The Nicaragua CanalHarper & brothers, 1900 - 334 pages |
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Page 17
... alligator pear . The cultivation of cacao is a profitable indus- try . The government gives a bounty of ten cents for every tree planted , and it is said that every pound of the beans raised can be sold in the home market for ...
... alligator pear . The cultivation of cacao is a profitable indus- try . The government gives a bounty of ten cents for every tree planted , and it is said that every pound of the beans raised can be sold in the home market for ...
Page 20
... alligator pear . The cultivation of cacao is a profitable indus- try . The government gives a bounty of ten cents for every tree planted , and it is said that every pound of the beans raised can be sold in the home market for ...
... alligator pear . The cultivation of cacao is a profitable indus- try . The government gives a bounty of ten cents for every tree planted , and it is said that every pound of the beans raised can be sold in the home market for ...
Page 122
... their bodies , file across your path . Great black ants ( called locally the alligator ant ) , more than an inch in length , whose bite is more painful and serious than thẹ sting of the wasp , strut with pugnacious mein over 122.
... their bodies , file across your path . Great black ants ( called locally the alligator ant ) , more than an inch in length , whose bite is more painful and serious than thẹ sting of the wasp , strut with pugnacious mein over 122.
Page 123
... alligator ant . Men accustomed to the woods will never put their hands on a tree or branch without looking out for this fellow . He is ever ready to bite , and will continue to bite until shaken off . It is said that a single bite on ...
... alligator ant . Men accustomed to the woods will never put their hands on a tree or branch without looking out for this fellow . He is ever ready to bite , and will continue to bite until shaken off . It is said that a single bite on ...
Page 151
... Alligators are said to be very abundant in the river , but that was the first and only large one we saw . The snout is more pointed and otherwise differently shaped from that of the alligator found in the southern part of the United ...
... Alligators are said to be very abundant in the river , but that was the first and only large one we saw . The snout is more pointed and otherwise differently shaped from that of the alligator found in the southern part of the United ...
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Common terms and phrases
alligator American Atlantic Aztecs bank Belt bill birds breakwater buildings built cacao called Camp Canal Company canoe Castillo Central America cents Chanchos chief Chinandega Chontales color concession conquest construction Corinto Costa Rica covered dense distance dredges eastern engineering feet high flowers forest fruit Granada Greytown ground harbor of Greytown head hills Indian inhabitants island jaguar jicara Lake Managua Lake Nicaragua land Leon Masaya Matagalpa Medeira Menocal ment miles long Mombacho Momotombo monkey Mosquito coast mountain mouth Nahuatls natives NICARAGUA CANAL ocean Ometepec Pacific coast party peaks plaza President priests railroad rain Rivas rock route San Carlos San Juan River Segovia Senate shore side smoke Spaniards Spanish species Squier steamers stone stream surface Tezcatlipoca tion Tipitapa Tonacatecuhtli Toro Rapids town trachyte tramp tree twenty United vessels VIMU volcanic women yellow
Popular passages
Page 327 - An Act to provide for the construction of a canal connecting the waters of the Atlantic and Pacific oceans...
Page 326 - ... protection of a canal connecting the Caribbean Sea with the Pacific Ocean by what is commonly known as the Nicaragua route, shall through the said Isthmian Canal Commission cause to be excavated and constructed a ship canal and waterway from a point on the shore of the Caribbean Sea near Greytown. by way of Lake Nicaragua, to a point near Brito on the Pacific Ocean.
Page 107 - Not less so are the cecropia trees, with their white stems and large palmated leaves standing up like great candelabra. Sometimes the ground is carpeted with large flowers, yellow, pink, or white, that have fallen from some invisible tree-top above, or the air is filled with a delicious perfume, for the source of which one seeks around in vain, as the flowers that cause it are far overhead out of sight, lost in the great overshadowing crown of verdure.
Page 327 - That in any agreement with the Republic of Colombia, or with the States of Nicaragua and Costa Rica, the President is authorized to guarantee to said Republic or to said States the use of said canal and harbors, upon such terms as may be agreed upon, for all vessels owned by said States or by citizens thereof.
Page 229 - ... other families and races, from the Saracen to the Indian and the Negro, in every degree of intermixture. And as tastes differ, so may opinions as to whether the tinge of brown, through which the blood glows with a peach-like bloom, in the complexion of the girl who may trace her lineage to the caziques upon one side, and the haughty grandees of Andalusia and Seville on the other, superadded, as it usually is, to a greater lightness of figure and animation of face, — whether this is not a more...
Page 250 - I saw were killed through the large harlequin beetle (Acrocimis longimanus) laying its eggs in the cuts, and the grubs that are hatched boring great holes all through the trunk. When these grubs are at work you can hear their rasping by standing at the bottom of the tree, and the wood dust thrown out of their burrows accumulates in heaps on the ground below.
Page 166 - For large spaces the whole ground seems resting upon a boiling cauldron, and is encrusted with mineral deposits. There are also many places where the ground is depressed and bare, resembling a honey-combed, ferruginous clay-pit, from which sulphurous vapors are constantly rising, destroying vegetation in the vicinity, but especially to the leeward, where they are carried by the wind. By daylight nothing is to be seen at these places, except a kind of tremulous motion of the heated atmosphere near...
Page 249 - ... that hang from every tree ; this they do by tying short pieces of wood across them with small lianas, many of which are as tough as cord. They then proceed to score the bark, with cuts which extend nearly round the tree like the letter V, the point being downwards.
Page 166 - ... yards. Hot springs, and openings in the ground emitting hot air, smoke, and steam, called infernales, are common around the bases of these volcanoes. For large spaces the whole ground seems resting upon a boiling cauldron, and is encrusted with mineral deposits. There are also many places where the ground is depressed and bare, resembling a honey-combed, ferruginous...
Page 326 - ... for vessels of the largest tonnage and greatest draft now in use, and such as may be reasonably anticipated, and shall be supplied with all necessary locks and other appliances to meet the necessities of vessels passing through the same from ocean to ocean; and he shall also construct such safe and commodious harbors at the termini of said canal as shall be necessary for the safe and convenient use thereof...