Second Shetland Truck System Report - BestLightNovel.com
You’re reading novel Second Shetland Truck System Report Part 195 online at BestLightNovel.com. Please use the follow button to get notification about the latest chapter next time when you visit BestLightNovel.com. Use F11 button to read novel in full-screen(PC only). Drop by anytime you want to read free – fast – latest novel. It’s great if you could leave a comment, share your opinion about the new chapters, new novel with others on the internet. We’ll do our best to bring you the finest, latest novel everyday. Enjoy
7881. Did you know any men who were behind, and had a balance against them at the end of the year?-I cannot say whether there were any in that position.
7882. You were not in that position yourself?-Never.
7883. What was the reason why the men generally dealt with the merchants who employed them at the fis.h.i.+ng?-Perhaps the men did not have money at the time with which to go and buy the articles from any other party, and the man who owned the vessel ready to supply them. That was the way in which it was done, so far as I know.
7884. I suppose some of them had been supplied with goods before they went away to the fis.h.i.+ng?-I think so.
7885. And it was a common enough thing for an account to be standing against them when they settled?-I believe it was.
7886. Do you think any of them would have engaged with another merchant in preference for the fis.h.i.+ng if they had not had that account?-I cannot say as to that.
7887. Was there any obligation on them to engage with the merchant who supplied them with their goods?-Not so far as I know.
7888. Except that they thought it fair to go and fish for him in order that he might have some security for his advances?-Of course.
7889. How long is it since you opened your shop?-About twenty-one or twenty-two months.
7890. On whose land is it?-The proprietor, Mr. Robert Hoseason, is in New Zealand.
7891. Is it under the management of Pole, Hoseason, & Co.?-No.
Mr. Sievwright, writer in Lerwick, is the agent. Mr. John White and Mr. Cheyne, Edinburgh, are the agents, and they have Mr.
Sievwright under them.
7892. Had you any difficulty in getting a place in which to open your business?-No; I had been living there before.
7893. But was any objection made to your opening the shop?-No; there could be none, because I have a lease of the place.
7894. For what length of time is your lease?-For ten years.
7895. Do you know whether there is a difficulty in getting premises for shops in other parts of the district?-I cannot say, because I never tried.
7896. What is the price of your meal just now?-The fact is, we have none.
7897. Do you not sell meal?-Yes, I sell it. My meal is 16d. a peck all through the year.
7898. Is that higher or lower than the price at the Mossbank shop?-I think it is 1d. below it.
7899. Is your meal of the same quality as the meal there?-I think so. I get my meal from Aberdeen.
7900. Is it better than the meal sold at Mossbank?-I could not say that.
7901. Do you get it from Bremner & Grant?-Yes, and sometimes I get it from Tulloch. I generally get it by the sack or boll; and if any person takes a sack or boll from me, I give it at what it cost me, adding something for freight.
7902. You sell it at 16d. per peck; how much is that per boll?- There are about 17 pecks to the boll, but you will not get a boll to weigh out 17 pecks. There should be 171/2 in it, but weighing out pecks and half pecks the boll will not weigh out so much as 17.
7903. Are most of the people about Mossbank employed by Pole, Hoseason, & Co. at the fis.h.i.+ng?-Yes most of them.
7904. Is there anybody there who fishes for one else?-James Hay fishes for Mr. Adie, Voe. That is all I know.
7905. Does he go to Voe to fish?-No; he fishes at Feideland Station.
7906. With that exception, will all the people within two or three miles of Mossbank be fis.h.i.+ng for Pole, Hoseason, & Co.?-Yes; I think most of them.
7907. Or within five miles?-I could not say for five miles; but I think most of them will.
7908. Do most of them deal at Pole, Hoseason, & Co.'s shop?-I believe they do.
7909. Very few of them come to you?-Occasionally they do, but not to any great extent.
7910. Do you think you would have a greater number of customers if you were employing boats yourself for the fis.h.i.+ng?- I cannot say; perhaps I might.
7911. Have you not thought of turning your attention that way?- Not as yet.
7912. How is it that the men are at liberty to sell fish to you if they are engaged to Pole, Hoseason & Co.?-They are engaged in the summer time with the large boats, because the large boats belong to Pole, Hoseason, & Co.; but the small boats which they use in the winter time belong to the men themselves, and it is more convenient for the men living in the neighbourhood of my house to sell their fish to me than to Pole, Hoseason, & Co. It would be better for them to sell their fish to me 6d. per cwt. cheaper than to go to Mossbank with them. The boats are their own, and the men are not in debt to Pole, Hoseason, & Co., and therefore they can do with these fish as they please.
7913. Do you also buy fish from men who are in debt to Pole, Hoseason, & Co.?-I don't know whether they are in debt to them or not. I take fish from every one who brings them to me.
7914. Do you buy many fish during the winter season in that way?-Not a large quant.i.ty. Perhaps. I might have about 11/2 or 2 tons of dry fish in the spring; that would be about the amount of it.
7915. Are these worth about 20 a ton?-No; I got 17, 10s. last year for them.
7916. Then these fish don't sell so well as the summer cured fish?-No; some of them are very small.
7917. Do the men about you not think it would be more profitable for themselves to cure their own fish?-They could not manage it, because they have no cellars or stores in which to keep salt, or convenient beaches on which to dry the fish.
7918. Did not the men formerly cure their own fish in Shetland to some extent?-I don't know.
7919. Don't they try to do it still?-Some of them do it still in Shetland; but in the winter time they must have a booth for the purpose of salting their fish and keeping them.
7920. Do you sell soft goods in your shop as well as provisions?- No. We sometimes had a bit of white cotton last year for making oil cloths, or the like of that, but we have none now.
7921. Do you think the men about you are not able to purchase from you so much as they would otherwise do from want of having money in their pockets?-That is a thing I cannot say anything about, because I never know what any man has in his pocket. We never talk about that. I might have my ideas on the subject, but I could not speak positively about it.
7922. It is your ideas I want to know, and what, you feel in your own experience. What is your opinion on the subject?-I believe it might be better, for the men if they were allowed to buy or not as they thought proper.
7923. But do you think the extent of your dealings, is less than it would be if the men had ready money payments?-I could not say for that.
[Page 193]
7924. Supposing you provided as good an article as Pole, Hoseason, & Co., would the men come to you in greater numbers if they were paid in cash shorter periods?-I could not say. They just come to as their own minds lead them, but I believe they would still go to Pole, Hoseason, & Co.'s shop, even although they had money.
7925. But don't you think they are prevented from coming to you by their want of money?-They may be in some cases.
7926. You say you have your own ideas about that: what are they?-I believe it might be the idea of man that he might get a better article if he could come to me for it, or go to Pole Hoseason, & Co.'s shop, just as he liked.
7927. But suppose a man does want to come to you, and I suppose some of your friends would be very glad to deal with you, do you know that they are sometimes in want of money, and thus prevented from coming?-I don't know.
7928. Do the men not prefer to go to a place where they can get what they want on credit?-I don't know about that either.