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species of buffalo, very wild and entirely untamable; and, though
numerous in certain places, is hard to find, and when brought to bay
dies fighting.
Birds abound in all of the islands; nearly six hundred species have
been found, over fifty of which exist nowhere else in the world. One
of these species builds a nest which is highly prized by Chinese
epicures as an article of diet. Prof. Worcester tells us "the best
quality of them sometimes bring more than their weight in gold."
Crocodiles are numerous in fresh-water lakes and streams, attaining
enormous size, and in certain places causing much loss of life among
stock and men as well. Snakes also abound, and some of them are
very venomous. Cobras are found in the southern islands. Pythons
are numerous, some of the smaller sizes being sold in the towns and
kept in houses to catch rats, at which they are said to be more
expert than house-cats.
All the domestic animals, aside from the carabao, have been
introduced from abroad. Cattle are extensively raised, and in some
of the islands run wild. The horses are a small Spanish breed, but
are very strong and have great endurance. Large European horses
do not stand the climate well.
CLIMATE, VOLCANOES, ETC.
The mean annual temperature of Manila is 80° F. The thermometer
seldom rises above 100° or falls below 60° anywhere in the
archipelago. There is no month in the year during which it does not
rise as high as 91°. January and December are the coldest months,
the average temperature being 70° to 73°. May is the warmest, the
average being 84°. April is the next warmest, with an average of
83°; but the weather is generally very moist and humid, which
makes the heat more trying. The three winter months have cool
nights. Malaria is prevalent, but contagious diseases are
comparatively few. Yellow fever and cholera are seldom heard of.
The Philippines are the home of many volcanoes, a number of them
still active. Mayon, in the island of Luzon, is one of the most
remarkable volcanic mountains on the globe. It is a perfect cone,
rising to the height of 8,900 feet, and is in constant activity; its
latest destructive eruption took place in 1888. Apo, in the island of
Mindanao, 10,312 feet high, is the largest of the Philippine
volcanoes. Next is Canloon in Negros, which rises 8,192 feet above
the sea. Taal is in a lake, with a height of 900 feet, and is
noteworthy as being the lowest volcano in the world. To those not
accustomed to volcanoes, these great fire-spouting mountains,
which are but prominent representatives of many lesser ones in the
islands, seem to be an ever-present danger to the inhabitants; but
the natives and those who live there manifest little or no fear of
them. In fact, they rather pride themselves in their possession of
such terrifying neighbors.
Such is an outline view of the Philippine Archipelago of the present
day. A new era has opened up in the history of that wonderful land
with its liberation from the Spanish yoke. The dense ignorance and
semi-savage barbarities which exist there must not be expected to
yield too rapidly to the touch of human kindness and brotherly love
with which the Christian world will now visit those semi-civilized and
untamed children of nature. Nevertheless, western civilization and
western progress will undoubtedly work mighty changes in the lives
of those people, in the development of that country, during the first
quarter of the twentieth century, which ushers in the dawn of its
freedom.
THE BATTLE OF MANILA.
In all the annals of naval warfare there is no engagement,
terminating in so signal a victory with so little damage to the victors,
as that which made the name of George Dewey immortal on the
memorable Sunday morning of May 1, 1898, in Manila Bay. The
world knows the story of that battle, for it has been told hundreds of
times in the thousands of newspapers and magazines and scores of
books throughout the civilized world. But few, perhaps, who peruse
these pages have read the simple details of the fight as narrated by
that most modest of men, Admiral Dewey himself. We cannot better
close this chapter on the Philippines than by inserting Admiral
Dewey's official report of the battle which wrested the Filipinos from
Spanish tyranny and placed nearly ten millions of oppressed people
under the protecting care of the United States.

YOUNG MAN OF THE UPPER CLASS.


White duck or crash trousers and a silk or pina shirt make a fashionable suit.

AGUINALDO AT THE AGE OF 22.


Dressed in fine pina cloth shirt.
DOING THE FAMILY WASH.
The glory of all Philippine women is their long and beautiful hair.

NATIVE WOMAN FRUIT SELLER.


And customers, Manila.

ADMIRAL DEWEY'S STORY OF MANILA.


"United States Flagship Olympia, Cavite, May 4, 1898.
"The squadron left Mirs Bay on April 27th, arrived off Bolinao on the
morning of April 30th, and, finding no vessels there, proceeded
down the coast and arrived off the entrance to Manila Bay on the
same afternoon. The Boston and the Concord were sent to
reconnoitre Port Subic. A thorough search was made of the port by
the Boston and the Concord, but the Spanish fleet was not found.
Entered the south channel at 11:30 p.m., steaming in column at eight
knots. After half the squadron had passed, a battery on the south
side of the channel opened fire, none of the shots taking effect. The
Boston and McCulloch returned the fire. The squadron proceeded
across the bay at slow speed and arrived off Manila at daybreak, and
was fired upon at 5:15 a.m. by three batteries at Manila and two near
Cavite, and by the Spanish fleet anchored in an approximately east
and west line across the mouth of Bakor Bay, with their left in shoal
water in Canacao Bay.
"The squadron then proceeded to the attack, the flagship Olympia,
under my personal direction, leading, followed at a distance by the
Baltimore, Raleigh, Petrel, Concord, and Boston in the order named,
which formation was maintained throughout the action. The
squadron opened fire at 5:41 a.m. While advancing to the attack two
mines were exploded ahead of the flagship, too far to be effective.
The squadron maintained a continuous and precise fire at ranges
varying from 5,000 to 2,000 yards, countermarching in a line
approximately parallel to that of the Spanish fleet. The enemy's fire
was vigorous, but generally ineffective. Early in the engagement two
launches put out toward the Olympia with the apparent intention of
using torpedoes. One was sunk and the other disabled by our fire
and beached before they were able to fire their torpedoes.
"At seven a.m. the Spanish flagship Reina Cristina made a desperate
attempt to leave the line and come out to engage at short range,
but was received with such a galling fire, the entire battery of the
Olympia being concentrated upon her, that she was barely able to
return to the shelter of the point. The fires started in her by our
shells at the time were not extinguished until she sank. The three
batteries at Manila had kept up a continuous fire from the beginning
of the engagement, which fire was not returned by my squadron.
The first of these batteries was situated on the south mole-head at
the entrance of the Pasig River, the second on the south position of
the walled city of Manila, and the third at Molate, about one-half
mile further south. At this point I sent a message to the Governor-
General to the effect that if the batteries did not cease firing the city
would be shelled. This had the effect of silencing them.
"At 7:35 a.m. I ceased firing and withdrew the squadron for
breakfast. At 11:16 I returned to the attack. By this time the Spanish
flagship and almost all the Spanish fleet were in flames. At 12:30 the
squadron ceased firing, the batteries being silenced and the ships
sunk, burned, and deserted.
"At 12:40 the squadron returned and anchored off Manila, the Petrel
being left behind to complete the destruction of the smaller
gunboats, which were behind the point of Cavite. This duty was
performed by Commander E.P. Wood in the most expeditious and
complete manner possible. The Spanish lost the following vessels:
Sunk, Reina Cristina, Castilla, Don Antonio de Ulloa; burned, Don
Juan de Austria, Isla de Luzon, Isla de Cuba, General Lezo, Marquia
del Duero, El Correo, Velasco, and Isla de Mindanao (transport);
captured, Rapido and Hercules (tugs), and several small launches.
"I am unable to obtain complete accounts of the enemy's killed and
wounded, but believe their losses to be very heavy. The Reina
Cristina alone had 150 killed, including the captain, and ninety
wounded. I am happy to report that the damage done to the
squadron under my command was inconsiderable. There were none
killed and only seven men in the squadron were slightly wounded.
Several of the vessels were struck and even penetrated, but the
damage was of the slightest, and the squadron is in as good
condition now as before the battle.
"I beg to state to the department that I doubt if any commander-in-
chief was ever served by more loyal, efficient, and gallant-captains
than those of the squadron now under my command. Captain Frank
Wildes, commanding the Boston, volunteered to remain in command
of his vessel, although his relief arrived before leaving Hong Kong.
Assistant Surgeon Kindelberger, of the Olympia, and Gunner J.C.
Evans, of the Boston, also volunteered to remain, after orders
detaching them had arrived. The conduct of my personal staff was
excellent. Commander B.P. Lamberton, chief of staff, was a volunteer
for that position, and gave me most efficient aid. Lieutenant Brumby,
Flag Lieutenant, and Ensign E.P. Scott, aide, performed their duties
as signal officers in a highly creditable manner; Caldwell, Flag
Secretary, volunteered for and was assigned to a subdivision of the
five-inch battery. Mr. J.L. Stickney, formerly an officer in the United
States Navy, and now correspondent for the New York Herald,
volunteered for duty as my aide, and rendered valuable service. I
desire especially to mention the coolness of Lieutenant C.G. Calkins,
the navigator of the Olympia, who came under my personal
observation, being on the bridge with me throughout the entire
action, and giving the ranges to the guns with an accuracy that was
proven by the excellence of the firing.
"On May 2d, the day following the engagement, the squadron again
went to Cavite, where it remains. On the 3d the military forces
evacuated the Cavite arsenal, which was taken possession of by a
landing party. On the same day the Raleigh and the Baltimore
secured the surrender of the batteries on Corregidor Island, paroling
the garrison and destroying the guns. On the morning of May 4th,
the transport Manila, which had been aground in Bakor Bay, was
towed off and made a prize."

THE MOUTH OF THE PASIG RIVER.


The city of Old Manila is surrounded by water. On the west is the sea, to the
north is the Pasig River, while moats, connected with the river by sluices, flank
the other two sides. All the principal warehouses of the city are on the Pasig,
and ships deliver and receive their cargoes direct, without the necessity of
cartage.

OUR NEW POSSESSIONS (CONTINUED).

THE LADRONE, OR MARIANA ISLANDS.


It was a welcome sight to Magellan and his crew when, one day in
March, nearly 400 years ago, they beheld the verdant and beautifully
sloping hills of the Ladrone Islands. Eighteen weary months before
they had sailed from the coast of Spain, and all that time, first to the
southwest and then to the northwest, they had followed the setting
sun. Theirs were the first vessels manned by white men that had
ever plowed the trackless Pacific; and this was the first land ever
seen by white men within that unknown ocean.
It was a pitiable crew on those three small, weather-beaten ships,
who drew, that March morning, toward the coast of the present
island of Guam, which is now a possession of the United States.
Hunger and thirst had driven them to the verge of madness. They
had eaten even the leather thongs from their sail fastenings, and
only a small mug of water per day was the portion of drink for a
man. "Land! Land!!" It was a glad cry from the watch aloft. There
were palm trees, cocoanuts, green grass, tropical fruits, an
abundance of fresh water, and—though naked—a curious and
friendly people. No wonder Magellan paused to rest himself and his
sailors.
Those little islands have never been of much value, and never can
be. Seventeen of them stretching in a row about six hundred miles
from north to south, and their total area, including their islets and
reefs, is variously estimated at from 400 to 560 square miles. Hence,
there is but about one-fourth more territory on the whole seventeen
islands combined than is included within the corporate limits of the
city of Greater New York.
A broad channel divides the Ladrones into two groups. The northern
group consists of ten islets, without inhabitants; the southern group
has seven islands, four of which are inhabited. The largest island,
Guahan, known to us as Guam, ceded to us by Spain, was taken by
our warship Charleston on July 4, 1898. This island contains the only
town in the colony. Its full Spanish name is San Ignacio de Agaña. It
is the capital of the archipelago, and contains more than half of the
whole population.
THE NATIVE INHABITANTS.
When first visited by Europeans, the archipelago contained from
40,000 to 60,000 souls, represented by two distinct classes, the
nobles and the people, between whom marriage, and even contact,
were forbidden. But the Spanish conquest soon ended this
distinction by reducing all alike to servitude. For a long time after
Spanish occupation, the natives complained and finally rebelled
against the oppressive measures of their rulers; but by the end of
the seventeenth century they ceased their resistance, and it was
found by a census that fully half of them had perished or escaped in
their canoes to the Caroline Islands, and that two-thirds of their one
hundred and eighty villages had fallen to ruins. Then came an
epidemic which swept away nearly all the natives of Guam; and the
island of Tinian (one of the group) was depopulated and its
inhabitants brought to Guam.

NATIVE HOUSE AND PALMS, LADRONE ISLANDS.

Nearly all the new arrivals soon died. In the year 1760, a census
showed a total of only 1,654 inhabitants left in all the islands, and
the Spaniards repopulated them by bringing Tagals from the
Philippines. These, mixed with the remaining natives and Spaniards,
have steadily increased. The population of the islands in 1899 was
estimated at about 9,000. The people are generally lacking in
energy, loose in morals, and miserably poor. Their education has
been seriously neglected. Their religion is Catholic, no Protestant
missions having been encouraged—we might say, not allowed—there
or in the Philippines or the Carolines.
TOPOGRAPHY, CLIMATE, ETC.
The islands of the northern group are mountainous, the altitudes
reaching from 2,600 to 2,700 feet. There are evidences of volcanoes
all over the archipelago, and some mountains contain small craters
and cones not yet extinct. The climate of the Ladrones, though
humid, is salubrious, and the heat, being tempered by the trade
winds, is milder than in the Philippines. The yearly average
temperature of Guam is 81°. Streams are everywhere copious—
though the clearing of the land has diminished their size of late
years. The original flora consists generally of Asiatic plants, but
much has been introduced from the Philippines and other sources.
Cocoanuts, palms, the bread tree, and tropical trees and plants
generally, thrive. The large fruit bat which abounds in the Philippines
is indigenous to the Ladrones, and, despite its objectionable odor, is
a principal article of food. Swine and oxen are allowed to run wild,
and are hunted when needed. There are only a few species of birds;
even insects are rare; and the reptiles are represented by several
kinds of lizards and a single species of serpent. No domestic animals
were known in the islands until introduced by the Spaniards.
When the United States steamship Charleston opened fire on the
little city of Agaña, July 4, 1898, the people had not heard of the
war, and the governor said he thought "the noble Americans were
saluting" him, and was "deeply humiliated because he had no
powder to return their salute." It was an easy, bloodless victory. The
governor and his soldiers were carried to Manila as prisoners, and an
American garrison of a few men left to take charge of this new
American territory in the Pacific.
CONCLUSION.
Thus at the close of the nineteenth century, the Greater United
States assumes its appointed place among the foremost nations of
the world, and stands on the threshold of achievements whose
grandeur no man dare attempt to prophesy. We pause, awed,
grateful, and profoundly impressed, when we recall the mighty
events, the amazing progress, and the wonderful advancements in
discovery, science, art, literature, and all that tends to the good of
mankind that are certain to give the twentieth century a pre-
eminence above all the years that have gone before.
The new era of our country has opened. The United States enters on
the first stage of the transformation from an isolated commonwealth
into an outreaching power with dependencies in both hemispheres.
We can no longer hold an attitude of aloofness from the rest of the
world. With vulnerable points in our outlying possessions, we must
make ready to defend them not only by force of arms but by
diplomatic skill. Entangling alliances as heretofore will be avoided,
and the conditions, complications, and policies of foreign powers
must in the future possess a practical importance for us.
The original thirteen States have expanded into forty-five, embracing
the vast area between the two oceans and extending from the
British possessions to the Gulf of Mexico. To them has now been
added our colonial territory, so vast in extent that, like the British
Empire, the sun never sets on our dominions. Where a hundred
years ago were only a few scattered villages and towns, imperial
cities now raise their heads. Thousands of square miles of forest and
solitude have given place to cultivated farms, to factories, and
workshops that hum with the wheels of industry. The Patent Office
issues 40,000 patents each year. We have three cities with more
than a million population apiece, and twenty-five with a population
ranging from a hundred thousand to half a million. Greater New York
is the second city in the world, and, if its present rate of growth
continues, it will surpass London before the middle of the coming
century. Our population has grown from 3,000,000 at the close of
the Revolution to 75,000,000. When Andrew Jackson became
President there was not a mile of railroad in the United States. To-
day our mileage exceeds that of all the countries of Europe, Asia,
and Africa combined, and the employes, connected directly or
indirectly with railroads in the United States, number almost a million
persons. The half-dozen crude newspapers of the Revolution have
expanded into more than 20,000, whose daily news is gathered from
every quarter of the globe. The total yearly issue is more than three
billions.
No country can approach the advancements we have made in
invention, in discovery, in science, in art, in education and in all the
civilizing agencies of mankind. Volumes would be required to name
our achievements in these lines. Our material property has been or
is equally wonderful. When the Civil War closed, our public debt was
nearly $3,000,000,000. On December 1, 1898, it was
$1,036,000,000. Most of the leading nations have great debts, but
the United States is the only one which is steadily decreasing its
debt and at the same time enormously increasing its resources. The
debt of Great Britain is now about $87 per capita, that of France
$115, of Holland $100, of Italy $75, and of the United States less
than $15, with the security increasing all the time.
Let the thoughtful reader note these striking facts. European nations
generally, and some South American nations also, have been
compelled to resort to various methods of taxation to supply the
sums needed for ordinary governmental expenses, to meet the
interest on the existing debt, to provide resources for new
expenditures, buildings, armament, subsidies, and various public
works. England has an income tax and many stamp taxes, a house
tax, and collects some 20 per cent. of its revenue from direct
taxation. France has a tobacco monopoly, registration taxes, stamp
taxes, tax on windows, and innumerable local taxes, one being the
octroi, or tax on goods entering cities. In addition to an income tax,
and many stamp taxes, Austria derives a good deal of its public
revenue from lotteries. Italy goes still further with her tobacco
monopoly, house tax, income tax, salt tax, octroi duties, stamp
taxes, and heavy legacy and registration taxes. In the United States,
however, the public revenues have been provided for and all public
expenses met, and the national debt reduced beside, without
recourse to any direct taxation. We have no government monopolies,
and the Treasury maintains a healthful condition from the receipts of
customs and internal revenue payments.
Thus with the spirit of fraternity between all sections of the Union
stronger than ever before, with the spirit of patriotism more deeply
imbedded and all-pervading, with our moral, educational, and
material prosperity and progress greater than any time in our past
history, and never equaled by any nation, since the annals of
mankind began—we face the future, bravely resolved to meet all
requirements, responsibilities, and duties as become men whose
motto is
IN GOD IS OUR TRUST.
The End.
*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A NEW HISTORY OF
THE UNITED STATES ***

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