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rain, mist and clouds prevailed.
Yours sincerely,
JOHN M’BOYLE.
HE WILL HELP.
Dear Sir: Enclosed find sl, for
which send me your paper for one
year. Send me some sample copies
and I will try to-get up a club.
Respectfully,
F. M. STONE.
Carbon, Texas.
TO BRAD WYNN, OF WILKINSON
COUNTY.
November 19, 1907.
Mr. B. Wyfin, Toomsboro, Ga.
My Dear Mr. Wynn: In looking
over some old files, your letter of a
year ago passed in review.
Whenever I think of Wilkinson
county, the names that pop into my
mind are those of Captain John T.
Lingo, Captain Mason, Henry Clay,
Frank Cannon and Brad Wynn. The
heroism displayed by those loyal
friends who stood their ground in
those dark days engraved their names
upon my memory so deeply that they
will never be forgotten. It is very
sad that so many of them died while
the clouds were still low, and the
wind was from the east. It is a pity
too deep for words that they could
not live to see the triumph of the
principles for which they fought and
suffered. I am glad, however, that
such men as you and my gallant old
friend, Captain J. A. Mason, have
survived those cruel times, and can
congratulate themselves that you
were faithful when so many weak
lings gave in. Nothing would give
me greater pleasure than to see once
more every comrade who stood by me
in those days, and take him by the
hand, and talk of old times.
Your friend, as ever,
THOS. E. WATSON.
FROM THE WIDOW OF A LIFE
LONG FRIEND.
Roanoke, Ala., Nov. 29, 1907.
Dear Mr. Watson: Please continue
your magazine to my address. Be
sure to send the December number,
as I keep them all. I enjoy read
ing it so much.
Your friend,
MRS. I. G. WORRILL.
HE TAKES A SHARE OF THE
STOCK.
Wrightsville, Ga., Nov. 29, 1907.
Dear Sir and Friend: Please find
inclosed P. 0. money order for
$15.85, to be applied as follows:
Please send your magazine and
Weekly Jeffersonian to Judge Wm.
Faircloth, magazine and Weekly Jef
fersonian; C. M. Dent, magazine, and
M. M. Davis, magazine. Send all of
them to Wrightsville, Ga.
The above are parties I got to sub
scribe. I also send $2 to renew
my subscription io both publications.
The $lO is to pay for one share in
your stock company for myself.
Yours truly,
J. T. FERGUSON.
STILL A MID-ROADER.
Camp Hill, Ala., Nov. 28, 1907.
My Dear Mr. Watson: I wish to
renew my subscription for the maga
zine at $1.50, and ask you to enter
my name as a subscriber for your
Weekly Jeffersonian at sl, for which
I send money order. I am elated at
the present trend of the minds of
all those who are willing to have Jef
ferson’s principles grafted into our
American government. Our Tom has
a whole lot of good horse sense and
long may he live to carry the people’s
banner. With best wishes, I am still
in the middle of the road,
E. B. LANGLEY.
Route No. 1.
LIKE A STONE WALL.
Wingo, Ky., Nov. 23* 1997.
Dear Sir: Tell the cotton and to
bacco farmers to stand like a stone
wall by their prices. The powers of
combined capital are striving to crush
organized farmers and laborers. The
fight is one. One party or the other
will be defeated.
Respectfully,
DR. I. A. WESSON.
GLAD TO HAVE YOU, ON YOUR
OWN TERMS.
Baltimore, Nov. 2’B, 1907.
Dear Sir: Enclosed please find my
check for $2, for which I desire you
to send me the Weekly Jeffersonian
and Watson’s Jeffersonian Magazine.
I am impelled to do this, not because
I subscribe to your doctrines, or at
any rate, all of them, and especially
not to your unwarranted criticism oi
Mr. Bryan, but because of your gen
ius as a writer.
Yours truly,
ROBERT LEACH.
P. S.—l sincerely hope that you
may yet find the time and have the
inclination to give the world more
biographies, especially of Southern
men.
YES; WILL JOG YOUR MEMORY.
Monticello, Ga., Nov. 28, 1907.
Dear Sir: Enclosed you will find
$2. Please send me the Jeffersonian
Magazine ... and Weekly Jeffersonian
for one year, and if I should forget
to renew at that time, you will please
notify me, as I don’t want my sub
scription to’ run out any time.
Yours very truly,
T. E. PERRY.
MEANS TO HAVE THAT CHINA
SET.
Spread, Ga., Nov. 29, 1907.
Dear Sir: Please find enclosed
check for $1 for the Weekly Jeffer
sonian. I want the china set prem
ium. I will send more subscribers
soon.
Your friend,
J. E. HANNAH.
H. G. Parrish, Wrens, Ga.
DON’T WE, THOUGH?
Farmington, lowa, Nov. 26, 1907.
Dear Sir: Inclosed find money or
der for $1.50 for Jeffersonian JSlaga
zine one year. Go for the great oc
topus banking power devil fish, the
greatest of all trusts.
ELI BROWN.
R. F. D.
GLAD TO WELCOME THE
LADIES.
Augusta, Ga., Nov. 29, 1907.
Dear Sir: Find enclosed $2, for
which send to Mary Lou Barwick,
Blythe, Ga., the Weekly and monthly
Jeffersonian.
Yours truly,
(MISS) MARY LOU BARWICK.
THE JEFFERSONIAN.
BRO. BLODGETT STAYS PUT.
Noah, Ga., Nov. 29, 1907.
Dear Sir: Find enclosed $4.20 for
renewal. M. Brooks, $2 for Weekly
and monthly; R. R. Blodgett, $2 for
Weekly and monthly. The 20 cents
is to pay for the Weekly, October 18
to January 1, 1908.
Yours truly,
R. R. BLODGETT.
*
MONTANA, ALSO, LIKES US.
Lewiston, Mon., Nov. 22, 1907.
Dear Sir: Enclosed find $2, foi
which you will please send me, or
renew my subscription to the Week
ly and Jefferson Magazine, and
Oblige,
WM. WUNDERLIN.
P. S.—ls that is not right let me
know and I will make it right before
New Year. W. W.
THE AVERAGE IS STRUCK
ACCORDINGLY.
Cleburne, Tex., Nov. 27, 1907.
My Dear Mr. Watson: I enclose
money order for $2, to set the fig
ures on my two Jeffersonians forward
another year. Strike an average and
let the time expire on each at same
date. May God bless and perpetuate
your useful life, is the wish of your
admiring friend,
T. N. LAWSON.
203 N. Border street.
DOESN’T WANT TO MISS ONE
Oglethorpe, Ga., Nov. 25, 1907.
Dear Sir: I have been a constant
reader of all your writings from the
People’s Party Paper down to the
present, and do not want to miss s
single copy of the paper. My sub
scription to the magazine ends with
the December number, and my sub
scription to the Weeklv ends some
time in the spring of 1908.' I send
postal order for $2. 'Please re
new my subscription to both for an
other year. Ido heartily endorse all
of your public utterances, and espe
cially your position on the money
question. I do hope and pray that
you may yet be, rewarded in this
life for the manly, patriotic and brave
fight you have made and are now
making for true democracy. My
wife joins we in love to you and
yours,
THOS. S. BROOKS.
LIKES IT FINE.
Dalton, Ga., Nov. 30, 1907.
Dear Sir: Enclosed please find $2,
for which send me vour two Jeffer
sonians for one year. I took Week
ly this year and was taking New
York magazine when it went to the
wall. Like your doctrine fine.
Yours friend,
GUS YAEGER.
R. F. D. No. 1.
RENEWS FOR ONE AND TAKES
THE OTHER.
Concord, Ga., Nov. 29, 1907.
Dear Sir: Enclosed find post office
order for $2, for w-hich send to the
above address your Jeffersonians
each for one year as per ad.
As ever yours,
R. A. MILNER.
R. F. D. No. 1.
P. S, —Renewal for the magazine.
A SAMPLE COPY IMPRESSED
HIM.
Keyser, W. Va., Nov. 26, 1907.
Dear Si£: I am a young man, being
born since the Uncivil War, but from
Southern stock —a rebel, a Democrat
and a free trader. I want to write
you and express my appreciation of
a magazine I happened to find on the
counter of one of our news dealers,
edited and published by you.
The Jeffersonian, to my idea, is
the ideal magazine of the day to any
young man that wants-light on the
affairs of his country. Tn it a
“spade” is called a spade, and the
vital questions are couched in plain
language, so any one can understand
them. Long life to the Jeffersonian
and its editor. I don’t believe in
placing all the flowers on the coffin
of the deceased, but give them a few
of the fragrant roses before they
pass away.
Yours very truly,
V. F. ATKIRE.
FROM BLEEDING KANSAS.
Eureka. Kan., Nov. 26. 1907.
Dear Sir: Enclosed find P. O. or
der for $2, for which please send
your magazine and also your Week
ly Jeffersonian. I have read the
magazine from the first number, and
can not do without it. I send by the
same mail Bent Murdock’s paper of
last week, which I think is quite
warm for a Republican.
Respectfully,
C. M. NOBLE.
FPOM THE EMPIRE ST A TE
Hamilton. N. Y. Nov. 30. 1907.
My Dear Sir: Enclosed please find
money order for $2 for the two Jef
fersonians- —the Weeklv and maga
zine—and may God §peed your good
work. Yours of the 27th insf. just a<
hand. Will write you again in a few
days.
Yours very trulv,
* J. M. HALL.
FROM TENNESSEE RENEWALS
COME.
Jackson, Tenn., Nov. 30, 1907.
Dear Sir: Enclosed find post office
order for $1.50, for which please re
new my subscription to your maga
zine for another year, and oblige
Your friend,
JOHN J. BOON.
FAITHFUL UNTO THE END.
VanAlstyne, Tex., Nov. 29, 1907.
Dear Sir- I send you $2 ’:•» renew
my magazine and for your Weekly
Jeffersonian. I am one of the old
reformers, commenced with the
Grange, and then with the Alliance.
And will, be a reformer as long as I
live, but that will not be long as
I am near eighty four. I can not
help the cause much.
R. B. GEORGE.
TEXAS KEEPS COMING.
Reynard, Texas, Nov. 30, 1907.
Dear Sir: Find enclosed check for
$2, for which renew my, Watson’s
Jeffersonian Magazine. Also send
me the Weekly Jeffersonian, and
Oblige,
C. H. BEAZLEY.
P. S. —Send to C. H. Beazley ?
Grape Land, R. F. D,
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