• VIVAN LOS AMERICANOS!” WILL THE CUBAN LEARN HIS LESSONS? CUBAN AS A MAZEPPA. The Island» Compurol with Sonic ol Oar Seaboard State». ADVENTURE WITH A BAND OF •MERCILESS GUERRILLAS Señorita Monica Tied to the Back of u Wild How Which Was Turned Loose on the Plains—Her Compan* ions Murdered. Rescued and Avenged. There is one happy young woman in this town, writes a San Antonio, Tex., correspondent. Iler name is Valencia Monica, whose father is an officer in the Cuban army. Miss Monica Is the heroine of a most remarkable escape from the hands of the mercileM Span­ iards. About a year ago she was In Cuba, and, in company with a family of re­ concentrados, she attempted to make tl>e Journey pcroes the country from the little interior plantation of Palma to Santiago In the hope of finding some opportunity at the latter place to es­ cape to the United Stat«»). An officer with a spark of humanity in his bosom, touched by the miserable condition of the unfortunates, furnished them with a pass and assured the young lady I I that no soldiers would luirm them. They passed several columns of sol­ diers in safety, but one evening a dozen i or more drunken Spanish guerrillas rode up to their cart and overturned it. VALEXCIA MONICA. The young l.Kly showed her pass, but the leader paid no attention to it. Af­ ter offering her a drink from his bottle he staggered against her and made an attempt to take her face in his hands. Now thoroughly alarmed and prefer- ing death to dishonor, the’llttle Ctthan quickly drew a stiletto from her bosom and sprang at the monster’s throat, barely grazing his Until with the keen blade. “I cannot tell you what happened or at least repeat one-half of the horrors of that terrible night,” said Miss Moni­ ca. “I cannot recall it without a shud­ der. While drinking and carousing they butchered the man who was with us with their machetes, ami laughed at hly dying agonies. One threw a lariat over my neck, and after they had dis- j ■ tnal’s back and shouted to bls comrades to fetch ropes. “Let us have some fun," he roared, “Lash the little rebel to the wild devil’s back and turn him loose and we will chase her off the Island and save some- laxly the trouble of slaying her." The next moment the fiends were binding the terrified girl on the back of the equally terrified borse. Before Miss Monica realized what her tormentors were doing one of the wretches cut the rope that was about the horse’s neck and fired a pistol. The frightened animal sprang Into the air and struck the earth running. Pistol balls rained al>out him, but, unharmed, he seemed to sail above the earth with the wind, and was soon beyond the reach of the guerrillas. The girl had little hope of escaping with her life. But her good angel had ! not deserted her. A party of Cuban j soldiers who had fallowed the guerril- ! las saw the horse coming. He was ■ nearly exhausted, and when lie saw I the soldiers' horses be ran among them . and stopped. He was completely , frightened out of his senses, and so weak that he made no attempt to move when a soldier threw a rope over his neck. Many of rhe Cubans knew Honor Monica, and their anger knew no bounds. At sunrise they fell upon the guerrillas’ camp and shot every one of them to death except the leader of tlve gang, who was captured and hanged later in the day. - ...... ■ ................. . I < FIGHT TO A FINISH. Duel to the Death Between Wounded American urul Spaniard, The battle cry, “Remember the Maine,” still ring in the curs of the wounded Americans on the field of Santiago. Roundabout lay the botlh-s of the dead, keeping silent companionship with the wounded. Groans and sighs filled the air. The brushwood, thick and sturdy and straight, trampled down by the hoofs of the Rough Riders’ horses, was saturated with tbe blood of friend and foe, until it no longer bld fro-ru each other’s view the fallen of two nations. In the distance tbe sharp report of the guns told of the onward march to ably, howqrer, the general testimony of physicians and scientists would be found to be almost unanimous that un­ der certain conditions und used in mod­ eration tobacco Is a friend to man. Especially has there been a change of views in this resqiect since studies haw t>een made upon bacteria of the malign kind. One of the latest advocates of totxu’co Is Dr. Norman Kerr, on Eng­ lish physician, who says that ft would be impossible for him, without disloy­ alty to science and truth, to denounce the smoking of tobacco a-s always in­ jurious. On the contrary, as In the case of asthmatic paroxysms, or Inheritors of narcomanlacal Intoxication, tobacco is a valuable remedy lu warding off morbid Impulses. In the case of sol­ diers In trenches, or when kept with­ out sufficient rations, tobacco, he says, becomes a friend indeed, cheering the fainting heart and allaying the gnaw­ ing of huuger. Tobacco Smoke Is also a disinfectant and 1s especially valu­ able as a prophylactic against yellow fever and In destroying the microbes of cholera and pneumonia. That tobacw» Is greatly abused does not admit of question, but It ought not to be for­ gotten that It also has Its proper uses. I j Always Clothed in the Very Plainest | ENGLAND’S FUTURE KING. — * Kind of Frocks. Those wise little mothers who decry the American habit of overdressing' wee bits of babies will be interested to know that Prince Albert, the small | mite of 4 years, who Is tn the direct 1 line of succession to the throne of En- | gland, wears the plainest kind of A good Idea of the size and extent of X the Philippine Islands, about which so many conflicting statements have been made since the group came into promi­ nence a few months ago, may lx- ob- tained from nn observation of the ac­ companying map. Tbe islands are *■ there shown superlnqtosed upon a map as a part of the Atlantic sealioard of the United States, beginning at the north with New York and extending throng!) South Carolina. The Philb»- •-» * pine group and the States are drawn to precisely the same scale, so that the comparison is accurate. The total length of the group, from the northernmost [sjlnt of Luzon to the southern extremity of Mindanao. Is about 050 miles, or fifty miles less than the distance from the northern boun­ dary of New Y'ork to the southern , point of South Carolina. The Philip­ pines have never been thoroughly sur­ veyed or explored, and consequently' the estimates of the total area of the several hundred Islands of the group have differed widely. The most trust­ worthy calculations fix this total area to be between 114,300 and 115,500 s)juare miles, an extent of territory equal to the combined areas of the States of New York, New Jersey, Penn­ sylvania and Maryland. The largest of the Philippine Islands, Luzon, upon altty. The marriage was unhappy, which Manila Is situated, has an area There wet}' violent quarrels and dlspu- of 40,875 square miles, being thus of tatlons until things were brought to*a almost exactly the same size as the climax one night in Delinonico's, when State of Virginia and over 8,000 square “Jack” threw a plate of ice cream into his wife's pretty face. A separation followed and Marie went to live with her father, who was in Italy. Her nervous s.vstiun was entirely broken, and at her father’s advice she returned to America to seek rest In a sanitarium. In a few hours after her landing she was In Bloomingdale ¿Asy­ lum. RELIC OF MEDIEVALISM. Quintain Sahl to Be the Only Fnrvtv- ing Specimen in Englund. Proper Uses of Tobacco. The question as to the Injurious or beneficial effects of tobacco is about as old as the practice of using tin* •‘weed’* among civilized people and. apparently, is as far as ever from settlement. Prob- SENOR1TA MONICA LASHED TO A WILD HORSE. armed me they bound my hands to a tree.” A very slight rfrcunistance doubtless saved the young lady from a fate worse than death, tltotigh it subjected her to one of the moat frightful ordeals ever endured by mortal flesh. One of the guerrillas came into the camp lending n very wild-looking black stallion, which he In his drunken reck­ lessness declared was the devil’s own saddle horse. They had just stolen the fine animal, and lie tuid thrown every one who had mounted him. "Do you think you could ride him, my little tigress?" sold one of the guer­ rillas. approaching Miss Monica and making an attempt to become famil­ iar. Her answer, which was. "I should Like nothing tx-tter than to try,” seem­ ed to tickle the desperate characters Immensely. Miss Monica says that she hardly know« why she made such nn answer. She realized that he had no chance of escaping from the drunken vet and would willingly have exchang ed her position for the bock of the wildest horse In the world. “All right,” Shouted the guerrilla chief, “the little tiger cnme near cut­ ting my throat and I will just send her to the devil on horsetmck.” The big guerrilla seized the young girl in bis arms, and. running to the wild hors >, he threw her across the aul- SIZE OF THE PHILIPPINES. TUB DUET- A cirri: ms clause, taking one right back to the middle ages, appears in the title deeds of a house which Is now to be sold hi the village of Offinim. In Kent, says the Westminster Gazette. Scheduled as part of the “messuages, lands. hereditaments anti premises” is the village quintain, which still swings on Its stout oaken post before tbe house, ami the purchaser must coven­ ant to keep the relic of a bygone pas­ time tn good repair. One end of the swinging crossbar of this quintain Isold to be the only surviving specimen in England) Is shaped like a square tar­ get pierced with a number of holes into which the point of the player’s lance would enter. When struck It would swing round, and unless tbe player w « tc tilmlde the sandbag hung on the other end of the crossbar would swing PBINCB ALBETTW round and unseat film. Here is a chance frocks and bonnets. The children of seldom met In these modern days of the royal family are always clothed getting back Into medievalism. The simply. Tbelr Uttlu arms are unham­ pered with frills and furbelows, and ribbons and bows are not continually getting Into their precious mouths or tickling their soft, pretty necks. Little Prince Albert, whose picture Is here given, wears tucked skirts of pique and blouses of tbe same material, trimmed with braid of plain white or turkey red. The children of many of the well-to-do Americans are costumed in small gar­ ments every bit ns costly. ITlnce Albert’s younger brother. Prince Albert Frederick Arthur George of York, who Is one year younger thiin the eldest baby of the Duke of York's Interesting family, plays his baby games In ordinary frocks of nainsook, trimmed perhaps with a few dainty tucks or edgings of delicate lianil em­ broidery. The little sister. Princess Victoria, who was 1 year old April 25 last, has for everyday wear plain fine tittle slips that have neither heavy lace-trimmed flounces to hamper her small legs or elaborately made yokes to fret her infant mind. victory. It goaded the wounded Amer­ icans to action—the stricken foe to rt“- venge. From behind a tuft of grass on tbe blades of which blood hung con­ gealed. a head arose. It was the visage of a Spaniard, deathly pale, with a I stream of blood trickling from his tem­ | ple. Ills fiendish gaze was fastened upon the outstretched form of an | American soldier, who, face downward, ! lay with his bead against a tree. He ' was still, as one In death, his life blood ebbing away, be thought, through a wound tn bls side. Slowly tbe Spaniard propped his arms Ixmcath his txxly and grasped Ills gun. There tn the brush beside him was hts deadliest foe. Crawl to his aid? Not be. He would riddle tbe Ixxly with Mauser bullets. He would rejoice to mutilate even tbe lifeless to demonstrate his hatred. Quick as a ' flash he fired, the bullet striking the American tn the leg. The sting of the ! lend brought the soldier hack to con­ | sciousness. At a glance lie took In the situation. The gleam of tierce, fiendish hatred In tbe eye of the Spaniard con­ vinced him that this would be a duel to the death. He returned the fire, and sent shot after shot toward his an- tagonfsC’s quarter. A fusillade fol­ j lowed, and ceastsl only with the death | of the Spaniard. Tbe .American, who had dropped tn his tracks beyond his VICTIM OF CONSPIRACY. twittie line, was rescued by hts com­ rades, who had been attracted to the Beautiful Mrs. “Jaeh“ Wilmerdinir'K spot by tbe terrific struggle of the two w Friends Claim she Is Not Insane. For some time past New Y'ork society wounded men.—St. Louis Republic. has bism deeply Interested In the nt« A SiTinon on Money. fortunate case of Mrs. “Jack” Wilmer­ A colored exborter said recently, tn ding. tbe beautiful scion of the Vander- the course of a sermon on “Money, tbe Gnat Evil:” “My hrothertn', money cause mo’ trout kb- In dis worl’ dan anyflng I knows on. Fac. is de devil Is tn de dol­ lar! Wlx-n I see a man w1d a pocket full er money I say ter myself: ’Dor’s a man what needs a guardeen,' and I feels des like takin’ him home en lock­ in’ up »bit money fer hint. Ef any er you in de hearln’ er my voice is got money on yo’ pusson. bring it right heah. und lay It on de altar, en go yo’ ways, en lemme pray over It till it bl easin’ come t»-r tt. Doan wait ter count It; des come forward en unload.” —Atlanta Constitution. Bagpipes in Indio. Several Punjab regiments of Infantry march to the sound of the bagpipes. The harsh tones of the I nd Lin instru­ ment, and Its limited range of uotes. jars on the ears of Englishmen. “That tired feeling,” which is common to all who live outside the 1-and o’ Cakes when the national music Is In full blast Is actually shared by the Hlgal.uuler himself when the pipes are tn .lx» hands of a Goorkha There Is no one who expresses such pain at the sound of the native Indian bagpipes as our Scotch friends. In their •■stlniutl»« the Goorkha Is Just “makln’ a fule of tbe Instrument.” Mrs. Intrade— Where Is your father? Adult eon- He Is at the store, editing blsedltionof “Society As I Have Found When a girl's marriage Is announced It” Mrs. Intrade—What! A book? Soo It is recalled bow many times she bad —Yes; a ledger, full of unpaid and un been engaged before. collectable bills.—New York Weekly. MRA “JACK" WILMERPINO. blit family wbo is confined In the1 Bloomingdale .Asylum. Her friends claim that she Is not Insane and that she Is tbe victim of conspiracy and they have gon»- to tbe courts to secure 'her release. Mrs. Wilmerding was Marie Allen, tile d«ug!«ter of Vanderbilt Allen. and grandniece of the old Commodore Van­ derbilt. She was a pretty, dashing girl, and “Jack" Wilmerding foil In love with her and married her in 18U2. Husband and wife were both fond of gayvty. arxl Mrs. WUmecdlng spent money freely. She was not without ; «tune fortune of her own. and her' gowns were the envy of many women ' 1 who had more wealth but less origin 1 m QUINTAIN AT OFFHAM. has only to don the contempo­ rary costume, tilt at the quitetaJn and imagine that the clock bos been put back a few centuries. owdct True Hospitality. The Washington Post prints a “true story,” told by a retired army officer. The occurrence happened in New Mex­ ico. Colonel X. was making a long march, and the provision wagons had gone astray. He was hot and tired and hungry, when he met Major B., who invited him home—presumably to some fort—to break fast. The major's fortunes were at a low ebb, and when the breakfast was brought on tt proved to consist entirely of rice—rice cooked In the wonderful Southern fashion, with every kernel ¡«erfect. The hungry guest ate a spoon­ ful. He detests rice. Then be waited for a second course. “Have some rice, colonel," said tbe major, whom nothing ever disconcerts, quite ns if the rice had but that mo­ ment disappeared. ”No!" snapped tbe colonel. “I'm a Keutuckfan. sir, and I don’t eat rice. I don’t eat rice, sir. Give me something else.” "Why. certainly colonel, certainly," said the host. "Try some of the mus­ tard; it's very fine. sir. very fine." Juggernaut Story a F’ake. The ghastly stories told of many of the Indian fanatics who, at tne relig­ ious festivals throw themselves be­ neath the wheels of the Juggernaut car are for the most part imaginative. These car festivals, which sometimes attracted as many as l)X»,fiOO pilgrims, have certainly resulted lu loss of life; but It Is stated these deaths were pure­ ly accidental. Every woman Is secretly proud of her guests who dress well. SIZE OS THS PHILIPPINES. miles smaller than New York State. In length Luzon extends for about 475 miles and would reach from a point slightly north of the northern boundary of New York almost to the mouth of the Potomac River. Mindanao, the next Largest of the Isl­ ands, lias an area of 37,256 square miles. It would require the combined territory of West Virginia and Mary­ land to equal tbe Island In size. Min­ danao extends nearly 300 miles from north to south, or, in comparison with the part of the map upon which it is superimposed, it would reach from the mouth of the Roanoke Rh cr, in North Carolina, to Charleston, S. C. Project­ ing from its western coast Mindanao has a long. Irregular peninsula, which makes the extreme width of the Island something over 300 miles. The two smaller islands of Mindoro and Panay, upon the latter of which is the port of Iloilo, are each over 4,000 square miles in area. Together they equal in size tbe State of New Jersey. Samar Island, southeast of Luzon, cov­ ers 7,000 square miles. There are estimated to be about 1,- 200 Islands Ln tbe Philippine group, though any accurate statement Is im­ possible. Probably not more than one- third of these are Inhabited. It is as difficult to obtain correct statistics re­ garding the population of the Philip­ pines as It Is to get a definite statement of their area, because a careful census has never been taken. Various writers estimate tbe present population at from 8,000,000 to 10,000,000. Worldly Wisdom. A relative whom Mrs. Uppenup bad not seen for many years came one day to visit her. “Maria" said Mr. Uppenup. after the family had retired to rest that evening, “It seems to me you weren't any too cordial to Cousin Harriet, considering the tact that this Is the first time you and she have met for nearly a quarter of a century. You didn't even smile when you greeted her.” “Henry,” replied Mrs. Uppenup, “have you noticed that when I smile It wrinkles my face all over? Well, I didn't want the wrinkles of twenty-fire years to take effect on her all at once.” One of the most distressing things In the world is to hear any one scold 'ft who Is so old and feeble that his breath gives out. Men do not propose marriage outside of novels, though the result of calling on a girl and treating her to soda la Just the same. What has become of the old-fashioned people who on a hot afternoou used to make their own soda water? Some politicians are like corkscrews —rather crooked, but they have a strong pulL *