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years ago, when Mr. Douglass was entering the stage, on leaving Peterboro, I ventured to say to him "learn to forget you are a colored man." To me who believed that "there never was a good horse of a bad color," it seemed, as it were, certain, that color had little or no place in regulating the power-value of animals, man included. Now my dear friend "don't fret your cattle on the start" and you know it takes more of a man to stand prosperity than adversity.
Your infidel fellow-[feeler?]
Chas. D. Miller
March 19th 1899