lßrnlg Seth M. Vining, Editor $1.50 Year In the Carolina* lc per copy (The Worlds Smallest Daily Newspaper) le per copy Vol. 12. Est. 1-31-28 TRYON, N C., FRIDAY, JAN. 26, 1940 Secretary G. Isham Henderson of the Civil Service commission has several openings for government jobs including telephone operator at $1,200 per year, stenographers, typists, aeronautical inspector, elec trical mechanic and others. If interested in getting these jobs make application at Tryon post office .... The Southern Literary Messenger, founded in 1834, and famous for its literary articles has been revived and is again de voted to every department of litera ture and the fine arts. The cur rent issue is dedicated to our lieloved poet, Sidney Lanier, and has more than a dozen articles about Lanier. They include Un nublished Letters of Sidney Lanier J- J. DeWitt Hankins; Our Poet Dawns, a poem, by M. Clifford arrison; A dedication editorial by Editor F. Meredith Dietz; An artistic sketch of the last Lanier home at Lynn, drawn by Mrs. Harkness Smith; On Wings of Song by Beatrice Miary Billing; The South’s Religious Thinkers by John J. Lanier; The Laniers by Mary Lanier Magruder; Sidney Lanier’s Fame and Memorials by Oliver Orr; Ballard of the Silver Flute, a tribute to Sidney Lanier by Visian Yeiser Laramore, poet Laureate of Florida; and other in teresting articles. Tryon and its visitors appreciate Sidney Lanier. We have honored his memory by —.Continued on Back Page Mill Spring School To Re-Open Soon Classes are expected to be re sumed at the Mall Spring school within the next week or ten days, according to a statement made to day by W. E. Sawyer, county superintendent of education. Although the part of the build ing destroyed by fire on Mjonday afternoon is not expected to be re built in time for use during this term, Superintendent Sawyer said that the auditorium and the man ual training shop located in the unburned section of the building will be partitioned and used as emergency class rooms until re building of the north wing is completed. The school’s heating equipment was located in the burned section and was lost. The time classes will be suspended depends on the time it will take for plumbers to install emergency heating units. Green Creek school in the low er part of the county remains closed as a result of the boiler * used to heat this building, evplod ing immediately after the Christ mas holidays. According to in formation reaching Tryon, a new boiler has been purchased and is now being installed. This will enable classes to be resumed in this unit of the Polk county schools within the next few days. Due to the condition of the county roads traversed by school busses, none of the consolidated schools will re-open until Monday, according to Mr. Sawyer. Nazis to intensify U-boat war fare. Germany builds sub daily.
The Tryon Daily Bulletin (Tryon, N.C.)
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Jan. 26, 1940, edition 1
1
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