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HUN'S ADVENTURES IN BRITISH SHIP.

EMPLOYED AS LOOK-OUT FOR U BOATS. The "Taglishe Rundschau" gives an account of the astonishing adventures of a young German mercantile officer ,a son or Justice Kray, of Elberfeld, who has just reached home after serving mostly in ships running from British ports to America, including two voyages to Canada as a member of the crew of the steamship Englishman, which traded between Bristol and Canada, says the Amsterdam corresi ondent of the "Daily Mail."

On the first voyage in the Englishman Kray was employed as a 100 flout to watch for mines and German submarines. He borrowed papers from a Danish friend and succeeded In getting a passport as a Dane from tne Bristol Consulate. When the war broke out Kray was at Chanaril, in Chile, where he had arrived in the German four-master Nereus. With two other Germans Kray tried to cross the Cordilleras en mules to reach thb Atlantic coast, but was obViged to tun. Lack owing to the sickness of his comrades and the death of one mule, when they reached a heighi of 13,000 feet. He tried to ship in a Russian vessel n.nnlng to Europe with saltpetre, but at Iquique they guessed his nationality, and he deserted. A friendly Dane lent him some ship's discharge papers to prove his Danish natinoality, and with these Kray got employed as one of the hands of the Norwegian barque Storesand, running with saltpetre from Iquique. Th? vessel was overtaken by a German submarine 200 miles from the Irish coast. Kray failed to get the chance of making his identity known to the submarine, which subsequently sank '.he Storesand by shell fire.

The crew were picked up by a British steamer, which took them to Bristol. Here Kray worked for a time as a stevedore, after obtaining a Danish passport.

Later, he shipped in the Englishman, and made two trips to Canada, being employed on the first trip to watch for submarines. "And how I wished cne would appear," he said. Tb> Englishman was sunk in March this year.

In December Kray signed on with the Swedish barque Angelo, bound for Norway, which sailed from Cardiff on February 23, but, after running 300 miles, became unseaworthy, and was towed into Berehaven by a naval tug. After repairs the Angelo again sailed, and reached Melsomik, near Tonsberg, Norway, where Kray revealed his identity and was sent heme to Elberfeld. He will shortly be in the German Navy.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/PWT19160908.2.14.27

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Pukekohe & Waiuku Times, Volume 5, Issue 207, 8 September 1916, Page 3 (Supplement)

Word count
Tapeke kupu
413

HUN'S ADVENTURES IN BRITISH SHIP. Pukekohe & Waiuku Times, Volume 5, Issue 207, 8 September 1916, Page 3 (Supplement)

HUN'S ADVENTURES IN BRITISH SHIP. Pukekohe & Waiuku Times, Volume 5, Issue 207, 8 September 1916, Page 3 (Supplement)

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