THK SEA SNAKE
... 1 read the acco« ...
... 1 read the acco« ...
... on Thursday the Antmliaa mail, was Captain ■«, the eammander Confederate mau-»f-war Sumter, whose daring achievements the Caribbean Sea have attracted much attention. After luring and destroying almost merchant shipping among West India Islands ana in the ...
... large steamer loaiing bottom up»a:de, but bo mark letter could seen eo ae to It ed to her identity- On the Bth ol April, the Caribbean, from the Clyde to Rt. Jobo’d, Newfoundland, Was lost to the ice off Cape Bollard crew. padKOgere, end pert of Cargo were ...
... England and France, inim pieoeijing the first French revolution, idtilish frigate captured French v, s-il of war in the Caribbean Sea, to >k lie.- mto Port Royal, dam.iica. The prize was lei way from the East Indies, whither she had be n sent ny the French ...
... It only mvds a telegraphic wire, and timely newt of the flying cyclone may be flaslied from island to island along the Caribbean Sea. the case a narrow cyclone there might be some difficulty at the time in determining the points of danger yet the warning ...
... about the one thing needfnl. left this land, and wandered over the shores of Mexico, the West Indies, Texas, through the Caribbean Seas, &c., and having been absent for some time, ho at length returned home. During tho voyage, tho ship was nearly being ...
... seamen by yellow fever in the West Indies, hut her departure on the lOlh March, the squadron was healthy. In several of the Caribbean Islands, the planters proposed emancipate the slaves on the Ist August next. The traffic in slaves appeared to flourish mure ...
... Atlantic to Jersey. One had Wen found after years, another after 14, and third after ten years. One was thrown into the Caribbean S«o,a bottle was thrown in Behring’s Straits, and 200 days afterwards was found on the Houduras coast, having travelled 3500 ...
... Dr. Mills and the Rev. C. Worthy. Four years ago went sea, and wandered over toe shores «f Mexico, Texas, and through the Caribbean Seas. lie set out again to sea about three years ago, but the ship was obliged to put back in half-wricked condition ; and ...
... spectators, leads to believe, that, had Monsieur Cbabert himself keen sufficiently baked, they would here proceeded to a Caribbean banquet. Many experiments, to the extent to which the human frame could hear beat, without the destruction of the vital power ...