INDEX

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Ainslie, Hew, I, 87-91
Allen, Frank Waller, II, 366-368
Allen, James Lane, II, 4-17
Allison, Young E., II, 53-56
Altsheler, Joseph A., II, 144-149
Anderson, Miss Margaret S., II, 318-320
Andrews, Mrs. Mary R. S., II, 104-110
Aroni, Ernest, II, 206
Audubon, John J., I, 45-51
Audubon, John W., I, 185-187
Badin, Stephen T., I, 30-34
Banks, Mrs. Nancy Huston, II, 17-20
Barnett, Mrs. Evelyn S., II, 119-122
Bartlett, Elisha, I, 147-150
Barton, William E., II, 126-129
Bascom, Henry B., I, 98-102
Baskett, James Newton, II, 1-4
Bayne, Mrs. Mary Addams, II, 202-205
Beck, George, I, 23-26
Betts, Mary E. W., I, 237-239
Bingham, George, II, 375-378
Bird, Robert M., I, 135-139
Birney, James G., I, 91-95
Blackburn, J. C. S., I, 232
Bledsoe, Albert T., I, 169-172
Bolton, Mrs. Sarah T., I, 228-230
Bradford, John, I, 5-7
Breckinridge, John C., I, 231-234
Breckinridge, Robert J., I, 112-114
Breckinridge, W. C. P., I, 319-323
Brodhead, Mrs. Eva Wilder, II, 267-273
Broadus, John A., I, 261-265
Bronner, Milton, II, 303-305
Brown, John Mason, I, 240
Browne, J. Ross, I, 200-204
Bruner, James D., II, 184-186
Buchanan, Thompson, II, 355-362
Buck, Charles Neville, II, 371-375
Burton, George Lee, II, 222-228
Butler, Mann, I, 59-62
Butler, William O., I, 84-87
Caldwell, Charles, I, 34-37
Call, Richard E., I, 240
Cawein, Madison, II, 187-198
Childs, Mrs. Mary F., I, 356-359
Chivers, Thomas H., I, 152-156
Clay, Henry, I, 39-44
Clay, Mrs. Mary R., I, 240
Cobb, Irvin S., II, 323-342
Collins, Lewis, I, 104-106
Collins, Richard H., 244-247
Comfort, Will Levington, II, 363-366
Connelley, Wm. E., II, 63-67
Conrard, Harrison, II, 236-237
Corwin, Thomas, I, 95-98
Cosby, Fortunatus, Jr., I, 119-123
Cottell, Dr. Henry A., II, 384
Cotter, Joseph S., II, 115-116
Crittenden, John J., I, 71-74
Crittenden, William L., I, 238
Crockett, Ingram, II, 77-80
Cutter, George W., I, 176-179
Dargan, Mrs. Olive Tilford, II, 255-262
Davie, George M., I, 363-364
Daviess, Miss Maria Thompson, II, 279-283
Davis, Jefferson, I, 156-160
Dazey, Chas. Turner, II, 67-71
Dinsmore, Miss Julia S., I, 295-297
Dixon, Mrs. Susan B., I, 220
Doneghy, George W., I, 146
Doty, Douglas Z., II, 239
Drake, Daniel, I, 65-68
Duke, Basil W., I, 323-325
Durbin, John P., I, 117-119
Durrett, Reuben T., I, 239-243
Ellis, James Tandy, II, 228-230
Filson, John, I, 1-4
Filson Club, I, 240-241
Finck, Bert, II, 254-255
Flagg, Edmund, I, 194-196
Fleming, Walter L., I, 158
Flexner, Mrs. Anne Crawford, II, 239
Flexner, Miss Hortense, II, 381
Ford, Mrs. Sallie R., I, 272-275
Foster, Stephen C., I, 255-257
Fox, John, Jr., II, 172-181
Frazee, Lewis J., I, 216-218
Fruit, John Phelps, II, 72-74
Furman, Miss Lucy, II, 247-253
Gallagher, Wm. D., I, 160-163
Geppert, Mrs. Hester Higbee, II, 57-60
Gilmore, Miss Marion F., II, 380-381
Giltner, Miss Leigh Gordon, II, 311-317
Goodloe, Miss Carter, II, 217-222
Green, Thomas M., I, 310-313
Griffin, Gilderoy W., I, 331-333
Gross, A. Haller, I, 151
Gross, Samuel D., I, 150-152
Harney, John M., I, 74-78
Harney, Will Wallace, I, 291-292
Harris, Credo, II, 295-297
Hatcher, John E., I, 276-278
Hentz, Mrs. Caroline L., I, 114-116
Herrick, Mrs. Sophia, I, 171
Holley, Horace, I, 52-56
Holley, Mrs. Mary A., I, 69-71
Holmes, Daniel Henry, II, 36-47
Holmes, Mrs. Mary J., I, 265-269
Imelda, Sister, II, 233-235
Imlay, Gilbert, I, 11-16
Jeffrey, Mrs. Rosa V., I, 269-272
Johnson, Thomas, Jr., I, 19-23
Johnston, Mrs. Annie Fellows, II, 165-169
Johnston, J. Stoddard, I, 292-294
Johnston, William P., I, 288-290
Kelley, Andrew W., II, 49-53
Ketchum, Mrs. Annie C., I, 247-249
Kinkead, Miss Eleanor T., II, 175
Knott, J. Proctor, I, 282-284
Lampton, Will J., II, 96-101
Leonard, Miss Mary F., II, 142-144
Litsey, Edwin Carlile, II, 300-302
Lloyd, John Uri, I, 364-368
Lorimer, George Horace II, 230-233
Lyon, Matthew, I, 8-11
McAfee, Mrs. Nelly M., I, 353-356
McClung, John A., I, 139-142
McElroy, Mrs. Lucy Cleaver, II, 139-142
McElroy, Robert M., II, 289-293
McKinney, Mrs. Kate S., II, 85-86
Macaulay, Mrs. Fannie C., II, 181-184
MacKenzie, A. S., II, 305-307
Madden, Miss Eva A., II, 170-172
Magruder, Allan B., I, 37-39
Marcosson, Isaac F., II, 343-345
Marriner, Harry L., II, 262-264
Marriott, Crittenden, II, 211-217
Martin, Mrs. George M., II, 198-202
Marshall, Humphrey, I, 26-29
Marshall, Thomas F., I, 123-126
Marvin, William F., I, 145-147
Mason, Miss Emily V., I, 191-193
Menefee, Richard H., I, 173-175
Mulligan, James H., I, 348-352
Murphy, Miss Ethel Allen, II, 381
Musgrove, Charles Hamilton, II, 377
Mitchel, Ormsby M., I, 166-169
Mitchell, Mrs. Agnes E., II, 385-386
Morehead, James T., I, 102-104
Morehead, Mrs. L. M., I, 103
Morris, Rob, I, 205-207
Navarro, Mary Anderson de, II, 101-104
Norris, Mrs. Zoe A., II, 135-139
Obenchain, Mrs. Eliza Calvert, II, 81-84
O'Hara, Theodore, I, 218-228
O'Malley, Charles J., II, 86-91
Patterson, John, II, 123-125
Pattie, James O., I, 142-144
Penn, Shadrach, I, 82-83
Perrin, William H., I, 240
Perry, Bliss, I, 252
Peter, Dr. Robert, I, 240-241
Petrie, Mrs. Cordia G., II, 273-279
Piatt, Mrs. Sarah M. B., I, 303-307
Pickett, Thomas E., I, 241
Pirtle, Alfred, I, 240
Pitts, Miss Mabel Porter, II, 379-380
Plaschke, Paul, II, 377
Polk, Jefferson J., I, 126-128
Portor, Miss Laura S., II, 308-310
Prentice, George D., I, 129-135
Price, Samuel W., I, 240
Price, Willi

[1] Copyright, 1900, by the Macmillan Company.[2] Copyright, 1908, by the Outlook Company.[3] Copyright, 1908, by the Curtis Publishing Company.[4] Copyright, 1903, by the Macmillan Company.[5] Copyright, 1905, by McClure, Phillips and Company.[6] Copyright, 1906, by Richard G. Badger.[7] Copyright, 1906, by the Filson Club.[8] Copyright, 1887, by O. M. Dunham.[9] Copyright, 1911, by the Author.[10] Mrs. Geppert died at Scarsborough-on-the-Hudson, New York, February 23, 1913. Her remains were not brought to Kentucky for interment.[11] Copyright, 1890, by the Belford Company.[12] Copyright, 1897, by Jacob Litt.[13] Copyright, 1899, by A. S. Barnes and Company.[14] Copyright, 1907, by Charles Scribner's Sons.[15] Copyright, 1898, by R. H. Russell.[16] Copyright, 1908, by the Author.[17] Copyright, 1907, by Little, Brown and Company.[18] Copyright, 1887, by the Author.[19] Copyright, 1894, by the Advocate Publishing Company.[20] Copyright, 1909, by L. E. Bassett and Company.[21] Copyright, 1907, by the Pearson Publishing Company, New York.[22] Copyright, 1908, by the Pearson Publishing Co., New York.[23] Copyright, 1896, by Osgood, McIlvaine and Company, London.[24] Copyright, 1911, by Charles Scribner's Sons.[25] (George) Douglass Sherley, born at Louisville, Kentucky, June 27, 1857; educated at Centre College, Danville, Kentucky, and University of Virginia; joined staff of the old Louisville Commercial; made lecture tour with James Whitcomb Riley, the Hoosier poet; now resides near Lexington, Kentucky. Author of: The Inner Sisterhood (Louisville, 1884); The Valley of Unrest (New York, 1884); Love Perpetuated (Louisville, 1884); The Story of a Picture (Louisville, 1884). Mr. Sherley has done much occasional writing since his four books were published, which has appeared in the form of calendars, leaflets, and in newspapers.[26] Copyright, 1909, by the Author.[27] Copyright, 1909, by B. W. Huebsch and Company.[28] Copyright, 1893, by Robert Clarke and Company.[29] Copyright, 1897, by the Author.[30] Copyright, 1905, by the Century Company.[31] Copyright, 1912, by the Author.[32] Copyright, 1901, by Thomas Y. Crowell and Company.[33] Copyright, 1901, by Thomas Y. Crowell and Company.[34] Copyright, 1900, by D. Appleton and Company.[35] Copyright, 1909, by the Macmillan Company.[36] Copyright, 1911, by Henry Holt and Company.[37] Copyright, 1901, by L. C. Page and Company.[38] Copyright, 1902, by Thomas Y. Crowell and Company.[39] When Mr. Fox followed the trail of the Goebel tragedy he was poaching upon the especial preserves of Miss Eleanor Talbot Kinkead, whose romance of the "autocrat," The Courage of Blackburn Blair (New York, 1907), was widely read and reviewed. Miss Kinkead was born in Kentucky, and, besides the story mentioned above, is the author of 'Gainst Wind and Tide (Chicago, 1892); Young Greer of Kentucky (Chicago, 1895); Florida Alexander (Chicago, 1898); and The Invisible Bond (New York, 1906).[40] Copyright, 1909, by P. F. Collier and Son.[41] Copyright, 1906, by the Century Company.[42] Copyright, 1909, by the Author.[43] Copyright, 1896, by Copeland and Day.[44] Copyright, 1903, by the Author.[45] Copyright, 1906, by the Author.[46] Copyright, 1907, by the Author.[47] Copyright, 1910, by the Author.[48] Copyright, 1911, by the Macmillan Company.[49] Copyright, 1902, by McClure, Phillips and Company.[50] Copyright, 1907, by the Standard Publishing Company.[51] Ernest ("Pat") Aroni, was far and away the finest dramatic critic Kentucky has produced, and a delightful volume of his work could be gathered from the files of The Courier-Journal. Mr. Aroni's fame has lingered in Kentucky in a rather remarkable manner, as he never published a book or wrote for the magazines. He is now chief editorial writer on The North American, Philadelphia.[52] Copyright, 1903, by the Century Company.[53] Copyright, 1912, by the Ridgway Company.[54] Copyright, 1905, by Charles Scribner's Sons.[55] Copyright, 1912, by the Curtis Publishing Company.[56] Copyright, 1911, by the C. M. Clark Company.[57] Copyright, 1902, by Small, Maynard and Company.[58] Copyright, 1905, by the Author.[59] Copyright, 1907, by Richard G. Badger.[60] Mr. Opp was dramatized by Douglas Z. Doty, a New York editor, and presented at Macaulay's Theatre, in Louisville, but it was shortly sent to the store-house. Mrs. Wiggs was put into play-form by Mrs. Anne (Laziere) Crawford Flexner, in 1904, with Madge Carr Cook in the title-role. Mrs. Flexner was born at Georgetown, Kentucky; educated at Vassar; married Abraham Flexner of Louisville, June 23, 1898; lived at Louisville until June, 1905, since which time she has spent a year in Cambridge, Mass., and a year abroad; now residing in New York City. She has written two original plays: A Man's Woman, in four acts; and A Lucky Star, the fount of inspiration being a novel by C. N. and A. M. Williamson, entitled The Motor Chaperon, which was produced by Charles Frohman, with Willie Collier in the steller part, at the Hudson Theatre, New York, in 1910. She also dramatized A. E. W. Mason's story, Miranda of the Balcony (London, 1899), which was produced in New York by Mrs. Fiske in 1901. Mrs. Flexner is the only successful woman playwright Kentucky has produced; and it is a real pity that none of her plays have been published. Mrs. Wiggs has held the "boards" for eight year; and it seems destined to go on forever.[61] Copyright, 1909, by the Century Company.[62] Copyright, 1905, by Henry Holt and Company.[63] Copyright, 1912, by the Century Company.[64] Copyright, 1900, by the Author.[65] Copyright, 1906, by Charles Scribner's Sons.[66] Copyright, 1909, by the Author.[67] Copyright, 1911, by the Author.[68] Copyright, 1903, by the Author.[69] Copyright, 1894, by Harper and Brothers.[70] Copyright, 1912, by the Bobbs-Merrill Company.[71] Copyright, 1907, by McClure, Phillips and Company.[72] Copyright, 1909, by Moffat, Yard and Company.[73] Copyright, 1912, by the Phillips Publishing Company.[74] Copyright, 1912, by Moffat, Yard and Company.[75] Copyright, 1907, by the Bobbs-Merrill Company.[76] Copyright, 1905, by Little, Brown and Company.[77] Copyright, 1910, by L. E. Bassett.[78] Copyright, 1911, by Thomas Y. Crowell and Company.[79] Copyright, 1905, by Houghton, Mifflin Company.[80] Copyright, 1909, by S. S. McClure Company.[81] Copyright, 1904, by the Frank A. Munsey Company.[82] Copyright, 1909, by S. S. McClure Company.[83] Copyright, 1909, by S. S. McClure Company.[84] Copyright, 1910, by the Atlantic Monthly Company.[85] Copyright, 1906, by Harper and Brothers.[86] Copyright, 1912, by the Curtis Publishing Company.[87] Copyright, 1910, by Moffat, Yard and Company.[88] Copyright, 1909, by Doubleday, Page and Company.[89] Copyright, 1909, by Mitchell Kennerley.[90] Copyright, 1911, by Mitchell Kennerley.[91] Copyright, 1908, by Doubleday, Page and Company.[92] Copyright, 1909, by the Current Literature Publishing Company.[93] Copyright, 1911, by J. B. Lippincott Company.[94] Copyright, 1910, by Small, Maynard and Company.[95] Copyright, 1911, by W. J. Watt and Company.[96] Mr. Musgrove, who is to leave The Post at the end of 1912 to become humorist editor of The Louisville Times, was born in Kentucky, and is the author of a charming volume of verse, The Dream Beautiful and Other Poems (Louisville; 1898). He is to issue in 1913 another book of poems, through a Louisville firm, to be entitled Pan and Aeolus. When Mr. Musgrove joins The Times he will take The Post's clever cartoonist, Paul Plaschke, with him; and they will occupy an office next to Colonel Henry Watterson's in the new Courier-Journal and Times building.[97] Copyright, 1907, by the Author.[98] There are two other young women poets of Louisville who should be mentioned in the same breath with Miss Gilmore: Miss Ethel Allen Murphy, author of The Angel of Thought and Other Poems (Boston, 1909), and contributor of brief lyrics to Everybody's Magazine; and Miss Hortense Flexner, on the staff of The Louisville Herald, whose poems in the new Mammoth Cave Magazine have attracted much attention. Miss Flexner is to have a poem published in The American Magazine in 1913.[99] Copyright, 1910, by the Author.


Transcriber's Notes:

  • Obvious punctuation and spelling errors fixed throughout.
  • The oe ligature in this etext has been replaced with oe.
  • Inconsistent hyphenation is as in the original.
  • Page 106: The title and italicization has been changed from (... little story, With A Good Samaritan ...) to this (... little story, with A Good Samaritan ...) to match the title in the rest of the text.
  • Page 392: In the Index Mulligan, Murphy and Musgrove are entered out of alphabetic order as in the original.




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