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CUBAN CORRESPONDENCE.
23

And I beg to confirm the following telegrams to you:

Havana, January 15.

(All quiet.)

Havana, January 16.

All quiet.

Havana, January 17.

(Reports supplies by Carcho a week since delivered to-day. Regulations and recent rioting causes of delay. Apprehends no difficulty as to landing supplies and reports arrival to-day of Vigilancia.)

Havana, January 18.

All tranquil.

Havana, January 19.

Reports that November 4 decree admitting cattle into Cuba free until January 10 is extended to March 10 of present year, with conditions unchanged, and adds that quiet prevails.

Havana, January 21.

All quiet.

Havana, January 22.

(Reports no foreign naval vessels at Havana, but that two such German ships are expected to arrive during January.)

I am, etc.,

Fitzhugh Lee.

Mr. Lee to Mr. Day.

No. 767.]

United States Consulate-General
Havana, February 4, 1598.

Sir: I have the honor to report that I have received $1,743.46 from various sections of the country, in addition to the $5,000 first sent, making a total of $6,743.46, which have been placed to the credit of the unofficial fund. Of this amount about $3,000 have been already expended in purchasing food, paying railroad freights on provisions sent away from the city, and the salary and expenses of an agent to attend to the purchase and distribution, who acts with the committee appointed by the government of the city. It will be necessary to keep sufficient funds on hand to meet the expenses necessarily incurred in the work here.

Most of the money I have received has been in small sums, the $1,743.46 being contributed by 37 different persons. Last mail brought me $200 from an unknown donor in Baltimore, Md. I do not see any diminution in the numbers of the suffering poor on this island, except by the daily deaths occurring everywhere from starvation. The present population, which has been concentrated at various places under Weyler's proclamation is still there, not daring to go out to their homes in the interior, if said homes were still in existence, so they continue to herd together with no employment and with but little means of subsistence outside of what we are now trying to afford them. The condition of the reconcentrados is worse in the vicinity of the smaller towns, because they can get something by begging in the larger ones, and hence the death rate is greater in the small towns.

The fact that the greater majority of these poor people are principally women and children makes the sad story of suffering and death more heartrending.

I am, sir, etc.,

Fitzhugh Lee,
Consul-General.