"Dear Tom:
- I am J. F. Dillard, a son of G. G. Dillard, who moved to Smithville in 1872, a partner of Tom Christian in the drug business. I remember with great clearness most of the characters of whom you write in The Review and I much wonder why the older
we grow the more we live in our memories. Do you remember Coon Potter who always said "Certainly" to everything, and do you remember the old yellow dog who through all weather followed Cain Magness to town. And do you remember how Josh Phillips enjoyed
the opportunity to argue predestination?
-
It would be interesting if you could recall some of the battles of Jim Willis and Bob Gilbert, old-time bullies, and write about them. If you draw a bit on your imagination it would not hurt for they were great "men of valor" in their day.
-
I was talking to some ladies of Dallas last Sunday who told me that some of them had received copies of the Review from you.
-
I see Stanfield Dunlap frequently. His red hair is now white but the fire is still in his eyes, and he often tells me stories of the olden times that are very interesting.
-
I just wanted to write my appreciation of those stories you have written for the Review and express the hope that you will write more of them.
"Breathes there the man, with soul so dead,
who never to himself hath said,
This is my own, my native land!
Whose heart hath ne'er within him burned,
As home his footsteps he hath turned,
From wandering on a foreign strand?" |
|