2. He iaister been a Southerner ‚ cause white tOlks would not treated him near that good. It was fo de war. They say uhen the first bugle blowed ~o war he was done gone an‘ nebber been heard of till dis day. I heard aci~ say last they seed him, he was rollin‘ over an‘ over on the ground and the men rim oft to find em nother captain. I don‘t know if they was tellin‘ like lt took place. I know I never seed him no more. Slave Tim•s “The servants take up ihat they eat in bowls end pans ~— little wooden bowls ~ and eat wid their fingers and wid spoons and they had cups. Some bad tables fixed~ up out under the trees. lay they make em -~ split a big tree half in two and bore holes up in it and trim out legs to fit. They cooked on the fireplaces an‘ hearth and outerdoora. They cooked sompin to eat. They had plenty to eat. ~t they didn‘t have pies and cake less they be goiner have company. They have so ~ch milk they fatten the pigs on it. “The animals eat up the ~rdens and crops. The men k~11 coon and poB8um if‘ they didn‘t get nough neat up at the house. I say it surs is good. It is good as pork. The men prowl all night in the winter huntin‘. If you be workin‘ at the field yo dinner is fetched down thai‘ to you in a bucket that high ~ ‘rtj] ‚ that big er round ~lk,~wide~ . The hands all c~ an‘ did they eat. That be mostly fried meat and bread and baked tatare, so they could work, “Old mistress say she first married Mr. Abraham Chenol. Then she married ~. Joel Sutton and they both died. She had two sons. She had a nephew what come there from way off. She said he was her sister‘s boy.