FOLK LIBRARY 204 WALKER ST. vOLUMBUS, N c 23722 2nd Class Postage at Tryon. North Carolina 28782 and additional post offices. Postmaster: send address changes to The Tryun Daily Bulletin, PO. Box 790, Tryon. N. C. 28782 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 Tryon Daily Bulletin (USPS 643-360) is published daily except Sat. and Sun. for $35 per year by the Tryon Daily Bulletin. Inc. 106 N. Trade St., P.O. Box 790, Tryon. N.C. 287 82 The Tryon Daily Bulletin Phone 859-9151 Printed in the THERMAL BELT of Western North Carolina 12 Pages Today Vol. 65 - No. 91 TRYON, N.C. 28782 TUESDAY, JUNE 9,1992 25c Per Copy The weekend weather: Friday, high 81, low 58, hum. 60 percent, and .43 inches of rain; Saturday, high 87, low 58, hum. 48 percent; Sunday, high 88, low 61, hum. 55 percent. When you have pre-teen children of roughly the same age, one of the things you find yourself arguing about frequently is "fairness.'' "It’s not fair!" you are told, and you spend a year or two, depending upon your patience, trying to explain the subtleties of the fairness issue. Eventu ally, you give up and shout back, "Nothing's 'fair'! Now be quiet. I don't want to hear about 'fairness' anymore." Children just don't have the capacity to see the bigger pic ture. Sure, perhaps today one got to go on an outing and the other had to clean his room. But tomorrow, the tables will turn. And there's lots of reasons why things work the way they do that don't relate to quid pro quo 'fairness' doctrines. Much of the argument for booting out our South Carolina friends from our schools is spoken of in similar terms of 'fairness.' "South Carolina charges (Continued On Back Page) Tryon Council May Hold Referendum On Town Drinking Laws The Tryon Town Council, after meeting with citizens recently to discuss crime issues, is considering holding a refer endum in the fall on the town's drinking laws. During the town meeting on crime, Tryon officials and citi zens discussed the fact that many of Tryon's problems seem to stem from the bars up and down Trade Street. Cheap drinks and the availability of drugs make Tryon a gathering spot for persons from surround ing areas, town police said. Seth Vining Jr. said at the time that the town should con sider holding a referendum to change the town's drinking laws. Right now Tryon allows on- premises and off-premises sales of beer, wine and mixed drinks. The council, however, focused its discussion last week during a budget work session on the laws regarding malt beverages (beers). "Our trouble spots are those places which sell beer and mixed drinks and no significant amount of food," Mayor Bob Neely said. Neely suggested that Tryon voters could opt for the ABC law which would permit the on premises sale of malt beverages by Class A hotels, motels and restaurants only. Class A estab lishments sell at least 50 percent (Continued On Back Page) Lutz Foundation Scholarship Winners The 14th annual Lutz Foun dation Awards Luncheon was held May 21st at North Lake Country in Shelby, N.C. Petro leum World, Inc. sponsored the luncheon where 12 students were honored. This years stu dents from Polk County are: Angela Rogers from Polk (on left) and Leah Justice from Tryon High. -Community Reporter Summer Story time At P. C. Library Polk County Public Library's Summer Storytime series, The Whole World in a Book, will begin June 18. Programs will be offered each Thursday at 10:30 a.m. from June 18 through August 13. Join us as we begin our jour ney into the "Whole World” with traditional American tales of nature and folk heroes. All children ages 3 and over are invited. No registration required. Teenager Drowns In Sunny View Pond Justin Grant Metcalf, 15, of Rutherfordton drowned in a swimming accident Sunday night in the Sunny View section of Polk County. Metcalf was swimming with two other teenagers in a private pond off Edgerton Road. The Polk County Sheriffs Department was notified at 7:50 p.m. Sunday night of a possible drowning. When officers arrived, the two teenagers told them a friend had gone under water about 40 feet from the bank and had not surfaced again. Polk County Rescue Squad personnel began dragging the pond and located Metcalf's body around 9 p.m. Buy Land Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Camp bell have purchased six acres of land in the Foxwood Hills sub division of Columbus. Bobby and Susan are cur rently living in Forest City, but are planning to build a home on their new property and move here in the near future. The property was owned and listed by Vernon Horne of Horne Realty. Frances Lytle of ERA/The Walker Agency was the sales agent in this transac tion. - Community Reporter Read The Bulletin For laical News