Manning the Royal Navy & Mercantile Marine, Also Belligerent and Neutral Rights in the Event of War: A Review of the Past and Present Methods of Manning ...Pewtress, 1877 - 133 páginas |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Manning the Royal Navy & Mercantile Marine; Also Belligerent and Neutral ... W. S. Lindsay Sin vista previa disponible - 2017 |
Manning the Royal Navy & Mercantile Marine, Also Belligerent and Neutral ... William Schaw Lindsay Sin vista previa disponible - 2019 |
Términos y frases comunes
31st December able seamen Admiralty adopted afloat annual annum apprenticeship become belligerents blockade boat British Captain Captain Marryat Commissioners consider convicted cost Declaration of 1856 Declaration of Paris defence desertion destitute boys Ditto doubt drill engage enrolled enter expense fact Feltham fleet force Friedrichsort Government Greenwich Hospital guns impressment increased indentures inducements Industrial School interests ironclads Lord maintain Marine Society master means ment Mercantile Marine Merchant Service merchant ships merchantmen mine-a months nations necessary neutral number of apprentices number of boys number of seamen obtain officers opinion ordinary seamen Parliament peace pension ports present press-gang proposed purpose question received reformatory remarks render Royal Commission Royal Naval Reserve Royal Navy sailors scheme school-ships seafaring pursuits serve shipowners shore steam steamers supply Swinemunde tion tonnage tons torpedo trade training-ships United United Kingdom Unseaworthy Ships vessels voyage Wilhelmshafen youths
Pasajes populares
Página 59 - That is found wandering and not having any Home or settled Place of Abode, or proper Guardianship, or visible Means of Subsistence...
Página 103 - Neutral goods, with the exception of contraband of war, are not liable to capture under enemy's flag ; 4. Blockades, in order to be binding, must be effective, that is to say, maintained by a force sufficient really to prevent access to the coast of the enemy.
Página 58 - Schools, it is enacted, that any person may bring before two justices or a magistrate ' any child apparently under the age of fourteen years that comes within any of the following descriptions...
Página 58 - Any person may bring before two justices or a magistrate any child apparently under the age of fourteen years that comes within any of the following descriptions, namely : " That is found begging, or receiving alms (whether actually or under the pretext of selling or offering for sale anything), or being in any street or public place for the purpose of so begging or receiving alms...
Página 66 - Boy previous to being entered must satisfy the Examining Officers— I. That he is of robust frame, intelligent, of perfectly sound and healthy constitution, free from any physical defects or malformation, and not sublect to fits. II. That he is able to read and write.
Página 59 - Where a child apparently under the age of twelve years is charged before two Justices or a Magistrate with an offence punishable by imprisonment or a less punishment, but has not been in England convicted of felony, or in Scotland of theft, and the child ought, in the opinion of the Justices or Magistrate (regard being had to his age and to the circumstances of the case), to be dealt with under this Act, the Justices or Magistrate may order him to be sent to a Certified Industrial School.
Página 59 - ... is refractory, or is the child of parents either of whom has been convicted of a crime or offence punishable with penal servitude or imprisonment, and that it is desirable that...
Página 113 - Should the leading powers of Europe concur in proposing, as a rule of international law, to exempt private property, upon the ocean, from seizure by public armed cruisers, as well as by privateers, the United States will readily meet them upon that broad ground.
Página 113 - The proposal to surrender the right to employ privateers is professedly founded upon the principle that private property of unoffending noncombatants, though enemies, should be exempt from the ravages of war; but the proposed surrender goes but little way in carrying out that principle, which equally requires that such private property should not be seized or molested by national ships of war. Should the leading powers of Europe concur in proposing as a rule of international law to exempt private...