CARGO HANDLING AT PORTS
disguising the fact that mechanical appliances, in order to
justify their adoption, must be labour-saving. Where the
dock labourer makes a mistake in his opposition is in short-
sightedly refusing to recognise that the reduction in the
manual labour required is only temporary, and that with
an increased output, or turnover, there will be ultimately,
and probably at very short date, correspondingly increased
opportunities for more labour, and that of a less arduous
and more intelligent kind, while the advantage to the
general community, of which he is equally and essentially
a unit, by cheapening the cost of transport, can hardly be
over-estimated.
CONSERVATISM.
But conservatism in port working is not confined to the
ranks of the uneducated. There are often to be found
prejudices arising out of a more or less unreasoning adherence
to what is termed the custom of a port.” As an instance
of the extent to which long-established practices are per-
petuated after the necessity for them has entirely disappeared
may be quoted the following extract from a recent press
article * on the subject of the trade term: * Custom of the
Port’ —
« Re-bagging of Grain.—Much faith is still pinned at
the port of Hull to hand labour in the discharge of grain
cargoes, and to this custom is attributed the comparative
neglect of a large modern silo and elevator plant in the
King George Dock.
“ Quite lately, shipowners, who had not previously
engaged in the trade, were surprised to learn that when
steamers arrived at the port from the Pacific Coast of North
America with cargoes of grain in bags, it was customary
for men employed by the consignees to enter the holds,
empty the grain from the bags, and put it into fresh bags.
One explanation to account for this unusual proceeding was
that the consignees preferred that the grain should be
marketed in bags bearing their own description, rather
¢ Times Trade and Encineering Supplement, June 3oth, 1923.