3.. n ‘Bout two y.ara ago I got aick and broks up and not able to work and Mr. Dilley give n~ a penaion~-ten dollara a rnonth.~ »~it de wage e and hour got here now and I don‘ t know what ‘ 8 gwine do. When de next pay-day oome e he might give me aomethtri‘ and he might not. *MiBS, de white tolka has don.e 80 bad here dat I don‘t know what dey‘e gwine a do. 1fr. Ed and hie father been takin‘ care of me for twenty yeareQ E~y sure has been takin ‚ care of me . Mies ‚ I can‘ t find no fault of ~. ~d Dilley at all. “I can do a little light work but when I work halt a day I get nervoue and can‘t do nothin‘. “No ma‘am, I never did vote. I~y didn‘t ‘low us to vote, Well, if dey did I didn‘t know it and I didn‘t votes “Well, Mies, I think de young falke la near to de dogs and de dogs ought to have ‚ ein and bury ‚ em. Miss ‚ I don ‚ t ‚ cept none of ‚ em. I wouldn ‚ t want to go on and tell you how dey has treated ~‚ ~y ain‘t no use to ask t cause I am‘ t gwine tell you • The people is more wicked and more wuss and ever‘thing. I don‘t think nothin‘ of ‘em. *M183, let n~ tell you de only fOlks dat showed r~ any ~riend],y is Mr. Kd Dilley. I worked out dore night and day, 8unday and Monday--any time he called, ‘Misa, I ain‘t never seen any jail house; I ain‘t never been to police headquarters; I ain‘t never been called a witness in my life. I try te live right, all I know, and it I do wrong it‘s somethin‘ I don‘t know. I ain‘t had dat ni~tch troubles in my lite, ‘I went up here to 3~udge Brewster to see about de pension and he said, ‘Got a home?‘ I said, ‘Yea.‘ ‘Got it paid for‘?‘ ‘Yes.‘ ‘Got a deed?‘