KYMnWlM V m i i ii Map of Cuba Showing Disposition of Spanish and Cuban Troops and All Important Operations to Date Under Cuban Occujatkh v CUBAN WAE BEYIEW TWO YEARS OF LITTLE FIGHTING RESULT WITH History of the Presdrit Uprising Story of the stormy Island from Its Discovery Topographical and Climatic Conditions A kaiid of Rebellion Nearly two years have elapsed since the Cubans declared that they would no longer endure the yoke of Spain Mil lions of dollars have been expended dur ing that time both in the maintenance of irmies and the destruction of the proper ty of the people of the war swept island GABCIAS HORRIBLE TORTURE Feb 24 1S95 is the date upon which the insurgents declared their independ ence and before the end of the month martial law had been proclaimed in Ha vanaTose IVIarti was placed at the head of the provisional government and Gen Maximo Gomez had arrived in Cuba to begin operations TneTiistory of the island runs coinci dent with our own and is therefore inter esting Cuba was discovered by Christo pher Columbus Oct 28 1492 sixteen days after he touched at San Salvador and nineteen years later his son Diego colon ized the island Pope Leo X erecting its first cathedral Velasquez followed with new contingents and in 1519 the capital was located at once assuming a position of importance in the eyes of the free lances of the ocean In 1538 a French adventurer sacked the town which was rebuilt when Ferdinand De Soto the discoverer of the Mississippi River was made Governor Spain prized Havana as a base of operations There Cortez com pleted his preparations for the conquest of Mexico and there Pizarro rested his men before proceeding to Peru Despite the strong fortress erected the French in 1554 again destroyed the town when two other fortresses for the defense of Havana were built which still exist the Moro and the Punta By 1G00 the colon ists were raising cattle and applying thumb screws and the torch to the na tives to induce them to reveal the spots where they found gold and silver nug gets Then they started the cultivation of tobacco and sugar and the woes of the natives began Under a system of cruelty and oppression the gentle aborigines di minished so rapidly that negro slaves were introduced and that eventually led to the internecine strife which has made one of the fairest spots on earth the home of pestilence and crime and savagery in warfare tho contemplation of which sickens a civilized world After invasions by the French English and Dutch and various claims1 as to the ownership of the island Cuba was re stored to Spanish rule in 1763 A new native population now sprung up and in 1790 Las Casas whose memory is re rered by Cubans to this day became captain general of Cuba Its ports were opetfefl to the world and great public im provements were effected Despite the Pawning of prosperity however and the ijeu by Spaih - J Disputed TeHRiTowl under Cuban Ocapwoi ifeJl aT Lr T - - sjl y OiU vy a jS vty teln P was quelled but others followed and two years since the restive spirit of the peo ple galling under an unjust yoke was augmented by still worse Spanish mis government The beet sugar production of Germany made Cuban culture unprof itable With hard times came discon tent The stupid Madrid Government continued its oppressive taxation injustice and nepotism and exiled patriots saw their opportunity to give affairs a political character Money was raised arms bought ships chartered and parties of patriots some of them veterans of the war of 186S 78 were landed in the eastern provinces where white and colored workmen of the plantations and small villnres were in duced to take up arms The location of Cuba is such that in case of annexation to the United States or even the certainty of its independence the commercial benefits accruing to this country would be very great and lasting It is only 130 miles from Florida and al though containing only 43319 square miles or a little more than half the area of the State of Kansas every section is stored with rich natural resources It has valleys that are susceptible of rais ing the finest grades of vegetable luxur ies and mountains S000 feet high It has 2G0 rivers and its seasons are uni formly divided rain from May to Octo ber sunny skies from November to April The population is fully adequate to all possible national and commercial require ments Five years ago it was announced at 1521684 of whom 977992 wort Spanish 10632 foreign Whites 4S9249 blacks and 43811 Chinese Havana atom is credited with a population of 200000 souls There are several short railways in the aggregate covering some 500 miles Cuba abounds in citrus fruits Then are peerless orange lemon and lime groves cocoanuts cocoanut oil cocoa coffee india rubber tobacco these com modities form the base of supplies easily obtained while the interior and middle sections boast immense forests of ma hogany and dye woods It is estimated that there are 13000000 acres of unclear ed mahogany forests alone The wood is spjjommontbat chopping blocks are made ofit and watering troughs of red cedar Lignum vitae for flutes lancewood for carriage shafts and surveying instru ments and otherfine varieties of rare and precious timber also exist in wild and un limited volume There is the richest kind of grazing for cattle Forty four times more food can be secured from an acre of bananas than from an acre of pota toes and it is claimed that from that small area in Cuba 20000 pounds of flour can be obtained in a single year and the much used banana wine in pro portion With all these manifold re sources it is estimated that the island in normal times would take 300000000 worth of merchandise annually from the United States to which country it now sells 250000000 cigars every year Up to the present time when Cuban in dependence is still hovering in the bal ance the history of the last great strug gle for independence in Cuba involves the same line of victories and reverses that characterized the strife of the 60s only that the people seem more and better organized The death of Marti May 19 1S95 and that of Maceo a few weeks since were severe blows for the insurrectionists for they idolized these men but intrepid leaders are not lacking Martis great political act was the summoning of the September conven tion which declared a provisional govern ment He was shrewd and persistent and in an incredibly brief space of time had vast quantities of firearms imported from the United States By December 1895 the Cuban forces were right in the center of the Spanish army The latter were driven back for seven consecutive days and Campos then in command was forced to change his strategic positions by Gomez being overwhelmed at Calisco Christmas eve Gomez as he had prom ised was within a few miles of Havana and Matanzas and so certain of success seemed the efforts of the patriots that Gen Weyler was sent to subdue this conglomeration of negroes bandits assas sins and adventurers Then began the - va MOTHER AND BABI SHOT BT THE SPANIARDS representation of the island in the Madrid Parliament several successive outbreaks occurred culminating in the famous Black Eagle conspiracy of 1S29 Good governors were few and from Velasquez down to Weyler they were vested with absolute power Insurgents were burned alive intolerance throve and the merci less dealings of the despots finally effected an amalgamation of the white red and black races The insurrection referred to policy of terror and butchery ever since diligently pursued The tortures inflicted on prisoners on suspects on helpless in nocent women and children almost out rival the Armenian cruelties men were lashed to death slowly garroted women and children were cast into burning houses blistered with lighted matches dismembered and these horrors coupled with a memory of what 300 patriot Cu bans were suffering in Spains pet con- vict colony Ceuta fired the blood of every true native patriot anew and brought to them the sympathy of nearly every nation on the earth The Cubans stood firm with nearly three fourths of the island under control with their civil government fully established in Santiago Puerto Principe Santa Clara and sev eral minor provinces It is a remarkable fact that when Cam pos the strong man of Spain arrived in Cuba with 36000 soldiers to recognize belligerent rights in 1S76 out of 145000 soldiers previously sent nor enough had returned to their native land to consti tute a regiment The deeds following the oppression of those years were heroic Persecution made martyrs In one in stance a boy of 15 was arrested for m0xmui HW Iijb liTiMiJgSMJflasaaEMrsBregaEJJSP TORTURED WITH BLAZIXG MATCHES seditious writings He was loaded with chains kept at hard labor and finally sent to Spain Here he became a brilliant journalist This boy was Jose Marti the great Cuban patriot who by 1891 had formed patriot clubs everywhere and who was the first to appear as a war leader when the present revolt broke out The war in Cuba may be primitive in its general methods and barbarous in the matter of butchery but it is certainly modern in the rapid development of dyna mite and other explosives as weapons of offense and defense To the dynamito gun used by the Cubans in Pinar del Rio more than to anything else may be attributed the noteworthy successes of Maceo against the Spanish troops Invis ible bullets thouch deadly in their ef fect are comparatively easy to stand against It requires superhuman nerve however to face a healthy dynamite pro jectile and it is no wonder that the Span ish troops have beep invariably defeated when called upon to make a stand against such weapons Army officers are watch ing the war in Cuba with great interest as the employment of dynamite by the Cubans has satisfied the military mind of the value of this explosive for offensive purposes Despite her financial embarrassment Spain has recently done relatively more than any European power with the ex ception of Great Britain to strengthen her navy At present there are four torpedo-boat destroyers in the hands of builders The first two have recently completed their official trials and these have been most successful in all respects The dimensions of the vessels are 220x 20 feet and the engines are triple expan sion developing 6000 horse power The engines at the trials both in the measured mile and in the three hours continuous steaming test worked smoothly and with no heating The internal appliances are of the most up-to-date character special attention being paid to what is the general defect in all torpedo craft namely ven tilation The encounters at Bocas del Toro Pai marito Palmiros Canasi Manut Mogate and Tagnasco were fast succeeding de velopments of the Cuban campaign direct ly after the declaration of independence but these were mere skirmishes com pared to the events of the past year The splendid march of Gomez and Maceo ij iEK TO WIP Lnes sAotk route of marches of Gomez and Alaceo 1 General Yarlos Spanish near Guanajay in Plnar del Rio across Habana lino to Intercept skirmishing Insurgents 2 Insurgent hospital at Cienfuesos destroyed toy Spanish and all sick and wounded butchered on Jan 18 1807 3 Colonel Hernandez Spanish south of Guanabacoa In Habana 4 Headquarters of General Ruls Rivera successor of Maceo in Plnar del Rio with 8000 well armed men waiting for the word from Gomez to make a dash through the trocha on Habana 5 Headquarters of the Spanish forces at Weylera trocha at Artemlsa 6 Major Sorres near Jabaco In Matanzas 7 Spanish troops under Colonel Sauquin at Important point Cablllos 8 Captured by Gomez In January and held by a garrison of 4000 men Santa Clara 0 Gomez i supposed to be near San Valentin and Alvarez with 18000 men waiting for an opportunity to push to Habana 10 Lone Star Rangers the gallant Texas regiment makes across the island from Santiago to Pinar del Rio the fierce fights within cannon shot of Havana the constant destruction of the trochas were brilliant achieve ments that terrified tle encompassed Weyler until they culminated in the death of Maceo With the opening of the new year however the situation seems just as complex and undetermined as it was the day after the two chieftains hoisted their flag in the eastern province and began the battle for freedom The end is apparently no nearer than it was a month after the first call to arms PERSONAL ENCOUNTERS Interesting Notes About Lnels and Duelling Even in Germany the popularity of the duel is open to some doubt Its ex istence is due not so much to a desire for a combat as of fear what people will say if there is no fight There have been noted duelists who were al ways ready for a fray and when they entered a drawing room women quail ed and hoped it would not be their hus bands or lovers who would be so un lucky as to excite the ire or the men of blood During the occupation of Paris by the Allies there were duels every day the Frenchmen usually being the chal lengers and the victors as they were very skillful with the small sword Sometimes however they made a mis take as when they jeered at an En glish officer over losing his leg at Waterloo The jeerer discovered that the loss of his leg did not interfere in the least with the Englishmans aim There have been exceptions to the GENERAL JTJAK RUIZ RIVERA mania for fighting at any price An En glish captain challenged by a French man had the choice of weapons and chose pistols The Frenchman declar ed he would fight with nothing but the sword and Interested friends finally compromised on lances ahorseback - en forays on San Chrlstobal and worries the Spanish 11 Bayamo held by Calixto Garcia with 5000 men military headquarters ef the Province of Santiago 12 Genoral Al sinos Spanish forces In Plnar del Rio 13 General Ynclais Spanish forces In Hnar del Rio 14 Xear Pico Puerto in the south central pare of Santa Clara Genoral Francisco Carlllo is sup ed to bo with 5000 men 15 Gen Jose M Agulrre Cub in near Buena Ylsta in eastern Matanzas 16 Cuban military station near Holguln was the Cuban arsenal and a b2sls of operatons In Santiago 17 Military railway projected by Campos from Maczanillo to Hayamo but was not finished 18 Third Army Corps of tho Cubans operating In Puerto Princlpa under General Jose M J OS 0 O 2 5S PUERTO Jri y C Jfel Ji JL The combat naturally attracted much attention A great crowd witnessed the duel One man received three ugly prods but finally killed his antagonist No duelist could ever be made to smile over the famous story of the En glishman and Frenchman who were to fight a duel in a pitch dark room Not wishing to kill his man the English man fired up the chimney when the word was given and to his surprise brought down the Frenchman who had hidden there When this story is told in France it Is always the En glishman who is up the chimney Fighting Fitzgerald was successful in eighteen duels before it was discov ered that he always wore a coat of mail For years his fame in society had rested on his Invariable success as a duelist and this discovery was his undoing A certain major in fighting him objected when his sword snapped on a heart thrust and demanded an in vestigation He was afterward hang ed in Ireland for murdering a neigh bor The most tragic duel in England was between Lord Byron grand uncle of the poet and a kinsman It was fought in a tavern room by the light of one tallow candle Lord Byron was tried for murder but got off on manslaugh ter from the penalties of which he 32 ffw HOW LONG MUST THIS LAST caped because he was a peer of the realm This safeguard of peers was done away with only during the pres ent reign Chicago News Crisp ana New A much cleaner lot of paper money is in circulation now than formerly a bank cashier states The banks now send their soiled notes to the United States Treasury to be destroyed as soon as a sufficient quantity accumulates to justify it and new notes are issued in their place This has been rendered not only possible but advisable owing to the Increased facilities for printing banknotes One never sees a soiled banknote in London They are all crisp and white and new simply because the Bank of England never lets a note go out a second time The average life of a Bank of England note is said to be five days A Living Skeleton Seurat who was shown as a living skeleton in England in 1825 was 27 years old He was 5 feet 7 inches high and his bones were merely cov ered with his dry parchment skin The upper joints of his arms were four inch es round The distance from the chest to the backbone was but three Laches The shoulder blade bones werd scarcely an inch asunder His appetite was good The pulsation of the heart was visible to the eye Measure of the Centimete One thousand cubic centimeters a quart of the standard measur use in this country Rodriguez 10 Felayo In western Puerto Principe by which Gome passed tho trocha aid entered Santa Clara 20 Third of Campos trochas tompoiary made to Imped the march of Gomez 21 Carlos Roloff and the Fourth Cuban Army Corps are In Matanzas 22 Cubms under Guena in western Matanzas near Habana province 23 Landing places of the Three Friends 24 Guanabacoa the scene of re cent Spanish barbarities 25 The scene of Maceos death 4F l 9TTmz i Zfa W equal fcs In 1 Said Freddy Vane I am awfully glad to see it rain I or now bgosh I can wear my 20 mackintosh Chicago Tribune Do you think that all matches are made in heaven Yes except those made at the seashore Judge Arent you giving your boy dancing lessons at a very young age But we intend him for the army Life Poak The way of the transgressor is hard Joak True but the trouble Is Its generally hard on somebody else Truth Friend Do you always wait for in spiration before you write a poem Author No I always need ten dol lars SomerviHe Journal Is the sail the only thing that guides a ship asked the green passenger No said the mate There are rud ders Indianapolis Journal I am hopeful that you will pay ma that 10 before the end of the week Smithson Thats right old man Be hopeful but dont be sanguine Judge I believe you men think more of your wheels than you do of your wives Why not We can get an improved make every year Chicago Record I love to have you come and see sis ter Mr Tompkins Why Dickie Cause she never likes that candy you bring her an gives It to me Chicago Record Fisher Do you believe in heredity Mann Sure Many a time I have no ticed that when a man was rich his son had the same trait Cincinnati Inquirer Miss Wabash So you come from Boston do you Thats where every body so cultured isnt it Miss Bea constreete No cultivated Somerville Journal Blynkins That fellow De Soaque says some very dry things doesnt he Wynkins Yes Ive heard him say Dont care if I do repeatedly Balti more News If poker Is our national game then the American beauty rose ought to be the national flower Why Be cause it has such a royal flush Chi cago Record Minnie George said I ought to go on the stage He said that he had no doubt I would be a peach Mamie Are you sure he didnt say a Cherry Indian apolis Journal Tommy Paw what is a designing villain Mr Figg Oh the descrip tion would apply to one of these poster artists about as well as anything Indianapolis Journal He Have you heard my new song The Proposal She No what key Is It in He Be mine er She I will And now you can transpose it to the key of A flat Life Tain alius dem ez hab de mos said Uncle Eben dat manages ter hoi onto it de longes De cullud gemman don git bald nigh ez quick ez de white gemman Washington Star Reed Ail the original jokes were written 2000 years ago Wright What nonsense Ill leave it to you now Do I look as If I could be more than 2000 years old Cincinnati Enquirer You do not go out often to dinner Mrs Waddington No I dont think the best dinner on earth is sufficient compensation for making ones self agreeable for three hours at a stretch Chicago Record Rugby Our landlady is one of the most expert calculators in town Wil klfls Is she Rugby Yep We had beans for dinner to day and she asked m how many I would have Cleve land Plain Dealer Professor Say Anna couldnt we just as well postpone our silver wed ding and celebrate it at the same time as the golden wedding I dont like to be interrupted In my work so often Fllegende Blaetter T S t 1 1