ADAIR COUNTY NEWS

 
Adair County News, April 6, 1910

At a meeting of the City Council last Monday night the Board passed an ordinance licensing poll
rooms, one hundred dollars for the first table and ten dollars for each additional table... If license
should be issued to a pool-room keeper, minors are not to be allowed, whiskey drunk on the
premises prohibited, and the business must close not later than 11 o'clock at night.
 

Adair County News, April 6, 1910

She Was a Native of Adair County
                
Readers of the Courier-Journal will remember noticing in the issue of March the 26th and account
of a double tragedy in Louisville--a woman stabbed to death by Andrew Beinlin, followed by the
slayer cutting his own throat, dying in a few minutes. The woman's name maiden name was
Meeky Ellen Bryant, a daughter of Peter Hawk Bryant, and she was born and reared in Adair
county., a few miles from Columbia. Her parents now live in Campbellsville. She had been three
times married and was a grass widow when murdered. She and her murderer boarded in the same
house in Louisville, the man being desperately in love with the woman, but his love was not
reciprocated, and he was very jealous of attentions paid her by another man. He told his victim a
few days before the tragedy that he intended to kill her, but would not say just when.

(Transcriber's notes: 1) A "grass widow" was an euphenism meaning, among other things, a divorced woman. 2) Peter H. Bryant, age 37, appears in 1880 Adair County census, White Oak district, along with his wife, Sarah, age 36, and seven children, including a daughter, Meeky E. Bryant, age six.)