. .. ~ . XIII. ~ 60 • ~ . ~ ~ ~ 034 Marster hearedde fuss dey ruade axid he corae d~o*n to de kitch-~ en to see what wà~ de matter. De yankees ‘den ordered Mar~ter j to git ‘em his hosses. Marster called fleddy and told him to git de hosses, but Daddy, tie played foolish lak and. stalled ~ ~ ‘round lak he didn‘t have good sense. 3~exñ sojers raved and. ~• ~ fussed all ni~tht long ‘bout dem hosses, but dey never thought ‘bout lookin‘ in de smoke‘ouse and hen ‘ouse for ‘em and ‘boùt daybreak dey left widout takin‘ n.T~thin‘. ~ Marster said he was she proud of my Daddy for savin‘ dem good hosses for him. “Marster had a long pocketbook what fastened at ~ ~ one end wid a ring. One day when he went to git out some money he drepped. a roll of bills dat he never seed, but i~addy picket it up and handed it back tÔ hii~:right alay. Nowmy D~dy~cô~i3~ ~ have ke~t dat money jus‘ as easy, but he ~s a ~e~tiona1 ~ : ~ 1;‘ . I and believed evvybody ought to do right. ~ . ~ “Aunt an‘ s old. nian ‚ Und e Griff ‚ come to live ~ wid her on our pIece atter de war was ovér. ‘Fore den he had belonged to a man named Oo1quitt~ ~ )~trster pervided a honaefàr ~ hiiii and Aunt Tame ‘tu dey was both daid. ~ Y~‘hen dey was buildin‘ de tust co1oredMeth~~~~ch in dat section Uncle G~riff give a whole hundred dollars to d~e buildint fund . Now it tuk ~a hàp of scrimpin‘ for hirn to save dat rauch nioney ‘cause he nev~ ~ad ~ made over ~IO a raonth. Aunt Tama h~d done gone to Glory a long ‚ time when Uncle G~riff diêd. Atter dey b~ied him dey corne baók and was ‘rangin‘ dé things in h1~ iitt1e~cabin. ~!hen dey rnöve~