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"May I have your permission to examine the list of cabin passengers?"
It was said that the few cabin passengers on board sailed under very different conditions.
"We have no wish to be cabin passengers on such a ship.
Has he been robbing the trunks of the dead cabin passengers?
The six of us cabin passengers were pearl buyers.
In addition to cabin passengers, 200 other travelers were bunking down on deck.
For cabin passengers, of course, it is not necessary.'
During the day, Warwick had taken his meals in the dining-room, with the captain and the other cabin passengers.
Has to, because she carries cabin passengers.
'They wouldn't dare treat cabin passengers the way we're treated!'
Up and down the cabin passengers roused from snoozing and turned their heads in curiosity.
Her accommodations were altered to carry 600 cabin passengers and 800 third-class passengers.
At the turn of 1927-28, Olympic was converted to carry tourist third cabin passengers as well as first, second and third class.
There appeared an openness in the minds of the master of the ship and in the cabin passengers towards me.
She wondered if the cabin passengers caught the illnesses - especially dysentery - which were rife in the steerage.
George Morphett Esq, and his wife and three surviving children were cabin passengers.
Airport check-in, security screening, and aircraft boarding are prioritized over Main Cabin passengers.
The rear cabin passengers and flight crew heard a very loud bang and experienced a blast-like sensation.
The last particular in which the second cabin passenger remarkably stands ahead of his brother of the steerage is one altogether of sentiment.
On a certain voyage out, in exquisite summer weather, he had for cabin passengers one beautiful young lady, and ten more or less beautiful young gentlemen.
'Now that you're a cabin passenger.'
During the eight-month conversion, spaces for troop and cabin passenger accommodations and for hospital facilities were constructed.
All three were Robert Louis Stevenson's fellow cabin passengers on the 1890 Janet Nicholl voyage.
Cabin passengers could travel for L35, but were not entitled to land (on the ships' lists they appeared as 'passengers', while the others were labelled 'emigrants').
Heartlessly, Helva applied thrust as long as she could, despite the fact that the gravitational force mashed her cabin passengers brutally and crushed two fatally.