16,319. Do you not take goods across the country to Scalloway sometimes when any of your family happen to be in Lerwick?- Only very little.
16,320. Do you settle about December or January every year?- Generally about the 1st of December.
16,321. Do you get the balance which is due to you then in cash?-Yes.
16,322. Do you sometimes get advances in money during the course of the year?-Yes; I get what I require.
16,323. How much do you generally get in money before the settlement?-Generally between summer and winter I may run an account of about 30 or 40 for myself and the vessel.
16,324. But what do you get in your private account?-Just what money I require, and what I ask. I may perhaps ask 4 or 5 or 6 at a time, just as I need it.
16,325. Is it for any particular purpose that you ask for so much?- No; there is no particular purpose ever mentioned.
16,326. Do you think you would get all the money that was due to you at any time before settlement if you asked for it?-I have no doubt of that; but there is generally an account run.
16,327. Do you take out goods in the course of the year when you want them?-Yes, when it is convenient to get them to Scalloway.
16,328. Suppose you did not take out any goods at all, but wanted to get the whole in cash, do you suppose you would get that?- Yes.
16,329. Have you ever asked for it all in cash?-No; because I leave my money along with Mr. Leask.
16,330. What do you mean by leaving your money along with him?-I get the same interest for my money when it is in his hands as I would get from the bank.
16,331. Then when you settle you don"t always draw the whole balance that is due to you?-No.
16,332. You leave it in Mr. Leask"s hands, and get interest allowed to you for it in your next account?-Yes.
16,333. Did you always have an account with him?-Yes.
16,334. Do all the men in the smacks keep accounts with the owner of the smack for their supplies?-Yes, so far as I know.
16,335. Do they all get money when they ask for it?-I never heard anything else. I never heard any man say that he had asked for money and did not get it.
16,336 Do they generally ask for much money?-I don"t know. I suppose every man asks for what he requires, or according to what he has to get.
16,337. Are they not expected to get their supplies at the merchant"s shop?-It is just as they like.
16,338. Of course it is just as they like, but are they not expected to get a part of their supplies in the shop?-I suppose so. They always do so.
16,339. Are there as many men to be had for the Faroe fishing as are wanted to man the smacks?-Yes. There has been no scarcity in time past.
16,340. Do you know of any men who go to the Faroe fishing and draw money from the owner in the course of the season for the support of their families, and who do not get any supplies at all?- No. , They generally take their goods for the voyage from the merchant, whether they take anything else or not; but I never knew any men who did not take some supplies from him.
Lerwick, February 5, 1872, ARTHUR MOFFAT, examined.
16,341. Are you a seaman living at Lochside, Lerwick?-Yes.
16,342. Are you now serving in the Naval Reserve?- Yes.
16,343. Where have you been employed?-I have been going to the seal and whale fishing.
16,344. Have you ever been at Faroe or at the ling fishing?-No.
16,345. What agents have you engaged with for the Greenland voyage?-I have been out for the whole of them.
16,346. Did you always keep an account for supplies with the agent who engaged you?-Yes.
16,347. Was that settled at his office before 1867?-Yes.
16,348. Since that year it has been settled at the Custom House?- Yes.
16,349. Do you always go straight down from the Custom House to the agent"s office and pay your account?-Yes.
16,350. Are you expected to go straight down?-I don"t know, but I think it my duty to do so.
16,351. Are you expected to take some of your supplies from the agent who engages you?-We just take them as we require them.
16,352. But if you require supplies or an outfit, are you expected to take them from the agent who engages you?-Yes, we can do nothing else but take them from him; we cannot go to a strange shop for them, because they would not give them to us.
16,353. Why would they not give you credit at it strange shop?- Because they do no business with us, and perhaps they would not know us.
16,354. Would you not have your first month"s pay in advance with which to buy what you wanted?-Not very often, because I don"t take it out in that way.
16,355 But you could it?-Yes.
16,356. And if you had it you could get what you wanted at another shop?-Yes.
16,357. When you go in to engage with an agent does he, or do his shop-people, ask you if you want anything?-No.
16,358. Do you generally get an advance note?-Yes, we get it, but we leave it with the agent; at least I do.
16,359. Why do you leave it with the agent?-Because I find the half-pay too little for the support of my wife and family during my absence. They require more supplies than that, and they get them out of the agent"s shop.
16,360. Has that been your practice for a long time?-It has.
16,361. Have you always engaged with the same agent for a number of years back?-Yes, I have engaged with Mr. Leask for some time.
16,362. Have you always got your supplies at his shop?-Yes.
16,363. You said you could not get credit anywhere else: is that because Mr. Leask has the command of the money you are to get?-No, it is not that, because we get the money if we want it.
16,364. You could get the money if you wanted it on an allotment note, but not otherwise?-Yes.
16,3 65. Do you say that you could get a larger amount of supplies at Mr. Leask"s shop than your allotment note would pay for if you had it?-I do.
16,366. Have you a balance to receive at the end of the year when you settle with Mr. Leask?-Generally.
16,367. Are you never in his debt at settlement?-No.