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9881. Have you not sold any other stock except these two cattle for the last five or six years?-No.
9882. Is there any other way you have of getting money except by selling your stock and your fish?-No.
9883. Then you will not have much money pa.s.sing through your hands?-No, very little.
9884. Will you have 1 in your hands in the course of a year?-I could hardly say, because I don't take particular note of how many twopences or sixpences pa.s.s through my hands.
9885. But will you have 1 at a time?-No; I have not had 1 at a time.
9886. Have you had 10s.?-Yes; I have had that.
9887. Do you sometimes sell your winter fish?-Yes.
9888. Do you get money for them?-Yes, if we ask it.
9889. Who do you sell them to?-To Spence & Co.
9890. Are you generally paid in money for your winter fish?-A little money and some goods.
9891. But these are settled for at the time?-They do not enter your account at all.
9892. Would you get the whole price of your winter fish in cash if you asked for it?-I believe I would; but I could not say, because I have never asked the whole of it in that way.
9893. Why have you never asked it?-Because I thought the goods were just the same from their shop as from any other place, and I did not think of asking them for money with which to go to any other place and purchase goods.
9894. Did you think you would not have got it all if you had asked for it in cash?-I cannot say, because I never did ask it; but I think I would have got it if I had asked them, so far as I know.
9895. Are you quite content to go on in this way without getting your money into your own hands?-I should like to get all my own money into my own hands if I could.
9896. You say you think you could have got the money for your winter fish if you had asked it?-I think I could.
9897. Then why did you not ask for it if you would like to have your money?-For the reason I have mentioned: that I thought the goods were the same in their shop as in any other place and therefore I did not ask it.
9898. Then why do you want the money?-Because if I had the money, I would perhaps buy my goods somewhere else, if I thought I could get them cheaper or better.
9899. Have you any fault to find with the quality of the goods you get at their shop?-Sometimes I think the meal is not very good.
Flour was sometimes 1s. 3d., and it was not very good.
9900. Did you ever try any other flour?-Yes; I got a little from other places. It was not very much that I could buy, but I got flour at other shops which was of superior quality.
9901. What did you pay for it?-About 1s. 4d or 1s. 5d.
9902. Then that was it little dearer than the flour you got at the company's shop?-Yes; I got it at Mr. Johnston's.
9903. Would you not have got as good flour at the company's shop if you had paid a higher price for it?-Yes; they had good flour at 1s. 6d.
9904. But you cannot complain of them giving you a worse quality of flour at a lower price?-No.
9905. Was the meal the same as you get at any place for the same sum?-It was 1d. per peck higher last summer.
9906. And you said it was not quite so good as you would like?- That was the flour.
9907. I thought you said so about the meal also?-There were some weeks when the meal was really good, and some weeks when it was not so good.
9908. How did you get the money with which to purchase flour at Johnston's?-We sold a few eggs or a little b.u.t.ter, and got it in that way.
9909. You did not pay for it in money, but in eggs or b.u.t.ter?- Yes.
9910. Is that it common way of selling your eggs and b.u.t.ter?- Yes.
9911. You do not get money for them?-No.
9912. Why did you not take the eggs and b.u.t.ter to Spence & Co.'s shop?-Because we sometimes thought of trying another place.
9913. Why did you not take your money for the winter fis.h.i.+ng and buy your provisions at another place if you thought you could get them better?-Our earnings from it were very small; and for all the money we had to get, it was not worth while to take it from Spence & Co.'s shop and go to any other place with it, even although we might have got our goods it little cheaper. I think all my winter fis.h.i.+ng only came to about 30s.
9914. How far do you live from the company's shop?-Nearly two miles.
9915. Is Johnston's shop nearer to you?-Very little.
9916. Is there any other shop nearer?-No.
9917. Have you ever been asked to fish for any other person than Spence & Co. since they began business?-No.
Baltasound, Unst, January 19, 1872, MAGNUS HENDERSON, examined.
9918. You are a proprietor near Haroldswick?-Yes, a small proprietor.
9919. You have been resident in Unst all your life?-Yes.
9920. You were at one time engaged in the fis.h.i.+ng yourself, and you know the system that is practised here?-Yes, so far.
9921. I presume the system of annual settlements has been one of long continuance here?-Yes.
9922. The fishermen have also for a long time combined the calling of farming with that of fis.h.i.+ng?-Yes.
9923. They fish for about four months in the year, and are engaged on their farms for the rest of the time?-Yes.
9924. How has the rent been usually paid to the landlord during the last twenty or thirty years?-Very often the tenants have fished for the landlord; and of course at the end of the year, when their accounts were made up, the rent was taken into account along with other matters.
9925. When they did not fish for their landlord, has there been any arrangement between the landlord and the fish-merchant for the payment of the rent?-Yes. In some cases, I suppose, the fish-curers are bound to pay the rent to the landlord for the tenants who fish for them.
9926. Are you aware whether there has been a written arrangement of that kind between the landlord and the fish-merchants?-I am not aware of that.
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9927. Of course, when the fish-merchant happens to be the tacksman, that is it different case?-It is.