Panama: The Canal, the Country, and the PeopleMacMillan, 1911 - Počet stran: 585 |
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Strana 27
... Spaniards , negroes from the States , from Africa , from Jamaica , from the French Islands , to settle down to those from Barbados . They have proved the most efficient . This recruiting officer was about to send over a consignment of ...
... Spaniards , negroes from the States , from Africa , from Jamaica , from the French Islands , to settle down to those from Barbados . They have proved the most efficient . This recruiting officer was about to send over a consignment of ...
Strana 49
... Spaniards , the crowd was just the same as that which comes down to meet the commuters on an evening train after the work - day is over . One group caught my atten- tion . A young mother of thirty , in the crispest , whitest lawn , was ...
... Spaniards , the crowd was just the same as that which comes down to meet the commuters on an evening train after the work - day is over . One group caught my atten- tion . A young mother of thirty , in the crispest , whitest lawn , was ...
Strana 58
... Spaniards knew anything particu- larly worth while about architecture except what they learned from the Moors . Their architects in the American colonies seem to have forgotten most of that . There are no beautiful dwellings nor public ...
... Spaniards knew anything particu- larly worth while about architecture except what they learned from the Moors . Their architects in the American colonies seem to have forgotten most of that . There are no beautiful dwellings nor public ...
Strana 69
... for generations and even if the railroad project falls through real estate is a good invest- ment . In the early colonial days the Spaniards worked some very rich gold mines in the mountains of Chiriqui , THE GEOGRAPHY OF THE ISTHMUS 69.
... for generations and even if the railroad project falls through real estate is a good invest- ment . In the early colonial days the Spaniards worked some very rich gold mines in the mountains of Chiriqui , THE GEOGRAPHY OF THE ISTHMUS 69.
Strana 85
... Spaniards . The San Blas men frequently come up to Colon and Pan- ama with cayukas laden with cocoanuts and scrap rubber which they trade for powder and salt and needles and cloth . They allow traders along their coast , but never ...
... Spaniards . The San Blas men frequently come up to Colon and Pan- ama with cayukas laden with cocoanuts and scrap rubber which they trade for powder and salt and needles and cloth . They allow traders along their coast , but never ...
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Běžně se vyskytující výrazy a sousloví
American army arrived Balboa began boat Bogota Bolivár brigantine Cacique called Canal Zone captain Casas Castilla del Oro Chagres chief engineer club coast Colombia Colonel Goethals colony Columbus Commission Congress crowd Culebra Darien Enciso English expedition feet fever force French company Gatun Gatun Dam Gatun Lake give gold Gorgas Gorgona governor Granada harbor hundred immense Indians Indies island Isthmus jungle king labor land letter lock lock canal look ment miles morning mosquitoes natives negroes never Nicaragua Nicuesa night Nombre de Dios Ojeda once Panama City Panama railroad Pedrarias Pedro Peru Pizarro Porto Bello President Republic revolution route sailed sanitary Santa Maria Santo Domingo seems sent ship slaves Spain Spaniards Spanish steam-shovels Stevens things thousand tion took town treaty tropical United Vasco Nuñez Wallace yellow fever
Oblíbené pasáže
Strana 347 - The Republic of Panama further grants to the United States in perpetuity the use, occupation and control of any other lands and waters outside of the Zone above described which may be necessary and convenient for the construction, maintenance, operation, sanitation and protection of said Canal.
Strana 347 - the rights, power and authority . . . which the United States would possess and exercise if it were the sovereign of the territory ... to the entire exclusion of the exercise by the Republic of Panama of any such sovereign rights, power or authority.
Strana 331 - been in a constant state of flux. The following is a partial list of the disturbances on the Isthmus of Panama during the period in question as reported to us by our consuls. It is not possible to give a complete list, and some of the reports that speak of 'revolutions' must mean unsuccessful revolutions: "May 22,
Strana 343 - the United States also guarantee, in the same manner, the rights of sovereignty and property which New Granada has and possesses over the said territory.
Strana 315 - is so gigantic that I have grave doubts of its completion. . . . And, thirdly and lastly, I should wish to see England in possession of a canal through the Isthmus of Suez. Would I could live to see these three great works! It would well be worth the trouble to last some fifty years more for
Strana 218 - Captain Drake, if you fortune to come to this Port, make hast away: For the Spanyards, which you had with you here the last year, have bewrayed this place, and taken away all that you left here. I departed from hence this present 7. of
Strana 343 - Maintain free and uninterrupted transit. If interruption is threatened by armed force, occupy line of railroad. Prevent landing of any armed force with hostile intent, either government or insurgent, either at Colon, Porto Bello, or other points.
Strana 170 - to which they were certainly not entitled by their poetical merits, may be thus rendered into corresponding doggerel: Look out, sefior Governor, For the drover while he's near ; Since he goes home to get the sheep For the butcher, who stays here.
Strana 170 - The letter, which was signed by several of the disaffected soldiery besides the writer, painted in gloomy colors the miseries of their condition, accused the two commanders of being the authors of this, and called on the authorities of Panama to interfere by sending a vessel to take them from the desolate spot.
Strana 185 - His career affords perhaps a solitary instance of a man, who, being neither a conqueror, a discoverer nor an inventor, has, by the pure force of benevolence, become so notable a figure, that large portions of history cannot be written, or at least cannot be understood, without the narrative of his deeds.