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Sign up freeThe Adair County News
Columbia, Adair County, Kentucky
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Gradyville local news includes residents' visits to nearby areas, livestock sales and shipments, a beneficial rain boosting crop expectations, and several young women leaving for school in Lebanon, Tennessee.
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W. L. Grady and wife spent Sunday at Sulphur Well.
Geo. Flowers spent a day or so at Park last week.
J. D. Walker and Thos. Dowell were at Greensburg last week.
Chas. Murrell, of Columbia, passed through here last week enroute for Edmonton in the interest of the News.
A. B. Wilmore, of Greensburg, was here last week looking after his farm.
Mrs. Ada Beauchamp, of Falls of Rough, is visiting relatives here.
Uncle Will Walker, of Nell, was mixing with our people last week.
Mrs. H. C. Walker was at the bed side of her sick father, Mr. W. C. Turk, at Bliss, last week.
C. O. Moss sold to J. E. Flowers one calf for $14.50.
Smith & Nell shipped two car loads of cattle to the Louisville market.
J. A. Diddle bought of J. D. Walker one of the best mule colts in the county for $60.
We had a good rain one day last week and our people are considerably revived and have come to the conclusion that we will make a much larger crop of corn than we made last year.
Misses Holladay, of Columbia, passed through here last week enroute for Glasgow to enter school.
Misses Vallie and Leva Sandidge, Ella Dohoney, Mary Grissom and Clara Wilmore, left Monday for Lebanon, Tenn., where they entered the Female University. Your servant was honored with the pleasure of driving their hack and accompanying them to Glasgow.
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Domestic News Details
Primary Location
Gradyville
Event Date
Last Week
Key Persons
Event Details
Local residents visited nearby towns like Sulphur Well, Park, Greensburg, and Bliss; Mrs. Ada Beauchamp visited relatives; livestock sales included a calf for $14.50 and a mule colt for $60, with two carloads of cattle shipped to Louisville; a good rain last week improved corn crop prospects; young women traveled to schools in Glasgow and Lebanon, Tenn.