LIBRARY 204 "A COLUMBUS, Ill c ^ER BT. 2 3722 2nd Class Postage at Tryon. North Carolina 28782 and additional post offices. Postmaster: send address changes to The Tryon Dail) 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 (LISPS 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 L® Tryon ^s^. '^ ' or Phone 859-9151 Printed in the THERMAL BELT of Western North Carolina 28 Pages Today Vol. 65 - No. 116 The weather Monday, high 96, low 69, hum. 55 percent. The memories of Tryon linger in the minds of those who are long gone. Yesterday we printed one man's recollection of a summer in Tryon decades ago, when Thousand Pines Inn was in its heyday. Today, we bring you news of another day dreamer. Sara Goodyear Lanford of Charlotte saw a story about Mrs. B. King Couper the other day and that spurred memories of a portrait that famous Tryon artist painted. Mrs. Lanford wrote the Bul letin this week, hoping to find out the whereabouts of the por trait. Perhaps you remember it. It was a portrait of her mother, Josephine Lyles Goodyear, and it hung in the sun room at the Oak Hall Hotel for many years. If you have any information, contact the Bulletin, and we will forward it along to Mrs. Lan ford. What's happening: The Tryon Fine Arts Center box office is open from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. through Friday to sell tickets for this week's opening of Guys and Dolls. The Tryon (Continued On Back Page) TRYON, N.C. 28782 Van, Truck Collide On Hwy. 108 Monday A 1992 Ford van driven by Sandra Ward of Mill Spring crossed the center line on Hwy. 108 Monday afternoon at 2:20 and collided with a dump truck headed east. N.C. Highway Patrol officer Butch Kennedy reported that Ward was charged with driving left of center. He said she com plained that the van's steering system had begun to fail, caus ing the accident. Ward and the driver of the pick-up, Charlie Mathis of Spindale, were taken by ambu lance to St. Luke's Hospital and treated. Kennedy said the van was totaled and the left front of the dump truck was damaged from the collision. Remember When? Tliere were six players on a girls basketball team? The football field at Harmon Field ran East-West instead of North-South? The school and all the stores in town closed on Horse Show Day? A senior privilege allowed seniors to march out of Chapel or Assembly first? There was a play each Friday in the auditorium? Tlie ball went back to a center jump after each score in basket- ball? Plan to be at "The Last Hur- ^ h ,' 0n Au S- 15 at Harmon Field! - Community Reporter WEDNESDAY, JULY 15,1992 2SC Per Copy Thousands of dollars worth of harvested bean sprouts were dumped by unhappy growers at the doors of Ameri-Sprout on Hwy. 14 in Landrum Monday. Ameri-Sprout Closes, Some Fear Swindle Optimistic bean sprout grow ers with thousands of dollars invested in the Ameri-Sprout Co. were crestfallen Monday when they arrived at the com pany's offices on Hwy. 14 to make one of their bi-weekly deliveries. Warehouse and office doors were locked and a mysterious sign on the door read: "Tempo rary (sic) Closed Due To Les Campbell." Tons of mung bean sprouts worth thousands of dollars were piled high in plastic bags next to the warehouse doors where the disgruntled growers had dumped them. The sprouts were rotting in the blistering sun. Despite the stench and flies, groups of growers gathered in knots to speculate on what might have caused the Lan drum company to close. By Tuesday, one grower reported that curious people had broken into the Ameri-Sprout building and were rifling desks hoping to find the payments due them. Spartanburg sheriff's deputies were called to the scene to secure the building. Area residents who had gotten involved with the company were clearly worried that they had been taken. Here was the deal: For an investment of $3,500 each growers had bought mung beans from Ameri-Sprouts at a (Continued On Back Page)