CHRISTMAS IN SHADOW
ANXIETY OF 5000 MEN. Five thousand men in Britain were lately facing a Christmas deeply shadowed with suspense. They are employees of the White Star and Cunard lines and they did not know what would happen when the two lines eventually amalgamated. All. the employees will not be needed for the one firm. Some must go—but which ones? An interviewer spoke to some of them. There was one man, apparently about 50, white hair, pincenez, a moustache. Thirty years with "the firm." His wife kept asking him what was going to happen. He replied: "Of course my job can't go after thirty years' service." He did not want her to worry. But he knew someone must go.
There was another man, tall, rather businesslike, horn-rimmed spectacles, clean shaven. "The one great question crops up every morning," he said. "Does anyone know who is to be fired? But no one does. I hardly like to buy presents for) My children—the money might be so badly needed later on. But if I don't buy them I should feci worse. I can only wait and hope for the best." "Both lines have offices in the larger provincial towns. Only, one office will be needed now. It is the same with the dock staffs and marine, superintendents. Half must go. They all know it—but they don't know who, and when and how."
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Bibliographic details
Ashburton Guardian, Volume 54, Issue 190, 25 May 1934, Page 8
Word Count
231CHRISTMAS IN SHADOW Ashburton Guardian, Volume 54, Issue 190, 25 May 1934, Page 8
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