118 or to requisition, in accordance, in either oase, with the Convention aforesaid. The said Privileges will also not extend to merchant ships which show bj their build that they arg intended for conversion into warships, as such vessels are outside the scopo of the said Con vention, and are liable on adjudication by the Prize Court to condemnation as prize. 7. Enemy merchant ships allowed to depart under Articles 3 and 4 will be provided with a pass indi- cating the port to which they are to proceed, and the route they are to follow. 8. A merchant ship which, alter receipt of such a pass, does not follow the course indicated therein will be liable to capture. 9. If no Information reaches one of Eis Majesty’s Principal Secretaries of State by the day and hour afore- mentioned to the effect that the treatment accorded to British merchant ships and their cargoes which were in the ports of the enemy at the date of the outbreak of hostilities, or which subsequently entered them, is, in bis opinion, not less favourable than that accorded to enemy merchand ships by Articles 3 to 8 of this Order, every enemy merchant ship which, on the out break of hostilities, was in any port to which this Order applies, and also every enemy merchant ship which cleared from its last port before the decla- ration of war, but which, with no knowledge of the war enters a port to which this Order applies, shall, together with the cargo on board thefeof, be liable to capture and shall be brought before the Prize Court forthwith for adjudication. 10. In the event of Information reaching one of Eis Majesty’s Principal Secretaries of State that British merchant ships which cleared from their last port before the declaration of war, but are raet with by the enemy at sea after the outbreak of hostilities, are allowed to continue their voyage without interference with either the ship or the cargo, or after capture are released with or without proceedings for adjudi cation in the Prize Court, or are to be detained during the war or requisitioned in lieu of condemnation as prize, he shalUnotify the Lords Commissioners of the Admiralty accordingly, and shall publish a notification thereof in the „London Gazette“, and in that event, but not otherwise, enemy merchant ships which cleared from their last port before the declaration of war, and are captured after the outbreak of hostilities and brought before the Prize Courts for adjudication, shall be released or detained or requisitioned in such cases and upon such terms as may he directed in the said notification in the „London Gazette“. 11. Neutral cargo, other than contraband of war, on board an enemy merchant ship which is not allo wed to depart from a port to which this Order applies, shall be released. 12. In accordance with the provisions ofChapterlll of the Convention relative to certain Restrictions on the Exercise of the Right of Capture in Maritime War, signed at The Eague on the 18th October, 1907, an undertaking must, whether the merchant ship is allo wed to depart or not, be given in writing by each of the officers and members of the crew of such vessels who is of enemy nationality, that he will not, after the conclusion of the voyage for which the pass is issued, engage while hostilities last in any Service con nected with the Operation of the war. If any such officer is of neutral nationality. an undertaking must be given in writing that he will not serve, after the conclusion of the voyage for which the pass is issued, on any enemy ship while hostilities last. No under taking is to be required from members of the crew who are of neutral nationality. Officers or members of the crew dcclining to give the undertakings required by this Article will be detained as prisoners of war. And the Lords Commissioners of Bis Majesty’s Treasury, the Lord Commissioners of the Admiralty, and each of Eis Majesty’s Principal Secretaries of State, and all Governors, Officers, and Anethorities whom it may concern are to give the necessary diroctions herein as to them may respectively apportain. Notification of the Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs as to the Treatment accorded to British Merchant Ships and their Cargoes in German Ports. On the night of August 4th, 1914, the Secretary of State received the sollewing notice from thu German Ambassador: — „The Imperial Government will keep merchant vessels flying the British flag internet! in German harbours, but will liberale them if the Imperial Government receive a counter undertaking from the British Government within forty-eight hours.“ On August öth a copy of the Order in Council issued on August 4th as to the treatment of enemy merchant vessels in British ports at the date of the outbreak of hostilities was communicatod to the Am bassador of the United States in London, who was then in Charge of German Interests in this country, with a request that he would be so good as to cause enquiry to be made of the German Government as to whether the term of Articles III. to VIEL of the Order in Council constituted an undertaking of the nature the German Government required, and under which they would liberale merchant vessels flying the British flag interned in German harbours. On August 7th a communication was received from the United States Embassy that the United States Minister at Stockholm had sent the following telegram signed by the United States Ambassadpr at Berlin : — „Please state if England has issued Procla- mation that she gives permission to enemy ships to leave British ports until midnight, August 14tb. If this is so, Germany will issue eorrosponding Orders. Reply through German Legation, Stock holm.“