Second Shetland Truck System Report - BestLightNovel.com
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5914. Are there many people employed in your curing establishment as day workers?-Yes; they are chiefly women, but there are a few boys and a few old people.
5915. How are they paid?-By the day.
5916. When are they paid?-Whenever they wish
5917. Is there a weekly pay-day with them?-There may be, if they wish; but sometimes, for their convenience, we do not settle weekly. The settlement may run for three, four, five, or six weeks, or perhaps whole season.
5918. How many days will these women be employed in the course of the season? Is it anything like constant employment?- Yes; at least during the summer. From the end of May till the end of September we will employ on an average about twenty women daily at Mossbank, and about ten at Greenbank.
5919. Do these women run an account at your shop for goods?- Yes.
5920. Is a considerable amount of their wages paid to them in goods?-Yes, a considerable part.
5921. Is there any understanding or rule that they shall take part of their wages in goods?-There is no such understanding.
5922. They are quite at liberty with regard to that-Yes.
5923. Will they get cash if they ask for it?-Yes, if they have it to get; but it is a convenience for them to get their goods from our shop. It saves them the trouble of going a greater distance for them.
5924. Is there no other shop there?-Not close by. The nearest shop is about a mile off, I think.
5925. Is there any expectation or understanding, when these women are engaged, that they shall open an account and take their wages, or the greater part of them, in goods at your shop?-No, there is no understanding; but we have every reason to believe that they will come to us, because they cannot manage otherwise.
5926. Are the goods which they take generally provisions or soft goods?-Chiefly provisions, but some soft goods too.
5927. In engaging these women, do you give any preference to those who deal at your shop?-No; but they mostly all deal there.
5928. Has each of them a ledger account in her own name with you?-Yes.
5929. Have they generally pa.s.s-books, or do they prefer to do without them?-They can get a pa.s.sbook if they like, but they seldom do it.
5930. Are you a landed proprietor?-I am to small extent.
5931. Are any members of your firm owners of land?-No; not owners.
5932. Or tacksmen?-I am a tacksman of some; and we, as a firm, are factors for one or two small properties.
5933. Are any other members of the firm tacksmen or proprietors of land?-Not tacksmen.
5934. Or proprietors?-No. Mr. Hoseason, I think, is proprietor of one-fifth part of a rental of 3.
5935. On the land which you hold as owner or tacksman, are there many of the tenants who are fishermen and are employed by your firm?-Yes, there are a great many fishermen.
5936. Are they under any obligation to fish for you, and not for another?-Yes; we expect them fish for us in preference.
5937. That is part of the contract which they enter into for their ground?-Yes; but it is also understood that we are to give them the current price of the country.
5938. What are the properties of which you are tacksman?- Aywick, in East Yell.
5939. What is the number of fishermen on that property?-There are only four or five of them who fish to us. There are a good many others, but they do not [Page 147] fish to us. Some of these men go to the whale fis.h.i.+ng, and we are not interested in it.
5940. They are not bound to fish for you if they go to the whale fis.h.i.+ng or to the Faroe fis.h.i.+ng?-No; not unless we require them.
If we require them, they will give us the preference willingly.
5941. Is it part of the arrangement or understanding, that you are ent.i.tled to prevent them from going to the whale fis.h.i.+ng or to the Faroe fis.h.i.+ng if you please?-No; they are at perfect liberty to go to the whale fis.h.i.+ng if they prefer it.
5942. But if they engage in the home fis.h.i.+ng they are bound to fish to you?-Yes, if we wish it.
5943. What other properties are held in tack by you?-Sandwick, in North Yell.
5944. How many men are upon it?-There are seven or eight families, the heads of which are all fishermen, and they fish to us.
There is another small property called Sellafirth, in North Yell, on which I think there are four or five men. We are also factors for George Hoseason of Basta, in North Yell.
5945. Are the men there bound to fish to you?-They all fish to us.
They are not bound to do so; only, it is understood that they are to fish to us.
5946. How many of them may there be?-I think six or seven.
These are all the properties of which we are tacksmen.
5947. Of what properties are you proprietor?-I am proprietor of small place in Delting, at Mossbank.
5948. Are there many fishermen on it?-No; only three or four.
5949. Are they also expected to fish for you?-No; there is only one of them, I think, who fishes for us.
5950. Are those fishermen in North Yell who fish for you, and who live on the land you have mentioned, in the habit of dealing at your shop at Gloup?-Yes; to a small extent.
5951. Are your books kept there?-No; Greenbank is the princ.i.p.al place where they are kept. Gloup is fis.h.i.+ng station in connection with Greenbank.
5952. The shop accounts at Greenbank are balanced in the same way against the price of the fish?-Yes.
5953. Perhaps you will make up a similar statement to that which Mr. Adie has promised with regard to the amount of the shop accounts and the indebtedness of the men?-Yes. The systems pursued at Mossbank and Greenbank are a little different. At Greenbank we hire both boat and lines to the men; while at Mossbank the men almost all buy their lines, and hire the boat only.
5954. How many accounts do you keep at both places?-I think about 120 or 130 altogether, for the ling fis.h.i.+ng.
5955. Are you engaged in the Faroe fis.h.i.+ng?-Yes, to a small extent.
5956. Your dealing with regard to it is similar to what Mr. Adie has described?-Yes, quite the same.
5957. The men who go to that fis.h.i.+ng deal at your shop in the same way as those who go to the home fis.h.i.+ng?-Yes.
5958. Do they generally incur as large a shop account as the men who engage in the home fis.h.i.+ng?-Not generally.
5959. Is that because they are young men?-Yes.
5960. But those who have families are in pretty much the same condition as the home fishers?-Yes; there is not any material difference as to the amount of their shop accounts.
5961. Is there anything you would like to add to what Mr. Adie has said?-No; I think everything I have to say has been stated already.