From: KyArchives [Archives@genrecords.org] Sent: Thursday, February 10, 2005 1:19 PM To: Ky-Footsteps Subject: NEWS.Glasgow.Times-Barren-Cumberland.1901.11.19 News Notes November 19 1901 Cumberland-Barren County KyArchives News Glasgow Times Glasgow and Burksville Stage Notes: Mr. Reece MORGAN, of Albany Landing, who has been to Texas and Indian Territory for several months past, returned home last Friday. He is wonderfully blessed with investments made while gone. Mr. Jas H GRUBBS, of Waterview, came over on the state Saturday en route to Nashville, where he goes to take a position in the L&N freight office as receiving and disbursing clerk. Mr and Mrs APPLEBY, formerly of Lick Branch, Cumberland County, after an absence of three years in the West, went over the road Saturday en route to their old home in Cumberland. J W NORRIS, formerly of Cumberland, but now living in Arkansas, passed over the road Monday on a visit to his old Kentucky home. LAND, STOCK AND CROP. W B CLARK, near Hiseville, has 15 fat hogs for sale.T M BERRY, Austin, has 18 steers weighing from 600 to 800 pounds for sale. Mr. Willis BRYANT, of Hiseville, want to buy two nice mare mules (weanlings). Edgar KING bought a four-year-old mare mule, 15 1/21 hands high, from C B BOWLES for $90.Mark DOUGHERTY, of Oleoak, sold a Peacock gelding to S E TERRY here yesterday for $125.00. J A SMITH, of Warren county, bought two nice horses from T M BERRY, of Austin, for $200. CLARK & NICKOLS, the Coral Hill millers, bought 90 bushels of wheat in Simpson county at 77 cents delivered at the mill. R Y AUSTIN, of Austin, bought 21 steers from T M BERRY for $405. They weighed between 600 and 800 pounds each.Mr Lee JEWELL, the well-known Barren-river farmer, has a pumpkin on exhibition in the show-window of ROGERS & HATCHER that weighs eighty pounds. If any of the TIMES readers thinks he can down Mr. Jewell as a pumpkin raiser, he will please come forward and bring the evidence with him. Mr J S VAUGHAN has sold 106 acres of what is known as the Buck SHAW place, near Cave City, to Rev. W S DOYLE, at $31 an acre. The remainder of the Shaw farm Mr Vaughan sold to a Mr LYONS, a price not made public. Mr Vaughan has bought Mrs Tabitha DICKEY's farm of 38 acres between Cave City and Woodland for $2,000. Real estate transfers: SUMMERS & FORD to Farmer's Milling Co, mill-site in Cave City, at $1,000; Laura SANDERSON to C P HOWARD, town lot in Cave City, $600; C P Howard to S D CALDWELL, town lot Cave City, $625; B W SHAW to James C DOOLEY, 7 acres near Coral Hill, $100; Schuyler R STEFFEY to _ E STEFFEY, etc., interest in Steffey farm near Beech Grove, $1,500. The town was full of mules yesterday, and the mule-buyers were on hand early, but the sellers and buyers could not get together on the price, and all but a few were taken home. Harry LAZARUS bought six at an average of about $100, and JONES and SHOBE, of Smiths Grove, took four at about the same figure. Several horsemen were in town, but only two or three changed hands at prices in the neighborhood of $100. About People: Mr and Mrs. P E TANDY are visiting relatives in Todd and Christian counties. Circuit Clerk Louie EVANS, of Russellville, was in Glasgow bestween trains Friday. Attorney R C P THOMAS, of Bowling Green, was here on business in the Circuit Court Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Charles R. LEWIS, of Louisville, were the guests of relatives here several days last week. Deputy Sheriff L C SHAW and wife, of Frankfort, have been visiting relatives in this county for a week past. Mr. Claud STEEN, of the Goodnight country, will leave this week for Hodgenville, where he will embark in the goods business. Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Henry, of Louisville, stopped over night with Mr. J. T. Currie and family Friday en route to visit relatives in Metcalfe County. Messrs. J. H. YANCEY, of Louisville, and S. C. PEMBERTON, of Horse Cave, were through the Hiseville country last week talking tobacco to the farmers. Mrs. Emily MITCHELL, who has been on a visit to relatives in Barren and Hart counties for several months, leaves Wednesday for her home in Kansas City, MO. Mrs. H. C. TRIGG returns to-day from Louisville; where she has been for several weeks under the care of a physician. Her many friends will be glad to hear that her health is improved. Mrs. J. Y. HOSKINS, of Danville; Mrs. J. E. WRIGHT, of Junction City, Ky., and little Miss Irene LYONS, of Lyon's Station, Ky. are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Chas F. TERRY, on Washington St. Mr. Luther SHIRLEY, one of the cleverest young men ever reared in Barren county, has sold his property near Randolph, where he lived for a year past, and he and his wife leave this week for Carthage, Ind., the former home of Mrs. Shirley. Miss Lydia HINDMAN of Cave City, was the guest of Mrs. W. M. CARVER at the Scottsville Hotel a few days this week. Miss Hindman contemplates securing a class in art to be taught in connection with the Spring term of Profs. SPEARS & BRYANT's school and will likely return in a few weeks with that object in view. Miss Hindman is a graduate of Liberty College, Glasgow, and has made art a speciality (from the Scottsville Times). Popular Jack THOMPSON, of Horse Cave, who represented a Louisville wholesale house in this territory for nearly twenty-one yhears, and then resigned last summer to take a position with the Tennet Shoe Company, of St. Louis, was in Glasgow Saturday on his way home from a two weeks' trip through the back country. He is delighted with his new position, and is making an even greater success as a shoe salesman than he did as a clothing drummer. He has hardly missed a sale since he has been out, and says he found "em settin" on the fence waiting for him. 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