Second Shetland Truck System Report - LightNovelsOnl.com
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13,868. Do you get most of them there?-No; I only get a part.
13,869. Does it depend upon whether you have a balance in your favour, or cash in your hands, that you go to Vidlin?-I sometimes go for credit and sometimes for cash.
13,870. Do you get your goods at the same price there, whether you get them on account or pay cash?-I believe I do.
13,871. Is that [showing] your pa.s.s-book with Mr. Robertson at Vidlin?-Yes. The account is kept with Mr. Robert Sutherland, the shopkeeper there. I also produce an old account for 1864.
13,872. Do you always keep a pa.s.s-book?-No; only at times. I got that account just after the settlement. I thought it rather too heavy, and I wished a copy of it; but I cannot say whether it is accurate or not.
13,873. Did you get a discount when you complained about the account being too high?-I don't remember; but I have sometimes got a small discount.
13,874. Is the settlement at Vidlin generally in December?-It is generally after Martinmas, sometimes sooner and sometimes later.
13,875. We need not go back so far as 1864. Have you ever got an account like that since?-No; I think that was the heaviest account I ever had.
13,876. You never disputed the rates you were charged since then?-No, I never disputed them.
13,877. Do you always get your account read over to you at settlement?-Yes; Mr. Robertson sometimes does it.
13,878. Do you settle with Mr. Robertson himself?-Yes.
13,879. Does he always read over your account?-Sometimes he reads it over, and at other times he allows me to get it read over by Mr. Sutherland.
13,880. Is there a separate account kept for any of your family?- No.
13,881. I see from your pa.s.s-book that in 1870 you got two advances of cash in April and June?-Yes.
13,882. Do you get cash advanced to you when you ask it?-Yes.
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13,883. Had you a balance to get at the settlement for 1870?-I think I had.
13,884. I see that on September 9th, 1870, you were charged quarter boll best oatmeal, 5s. 8d.; September 26th, quarter boll, 5s.
6d.; one peck, 1s. 4d. Were you buying meal in Lerwick at that time?-No; that was just about the time when I was getting in my crop.
13,885. Did you buy any meal in Lerwick last summer or autumn?-I bought some in April before I began to the fis.h.i.+ng.
I paid 2 to Mr. John Tait for sack of Orkney oatmeal.
13,886. The book you have produced also contains your fish account?-It contains a copy of it, which was made by my son on Thursday night, from an old pa.s.s-book which I used in settling with Mr. Robertson.
13,887. In 1870 you got 7s. 3d. for your ling: did all the fishermen in Lunnasting get the same?-Yes.
13,888.,Was that the current price for the year?-Yes, but I believe some got more.
13,889. Did you hear that the people about Sandwick had got 8s.
3d. for ling that year?-Yes.
13,890. Was that from Smith and Tulloch, the curers there?-I don't know the men's names, but I believe it was.
13,891. Do you think it would have been possible to pay you as high as that, and to allow the fish-curer a decent profit?-I could not know unless I had been dealing in the fish myself, but I don't think it would have been possible.
13,892. The current price this year was 8s. for ling, 6s. 6d. for tusk and cod, and 4s. for saith?-Yes.
13,893. Do you think there was a higher price paid anywhere else this year?-I cannot say.
13,894. If you had got the price that was paid in 1870 at Sandwick, would you have had a larger sum to receive for your fis.h.i.+ng?- Yes; we would have received about 13 more for the crew on the summer and harvest fis.h.i.+ng.
13,895. Do you fish much in harvest?-No; we sometimes fish two weeks after old Lammas Day.
13,896. Is that put into a separate account from the summer fis.h.i.+ng?-Yes, but it is all paid at the same time, because it has been earned by the same crew.
13,897. Do you sometimes fish in small boats in winter?-I have done that on former occasions, but not now. I have dropped the winter fis.h.i.+ng.
13,898. Did you sometimes take large quant.i.ties of fish in winter?-Sometimes the fis.h.i.+ng then was not very good. In some years we might make a few pounds by it.
13,899. Did you always sell your winter fish to the tacksman at Vidlin?-Sometimes; but I cannot say that we did so always.
13,900. Did you consider yourself bound to sell them to him?-I believed I was bound.
13,901. But you were not so strict in doing it in winter as you were with regard to the summer fis.h.i.+ng?-No.
13,902. What led you to think that you were bound to sell your winter fish to him as well as your summer fish?-I don't know. I only knew that the tacksman wished to have them; but we did not sell them all to him.
13,903. Are you at perfect liberty to go to Lerwick for your goods if you choose?-Yes.
13,904. Does Sutherland or any one else ask you at settlement if you want any goods?-No; they just give me whatever goods I ask.
13,905. But do they ask you if you want anything when you are settling?-At times they may, but not always.
13,906. Do you settle in the shop at Vidlin?-We settle in the office behind the shop.
13,907. Do you go past the counter into the office?-Yes.
13,908. After you have had your account read over to you, and the amount of your fish stated, are you ever asked whether you want any more goods?-No; not unless I please to take some.
13,909. But are you ever asked if you want them?-I cannot say that I am. If I buy anything myself, then they may ask me if I want anything more.
13,910. Do they not ask you unless you are buying something at any rate?-No.
13,911. Does not Mr. Sutherland sometimes ask you if you want goods before you go in to settle?-No.
13,912. If you take goods at that time, are they put into your account for the past year, or do they go into your account for the next year?-They are entered any way I choose. Perhaps they may be marked down to account, or I may pay for them in cash if it is any small thing. I don't wish to run a heavy account.
13,913. Do you pay in cash for the articles you get in Lerwick, or have you an account with Mr. Tait?-There are some merchants who know me who would give me credit for perhaps twelve months or so, but sometimes I pay cash down.
13,914. I suppose they know that you have got something in the bank?-It is not much. Mr. Robertson is my banker.
13,915. Then you sometimes leave your balance in his hands at the end of the year, and get interest on it?-Yes.