I SANTIAGO DE CUBA. 1 fl| Features of the City and the Province. ||| The town of Santiago de Cuba is situ ated at one side of the harbor and about six miles from its entrance and overlooks it at the widest part. The entrance to the harbor is very narrow, not more than about 150 feet wide, and the channel is winding until it reaches Punta Gorda, after which it widens in to a beautiful harbor. At one side of the entrance is Morro Castle, a very old fort. "Morro" is a typical name given t,o all these coast fortresses. On —— ■ THE FAMOUS SANTIAGO SLAUGHTER HOUSE WHERE THE VIRGINIUS CREW WERE SHOT BY THE SPANIARDS. the opposite side of the harbor is So capa. The town of Santiago is low, but rises as the ground slopes up from the coast towards some ranges of bills. It was quite a business town before the war, and there are three companies there that have handled a great deal of ore, one of them as much as a thousand tons a day. The houses are mostly one story high 011 account of the liability to earth quakes, but there are some of two stories. The dwelling-houses are sur rounded by spacious verandas, which look ou beautiful gardens filled with a wealth of gorgeous tropical flowers. The poiusettia, with its heads of bril liant scarlet leaves which people in the North cherish in little flower-pots and in greenhouses, is there a large tree, and other trees with their clusters ot gaudy fragrant flowers make these gar dens a fairy scene. There are various insects among the flowers and mosquitoes innumerable, but none of the insects are poisonous. There is a large spider about the size of one's fist, whose bite produces a swelling and a slight fever, and a scor pion whose bite causes some irritation, but is not deadly. There are no veno mous reptiles in the island. There is one enormous variety of boa, called the Maja, of immense strength. It is per fectly black, as thick as one's arm, and capable of swelling itself out to nearly five times its natural size, and has a blood-red mouth —all of which sounds very alarming until you find out that lie is a lazy fellow and does not trou ble himself about human beings, being satisfied with pigs and goats and even small game. There is a small snake sailed the jubo, and some other varie ties, but they are not venomous. The repose of the streets is not disturbed by the rush of cable or trolley cars. The usual conveyance, STREET SCENE XX SANTIAGO. the volante, is a long-bodied vehicle on two wheels. The town of Santiago is the see of the Archbishop, and contains the largest cathedral in the island—the Cathedral of Nuestra Senora de la Caridad del Cobre. Here is also the Theological Seminary of San Basilio. In this region is the highest land in Cuba. A mountain range called the Montanos de Maestra or Cobre ex tends from the Punta de Maisi on the eastern extremity to Cape Cruz on the opposite side. Pico de Turquino, the highest elevation, rises 7070 feet above the ocean. These mountains are very rich in ore, and the Cobre copper THE MARKET PLACE IN SANTIAGO. nes, some twelve miles distant from e city, have yielded fifty tons a day, e higher grades being shipped to tircpe, and the inferior grades aelted at the mines. All this work is stopped since the war became nous. These mines were worked early as the seventeenth century, d were then abandoned for more ~ian a hundred years. Iron is also )und there, and Bold and silver have been taken oat, but not in sufficient quantities to make it profitable. How ever, none of these mines have yet been fully developed. Bituminous coal is found which gives out a high degree of heat and leaves scarcely any ashes or cinders. Near the coast it is often found in semi-liquid masses resembling petroleum or naphtha. There are some very extensive caves in these mountains, which have never been thoroughly explored. There are forests of mahogany, Cuban ebony, cedar, and other hard woods in this provirce, among them one called the quebra hacha or axe breaker, and the jucero, which does not even decay after lung submersion. The marqueterie work in the room occupied by Philip 11. of Spain, in the Escarial, was made from these woods, of which the Spaniards l;now the value, and they are exported from the island in large quantities. There are 110 wild animals, properly speaking, except wild dogs, which play havoc in the poultry yards. A small animal called jutia that resem bles a coon and probably belongs to the same family is found in great JABAYO BLOCKIIOUSE, ONE OF SANTI AGO'S DEFENSES. numbers, aud has furnished many a good meal to the hungry Cuban sol diers, who trap it by the dozen. When eaten with a relish of garlio and onion it is delicious—to those who like garlic. The city of Bayamo, in the western part of the province, was very impor tant a century or more ago, and a great stroughold of the insurgents— for there have always been insurgents in Cuba. But of late years business has moved to Santiago and other coast cities, and Santiago now has about 45,000 inhabitants, while Bay amo has only 10,000. It was a law yer of Bayamo, Charles M.de Ces pedes, who, in 1808, at the head of 128 wretchedly armed men, rose in re bellion at Yara, few weeks was at the resolute though badly The Hymno de Bayamo, the revolutionary hymn of the Cuban patriots, origin ated in Bayamo. This was the Mar seillaise to which music Maceo me :ched. Santiago de Cuba was the bivthplace of the brothers Maceo. On the opposite side of the prov ince from the town of Santiago is the Bay of Nipe. The Bay of Cienfuegos is said to be one of the most magnifi cent harbors in the world, both for area and depth of water; but it is sur passed by the harbor of Nipe, which embraces sixty-five miles of deep water. A New llange-Flnder. An Italian artist in London is said to have just perfected a new range finder, which, it is claimed, will be of immense service both in peace arid war. It is said to be a grf.it improve ment on all rang j-flnders now in use. The distance of any object can be as certained by a mere glance through the instrument, it being sho-vu on a little dial the moment the object is focused. ; True love is not so common as to swell locksmiths up with the idea that they are tunny men.—Pack. THE CHINESE IN MANILA THEY ARE INFLUENTIAL AND THERE FORE DISLIKED. K*he American and English Houses in the Philippines Prefer to Deal With Theut Rather Than With the Haughty Dons- Chinese Who Have Become Savages. Forming as they do a very large proportion of the population, nearly equal to that of the natives them selves, and, having by their industry »nd business ability sustained the iarne of Manila as a commercial port, the Chinese are a thorn in the side of the Spanish mercantile class, aside from the conventional dislike extended ay the latter toward all foreigners. Being commercial by nature, and hav ing realized the good policy of keep lug their word in business matters, iu jontrast with the everlasting procras tinating and "manana"-ing of the Spaniards, they have built up a large jusiness with the English and Aineri •an houses, in the Philippines who .nfinitely prefer to deal with them rather than with the owners of the toil. Their thrifty ways and tend ency to save money and send it home to China rather than to spend it where shey are is another source of griev ance to the haughty "Espanoles." Then their ability and willingness ;o perform every kind of manual ,abor, from carpentering, shoemaking, jtc., to coolie work, from morning to aight at the lowest of wages, is a ?ause of envious irritation to the in iolent native "Filipinos," and a con stant feud is waa;ed between the two races, which has been handed down for generations. In a street fight, aowqyer, I have noticed that the ''Filipino" is very apt to come out iliead, although many of the coolies lave the most superb muscular devel aieut vhich I have ever seen. Long ago, according to history, a 3eet of Cliine.se junks, under the fa mous pirate chief Li Ma Hong, bore down on Mauila with the intention of capturing it and its many treasures. The little garrison in the fort defended tt with a gallantry such as Spaniards ;au aud will display when in despera tion, and Li Ma Hong, possessing no "petroleum shells," and a storm com ing up providentially, the fleet was iu gloriously defeated. Some of the junks went ashore on the northern ioast of the island, and there is today * curious race of so-called Chinese "Igorotes," or savages, living iu the fastnesses of the mountains, lud supposed to be the descendants jf the shipwrecked pirates. A certain 3ny iu January is the anniversary of the fight, aud on that day hardly a Chinaman in Mauila dares show him self out of doors, for every small boy, native or Spaniard, feels iu duty bound to "heave a rock" at him. Whenever thore is a big fire iu the town, it is always assumed that the Chinese have set it, aud they are very scarce in the streets while the confla gration lasts, for tacit instructions would seem to have been given on •,liese occasions to the efi'ect that "if you see a Chinaman bit him." Early in the spring of 1893 the Spauish iron steamer Sau Juan sailed from Hong Kong for Mauila with a sargo largely composed of kerosene, which had been carefully stowed as near the boilers as possible, and on deck, where the some three hundred Chinese coolies who composed the passenger list could sit on the cases ind knock theembersfrom their pipes against them. It is not surprising that the ship took tiro when just within sight of Luzon, and the Span ish captain, with most of his officers, promptly took to the boats and pulled for the shore, leaving a raging, fren zied mass of Chinese shrieking at tlieiu from the doomed vessel, for no pro vision is made on these steamers for the safety of the coolies in case of accident. In a few minutes the San Juan was afire from stem to stern. As many as could climbed the masts, only to fall back suffocated iuto the blaz ing furnace below. Even the more merciful death of drowning was de nied them, for the sea was alive with sharks, attracted by the glare, swarm ing around the ship as mackerel swarm arouud a bucketful of "gurry." Thirty-six hours later another steamer sighted the wreck and bore down to the rescue. Out of the original three hundred, some eighty wretched creatures were found alive, clinging to the big gangway which hung over the side and to the stern davits and boat tackle, with the iron hull of the steamer redhot in places, aud the sharks leaping at them. The rescuing boats had literally to fight their way through the ravenous brutes. I saw the survivors as they wero lauded, a:id a discouraged-looking lot they were. The San Juan, an empty, scorched hull, was towed iu and an chored in tbe mouth of the river to cool off until tilt seventy thousand Mexican dollars iu her bottom could be dug out of the debris, a melted mass. And not an expression of regret did I hear from any of my "Chino" friends over the disaster to their coun trymen. "Pah! coolies!" was all they said. Tlio Mont Antique Military Order. The order that claims the greatest amount of antiquity is the Military Order of St. Constantine, which used to be bestowed by the king of the two Sicilies. This order, if its historians are to be believed, was founded A. D. 317, by Constantino the Great. Eight hundrefl and seventy-four years later, in 11911 the Emperor Isaac Comnenus renewal it. One of the Palieologi confir Jed it in 1261; in 1637 the last Paliegus gave the order to the Dukel of Parma, and the Emperor LeofMd confirmed it in 1691. Un fortufttely, the iconoclastic Victor annexed the kingdom of the Sicilies, and left this aged Mil v. THOMAS JEFFERSON'S DAY. Wl Name Is Inseparably Linked With the Glorious Fourth. Thomas Jefferson, as near as any one man, may be called the patron saint of the Fourth of July because he wrote the instrument whose adoption signalizes that holiday, and his name is further associated with the date because on this day in 1826 he died. The briefest summary of the events in his life is as follows: "Thomas Jefferson was born at Shadwell, Albem&u-le County, Va., April 13, 1743. On his tomb at Monticello is, 'Born April 2d, 1743, O. S.' He died at Monticello, near Charlottesville, Va., at 1 o'clock p. m., July 4,1826, at more than eighty-three years of age. "Before 1766, in Virginia, he began to agitate against tbe misrule of King George, and joined Patrick Henry, George Wythe and others in deter mined opposition to tyranny. "He advocated common schools and the abolishment of slavery. He caused the passage of a law prohibiting the importation of slaves into Virginia. "With George Wythe and James Mad ison in the Virginia Legislature after September, 1776, he spent three years in revising and adapting the laws of Virginia to the new conditions under liberty. "He drew and caused to be enacted the statute for religious liberty in Vir ginia—the first one ever enacted by Legislature, and the first by any gov ernment. THE PATRIOTIC SUMMER GIRL OF *9B. "He suggested the dollar as the unit of value. "Ho was largely responsible for the location of the capital at Washington. "In Congress in 1783-1784,he voted to ratify the treaty of peace with Great Britain—settling the war his Declara tion of Independence had helped to make, and presented to Congress the Virginia deed of cession of her lands northwest of the Biver Ohio to the United States for public domain. "March 1, 1784, in Congress, he re ported from a committee aud all in his handwriting a plan for the temporary THOMAS JEFFERSON, AGED FIFTY-EIGHT. government of the Northwestern Ter ritory, with a clause prohibiting slavery within. This plan became the basis, and was, in fact, embraced in the ordinance of July 13,1787, for the Gov ernment of the Territory of the United States northwest of the Biver Ohio. "After he retired from public life, in 18J9, he founded the University of Virginia, at, Charlottesville, Va., was Its rector aud devoted his remainiug years to its development. "Iu 1821 Mr. Jefferson wrote: 'I have sometimes asked myself whether my country is the better for my hav ing lived at all. Ido uot know that it is. I have been the instrument of doiag the following things, bat thqy would have been done by others, soma of them, perhaps, a little better.' Then follows his account of what he did. Abridged they c-e: THE HOUSE IN WHICH THOMAS JEFFER* SON WROTE THE DECLARATION OF IN DEPENDENCE. "He improved the navigation of the Bivanna Biver. "He wrote the Declaration of Inde pendence. "He disestablished the Established Church in Virginia and secured the freedom of religion. "He was the father of the act put ting an end to entails, of the act pro hibiting the importation of slaves, of the act concerning citizens, and estab lishing the natural right of man to ex patriate himself at will, of the act changing the course of descents and giving the inheritance to all children equally, aud of the act for apportioning crimes and punishments. He intro duced the olive tree into South Caro lina from France in 1789-1790, and brought upland rice into South Caro lina from Africa in 1790. He makes no mention of his service in Congress or his acts while President and does not mention having founded the Uni versity of Virginia. He was a modest man in respect to his public acts. While President he purchased the pro vince of Louisana from France in 1803. "Heseui Lewis and Clark and Pike to explore the Western country. Ha tried to enforce national rights by em bargo instead of by war. He reduced the public debt, aided trade and com merce and provided a system of sea coast and tidewater defenses." The house in which the Declaration of Independence was written was No. 230 High street, afterwards No. 700 Market street, and located on the southwest corner of Seventh and Mar ket streets, Philadelphia. A Wonderfully Clear Atmosphere. The atmosphere is so clear in Zulu land that it is said objects can be seer by starlight at a distance of sever miles. All He llequired. Skullins (the road agent)—" Lady, I stand in great need uv sympat'y." Lady—"lndeed?" Skullins—"Yes, lady. I'm one uv de unfortunate crew uv a Spanish merchantship de United States ships captured. Lady—"Poor man! and so you are looking for work?" Skullins—"No, lady; food an' money is ail I require."—Judge. /,SOO MILES FROM ANYWHERE. Shipwrecked Sailors Enjoy the Hospital ity of Kanaka*. When the steamship Cottage City arrived at San Francisco from New York to join the Klondike trade it car ried three shipwrecked sailors, picke.l up at Valparaiso. They were Jack O'Neil of San Fran cisco, William Walsh of New York and John Dall, a Norwegian. They had been seamen on the bark Monan turn, wrecked seven months ago. "We were on the way from Newcas. tie, Australia, to Panama when the bark sprung a leak," said O'Neil, at the Sailors' home, "Captain Newhall put us at the pumps, and he soon con cluded that we would have to run for Easter island. This island, mind, is away oil' the coast of Chile, about 2500 miles from anywhere. "The captain's idea was to run the bark ashore, so he wasn't particular what course he took, and, as hard luck would have it, we banged into a reef. That settled it, and we barely suc ceeded in getting ashore with our lives. Easter island is about twenty miles long and eight or nine miles wide. It is inhabited by a simple and hospitable lot of Kanakas—about 180 of them iu all. There is a king at the head, and there are three or four chiefs or offi cers, who seem to hold office by right of age. "The king took a fancy to me. He unceremoniously conducted me to his house —a rude cabin of sticks, dried mud and thatch. The captain and the rest of the crew had to put up with the homes of the ordinary citizens, but we all had about the same amount of beef and sweet potatoes to eat. These are the only foods we saw on tbe islaud, and as the cattle run wild and have scant pasturage the beef is pretty lean. They have only one meal a day on the island, and that comes about five o'clock in the afternoon. "By one of those funny freaks that always happen at shipwrecks, a chest containing paint had floated ashore. I painted the king's house for him red, white and yellow, with trimmings of tar. His barefooted highness tnouglit that was out of sight. He had an extra dinner that day, just as they do at weddings and funerals, and he never stopped chuckling. "We hail been there six months when a sailing vessel landed and took us to Valparaiso. The king and all the subjects—men, women and chil dren —shouted in lamentation as we came away."—San Francisco Exam iner. THE PAY OF THE ARMY. What Our Gallant Soldier* Receive for Serving Uncle Sam. The following is the monthly sti pend of officers and soldiers of tha United States army : Major-general, $625,00 Brigadier-general, 458 33 Colonel, 291 67 Lieutenant-colonel, 250 00 Major, 208 33 Captain, mounted, 166 67 Captain, not mounted, 150 00 Begimental adjutant, 150 00 Regimental quartermaster, 150 00 First lieutenant, mounted, 133 33 First lieutenant, not mounted," 125 00 Second lieuteutant, mounted, 125 00 Second lieut. not mounted, 116 76 Chaplain, 125 00 Companj, Private, 13 00 Musician, 13 00 Trumpeter, 13 00 Wagoner, 14 00 Artificer, . 15 00 Corporal (artillery, cavalry and infantry), 15 00 Blacksmith and farrier 15 00 Saddler, 15 00 Sergeant, 18 00 Private (engineers and ordi ance), 17 00 Corporal (engineers and ordi nance), 20 00 First sergeant, 25 00 {Sergeant (engineers, ordi nance and signal corps) 34 00 Sergeants (signal corps) 45 00 Regiment, Chief trumpeter, 22 00 Principal musician, 22 00 Saddler sergeant, 22 00 Chief musician, 60 00 Sergeant-major, 23 00 Quartermaster-sergeant, 23 00 Sergeant-major anil quarter master-sergeant, 36 00 Post, Ordinance sergeant, 34 00 Commissary sergeant, 34 00 Post quartermaster-sergeant., 34 00 Hospital corps, Hospital steward. 45 00 Acting hospital steward, 25 00 Private, 18 00 Veterinary surgeon (senior), 100 00 Veterinary surgeon (junior), 75 00 Hospital matron. 10 00 Simple Antiseptic Dre*Bing. A well-known Belgian physician, Dr. Rasurei, is reported to have succeeded, after long and thorough experiment, iu producing a material composed of peat fibres in combination with woolen threads, iu this way utilizing the anti septic qualities of the peat fibre for all sorts of textures and of dress ma terials. It is stated that the original intention was to produce sanitary undergarments, which, as attested by medical authorities, show the follow ing improvements over other fabrics for similar purposes. The remarka ble porosity of the fibre imparts to the texture with which it is mixed, iu wool, an unusual power of absorbing and evaporating moisture ; its tendency, too, to arrest decomposition renders if a preventive against disease by check ing the fermentation which usually ac companies perspiration. Thus, gar ineuts composed of mixed peat and wool are said to protect one from tak ing cold by any sudden change from perspiration to chill whaterar b« Ui« temperature.