| United States. President - Presidents - 1897 - 584 pages
...port, harbor, roadstead, or waters of the United States, such vessel shall be required to depart and to put to sea within twenty-four hours after her entrance into such port, harbor, roadstead, or waters, except in case of stress of weather or of her requiring provisions or... | |
| United States. President, James Daniel Richardson - United States - 1897 - 672 pages
...port, harbor, roadstead, or waters of the United States, such vessel shall be required to depart and to put to sea within twenty-four hours after her entrance into such port, harbor, roadstead, or waters, except in case of stress of weather or of her requiring provisions or... | |
| John Randolph Spears - Spanish-American War, 1898 - 1898 - 560 pages
...either belligerent which should enter British waters to depart within twentyfour hours afterwards, except in case of stress of weather, or of her requiring...subsistence of her crew, or repairs. In either of these cases she was to put to sea as soon after the expiration of the twenty-four hours as possible,... | |
| United States. Department of State - Neutrality - 1899 - 110 pages
...Majesty's colonies or foreign possessions or dependencies, such vessel shall be required to depart and to put to sea within twenty-four hours after her entrance...of which cases the authorities of the port, or of the nearest port (as the case may be), shall require her to put to sea as soon as possible after the... | |
| Great Britain. Foreign Office - Commercial treaties - 1901 - 1366 pages
...the British Crown, such ship shall depart and put to sea within 24 hours after her entrance into any such port, roadstead, or •waters, except in case...of which cases the authorities of the port, or of the nearest port (as the case may be), shall require her to put to sea as soon as possible after the... | |
| John Morris Ellicott - United States - 1901 - 330 pages
...Majesty's colonies, or foreign possessions, or dependencies, such vessel shall be required to depart and to put to sea within twentyfour hours after her entrance...necessary for the subsistence of her crew, or repairs.' " This acknowledges and endorses the right of a ship-of-war belonging to the United States to enter... | |
| George Grafton Wilson, George Fox Tucker - International law - 1901 - 534 pages
...vessel shall be required ... to put to sea within twenty-four hours after her entrance into such . . . waters, except in case of stress of weather or of...things necessary for the subsistence of her crew, or for repairs; in either of which cases the authorities . . . shall require her to put to sea as soon... | |
| International law - 1905 - 156 pages
...her entrance into such port, except in case of stress of weather, or of her requiring provisionsor things necessary for the subsistence of her crew,...either of which cases the authorities of the port were ordered "to require her to put to sea as soon as possible after the expiration of such period... | |
| Ferdinand Perels - Maritime law - 1903 - 392 pages
...Crown, eitcA ship shall depart and put to sea icithin twenty-four hours after her entrance into any mich port, roadstead, or waters, except in case of stress...of which cases the authorities of the port, or of the nearest port (as the case may be), shall require her to put to sea as soon as possible after the... | |
| Ferdinand Perels - Maritime law - 1903 - 388 pages
...her entrance into any such port, roadstead, or waters, except in case of stress ofweather, or ofher requiring provisions or things necessary for the subsistence of her crew, or repairs in either of ivhich cases the authorities of the port, or of the nearest port (as the case may be), shall require... | |
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