Second Shetland Truck System Report - LightNovelsOnl.com
You're reading novel online at LightNovelsOnl.com. Please use the follow button to get notifications about your favorite novels and its latest chapters so you can come back anytime and won't miss anything.
9470. Had you anything to do with settling these accounts?-No; he settled with the men himself.
9471. Did you keep the books in which the goods taken from the shop were entered?-Yes; the daybook.
9472. Do you remember anything about the prices charged there?-They varied, just as they did at other places.
9473. Were you aware at the time that the prices charged in Mouat's shop were much higher than those at other places?- I cannot say that they were higher for a country shop.
9474. Were they dearer than are charged in this neighbourhood now?-I cannot say that they were for the groceries; but indeed they would require to have been dearer, because he had to take his goods overland at a heavy expense from Lerwick. It was pretty expensive keeping a horse and cart for that purpose, and taking his goods down on a winter day. When he did not do that, he had either to employ a sloop for himself, or a big six-oared boat.
9475. But you have to do that in many places in Shetland?-They do that throughout the mainland, in Quendale and other places.
9476. Did the men about Coningsburgh ever complain to you of the quality of the goods sold in Mouat's store?-Of course I might have heard a man complain, just as parties will do when buying goods. Some customers will always complain. They may perhaps despise the thing, and yet at the same time they like very well to take it, but they pretend not to want it in [Page 229] order to get it a little reduced in price. I don't think the goods were any dearer or any worse than in most country shops in Shetland, because they came from the south country, and from the same men from whom most country merchants in Shetland purchase.
9477. Did Mouat buy from a merchant in Aberdeen?-He got most of his soft goods from Mr. D. L. s.h.i.+rras there.
9478. Where did he get his meal and flour?-Sometimes from Macduff in Banffs.h.i.+re, and sometimes from Tod Brothers, Stockbridge.
9479. Who was his merchant at Macduff?-I forget; I think it was Messrs. Laing. He had one cargo from them during the time I was there. I think Mr. Adie, Voe, had some in the vessel at the same time.
9480. Was the cargo landed at Coningsburgh?-Some of it, and some at other places, just as the party got orders for it.
9481. Did the cargo belong to Mouat, or was it a joint concern?-I cannot say.
9482. Where did he get his flour?-He did not get very much flour during the time I was there, except for house use.
9483. Where did he get his tea and groceries?-From Mackintosh & Co. Glasgow, and from Bremner & Grant, Aberdeen.
9484. Did you ever know of any of Mouat's men getting money at the settlement?-Yes; those who had it to get got it, the year I was there.
9485. Were they sometimes paid by receipts or lines?-I cannot say how they were paid. The men, as they came out of the place where they had been settling, spoke about being paid.
9486. But you don't know whether they got cash?-No; they might have got a cheque on the bank. I only saw the entry in the ledger, of cash being paid in full.
9487. Your department was merely to sell in the shop?-Yes; and I was oftener travelling. I travelled a good deal buying up stock for him.
9488. Where were your princ.i.p.al purchases of stock made?-In winter they were chiefly at the Walls Martinmas sale.
9489. Was that in the neighbourhood of Coningsburgh?-No, it was in the west side of Shetland; but Mouat would perhaps buy a beast or two in the neighbourhood of Coningsburgh as he had orders for them.
9490. How were these cattle settled for?-Those that I bought were paid in money at the time. I cannot tell how he paid for those he bought himself.
9491. Were these cattle sent out of the country?-Some of them were, and others were re-sold in the country.
9492. Do you really think that upon the whole the stock of goods in Mouat's shop was as fair in quality as is usual in Shetland?-I could not say any other. The goods might have been lying for some time, and I could not tell what strength was in them, but they looked very well. They just looked like any goods that you would see brought into a country shop.
9493. I understand you have taken Mrs. Budge's premises at Seafield for curing and salting your fish?-Yes. Of course we had an understanding when we took them, that we were to have the men on equal terms with what they would get from another, but there was no more agreement about it. There is scarcely any man who could keep the premises there and carry on business in them without the privilege of having the men to fish for him. It would hardly have been fair to have made them fish for me unless they were as well served as by fis.h.i.+ng for another; but I told them that I did not want any of them to fish for me unless they came voluntarily.
9494. Do you mean that the premises are inconveniently situated for such a business?-Of course. They lie so far inland that we require to have a push like that.
9495. And in order to get men to deliver their fish there, it is necessary that they should be under some sort of obligation?- We thought that unless the men had something to do at the place, it would not be worth keeping it. Of course you cannot very easily force a business there, without a few men that you can depend upon.
9496. Do you mean to force a business in the way of fish-curing, or in the way of selling goods or provisions?-Of course it would require a man with more capital than I have to force a business so far inland.
9497. But which do you mean; the fish-curing business, or the general business?-I mean the general business.
9498. I suppose the drapery and provision business depends very much on the success of the fish-curing business?-Yes. There is nothing else to depend upon. There are no works or anything like that in the neighbourhood.
9499. Do the men who are employed by you in the fis.h.i.+ng live near your shop?-Yes.
9500. But you say that for fish-curing this is not a very convenient place, because it is too far inland?-I say it is not convenient for driving a business, unless you have some means to depend upon in the fis.h.i.+ng or such like. There are not many people round about who could purchase goods over the counter, so that the business cannot be carried on in that way.
9501. But do you suppose that in any part of Shetland a good business over the counter could be carried on unless there were fishermen employed by the merchants?-Yes. I know places in Shetland where they do carry on a good business over the counter without having fishermen. For instance, they could do so in Unst.
9502. Don't merchants who try to establish a business find it exceedingly difficult to get on in the neighbourhood of a large merchant who has a number of fishermen employed, unless they have fishermen of their own?-No doubt but then there are some places a good distance from these large fish-curers where they could drive a very good business over the counter. Of course they could not make a large business of it, because there is not a large business to be done in Shetland.
9503. But they could make something if they were far enough away from the large fish-curers?-Yes.
9504. Still at any place I suppose it is an advantage for a merchant to be a fish-curer?-I don't know as to that. I cannot say much for it this year. Last year was my first year at it, and I had two boats.
9505. Did you not make a good thing of your fis.h.i.+ng last year?- They did very well in the way of fis.h.i.+ng, but I lost a good few lines and I had to pay most in cash. I paid the men cash down, and when they do not take their goods in return we make very little by the fish.
9506. Did the men not run accounts with you as they would do with another fish-curer?-No doubt some of them did, but some of them did not.
9507. Had they all cash to receive at the end of the year?-Yes.
9508. Was there not one of them who was in debt to you at the settlement?-Not one. The lowest had about 6 to get.
9509. Then you would not make so much of them as some merchants do?-I don't know as to that. I don't expect that I would make anything.
9510. Did you not expect to drive a fair business at Seafield?- Hardly, upon that footing.
9511. Are you not satisfied with your first year's trial here?- Sometimes we must be doing, although we are not satisfied with everything that comes across us. Sometimes we must just endure it, and hope for better success in another year.
9512. How do you account for your shop business not being larger last year?-The men were in pretty good circ.u.mstances, and perhaps they found that they could get their things a little cheaper in Lerwick, and they ran accounts there. Of course I could not sell so cheap as they do in Lerwick, because I was buying most of my goods there. I got part of my goods from the south, and part from Mr. Leask.
9513. Did you hear Mr. Laurence Williamson's evidence?-Yes.
9514. Do you make the same bargain with your fishermen about boats and lines and other things as he described?-The captain of the boat got something extra from me.
[Page 230]
9515. But did you give as much off the boat hire as a premium to the men?-No; but of course it came to the same thing. I got 4 for the boat and lines. Laurence Williamson charged 6, and of course I charged 6 too, but I gave the lines free to the captain of the boat, and 1, 6s., which is equal to 2.
9516. Do any of the men in your experience buy their boats and lines?-They do in other places but not on this island, so far as I am aware.
9517. And that is always a debt against a boat's crew at starting?- Yes. In Dunrossness the crew buy their boat and lines, and I believe in Whalsay too.
9518. Have you engaged your boats for next year?-Of course it was understood when I bought my new boats last year, that the men would continue to fish for me; and this year they have not said anything against continuing to fish.