Watson's Magazine, Vol. IV, No. 2, April, 1906
ABRAHAM LINCOLN
was the radical of his day. Many of the views expressed in his letters and speeches would strike a “good Republican” of today as extremely radical.
ARE YOU ACQUAINTED
with the great commoner’s views on political and religious liberty, on alien immigration, on the relation of labor and capital, on the colonization of negroes, on free labor, on lynch law, on the doctrine that all men are created equal, on the importance of young men in politics, on popular sovereignty, on woman suffrage?
All of his views are to be found in this edition of “LINCOLN’S LETTERS AND ADDRESSES,” the first complete collection to be published in a single volume. Bound in an artistic green crash cloth, stamped in gold. Printed in a plain, readable type, on an opaque featherweight paper.
For $1.95, sent direct to this office, we will enter a year’s subscription to WATSON’S MAGAZINE and mail a copy of LINCOLN’S LETTERS AND ADDRESSES, postage prepaid. This handsome book and Watson’s Magazine—both for only $1.95. Send today. Do it now.
TOM WATSON’S MAGAZINE 121 West 42d St., New York City
THE MAGAZINE WITH A PURPOSE BACK OF IT
April, 1906
Application made for Entry as Second-Class Matter, February 17, 1906, at the Post Office at New York, N. Y., under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1879.
Copyright, 1906, in U. S. and Great Britain. Published by Tom Watson’s Magazine, 121 West 42d Street, N. Y.
TERMS: $1.50 A YEAR; 15 CENTS A NUMBER