ENTERED AS SECOND-CLASS MATTER AUGUST 20, 192#, AT THE POST OFFICK AT TRYON, N C. UNDER THE ACT OF CONGRESS, MARCH 3, 1879 Sttf * ißailjj Seth M. ViNing, Editor $1.50 Year In the Carolina« lc PBg COPY (The World’s Smallest Daily Newspaper) lc pEr copy u - Es t. 1-31-28 TRYON, N C. t MONDAY, JAN. 1, 1940 E. W. Dedmond fi. W. Dedmond, 81-year-old /pioneer resident of Polk county, jjyfoowg to thousands of friends as Dedmond, died at approximate ... ly 5 *o*clQck fhis morning as his home in Columbus, He had been . in declining hgplth fqp some time, . his condition jbteeaming serious over ♦ theweekentt/ *£s The deceased is survived by two sons, George C., of Tryedtnondt of Newbeipw, S. C.; three Mrs. A/D. flTaaperity, S.*C,; Mrs. J. L.Fu*r of Clinton, S. C.,~ and M!rs. W. A. t)rmand of Columbus. Seventeen grandchildren and sev eral great-grandchildrdn alsp sur vive. . , \ Funeral services will be held on * Tuesday at / the'*. First Baptist * church at 2 p. m., with interment in the cemetery of the '»Higbus Presbyterian church. .'WpWne *Rev. D. M. gMicGeacby will officiate, assisted by* Dr. G. V. Tilley. 4 • ,* Mr; Dedmond and A late Mrs. Dedmond celebrated f|eir 60th > weeding anniversary on 10, 1j)39, and Mrs. Dedmond, ill at tm&fr time failed ro recuperate and died December 21. She was 77 £«ftrs of age. Dr. .Dedmond moved with his fatnly tp Ptdk county from Clm ; ton, S. C., and had engaged in the manufacture of a mineral medicine from ore on his farm near and continued actively in this business until his-death. * * A London Letter To liarkness Smith * - - - The following culled from a let ter dated December* 15, from my British cou&'ft, Mrs; W„,Foss Hark ness, in London somewhere: Excerpt:— “ ... .We |j |» living at Latymer Court, Hammersmith Road, not far along from the High Street shops at Kensington, and the fiat is a joy,—just like an American flat, with i central (steam) heating, BOILING water, hard wood floors and an American ;refrigapator. So at the mojnent wfr feel vlfy happy altho we have none too mueh fnoney to spare. , / . JF “Everyone from the States was so kind we were landed over what with letters beggigg ns to come over and offering all sorts of in ducements. “It was very fuyiy how the American were most anxious to get ns all out. “The poor Navy as usual gets all the brunts of war, and" the way that-the Germans have sunk neu tral shipping is scandalous. I do not suppose we ever can do as thev do—as for instance the non-sink ing of the ‘Bremen.’ “I wonder (vhat Lindbergh thinks of our ‘poor little air-force’ • now ? We ourselves are amazed at how much they are doing with so little loss. The thing is. it is fo upsdt them (Ed. the German peo ple)* when so few of their fliers re turn,—and VERY few of the : r vaunted submarines. / ! /' / “1 Suppose that after taking / Continued on Rttrh *»/,.. '•**/$