h IX rr r i4 SOMETHING ABOUT The secretary of the navy recently uent a message to the men of the fleet, says Pnrk Benjamin In tlie Independ ent, encouraging them to emulate the example of Admiral Farrngut, since which time several Journals have re ferred to Farragut's famous ascent of the rigging of the Hartford during the passage of the forts at Mobile as u proceeding which might with advantage be copied by the commanders of our present ships. The truth Is that for anyone to expose himself to an open deck In an action between battleships or cruisers Is almost certain destruc tion, and In all vessels In which the plating of the superstructure Is not sufficient to keep out machine-gun pro jectiles the loss of life will probably be greater than has ever happened before In naval conflicts. Some vessels, though by no means all, are provided with armor; but It Is not true, as Is generally supposed, that the armor Is there nrlmnrllv lo shield the men. Its function Is to protect the guns, the1 motive power and sulllclent or tlie compartments Into which the ship Is divided to keep her nlloat, even IT nil the others are Injured. PROJECTILES FROM MACHINE GUNS. In our last war the forts at Mobile and New Orleans used grape and can ister shot with much effect at very close range. At long range, shells and the flying splinters of wooden vessels were the principal agents of wholesale destruction. Hut now the huge shells will begin tb come on board from the high-power guns when the contending vessels are nearly three miles apart. The largest guns, twelve and thlrteen Inch caliber, can be loaded and tired almost once every three minutes. At a little less than two miles' distance the five and six-Inch rapid-firing guns will begin to pour In their projectiles, and these weapons can be loaded and fired at the rate of from seven to fifteen aimed shots per minute. Then come the slx-poundei guns, delivering forty shots per minute, the one-pounders, throwing a shot per minute.the machine one-pounders (Maxim Nordenfeldt), two hundred shots per minute, and so on up to the Gatllngs, fed automatic, ally by electric motors and projecting bullets at the rate of 3,000 per minute. A man might brave a storm of grape and bullets with a chance of escape: but the battle of the Valu river showed that under the quirk-fire hall of the Japanese ships the slaughter on the Chinese ships was so frightful that the Chinese with all their stolid contempi for death could hardly be kept at their posts. So fierce was the storm of teel around the attacked vessels that the sea was literally lashed into foam by It. Of course, there Is no place on board a warship in action which Is ever rea sonably safe. The marines stationed In the military tops are likely to be cwept out by quick-fire hall, and the coal passers down In the bunkers or the engineers In the tangle of steam ma chinery are In as Imminent danger of death through Injuries to the boilers and the scalding of escaping steam. THE CAPTAIN'S PERIL. Of all on board the man who stands In the greatest peril is the captain. In the battleships and cruisers his position Is in a cylindrical box of steel placed Just under the bridge, well forward, which is called the conning tower. The armor of It is thick enough, ordlnar tv tn i-oalat tlio nonet rntlnn of heavv projectiles. It contains the speaking tubes ana electrical wires wnereuy nu communicates with the guns, engines and helm, and sometimes apparatus whereby he Is enabled to fire the guns nimseii niter tney are una ujjuh me nemy. His field of vision is limited to what he can see through a little hori zontal silt on about the level of his eye. In point of frightful responsibility no situation In the world can compare with that which Is occupied by the man who stands In that tower and directs the movement of his ship. After the conflict once begins the din about him will be something Infernal. Upon him trated, and upon the exterior of that the fire of the enemy will be concen steel drum In which he Is shut up there will be a continuous hall of Iron and steel. Shells will burst everywhere around it, and to that babel will be added the roar of the force blast under the engines, the tremendous reports of the heavy guns, and the din of the quick-fire and machine guns In chorus. In such circumstances as this, aided by uch knowledge as he can get by look ing out through the little peephole In front of him, as well as the smoke will let him, the captain must control the tremendous forces under his command, and his declslcn3 are matters of sec onds. Nobody now believes that a captain who finds his vision through the slits of the tower cut off by smoke will stay thus shut up. It is extremely doubtful if It will be physically possible for him to remain there nfter the shells begin to hammer its sides and burst against it; and, In any event, the Intense anxi ety to see and know clearly what the enemy is dcing will Inevitably lead him to take his chances in the open. Conning tower or no conning tower, his duty Is to place himself at whatever point he can manage his ship to the best advantage, and this he will cer tainly do. Lord Charles Beresford. with grim humor, has suggested that the captain's safest place Is not in but behind his conning tower, "because then he has two thicknesses of steel between himself and the enemy, don't you see?" But while conning tower armor may resist penetration, it is oy no means certain that the whole struc ture will not be swept away by the first heavy projectile which squarely hlts.it. NO PLACE FOR THE ADMIRAL. As for the admiral, there Is nowadays no rigging for him to ascend, and he would be promptly blown out of It If there were. In fact, after a fleet en gagement has begun, there Is no place for him at all. He has no business In the conning tower, no business at the guns. He cannot very consistently go below, and he cannot stay on deck. It has been proposed to build a separate armored tower for him, or to take him off the flagship and put him on a small, swift vessel, so that he could choose his position and conveniently give his orders by signals. The dllilculty with this would be that the enemy would concentrate his fire on that tower or shin, with the certainty of sinking the latter and rendering the former unin habitable. The problem, therefoie, Is still unsolved. Against the effect of n torpedo. If It gets to the hull, there Is no safeguard. The heaviest battle ship is Just as vulnerable as the lightest gunboat. The best that can be hoped is that the destruction will be limited to few com partments, so that those remaining In tact will be sutllclent to keep the ship afloat. But this only puts off the evil hour. As the vessel becomes water logged, her speed falls off und her maneuvering capacity is reduced, so that the enemy may then pick his po sition of advantage and shatter her MODERN WARFARE with his guns or administer n coupe de grace with another torpedo. Altogether, the prospects of one's coming out of n naval engagement tin. wounded stand a poorer chance than was the case In the old wooden ships. How the surgeons are to get at them, with the vessel divided Into n honey comb of compartments with no direct Interconnection where they can be con veyed directly from the guns without traversing doors and passages Intri cate and many, Is difficult to under stand. Those who happen to be stn ttoned In the battleships directly over the torpedo or handling rooms mny per haps be lowered at once to surpenus there placed; but what Is to become of the rest In more distant positions Is not clear. THE VALUE OF DISCIPLINE. All of this goes to show the great ad vantage of the almost perfect dtsclpllno and drill now prevailing In the navy. Indeed, it never has been so completely recognized as It Is at the present day thnt the best protection for n war ship's crew Is their own lighting ca pacity. No armor is so efllclent as ce lerity of action and good gunnery. That ship will win. and Incidentally save the greater numbei of lives of Its men, which first plants an effective projectile in a vltnl part of the enemy. The sen fight will not be gained by the ship which withstands the most pounding, but by the ship which pounds hardest and quickest, nnd so destroys or Im pairs her antagonist's pounding capa city. It Is that swift attack and supe rior markmnnshlp which, above all else, characterize the crews of the war. ships of the United Stales, and It Is In Just this that the Spaniards are most deficient. SUBMARINE MINES. The submarine mine has only one use namely, that of coast defense. In this respect It Is superior to all the battle ships In the world. Where the battle- ; ship leaves off, because It cannot run In shallow water, the submarine mine begins, i Submarine mining began with the Germans, who began using It with great effect In the Franco-Prussian war and kept the French fleet from bom barding the forts. In those days, how ever, only the crudest of submarine mines were Invented, nnd they did not nlways explode. They had to be plant ed In great numbers and experts were satisfied If one out of six responded. The submarine mine to the lay reader means only an explosive and to even tlie average close reader the submarine mine Is a ball of high explosive so ar- ranged that when a vessel sails over! it an explosion will take place and the vessel be destroyed. Such a mine Is, however, far too crude for the use of the navy. It would be very dangerous to locate mines In this loose, uncertain fnshlo: and It Is safe to say that not one ot these con-, tact mines now exists, outside of a few small ports. To explain the use of mines, It Is nec essary to distinguish between the dlf-, ferent kinds of mines. There are three, namely, the "contact," the "observa tion" and the "ground mine." The ob- , servatlon mine and the ground mine are the ones most In use, nnd of these two the ground mine Is used more than the other. The contact mine Is a simple little ar rangement by which a ball of dyna mite Is lowered to a point about eight feet below the surface of the water. It which rests on the bottom of the ocean. The ball of dynamites has several points which on being touched are driven Into the center of the ball and an explosion takes place. As will be seen, this must be greatly affected by the tides. At times the ball will be a great distance below the sur face of the water; again it will be near the surface. All will depend upon the tide. To do damage to the bottom of an Ironclad, the explosion must take place at least eight feet below the water line, and the submarine mine must be locat ed so that It will strike the Ironclad six feet under water. This, with the ever-changing tide, Is such a difficult matter that the contact mine Is almost useless except when the tide Is at cer tain heights. Another bad point about the simple contact mine Is that It gets uncontroll able. The Iron sinker, no matter how heavy It might be, Is apt to become knocked around by the waves, and the mine gets floated out to sea, ready to do damage to friend as well as to foe. The mine which Is more generally used is the observation mine. This Is in three parts. To an observer who can be permitted a glimpse underneath the surface of the water the observation mine consists of three balls. One three feet below the water, another eight feet below the water and the third lying on the bed of the ocean. These three are Joined together by a cable. The top one is the observatory. This consists of a globe with two points upon It. On being touched these points sink Into the globe and complete a circuit. This circuit communicates with a station on the shore. As the points are driven Into the top globe a bell, Is rung at the sta tion and the engineer In charge real izes that a ship Is passing over the mine. He looks out to see If It be a friend or foe. If It Is a foe he touches a button and completes the circuit which discharges the mine. The explo sive lies In the middle bulb, or the one which Is about eight feet below the up per bulb. In case a friendly ship has passed over the little observatory bulb the engineer does not touch the button and no explosion takes plnce. These are ex tremely safe mines and are Inexpensive. They can be planted In any harbor without danger to merchant ships. The big ground mine Is the one upon which we rely for coast defense. This mine consists of a very large bulb of high explosive. It lies on or near the bottom of the ocean directly In the channel over which the ships pass. It is connected with the shore by two circuits. These circuits pass Into sta tions which are widely separated. They often lie upon opposite sides of the river so that the officers In charge of the stations which controls the submarine mine are separated by a broad expanse of water. In order to explode one of the ground mines there must be simultaneous ac tion on the part of the engineers In their stations on opposite sides of the river. They must both act at once or the mine will not explode. The man ner In which this done can best be explained by nn Illustration. Engineer A. on the west side of the river. Is seat ed In a little room. He is provided with a telescope which sights the harbor. En gineer B Is on the other side of the river He Is seated In a small room nnd is also provided with a telescope which overlooks the sea. Both engineers are connected by electric circuits with the submarine mine which lies In the mid dle of the harbor. The telescopps are remarkable ones that nre made by I government electricians In the govern ment electrical works. They have no other work to do thnn to assist In the explosion of the mine When n hostile ship Is sighted both engineers turn their telescopes upon It. As It draws near both of them keep It In sight, swinging their telescopes ns the ship approaches. When It gcti directly over the mine the telescopes are focused simultaneously upon It and the mechanism of the telescopos Is so nrinuged thnt they complete the circuit of explosion nnd the mine goes off. This Is odne without any touch of the button nnd without any effort whatever upon the part of the engineer. He has only to center his telescope upon the ship and to watch It ns It slowly comes up the harbor. When the explosion takes place, the ship Is supposed to be blown Into atoms and the work of the engineer Is done until such time ns nnother mine can be laid. This very elaborate mechanism was provided In order to save valuable ground mines from being destroyed prematurely. These mines. In their mechanism nnd const met Ion, cost the government $5,000 each and were they to be prematurely destroyed It would bo a great loss to the government. It wttB feared that In the excitement of sighting n warship the engineer might touch the button by accident or might mnke a mistake In the location of tlie ship, therefor the twin telescopes, each with their nutomatlc circuits were nrranged on opposite ports, and with grent success. This bus not been tried upon a warship as yet, but Its experi ments have been so highly satisfactory that there is no doubt of Its successful working nt the critical moment. It Is estimated that It needs a pres sure of 12,000 pounds per square Inch to blow a hole through the bottom of a modern warship. This Is an Immense power, and while It worked In the case of the Maine It might not do as well with a ship In motion. The Mnlne lay nt anchor In Havana hnrbor and was an easy prey to the mine, which was unodubtedly raised until It almost touched Its bottom. But with a ship In motion on a tcsslng sen It will be diffi cult to lay the mine against her and therefore much of the power might be lost. In case of the loss of power, engineers estimate that the explosion would dam age the ship's mechanism very seriously and the mere force of the explosion would cause Its engines Inside to ex. plode nnd the ship would blow Itself up. If no explosion were to take place the boilers nt leost would bo damaged and the whole ship thrown out of work ing order. Gun cotton, dynamite and explosive gelntlne are the high explo sives used at present with submarine mines. In every port of the United States there Is a carefully devised system of mines, and In case of the Instant de structlon of n mine nil the forts are equipped with storehouses, and there Is every preparation to restore them at n moment's notice. There was considerable consternation caused In naval circles two weeks ago when It was learned thnt the submutino mines nt Fort Wasdworth had been cut, presumably by a Spanish spy. Nnvnl olllcers, however, restored these mines so quickly that the secretary of the nevy gave himself no uneasiness about them. THE ARMY MULE. There la great activity In the mule market of St. Louis and Kansas City, Mo., Memphis, Tenn., nnd Louisville, Ky., consequent upon the fact that the government Is buying up every avail able mule of standard weight and pro portion for use In the army of Cuban Invasion. The army mule won hl3 place In his tory during the civil war. A great gen eral said that In war soldiers were nec essary, but that mules were Indispen sable. The qualities which make the mule more serviceable In battle than the horse are his hardiness, his equanimity and his Judgment. This Inst article has been named Etupldlty. That is a libel. The mule Is conservative, but well balanced. He never loses his head. He does not get excited. Even when he Is Indulging In a runaway he keeps cool and steers clear of danger, where a horse would plunge blindly Into It. The horse Is the mule's superior on the battlefield only for purposes of flight, and as there Is going to he no fleeing on this side of the line In Cuba the mule's lack of speed will not In terfere with his usefulness. Dr. Edward N. Farrell, the govern ment mule expert at St. Louis, says that for army purposes mules are di vided Into four classes. There are wheel mules, swing mules, lead mules and pack mules. The wheel mule is the largest, and is so called because he is hitched nearest the wagon. He Is the king of army mules. "He Is the long-legged, big-eared, short-buckled animal that Is supposed to hunch himself up and pull like blazes when the wagon gets stuck. This Is merely a supposition, however. Maybe he will do all these commendable things and maybe he wont. It depends entirely on how his last meal agreed with him and whether he Is In the right humor. The mule disposition Is uncertain, nnd Uncle Sam's nnlmals are no different from any others In this respect. In ad dition to being 16 hands high, the 'wheeler' must weigh nt least 1.200 pounds. When he throws that weight of bone, muscle and stubbornness Into any cause, be It good or bad, some thing is sure to come. "The 'swing mule' Is the middleman in a slx-anlmal team. He Is the chap that takes up all the slack left by the 'wheeler.' He must be 15 hands high and must weigh about 1.030 pounds. So far as his other peculiarities are con cerned, he Is much like the 'wheeler,' only worse, because a shade smaller. "The 'lead mule' Is the anlmnl that pulls along to suit himself ahead of all the rest. He Is a chunky, 15-hand an imal, and weighs about 950 pounds. "Last, but not least, Is the 'pack mule,' a blocky animal. 15 hands high, and weighing an even 1,000 pounds. The pack mule Is supposed to carry a load larger than himself. I don't think It has ever been definitely nscertnlned Just how much he can carry. At any rate, the 'packer always feels Justified in strapping on his back all that can be piled on. The average price of the army mule a week ago was $31. but the price is steadily advancing wider the demand." Some few years ago a well known gambler of this city went to one of the pilnclpal churches one Sundny. and was seated by the usher In the pew of an old and conservative New Yorker, who came In later, and, on finding the gam bler seated In his pew, handed him his card, on the back of which he had writ, ten. "This Is my pow." The gambler" returned the card, having written on It "A pretty d d poor pew." "If," mused the suburbanite, who had been rending the poem beginning: "O, for a lodge In some vast wilder ness " "If Cowper were alive today he would have a hard time ducglng the folks who nre anxious to dlspos of suburban residences at a sacrifice. " BRAVE CUBAN WOMEN IN WAR TIME, -- - - - - So much In. aginary stuff has been clr t Minted nbout Tuba by valiant war vor- spoudeuts who remained nt snf tatuci from the Islnnd, that one hardly kn ws where to draw the line between fact and fiction, and doubtless, whllo some times being fcoled by clever fulsehojds, we hnve discredited strange things which actually occurred. At first no body really believed that there were women In the Cuban army, though the newspapers printed romantic tnles of their exploits. The truth Is that from the outset fen ale soldiers have played no unlinportnnt part In the struggle for Independence. General Wcyler admitted their dangerous zeal when he first us fu med conininnd In Cuba. In an Inter view with nn American corespondent he said: "Yes, we captured a woman yesterday. She was white, too, and good looking. Most of thene Amazons ate colored. This one wus diosscd !n men's clothes, nstrlde a powerful horse and wielding her mnchete like the devil Th'se women soldiers nre fiercer than men. they tide and fight like furies. Where Is she now? In Morro Castle, oi couise. What will be done with her? Well" nnd a charnetetlstlc shrug, ac companied by a gleam In the cruel eyo which boded no good to the captive, finished the sentence. Maceo, the mulatto Insurgent leader, had more than 100 female soldiers (mostly colored) In his company. Gomez nlso had u gcod many, nnd so hns Cal Izto Alvarez, the chltf from the eastern district of San Jago de Cuba. The ma jority abandoned small farms and plantations to follow tho fortunes of their husbands, and though all carry machetes and revolvers, their chief duty Is to gather up and succor the wounded that fall In battle. Many of them are wives und mothers women of dignity und eduction not conrse and shameless Airnzons such as the Span ish authorities have described. As a race, the Cuban women are the most true-henrted, simple nnd domestic In the civilized world, devoted to their homes and ink ring their husbnuds and children. They are at dent patriots too, and have shown themselves strongs than their lctds In nd versify and more serene in martyrdom. But their cheeks glow pale at the thought of Innumer able crimes committed upon their sex In this and other Cuban wars. The first went to the field with their hits bands and fathers for the sake of pro tection. While misrule prevailed through the Islnnd Spanish soldiers and murderous banditti Infesting the hlghwnys, looting plantations and per pelrntlng nil mnnner of atrocities no woman was safe at home without her natural protector. In come cases gentle Indies were transformed Into avenging furies, seeing their loved ones butch ered. Afterward they fought shoulder to shoulder with the men, led dnrlng raids and applied the torch In a thou sand places; and many of them now sleep In unmarked graves. Many women, not "trained" or Red Cross nurses, are caring for the sick and wounded in Insurgent camps. Children hnve been born upon the battle field, i whose mothers did not fonr death so much as the horrors that might await them at home. i Mrs. Kate Mnstorson, who, by the way, has written some most graphic pictures of JIfe In Cuba, spenks of woman's part In this war as follows: "From this beautiful summer land one cry goes up which is heard over the din of battle and the clash of arms. It Is the wall of the desolnte women. They nre mourning for their loved ones and their tenrs are falling upon new-made graves nil over the Islnnd. Their soft eyes have looked upon ghastly bonfires In which the bodies of their bnbles have been the fuel which fed the flames. Their cry Is more eloquent than all the ruin nnd desolation In this fair land of graves. Like Easter lilies, bent and stalnd with patriot blood like the roses, trampled in the earth and drenched with mire, are the hearts of these poor women. Many of them hnve lost all they possess through this war not only husbands, sons nnd daughters, relatives nnd friends, but their plan tations nave been burned nnd their fortunes swept nway. They are willing to give everything to Cuba glad to see their sugar cane go up In smoke since thereby Its revenue will be lost to Spain. Some of them sold their Jewels when nil their money was gone. In order lo send medicine nnd lint to the rebels. In every Cuban home a sum Is set aside out of each day's household money to send to the Held." There have been traitors In Cuba but they were never women. As a rule they are better conspirators than their fathers nnd brothers, because they know the value of silence. They are tireless nnd successful In their efforts to get food nnd medicine to the rebels, and word from one scattered band to another. Delicate senorltns, renred In southern seclusion, dressed In boys' clothes, steal out nt night to the nenr by haunts of lovers or brothers, In the "long grass," as the Insurgent camps are called. They secrete food In false pockets, hide letters, whose envelopes have been dipped In Ink, In their abund ant black hair; carry medicine In their scent bottles nnd umbrella handles, cloth for clothes or bandages In the lining of their garments. One girl, the only daughter of n once wenlthy family, has many times cnrrled dynamite to the woods in eggshells deftly put to gether. Disguised as a vender, she has had many thrilling experiences. Her narrowest escape was when a SpanlBh soldier stole the bnsket of supposed eggs and prepared to cook them by the wayside. Nothing saved her then but a sudden call from head quarters which the soldier dared not disobey. There Is no end to the well-authenticated stories that are told In this line. Here are a few of them: The very first Insurgent band of the present war had Its romance. It started In Matanzas province, and Its chief was Antonio Lopez Coloma. In February of 1895, while his party was hiding In the woods, near the Ignaclo mill, his fiancee, Senorlta Amapara Obre, ran nway from home and Joined him, de termlned to share his fortunes, what- ever they might be. Tho party was soon captured, and the lovers shut up In the old San Severlno castle at Ma tanzas, but at opposite ends of the fortress. The girl was soon released, but Coloma remnlned some months In durance vile, and was then transferred to the Morro, In Havana. Miss Obre followed, and they were married In prison. Before Vehultas village was garri soned some arms belonging to n local company of volunteers were gathered In a certain house. The rebel chief, Estebnn Tamayo, hearing of this, wont with fifty followers to the residence of the captain of the Spanish volunteers and demanded that the arms be given up to him. No resistance was made, and Tamayo and his men were soon provided with guns und cartridges, only to discover that they had been rendered useless. Disappointment made the rebels furious. The Spanish cap. tain was quickly qourt martlaled, or- I dered to be shot forthwith, and the customary number of men was detailed - - to carry out the sentence At the crit ical moment, when the victim stood looking Into the muzzles of the rifles aimed at his brenst. a young woman sprang between, nnd fnclng the rebels, crlrdr "He will not die before you have killed n Cuban woman." This bravo act of devotion so plensed the execu tioners that they lowered their guns and left without cnrrylng out the sen tence. Among the enrly dramatic Incidents of the war was a mnrrlogc ceremony performed nt dawn In the mountains of Puerto Principe. Don Rohenu, n hnnd some, well. educated young man, heir to n large estate, was one of the flrt to enlist with Gomez ns n private. He has fought bravely nnd been advanced stop by step, till he Is now major of n regiment recruited by himself from his own neighborhood, composed entirely of his personal friends, who nre nil llnely-hred young men. Rohenu was In lovo with a young girl who lived In a suinll village near his father's estate. She was In humbler clrcumstnnces than he, nnd the ilglil rules of Cuban eti quette kept them apart. But when the young major first marched through the town with his splendid company of men their horses' bridles Were braided with rHibons, and they wore palm wreaths twined around their hats In her honor. They passed the girl's homo nnd saluted her ns she stood on the bnl cony with her mother. Rohenu went In nnd nsked the pnrcnts If he might marry their daughter, and tnke her with htm, us he feared some harm might befall her In his absence. But the old folk would not consent, and finally the young lover yielded tvi their wishes nnd marched sadly nwny. Two days later, when he had gone many miles, the girl dnshed to Ills side mounted on n horse. She had run nwny from home to Join her sweetheart. That night Rohenu sent n guard of two men with an extra horso nnd empty saddte, to the house of the nunrest priest. The terrified padre, expecting to be killed despite the assurance of his escort, mounted nnd rode with them, muttering ave marlan nil the way. They i cached the hills where the regiment wns halted Just before day light; nnd ns dnwn broke from the east the ylung people were married. They aro now at Santa Clara, where Major Robeau hns command of 400 men, operating with Sernphlno Sanchez nnd his hnnd of 4,000. When Dnminn Ilornnndez wns sent, a political exile, to the Isle of Pines his wife nccompnnletl him that she might liberate him at the first oppor tunity. One day. when ho was work ing with the other prisoners cutting wood, she engaged the guard, with whom she had previously made herself tamlllar, In friendly conversation, Taking his gun, on pretense of ex amining It, she suddenly lenped back ward and pointing It nt his head threatened him with Instnnt death It ho moved. Then her husbnnd and his comrndcB tied the unfortunate man nnd fled to the conBt. There they com. pelled the cnptnln of the schooner Mnrgrltn to sail for Zapata, which they reached In safety and later they made thler way to the revolutionary forces, where Mrs. Hernandez acts bb nurse. Another notnble womnn Is the wife of Dr. Hernandez of San Cristobal. She Is young and beautiful, and now In the Held with her husband, taking an active part in the fighting. She had only been mnrrled a year when her husbnnd was called upon to orgnnlzo a band of men. He came to his young wife, who wns nbout to become a mother, nnd told her that he would do Just as she had willed, for he felt thnt his life belonged to her. She an swered that she wished him to go to the wnr. In n week he had raised a band of 500 men and ns they mnrched out of town they snluted Mrs. Hernnn. dez. passing her house nnd shouting "VIvn the Queen of Cuba!" When the baby was a few days old the Spnnlnrds took possession of the town. One or the lleutcnnnts rode Into the Hernandez parlor on hoseback nnd subjected the young mother to threats and Insults. That night she got n horse nnd with the child In her arms went to Join her husband, riding many miles through the Cuban hills until she found him. TORPEDO BOAT DESTROYERS.I "There Is no kind of n naval vessel that could be conscientiously recom mended In time of war as a sanitari um," drawled Captain Schley one day to me In his Inlmltnble way. "But of all the various craft, big and little, thnt constitute n modern fleet there Is none so thoroughly undesirable to the searcher after a safe and easy berth as a torpedo boat." The man on the torpedo bont has three-sixteenths of nn Inch of steel be tween him nnd the sea that Is hungrily watching Its chnnce to swallow him. The boat could be cut In two with n can opener. Not only would Its walls give way like tissue paper before the lire of great guns, rapid-fire guns nnd mnchlne guns, but they would not re sist a bullet from a hand rifle, or even n good sized revolver. On an ordinary vessel there Is some chance of getting behind something that might concelvnbly turn a projec tile. The crew of a torpedo boat Is practically In the open air. Any shot that strikes the open craft will search It from end to end like nn X ray. Torpedo boats are divided Into three classes. The third class now Is consid ered obsolete. They were small enough to be cnrrled aboard a ship, for they were thlrty-tonners, the second class boats were about sixty-five tons. They were Intended for harbor service only, and were not seagoing. The flrst-clnss boats are sea-going craft, but are Intended to operate from a base, for the coal and water storage capacity Is limited. This precludes a torpedo boat from .cruising more than seventy-five to eighty miles from Its base of supplies. This Is the kind now relied upon In the navy. First class beats vary In tonnage from 115 to 175 tons, In length from 140 to 190 feet, and In draught from five to eight feet. They nre perfectly sea worthy and can ride out the heaviest gales. The armament consists of three to four elghteen-lnch Whitehead torpe does and three or four one-pounder ma chine guns. In addition there Is a re volver and two or three rifles for each of the twenty-two to thirty men, the rifles supplied with sword bayonets to repel boarders The biggest kind of modern destroyer hns a length of 220 feet, with a beam of 2GV feet. The horse power Is about G.500. driving the boat at a speed of thirty-one knots or more. The engines nre triple-expansion, with water tube boilers. They carry from seven, to a hundred tons of coal, and at a speed of eight or nine knots can keep the sea for a week; so they are Independent of coaling In a voyuge of botween 1,300 and 1,500 miles, They carry a crew of about three or four officers and about forty men. The engines, as you can see, are all out of proportion to the craft they drive. Tho torpedo flotilla In the war flt lying off Key West Is a little fleet tt Itself, commanded by Lieutenant Com mander W. W Kimball. It consists of the Foote. Lieutenant W. L. Roger commanding. Ensign R. H Jackson; tho Pushing, l.lputrnunt A. Cleaves com manding, Ensign F. P. Baldwin; tho ICrlcsKon. Lieutenant R. N. Usher com manding, Passed Assistant Engineer O. W. Knesler, Ensign U A. Bostwlrk; the Window, Lieutenant J B. Bernndeu commanding, the Porter, Lieutenant J. C. Fremont commanding. Assistant SurReon 1. V. Olllls; the Uupont. Lteu tetinnt S. S. Wood commanding, Ensign F. 11. Clarke, Jr. The dishing Is one of the best known of the torpedo boats In the navy. It has tho longest cruising record, nnd la known nil the way from Galveston to Ilnth, Me. Its engines of 1.820 horse power, can drive It twenty-lhiee knots (n knot Is 1 1-10 miles) nn hour, To do this Its twin screws, ench 2 feet 2 Inches In dlntroter with a pilch of 8 feet ( Inches, must make 450 revolutions a minute. Each of Its cnglneB has five cylinders, Increasing In diameter from 1H4 Inches for the hlgh-presxure cylin der to 22 Inches for low-pressure oyl Inder, with n stroke of 15 Inches. Each of the two wnter-tuhe hollers has 950 tubes. Stenm Is used nt a pressure to the square Inch (100 pounds Is a good pressure on nn ordlnnry holler) and tho boilers develop 1,820 horse-power. In dividing such a craft up Internally usually the shnrp knife-edge how Is shut off six or tight feet abaft the stem from the icmnlnder of the boat by the collision bulkhond, THs division Is made, first, because nothing could bo stowed nway In so nnrrow n place so far forward, and second, to Insure the safe ty of the boat In case her bows get stove. TO stave In the bows of a tor pedo boat Is really quite as easy ns fall ing off u log, for the boat In all her pnrts Is made as light us possible. Tho skin plating Is of the thinnest steel, the frames nre of light weight, tho longitudinals nre mere strips of metal. So thin nnd frail Is the construction of the boat that If she bumps or runs Into anything she will be bent out of her shape, nnd should her bow strike any hard object like a floating spar or tho spllo or a dock It would be turned bnck upon Itself and twisted nil out of shapo. In much the snme wny as a stiff plcco of paper would be nfter being crumpled In the hand. The mission of the torpedo boat Is to get close to n warship, lire Its shot Into the weakest shot and sink tho ship. Lying low and going nt a great rate of speed It Is supposed to act llko a little David killing his Goliath. It runs up to him. strikes him, strikes him ngaln and again, nnd then either fnlls or sees the enemy go down. No greater heroism Ib required than this for any tnsk of modern times. The crow Is a picked one. Fat men aro not wanted aboard torpedo boats, nor men who tower head and shoulders above tho average crowd. Space Is so valuablo on one of these little marina sprinters that the cook sleeps In tho pantry nnd the men hnve to go ashore to salute their olllcers. All dress in overalls like laborers and look moro like bricklayers than marines. It Is always considered Important In wnrfare to bring the men Into action in good physical condition, well fed, com fortable and with plenty of sleep. Ser vice on a torpedo boat Is destructive to all these requirements. The torrlflo vibration of tho paper-shelled hull, plunging through the water as, tho speed of an express train, unsettles tho strongest stomnch. It Is Impossible to eat or sleep with comfort In fact, la the British naval maneuvers the favor ite menu for the officers of torpedo boats has been confined to egg-nog. Tlie service, even In peaceful exercis es, is so arduous that the crews have to be changed nt Intervals of a few days. There Is a warship on the horizon. It has to be destroyed. Who can do It ex cept the torpedol The cnptaln looks at hla ploked crew. "Ready boys!" means ready for death. Talk of desperation In the charge of the Light Brigade there were hundreds or survivors at that charge, but here Is u dash from which nobody' expects to return nllve, nnd In which the only hope of the men who mnke It Is that they may hold out long enough to brlns their enemy down with them. Quiet groups stand by tho rapid-fire guns. Suddenly n search-light Hashes on the horizon. It sweeps the sen from side to side, and at Inst It touches the tor pedo hoot ond remains fastened upon It while every man Is outlined In merci less shnrpness. It Is the searchlight of the enemy. The pent-up steam crowds Into the cylinders under the lash of the forced draught nnd the boat plunges along the path of light on Its race of death. There are two miles to cover berore it will come In striking distance, and nlrendy the splaphes of pattering shots In the wnter tell that the enemy's secondary battery Is finding the range. The nerves of every man on board are keyed up tense ns harp strings. The eyes of the lookouts peer fiercely through tho blackness In which, with nil lights out. the hostile battleship lies ready to pour destruction on anything thnt approaches. The method of attack must now bo considered. There are two ways, one Is to stenm up to about COO yards bows on, stop, flre, and then back straight out. The other is to steam up, turn around, firing froTn the deck tubes whllo turning and steam back at fullest speed. The advantage Is that the least surface of the boat Is offered as a target to her enemy. In the second case the objection is that, while turning, the entire side of the boat is at the mercy of the enemy's guns, and the boat's stern with steer ing gear, etc., is exposed to damage while runnlnir away. The advantage In this last method rests In the opportunity of firing the nfter torpedo tubes ana in the shorter time the boat is under fire In the danger space. Like lightning the captain must decide. The man behind the gun is the more important than the gun itself or the ship that carries It. He has developed his skill until ho can put four shots out of five, into a large target at 2,000 yards; but will his training serve him now, or will "buck fever" shake his nerve and destroy his aim? Yesterday his record In practice might have been absolute perfection, and nobody outside his ship would have thought anything of it. Today tho world Is waiting to hear of his work, and two nations nre hanging In feverish dread on the result. Will the responsibility unnerve or be wilder him? It all depends on the stuff the man behind the gun Is made of. The hall of projectiles from the bat tleship's machine guns is doing its work. The torpedo boat Is riddled; tho water Is pouring through a dozen leaks; dead and dying men are lying all about the decks; the speed Is falling off. But still the shots have missed the torpe does, the premature explosion of one of which would leave not a relic of the craft or its crew; still there nre men enough, standing grimly by the tubes, to do their work, and the boat stag gers onwar dto its prey. At last the mo ment has come. Eight hundred yards. The helm goes hard over, the boat be gins to swing around, and from two of nor tubes go speeding messengers of de. structlon. The enemy's battleship goes down. - . v