PROPOSED INTERNATIONAL EXHIBITION OF FISHERIES

... teloi that at the time the European was blown up at Aipinwall the Caribbean was lying at a wharf '1Scby. So terrible was the effect of the explosion 'hat the appearance of the Caribbean after the ?? was that of a wreck. Her bulwarks were tr,'ied in and ...

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 ...

HISTORICAL AND GEOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES OF NORTH AMERICA

... Is an opening from the Gulf of Mexico into the f Caribbean Sea. It may here be as easily named as anywhere, ) that the heated waters of the South Atlantio Ocean pass in a Z.current through the Caribbean Sea, and through the opening last named into the ...

LITERARY NOTICES

... and conditions of men, beingthe resultof the literary partnership rscontlydissolvedbydeathof Mlessrs. Bcsanitand Rice* Caribbean Twelve per Cents. is very entertaining, and John Wilkes at Brighton is a bright piece of gossippiug biography. Bally's ...

PRIMITIVE MARRIAGE

... simulated. Among the Caribbeans, HUMBOLDT says, to such an extent do all the tribes depend on aggression for their wives, that the women of every tribe were found to belong to different tribes, and nowhere were the men and women of the Caribbean race found to ...

PRIMITIVE MARRIAGE

... simulated. Among the Caribbeans, HUMBOLDT says, to such an extent do all the tribes depend on aggression for their wives, that the women of every tribe were found to belong to different tribes, and nowhere were the men and women of the Caribbean race found to ...

Extracts From New Books

... French masters, the slaves generally were treated with a brutality the moral effects of which endure to the present mon ?? Caribbean Confederatin. By C. Salmon. Mas BANCeoro ON ' PoLLY EcOLES,tI love Polly for the innate fine qualities of her nature; her ...

THE BRITON'S LAND

... waves of the Sainr. Lawrcace pour; Where Uishers by Newfoundland reap 'lThb ony hacvest of thre deep; J; Y WVere, on the Caribbean Iles, Bcgiht worth pa~s, the ocean smiles; PA Where Demnerara's lwat'ry plains Eixult in wveolth ef vogar-cenes. en Usn arctic ...

THE LOST HISTORIES OF AMERICA

... (London Tti~bner. aSSA.) evidently point to American countries or districts. Cerberus, for instance, clangs both with the Caribbean Sea and with the Carib Indians, who inhabit the West India Islands. Moreover, Haiti is undeniably the same as IHades, for ...

BOOKS RECEIVED

... Adventures. By Grant Allen with illustrations by Gordon'Browns. Ge. (Graxit I Richards.) The Queen of Atlantis. A Romance oft Caribbean Sea. By Frank Aubrey. Ga. (no)-ifte son and Co.) The Hymns and Ayma-Writers of the Church Hymnair B9 Rev. John Brownlie ...

LITERATURE

... hroad. ft is 12 il. frotn thle hi Pacific, froum which it ii separated by a ridge of volcanic su hills, atllt S0 from the Caribbean Sea. It receives the at wateis ?? Le;e Leoe fron tbte N.A., and di y targeshythe bi Sait Jisas i nto the Caribhban Sea. h-eight ...

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 ...