FOLK LIBRARY R T. 2, BOX 11 COLUMBUS, N c 2nd Class Postage Paid At Tryon, North Carolina, 28782 Established January 31, 1928 11 nov 00 28722 THE WORLD’S SMALLEST DAILY NEWSPAPER Member: North Carolina Press Assn. (Consolidated with the Polk County News 1955) Seth M. Vining, Jr., Editor and Manager The Bulletin is published Dally except Sat. and Sun. 106 N. Trade St., P. 0. Box 790 Tryon, N. C. 28782 The Tryon Daily Bulletin * (USPS 643-360) Phone 859 9151 Printed In the THERMAL BELT of Western North Carolina Vol. 53 — No 57 TRYON. N. C 28782 MONDAY, APR. 21, 1980 12 Pages Today Price 10c Per Copy Weather Thursday: high 66, low 33. Friday was a perfect spring day. Sears, Roebuck and Co., searching for 20 kids to model clothes for its catalog, has received more than 200.000 pictures from responding par ents They have had to hire 18 people to help sort out the mail Britain's last African colony. Rhodesia, became the new black-ruled nation of Zimbabwe Thursday. 30,000 people cheered as Britain’s Prince Charles handed over the instrument of power (constitution) to the country’s new prime minister, Robert Mugabe. The Red Cross Bloodmobile is at the Episcopal Parish House today from 12:30to5:30p m This visit of the Bloodmobile is a tribute to Dr Wm. R. Bosien. The Polk County Commission ers will meet tonight at 7 O’clock at the Mill Spring School. All children who will be 5 or 6 on or before Nov. 1st should register for kindergarten or first grade Tuesday at O. P. Earle Library MEET TONIGHT The Tryon Band Booster Club will meet tonight at 7 30 at the band room Today Is The Day! The Red Cross Bloodmobile will be at the Parish Hall in Holy Cross Episcopal Church today from 12:30 to 5:30. The Red Cross is urging everyone who is over 17 years of age. weighs more than 110 pounds and is in good health to donate a pint of blood as a special tribute to the late Or. William R Bosien. The process is simple and the blood is urgently needed for use by doctors in this area and at St. Luke's Hospital. — Reporter “The Salt Syndrome” At Kiwanis Tuesday The Tryon Kiwanis Club will meet Tuesday at 12:45 p m. at The Dinner Bell. The film, "The Sall Syndrom", produced by the American Security Council Edu cation Foundation for the Coalition for Peace Through Strength will be shown. The objectives ol the coalition are to inform all Americans of the dangerous risk our country is taking by unilaterally disarming in the face of an all-out Soviet buildup, and to work for the adoption of a national strategy of peace through strength. Allan Biles is in charge of the program. Red Fox Couples Bridge Winners of the Red Fox Couple Bridge on Wednesday. April 11 were Fred Schairer 1st; Stan Czetwertynski. 2nd; Mrs. Roland Towle. 3rd; Lou Pettit. 4th. George Dusenbury The Bulletin learned of the death of George Dusenbury in Winston-Salem on Friday prior to press time. The obituary will be in Tuesday’s Bulletin. Mr Dusenbury was critically burned about noon last Monday. The funeral will be Wednesday al 4 p.m. at the Church of Holy £ross. DUPLICATE BRIDGE The Tryon Duplicate Bridge was held Thursday night at the home of Mr and Mrs. Stanislas Czetwertynski. The results were as follows: North-South: 1st Mrs. L. M. Davis and Mrs. Stanislas Cxelwertynski; 2nd Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Pomeroy; 3rd. Mrs. Miles White and Frederick Chevalier East-West: 1st. George Kelly and Arthur Farwell; 2nd. (tie) Mrs. Bert Anderson and Mrs. Earl Carter with Mrs. Nickolas Willis and Stanislas Czetwertyn ski. TRACK NEWS In the Appalachian conference boys track meet Cherokee was first with 152 points, followed by Polk Central 130.5, Edneyville 126, NCSD 47. Tryon 46. Rosman 20.5. Local winners were: 1600 meters. Janulis, Tryon 4:33 . 800 Relay. Polk Central 1:39 5; 200 meters, Huen. Polk Central 24.86; High Jump. Kelly, Polk Central 5-8; Long Jump. Kelly, ^olk Central 19-8*4; Triple Jump. Kelly. Polk Central 39-6. Fine Arts Center Buys Binks Property John Landrum, President of the Tryon Fine Arts Center, has announced the purchase of the Albert E. Binks property, adjacent to the Center, at a cost of $75,000. Arthur Farwell, a former director, has donated half of the purchase price as a memorial to his son, Fred B Farwell, who died last year. In 1972 the senior Mr. Farwell gave the Portia Bartlett Farwell Memorial Gar den. directly behind the Fine Arts Center, in memory of his first wife. Other gifts are beginning to come in and it is expected that the community will support the new acquisition through gifts and projects. "With the growth of the Tryon area and the increase in activities of many kinds in the Center," Mr. Landrum said, “it has become increasingly obvious that we must expand. During the past year more than 300 performances, rehearsals, meet ings and other events were scheduled in the Center. The new acquisition will ease the space problem inherent in this kind of demand.” The property consists of a six room house with basement occupying a lot 75 by 134 feet on the west side of the Center building While the sale has legally taken place, the Center will not take Continued On Back Page

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