nm DIM BULLETIN
The World’s Smallest dai S Newspaper.
Seth M. Vinina, Editor
a Published Daily Except
-31-28]Saturday and Sunday [5c
Entered as second class matter AUGUST 20, 1928, AT THE
_at TRYON, N. C. UNDER THE ACT OF CONGRESS, MARCH 3,
Per Copy]
POSTOFFICE
1879
Vol. 26—No. 89 TRY os N~. C. THURSDAY, JUNE 4TH, 1953
Weather Wednesday: high 89,
low 46, Rel. Hum. 33. . . Write your
friends in the North that the ther
momether goes down to 46 in June
sometimes. Just because it’s nice
and warm most of the time in
April winter guests have been
heard to remark, “I’d hate to be in.
Tryon in the summer; it must be
terribly hot.” It does get hot, but
not continuously so. Most nights
are comfortable, and even on hot
days you can find a cool spot even
if you have to go to Pearson’s Falls
. . . Sunnydale, which is being
operated this summer by Mrs.
Allen Correll (Elizabeth Kerhulas)
will ha/e organ music Friday night
beginning at 8:30. Earl Paul and
M. J. McClement of Spartanburg
will play on the electronic organ
for those who dance or want to
listen while they eat . . . Clint
Swain, chairman of Polk County
Production and Marketing Admin
istration Committee says “Far
mers on land on which no wheat
was seeded for any of the years
1951, 52, 53 may apply for a 1954
wheat acreage allotment. Farmers
must apply to his PMA committee
by June 30. Application forms are
at the County PMA office in Co
lumbus’” . . . Coroner’s Jury will
hear the Ball murder case today
(Thursday^ at 2 p m. at Court
House in Columbus . . .
I DR. DAVID WENSTRAND
j Dr. David Eric William Wen
strand, 76, passed away Thursday
morning- at St. Luke’s Hospital
about 9:10 following a short ill
ness.
Funeral arrangements had not
been made at press time. McFar
j land Funeral Home of Tryon is in
charge.
Ur. Wenstrand was born May
; 6, 1876, at Motala, Sweden, son
j of Andrew Eric and Ida Whil
helmina (Sandstrom) Wenstrand.
I He came to the United States in
j 1886 and was naturalized in 1897.
' He received his medical degree
] from Northwestern University in
1 1900 and interned at Cook County
Hospital 1900-02; he received a
! fellow in pathology at Rush Medi
j cal School in 1902-03. For 33 years
j he was assistant medical director
Northwestern Mutual Life Insur
! ance Co., and was its director
j from 1936 to his retirement -..to
Tryon. He was president of the
American Association of Life In
-Continued on Back Page_
| Cleveland Banker Buys Here
Mr. and Mrs. William P. Abbott
of Cleveland, Ohio have bought
' the George Waterman property,
known as Long Lane Farm,
through „ Richardson & Karsten.
Mr. Abbott is vice president of the
Central National Bank of Cleve
land and will retire in the fall
when he and Mrs. Abbott plan to
come to Tryon to make their home.
They have one son who is now in
the Army and was a student at
Cornell University when he en
listed.
The Waterman place was known
for many years as the Speed and
Beaumont place and later the E.
G. Flynns owned it and sold to
the Watermans. ’