The Nautical Magazine: A Journal of Papers on Subjects Connected with Maritime Affairs, Volum 48Brown, Son and Ferguson, 1879 |
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Side 6
... SEAMEN COMMITTED TO PRISON . CORRESPONDENT has written to us in a hot state of indignation to call attention to the large number of seamen ( as he says ) cruelly and wickedly committed . to prison every year . He writes as if he thought ...
... SEAMEN COMMITTED TO PRISON . CORRESPONDENT has written to us in a hot state of indignation to call attention to the large number of seamen ( as he says ) cruelly and wickedly committed . to prison every year . He writes as if he thought ...
Side 7
... seamen committed to gaol in Great Britain and Ireland for refusing to go to sea , or for desertion , in the years 1875-6-7 . " The form of the return moved for , and the information given , could not have been devised in a more suitable ...
... seamen committed to gaol in Great Britain and Ireland for refusing to go to sea , or for desertion , in the years 1875-6-7 . " The form of the return moved for , and the information given , could not have been devised in a more suitable ...
Side 8
... seamen in the Mercantile Marine is almost infinitesimal . If it could but be found how many of the men included in the return have appeared in it more than once , then the return would be useful as showing more completely how very ...
... seamen in the Mercantile Marine is almost infinitesimal . If it could but be found how many of the men included in the return have appeared in it more than once , then the return would be useful as showing more completely how very ...
Side 9
... seamen are still sent to prison because they refuse to proceed to sea in unseaworthy ships , " we are altogether surprised to find that the returns show how little the seaman himself believes in unseaworthiness . It is the more ...
... seamen are still sent to prison because they refuse to proceed to sea in unseaworthy ships , " we are altogether surprised to find that the returns show how little the seaman himself believes in unseaworthiness . It is the more ...
Side 10
... seamen and only one in about every 23,000 British seamen , including their repeated voyages , who leave a port in the United Kingdom during one year . There is one fertile cause of desertion which is not properly represented in our ...
... seamen and only one in about every 23,000 British seamen , including their repeated voyages , who leave a port in the United Kingdom during one year . There is one fertile cause of desertion which is not properly represented in our ...
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Populære avsnitt
Side 881 - ... abaft the beam on the starboard side, and of such a character as to be visible at a distance of at least two miles.
Side 672 - When both are running free, with the wind on the same side, the vessel which is to windward shall keep out of the way of the vessel which is to leeward.
Side 885 - ... which must, if both keep on their respective courses, pass clear of each other. The only cases to which it does apply are, when each of the two vessels is end on, or nearly end on, to the other; in other words, to cases in which, by day, each vessel sees the masts of the other in a line, or...
Side 881 - The vessels referred to in this article, when not making way through the water, shall not carry the side lights, but when making way shall carry them.
Side 672 - When two sailing vessels are approaching one another, so as to involve risk of collision, one of them shall keep out of the way of the other...
Side 890 - ... use : and shall, on the approach of or to other vessels, be exhibited on their respective sides in sufficient time to prevent collision, in such manner as to make them most visible, and so that the green light shall not be seen on the port side nor the red light on the starboard side, nor, if practicable, more than two points abaft the beam on their respective sides.
Side 672 - A vessel which is close-hauled on the port tack shall keep out of the way of a vessel which is close-hauled on the starboard tack. (c) When both are running free, with the wind on different sides, the vessel which has the wind on the port side shall keep out of the way of the other.
Side 614 - 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.
Side 668 - On the starboard side, a green light, so constructed as to show an uniform and unbroken light over an arc of the horizon of 10 points of the compass, so fixed as to throw the light from right ahead to two points abaft the beam...
Side 416 - Pilot vessels, when engaged on their station on pilotage duty, shall not show the lights required for other vessels, but shall carry a white light at the masthead, visible all round the horizon, and shall also exhibit a flare-up light or flare-up lights at short intervals, which shall never exceed fifteen minutes.