THE COURIER "In whatever direction we look, and whatever improvement in existing con ditions ve seek to effect, we come back to it again and again, that the end is de termined by the beginning, and that the foundations of all public betterment have to be laid in the children." Achievements are always in proportion to aspirations. Self-satisfaction is as fatal to an organization as to an indi vidual. There is nothing that cannot be accomplished by united womanhood. Life is large; ita opportunities are large. Ab an organization of earnest, high minded women, our opportunities are immense, because the individual is lost and becomes a part of the great force that is influencing the world. The duty is sacred. For these developments of a finer humanity let us give our deeper selves. An important subject for considera tion at the Federation meeting next year will be the proposed amendments to the constitution, the result of careful study by the constitution committee, Mrs. Draper Smith, Mrs. Stoutenbor ough and Mrs. Gault. It seemed advisable to have the article relating to membership precede the one concerning officers, therefore Article V becomes Article III. As it now stands, the article reads: "Clubs desiring to join this federation shall make applica tion." By the proposed change the sen tence will read: "Any woman's club with objects unsectarian and non-partisan." It is also proposed to strike out the closing sentence: "A majority vote of the executive board present at any meeting shall be necessary to admit to membership," and to substitute a new section called "section 2," which declares "The corresponding secretary 6hall pre sent each application to the executive board at the session following its receipt, and a majority vote of those present shall admit the club to membership." Article III becomes Article IV, and as amended will read: "The officers shall be a president, vice president, re cording secretary, corresponding secre tary, treasurer, auditor and librarian. These officers with the General Federa tion secretary shall constitute an execu tive board for the transaction of the business of the state federation, subject to its directions, and shall make a full report at each biennial meeting. In addition to these officers above men tioned there shall be a vice president for each congressional district in the state." Article VI, in regard to the annual meeting, will be changed to "meetings shall take place every two years, the second week in October, beginning in 1904, at such piece as the executive board shall decide." In Article VII, referring to the elec tion of officers, the sentence "The elec tion of officers shall take place at the annua meeting," will he changed to: "Officers shall be elected biennially and shall not be eligible to successive re election to the same office." It is further amended by the addition of a new sec tion, which is, "No person shall hold more than one office at a time." Article VIII cow reads: "The annual dues, payable in advance of the annual meeting, shall be two dollars for each club of fifty or lees members, and one dollar additional for each fifty members or major fraction thereof after the first fifty members." When amended, and with the addition of two new sections, it will read: "The annual dues shall be three dollars for each club of fifty or fewer members and one additional dol lar for each fifty members or major frac tion thereof after the first fifty members, and shall be paid annually to the treas urerby September 15, beginning with the year 1903." "Section 2. The dues for the ensuing year shall be paid to the treasurer before any club shall be en titled to representation." "Section 3. Clubs may be restored to membership upon the payment of all arrears." In article X, referring to amendments, the clause, "Notice of the proposed amendments having been printed in the year-book," will be eliminated, and the article will read: "The constitution may be amended at any meeting of the state federation by a two-thirds vote of those present and voting, notice of the proposed amendment having been sub mitted to the executive board and ap pended to the call for the meeting." Section 1 of the by-laws, defining the duties of the executive board, will read: The duties of the executive board shall be to decide upon the admission of clubs, to fill all vacancies in its own body, to appoint Buch committees and make such appropriations as may be re quired to carry on the work of the state federation, and to conduct the business of the general federation in the state." The former section becomes section two and reads: "The president shall pre side at all meetings of the federation, the executive board and the board of directors, and shall supervise all work of the association." Section 2 will become section 3 and will read: "The vice president shall in the absence of the president perform the duties of the president." Section 4 will be amended to read: "It shall be the duty of the district vice presidents to have general supervision over the clubs in their respective dis tricts, to encourage the extension of club work and the organization of local or district federations wherever possible." Section G will be added to by-law 1: "The duties of the other officers shall be those that usually pertain to the officers." By-law 6 becomes by-law 7 by the in sertion of a new by-law to be numbered G, between those numbered 5 and G. It will read: "The executive board and chairman of committees appointed td report at any biennial meeting shall be members of the meeting and entitled to introduce motions and vote." rCTDi We receive all th. f mrw pnrwQ I l iz) Y V JL-JVVlXw new publications .is h We have all StandamVS 7A soon as they are issued. Works by popular authors. We have all the leading Magazines and Periodicals and can furnish any book desired. Subscription taken for all Magazines and Periodicals. WEDDING INVITATIONS and announcements. also Party or Reception Cards. r$ 100 Engraved Visiting Cards and Plate. . .90c ffe 100 Engraved Visiting Cards with your Plate 70c W FINE TABLE LINEN We show a larger variety f of patterns (many of them exclusive with us) than can be found elsewhere in the city. $& We guarantee our Table Linens to give the best of ? wear. Our pure linen double Satin Damasks, 72 inches wide, beautiful patterns at $1.00, $1.25 and J? up to $2.50 a yard. With Napkins to match qual-i ity and pattern at $3.00, $3.75 and up to $12.00 a dozen. &i Linen Huck Towels, fancv colored borders at .10, ! .12, .15, .20 and .25 each. f Fancy Damask Towels, pure linen, hemmed orL fringed at .35, .50, .65 and up to $1.75. In Silk and Wool Dress Goods for evening wear we show a beautiful assortment. Warp printed taffetas f in this season's choicest colorings. Special values h at $1.25 and $1.50. ? fc An excellent, finft nunlit.v -nrinfprl T.ntiicinp cntfnMo -.. -. ., l.-.v. ioi evening wear in ncn colorings, at $i.iw and. $1.25. We have just opened an elegant line of silk warp ip "bublimes in all the evening shades, very popular jx cvcuiug vaiia supcuui (juauLy, "X& Indies $1.25 for (SilSi wirip. nf tajew -.-, .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ., .. .. . . . . . .. - 9 not like us, and she cannot forget it. There are noble women in the South who are earnestly working for the bet terment of the colored race. It is their question, let them settle it in their own way. A prejudice so deeply grounded that religion cannot alter it can never be uprooted by thrusting the colored race into the General Federation of Wo man's Clubs. Lst us be charitable, and let ua wait." The following supplementary report of MrB. Feattie's informal talk at the Wayne federation is contributed by Mrs. D. C. McKillip of Seward: While the convention was waitipg for the report of the nominating committee, Mrs. Peattie was called to the platform and induced to express her views on the color question. Uaid Mrs. Peattie, in substance: "In regard to this question I feel very de ply. I sincerely trust the club women will do nothing rash. Let ub wait. I do not wish to see this new harmony that has so lately united North and South broken. Just as the battle scan are covered by a mantle of charity and kindly feeling, juBt as the The Lincoln Fortnightly club has old rankling pain of defeat in the Bouth issued to the membere the year-book for and the bitter prejudices of the North the season of 1901 and 1902. The topic are forgotten, and women of both re- for the year is the "Study of Coloniza- gions have joined hands and are work- tion." What is particularly noticeable ing as one harmonious whole for a com- is the admirable and illuminating divis- mon cause, why should we destroy the ion into topics as follows: peace and beauty of it all by offering The mercantile system and colonial pol- the most cruel insult possible to our icy from 1500 to 1800. Bisters of the South? Let us think this England's present policy toward her subject over carefully and let ub wait, colonies (Canada, Australia, New Zea- If the colored people needed to come land, etc.) in, it would be different; but they now England's present policy toward her de- have all the helps, all the literature, all pendencies (India, West Indies, etc.) the advantages that we can give them. Symposium Is colonization the inevi- They have their own clubs and their table outgrowth of national develop- general federation. They do not need ment? us and we are better off without them. Peculiarities of modern Dutch, French They would not be happy with us. and German systems. There is a difference we did not make Russian methods of colonization, the difference God made it. He made Symposium Does colonization pay? them a different race, with racial pecu- Transformations in European colonies liarities. While there are many noble in the Western Hemisphere, people among them, yet they are not Territorial growth of the United States, like us, and God never intended the Constitutional aspects of the relations black and the white to mix. tastes are dmerent irom ours: tneir enciee, pleasures are not the same; their songs Symposium: characteristics. Thero is a colored wo- lems, aa race, climate, etc. man in our club in Chicago, but she is Pending problems: (b) Political prob- not happy with us. She feels that she is lems, as government, civil service, mili tary, etc. Pending problems: (c) Economic prob lems, as trade, commerce, labor, etc. Pending problems: (d) Educational, moral and religious problems. Symposium: What will be the retlex influence of dependencies on the United States? The bibliography is a catalogue issued by the library of Washington entitled List of books (with references to periodi cals) relating to theory of colonization, government of dependencies, protector ates, and related topics, by A. C. Griflin, Chief, Division of Bibliography. The officers for the year are, president, Mrs. H. H. Wilson; vice president, Mrs. W. G. L. Taylor; secretary, Mies Belva Herron. Besides these the members of the club are Mrs. E. B. Andrews, Mrs. E. H. Barbour, Mrs. F. M. Brooke, Mrs. S. H. Burnham, Mrs. A. W. Field. Mrs. C. H. Gere, Mrs. W. A. Green, MrH. E. L. Hinman, Mrs. A. J. Sawyer, Mrs. W. J. Lamb, Mrs. G. M. Lambertson, Mrs. A. D. Levering, Mrs. H. E. Lewie, Mrs. A. S. Raymond, Mrs. L. C. Rich ards, Mrs. A. C. Rickette. From 1894 to 1897 the Fortnight studied American literature, in 1897 the Netherlands, from 1898 to 1900 Russia, and last year reviewed tne nineteenth century. have the weird rhythm of their race, and they can never be natural without thtce A most interesting recital arranged by Mrs. A. S. Raymond and Miss Mary A.Smith, leaders of the first division. WHB CTimn of f ha nnillii. mnntinrr if tVin Their between the United States and depend- Matinee Musicale on Monday afternoon. Nevin'a song cycle entitled "Captive What are the conditions of Memories" was rendered with a true bd good colonial government? Pending problems: (a) Natural prob- preciation of its The singers were artistic possibilities. Miss Eleanor Ray-