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Daily News (London)

AMERICA'S EXPANSION.*

... writes Captainan E is the true route), will introduceanewcom m j ema, and new international rivarie, whic will render the Caribbean Sea one of the world's strategically most vital quarters. Over that Nsa and the canal, and the lands, isalar, or con- tnental ...

NEW BOOKS

... ery, continues to br fasciniate succoodingt generations, so that the ar lonely occupalnt of the dosert island iu the Wv. Caribbean Sea is as real It personage to most P;1 people as any one of their acunaintances. In Defoe's itiseellanieous writings there ...

LITERATURE

... with a strong belief in its le accuracy; and it will be seen by the following pas- ci sage, descriptive of a sunset in the Caribbean Sea, Pi that the author is able to depict with minute fidelity Be an appearance not easily referable to ordinary T standards ...

ULYSSES S. GRANT.*

... protection. He ioresaw the rivalry of the nationis in the isthinian seas, and desired the acquisition of islands in the Caribbean Sea and the Gulf of Mexico. He recognised the importance of cul- tivating the friendtihip of China and Japan. The general ...

A WEST AFRICAN HERO.*

... long straight hair, denote their descent from the Real Indian. At one tane, these Cawibs popu- lated ad the tbda8ds in the Caribbean S. Now only a about eighty of them are left in Dominmes, and these people are the principal road makers. They follow the ...

LITERATURE

... the native tribes of Panamv and Central America, and even some coincidences in the names of places around the Mexican and Caribbean seas. Two distinct styles of costure may be recognised in paintings of aboriginal Americans; and the cinctureeand wreath ...

LITERATURE

... the north- c western region of the Arctic sons, yet nothinlg cani be more absolutely true. If by any ?? of a nature the Caribbean Archipelago were ulnited together as a breakwater which wrould dam uPA the moulth of the MIexicanA Gulf, so that the wr 1 ...

LITERATURE

... evangelical and national antipathies to the Pepibtical Empire of Spain, E sailed forth to make prize of rich galleons in the c Caribbean sea, or to make havoc of the new Spanish E ports and settlements on the rivers of NorthAmerica. E Yet the peaceful colonists ...

Literature

... look into it with the expectation of finding profound disquisitions on the government of the British possessions in the Caribbean Sea, or bloe- book statistics, or ethnological observations, but we do find in it what is much more suited to the occasion ...

LITERATURE

... degree of longi- tude, west of Greenwich. It has a coast line of 4,200 miles on the Pacific Ocean, and of 1,600 miles on the Caribbean Sea. It is watered by nu- merous rivers, the largest of which, the Bravo del Norte, after a course of 1,427 miles, empties ...