WJ m mm r,. mwwm M El I IIE story of Cuba is a traeedv. a U tragedy so black i n" that tbe pages of history, not ex cepting those up on which is writ- fWM-VlW tn the diabolical feffifitSSttm doings of the Spanish Inquisi tion, contnin 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 of treachery and oppression, reared in in ternicine strife, and matured in this re volting war and its attendant horrors, which have wrested from Cuba the proud title, 'Twirl of the Antilles," and earned for her the name of "Isle of Wood." . 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 Revo lutionary Tarty, an association of clubs of Cuban political exiles, for the purpose of raising money to free their country, Poor as were the majority of the few Cu bans who lived in the United Slates 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 Culm from Spain. Marti was ap pointed delegate of the party, and his faithful friend, Itenjaniin J. Uuerra, was made treasurer. There was not much money 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. Hut Marti had obtained the co-operation of Gen. Maximo Uomez and Gen. Antonio Maceo, two veterans of the last war, lie knew thai the discontent against Spain was deep throughout the island. lie had important connections with conspirators In ull the provinces, lie gave without hes itation the orders for the uprising and went to Santo Domingo to join lien. Go mcz and lake, with him, the tield. At that grave and decisive moment the total funds of the patriots amounted to not more than 70,000.. It is wonderful that with n sum, comparatively speaking io paltry for so great a purpose, a war should have been raised which cost Spain lip to February, 1S!)S, besides the saeriliee of so many of her soldiers, fJ")0,0O0,0(M) and caused to the United States a net loss In trade ami business of $:Kl,0(lO,iMH). On May U), lMJo. Marti was killed In the engagement at Dos Hies, but his work had already been done. lie had landed on April 11 with Gen. Gomez at Siibanu la Mar, on the southern const of Cuba, after Issuing at Monte Cristi a revolutionary manifesto, and bad had time before his death to convoke the representatives of all tho Cuban provinces to a general assem bly to elect a provisional government and frame n constitution. If this was not done until later, In September of the same year, at the town of Jimnguayu, it was not tho less true that from the lirst days of the revolution the desire of Marti, as of nil tbe patriots, was to organize a republic With popular Institutions. Two months before Marti's death Gen. Antonio Maceo had landed at Duava, near ltaracoa, Santiago do Cuba province. ,Yitu n handful of men and a few ritles and cartridges, a small opeu boat brought liiiii to Cuba from Jamaica. Hut his mime and Ills presence were enough to make Spain tremble, lie and his heroic broth er, Jose Maceo, were surrounded by su perior Spanish forces on the dny of their landing. They broke through the Span ish lines ami made their way Into tho country. In a few days, as soon as the news spread of their arrival, the province of Santiago de Cuba rose in onus and Antonio Maceo had around him more thau 10,000 Cuban soldiers. The revolution was saved. The few patriots who took up arms on Feb. 'H at liaire and Manitanillo had courageously resisted under Gen. ltartoloine Mnso, now Cuba's president, the attacks of the col limns of the Spanish Gen, I.achambre, ns Canovas, then In power, resolved tc fight the revolution with the first of tho Spanish generals and with 'all the resources of the nation. Gen. Cnlleja was recalled and Gen. Martinez Campos was sent to Cuba with 25,000 soldiers. Martinez Campos landed in Guantano- ma, Santiago de Cuba, on April 16, 1895. 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 1808. 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, 1805, is the memorable date of the battle of Peralejo. The war had been until tlwm confined almost to the province of Santiago de Cuba, with some small bands of patriots roaming through Puerto Principe and keeping up only an unimpor tant guerrilla warfare. Hut Maceo had already obhiihed 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 wns on the way to Bayamo, Ma ceo offered him buttle near Peralejo. The engagement was a pitched battle, and the Cubnns, not numbering 6,000, car ried the day. Gen. Stantocildes fell dead near Gen. Mnrtinez Campos. The Span- lards lost all their arnniuuition nnd their horses. Completely routed, a body of them, availing themselves of the darkness of the evening, tied to Hayamo, carrying Martinez Campos on a stretcher borne by four soldiers. He was exhausted by fa tlgue 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 comuiauder-iu-chief of the army, in September, by the assembly Valcrlano Weyler y Nlcolau 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 t Washington. At Guira de Melena on Jan. 4, 1800, 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 profcnees invad ed, so far as his resources permitted him to do, and try to raise the war In Pinar AUGUSTINE CUlf Hm V MEXICO CUBA'S GEOGRAPHICAL RKLATIUN TO THE UNITED STATES. del Rio province. At Garro Jan. 8 the pntriots routed a Spanish column and en tered Pinar del Klo. Gen. Gomez then withdrew to the east while Maceo proceed ed to the west. On Jan. 17 he obtnined another victory at the very gates of Pinar del Rio 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 Haragua in Santiago de Cuba. On Feb. 12 Mnceo 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 unjustly charged with aiding the re bellion were shot every day In Havana. women and children, were condemned to, die from hunger. Wholesale Slaughter. From the date of those decrees until November, 1890, 300,000 people were mur dered thus in Cuba. Since November, as a result of Weyler's sanguinary orders, the number has been increased to 400,000. What monster in history ever did so much against humanity and civilization? Nero, Caligula, Tamerlane, Torquemada, Alva, when compared with Weyler, appear mild and humane. A poltroon, besides being an assassin, he never offered battle to the Cubans or took the field to fight. In his time Spain sent 200,000 soldiers to Cuba. He kept them inactive guarding the trocha from Mariel to Majana in Pinar del Rio province or from Juearo 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 his or ders exactly. , On Dec. 7, 1806, Maceo, after having crossed Weyler's 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 Cuba's cause. In March, 1896, Gen. Calixto Garcia landed in San tiago 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 Gomez's 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 Weyler's recall was im posed upon Spain by this country. Gen. Don Ramon Blanco, who was to change the sanguinary 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 MEN ! be cured JIHAD WAOON OS IT BOr.NPS. well as the proposals of peace from the captain general of the island, Don Kmilio Calloja. Hie envoys of the captain gen eral told Muso that tho revolution was a failure. The provinces of Pinar del lilo and llMaim were entirely quiet. A few unimportant bands In Matanzas and San ta Clara hud been dispersed or had aur- rendered. Puerto Principe was unanl mously in favor of peace. Hut Maso, knowing well how to receive such reports, refused to yield. Me had confidence In the landing of Maceo, Marti and Gomez lie knew the great moral effect that the presence of those leaders In the held wa Kiting to havo on the Cuban people; am Siiaiu knew it u'so. The news that Maceo was hi Cuba reached Madrid shortly aftf the overthrow uf the Sagasta cabinet A SCENE AMONG TflE STARVING EECONCENTRADOS. of representatives, started for the east with 2,000 of his men. On Oct. 30 Gomez Invaded I.as Villas. Maceo joined hlni on Nov. 29 near a place called Los Guayos. From there they began their triumphant march. On Dee. 3 the Spanish Col. Se- gura was defeated tiy me insurgents at Iguara and had to leave his dead on the Held, together with a great supply of arms and ammunition. On Dec. 15 the Spanish battalions of Cnnnrias and Trevlno were routed by Maceo at Mai Tlempo, after the most gallant chnrgo with machetes of the Cubau cavalry, led by Maceo himself, that lias ever been seen in 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 chock the two Cubau lenders. Until that moment he had been recoiling U'fure the invaders with his columns, hoping that they would stop. Hut he saw that each step of the patriots to the west was n 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 ami presented battle at El Co liseo on Dec, 23. The action was sharp and decisive. Mar tinez Campos behaved bravely, lending one of his wings In a charge against Go mez, but Maceo, falling on the Spanish, won the day for Cuba and comiollod Mar- tine Campos to retire. Hie 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. Ppntn 8c-mis Weyler, On the night of Dec. 27 the captain general made that avowal. A few days later the rabid Spaniards of the city com- nelled 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 tolief, women, rhildreu, every one born lu Culm, should lie held responsible for the situation. They did not like a soldier with a gallant career and personal courage. They wanted an executioner. Cauovas satisfied them and appointed Don The most summary court mnrtlal 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 Bharks. The horrors of the Council of Blood under Alva look pale when compared to the crimes of Weyler. In the country his troop lmJ 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 100,000 persons emigrated from Cuba panic-stricken. Hut Weyler was not satisfied. He In tended to destroy the country nnd to ex terminate tho natives. Seeing that the executions In the forts were too slow a method and that the destruction 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. 10, 1890, 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 of treachery to their Dag. They hanged as TtAO OF FRKE CUBA. Ish columns, and go to oue of the fortified towns under the vigilance of the Spanish soldiery. W Uta the homes of the reeon ceutrados their cultivated lands were to be devastated and around the towns 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 tiou, halt a uiiUiou peopl-', most of them itliii WATCHINO HF.Il DYING BABE. If you iuffer from any of the ills of men, come to the oldest Specialist on the Pacific Coast, DR. JORDAN & CO.. 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