THE CUBA REVIEW 



41 



Winter Haven Nurseries 



A. M. KLEMM, Proprietor 



Established 1884. Winter Haven, Fla. 



V h<'lesale Grow<TS of Citrus Stock of the best commercial varieties We 

 guarantee our extensive btock to be well grown, free of insects and true 

 to name. ... ~ . ,. 



Sil er Cluster Grape Fruit our leading Specialty. 



Prices right. Graflinji and I'ackii g pt-rftct. N\ rite f->r Catalogue. 



The Slandard Guide to Cu'ia 



Reliable — accurate— maps- -illustrations. 

 50 cexxts. 



FOSTER &. REYKOI.DS, i iwadisoii Avenue, I<ie>v Yorfe. 



BUSINESS FIRMS OF SANTIAGO 



E. GIRAUDY A CA. 

 ALMACEN DE VIVERES 

 Marina baja n. 23, Santiago de Cuba. 

 Agentet de Schlitz Beer. 



JULIAN CENDOYA 



Stea.Tiship Agent anrl Broker 



COMMISSION MERCHANT 



CABLE: Cendoya. Santiago de Cuba. 



VALLS. RIBERA ft CA. 

 (S. en C.) 

 Importadores de Ferreteria y Machinery. 

 Telegrafo: Valribe. 



Santiago de Cuba y Manzanillo. 



A. B. C. Code, 5th Edition. Telephone, 190. 



P. O. Box, 95. Cable address: SILVAPA. 



SILVA Y PARRENO H. 



General Commission Merchants. 



Custom House Brokers — Forwarding Agents. 



Consignees of the Cuban steamers of the Carlos J. 



Trujillo, S. en C, Line, formerly Mcnendez iK: Co. 



References : — J. Cendoya and Nat'l Bank of Cuba. 



CAMP HERMANOS, Santiago de Cuba. 



Ron Selecto "Golondrina" y "Carta Cuba." 



Medalla de Ore, St. Louis, 1904. 



RON BACARDI 



DE BACARDI & CO., Distillers, Proprietors. 



43 San Ignacio, cor. Santa Clara, Havana, 



Santiago de Cuba. 



LARREA Y BESEALIE 



Importers of General Groceries and Exporters of 



Cocoa, Wax, Honey and Woods. 



Apartado 65, Marina Baja 46. Cable: Larrea. 



Importacion. Exportacton. 



L. ABASCAL Y SOBRINOS 

 Agentes de las lincas Pinillos Izquierdo y Ca., de 

 Cadiz. Larrinaga y Ca., de Liverpool. Com- 

 pania de Seguros, Aachen & Munich, Aix-la- 

 Chapelle. 



BROOKS ft CO. 



Bankers and General Commission Merchants. 

 Santiago and Guantanamo. 



How to Play Jai Alai. 



Representative Tawney, chairman of 

 Appropriations Committee of the United 

 States House of Representatives, came 

 back from a trip to Cuba a short time 

 ago, and was telling Representative Lan- 

 dis, of Indiana, about what he had seen, 

 says a Baton Rouge, La., paper. 



"I went around to see a game of jai alai," 

 said Tawney. "It is a most exciting and in- 

 teresting game." 



"How do they play it?" asked Landis. 



"Why," said Tawney, "they have long, 

 narrow baskets that are strapped to their 

 arms and they catch the ball in those baskets 

 and hurl it against the wall. It requires 

 much skill to catch the bill in the basket." 



"Well," said Landis, "if we played that 



game out in Indiana, we would use wash- 

 tubs and take no chances." 



The Cuban's Viewpoint. 



Even the Cuban, with some ideas of 

 patriotism, looks at things from a different 

 standpoint than an American. All his life 

 he was subject to absolute authority, and 

 when that was removed he found it hard to 

 make an adjustment between that and con- 

 stituted authority upheld by the will of the 

 people. It has never yet occurred to him 

 that to pull down constituted authority for 

 personal reasons, provided he could do it, 

 was treason to the state, and still further 

 is he from knowing that a government built 

 upon no stronger principle than personal 

 popularity cannot stand — that union under 

 such con'hticns is impossible. — Atlanta, Ga., 

 Constitution. 



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