PUNISHMENT ON SHIP
DISORDERLY SAILOR HANDED OVER “I wouldn’t let him come ashore for a lime,” suggested Mr. F. K. Hunt, S.M., when Arthur Worster, who was charged at the Police Court this morning with being disorderly while drunk, was handed over to the naval authorities for punishment. “I was drunk but not disorderly," answered Worster, a signalman of H.M.S. -Dunedin, when he faced the charge. Constable Sherson said that he was called to a city restaurant about 8.30 last evening when Worster had been making a nuisance of himself. “He was calling out and said he wouldn’t go away,” said the constable. A naval divisional officer assured the magistrate that the man would be ade- ; quately dealt with on his ship so a I conviction was entered against him.
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Bibliographic details
Sun (Auckland), Volume III, Issue 757, 2 September 1929, Page 1
Word Count
130PUNISHMENT ON SHIP Sun (Auckland), Volume III, Issue 757, 2 September 1929, Page 1
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