Jackson Times, Jan. 4, 1918 ALL ARE WELL KNOWN HERE H.P. Wilson, well and favorable known by many citizens of Breathitt and other mountain counties as a stock buyer for years, was a caller at The Times office on New Year's day, and having made up his mind to start the new year off right, he threw enough mazuma in the roulette wheel to cause her to spin round to Jan. 1, 1919, and if not hindered providentially or otherwise, he will receive the paper at Daysboro in the County of Wolfe; each week, and, of course, be a wiser, better, happier and more patriotic man, than he would be without it, and then the good wife will be contented and happy by perusing its columns, also. Mr. Wilson has recently purchased a good bottom farm on Red River at something like eight or ten thousand dollars, the money having been left him by Frank Trimble, a brother to Mr. Wilson's mother, Mr. Trimble having recently died at Memphis, Tenn., worth some $360,000, about all of which he made after had passed 50 years of age. Mr. Frank Trimble was a brother of Hon. J. Green Trimble, of Mt. Sterling, at one time a merchant prince of Hazel Green, later a merchant and banker at Mt. Sterling, and author of "Recollections of Breathitt' and other historical writing, and still living at the age of 95, is one of the most remarkable men of the State and of America. Going back to Mr. Wilson nephew of the Trimbles, he was a brother of Hon. Howard Wilson, an officer in the Federal Service, who was shot and killed in Menifee county in 1900 by Tip Day, a noted moonshiner and desperado. Mr. Howard Wilson, who used to visit the Misses Spencer in Jackson, and who will be remembered by many of our people as one of the most beautiful and attractive young women who ever came to the town, and those who do remember her will be glad to know that Miss Esther was one of the beneficiaries under the will of her uncle, Frank Trimble, with whom she had been making her home in Memphis, Tenn., for some years before his death. Miss Esther was one of the young ladies sent on a pleasure trip to Europe some years ago by the Courier-Journal and upon the whole the lines seem to have fallen to her in pleasant places, and of this The Times man and all who know her will be glad. Carole In a later paper, J. Green Trimble had passed away, the richest man around having left $400.000.