Standard Guide to Cuba: A New and Complete Guide to the Island of CubaFoster & Reynolds, 1906 - 250 pages |
From inside the book
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Page 21
... native wood , heavily barred and studded , and furnished with pon- derous bolts and ornamental locks and knockers . A wicket door set in the larger one is common . A TYPICAL WINDOW . Windows are closed by iron grilles , which often ...
... native wood , heavily barred and studded , and furnished with pon- derous bolts and ornamental locks and knockers . A wicket door set in the larger one is common . A TYPICAL WINDOW . Windows are closed by iron grilles , which often ...
Page 36
... fort at Santo Domingo , La Fuerza is the oldest fortification in America . 4 CALLE EM PEDRADO . THE CATHEDRAL . THE CATHEDRAL is. THE OLD CHORRERA FORT . " WE MAY PERHAPS SEE A NATIVE CUBAN HAT FACTORY. 36 THE STANDARD GUIDE .
... fort at Santo Domingo , La Fuerza is the oldest fortification in America . 4 CALLE EM PEDRADO . THE CATHEDRAL . THE CATHEDRAL is. THE OLD CHORRERA FORT . " WE MAY PERHAPS SEE A NATIVE CUBAN HAT FACTORY. 36 THE STANDARD GUIDE .
Page 38
... native limestone , which is yellowish - white when quarried , but soon darkens and grows dingy , and the surface disintegrating gives an appearance of great antiquity . The Cathedral was built by the Jesuits . two centuries ago , in ...
... native limestone , which is yellowish - white when quarried , but soon darkens and grows dingy , and the surface disintegrating gives an appearance of great antiquity . The Cathedral was built by the Jesuits . two centuries ago , in ...
Page 44
... native Cuban hat factory . The guajiro makes a good waste basket for papers . Among other native pro- ductions are belts and pocketbooks made of the skin of the maja , a harm- less Cuban snake of the constrictor species , which ...
... native Cuban hat factory . The guajiro makes a good waste basket for papers . Among other native pro- ductions are belts and pocketbooks made of the skin of the maja , a harm- less Cuban snake of the constrictor species , which ...
Page 58
... natives of Spain were called Peninsulars ; the natives of Cuba Insulars , and the feeling between the two was bitter . The Peninsulars organized themselves into a militia corps of volunteers ( Instituto de los Volunterios de Cuba ) ...
... natives of Spain were called Peninsulars ; the natives of Cuba Insulars , and the feeling between the two was bitter . The Peninsulars organized themselves into a militia corps of volunteers ( Instituto de los Volunterios de Cuba ) ...
Other editions - View all
Standard Guide to Cuba: A New and Complete Guide to the Island of Cuba Foster &. Reynolds Co No preview available - 2022 |
Standard Guide to Cuba: A New and Complete Guide to the Island of Cuba Foster & Reynolds Co No preview available - 2015 |
Common terms and phrases
99 Prado American Baracoa bath building built Cabaña called Camagüey Cathedral cemetery Central Park cents church Cienfuegos Cobre color Columbus commanding Cruz CUBA CUBA Cuba Railroad Cuban east entrance fare feet Florida FOSTER for printed front fruit Fuerza Gibara Governor Guanabacoa Guide Travel Office harbor Havana hill Hotel houses island Isle of Pines Jamaica land Marianao Matanzas matter at Standard miles mountains night north coast Nuevitas O'Reilly street Obispo Palace Paseo Pinar del Rio Plaza de Armas port Port Antonio printed matter Proprietor Province Puerto Príncipe Punta Pyrates Regla River royal palms Sagua Sagua la Grande San Juan Santa Clara Santiago de Cuba Señor ship shore Spain Spaniards Spanish Standard Guide Travel station steamer Steamship sugar sweet-sop Tacon tion tourists town trees tropical United Railways Vedado Vuelta Abajo wall wharf yellow fever York
Popular passages
Page 118 - Cuban independence, the maintenance of a government adequate for the protection of life, property, and individual liberty, and for discharging the obligations with respect to Cuba imposed by the treaty of Paris on the United States, now to be assumed and undertaken by the government of Cuba. IV That all Acts of the United States in Cuba during its military occupation thereof are ratified and validated, and all lawful rights acquired thereunder shall be maintained and protected.
Page 182 - Spain cedes to the United States the island of Porto Rico and other islands now under Spanish sovereignty in the West Indies, and the island of Guam in the Marianas or Ladrones.
Page 161 - All the above are the Admiral's words. He ascended the river for some distance, examined some branches of it, and, returning to the mouth, he found some pleasant groves of trees, like a delightful orchard. Here he came upon a canoe, dug out of one tree, as big as a galley of twelve benches, fastened under a...
Page 128 - Lazear also experimented on himself at the same time, but was not infected. Some days later, while in the yellow-fever ward, he was bitten by a mosquito and noted the fact carefully. He acquired the disease in its most terrible form and died a martyr to science and a true hero. No other fatality occurred among the brave men who, in the course of the experiments, willingly exposed themselves to the infection of the dreaded disease. A camp was especially constructed for the experiments about 4 miles...
Page 94 - ... extending the whole width of the island, and having about an equal sea front on the north and south borders. Matanzas touches the Caribbean Sea only at its southwest corner, being separated from it elsewhere by a narrow peninsula of Santa Clara Province. The provinces are named, beginning at the west, Pinar del Rio, Havana, Matanzas, Santa Clara, Puerto Principe and Santiago de Cuba, My observations were confined to the four western provinces, which constitute about one-half the island. The two...
Page 128 - Lazear, and A. Agramonte. At this time the American authorities in Cuba had for a year and a half endeavored to diminish the disease and mortality of the Cuban towns, by general sanitary work, but while the health of the population showed distinct improvement and the mortality had greatly diminished, yellow fever apparently had been entirely unaffected by these measures. In fact, owing to the large number of...
Page 182 - ... the cities of the island, to the end that a recurrence of epidemic and infectious diseases may be prevented, thereby assuring protection to the people and commerce of Cuba, as well as to the commerce of the Southern ports of the United States and the people residing therein. ARTICLE VI The Island of Pines shall be omitted from the boundaries of Cuba specified in the Constitution, the title thereto being left to future adjustment by treaty.
Page 184 - Swamp, an almost impenetrable region 75 miles in length in an east and west direction by 30 miles in breadth. Off the south coast are many low, marshy mangrove-covered islets. Most of the harbors of both the north and south coasts are of peculiar shape, with narrow, crooked entrances, opening within into basins of considerable extent, which are thus completely sheltered. This is the character of the harbors of Havana, Santiago, Cienfuegos, Guantanamo, and many others. The...
Page 129 - A completely mosquito-proof building was divided into two compartments by a wire-screen partition; infected insects were liberated on one side only. A brave nonimmune entered and remained long enough to allow himself to be bitten several times. He was attacked by yellow fever, while two susceptible men in the other compartment did not acquire the disease, although sleeping there 13 nights.
Page 130 - Army, instituted measures to eradicate the disease, based entirely on the conclusions of the commission. Cases of yellow fever were required to be reported as promptly as possible, the patient was at first rigidly isolated, and immediately upon the report a force of men from the sanitary department visited the house. All the rooms of the building and of the neighboring houses were sealed and fumigated to destroy the mosquitoes present. Window and door screens were put up, and after the death or recovery...