"Were you forced into joining the Exchange?"
"I found that it was necessary in order to write policies."
Mr. Farlin said that he preferred belonging to the exchange to doing business as an independent broker because it meant more money and less trouble.
"So you're in favor of the higher rates?"
"Oh, no."
"But you get more premium, don't you?"
"Yes."
(2)
Mr. Green then took the stand. In
response to questions of Henry T.
Williams, his counsel, he said that he
was 57 years old, had lived in the city
50 years, and was a man of family.
He named several social and charitable
as well as financial institutions
with which he was associated. In
1870, he said, he had entered the employ
of the Harrington & Wilson Co.
as a shipping clerk in the sugar department,
subsequently he had been
promoted to the position of cashier,
and for the last 23 years had received
in that position a salary of $5,000 a
year.
Mr. Williams then sought to show that his client had no connection with the weighing of raw sugar on the docks, where the fraudulent practices are alleged to have taken place.
Q.—How much money was paid through your office in the course of a year? A.—Four million dollars.
Q.—So yours was a busy office? A.—Decidedly so.
Q.—How long were the raw sugar clerks in your office? A.—About twenty years.
Q.—Did you regulate their duties in anyway? A.—No.
Q.—Were you connected with the docks in any way? A.—No, that was a separate department.