Hints on the Legal Duties of ShipmastersC. Griffin, 1903 - 230 Seiten |
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Seite xvii
... allowed to become a dead letter in so far that it was agreed that prosecutions should not be instituted by the Board of Agriculture's officials against those who had brought cattle from Argentina and fulfilled the requirements of the ...
... allowed to become a dead letter in so far that it was agreed that prosecutions should not be instituted by the Board of Agriculture's officials against those who had brought cattle from Argentina and fulfilled the requirements of the ...
Seite 15
... allowed the shipmaster . He must be reasonably competent . He must not be slothful nor habitually drunken , nor careless of his employer's interests , and , whatever he does , he must do with absolutely bona fides , and with the ...
... allowed the shipmaster . He must be reasonably competent . He must not be slothful nor habitually drunken , nor careless of his employer's interests , and , whatever he does , he must do with absolutely bona fides , and with the ...
Seite 22
... allowed to put to sea . So , too , when he arrives at his final port of destina- tion in the United Kingdom at the end of the voyage , the master must , within forty - eight hours , deliver to the superin- tendent the ship's agreement ...
... allowed to put to sea . So , too , when he arrives at his final port of destina- tion in the United Kingdom at the end of the voyage , the master must , within forty - eight hours , deliver to the superin- tendent the ship's agreement ...
Seite 30
... allowed to be broken , save when the master relieves the second officer . The chief officer should be taken into the master's confidence as to the position of the ship and in regard to the day's work . The less the master interferes ...
... allowed to be broken , save when the master relieves the second officer . The chief officer should be taken into the master's confidence as to the position of the ship and in regard to the day's work . The less the master interferes ...
Seite 31
... allowed to pass unnoticed . Whether captain , officer , or man , he undertakes to assist in his proper place in the stowage and delivery of the cargo , in the mooring and unmooring of the ship , and in doing what lies in his power for ...
... allowed to pass unnoticed . Whether captain , officer , or man , he undertakes to assist in his proper place in the stowage and delivery of the cargo , in the mooring and unmooring of the ship , and in doing what lies in his power for ...
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
agreement bags barratry bill of lading Board of Trade boat of Section British ship BRYAN DONKIN bulk grain bulkhead cargo carrying passengers certificate charge CHARLES GRIFFIN charterer clearance compartments consignee contract course Court crew cubic customs officer damage discharge dunnage EDITION emigrant-ship emigration officer engaged Engineer examination EXETER STREET feeders feet fitted Foreign Animals Wharf foreign-going forfeiture freight given grain-tight hatch home-trade inches keelson landed liable lien loaded lower hold Marine maritime lien master Master Mariner master's duty Mate ment Merchant Shipping Act navigation offence officer of customs owner payable penalty persons on board pilot pilotage placed under davits port PRACTICAL proper properly Receiver of Wrecks regard regulations respect rules sailing seaman shifting boards ship's shipmaster shipowner statute adult steam steamer steamships steerage passengers stowage stowed sufficient superintendent surveyor tion United Kingdom upper deck vessel voyage wages WILLIAM ALLINGHAM
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Seite 137 - ART. 31. When a vessel is in distress and requires assistance from other vessels or from the shore, the following shall be the signals to be used or displayed by her, either together or separately, viz. : — In the daytime — 1. A gun or other explosive signal fired at intervals of about a minute. 2. The International Code signal of distress indicated by NC 3. The distant signal, consisting of a square flag, having either above or below it a ball or anything resembling a ball. 4. A continuous sounding...
Seite ii - SPLENDID BOOK . . . contains paragraphs on every point of Interest to the Merchant Marine. The 243 pages of this book are THE MOST VALUABLE to the sea captain that have EVER been COMPILED."— Merchant Service Review.
Seite 29 - ENGINE-ROOM PRACTICE : A Handbook for Engineers and Officers in the Royal Navy and Mercantile Marine, including the Management of the Main and Auxiliary Engines on Board Ship. BY JOHN G. LIVERSIDGE...
Seite 36 - Part I. Papers relating to Temperature, Elasticity, and Expansion of Vapours, Liquids, and Solids. Part II. Papers on Energy and its Transformations. Part III. Papers on Wave-Forms, Propulsion of Vessels, &c.
Seite 28 - English and Foreign Boilers with their Heat Efficiencies shown in Fifty Tables — Fire Grates of Various Types — Mechanical Stokers — Combustion of Fuel in Boilers — Transmission of Heat through Boiler Plates, and their Temperature — Feed Water Heaters, Superheaters, Feed Pumps, &c. — Smoke and its Prevention — Instruments used in Testing Boilers — Marine and Locomotive Boilers — Fuel Testing Stations — Discussion of the Trials and Conclusions — On the Choice of a Boiler, and...
Seite 156 - ... beyond such distance without previously paying the additional fare for the additional distance, and with intent to avoid payment thereof...
Seite 20 - Any regulations as to conduct on board, and as to fines, short allowance of provisions, or other lawful punishments for misconduct, which have been sanctioned by the Board of Trade...
Seite 42 - ... Levers — The Wheel and Axle : Windlass ; Ship's Capstan ; Crab Winch— Tackles : the "Old Man"— The Inclined Plane; the Screw— The Centre of Gravity of a Ship and Cargo — Relative .Strength of Rope : Steel Wire, Manilla, Hemp, Coir — Derricks and Shears — Calculation of the Cross-breaking Strain of Fir Spar — Centre of Effort of Sails — Hydrostatics: the Diving-bell ; Stability of Floating Bodies ; the Ship's Pump, &c. " THIS EXCELLENT BOOK . . . contains a LARGE AMOUNT of information....
Seite 30 - North- Western Railway, India. Contents. — Discussion of the Term "Light Railways." — English Railways, Rates, and Farmers. — Light Railways in Belgium, France, Italy, other European Countries, America and the Colonies, India, Ireland. — Road Transport as an alternative. — The Light Railways Act, 1896. — The Question of Gauge. — Construction and Working. — Locomotives and Rolling-Stock. — Light Railways in England, Scotland, and Wales. — Appendices and Index.
Seite 40 - Henry VIII. — To Death of Mary — During Elizabeth's Reign — Up to the Reign of William III.— The 18th and 19th Centuries— Institution oJ Examinations — Rise and Progress of Steam Propulsion — Development of Free Trade— Shipping Legislation, 1862 to 1875— " Locksley Hall" Case— Shipmasters' Societies — Loading of Ships — Shipping Legislation, 1884 to 1894 — Statistics of Shipping.