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Updated: June 4, 2025
Four State conferences were held during the year and Mrs. Brown represented the association at the National Suffrage Association at Washington in December; the Mississippi Valley Conference at Minneapolis the next May; the National Council of Women Voters at Cheyenne in July and the National Suffrage Association at Atlantic City in September.
Miss Marion Sloan of Rochester was made vice-president. During the year the association offered prizes for the best essay on woman suffrage to the students of the four Normal Schools, many competing. The annual meeting for 1905 was held in Minneapolis in November. In answer to the many calls a Lecture Bureau of twenty well-known speakers directed by Dr.
I am going to Minneapolis tonight and from there as soon as I can either to New York or Chicago. I will do as big things as I can. I I can't write I love you too much God keep you. Until she heard the whistle which told her that the Minneapolis train was leaving town, she kept herself from thinking, from moving. Then it was all over. She had no plan nor desire for anything.
Minneapolis, Omaha, etc., would not pay 3 cents premium for the best eggs produced, but cities of the same size east of the Appalachians and especially in New England, will pay a good premium. The Far West or the mountain districts will pay up better than the Mississippi Valley.
Busy, bustling, beautiful Minneapolis, with its elegant homes; its commodious churches; its great University with its four thousand students ; its well-equipped schools with their forty-two thousand pupils ; its great business blocks; its massive mills; its humming factories; its broad avenues; its pleasant parks; its population of a quarter of a million of souls; all this had not then even been as much as dreamed of.
They were all there Gertie and Adelaide, Ray and his mother, and Miss Greene, an unidentified girl from Minneapolis; all playing parcheesi, explaining that they thought it not quite proper to play cards on Sunday, but that parcheesi was "different." Ray winked at Carl as they said it. The general atmosphere was easy and livable. Carl found himself at home again.
To the freshman, Carl Ericson, descending from the dusty smoking-car of the M. & D., in company with tumultuous youths in pin-head caps and enormous sweaters, the town of Plato was metropolitan. As he walked humbly up Main Street and beheld two four-story buildings and a marble bank and an interurban trolley-car, he had, at last, an idea of what Minneapolis and Chicago must be.
"I didn't know you were so brave," said the Minneapolis girl. "Perhaps he didn't want you to know," said Miss Voscoe; "perhaps that's his life's dark secret." "People often pretend to a courage that they haven't," said Vernon. "A consistent pose of cowardice, that would be novel and I see the idea developing more than useful."
Manning lost no time in following up the clew he had obtained in Minneapolis, and so, purchasing a ticket for Bismarck, he was soon thundering on his way to the Missouri river.
The stories are all true to life, and mixed with the excitement there is a wealth of humor and pathos. "There is a dash about 'A Yellow Journalist' that exhilarates like a fresh breeze on a sharp winter morning." Chicago Record-Herald. "The book is bright and entertaining." Minneapolis Tribune.
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