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THE CUBA REVIEW 



THE 



TRUST COMPANY OF CUBA 



HAVANA 



CAPITAL $500,000 



SURPLUS $500,000 



TRANSACTS A 



GENERAL TRUST AND 

 BANKING BUSINESS 



REAL ESTATE DEPARTMENT 



EXAMINES TITLES, COLLECTS RENTS 

 NEGOTIATES LOANS ON MORTGAGES 



Correspondence Solicited from 

 Intending Investors 



OFFICERS 



Norman H. Davis President 



Oswald A. Hornsby Vice-President 



Claudio G. Mendoza Vice-President 



J. M. Hapgood Treasurer 



Rogelio Carbajal Secretary 



W. M. Whitner Mgr. Real Estate Dept. 



The Royal Bank of Canada 



FUNDADO EN 1869 



Capital Pagado $11,800,000 



Fondo de Reserva 13,236,000 



Activo Total 234,000,000 



Trescientas Treinta y Cinco Sucursales 



New York, corner William and Cedar Sts. 



Londres, Bank Buildings, Prince St. 



Veinte y Tres Sucursales en Cuba 



Corresponsales en Espafia e Islas Canarias y Ba- 



leares y en todas las otras plazas bancables del 



Mundo. 

 En el Departamento de Ahorros se admiten depo- 



sitos a interes desde Cinco Pesos en adelante. 

 Se expiden Cartas de Credito para viajeros en 



Libras 



Esterlinas 6 Pesetas, valederas estas sin descuento 



alguno. 



Sucursales en la Habana 



Galiano 92, Monte 118, Muralla 52, Linea 67. 



Vedado 



Oficina Principal - - - OBRAPIA 33 



Administradores 



R. DE AROZARENA F. J. BEATTY 



A Weekly Publication of 

 International Interest 



It covers every field and 



phase of the industry. 



Write for Sample Copy. 



SUBSCRIPTION - - $3.00 PER YEAR 



FACTS ABOUT SUGAR CONSOLIDATED belting company 



Correas de Cuero curtida especialmente para 

 ingenios de Azucar. Pidanse Precioa 



82 Wall Street, New York 



108 WALL STREET, N. Y. 



INDIA'S SUGAR FACTORIES 



Although British India is the second 

 largest sugar producing country in the 

 world, it contains very few factories 

 which in any sense approach the cen- 

 trales of more advanced countries. 



The Department of Statistics recently 

 made an inquiry into the number of fair- 

 sized factories operating in the country 

 and reported that there were 46. Thirty 

 of these turn out a total of 533 tons of 

 sugar per day and 181 tons of molasses. 

 Of the other factories, 6 did not reply to 

 the inquiry, 6 were closed and not in 



working order. One was opened only for 

 a short time in August and one produced 

 nothing but molasses. 



It is easily seen that by far the largest 

 portion of the Indian crop of about 

 3,000,000 tons of sugar is not produced 

 in these factories, and it is well known 

 that the production of sugar is most ex- 

 tensively carried on in small mills, large- 

 ly driven by animal power, which one 

 finds in every field in some sections of 

 the country. The sugar made in these 

 mills is called "ghur" — from which our 

 word "sugar" is derived — and is merely 

 concentrated unpurified cane juice. 



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