. The Cuba review. THE CUBA R E \' I E W 19. Yacht club headquarters on Cardenas Harbor at El Veradero. The scene is of mid-summer racing activity when crowds visit this well-known resort. Edificio principal del Club de Yates en el Puerto de Cardenas en El T^aradero. Es un luyar de grandes regatas durante los meses de verano, adondc acude un inmenso gentio a visitar este sitio vcranicgo tan conocido. churches in Oriente Province. Attached to the churches are schools, and these schools have been attended by children of both races, usually heretofore without prejudice to either. Reports received


. The Cuba review. THE CUBA R E \' I E W 19. Yacht club headquarters on Cardenas Harbor at El Veradero. The scene is of mid-summer racing activity when crowds visit this well-known resort. Edificio principal del Club de Yates en el Puerto de Cardenas en El T^aradero. Es un luyar de grandes regatas durante los meses de verano, adondc acude un inmenso gentio a visitar este sitio vcranicgo tan conocido. churches in Oriente Province. Attached to the churches are schools, and these schools have been attended by children of both races, usually heretofore without prejudice to either. Reports received by the Baptist Home Mission Society show that chapels at La Alaya and at Jorahucca have been burned, not by military forces l)ut by marauders and malcontents. Bap- tists in eastern Cuba alone have fifty-four churches. The Episcopal Church has work in nearly all parts of the island, with a cathedral at Havana, and a considerable educational .system that has headquarters in Guantanamo. Cuban's daughter fights will Surrogate Cohalan of New York County appointed on July 17th a referee to ascer- tain whether Paul Fuller and Joseph Man- dremi, as executors of the estate of Tirso Mesa y Hernandez, used due diligence to have placed in their hands property of the estate to which a daughter of the testator now lays claim. H the executors erred the referee will also be required to report the amount with which they should be sur- charged. Mesa y Hernandez was a Spaniard, who lived in Havana, where he was killed in 1908. He left a wife, two sons and a daughter, the latter a Vassar student. Under the Spanish law, a wife inherits one-half of the estate which her husband acquired after his marriage. When Mesa y Hernandez married, in 1881, he had prac- tically nothing, but when he died his estate atnounted to $1,092,896. His will left his wife an income of only $300,000. Mrs. Mesa y Hernandez brought an action in the Cuban courts, and was granted one- half the estate. It develops that Mesa y H


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