GENERAL REGULATIONS UNDER WHICH BRITISH TRADE IS TO BE CONDUCTED IN SIAM.
Art. I.---The master of any English ship coing to Bangkok to trade must, ither before or after entering the river, as may be found convenient, report the arrival of his vessel at the Custom-hous at Pakam, together with the number of his crew and guns, and the port from when e he comes. Upon anchoring his vessel at Paknam, he will deliver into the custody of the Custom-house officers all his guns and ammunition; and a Custom-house officer will then be appointed to the vessel, and will proceed in her to Bangkok.
Art. II.--A vessel passing Paknam without discharging her guns and ammuni- tion as directed in the foregoi gr gulation, will be se tack to Paknam t comply with its provisions, and will be fined eight hundred ticals for having so disobeyed. After delivery of her guns and ammunition she will be permitted to return to Bangkok to trade.
Art. III.-When a British vessel shall have cust anchor at Bangkok the master, unless a Sunday should intervene, will within four and twenty hours after arrival proceed to the British Consulate, and deposit ther his ship's papers, bills of lading, &c., together with a true manifest of his import cargo; and u on the Consul's reporting these particulars to the Custom-house, permission to break bulk will at once be given by the latter.
For neglecting so to report his arrival or for presenting a false manifest, the master will subject himself, in each instance, to a penalty f four hu dred ticals; but he will be allowed to correct, within twenty-four hours after elivery of it to the Consul, any mistake he may discover in his manifest, without incurring the above- mentioned penalty.
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Art. IV-A British vessel breaking bulk, and commencing to discharge, before due permission shall be obtained, or smuggling, either when in the river or outside the bar, shall be subject to the penalty of eight hundred ticals and confiscation of the goods so smuggled or discharged.
Art. V.-As soon as a British vessel shall have discharged her cargo, and completed her outward lading, paid alt her duties and delivered a true manifest of her outward cargo to the British Consul, a Siamese port-clearance shall be granted her on application from the Consul, who in the absence of any legal impediment to her departure, will then return to the master his ship's papers, and allow the vessel to leave. A Custom-house officer will accompany the vessel to Paknam; and on arriving there she will be inspected by the Custom-house officers of that station, and will receive from them the guns and ammunition previously delivered into their sharge. The above regulations, numbered from 1 to 5, are obligatory under the treaty concluded between Great Britain and Siam; those which follow, numbered from 6 to 14, are equally to be observed by masters of British vessels and their crews.
Art. VI.-Masters of British vessels, when reporting their arrival at Her Majesty's Consulate at the port of Bangkok, as directed by the tourth regulation above quoted, shall notify in writing the names of all passengers and persons not forming part of the registered crew.
Notice must likewise be given of the number and names of persons, who, as passengers or in any other capacity (seamen borne on the muster-roll excepted), in-
end to leave Siam in a British vessel.
Art. VII.-Seamen, lascars, and others belonging to British vessels in the port are strictly prohibited to wear side knives and other weapons while on shore.
Art. VIII. Should any seaman or apprentice absent himself without leave, the master will report his absence, if such exceeds twenty-four hours, at the Consulate offices.
Art, IX.--Auy British subject who entices a seaman or apprentice to desert, curs, according to the Merchant Shipping Act, 1854, paragraph 257, a penalty not *xceeding ten pounds; or any such subject who wilfully harbours or secretes a person deserted from his ship, incurs a penalty not exceeding twenty pounds, if it be proved that he had knowledge of his being a deserter.