The New-born CubaHarper & Bros., 1899 - 388 páginas |
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Página 22
... taken from its business card : This first class of establishment offeir the public , rooues with every confort and convinience for accommodation of permaent anf trancient guest . It will be observed that there is more trouble with ...
... taken from its business card : This first class of establishment offeir the public , rooues with every confort and convinience for accommodation of permaent anf trancient guest . It will be observed that there is more trouble with ...
Página 33
... taken the place of the smoke of war . They suggested only by contrast the burning of towns and villages and plantations . At railroad stations children and women held out their hands in mute appeals for charity , but that was a vast ...
... taken the place of the smoke of war . They suggested only by contrast the burning of towns and villages and plantations . At railroad stations children and women held out their hands in mute appeals for charity , but that was a vast ...
Página 40
... taken our troops out of the island , on the proof that Cuba was able to take care of herself . The administration of Major - General Wood in Santiago indicated freely and openly that he was in accord with these views . And yet the ...
... taken our troops out of the island , on the proof that Cuba was able to take care of herself . The administration of Major - General Wood in Santiago indicated freely and openly that he was in accord with these views . And yet the ...
Página 52
... taken by General Wilson in a tour through his province , which he permitted me to use : SANTANILLA . About 800 widows , girls , and helpless children left without male support . JAGUEY GRANDE . - About 550 destitute widows , besides 850 ...
... taken by General Wilson in a tour through his province , which he permitted me to use : SANTANILLA . About 800 widows , girls , and helpless children left without male support . JAGUEY GRANDE . - About 550 destitute widows , besides 850 ...
Página 71
... taken up with the procession that al- most no attention was paid to it at the time . It was a fine show to see the civilians - men , women , and children -parading the streets . Intense interest marked the ap- pearance of the cavalry ...
... taken up with the procession that al- most no attention was paid to it at the time . It was a fine show to see the civilians - men , women , and children -parading the streets . Intense interest marked the ap- pearance of the cavalry ...
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Términos y frases comunes
affairs alcaldes Ameri American army American military American occupation American soldiers asked began Brooke buildings Cabañas camp cane Captain Greble carnival carriages cars cattle cents charge Cienfuegos clean Colonel Bliss Conant condition Cuban Assembly Cuban soldiers custom Custom-house Davis Donaldson duty early established February Fitzhugh Lee flag force funeral Garcia Gomez harbor Havana houses hundreds island of Cuba kind labor look Ludlow Major Davis Matanzas Matanzas province matter McCullagh ment merchants miles military occupation months Morro Castle night o'clock palace persons Pinar del Rio plaza police post-office postal postmaster Prado province railroad Rathbone reconcentrados Santa Clara SANTA CLARA PROVINCE Santiago seemed sewers side soon Spaniards stations streets sugar TENTH REGULAR INFANTRY thing thousands tion tobacco told took town troops United United States army Vedado Vuelta Abajo wanted Wilson women yellow-fever
Pasajes populares
Página 40 - That the United States hereby disclaims any disposition or intention to exercise sovereignty, jurisdiction, or control over said island except for the pacification thereof, and asserts its determination, when that is accomplished, to leave the government and control of the island to its people.
Página 220 - March 3, 1899, directed that no property, franchises, or concessions of any kind whatever shall be granted by the United States, or by any military or other authority whatever, in the island of Cuba during the occupation thereof by the United States.
Página 307 - That field is freedom of speech, freedom of the press, the right of peaceable assembly, the right of petition, the right of trial by jury, and the right to worship according to the dictates of our own consciences.
Página 204 - For many years it was a case of every man for himself and the devil take the hindermost — and the devil did take a number of the hindermost.
Página 365 - ... great prospective wealth in this commodity can be formed, provided Cuba is successful in finding favorable foreign markets. In short, it is perfectly apparent, as has been elsewhere stated, that under such conditions Cuba can easily become the greatest sugar-producing country in the world. TOBACCO. Second only in importance to the sugar industry in Cuba is that of tobacco, in the cultivation of which upward of 80,000 people are employed. Unlike sugar cane, the tobacco plant is indigenous and...
Página vi - Harper, por. il., 8°, $2.50. Most of the chapters of this book appeared in a series of articles printed in Harper's Weekly early in 1899, but it has seemed best to supplement them with others giving a fuller account of what took place in Cuba in the first sixty days of American occupation and control. The contents include chapters on: Havana under American military rule; The Cuba of...
Página 49 - We are willing to give the United States complete control of every kind, except political annexation. You may annex us commercially — that is what we want ; but we also want independence — in name at least.
Página 315 - Put the idle people who are now reading the incendiary press to work, relegate to a back seat the politicians, whose present importance rests solely on the attentions they are receiving from our people, and they will not have followers enough left to give them the slightest importance or weight in the community. Agitators have tried to stir up the people of...
Página 290 - If there was any fault to be found with him, it was the glorious fault of doing too much.
Página 302 - Wood declared over his own signature that the city was "as healthy as any city of its size in the United States, excepting, perhaps, for the constant presence of malaria.