and leave notice of such arrival at harbour master's office. A précis of the Acts &c. relating to trade and quarantine to be prepared. Stationery, &c. Quarantine authority may sue in clerk's name. Repeal and savings. (2) The harbour police shall every morning between the hours of five and six a.m. leave notice at the office of the Harbour Master of the arrival of any such vessel. 88. The Governor-in-Executive Committee shall cause to be prepared and printed a précis of the Acts and regulations relating to trade, the harbour and quarantine; and copies thereof shall be supplied to the harbour master and harbour police, and any vessel not already supplied with a copy by the harbout police as provided for in section eighty seven of this Act, shall be supplied therewith by the harbour master on his visit to such vessel on entry. 89. All printed forms and stationery required by the quarantine authority, harbour master, or health officer in the discharge of their duties under this Act, shall be paid for out of the public treasury. 90. In any case arising uuder this Act the quarantine authority may she and be sued in the name of their clerk. Repeal. 91. The several Acts mentioned in the schedule to this Act are hereby repealed, to the extent mentioned provided that; (1) Any rule, order or bye-law now in force whether made under any enactment hereby repealed or not shall if not inconsistent with this Act, continue in force until otherwise provided; and (2) Any officer appointed under any enactment hereby repealed shall continue and be deemed to have been duly appointed under this Act; and (3) Any enactment or document referring to any Act or enactment hereby repealed (a) the past operation of any enactment (b) any right, privilege, obligation, or (c) any penalty, forfeiture, or punishment (d) any investigation, legal proceeding, (e) any Act in which the enactments here- (5) This repeal shall not revive any enactment, right, office, privilege, matter, or thing not in force or existing at the passing of this Act. 92. This Act shall not come into opera- Suspending section. tion unless and until the officer administer ing the government notifies by proclamation that it is Her Majesty's pleasure not to disallow the same and thereafter it shall come 23rd September 1892 An Act to The whole Act. amend the by the same or any other proclamation. administering the government shall notify into operation upon such day as the officer CAP. XLIII. (Assented to 25th April, 1893.) BARBADOS. An Act to enable James Kenneth Douglas MacKenzie (hereinafter called Kenneth MacKenzie') to supply electricity for the purpose of lighting the City of Bridgetown and the suburbs thereof and for other purposes. W HEREAS the lighting of Bridgetown would be greatly improved by the use of electricity; And Whereas Kenneth MacKenzie of Broadway Chambers, Westminster, in the City of London, Civil Engineer, is willing to provide the necessary machinery and to lay wires underground, and to provide other apparatus necessary for so lighting as aforesaid on having the exclusive right to do so for a limited term granted to him; Be it enacted by the Governor, Council, and Assembly of this island and by the authority of the same, as follcws: 1. This Act may be cited for all purposes as "The Bridgetown Electric Lighting Act, 1893." Short title. 2. In this Act unless the context other- Interpretation. wise requires, (1.) The term "electricity" means electricity, electric current or any like agency. (2.) The term electrical energy and for the purposes deemed to be an agency within the meaning of electricity as above defined. (3.) The term "electric line" shall mean any wire or wires, conductor or other means used for the purpose of conveying, transmitting or distributing electricity with any casing, coating, covering, tube, pipe, or insulator, covering, surrounding or supporting the same or any part thereof, or any apparatus counected therewith for the purpose of conveying, transmitting, transforming or distributing electricity or electric currents. (4.) The term "main" shall mean any continuous metallic conductor which may be laid down by the undertakers in any street or public place, and through which energy may be supplied or intended to be supplied by the undertakers for the purposes of general supply. (5.) The term "service line" shall mean any continuous metallic conductor through which energy may be supplied or intended to be supplied by the undertakers to any particular consumer either from any main or directly from the premises of the undertakers. (6.) The term "distributing main" shall mean the portion of any main which is used for the purpose of giving origin to service lines for the purposes of general supply. (7.) The term “general supply" means the general supply of electricity to unless ordinary consumers and |