TUG TBYON DAILY BULLETIN
The World’8 Smallest daily Newspaper.Seth M. Vining, Editor
Vol. 26—No. 114 TRYON, N. C. THURSDAY, JULY 9TH, 1953
Published Daily Except
{ Est. 1-31-28]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
CURB REPORTER
Weather Wednesday: High 88,
low 68, Rel. Hum. 68. ■ In some
places in Polk County last night it
was cold . . . Largest copper
head snake ever reported in South
Carolina was killed Wednesday in
Columbia. He was 44% inches
long . . . Peace talks begin again.
Tito of Yugoslavia thinks chances
for permanent peace in Europe
better . . . Master Point duplicate .
bridge Friday night at Oak Hall.
Tryon women golfers will go to
Asheville Friday for the Associa
tion tournament at the Country* I
Club. Mrs. Charles C. Stratford I
has been added to the list of play- |
ers going. . . . Charlotte Observer
reports that former Mayor Ben
E. Douglas is slated to be named
head of the Department of Con- I
servation and Development . . Dr. j
and Mrs. George F. Taylor' are I
staying at Hendersonville Sunshine |
Lodge while Dr. Taylor is teaching j
at Kanuga for 10 days.
THE SUMMER JOB AND
A TAX HURDLE
One of the most frustrating ex
periences of youth is that of a col
lege or high school student trying
to get a summer job. Time was
when a boy with a bike could nearly
always find something to do during
the vacation months, but in this
motorized and mechanized a<?e
bikes and jobs seldom go together.,
More and more bus m ss fir^s *>rn.
arranging their vacation schedule
so that they do not need ex+m|
help to fill in, with the result that
this source of employment is $lso
disappearing. A young man^ or
woman, therefore, must hun^ for
seasonal employment in resprts
and national parks, or, failing that,
— Continued on Back Page___
Rotary Club Reorganizes
The newly installed president of
the Tryon Rotary Club, George C.
Vance, will have his organizational
meeting Friday at 1 p. m. at Oak
Hall Hotel at which time he will
announce committee appointments
for the new Rotary year.
President Vance is a native of
Southern Ohio, went to high school
at Hillsboro, Ohio; worked with
the founders of LaSalle Extension
University; saw service in World
War I; became associated with In
ternationai Accountants Society
Inc., a Chicago correspondence
school of accounting
with Alexander Hamilton Insti
tute of New York. This merger
was dissolved in 1938 and Mr.
Vance became vice-president of
IAS until his retirement to Tryon.
He is still a director of IAS.
Since moving to Tryon he has
been a leader in the Episcopal
Church as treasurer and vestry
man; in the Rotary club as vice
president, committee chairman and
editor of the club bulletin. St
Luke’s Hospital, Horse Show,
Little Theatre and numerous other
civic organizations have benefited
from his art work which he fol
lows as a hobby.
Other new officers are Craig
Furr, vice president; James B.
Pruitt, secretary-treasurer.
HOSPITAL NEWS
New patients at St. Luke’s Hos
pital include Wm. J. Whitesides,
Ridge Spring, S. C., and Tom
Blackwell of Mill Spring.
Patients discharged include Ir
vin Brown of Mill Spring.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Miller of
Greensboro are arriving Thursday
for a visit with Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Burwell.