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6479. Why do you say that you never asked it?-Because I was just needing the cotton, and I took it.
6480. But why do you say that you never asked for it? Do you mean that you would have got it if you had asked?-Yes; I might have got it.
6481. How do you know?-There are some who have got it when they asked for it, but I never did.
6482. Do most of the women get money for their kelp?-I cannot say.
6483. What does your father do with his eggs?-He sells them.
6484. Have you a great quant.i.ty of eggs to sell?-Yes; in summer we have a good many.
6485. How many will you have in a week?-I cannot say.
6486. Do you generally take them to sell?-Sometimes.
6487. How many will you take at a time?-Perhaps a dozen or half a dozen.
6488. What do you get for them?-We sometimes get 6d. a dozen, but we have got 7d. We got that in the past summer.
6489. Do you get money for that?-We never take it in money; we just take in goods.
6490. Is that the way all the people hereabout do with their eggs?-I think it is the way that most of them do with them.
6491. Where do you take them to?-Sometimes to Mr.
Anderson's, and sometimes to Laurence Smith's.
6492. Is Smith's farther away than Anderson's?-Yes; it is about two miles from us.,
6493. Do you get the same price from both places?-I got a halfpenny more from Laurence Smith.
6494. But the price was paid to you at both places in goods?-Yes.
6495. What kind of goods do you get for your eggs?-I cannot say; sometimes we take tea.
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6496. Do you just get the goods when you go, or is there an account kept?-We just get them when we go. We have no account at all.
6497. Is your father here to-day?-Yes.
Hillswick, Northmavine, January 11, 1872, JOHN ANDERSON, examined.
6498. You are a merchant and fish-curer in Hillswick?-I am.
6499. And you are the proprietor of the estate of Ollaberry?-No; I am only tacksman.
6500. Is Ollaberry in Northmavine parish?-Yes.
6501. Your brother, I understand, is proprietor of that estate?- Yes.
6502. Do you carry on business at Hillswick under a firm or in your own name?-In my own name.
6503. I presume the way in which you arrange for the payment of your fishermen is similar to that which prevails in other parts of Shetland-viz. that the fisherman engages to fish for you for the season at the summer fis.h.i.+ng, and to receive payment for his fish in winter at the price then current after the sales have been made?
-Yes.
6504. Is it the case also that the way in which you keep accounts with your fishermen is that a ledger account is opened in name of each man, in which the entries on one side consist of advances made to him for the purpose of outfit and lines, boat-hire when the boat is not his own, or for the price of the boat if he is buying it by instalments?-Yes.
6505. And on the other side is entered the price of his fish, and anything else that may be due to him by you?-Yes.
6506. Is there any further explanation you desire to make about the way in which these arrangements entered into and carried out between you and your fishermen?-I think that is all, except the inducement I have held out to fishermen to buy their own boats and lines. My practice for several years past has been that when they bought their own boats and lines, and were free of debt, I allowed them 6d. a cwt. extra on their fish.
6507. That is to say, that a fisherman who hires his boat, or one who is paying up the price of his boat by instalments, or who is in debt, is paid for his fish 6d. a cwt. less than one who is not in your books for boat-hire or for the price of his boat?-Yes.
6508. Is that intended as an inducement to a man to get clear of his boat-hire or of debts of that sort?-Yes, it was so intended by me.
6509. How long has that system been in operation?-I think since 1864.
6510. Have many of the fishermen got clear of their debts in consequence of that inducement, so far as you can judge by your experience?-I think so.
6511. You think that system has had a beneficial effect?-I think so, judging from the diminution of the debts. I have taken the last four years, and struck an average with regard to that.
6512. You have made a calculation applying to the last four years, showing what?-Showing the degree in which the fishermen have reduced their debts. I don't have that calculation with me here.
6513. Was it made for your own private use?-Yes. I wanted to see whether I was correct in giving the fishermen that advantage, and I found that the average amount to which the fishermen were in debt was 13 each year.
6514. Was that an average only of those who were in debt?-Yes.
6515. And your calculation showed that the average debt of each fisherman was 13 this year?-Not this year, but taking the average for four years.
6516. I understood it was entered into for the purpose of comparison with the period before the system you have now mentioned was introduced?-No. The calculation I made was for the purpose of satisfying myself whether I was correct in giving that 6d. per cwt. in advance extra.
6517. Then do you find that the fishermen who are in your debt now were indebted to you to the amount of 13 on an average?- Yes.
6518. Are you of opinion that that is a less amount of debt per man than existed before that system introduced?-I am.
6519. Did you enter into any calculation over period of years before the introduction of the system, in order to compare it with the state of matters during the last four years, or have you made that comparison just from your general knowledge?-Just from my general knowledge. I did not make the calculation so accurately for the previous period as for the last four years.
6520. But you are clearly of opinion that the amount of debt before that system was introduced was greater than it is now?-I am clearly of that opinion.
6521. How many of the men do you calculate are now in your debt to that average extent?-I am not able to answer that question exactly.
6522. Can you not give an approximation to the number?-I am afraid not.
6523. How many men do you employ altogether in the ling and cod fis.h.i.+ng in summer?-I have no cod fis.h.i.+ng,-only ling fis.h.i.+ng, in which I think I employ about 120 or 130 men.
6524. Is that at Hillswick, or at all your stations?-At Hillswick.