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OFFICERS AS DECK HANDS.

Per Press Association. AUCKLAND, Oct. 12. Officers in the British Mercantile Marino do not as a rule scrub decks, batten down hatches and do other jobs that are the lot of seamen, but they do all these things on board the Commonwealth and Dominion Line motor ship Port Gisborne, which arrived at Auckland from London this afternoon. Every one of the 18 deckhands on the motor ship is a certificated officer who has shipped as a sailor Tor want of employment on the bridge of any other ship. The fact that the Port Gisborne carries an all-officer crew on the deck is a striking illustration of the wholesale unemployment that exists among seafaring men who are competent to navigate ships in any part of the world.

“A sailor’s job is better than no job at all in these hard times,” is the argument they work on, and they probably comfort themselves with the knowledge that other fellow officers who have made a voyage or so as A.B.’s are now back on the bridge again either in the same company or with some other.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/MS19321013.2.35

Bibliographic details

Manawatu Standard, Volume LII, Issue 269, 13 October 1932, Page 3

Word Count
187

OFFICERS AS DECK HANDS. Manawatu Standard, Volume LII, Issue 269, 13 October 1932, Page 3

OFFICERS AS DECK HANDS. Manawatu Standard, Volume LII, Issue 269, 13 October 1932, Page 3