of Kansas City, Mo., and he also went to Chicago to live, being a member of the mother packing house there.
Page 264. On Oct. 4, 1910, Mrs. Annie Hearne Armour, married Charles Webster Littlefield, pay director U. S. Navy. She still lives in her palatial home in Kansas City, Mo.
Page 275. On Oct. 5, 1910. James Willard Stevenson, married Miss Laura Rudasill, at the Woodville Baptist Church, Woodville, Va.
Page 292. Eveline Wasson, was born Sept. 29, 1819.
Page 298. John M. Wasson, died July 31, 1912, age eighty-eight
years. He was remakably active till a year previous, when he got a fall of fifteen feet from top of front porch to a granitoid side walk, which rendered him helpless and bedridden till death.
Page 300. April 11, 1907, Linn E. Wasson, married Miss Jessie Lawrence Jordan, of Chicago, Ill. She was born in Glasgow, Ky., June 20, 1880. Also Nannie Eloise Wasson, married Feb. 17. 1910, Edgar Morton Lewis Also Lewis A. Nuckols, married June 16, 1909, Miss Helena Baxter, of Staunton, Va., and has located in Frankfort, Ky. June 20, 1911, a daughter was born to them named Helen Douglas; also Miss Eva 0. Nuckols, married Robert H. Cay, Mar. 16, 1911.
Page 303. Mar. 3, 1910, Frances Holton Wasson married Isaac Wingate, a young man just elected High Sheriff of Wood- ford County. Also Mrs. Bettie Hereford died Oct. 11, 1910.
Page 305. April 18, 1911, Mr. and Mrs. John 0. Dalzell were killed by Carbon Dioxide Gas escaping from a gas water heater in the bathroom of their home. Their five year old daughter, Florence, sleeping in a nearby room, was partly overcome by the gas, but was revived next morning.
Page 309. Eliza, daughter of Minos Hearne, was born Aug. 31, 1828, and married Oct.1, 1846, and her daughter Thirza Ann, was born June 21, 1847. The mother, Eliza, died Dec. 26, 1847, in Clark County, Mo.
Page 331. Charles W. Stone died Nov. 6, 1908, at the home of his sister, Mrs. Bettie Gates, Longton, Kansas, where he had gone on a visit. He was buried in the cemetery there. His widow, Mrs. Pattie D. Stone, has bought (and removed to it) a farm eight miles from Lexington, Ky., on Harrodsburg Turn-
Thanks to Henry Hearn for providing an image of this page.
Thanks to Ida Olroyd for indexing
this page.
Copyright (c) 1999, 2007 Brian Cragun.