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1953. Do you know that any one can get money for their goods if they want it?-I know there are plenty who get it.
1954. But can any one get whatever money they require for their goods?-I don't know. I only know that there are many who want money; but for my own part, I generally ask for goods, and I get them; and if I require a little money, I always get it.
1955. Do you sometimes get lines?-Yes; and worsted to knit, which is the same as money.
1956. If you are in want of worsted, do you buy it from Mr.
Sinclair in payment for your shawls?-Yes.
1957. Do you keep any account, or do you just deal across the counter?-I just get the things as I want them.
1958. You go to the shop and say you want so much worsted as part of what you are taking?-Yes.
1959. Do you get it at the ordinary price?-Yes; it is just the same price.
1960. Does your sister-in-law, Mrs. James Bolt, deal in the same way?-Yes; in the same manner.
1961. And, altogether with Mr. Sinclair?-Yes. We always knit together, and what hosiery we have we always sell to him.
1962. Do you buy the worsted from Mr. Sinclair exactly in the same way as you would buy a piece of cotton or a dress?-Yes; just the same.
1963. The price of the worsted is reckoned up as part of the price of the shawl that you are selling?-Yes. We get it on a line the same as the other goods.
1964. Of course: there is no writing: it is just a transaction across the counter unless there is a line?-Yes.
1965. But if you have a line, and bring it back to the shop in order to get goods, do you get worsted for it just as you get any other goods?-Yes; I have got worsted on a line.
1966. Do you know that these transactions are all entered in Mr.
Sinclair's book?-Yes.
1967. You have seen that done?-Yes.
1968. The worsted is entered there as well as the other things?- Yes.
Lerwick, January 3, 1872, Mrs. WILHELMINA BOLT, examined.
1969. Have you anything different to say about the way in which you knit and deal in your hosiery business from what you have heard stated by your sister-in-law?-No; I have nothing more to say.
1970. You agree with her in everything?-Yes.
1971. And there is no difference or addition that you can state?- No.
1972. Have you asked for money and got all you wanted?-Yes; I never asked for money and did not get it. When I had a line from Mr. Sinclair, I just got the same goods from him upon it as I would have got for money.
Lerwick, January 3, 1872, MRS HELEN FLAUS, examined.
1973. Are you a dresser in Lerwick?-I dress a little and I knit a little.
1974. Did you hear the evidence which Mrs. Arcus gave to-day?- Yes.
1975. Do you do business in the same way that she described?- Much the same.
1976. Do you dress shawls for some of the knitters in Lerwick?- Yes.
1977. And you take ready money for that?-Yes.
1978. Do they sell the shawls direct to the merchants themselves?-Yes.
1979. Do you also dress shawls for knitters from the country?- Yes.
1980. Do you sell these shawls, or do you return them to the girls who bring them to you?-I sometimes sell them, and sometimes they sell them.
1981. When you sell them to the merchants, do you get ready money or lines, or do you get goods for the girls?-I get lines from those merchants who give lines, and those who give no lines mark them down in their books.
1982. Who gives you the lines?-Mr. Sinclair. Mr. Laurenson generally is the only other merchant I sell to and he marks them down in his own book. He does not give lines.
1983. You don't sell to any of the other merchants?-Sometimes I do.
1984. Do you sell to Mr. Johnston?-Not very much.
1985. Does he give you a line when you sell to him for a country girl?-Yes.
1986. Do you sell to Mr. Linklater?-Yes, occasionally. He does not give lines; he marks the articles down in his book.
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1987. How does he know the girl for whom the shawl has been sold, when he only marks it in the book?-I give in the girl's name to him, and she goes and asks for the amount that is marked in her name, and gets it.
1988. If she knows the amount?-I tell her the amount.
1989. Then she knows the amount, and that is sufficient to identify her?-Yes.
1990. Do these country girls sometimes ask you to get money for them rather than goods?-No; they have never asked me to do that.
1991. Do they sometimes get part of their payment in money?-I cannot tell about that. They always get a line from me, and I cannot tell how the merchants and they settle.
1992. Do you know whether lines are sometimes given for the goods which are sold by the knitters in town?-I cannot say anything about that.
1993. Or which are sold by yourself?-No; I don't know anything about that myself.
1994. You never took lines for the shawls you knitted yourself?- No; not for my own goods.
1995. Do you sometimes sell to strangers, or to people who are not in the trade?-No; I have never done that.
1996. I suppose you meet with people who knit a good deal, and have a number of transactions with them?-Yes.
1997. Do you know whether they prefer to sell to strangers, or to merchants in town?-Sometimes they require money, and at other times they require goods as well as money; and they would then just as well have the goods as the money.