26 



THE CUBA REVIEW And P.ullotin. 



SUGARS RECEIVED IX THESE WAREHOUSES UP 

 TO DATE. 



Acxicares recibidos en cstos aliitaceucs hasta 

 la fecha. 



Matanzas, Mayu 31 dc 1907. 

 Saco. 



Ingenio San Rafael 48,663 



" Santa Amalia 51.635 



" Santo Domingo "1,879 



" San Ignacio 62,602 



" \'alientc 26,269 



" Porvenir 17.742 



" Carolina 38.503 



" .\rnionia 41,894 



" Fcliz 43.640 



" Saratoga 24,193 



" .Mercedes 93.634 



Josefita 77,779 



" Conchita 92,681 



" Sta. Pieta Bare 46,526 



" Triunvirato 48,769 



" Ctl. Luisa (C.) 27,499 



" Carmen 62,384 



" Sta. Rita Galindez 45,570 



" San Cayetano 26.687 



" Santa Filomena 68,125 



" Araujo 21.574 



" Jicarita 26,023 



" Union 79,520 



Socorro 135.393 



" Limones 33,450 



" Flora 56,414 



" Nombre de Dios 5,ioi 



" Triunfo 12,776 



" Ctl. Nueva Luisa 3.657 



" Olimpo 7.038 



" Majagua 11.430 



Por Fuerza 8,698 



Elena 9,955 



" Jesus :Maria 21,709 



" Australia 24,025 



" Averhoff 56 



Indio 7,539 



Nueva Paz 4,268 



" San Vicente 550 



" Santa Catalina 2,867 



" Dolores 500 



Total 1,489,217 



MUTUAL MEN IN SUGAR DEAL — J. J. WARREN 



AND ROBERT H. m'cIJRDY FORM A CUBAN 



CORPOKATION. 



Financial arrangements are said to have 

 been practically Icompleted here for the 

 operation of three new and extensive sugar 

 and fruit-growing plantations and a large 

 sugar factory in Cuba. The project is that 

 of the Jucaro & Moron Sugar & Land Com- 

 pany, a New Jersey corporation, capitalized 

 at $5,000,000. The president of the com- 

 pany is J. J. Warren, the Cuban represen- 

 tative of the Mutual Life Insurance Com- 

 pany, who left for Cuba on Saturday after 

 consulting with capitalists here regarding 

 the flotation of the enterprise. Robert H. 

 McCurdy, formerly general manager of the 

 Mutual, is also primarily interested. Two 

 plantations aggregating about 30,000 acres 

 in the province of Camaguey have been ac- 



(|uired. Two thousand acres are now un- 

 der cane cultivation. The company has also 

 acquired some lo.ooo acres of property in 

 tlic same locality for growing fruits. The 

 first cost for the equiimient of the factor}' 

 will be about $Soo.ooo. Contracts for the 

 machinery are to be let within the ne.xt few 

 days. .\ lease of the Jucaro & San Fer- 

 nanda Railroad has also been obtained. The 

 line runs from the town of Jucaro on the 

 south coast to San Fernando on the north 

 coast, and will thus permit of the export 

 shipment of the sugar. — New York Times, 

 June 10, 1907. 



RESULT OF THE SUGAR CROP OF CIENFUEGOS IN 

 I 906- I 907. 



Kcsiiltado de la Zafra de Cieiifuegos dc 

 1 906- 1 907. 



Ingenio Caracas 173,000 



" Andreita 140,000 



" Hormiguero 115,000 



" San Agustin 86,200 



" Perseverancia 124,800 



" Soledad 81.400 



" Dos Hermanas 80,000 



" Constancia 79,000 



" Santa Rosa 75,50O 



" Cieneguita 63,000 



" Lequeitio 90,800 



" Portugalete 58.000 



" Juragua 63,200 



" Manuelita 54.000 



" San Francisco 56,500 



" Parque Alto 56,000 



Santa Catalina 63,800 



" Dos Hermanos 33.ooo 



" San Lino 60,500 



" Santa Maria 56,500 



Santisima Trinidad . . . 60.700 



" Pastora 36,700 



Aguada 23,200 



San Antonio 45.00O 



'' San Cristobal 15.000 



Regla 9.100 



" Carolina 16,000 



Total sacos 1,815,900 



GEN. FERRARA THINKS AMERICA INTENDS TO 

 ABANDON CUBA. 



Rome, June 11. — The Mattino will pub- 

 lish June 12 an interview with Gen. Ferrara, 

 one of the Cuba delegates to The Hague 

 conference, who from information obtained 

 in Washington and London says that 

 Joseph H. Choate, one of the American 

 delegates, who in *his case is backed by 

 England, intends proposing an international 

 guarantee for maritime traffic in time of 

 war. Hence the limitation of the prise de 

 guerre, and also the Drago doctrine will 

 be recognized and respected by the Euro- 

 pean Powers. 



Gen. Ferrara added that it was his per- 

 sonal opinion that America intends equally 

 to abandon the Philippines and Cuba, but 

 will strive to establish a strategic base in 

 Cuba as a precaution against the contin- 

 gency of a German-American war. — Special 

 cable to New York Sun. 



