coLLABoRvroRs AND OTHER POEMS

... silent t.l have forni , hed the roam idea of Ctu , Crii“re's i•land would seem to c mespond rather to one ot tho , e in the Caribbean Sea, and the nat:ve , de,cribed air ►C.trib-;. Too Quick DespAirer the t.t:e of a p:e. c t I )an• pier in as its subjet ...

Published: Saturday 07 September 1901
Newspaper: Tablet
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 780 | Page: 15 | Tags: none

Tii E TABLET

... was not less violent than that of the Mont Pelee, and sixteen square miles are covered with lava. The convulsions in the Caribbean Sea appear to have been part of a series of seismic and atmospheric disturbances. In France, the long extinct volcano of ...

Published: Saturday 31 May 1902
Newspaper: Tablet
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 2089 | Page: 13 | Tags: none

THE TABLET

... volcanoes, supplying the enormous quantities of steam and hot water which accompanied them. The alteration in the bottom of the Caribbean Sea, which has in soma places become deeper by as much as half a mile, has rendered the task of repairing the cables one ...

Published: Saturday 01 November 1902
Newspaper: Tablet
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1424 | Page: 12 | Tags: none

THE TABLET

... THE TABLET. A lonely mission field is that of Old Providence Island in the Caribbean Sea, 200 miles off the coast of South .In►erica. Here a solitary Catholic priest, Father Stroebele, works among a population consisting of natives from Jamaica, with ...

Published: Saturday 16 April 1904
Newspaper: Tablet
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 732 | Page: 10 | Tags: none

THE TABLET

... its northern boundary ; the Sarstoon, separating it from the Republic of Guatemala, its southern one. The waters of the Caribbean Sea wash its east coast, whilst its western limit is an imaginary line drawn from the Blue Creek near Fort Harley southwards ...

Published: Saturday 12 August 1905
Newspaper: Tablet
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1558 | Page: 8 | Tags: none

' And what singular voyages some of these solitary seafarers have had! Of two bottles thrown over in midocean at

... great tropical ocean in the trade wind belt, it went coursing along between the 1 is'ands in the Windward Group, across the Caribbean Sea, to the coast of Belize, almost, I within the Mexican Gulf. For 496 days it thus pursued , ts solitary way, before it ...

Published: Saturday 19 August 1905
Newspaper: Fermanagh Herald
County: Fermanagh, Northern Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 322 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

defect in popular estimation. The principal recommendation of the route is that it will break entirely new ..

... restrictions and uncertainties of a foreign tariff, is still further threatened by the extension of American interests in the Caribbean Sea and the consequent discrimination in favour of Cuba and Puerto Rico. Thus the fruit trade, carried on with the markets ...

Published: Saturday 02 September 1905
Newspaper: Tablet
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 812 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

LIST id.' KILLED .%VD JNJ!'RIcD

... either end of the renal. Thus we have a peculiar interest in preeervine order alone the meets and among the Wen& of the Caribbean Sea. Be wine and generoun aid. we ran help the people there. to that they can, and will. be able ultimrtel• to 'Rand alone ...

Saturday, January 27, 1906.] THE TABLET

... was not part of the Monroe doctrine. The United States could not permit foreign Powers to occupy ports or harbours in the Caribbean Sea, which guarded the approach to the Panama Canal. _ . At a meeting of the Liverpool City Justices, THE LICENSING a licensing ...

Published: Saturday 27 January 1906
Newspaper: Tablet
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 798 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

THE TABLET'

... it is intended that the canal shall be formed by dredging and excavation to a depth of 4oft. below the mean level of the Caribbean Sea for a continuous length of 45 miles, thus reaching the Ancon-Sosa saddle on the margin of Panama Bay, where, on an ideal ...

Published: Saturday 12 October 1907
Newspaper: Tablet
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 764 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

TWICE-TOLD TALES

... of Carthage must stir the classical heart as few other ROCUre, and there is a younger Carthage on the still shores of the Caribbean which, although it saw such stirring times in the days of the buccaneers, such maddening invitee in the reign of the Inquisition ...