2. 65 “w oouein used to be a quill blowers Brother Ji~a would oul f ishin‘ canoe and plat t em togebher‘umthe~ called t em a paok—«five in a rowe jU8t like 3I~ fingere. Azybody that knawed how could s~ire make 3miaio on ‚ «n. To~ Rollins~ that was ~i~r baby imole he wae a banjo pio1œx~è “I can r€in~iiber a heap a things that happened, but ‘bout alavery~ I didn‘t biow one dear from another. The~r treated us 80 nice that when they said freedœa coene, I thought I was always free~ n ~ heored n~r gran&aother talk aboirb sellin‘ t ~‚ bttt I was just a little kid and I didntt know what they was talkin‘ aboirb. I heered ‘em sa~y, ‘Did you Icnow they øold A~unt Sally away from her by‘ I heered t e~ talkin, I know that muoh. “After freedom, our folks ste~yed right on Paul McCall‘ e place. 3~p‘ granbaother cooked for the M~Calls till I ias eight or nine yeare old., then. she cooked for the M~Cra~‘s—they was all relativee-..till I was twenty—on.05 Then I ~rried~~ ~ “Paul Mr~Ca1I firet aarried in the Baxter f83IIi)~y and then he married ixrbo the MoCre~r family. I lived on the Mocall place till I ivai grown. They all oo~ front Alaben~.. Yestm, they oo~ befot the viar ias. “Chillun in ~a days paid attention. People raised ohillim in dœa da~ya. Folks just feeds t e~ now and lerbe t e~ grow up. “I looks at the young moe now and they is as wise ae rabbite. UI never went to school but three months, but I never will forg.1 that old blue baok MoGuffey‘ ~ ~i Porber was our t.aoher and I wae scared of him. I ~as 80 soared I oouldn‘t learn nothin‘ ~ .. “As far as I can remiember I have been treated nice everywhere I been. Ain‘t none of the white folks evèr mistreated ~ie~