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CARIBBEAN HOSPITALITY

... CARIBBEAN HOSPITALITY. According to the anther of Camps the Caribtcs,” the natives those islands obey one text of Scripture to the letter, they use hospitality one to another without grudging.” I recall, he says, one of the many excursions •which I made ...

Published: Saturday 18 February 1888
Newspaper: Fife Free Press
County: Fife, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 357 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

PROFESSOR ORME ON THE GULF STREAM

... all bee been ously in ies influence on the ¢ wh a very nsfer of subject of discussion. The origin of the strear ed in a Caribbean Sea and the Gulf of are full-charged waters of t Equatorial current, and it is from this broad : reservoir that the famous ...

Published: Saturday 11 February 1882
Newspaper: Dunfermline Saturday Press
County: Fife, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 938 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

THE WONDERS OF NATURE. THE WONDERFUL TIDES. No. 11. In our last chapter on the tides we stated their number,

... higher than on their western, as they are necessarily accumulated and held there. Thus, in the Gulf of Mexico. and in the Caribbean Sea, the water is twenty feet higher than in the Pacific Ocean, the waters being arrested by the Isthmus of Panama. The same ...

Published: Saturday 01 July 1882
Newspaper: Fife News
County: Fife, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 1065 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

THE WONDERS of NATURE. THE WONDERFUL TIDES. No. 11. In our last chapter on the tides we stated their number,

... always higher than on their western, as they are necessarily accumulated and held there. Thus, in the Gnlf Mexico, and in the Caribbean Sea, the water is twenty feet higher than in the Pacific Ocean, the waters being arrested by the Istkmns of Panama. The same ...

Published: Thursday 29 June 1882
Newspaper: Fife Herald
County: Fife, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 1094 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

THE PROPOSED NICARAGUAN CANAL. _ _

... stupendous of man's notwithstanding that risk, the . people of the Kited States have a great for a ship canal between tile Caribbean Bea end the Pacific, through the Nate of wider large eonoessions calmed at a prise. A negnificent chain of lakes the Nicaragua ...

Published: Saturday 12 January 1889
Newspaper: Fife News
County: Fife, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 1501 | Page: 8 | Tags: none

FROM TRINIDAD (WEST INDIES) 10 MEW. YORK

... mountains, and the ‘oreign of the many small islands sround the she duties we reached the Boces, through which w into the Caribbean Sea. The suo was eett steamed along the shore, and I stood gazi loveliness of island bome daring the last | Crete Towering ...

Published: Saturday 16 November 1889
Newspaper: Dunfermline Saturday Press
County: Fife, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 2912 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

BURNTISLAND

... (6) that bounded partly island groups, and partly by rises in the bed of the ocean which may not rise to the surface, the Caribbean. The circulation the water in the seas was dwelt upon at some length, and this was finely illustrated by instances adduced ...

Published: Saturday 23 November 1889
Newspaper: Fife Free Press
County: Fife, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 3820 | Page: 5 | Tags: none