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6624. But many of them do?-Many of them do, I think.
6625. Do they generally get further into your books, or do they very often clear off their debt as they grow older and get larger wages?-I think they often clear off their debt.
6626. Is it boy at the commencement likely, from his circ.u.mstances, to incur a larger debt in the first year than after a year or two, in proportion to his earnings?-I think not.
It depends, however, a great deal upon the parents. If a boy has poor parents, who cannot afford to give him much clothing the first year, to keep him warm, he must get these things from me and perhaps he may fall behind, and yet be a very honest boy.
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6627. But what I was pointing at is this, that a boy may require some outfit at the beginning of his career, and that he would probably incur some debt?-That is true in some cases, but not in all. A boy has been at the beach, and then he goes to the haaf; perhaps the first year or two he will require to fall a little behind; but if he is an honest, provident lad, he will soon clear off that.
6628. I understand you are a purchaser of kelp to some extent?- Yes.
6629. Have you heard the evidence that has been given to-day on that subject?-Yes.
6630. Was that evidence correct with regard to the manner in which the kelp is paid for; or do you wish to make any correction or addition to it?-It was perfectly correct, so far as the prices go.
4s. is the cash price, and 4s. 6d. is the goods price which we pay for it.
6631. You pay for it either in cash or goods?-Yes.
6632. In which way do you make the greater part of your payments for kelp?-I should think the greater part would be in goods
6633. Is that because you allow a higher price in goods, and the people prefer taking that higher price?-Certainly. I have no doubt they prefer it; otherwise they would not take it in that way
6634 I suppose if they got it in cash, they could not spend it very easily anywhere else than in your own store?-There are various shops round about where they could go to.
6635. Has that difference in the price of kelp been of long continuance?-I think there has not been very much difference on it for several years.
6636 But has it been long the practice to give an advanced price if payment is taken in goods?-Yes; that has always been the case during my experience. There have always been two prices, at least at Hillswick.
6637. Have you any lease of the kelp sh.o.r.es?-Yes; all round from Roeness Voe to Mavisgrind, on the Busta estate.
6638 Do you generally employ women, or allow any women to gather kelp and burn it?-Yes; sometimes men do it also.
6639. But they are not at liberty to gather it for any one except yourself?-No; that is quite understood.
6640. Have you to pay a lords.h.i.+p to the landlord for the kelp?- Yes; 15s. per ton.
6641. You do something in the hosiery business also, and you have brought your women's book to show how that business is conducted?-Yes.
6642. Is the hosiery always paid in goods?-Not always.
6643. Have you any idea what amount is usually paid in cash?- There is very little cash paid. Our general practice is, not to pay cash for hosiery, but to give goods only.
6644. Is that because you consider you have a very small profit on the hosiery?-Yes.
6645. What percentage do you calculate you have upon it?-I am afraid my experience has been, that I have never had any profit upon it. I have a profit on the goods, but not on the hosiery.
6646. Do you sell your hosiery generally to firms in Edinburgh or Glasgow?-In London, Edinburgh, Glasgow, or any place where we can get it sold.
6647. But you sell it direct to retail houses in these places, and not through Lerwick merchants?-Yes.
6648. Do you employ women to knit for you, and give out wool to them?-No.
6649. Yours is exclusively a purchase business?-Yes.
6650. Do you make a bargain for the article, whatever it may be, on the understanding that the woman is to take goods for it?-Yes, that is the understanding; but still I have paid cash in a good many cases.
6651. If you want a very fine article for any particular purpose, do you then sometimes agree to pay in cash?-Yes; if they wanted cash for that, we would give it.
6652. Would you give a lower rate in cash than in goods?-Yes.
6653. What difference might there be?-I cannot tell.
6654. Will it be 2s. or 3s. in the pound?-I should think so.
6655. Are you often asked to give cash for hosiery?-No.
6656. Do the people who bring it generally want goods?-Yes, they want goods; but the practice may arise too from their knowing that the understanding is, that they only get goods for the hosiery.
6657. In the case of a woman not wanting the goods at the time, is the article she brings entered to her account, or how is it dealt with?-It is entered to her account.
6658. She has a ledger account of her own in your books?-Yes.
6659. Or a pa.s.s-book?-Yes; many of them have pa.s.s-books.
6660. When a young woman begins to knit in that way, and to deal with you, does her account generally run on for a succession of years?-Yes, very often.
6661. Is it in what you call the women's book that these accounts are entered?-Yes.
6662. The goods supplied to them, I presume, are mostly soft goods?-Yes; soft goods and groceries.
6663. Do you give the same value in groceries hosiery as in soft goods?-No; not the same value.
6664. Is it part of the bargain at the beginning, whether the payment is to be taken in groceries or in soft goods?-There is no agreement of that sort.
6665. If a woman asks for groceries, what do you do?-We just give them to her.
6666. But you say you don't give the same value in groceries as in soft goods?-Not exactly the same value.
6667. Do you mean that when she gets groceries, you give them to her at a higher price?-Yes.
6668. You add something to the price for which you would sell them to a cash customer?-Yes.
6669. Or to a fisherman who keeps an account?-Yes.
6670. A fisherman keeping an account would get his groceries at a different price from a seller of hosiery?-Yes.
6671. Do you not think that a cash system for all these matters would be simpler and more convenient for all parties concerned?-I don't see that there would be any gain to the purchaser. Suppose a woman came in with hosiery of the value of 5s. and got cash for it, she would require to go either to my shop or to some other shop with it for her goods.