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1927

(469) Page 415 - General port regulations for British Consulates in China

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(469) Page 415 - General port regulations for British Consulates in China
GENERAL PORT REGULATIONS FOR BRITISH CONSULATES IN CHINA 415
General
6. Where under this Ordinance a ship is authorised or ordered to be detained,
if the ship after such detention or after service on the master of any notice of or order
| for such detention proceeds to sea before it is released by competent authority, the
: master of the ship, and also the owner or agent and any person who sends the ship
to sea, if such owner or agent or person be party or privy to the offence, shall be
liable to a penalty not exceeding five hundred dollars.
7. Where a ship so proceeding to sea takes to sea when on board thereof in the
execution of his duty any officer authorised to detain the ship, or any Surveyor or
officer appointed by the Grovernor. the owner and master of the ship shall each be
liable to pay all expenses of and incidental to the officer or Surveyor being so taken
to sea, and also a penalty not exceeding five hundred dollars, or if the offence is not
prosecuted in a summary manner, not exceeding fifty dollars for every day until the
officer or Surveyor returns, or until such time as would enable him after leaving the
ship to return to the port from which he is taken, and such expenses may be recovered
in like manner as the penalty.
16. Whosoever, with intent to defraud, shall forge, or alter, or shall offer, utter,
dispose of, or put off, knowing the same to be forged or altered, any certificate, ticket,
document, matter, or thing named in this Ordinance, or any regulation made there¬
under, shall be guilty of felony, and being convicted thereof, shall be liable, at the
■ discretion of the Supreme Court, to be kept in penal servitude for any term not
•exceeding seven years, or to be imprisoned with or without hard labour;
GENERAL PORT REGULATIONS POR BRITISH
CONSULATES IN CHINA
The undersigned, Her Britannic Majesty’s Envoy Extraordinary and Minister
If Plenipotentiary and Chief Superintendent of British Trade in China, acting under the
authority conferred upon him by the 85th Section of the China and Japan Order in
i Council, 1865, hereby declares the following Regulations, made, in pursuance of the
I above Order in Council, to -secure the observance of Treaties and the maintenance
[ of friendly relations between British subjects and Chinese subjects and authorities
to be applicable to all ports which are, or may hereafter become, open to British
j trade:—
I. —The British Consulate offices at the several open ports shall be opened for
i public business from 10 o’clock a.m. to 4 o’clock p.m. daily, excepting Sundays,
| Christmas Day, Good Friday, King’s Birthday, Easter Monday, those holidays
[ upon which public offices in England are closed, and Chinese New Year’s day, and
| such Chinese holidays as the Chinese Customs authorities may observe.
II. —On the arrival of any British vessel at the anchorage of any of the open
(' ports, the master shall, within 24 hours, deposit his ship’s papers, together with a
^ summary of the manifest of her cargo, at the Consulate office, unless a Sunday or
holiday shall intervene.
III. —Every British vessel must show her national colours on entering the port or
;! anchorage, and keep them hoisted until she shall have been reported at the Consulate
and her papers deposited there.
IY.—No British vessel or any vessel the property of a British subject, unless,
provided with a certificate of registry, or provisional or other pass from the Super-
intendent of Trade at Peking, or from the Colonial Government at Hongkong, shall
hoist the British ensign within any port or anchorage, or any flag similar to the

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