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PAGE TWO
OLD MAN PEEPUL AND THE BOYS, AND SOME OF THE LADY - FOLKS
FROM ONE OF THE OLD STAND
BYES AND TRUE BLUES.
My Dear Mr. Watson: Enclosed
you will find subscriptions for Jeff—■
being an advocate of the principles
which appear in your Weekly Jeffer
sonian and Magazine.
The people in this section think I
am agent for your publications, they
come to me without solicitation. It
is no trouble to me—nor expense, ex
cept money order, and I am glad to
get people to read papers that will
stimulate and form proper thought.
Only a few years ago your mail
ing list at this place was quite small,
now your paper is read and discussed
by a great many. Some of your
readers wondered why you did not
comment on the Leo Frank case. I
am glad that you kept silent as it
was so thoroughly aired in the dai
lies. The live issues that effect the
welfare of the people which most
dailies shy is looked forward to in
youi’ papers; and I believe if this
great Republic is preserved it can
only be done by adhering to the
principles advocated by a few papers
and magazines in our country.
I hope that you may live many,
many years to carry on the good
work you are doing. As I have often
said: you have had a hard fight—but
you have done more good tow’ard
educating the people of Georgia along
right lines of thought than any one
man.
The thought that saddens me is
that you will never realize how much
you are loved and appreciated. We
wait until people are dead before we
give them what is due them. Some
day you will be lauded as Georgia’s
greatest thinker and writer.
May your fondest dreams be real
ized. Very truly yours,
R. W. MAYS.
Jackson, Ga.
A SCHOOL TEACHER IN THE
DISTRICT HELPS AND EN
COURAGES.
Dear Mr. Watson: Please enclosed
find check on the bank of Wrens for
s•>.oo, and a list of names of people
who please send Magazine and Jeff
to at the reduced price of fifty cents
each.
I am very busy these days with my
school work, but I could not let the
time pass when I could do a great
man like you a favor. Ido not think
1 am doing you a good only, but I
realize I am doing my country a
great good, when 1 do something to
help you in the great fight which you
are engaged. Every person that
holds a place under the stars and
stripes of our country should help
you in your fight. 1 hope to see you
some day, and may our Heavenly
Father give you all the blessings that
is necessary for you to carry on this
good work of yours, and your coun
try. Remember I am your friend
now and till the end. I beg to re
main, Your friend,
L. P. GUNN.
Wrens, Ga.
A GLOWING TRIBUTE FROM ONE
OF THE PLAIN PEOPLE.
Dear Mr. Watson: I am enclos
ing a list of 17 subscribers to your
Jeffersonian, as a small token of the
high regard I have for you. I have
been feeole for several months and
only indirectly helped a little in cir
culating your paper. Perhaps as you
have not heard from me in so long a
time you have dropped my name
from the list of your thousands of
friends. If so. write it there again,
for you haven’t a truer friend in
Georgia than 1, I have been a close
reader of your books and papers. It
is possible that if every sentence that
I have read of your writings were
placed end to end in a straight line
it would reach across the State at
some point. 1 will never forget how
hard you worked while in Congress
for a class of people who had but
very few friends in Congress except
yourself. I think you are the man
who attacked and exposed a barroom
being run in the United States Capi-
THE JEFFERSONIAN
tol, and I am sure that rural free de
livery of .mail to the farmers and
laborers is one of the greatest bless
ings ever conferred upon country
people in many ways. We all know
that you were the champion of that
great blessing. The evangelist, Sam
P. Jones said you were and that it
was on the Congressional Record that
you were, and you have stood for the
% common people from then all along
down the line until the present day,
and you are doing more for the
people if possible now, than ever be
fore. Now 7 let every friend of Mr.
Watson send in a list of names for
Mr. Watson’s papers, and give him
all the help we can. His trial is to
come up soon if it ever does; friends,
it is our trial as well as his and we
should stand by him.
W. J. GLOVER.
Bowersville, Ga.
THIS ONE IS FROM INDIANA.
Dear Sir: Enclosed find $3.00 for
subscription list enclosed “separate
sheet.” I regret that 1 have been so
busy that I was not able to send you
-a much larger list, and especially
your very liberal offer to cut your
price in half for the months of July,
August and September. Between you
and the Menace things are getting
warmed up around this neck of the
woods. The Catholic priest I heard
last week roasted all people who
would read such papers as the Men
ace and others of the same stamp.
Hobart is only 2,500 population and
very few Roman Catholics, but they
hold over half of the offices, and we
are going to go for them this next
election.
Trusting this finds you and yours
well. I am yours truly,
Hobart, Ind. M. H. SMITH.
THANK YOU! HAVE ..WRITTEN TO
HIM. *
Dear Sir: Enclosed you will find
the name ana address of a gentle
man from India who has been travel
ing through the South making
speeches against foreign missions.
As I have been put to some trouble
in securing his name and address, I
would be very glad if you would write
him and ask his views on the foreign
mission question and publish same in
th “Jeff.” I enclose post card on
which please let me know if you re
ceived the address all right. I wish „
you God speed on this and all other
great questions of the day which you
so valiantly fight. From your staunch
friend and admirer,
A. G. B. GRAHAM.
Moss, Miss.
OH, YES: TELL US ABOUT THE
LICK IN THE JAW THE BAP
TIST PREACHER HANDED ME
Dear Friend: I say friend, because
you are a friend to us all. Even to
your enemies. I am sending you an
other club of subs. I think this
makes about forty or fifty that I have
sent you this year. Wish it was fifty
times that number. I will not tell
you about the lick in the jaw handed
you yesterday by a Baptist preacher
when I approached him for his sub
scription to help me make up my
club. But don’t be discouraged, I
am informed that he flings a fit every
occasionally. He blows his foreign
mission bugle and preaches for a sal
ary several times smaller than the
smallest foreign messionary in the
field. W. J. COLE.
Tallapoosa, Ga.
■ ♦
GEORGIA COMES ALONG AS
USUAL.
Dear Sir: Enclosed find list of
subscribers —ten papers in number,
which makes 42 sent in by me this
week. I found the woods on fire for
your literature and struck while the
iron was hot, may send more soon.
Send October Magazine to the above
subscribers if you have them. You
will also find P. O. order for five dol
lars less cost. Respectfully,
R. F. COCHRAN.
Lyons, Ga.
A SOUTH CAROMNA FRIEND.
Dear Mr. Watson: Enclosed you
will find a list of names that I
promised to send you. I am very
busy now, but if I can get up any
more subscribers for you I will cer
tainly do it, as I think it is about the
best missionary work I can do. Your
publications get better, and I wish
for you a long life of usefulness, also
strength of body and mind to fight
the “Great Apostate Church.” I
have two questions I would like to
ask you, but as you are a very busy
man I will not claim the time it
would take to answer them.
Very sincerely yours,
J. D. STONECYPHER.
Townville, S. C.
■
GOT SIX NEW SUBSCRIERS WITH
VERY LITTLE EFFORT.
Dear Sir: I have had success
with very little effort in getting j 6
new subscribers for the Weekly Jeff.
It seems as if some others in this
community are getting interested
about the great good work you are
engaged in for the betterment of
this beloved land of the free and
home of the brave. The question is,
“How ong will it be if some others
don’t get interested besides you and
a few more that are leading the fight
for the true America that we will
live in a land of the free?” Oh, how
sad it is to think back of the time
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Open Letters to Cardinal Gibbons
NOW ON THE PRESS
This series of articles which has appeared in the Watson
Magazine has been put in book form by Mr. Watson; it
has been added to, made very much more interesting,
and treats of the Roman Catholic question in an entirely
different way from that used in any of the other works
of Mr. Watson.
PRICE, POSTPAID, 50 CENTS
The Jeffersonian Publishing Company
Thomson, Georgia
I™™™ napoleqn
I By THOS. E. WATSON
| THIS BOOH IS REGARDED AS A STANDARD,
| BY EMINENT SCHOLARS
I Limited Edition PRICE, $1.50, POSTPAID
I THE dEFFERSOfiII ARI PUB. CO., Thomson, Ga.
When writing to advertisers please mention The Jeffersonian.
we sleepy headed Protestants have
slumbered away. ' Never mind, we
are waking itp in spots, just like
some* one with measles. AH' we need
is you and the others, who are at
work just to keel) giving the strong
teas that you have been giving and
they will break out all over,, and
then we will not be in so much
danger. I was talking to a friend
of mine some time ago of an uncle
who had sent you $5.00 to help you
in your case. He remarked my
uncle had better been buying him
some flour. I said to him, that’s
the trouble, some people had rather
swing on by the tail and not try to
WRITE US TODAY
FOR 1913 - U Budded: ud
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eral list of Fruit trees, ornamentals, Roses,
Palms, esc, Pecau budwood in 40 varieties. Our
6tock and service will please you-.
GAINESVILLE NURSERIES
Gainesvitte, Georgia
* V
pEOPLE in New Orleans can
get THE JEFF Publications
from THE BAYS NEWS CO.,
342 Slidell Ave., Algiers, La.