14. 4:1 ~o fight ag~.nst Garrad, it never will do, I Stratton and\Luoas is hard to out do, I They conquered our tigers and bull pups too, \~_ In spite of our force and all we could do. Coffer was killed by Colonel Frye ak Mill Springs. A statue is erected to Zollie Coffer at Somerset, Kentucky. Both sides were cruel during the Civil War. Mrs. McDaniel who lives here tells a story of how her father was killed in Clay County, wh~le eating dinner one day. Some federal soldiers drove up and asked what side ho was on and upon saying the confederate side, they took him outside and shot him with a gun in his own yard. Mrs. Jenny McKee, of color, who lives just North of London can tell many interesting things of her life. “Aunt Jenny“ a~ she is called, is about eighty—five years of ago, and says she thinks she is older then that as she can retriember many things of the slave days. She tells of the old “niasters“ home and the negro shacks all in a row behind the home. She has a soar on her forehead received when she was pushed by ène of the other little slaxes, upon a marble mantle place and received a deep wound in her head. The old ne gro lady slave s would sit in the door way of the ii‘ litt le shacks and playwith pieces of string, not lcnavrixig what else to do to pass off the time. They were never restless for they ~ew no other life than slavery. . .‚ Aunt Jenny McKee was born in Texas though she doesn‘t know what town she was born in, She remomebers when her mother was sold into the hands of another slave owner, the name of the piace was ~White Ranch Louisana. Her mother married again and this time she went by the ne~ne of Reclinan, her mother ‚ s s eoond hueband was named John‘ Rodman, and AUXI~t Jenny aitho her real name was Jenny Garden, carried the name of ~ed~tanunti1 she, was married to McKee. ~