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15,220. Would you give a similar guarantee to a merchant whom the men named themselves?-Yes.
15,221. Do you do that in order that the families of the men may be able to live during the fis.h.i.+ng season-Yes.
15,222. But it is only in the event of a man requiring these advances that you give such a guarantee, or require them to go to such a shop?-They all require it.
15,223. Are none of them able to live upon their own resources?- Plenty of them; but still they come for their supplies. There was an instance of that occurred with me only eight days past on Sat.u.r.day. A man who had been in my employment for two or three years had been engaged two or three weeks before to go to the fis.h.i.+ng for the rising season, and he came on Sat.u.r.day and asked for supplies. I asked him where he wished them from, and he said Hay & Co.'s, and I gave him an order to go there. After giving it to him, he came and asked me for some cash. I told him thought it was rather early to come and ask for cash for the rising season, and that he could hardly have spent the money he had got from me at settlement. After a good deal of pressure, he said that about the time he had settled with me he had got some money from his son, and he had added it to the money he had from me, and had put it into the bank, and he did not like to draw it out again. Therefore it is not altogether from necessity that they get these supplies.
15,224. But they all take them as a matter of course?-Yes. There are some men who always get them, and the other men would think they were not so well treated if they did not get them also.
15,225. Then the necessity of making these advances to the men is one of the elements which the merchant must take into account in making his arrangements for the season?-To some extent it must be.
15,226. Is it not an element in fixing the price which the men are to get, that the merchant has to make advances of that description?- Not so far as the Faroe fis.h.i.+ng is concerned.
15,227. In the Faroe trade do the men get exactly the same price for their fish which the merchant realizes?-Yes, and something more.
15,228. Why do you give more?-Just because we are obliged to do it. This year I am paying more than I can get. I am bound to pay the currency, as it is called; and if the currency is higher than I realize for the fish, I am still bound to pay it.
15,229. Have you not been able to sell up to the current price this year?-No. I did not accept the price which was offered to me at one time, thinking the fish would be higher, but instead of being higher they fell. I did not sell until after the men were settled with.
15,230. Are you agent or owner of the fis.h.i.+ng smack 'Gondola'?- Yes.
15,231 What was the amount of earnings of the men employed in that vessel last season?-The men's earnings in 1871 were about 19 or 20, on an average, for the season.
15,232. Was that the whole proceeds that were paid from the catch of the 'Gondola'?-Yes.
15,233. Was that the sum of which the men received payment after the necessary deductions?-The sum which each man receives varies according to his position [Page 386] in the vessel. The master received 42, 11s. 3d.; the mate received 25, 8s. 10d.; one man received 21, 6s., and the others ran from that to 19, 13s.
6d., if they were there the whole season, according to the amount of their score-money.
15,234. What was the amount credited to each sharesman for the value of his share of the fish?-It varied from 19, 13s. 6d. to about 21, 6s. for an ordinary sharesman. The score-money makes a little difference between one sharesman and another.
15,235. What was the amount of the share apart from the score-money?-It was 14, 4s. 7d. for the Faroe fis.h.i.+ng. That was for the period when they were paid by shares; but there was a part of the season when they were paid by wages, when they were upon an Iceland voyage.
15,236. What was the number of the crew?-There were fourteen during the Faroe fis.h.i.+ng. Of these, nine were full sharesmen, and the others varied from threequarters to half a share. There were 121/4 shares altogether, and the whole proceeds of the fis.h.i.+ng would be divided by that.
15,237. What was the total take of fish?-20 tons 6 cwt. 3 qrs. 21 lbs.
15,238. Was that a fair average fis.h.i.+ng for the season?-No, it was rather a poor season. I daresay it was fully an average for last year; but it was a poor fis.h.i.+ng, taking other years into account. We would not consider it a paying season.
15,239. Who cla.s.ses the quality of the fish?-It is generally the merchant. We usually send the first-cla.s.s fish to Spain, and the other cod go to the home market.
15,240. You charge 52s. 6d. as the cost price for curing. Is that by arrangement with the men at the beginning of the season?-No.
15,241. Is it rounded upon an estimate of the actual expense of curing for the year?-We cannot ascertain every particular with regard to the expense of curing the fish and bringing them into market; but I am certain we are charging under the rate which it actually costs us, including wages, salt, material, and a great many other things that have to be embraced in it. We have often to include coffee and other things supplied to the women at the beach.
15,242. Are the people employed in your curing establishment paid by weekly wages or by fees for the season?-They are not paid in that way at all. Here [showing in book] is the account of a man, Arthur Leask, who employs some women from the mainland. I make a contract with him for the curing of the fish. He generally gives an order to the women, and I pay them what is contained in that order.
15,243. Is that the way in which most of your curing business is managed?-Yes.
15,244. Do you cure at the island of Linga?-Yes. Here [showing]
is another account with people who have been curing for me for a number of years. I entered into the contract first with Laurence Thomson; he died and left the farm, and then John Thomson took it, and now Miss Thomson has it.
15,245. Is the work all done in contract with them?-Yes.
15,246. Do they give orders to their employes in the same way as Leask?-I think they manage it themselves, both there and at Linga, with the exception of the was.h.i.+ng.
15,247. Do you pay them in cash?-Yes.
15,248. Have you any transactions with the people employed by them?-No.
15,249. Had they an account for goods in any shop?-Not so far as I am aware.
15,250. In what way are the people paid whom Leask sends to you with orders?-They are paid in cash altogether.
15,251. Have you a written agreement with your Faroe fishers?- Yes; I have a separate one for each smack every year.
15,252. Do you stipulate in that agreement what deductions are to be made?-Yes; at least that is done generally. The deductions, including the expenses of curing and bringing the fish to market, and master's and mate's fees, score-money, and cost of bait, are made from the gross proceeds, and then the balance is divided into two-one half going to the men, and the other to the owners.
15,253. Is there not a deduction for commission?-No; that is generally just an understanding.
15,254. What is that understanding?-That a commission is to be charged. In the account I have produced for the 'Gondola'
commission and guarantee are charged at 5 per cent.,
15,255. Do the men at settlement see, or desire to see, the bills of sale?-They have never done so in any case.
15,256. Do they sometimes complain that they did not see them, or make any complaints about the price of the fish?-They are always grumbling; but they never made any direct complaint to me on the subject. In order to save a good deal of that trouble, the North Sea Fis.h.i.+ng Co. have produced their accounts, but very frequently they have begun to settle with their fishermen at the currency before the accounts were ready.
15,257. Do the company produce their bills of sale to the men?- They are bound to do it if the men call for them.
15,258. Are you connected with that company?-I am a director of it. Mr. Irvine, of Hay & Co., is the agent.
15,259. Do you know whether, in point of fact, the fishermen generally see the bills of sale of that company?-I cannot tell.
That is a matter which is left in the hands of Mr. Irvine.
15,260. Are the men frequently in debt to you at the commencement of the fis.h.i.+ng season?-No. There were some men who left me in debt last year, and they have gone elsewhere,-I don't know where. In fact I would rather get clear of a man who is in debt, and take my chance of getting my debt from him afterwards, than employ him again, unless he was a very good man.
Lerwick, January 30, 1872, JAMES COUTTS, examined.
15,261. Are you a provision merchant in Lerwick?-I am. I have been in business for eleven years.
15,262. Do you deal in anything else but provisions?-Nothing of any consequence. Sometimes I get a little cottons, or small wares as we call them.
15,263. Do you sometimes purchase soft goods over the counter?-I used to do it; but I have not done so for the last twelve or eighteen months.
15,264. Why did you give it up at that time?-There were several reasons for it. I did not think it was a nice thing to do; and sometimes it was more bother than it was all worth.
15,265. You probably found your other business increasing?-It was not for that reason that I gave it up. I got more humbug by it than all the good it was.