¶ ~ . “1 went to public school a little after the war. iq wife and I both went ~to Ka;y1!ood after we ~~eMarz‘iéd..~ A~er wà 1aI~I‘iè~ ~ we went • I took a ye‘ course there when It was a fine Inst itu.t Ion. It‘s ‚one dOWU now. 01 Wa. the oldest boy. We had two mules. We farmed on the halves. We made fift~u bales of cotton a year. NÖier did mak e le es than ten or twelve. “I have been in the mlnietry fifty—three jear~ I ~Was transferred ~ &rkanaaa In 1885 In the oonferncewhlc:hrnst ai ~iiboidt. ~firB~t wOrk here waa in Searcy in 1884. ~I think the question of r~sgro suffrage iiill ~rkIt~elf out. te we get further away from the OS.VL1 War an~. the réconetruction, it will • be lea. and less opposition to the Wegro‘. voting. You can ses a lot of si~e of that now. ~ . ~ ~ “I don‘t know about the young people. ¶L‘h~‘ are gonewild. I don‘t know what to sa~ &b~It them. ~ ~ t “I think whsre ~n are able to work I think li I. beat to give them iork. A a~i that is abl e to work ought to be given work by the ~vemmen~ If he oa&t get it any olther wq.“