- m j a f I 113 JM T rrHEstoryof n I Cuba Is a Jft X tragedy a J tragedy so black that the pages of history not ex cepting those up on which is writ ten the diabolical doings of the Spanish inquisi tion contain no counterpart It is -a nar rative which had its beginning in the dis covery of America it was rooted in Span ish tyranny transplanted into centuries treachery and oppression reared in in- iernicine strife and matured in this re volting war and its attendant horrors which have wrested from Cuba the proud -title Pearl of the Antilles and earned the name of Isle of Blood The revolution was organized by Jose Marti a Cuban exile in this country and a man of genius and courage He organ ized here what is called the Cuban Ta -- - ol uuus -of Cuban political exiles for the purpose -of raising money to free their country Toor as were the majority of the few Cu bans who lived in the United States be fore the beginning of the revolution they listened to the eloquent appeals of Marti -and gave him all they had on earth to lib erate Cuba from Spain Marti was ap pointed delegate of the party and his 4aithful friend Benjamin J Guerra was made treasurer There was not much inoney then in the safes of the afterward famous Junta and their funds were soon exhausted by an unsuccessful attempt to -start an expedition from the South But Marti had obtained the co operation of Gen Maximo Gomez and Gen Antonio Maceo two veterans of the last war He linew that the discontent against Spain was deep throughout the island He had important connections with conspirators -an all the provinces He gave without hes itation the orders for the uprising and went to Santo Domingo to join Gen Go mez and take with him the field At that grave and decisive moment the total funds of the patriots amounted to ot more than 70000 It is wonderful that with a sum comparatively speaking o paltry for so great a purpose a war should have been raised which cost Spain up to February 1S9S besides the sacrifice of so many of her soldiers 250000000 -and caused to the United States a net loss in trade and business of 300000000 On May 19 1893 Marti was killed in the engagement at Dos Itios but his work 2iad already been done He had landed on April 11 with Gen Gomez at Sabana la 3ar on the southern coast of Cuba after issuing at Monte Cristi a revolutionary manifesto and had had time before his -death to convoke the representatives of all the Cuban provinces to a general io -elect a provisional government and frame a constitution If this was not done until later in September of the same year at the town of Jimaguayu it was sot the less true that from the first days of the revolution the desire of Marti as of all the patriots was to organize a republic with popular institutions Two months before Martis death Gen lAntonio Maceo had landed at Duava near JBaraooa Santiago de Cuba province TWith a handful of men and a few rifles and cartridges a small open boat brought Jiiin to Cuba from Jamaica But his name and his presence were enough to make Spain tremble Ho and his heroic broth er Jose Maceo were surrounded by su perior Spanish forces on the day of their -landing They broke through the Span ish lines and made their way into the country In a few days as soon as the news spread of their arrival the province of Santiago de Cuba rose in arms and Antonio Maceo had around him more than 0000 Cuban soldiers The revolution was saved The few -patriots who took up arms on Feb 24 at and Manzanillo had courageously resisted under Gen Bartolome Maso now president the attacks of the col umns of the Spanish -Gen Lachambre as DEAD W uGOX ON ITS ROUNDS well as the proposals of peace from the captain general of the island Don Emilio Calleja The envoys of the captain gen eral told Maso that the revolution was a failure The provinces of Pinar del Rio jind Havana were entirely quiet A few unimportant bands in Matanzas and San la Clara had been dispersed or had cur rendered Puerto Principe was unani mously in favor of peace But Maso tnowiug well how to receive such reports refused to yield He had confidencein he landing of Maceo Marti and Gomez He knew the great moral effect that the presence of those leaders in the field was oing to have on the Cuban people and Kniin fcnpw it also Thp tipwr fhnf Afnon X - w vu I DU1U1U 11 3MM rfitf e I IIM II MJf III Vl Iff r Uli ft IttlW m lam M bj mwM Cnnovas then in power resolved tc fight the revolution with the first of the Spanish generals and with all tie resources of the nation Gen Calleja was recalled and Gen Martinez Campos was sent to Cuba with 25000 soldiers Martinez Campos landed in Guantano ma Santiago de Cuba on April 16 1S95 His first impression was pessimistic and the long chain of defeats inflicted upon his command until December of the same year proved how right he was in believing from the first day of his arrival that this war was to be more important than the previous one of 18G8 He wasted a great deal of time in useless trips by sea to Ha vana and again to the East Maceo was preparing in the meantime his men and Gomez was formulating the plan of the great invasion of the West in order to carry the revolution to all the provinces and establish in each one a regular body of the Cuban army July 13 1895 is the memorable date of fiohflttle of Peralejo The war had been unui men cuunntra i t Prriuctf of Santiago de Cuba with some small bands of patriots roaming through Puerto Principe and keeping up only an unimpor tant guerrilla warfare But Maceo had already obtained some notable triumphs and Martinez Campos decided to carry re enforcements to the Spanish towns in the interior which were in great danger of at tack by the insurgents While Martinez Campos was on the way to Bayamo Ma ceo offered him battle near Peralejo The engagement was a pitched battle and the Cubans not numbering 6000 car ried the day Gen Stantocildes fell dead near Gen Martinez Campos The Span iards lost all their ammunition and their horses Completely routed a body of them availing themselves of the darkness of the evening fled to Bayamo carrying Martinez Campos on a stretcher borne by four soldiers He was exhausted by fa tigue and filled with despair More than 300 Spanish soldiers were left dead on the field With the splendid booty secured by him Maceo completed the arming of his patriots From April to October Gomez success fully carried the war through Puerto Principe province and laid his plans for the invasion of the west On Oct 22 Ma ceo having received orders from Gomez who was appointed commander-in-chief of 4 t isandti Valcriano Weyler y Nicolau to succeed Martinez Campos The question may be asked why the pat riots after so many victories did not in vest the city of Havana and end there with the Spanish dominion The answer is very clear After the battle of Coliseo Gen Gomez reviewed his troops and found that each soldier had only three cartridges The Cubans in the United States were making vain efforts to send a big expedition to the patriots But if the Spanish army was defeated in the fields of Cuba Spanish diplomacy was triumphant at Washington At Guira de Melena on Jan 4 1896 the patriots had to fight with their machetes to enter the province of Havana For such a state of affairs Gen Gomez considered his best plan to be to organize armies in all the provinces invad ed so far as his resources permitted him to do and try to raise the war in Pinar v h f vb CKSOMVILLE tAUGuSTlflE L vV GULF OF MEXICO 0 vT - V VO T a r KEY A O STRAPS CUBAS GEOGRAPHICAL RELATION TO THE UNITED STATES del Rio province At Garro Jan 8 the patriots routed a Spanish column and en tered Pinar del Eio Gen Gomez then withdrew to the east while Maceo proceed ed to the west On Jan 17 he obtained another victory at the very gates of Pinar del llio city and on Jan 22 he took the town of Banes at the western extremity of the island three months after his de parture from Baragua in Santiago de Cuba On Feb 12 Maceo returned to Ha vana province Gen Weyler publicly de clared Pinar del Rio pacified and the gal lant Cuban leader returned to that prov ince on March 15 Before this Weyler had already shown his sanguinary spirit and plans of mur der Prisoners of war and innocent per sons nniustlv charged with niriinc Hm the army in September by the assembly hellion were shot every day iu Havana FLAG OF FUEE CUBA ish columns and go to one of the fortified towns under the vigilance of the Spanish soldiery With the homes of the recon centrados their cultivated lands were to be devastated and around the ttowns where they had to live not a piece of bread was to be given to them In this manner under pretext of a military opera tion half a million people most of them nmrumi BTilmrlfiiimiii women and children were condemned to die from hunger Wholesale Slanglitcr From the date of those decrees until November 1896 300000 people were mur dered thus in Cuba Since November as a resut of Weylers sanguinary orders the number has been increased to 400000 What monster in history ever did so much against humanity and civilization Nero Caligula Tamerlane Torqucmada Alva when compared with Weyler appear mild and humane A poltroon besides being an assassin he never offered battle to thej Cubans or took the field to fight In his time Spain env 200000 soldiers to Cuba He kept them inactive guarding the trocha from Mariel to Majana in Pinar del Rio province or from Jucaro to Moron in Puerto Principe At other times from his palace in Havana following on a map the imaginary positions of his enemies he or dered his columns to make combined move ments that always resulted in defeats One instance of the stupidity and cow ardice of Weyler occurred on May 1 1890 He ordered one of his favorite combina tions of columns against Maceo at a place called Cacarajicara in the province of Pinar del Rio The result was that the forces of the Spanish Colonels Inclan and Gelabert were shattered by the Cuban leader and the havoc made in the Span ish lines was so -great that the Spanish soldiers panic stricken threw themselves into the sea to escape the Cuban machete Weyler as in all other cases accused his subordinates of not having obeyed hi or ders exactly On Dec 7 1896 Maceo after having crossed Weylers famous trocha and en tered Havana province was assassinated in an ambush near Punta Brava The rev olution lost in him a great patriot and a heroic soldier But Weyler soon under stood that the murder of Maceo was not the death of Cubas cause In March 1896 Gen Calixto Garcia landed in Santiago-de Cuba He soon replaced Maceo as a dashing fighter and a brilliant com mander At the same time Gomez in Santa Clara had won the important battle of Saratoga and controlled the whole province The battle of Juan Criollo in February 1897 was another of Gomezs important victories and in Santiago de Cuba the latter part of the year was made conspicuous by the triumph of Gen Gar cia at Victoria de las Tunas Weyler was recalled in November when after the death of Canovas and the fall of the short lived Azcarraga cabinet Senor Sagasta was selected as prime min ister by the queen regent It is a well known fact that Weylers recall was im posed upon Spain by this country Gen Don Ramon Blanco who was to change the Eanguinary methods of war fare of his predecessor entered Havana Nov 29 1897 Spain granted to Cuba an autonomist system which has been de clared a mockery by all impartial judges The Cubans rejected it and the new A of representatives started for the east with 2000 of his men On Oct 30 Gomez invaded Las Villas Maceo joined him on Nov 29 near a place called Los Gnayos From there they began their triumphant march On Dec 3 the Spanish Col Se gura was defeated by the insurgents at Iguara and had to leave his dead on the field together with a great supply of arms and ammunition On Dec 15 the Spanish battalions of Ganarias and Trevino were routed by Maceo at Mai Tienipo after the most gallant charge with machetes of the Cuban cavalry led by Maceo himself that has ever been seen jn the Cuban wars On Dec 21 the victory of El Desquite cleared the way for the invaders to the province of Matanzas Martinez Campos then made a desperate effort to check the two Cuban leaders Until that moment he had been recoiling before the invaders with his columns hoping that they would stop But he saw that each step of the patriots to the west was a decisive triumph for their cause The enthusiasm of the revo lution was growing day by day through out the country The Cuban ranks were filled by volunteers from all the cities and towns by which Gomez and Maceo passed Martinez Campos rallied his almost dis persed men and presented battle at El Co liseo on Dec 23 The action was sharp and decisive Mar tinez Campos behaved bravely leading one of his wings iu a charge against Go mez but Maceo falling on the Spanish won the day for Cuba and compelled Mar tinez Campos to retire The captain gen eral hurriedly entered Havana making preparations to defend the city and he confessed his defeat to the astonished Spanish volunteers and residents of the capital Spain Sends Weyler On the night of Dec 27 the captain general made that avowal A few days later the rabid Spaniards of the city com pelled him to tender his resignation to Madrid They demanded from Canovas a captain general framed in the old iron cast of the Spanish conquerors not to fight battles and risk his life on the field but to exterminate the native population In their belief women children every one born in Cuba should be held responsible for the situation They did not like a Eoldier with a gallant career and personal was in Cuba reached Madrid shortly after courage They wanted an executioner jjixe overthrow of the Sagaata cabinet I Canovas satisfied them and appointed Don SCENE AMONG TIIE STARVING RECONCENTRADOS The most summary court martial preceded the executions as a mere formality In other cases the victims were murdered in cold blood in their dungeons or thrown alive into the sea during the night at the entrance to the harbor to feed the sharks The horrors of the Council of Blood under Alva look pale when compared to the crimes of Weyler In the country his troops had orders to kill every non-combatant without regard to age In the cities he appointed as inspectors of police the most infamous murderers and thieves from the Spanish penal colonies in Africa In a short time more than 100000 persons emigrated from Cuba panic stricken But Weyler was not satisfied He in tended to destroy the country and to ex terminate the natives Seeing that the executions in the forts were too slow a method and that thedestruction wrought by his columns was not enough to ruin the island he conceived one of the most mon strous crimes ever committed against hu manity On Feb 16 1S96 he issued his two famous decrees of concentration By them every human being in the country districts was compelled to leave his home after it had been destroyed by the Span- regime inaugurated in Havana on the first day of this year by Gen Blanco was as a complete failure The patriots declared the acceptance of autonomy an act vi treachery to their flag They hanged as WATCIIIXG HER DiIXG BABE spies all the Spanish agents sent to them to propose such a scheme They rejected with scorn the offers of money made to them by Blanco The death of the Cuban Gen Arauguren near Havana did not discourage the patriots in the least They kept up the war as enthusiastically as ever adopting as their motto Indepen dence or Death Effective Tip A hungry guest at a Chicago hotel who had sat at one of the tables unno ticed for several minutes called a wait er to Jiim at last and said Young fellow I saw that man ovei there hand you a tip of half a dollar just now Yes sah Youve got his order have you Yes sah Well now 111 give you a tip also wOiich is this Bring me exactly the same order served in exactly the same style as his and with the same promptness or Ill report you Do you get the idea young fellow Yes sah The two dinners were served- at the same time and were precisely alike When a boy gets hurt it can never be told how badly he Is bruised until after he has been given his Saturday bath WP BORN A SLAVE Ee Won Hla Way to a Commanding Position in American Life The career of Blanche K Bruce who died recently in Washington was one of the most remarkable in our history Although he was born and lived to the age of 20 years a slave he died in his second term as register of the Treasury after having served a full term as Uni ted States Senator and he honestly ac quired a comfortable fortune and a strong Influence in the politics and poli cies of the country Bruce who was born a slave in ijillm BLANCHE K BRUCE ginia in 1841 removed with his mas ier to Missouri a little before the war and In 1861 joined the Union forces Af ter the war he located in Mississippi where he prospered and where in 1874 he was elected to the United States Senate In this connection a good story is told It was announced that the Sena tor would go to Washington from his Mississippi home by one of the Missis sippi steamboats at least as far as St Louis on his way The captain a man by the name of Lathers was a typical Mississippi steamboat captain and he was reported to have said that he would show the black Senator wrhon ho got aboard of the boat that he would have to keep his place on that boat and If he put on any airs because he hap pened to be a Senator the captain would teach him his manners As soon as Bruce boarded the steam boat he sougbt the captain and he said to him Captain Lathers I am going to Washington and a part of the way as passenger on your steamboat My name is Bruce and possibly you may have heard of me What I wanted to say is that I know perfectly well what the feeling of many people who are travelers regarding persons of my color is They cannot help it and I cannot help it and I am going to give them no occasion for any annoyance while I am a passenger on your boat I simply ask that you see to it that I am made as comfortable as possible and I as sure you that you will have no reason for complaint The blutt captain stepped back a pace or two looked Bruce over and then held out his hand and said with great emphasis By you shall sit at my table you shall sit on my right hand on the entire trip and if any man objects he will have to fight me And on that entire trip of some three days the captain made Bruce his guest One of the impressive sights of Washington during the incumbency of Senator Bruce was to see him and his colleague the aristocratic Lamar walk ing daily together up the avenue to the Capi tol Lamar the scholar the orator the fine type of Southern chivalry and cultivation had the highest respect for Bruce and preferred his companionship in the daily walks to and from the Cap itol to that of any other Senator After his retirement from the Senate In 1881 Brace was appointed register of the Treasurer by President Garfield and six months before his death Presi dent McKinley reappointed liim to the same office PLAGUE OF THE KLONDIKE Monster Mosquitoes Which Torture Men and Even Bears to Death The Yukon mosquito is the most bru tal and bloodthirsty of its tribe it kills man and beast even the ferocions grizzly bear falling a victim to its bites Prof William Beutenmuller of the Museum of Natural History has in vestigated the mosquito and recognizes some thirty kinds in North America of which tlie variety found along the 3u kon is the most pestiferous These swarm in long columns resembling the smoke rising from a campfire Oue can hear their buzzing a hundred feet away It is not sweet music The iff THE YUKON MOSQUITO Slightly reduced from an official photograph sound is and that is just what the prospector does the second time he hears it if there is any second time- The first concert is his last some times for a nervous temperament can not endure an attack of the pests and though a miner should not have nerves some miners do have them and Snd them sadly in the way in time of trouble The mosquito pesters such a man- until he sinks from exhaustion never to rise again The Yukon mosquitoes drive the jMHWn fWfiW moose deer and caribou up the tains to the snow line -where these ani mals would prefer not to be in berry time They kill dogs and even the bir brown bear that is often miscalled a grizzly has succumbed to them Although the Alaska summer i3 short two broods of mosquitoes oarch out each year and are ready for busi ness from one to ten seconds after they leave the water It rains a good deal along the Yukon and rain is welcom ed for it drives the mosquitoes to cov er but after the rain they are worscr than ever Dr Arraond Raoui late bacteriolo gist of the St Louis Board of Health claims to have discovered a virus that is death to mosquitoes He is going to Alaska to start a plague among tbo pests by inoculating some choice speci mens of them and turning them loose to spread the fatal disease -which he declares Is highly contagious to all dlptera NEWS FOR ASTRONOMERS An Instrument Which Will Brlnjc the Moon AVi thin Pistol Shot Herr Johann Mayer royal and im perial first lieutenant in the 03d regi ment of Austro Hungarian infantry claims that he has invented an instru ment which will bring the stars with in a few hundred yards of the eartb and the moon within pistol shot Briefly summed up Herr Mayors telescope consists of a huge paracolic mirror in whose focus he suspends a small convex parabolic mirror whii h throws the rays received by the largi mirror upon the lens of the microscope connected with the apparatus This combination of the large and small mirror is shown in the drawing The original feature which Heir Mayer claims for his apparatus is of course the use of the enormous parabolic yhjrf J2 INl - y THE 3IIIUOK DOES IT ror and the small convex one as Wvli as his ability to dispense entirely Avitii the usual telescopic tube New Yoric Herald A Joke on a Phrenologist The jokes that practical jokers play upon wiise men are sometimes as funny as they are elaborate A case in point- is said to have occurred some years ago in England when a h umorloving indi vidual who rejoiced in the possession of a fine vegetable garden found there in one evening a large turnip It so happened that this particular turnip was marvelously like in its shape to a mans head and bore a very decided resemblance too to he features of a man The joker perceiving a line chance to make a point and struck hy the curious resemblance of the turnip had a cast made of it and sent the casit to a phrenologist requesting him to ex amine its bumps and to make a report After sitting in judgment upon the cast for some time tiie phrenologist so the story goes reported that while he could not judge accurately from the cast it was his opinion that it was the head of a person of acute mind and deep research that he had the organ of quick perception and also of persever ance well developed and that there were signs that he was also a person of extreme credulity This opinion was sent by mail and the phrenologist ex pressed in closing the hope that at some time he might have the priviiege of examining the head itself The reply was sent that the owner would gladly comply with this request but that unfortunately he could not do so since the original had been eaten by himself and his family several weeks before with their mutton at dinner What the phrenologist thought of the- roply is not stated Harpers Round Table Accent and Pronunciation T Pronunciation is a matter that may- be settled with reasonable certainty by the dictionary but accent as the Toronto Globe points out is a more subtle thing depending upon taste and temperament Most disputes about ac cent are like those of the two Scotch men hailing from different parts of the country My pronunciation may not be perfect said one in effect but at all events I dont call fush fecsh An En glish writer deplores the Canadian accent a cruel blow for the Cauav dian thinks he has an English not an American accent but the Globe re torts Take three educated men one from England one from Scotland and one from Ireland and their pronuncia tion so far as it can be defined by it dictionary will be the same yet there will be such a difference that the na tionality of the speaker wili ba at once detected Then again people often make the mistake of comparing the speech of an educated person in one place with that of an educated one in another place To say we call our city Terahnto says the Globe is like saying the Londoners call one of their public resorts Ide Park Oldest Piece or Furniture What is probably the most venerable piece of furniture in existence is now in the British Museum It is the thronc of Queen Hatsu who reigned in the Nile Yalley some 1G00 years before Christ A first class price doesnt always in dicate a first class hotel The achers of the farmer yield th dentist an income 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