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Voice of St. Lucia

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Voice of St. Lucia

Tin OUTLOOK IN THE CARIBBEAN

... Tin OUTLOOK IN CARIBBEAN. The anactancement that a draft of the Hampshire Regiment is shortly to sail for Bermuda, following upon the statement that a British garrison is still to remain in Egypt, and Mr. lyttleton's indefinite remarks at the Colston ...

Published: Thursday 08 February 1906
Newspaper: Voice of St. Lucia
County: Saint Lucia, Saint Lucia
Type: Article | Words: 501 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

THE EARTHQUAKE

... last few years, but that they are of a deeper character whose relations are to be sought in the genelat conditions of the Caribbean basin. The synchronism of the seismic phenomena throughout this broad region, extenaing from the South. West of Mexico where ...

Published: Thursday 12 April 1906
Newspaper: Voice of St. Lucia
County: Saint Lucia, Saint Lucia
Type: Article | Words: 157 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

the le is soinethint; almost fate Cal in the idea of leaving one second class cruiser to patrol the whole

... pain Mahan in his Interest of America in Sea Power, says • that the Caribbean Archipelago is the very domain of sea power. . . . In the Ouster of island fortresses of the Caribbean is one of the greatest of the new ' ,serve centres of the whole body ...

Published: Thursday 07 June 1906
Newspaper: Voice of St. Lucia
County: Saint Lucia, Saint Lucia
Type: Article | Words: 743 | Page: 5 | Tags: none

The Defence Force. The Out-Come of a Scare raised in English Service Journals by So-called Military Experts

... protest in the islinds. We in British Guiana may not Fe so well-informed as to the sentiments of our neighbours in the Caribbean, bat, the echoes of the storm never reached this colocy. A contributor to the Military Mail makes the profoundly interesting ...

Published: Thursday 12 April 1906
Newspaper: Voice of St. Lucia
County: Saint Lucia, Saint Lucia
Type: Article | Words: 178 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

OUR POLICY IN THE WEST IN DIE A paper read before the Royal Colonial Institute oh March .13, 1906, BY

... (Continued) If there was a personality at the War Office as able and powerful as there is at the Admiralty our poliey in the Caribbean would have been conceived on different lines no But even then it would riot meet the case because our commercial strategy ...

Published: Thursday 07 June 1906
Newspaper: Voice of St. Lucia
County: Saint Lucia, Saint Lucia
Type: Article | Words: 880 | Page: 5 | Tags: none

CULLED FROM THE DEMERARA PAPERS

... England have been accused of a too benevolent interest in the affairs of their struggling neighbours in the island, of the Caribbean, and even of Demerara, It is only fair to add that BArbados on every occasion, has indignantly denied the imputation of ...

Published: Thursday 17 May 1906
Newspaper: Voice of St. Lucia
County: Saint Lucia, Saint Lucia
Type: Illustrated | Words: 240 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

BY MISS C. DE TIIIERBY

... commands the entrance to the Gulf of Mexico, and, when the Mole St. Nicholas is acquired, the Windward Passage entrance to the Caribbean opposite the projected anal. That is to say, the shortest routes from Great Britain and the Dominion to Panama, Bonduras ...

Published: Thursday 31 May 1906
Newspaper: Voice of St. Lucia
County: Saint Lucia, Saint Lucia
Type: Article | Words: 2273 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

it is independent. But, experience is teaching us that when a strong Protective State estaidishes 3 ..

... special privileges. Are we going to allow to become even as Puerto Rico ? It looks like it, as every step taken by us in the Caribbean , seems to be retrograde. But, as a rule, our attitude is a perfectly passive one. If we imagine that the expansiout of the ...

Published: Thursday 07 June 1906
Newspaper: Voice of St. Lucia
County: Saint Lucia, Saint Lucia
Type: Article | Words: 743 | Page: 5 | Tags: none

THE UNrIED STATES AND THE CAItIBHEAN

... only purchasers, and the attempt of any other power to take these islands or other American territory, especially in the Caribbean Sea, or along the route of the Panama Canal, would be regaided by the American people as practically an act of war. Tee ...

Published: Thursday 19 April 1906
Newspaper: Voice of St. Lucia
County: Saint Lucia, Saint Lucia
Type: Illustrated | Words: 889 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

THE ST. LUCIA DEFENCE FORCE

... defences of the island which Captain Mahan has described as in some respects the most important single strategic point in the Caribbean. (Demerara Daily Cltrouicle.) ...

Published: Thursday 20 December 1906
Newspaper: Voice of St. Lucia
County: Saint Lucia, Saint Lucia
Type: Article | Words: 382 | Page: 5 | Tags: none

MINVIELLE & CHASTANET

... have declared that it is not connected with the recent earthquakes, and attributes them to the slowly settling bed of the Caribbean Sea, and wisely refuses to prophesy whether the other volcano islands will slilhr. Of course, we have not the pretension ...

Published: Thursday 15 March 1906
Newspaper: Voice of St. Lucia
County: Saint Lucia, Saint Lucia
Type: Article | Words: 1426 | Page: 9 | Tags: none

Pope Princess Ena has telegraphed to _ offering herself a most devoted and loyal daughter. The Buiihop of ..

... Pelim declares that it is not associated with the recent earthquakes, and attributes them to the slowly settling bed of the Caribbean Sea ; he refuses to prophesy whether the other volcano islands will suffer. Londue, March 9th—Sugar in stock on the third ...

Published: Thursday 15 March 1906
Newspaper: Voice of St. Lucia
County: Saint Lucia, Saint Lucia
Type: Article | Words: 351 | Page: 2 | Tags: none