.30299 ~ a2?c~ ~ . ~Ä)~4° Dlvi.iok ~ Person interviewed . . Z6n.i~ 04p ~ ~ ~tm ~ ~ ~ 9as‘nt, my nen~ is Zenia, Zenia ~lp ‘tie now since I married. My old master ‚ a neii~ was Billy Newton. Him and three more brothers co~ here and settled in this county years ago and Master Billy settled this farm. I was born thid raised here and ain‘t never lived no~heres else. I used to be nurse girl and lived ~xp at the big boues. You know up there where Mr. sohn Thinbar‘s widow lives now. And the family burying groun‘ is jus‘ a little south of the house where you sees them trees end tomb stones out in the middle of the field.. . . ~ “Master Billy ‚ e folks was so good to me and I sure thought a heap ot young Master Billy. Believe 1 told you I was th nurse girl. sell, young Master Billy was uy special oars. And he was a live ~z~s too. I eure had a tiae keepin‘ up wid that young rascal. I woeld . get him ready tor bed. every night. In swm~r tine h. want barefoot like all litti. chaps dosa and course I would wash his toots before I pit him to bed. That little• fellow would be so sleepy sometime that he would say: ‘~n‘t wash em, Zenia, jea‘ wet em.‘ Oh, he was a eight, young Master Billy was. ~Doee you know Miss Pearl? She live there in I]. Dorado. She i~ young master‘ s widow, Miss Pearl cœ~es out to see me sometime and wa talks lots bout young Master Billy. ~ ‘In, I‘ as always lived. here where I was born. Never moved way from de old plantation. Gourse things is changed lots since the days