THE CUBA REVIEW 



^ARROQ PARA TODOS usos y de todos tamanos, de los para cana con cuatro ruedas y capa- 



\^r\.*^M\\JtJ cidad de 1 }<^ toiieladas a los con juegos dobles de ruedas y capacidad de 30 toneladas 



Hacemos una especialidad de juegos de herrajes, incluyendo los juegos 



de ruedas, completamente armados, con todas las piesas de metal, y pianos 



complctos para construir los carros a su dcstino de madsras del pais 



RAMAPO IRON WORKS, 30 Church St., New York, N. Y. 



Cable Addri-.ss; 

 Ramai.iam 



HOLBROOK TOWING LINE 



W. S. HOLBROOK, Prop. 



Sea Harbor and General Towing. Steamship Towing a Specialty 



Boilers Tested for Any Required Pressure 



SOUTH ST., NEW YORK, U.S.A. S^llTt 



Phone, Broad 

 1835-1836 



WILLETT 



FOREIGN AND 

 DOMESTIC 



& GRAY, Brokers 



SUGARS 



and Agents 



RAW AND 

 REFINED 



82 WALL STREET, NEW YORK 



Publishers of Daily and Weekly Statistical Sugar Trade Journal — the recognized authority of the trade. 

 TELEGRAPHIC MARKET ADVICES FURNISHED 



Fruit and Vegetable Shippers 



It win pay you to allow us to handle your account in 

 New York. We make a specialty of Cuban products 

 and sell everything at PRIVATE SALE. We do 

 NOT use the auction. Write for stencil and market 

 information. 



J. PRATT CARROLL, Inc., 



287.269 Washington Street, New York City 



"The House that Satisfies" 



WATER-TIGHT CASES USED IN HAVANA 

 UNDERGROUND SYSTEM 



Wherever transformers are placed and 

 wherever branches are taken from mains 

 in the imderground electrical distribution 

 svstem at Havana, Cuba, cast-iron water- 

 tight cases are used to shield the equipment 

 from the tropical moisture. The primary 

 lighting lines of the Havana Electric Railway, 

 Light & Power Company are operated at 

 6,000 volts, and the secondary lines at 

 220 volts. 



PINEAPPLE OUTPUT INCREASED A 

 THOUSANDFOLD 



Hawaii produced one thousand times as 

 much canned pineapple in 1914 as it did in 

 1901; in round numbers, 2,000,000 cases in 

 1914 as compared with 2,000 cases in 1901. 



This most remarkable development in the 

 face of active competition from the older can- 

 ning centers of the Far East has been de- 

 scribed in detail in a report just issued by the 

 Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce 

 entitled, "Canned-Pineapple Industry of the 

 World," Special Agents Series No. 91. The 

 report was prepared by Commercial Agent J. 

 Alexis Shriver, who made a tour of inspection 

 of all the important pineapple canneries in the 

 world. 



The up-to-date machinery and the cleanli- 

 ness that characterizes the Hawaiian fac- 

 tories are contrasted with the hand labor and 

 the general untidiness that is the rule in most 

 of the other pineapple centers, and the condi- 

 tions in general that govern the industry in all 

 the producing countries of the world are de- 

 scribed in the report, which may be obtained 

 from the Superintendent of Documents, Gov- 

 ernment Printing Office, Washington, at 

 5 cents a copy. 



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