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1 THE WORLD S SMALLEST DAILY NEWSPAPER Founded Jan. 31.1926 ‘V s ""’" 8 ,;, (Consolidated with the Polk County News Jeffrey A. Byrd, Editor and Publisher 2nd Class Postage Paid At Tryon, North Carolina, 28782 Established January 31, 1928 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 J (USPS 643-360) Printed In the THERMAL BELT of Western North Caroline 24 Pages Today Phone 859-9151 TRYON, N.C. 28782 Vol. 64 - No.21 The yveather Wednesday: high 55, low 24, hum. 72 percent, and a big frost settled in over night. Kin Flynn of Tryon will offer a tax seminar Monday evening at 7 at the Polk Campus of Iso- Thermal Community College. Flynn, a past president of the Carolinas Council of the National Association of Accountants, will discuss the most recent laws affecting income taxes. This is a sentence which begins a paragraph. This sen tence can either serve as the second sentence in this para graph, or the last, depending upon its placement. This is a sentence to tell you that we received a letter yesterday ("today" as we write). This sentence questions the instrinsic value of those first two sen ¬ tences. This is a sentence to describe the letter, which com plained that our grammatical lesson last Friday, which was derived from yet another letter, contained a grammatical error. This is a sentence that was meant for yesterday's Curb Reporter, but was placed here by accident. This is a sentence to get us back on track, talking (Continued On Back Page) Grand Mazzanovich Exhibit Opens At Gallery Sunday Lawrence Mazzanovich, a resident artist of Tryon from 1925 until his death in 1959, will be a major showing of the Tryon Painters and Sculptors organization beginning Sunday, March 10, with reception from 3 to 5 p.m. The exhibit will end March 23. Mazzanovich was bom al sea off the coast of California in 1871 or 1872. His father, from Dalmatia in Yugoslavia, and his mother, a native of Venice, settled in San Francisco. After several moves, young Lawrence first became a sign painter and an illustrator in Oiicago. His first wife Ann, from Chi cago, persuaded him to become a full-time artist. They moved to Paris, where his first lands capes, dating from 1905, showed little sign of the influ ence of the prevailing impres sionism of the time. They por-. trayed rather the work of Whistler and the American ton- alist landscape painters of the early 20th century However, when he returned to America, settling in Connecti cut in 1909, his technique changed to a brightly-colored impressionism. The next decade sustained Mazzanovich's great est period of creativity and financial rewards. His wife Ann managed his exhibit scheduling and finances during this period. However, they divorced in (Continued On Back Page) FRIDAY, MARCH 1,1991 'The Lion In Winter’ Director Marianne Brown, who had extensive acting and musical experience around the world before coming to Tryon, has continued being active in those fields since moving here 14 years ago. She has acted in seven, and directed five, Tryon Little Theater productions. In addition, she has appeared at the Barn Door. Furthermore, she conducts her church choir. Marianne last appeared with Tryon Little Theater in 1988 in Call Me Madam, playing the role of the Grand Duchess. Her last director's assignment was Morning's at Seven, staged in 1986. Earlier she directed The Miracle Worker, Petticoat Fever, Holiday, and Hay Fever. She is elated over The Lion in Winter, her current assignment, not only because it is a superb play, but also because it has a (Continued On Back Page) 20e Per Copy Communication To: Tryon Thermal Belt Cham ber of Commerce Gentleman, On behalf of the officers and men of Attack Squadron EIGHTY-FIVE, I wish to express my sincere appreciation for the subscription to the peri odicals which your organization coordinated. Mr. Tabb was right on target when he described our hunger for news from back home and the need to relax after a five or six hour combat mis sion. The support of organizations such as yours is just as impor tant to the men and mission of Attack Squadron EIGHTY- FIVE as aircraft parts or bombs. We fight all the harder knowing that the American people are behind us in this conflict. You can be sure that in your own special way you have contrib uted immeasurably to our efforts. Once again, thanks for your prayers and support. May God bless you all. Lewis W. Crenshaw, Jr. Commander, U.S. Navy Meets Monday Thermal Belt Rotary will meet Monday, March 4 at the Western Steer in Columbus. The program, presented by Ed Britton, will be a Club Assem bly. It will follow dinner at 6 p.m. and everyone is invited.
The Tryon Daily Bulletin (Tryon, N.C.)
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March 1, 1991, edition 1
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