POLK LIBRARY 11 nov 91
E'i‘. >, 204 WALKER ST.
COLUMBUS, N C 23722
2nd Class Postage Paid At
Tryon, North Carolina, 28782
Established January 31, 1928
THE WORLD’S SMALLEST DAILY NEWSPAPER
Founded Jan 31.1928 by Seth M. Vining
(Consolidated with the Polk County News 1955)
Jeffrey A. Byrd, Editor and Publisher
The Bulletin is published
Daily except Sat. and Sun.
106 N. Trade St., P. O. Box 790
Tryon, N. C. 28782
The Tryon Daily Bulletin
o' (USPS 643-360)
Phone 859-9151
Printed in the THERMAL BELT of Western North Carolina
24 Pages
TRYON. N. C. 28782
Vol. 63 — No. 198
The weekend weather:
Thursday, high 61, low 39, hum.
68 percent; Friday, high 49, low
38, hum. 90 percent, and 1.33
inches of rain fell; Saturday, high
54, low 39, hum. 65 percent, and
1.89 inches of rain fell; Sunday,
high 61, low 40.
Tryon’s official weather
recorder, Robert Dedmondt, had
a heart attack Saturday and is
recovering well at St. Luke’s
Hospital.
The Landrum Town Council
meets tonight at 7:30 p.m. at the
Town Hall.
Tickets are now on sale for the
1990 Christmas Concert of the
Tryon Community Chorus.
Showtimes will be Dec. 14-16 and
all proceeds go to the Rotary
Scholarship Fund.
There will be a countywide
benefit to raise money to help
defray the hospital expenses of
Harry E. Fox. The program will
feature nine performers and will
be held at the Tryon Elementary
School Auditorium Saturday
night at7.
The first annual Crafts For
Hope sale, featuring over 25
talented crafters, will be held
Saturday from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.
at the Stearns Gym in Columbus.
All proceeds will go to benefit
Steps to HOPE.
Chorus Xmas Concert
Tickets Now On Sale
Tickets for the 1990 Christmas
Concert of the Tryon Community
Chorus went on sale to the
general public this week via a
couponed ad in The Daily
Bulletin. The concert, directed
by Betty Brewer and produced by
George Finnie is entitled “The
Many Faces of Christmas” and
will be presented on Dec. 14, 15,
and 16 in the Tryon Fine Arts
Center.
Seventy-three contributors to
the Chorus of $10 or more each
year who have thus become
“members of the Tryon
Community Chorus, Inc.” on Nov
2 received a special mailed
invitation to purchase tickets to
the Christmas concert.
“This is a good time to remind
our supporters that now is a good
time to renew their membership
in the Chorus, by sending their
check for $10 or more to Tryon
Community Chorus, PO Box 54,
Tryon,” Dr. Wray S. Monroe,
Rotary Liaison Officer for the
Chorus, advised. “Such
contributions are tax-deductible,
and help our Rotary Scholarship
program as much as ticket
purchases. And of course, we
plan to continue to offer such
contributing members early
choice of seats for our future
concerts,” he
noted. Reporter.
The St. Luke’s Hospital Board
of Trustees will meet Thursday,
Nov. 15 at 6:30 p.m. in the
hospital library.
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13,1990
200 Per Copy
Family Campout At FENCE
Here's a sure-fire recipe tor a
good time. Take twelve families
and friends, one large campfire,
plenty of hotdogs and
marshmallows, and blend well in
a grassy meadow beside a
stream. Top it off with a hike
through night-time woods, and
almost-full moon, and silent mist
rising from a pond.' Feeds 21
adults and 22 children.
This recipe was tested recently
at FENCE’S Fall Family
Campout with pleasing results.
Half the group enjoyed the
evening activities and cookout,
then returned home to sleep. The
other half spent the night in tents
or under the camp shelter and
awoke to 40 degree temperatures,
a crackling fire, and hot
chocolate. For those whose
appetites are sufficiently
whetted, seconds will be
available next fall.— Reporter.
Buys Property
Roland Williamson of
Magnolia, CA, has purchased the
Jones home on Shady Lane in
Landrum. Retired for over
twenty years and a recent
widower, Mr. Williams took his
transcontinental motor home on
a house-hunting jaunt, where he
checked out the Ozarks before
investigating the wonders of our
“Thermal Belt.” His host for our
area was John Prass of
AM:Realty, whose
correspondence had brought him
to the Carolinas.
The Shady Lane home was
listed by Carl Wharton of the
Walker Agency, and the sale was
handled by John Prass at
AM: Realty.