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14,962. Have any men who live on Mr. Anderson's estate got boats and lines of their own?-Yes. I think there is one man who has got a boat and lines.
14,963. Did he get 8s. 6d. too?-I don't know what he got.
Lerwick, January 29, 1872, GILBERT SCOLLAY, recalled.
14,964. I understand you wish to give some additional evidence to what you gave when you were examined at Brae?-Yes. In the first place I spoke as if the party I have from Lunnasting parish was still in my house but it is four months since that party was removed to another house, at the instance of the Board of Lunacy.
14,965. How many different prices of meal are there at Voe, according to the weight sold?-A party taking a whole sack will get it at a less price; when divided and subdivided, the meal rises in price.
14,966. What is the lowest price just now?-I have not bought any lately, and I cannot tell; but there has been flour sold lately for fifteenpence a peck.
14,967. Is there only one price for meal at Vidlin?-Yes; only one price for the same meal, whether you take it in large or in small quant.i.ties. That has been my experience.
14,968. Have you any statement to make about the rise in price at Voe according to the southern market?-Yes. I have been told that Mr. Adie has said that it should rise not only in his cellar, but in his book too, according to the market in the south. Henry Manson, post-runner between Voe and Lunna says he heard him say so.
14,969. But that is not what you know yourself; it is only what you have heard from other people?-I have heard Mr. Adie say so myself, that it would rise in price both in his cellar and in his book.
14,970. Do you mean that it rises with the southern market?-Yes; but at Vidlin it does not rise until the meal that has been bought at a certain price has been finished. Mr. Sutherland has told me that a quant.i.ty of meal bought in by Mr. Robertson at a certain price remained at the same price until the last of it was sold, and the same with the next parcel.
14,971. When you have pa.s.s-books at Voe, is the price generally entered in the pa.s.s-book at the time when you get the meal?-No; it is not entered until [Page 377] settlement, when it is compared with their book, as my pa.s.s-book will show. There are several quant.i.ties of meal in it for which no price is entered.
14,972. Is it entered at settlement at one price for the whole season, or at different prices?-I cannot tell. If what they say is true, it is entered at the highest market price if the market has risen, because they say it rises in their book as well as in their cellar.
14,973. You have produced several pa.s.s-books to me. Is that [showing] a pa.s.s-book of your father's in account with Mr. Adie at Voe?-Yes.
14,974. Have you carried through some of the transactions for your father at Mr. Adie's shop?-Yes.
14,975. I see here an entry on April 21, 1868, '24 lbs. meal at 5s.
3d.:' who made that entry?-It was made at the shop, not by me.
14,976. Here [showing] is another entry, 'April 25, one lispund Indian meal, 5s. 6d.:' who made that?-My father perhaps made some entries in the book himself when he got things, and when the pa.s.s-book was not sent to the shop.
14,977. Was that entry made by your father?-The entry of 24 lbs.
meal at 5s. 3d. is not by my father. I think the other is by him.
14,978. There is another entry, June 30, of 'Indian meal, 2s.:' who made that entry?-It is not in my father's writing. It has been made at Voe.
14,979. There is another entry, 'July 1, one boll Indian meal, 16s.
6d.:' who made that?-It is my father's.
14,980. There is another, 'Dec. 6, Indian meal, 1/2 lisp. 2s.?'-Yes.
14,981. That account has been settled in January 1869, you having given 21 yards cloth at 3s. 6d.?-Yes.
14,982. Have you any doubt that all the things entered in that account were got by your father?-No. They were all got and settled for.
14,983. The next account was settled on March 17, 1870: have you any doubt that all the things entered before that date were got by your father at Voe?-No, they were all received.
14,984. On November 25 he got 1/4 gallon oil at 6d.: would that be sillock oil?-Perhaps it was.
14,985. In that settlement your father is credited with 26 yards cloth, which comes to 3, 13s. 8d. There is something else that comes to 1s., being 3, 14s. 8d. due to him, and 2, 19s. 4d. to Mr.
Adie, leaving a balance in your father's favour of 15s. 4d.?-Yes.
14,986. Mr. Adie takes a discount for cash of 1s. 6d.: does that mean that he charged 1s. 6d. of discount on the 15s. 4d. which he was to pay to your father?-Yes.
14,987. Why was that?-I don't know; but it was a common thing, that when he gave cash he gave so much less for the cloth.
14,988. Was it the rule that all cloth was to be settled with by goods?-The price was 5 per cent. less if paid in cash.
14,989. But was it the rule that all the cloth was to be paid for by goods?-No. They just had to take the goods for convenience; but the wool was my father's, and I could go to whom he pleased with it.
14,990. The account for 1870 in the book is still unsettled?-It has been settled lately, and my father's account is now in another book.
14,991. Do you think the things that are marked in that book were got at the prices which are entered there?-Yes, so far as I know, they were. There was no dispute with my father, either about price or anything else.
14,992. We will go to your own books. Is this [showing] your pa.s.s-book with Mr. Adie at Voe from 1869 downwards?-Yes.
14,993. Were all the articles entered there got by you at the prices which are there marked?-Yes.
14,994. I see that in June and July 1869 there is some meal and flour entered in quant.i.ties, without any price being marked?-Yes.
14,995. How did that happen?-They know best themselves why they did not enter the prices. I cannot explain it.
14,996. I show you an entry of one quarter boll Indian meal: is that in Mr. Adie's handwriting?-I don't know; it will be in the writing of some of Adie's men. All the entries in that book were written in the shop.
14,997. Has that account been settled?-Not yet.
14,998. Is that the reason why the price has not been put in?-No, I should not say that was the reason.
14,999. Is this [showing] a continuation of the other account?- Yes.
15,000. Have you got all the articles that are marked in this book?-Yes.
15,001. Did you get all the articles entered there at the prices which are marked?-Yes, I got them at the prices marked when there is any price; but there is a sack of pease-meal entered without any price to it.
15,002. I see an entry on May 30, 'To dog licence, 5s.; by cash, 2s.
6d.:-2s. 6d.:' what does that mean?-I had 2s. 6d. that I paid as part of the dog licence, and Mr. Adie charged me with the rest.
15,003. Did you pay that licence through Mr. Adie?-Yes.
15,004. Does he transact all your business for you in that way?- Yes.
15,005. Does he pay your accounts for you?-No; he never pays any accounts for me, that I know of.
15,006. Did he only pay your dog licence for you?-He only paid one half of it. He might have paid the whole if I had asked him to do it.
15,007. The following are some of the entries in your book:-