PoLITICAL BENEFIT

... be counteracted, not only for the British, but also for the other island 9, by a new centre of attraction in a vigorous Caribbean Confederation under the British flag, inspired with the sense of a future full of possibilities. Further, federation would ...

Published: Friday 30 July 1909
Newspaper: Barbados Agricultural Reporter
County: Barbados, Barbados
Type: Article | Words: 212 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

trade, but he Mee heli;ed t

... trade, but he Mee heli;ed t in Jamaica and the u . titer B: the Caribbean Si,e traffic to those negiona, tressed and indoiNd, tt when much of hie' work ui brought to naught by i:a,• Kingston a few ye.o. .t.. trade also attrai•t,rl „r Arr. 'ion, to the ...

Published: Friday 17 December 1909
Newspaper: Heywood Advertiser
County: Lancashire, England
Type: | Words: 91 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

NAVY YARDS AND STATIONS

... With the opening of the Panama Canal, the Caribbean Sea will become the scene of great commercial activity, and our responsibility as to the police and maintenance of the Canal and our interest in the whole Caribbean region urgently call for an adequate naval ...

Published: Thursday 09 December 1909
Newspaper: Newcastle Daily Chronicle
County: Northumberland, England
Type: | Words: 666 | Page: 12 | Tags: none

A TIGER LOOSE AT SEA

... 12, says:—lncoming vessels from the South all report a great storm in the Gulf of Mexico and the severest weather in the Caribbean Sea, but the most extraordinary experience is reported by the passenger and cargo steamer Altai. which arrived here to-day ...

THE FLYING GERHARD

... the water, and is often blown on board vessels. In some eases men have thus been knocked down by them. The natives of the Caribbean Sea esteem the flying gurnard highly as a food fish. When a shoal is surrounded by a big net they dash out of the water in ...

Published: Friday 20 August 1909
Newspaper: Weekly Journal (Hartlepool)
County: Durham, England
Type: Article | Words: 243 | Page: 17 | Tags: none

MATCH RACE

... of a Trip to Jamaica. I (From New York Globe, October 4). The traveller who has not sailed through the blue waters of the Caribbean Sea, and enjoyed at least a superficial acquaintance with the semi-barbaric inhabitants of the quaint and picturesque little ...

Published: Saturday 06 November 1909
Newspaper: Barbados Agricultural Reporter
County: Barbados, Barbados
Type: Article | Words: 1158 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

THE FLYING GURNARD

... water, and is often blown on board veewele. In borne eases men have thus' been knocked down by them. The natives of !the Caribbean Sea esteem the dying gurnard highly es • food fish. When a shoal is aur-1 I rounded by a big net they dash out of the I water ...

Published: Friday 20 August 1909
Newspaper: Eastern Counties' Times
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 258 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

THE FLYING GURNARD

... of the water, and is often blown on board vessels. In some cases men have thus been knocked down them. The natives of the Caribbean Sea esteem the flying gurnard highly as food fish. When a shoal is surrounded by a big net they dash out of the water in ...

Published: Wednesday 18 August 1909
Newspaper: Falkirk Herald
County: Stirlingshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 244 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

THE FLYING GURNARD

... the water, and is often blown on board vessels. In some cases men have thus been knocked down by them. The natives of the Caribbean Bea esteem the flying gurnard highly as a food fish. When a shoal is surrounded by a big net they dash out of the water in ...

Published: Friday 20 August 1909
Newspaper: Musselburgh News
County: East Lothian, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 250 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

THE FLYING GIJRNARD

... the water, and ie often blown on board vessels. In some cases men have thus been knocked down by them. The natives of the Caribbean Sea esteem the flying gurnard highly as a food fish. When a shoal is sur• rounded by a big net they dash out of the water ...

Published: Friday 20 August 1909
Newspaper: Mid-Lothian Journal
County: Midlothian, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 253 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

THE FLTfINQ GURNARD

... the water, and is often blown on board veaeela. In eome cases men have thus been knocked down by them. The natives of the Caribbean Sea esteem the flying gurnard highly food fish. When shoal is surrounded big net they dash out of the water In hundreds. ...

Published: Thursday 09 December 1909
Newspaper: Islington Gazette
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 237 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

THE FLYI*G GURNARD

... the water, and is often blown on board vessels. In some cases men have thus been knocked down by them. The natives of the Caribbean Sea esteem the flying gurnard highly as a food fish. When a shoal is surrounded by a big net they dash out of the water in ...