THE CUBA REVIEV/ 



39 



LA NUEVA 



Maquina de 

 TRACCION 

 H I] B E R. 



Esta maquina es conocida como la mejor para Contratistas 6 para Arar. 



Esta ideada y construida para los trabajos mas dificiles sobre caminos 6 sobre _el_ campo. 

 Arrastrando grandes pesos 6 arando hay una tension tremenda sobre la transmision y la 

 rueda volante. Hemos puesto especial atension en la construccion de estas partes, hacien- 

 dolas del mejor material que se puede conseguir, de tal manera que hemos conseguido la 

 fuerza mayor posible combinada con el minimum de peso. 



Nuestras maquinas alcanzaran mayor fuerza que la estimada y harfin mayor cantidad 

 de trabajo y mucho mejor que lo que puede hacerse por medio de caballos, no se diga de buyes. 



Tendremos muchisimo gusto en tratar de estas mcaquinas detalladamente con las personas 

 interesadas en el mejor mode de tiaccion tanto en carretras, caminos reales, como campo 

 de arado. 



Esta maquinas sirven tambien, mediante un aparato especial, para tirar maderas del 

 monte 6 arados por medio de cable de alambre. 



Enviaremos catalogos a quienes nos los pidan en espanol 6 ingles. 



Para otros informes, sirvanse dirijirse Ti 



THE HUBER MANUFACTURING CO., 



3TATI0N J, MARION, OHIO, U. 5. A. 



6 a nuestro aeente para Cuba,Sr. P. D de Pool, Obispo 7, P. O. B. 10G9. Habana. 



^sK Wr. Foster 



anything about Cuba. No charge, no fees, no commissions. Reliable unbiased information. 

 1 Madison Avenue, Ne-*v York;. 



CAMAGUEY 



HI. J. CABAPKA 



COMMISSION MERCHANT. 



Solicits Correspondence from all the Important cities 

 of the United States of America. 

 P. 0. Box 3, Camaguey. 



Years ago P. R. Williams 



Sought and John Kerr, Americans, 



a were in the banking business 



$2,000,000 in Santiago de Cuba. In the 



Treasure, troublous times which then 



existed they hid a vast 



amount of money belonging to their clients. 



They were accused of looting their bank 



and fled. Williams was captured and shot. 



Kerr, with his wife, escaped to Buenos 



Ayres. Five years later Kerr sent his wife 



to Oakland, Cal., entrusting her with the 



secret of the hidden wealth. Subsequently 



he died. 



Mrs. Kerr, on her deathbed, intrusted the 

 secret to Mrs. Smith, her nurse. Through 

 A. J. Inger, her nephew, the interest of 

 Adolph Ottinger and John H. Young was 

 enlisted. Ottinger agreed to finance the 



party. They are all residents of San Fran- 

 cisco. 



The four departed for Santiago last May. 

 They found the building designated. After 

 some difficulty they rented the ground floor. 

 In the basement they pried up the floor 

 and began to dig. They came upon a small 

 underground chamber. They found two 

 iron chests and a wooden chest, but empty. 

 Scattered near them, however, they found 

 $1,243 in Spanish gold and a valuable ring. 



The searchers found a small tunnel hewn 

 through the solid rock and leading from 

 the treasure chamber to a little bungalow 

 five hundred yards from the building. In- 

 quiry revealed the fact that a few years ago 

 a mysterious priest, coming from Buenos 

 Ayres, had rented the bungalow. After a 

 stay of about a year, during which time he 

 had fenced in the place and lived the life 

 of a recluse, he had departed. The infer- 

 ence is that Kerr, despairing of hjs wife's 

 ability to recover the treasure, had imparted 

 the secret to the priest. The latter alone 

 had come to Cuba, had hewn his way 

 through the rock and reached the treasure. 

 —Herald, (N. Y.), July, 20, 1908. 



