Second Shetland Truck System Report - BestLightNovel.com
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16,224. Did you always get your outfit from the agent with whom you were engaged?-Always.
16,225. And some supplies for your family besides?-Yes.
16,226. Did you keep an account in the agent's shop, from which your family got what they wanted during your absence?-Yes.
16,227. Did your wife get all her supplies from Lerwick?-No; she got most of them from shops in our own neighbourhood, because it was a long distance to come to Lerwick; but sometimes she sent here, and sometimes not.
16,228. Why did she send here for them?-Sometimes she had to send here for money when she could not get money from her neighbours.
16,229. Did she get money here whenever she wanted it?-Yes, so far as ever I knew.
16,230. Did she have allotment notes?-Yes, towards the end of the time, but not at first.
16,231. Did you always take allotment notes for her use while you were absent?-I have done so lately.
16,232. Are these allotment notes taken in her name?-Yes; but sometimes I have been so much indebted to the agent before I left, that I had to leave the allotment note with him until he was paid.
16,233. Have you done that lately?-Yes.
16,234. Had you been in his debt before you engaged with him?- No. I got into his debt at the time of engaging. I got a lot of things from him then.
16,235. Did you leave your allotment note in his hands as a security for the payment of these supplies?-Yes.
16,236. Was the note taken in the agent's name?-No; it was taken in my wife's name, and she was supplied by him if she required anything.
16,237. Who was the agent you engaged with last year?-Messrs.
Laurenson & Co. I also engaged with them the year before. The year before that, I think I engaged with Mr. Joseph Leask.
16,238. In all these years did you run up a pretty large account at the agent's shop?-Yes; I always had an account with the agent.
16,239. Did you settle that account before you went up to the Custom House to be paid your wages?-No. Sometimes the agent was at the Custom House to receive payment of his account there, and sometimes I went down to his shop and paid him after I had been paid myself.
16,240. But was the account settled in the book, and the amount due by you to him ascertained before you went up to the Custom House?-Yes.
16,241. Was that done always?-No, not of late.
16,242. Why did you get supplies from Lerwick when you could have got them nearer home, without giving your wife the trouble of sending so far for them?-Sometimes, perhaps, I could not get credit from a neighbour.
16,243. Could your wife not have got money from the agent in Lerwick by sending in her allotment note to him?-If I was in debt to the agent, I could not expect him to advance money until he was paid his debt; but I never saw an agent refusing money, even although there was an account due to him.
16,244. Did you ever ask money and get it when there was an account due?-Yes.
16,245. Do you mean that your wife asked for money when you were away?-Yes.
16,246. Did she require it for any particular purpose when she asked it in that way?-I cannot say.
16,247. Did you ever know of her asking for money in order to buy supplies near home?-No, I never knew that.
16,248. Do you think she would have been likely to?-I don't think it. I think if she had ever done it, I would have known.
16,249. Do you think she would have got the money if she had asked it for that purpose?-I am sure she would.
16,250. Then why did she not do it instead of carrying her supplies all the way from Lerwick?-I don't know as to that.
16,251. How far is it from Lerwick to your place?-I never heard of it being measured, but I should say it is over twenty miles.
16,252. You say the agent keeps your allotment notes, even although they are in name of your wife?-Yes, if I am indebted to him.
16,253. Don't they require to be signed by your wife?-Not at first.
16,254. But afterwards?-Yes; if she has a note, then of course she has to sign it before she gets the money.
16,255. But she does not require to sign it when she gets supplies; these are set down to the account?-Yes; she does not require to sign it unless she is drawing her half-pay at the Custom House.
16,256. Has she ever drawn her half-pay, so long as you remember?-Yes.
16,257. Is that long ago?-It is perhaps a couple of years ago.
16,258. How much of it did she draw then?-She drew half a month's pay every month when I was away.
16,259. What did she do with that?-I suppose she required it.
16,260. Did she spend it at home or in Lerwick?-I cannot say.
16,261. Was the allotment note in the agent's hands at that time?-No.
16,262. She had got the allotment note that year herself?-Yes.
16,263. You had sent it to her before you went away?-Yes.
16,264. Then at that time you had not run up a large account with the agent?-Not very much.
16,265. Had you any account with the agent that year at all?-I don't remember; I don't think it was very much.
16,266. There might have been a little for some articles of outfit, perhaps?-Perhaps there was.
16,267. When you settle at the Custom House, are you ever told by the agent's clerk who goes up to hand [Page 412] you the money, that he expects you down at the shop to settle your account there?-Yes; but I usually go first to the shop and see what my account with the agent there is, and then I pay him immediately afterwards, either at the Custom House or at the shop, as soon as I am paid myself.
16,268. Are you expected to go down and pay your account at once?-Yes.
16,269. Are you ever spoken to about going at once?-No, I have never been told to go at once; but I understand it is my business to pay it at once, as long as I am able to do it.
16,270. Is it expected that the men going on a Greenland voyage are to take their supplies, partly at least, from the agent's shop?-I don't know if it is expected or not. I suppose it is expected, but a man may buy his outfit wherever he pleases.
16,271. Did you ever know a man buying it elsewhere than at the agent's shop?-I have bought some articles elsewhere myself.
16,272. Did you ever buy the whole of your articles anywhere else?-Yes.