THE CUBA REVIE W 



Insist upon Walker's "LION" Packing 



Avoid imitations, insist upon getting WALKER'S 

 METALLIC "LION" PACKING. Look for "The 

 Thin Red Line" which runs through all the 

 Genuine and the "Lion" Brass Trade Mark 

 Labels and Seals attached. 



WRITE FOR 

 OUR DESCRIPTIVE CATALOGUE 



JAMES WALKER & COMPANY, Ltd. 

 46 West Street New York City 



United Railways of Havana 



WESTERN DIVISION 



TRAIN SERVICE DAILY 



Trains 89, 91 and 93 connect with Electric trains from Central Station. 

 Trains 90, 92 and 94 connect with Electric train.' for Central Station. 



Round Trip Fares from Havana to 



Pines 15 cts. 



Arroyo Naranjo 25 cts. 



Calabazar 30 cts. 



Rancho Boyeros 40 cts. 



Santiago de las Vegas .... 55 cts. 

 Rincon 65 cts. 



Leaving Central Station every half hour from 5.16 A. M. to 7.16 P. M. 

 and every hour thereafter to 11.16 P. M. 

 \V. T. MEDLEY ARCHIBALD JACK 



Commercial Agent (Revised to March 1, 1922) General Manager 



Cane Acreage in U. S. 



The area of sugar cane in the eight 

 principal cane growing states this year is 

 estimated by the Department of Agricul- 

 ture at 524,000 acres, or about 99 per 

 cent of the acreage actually harvested in 

 1921. This is a preliminary estimate, and 

 includes the acreage intended for seed and 

 syrup, as well as for sugar. It does not 

 include the acreage in sorghum cane. 



Louisiana has 295,000 acres planted to 

 cane, according to this estimate, or more 

 than one-half the total. The areas in 

 the other leading states are as follows: 



Alabama, 79,000 acres; Georgia, 55,000; 

 Mississippi, 37,200; Florida, 29,000; Texas, 

 17,500; Arkansas, 2,500. 



The acreage in the Louisiana sugar belt, 

 which does not include the whole state, is 

 estimated to be 278,000 acres, of which it 

 is estimated that 56,000 acres are reserved 

 for seed and syrup. In 1921 the sugar belt 

 harvested 278,476 acres, of which 52,110 

 acres were used for seed and syrup. 



In addition to the cane drowned out in 

 Louisiana, floods in the Rio Grande valley 

 have destroyed a large part of the cane in 

 that section of Texas. 



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