Amos chuckled and with a loud "Whoa" brought the horse to a standstill.

Aunt Rebecca climbed from the carriage, picked up the trophy of good

luck and then took her seat beside her brother again, a smile upon her

lined old face.

"That's three horseshoes I have now. I never let one lay. I pick up all

I find and take them home and hang them on the old peach tree in the

back yard. I know they bring good luck. Mebbe if I hadn't picked up all

them three a lot o' trouble would come to me."

"Have it your way," conceded Uncle Amos. "They don't do you no hurt,

anyhow. But, Rebecca," he said as they came within sight of her little

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house, "you ought to get your place painted once."

"Ach, my goodness, what for? When it's me here alone. I think the house

looks nice. My flowers are real pretty this year, once. Course, I don't

fool with them like you do. I have the kind that don't take much

tendin' and come up every year without bein' planted. Calico flowers

and larkspur and lady-slippers are my kind. This plantin' and hoein' at

flowers is all for nothin'. It's all right to work so at beans and

potatoes and things you can eat when they grow, but what good are

flowers but to look at! I done my share of hoein' and diggin' and

workin' in the ground. I near killed myself when Jonas lived yet, in

them tobacco patches. I used to say to him still, we needn't work so

hard and slave like that after we had so much money put away, but he

was for workin' as long as we could, and so we kept on till he went. He

used to say money gets all if you begin to spend it and don't earn

more. Jonas was savin'."

"He sure was, that he was," seconded Uncle Amos with a twinkle in his

eyes. "Savin' for you and now you're savin' for somebody that'll make

it fly when you go, I bet. Some day you'll lay down and die and your

money'll be scattered. If you leave me any, Becky," he teased her,

"I'll put it all in an automobile."

"What, them wild things! Road-hogs, I heard somebody call 'em, and I

think it's a good name. My goodness, abody ain't safe no more since

they come on the streets. They go toot, toot, and you got to hop off to

one side in the mud or the ditch, it don't matter to them. I hate them

things! Only don't never take me to the graveyard in one of them."

"By that time," said Uncle Amos, "they'll have flyin' machine hearses;

they'll go faster."

"My goodness, Amos, how you talk! Ain't you ashamed to make fun at your

old sister that way! But Mom always said when you was little that you

seemed a little simple, so I guess you can't help it."




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