The white ministers should take up the cause of justice rather than endorse the red shirts, or carry a Winchester themselves. They should be the counselors of peace and not the advocates of bloodshed. Most of them, no doubt, do regret the terrible deeds committed by mobs on helpless and innocent people, but it is a question as to whether or not they would be suffered by public sentiment to "cry aloud" against them. It takes moral courage to face any evil, but it must be faced or dire consequences will follow of its own breeding. Our last word then, is an appeal to our BROTHERS IN WHITE, in the pulpit, that they should rally the people together for justice and; condemn mob violence. The Negroes do not ask social equality, but civil equality; let the false notions that confound civil rights with social rights be dispelled, and advocate the civil equality of all men, and the problem will be solved.
Edmund Burke says that "war never leaves where it found a nation." applying this to the American nation with respect to the Negro it is to be hoped that the late war will leave a better feeling toward him, especially in view of the glorious record of the Negro soldiers who participated in that conflict.
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.
[Transcriber's Note: Page numbers refer to the original 1899 text. All photographs were on individual pages in the original text.]
| Title of Photograph | Original Page Number |
| William McKinley. | Frontispiece |
| General Fitzhugh Lee | 6 |
| General Antonio Maceo | 8 |
| Miss Evangelina Cosio y Cisneros | 10 |
| U.S.S. Maine | 12 |
| Eddie Savoy. | 14 |
| Jose Maceo | 16 |
| Sergeant Frank W. Pullen | 20 |
| Charge on El Caney | 26 |
| Corporal Brown | 28 |
| George E. Powell | 35 |
| Col. Theodore B. Roosevelt | 39 |
| Gen. Nelson A. Miles | 47 |
| Sergeant Berry | 48 |
| General Thomas J. Morgan | 50 |
| General Maximo Gomez | 54 |
| First Pay-day in Cuba for the Ninth and Tenth Cavalry | 58 |
| First President of the Cuban Republic | 64 |
| Cubans Fighting from Tree Tops. | 70 |
| Investment of Santiago by U.S. Army | 78 |
| General Russell A. Alger, Secretary of War | 82 |
| Cuban Women Cavalry | 84 |
| Officers of the Ninth Ohio | 92 |
| Major John R. Lynch | 96 |
| Major R.R. Wright | 100 |
| Major J.B. Johnson | 106 |
| Third North Carolina Volunteers and Officers | 108 |
| President Charles F. Meserve | 110 |
| Mr. Judson W. Lyons | 113 |
| The Games Family | 115 |
| Coleman Cotton Factory | 116 |
| John R. Brown, Uncle Sam's Money Sealer | 118 |
| Gen. Pio Pilar | 120 |
| Paul Lawrence Dunbar, Negro Poet | 122 |
| A Philipino Lady | 124 |
| Emilio Aguinaldo, Military Dictator of the Filipinos | 128 |
| Felipe Agoncillo | 130 |
| Convent at Cavite, Aguinaldo's Headquarters | 132 |
| Church at San Sebastiano, Manila | 136 |
| Uncle Sam and His New Acquisitions | 142 |
APPENDIX.
THE TWENTY-FOURTH UNITED STATES INFANTRY.
BY SERGEANT E.D. GIBSON.
The Twenty-fourth United States Infantry was organized by act of Congress July 28, 1866. Reorganized by consolidation of the 38th and 41st regiments of infantry, by act of Congress, approved March 3, 1869. Organization of regiment completed in September, 1869, with headquarters at Fort McKavett, Texas.