Even though we assume that, because of the plaintiff’s obviously disturbed mental state, the master should have done more than merely to take away his glasses and send him below, Reek v. Pacifie-Atlantic S.S. Co., 2 Cir.,
The third claim is for maintenance and cure, and we agree that it would have been altogether unwarranted to hold that the plaintiff’s failure to disclose his mental condition at the time he shipped aboard should disable him from recovery. Lindquist v. Dilkes, 3 Cir.,
Interest should run on each day’s allowance from the day it became due.
Judgment modified by reducing the allowance by the amount of the wages earned by the plaintiff as dishwasher, and otherwise affirmed, with interest computed as aforesaid.
