Kidd V. Royal Agricultural Society of England. 579 
rompound material is ground and the pure linseed ? — A. Very 
little. 
Q. But there is? — A. Well, perhaps a minute or two; I do 
act know. We grind it so as to get it ready for the kettles. 
Q. Is not that called "peppering"? — A. No; I have never 
leard the term in my life. 
Mr. Justice BLACKBURN : Does it take more grinding for pure 
ban for mixed, or vice versa'? 
Mr. Field : More when it is going to be manufactured into 
lure. 
^ Mr. Justice Blackbuex : I understand just the contrary. 
The Witness : j\ o ; not more one than the other. 
A JuEOK : Are there not fewer turns of the stones when it is 
or pure than for mixed ? — A. Not one. 
' Mr. Justice Blackburn : I thought you said there Avas a 
lifference in the time taken in grinding ? 
The Witness : Mr. Field says under the rolls. 
A JuEOR : You confound each other. 
Mr. Justice Blackburn : Do I understand from you that 
then you have put the linseed under the stones, if it is for 
aixed cake there is a difference in the quantity of grinding, the 
'lUmber of turns of the stones, from what there would be if it 
[/as pure linseed? — A. Very little. 
Mr. Field : Then there is some ? — A. Yes. 
Q. Is that " some" more or less — which takes the longest 
me ? — A. Calcutta requires more grinding than the Black Sea. 
Mr. Justice Blackblt^N : I have understood you just now, if 
took vou rightlv, that when you are going to grind linseed 
ithout putting anything into it, you grind it for such and such 
time ; and that if to that same linseed you were adding this 
ran and sesame, you would grind it for a different time, is that 
'.3? — A. For about two minutes. 
Q. Would those two minutes be more or less when you add 
le sesame and bran ? — A. Less when I add the sesame. It is 
^ry material — two minutes I 
Mr. Justice Blackburn : That may be — that is Mr. Field's 
lok out. But what I want to see is that you understand each 
:her. 
Mr. Field : Now is not the object of administering" less 
inding to the compound materials than to the pure this, that 
is merelv for the purpose of mixing the three together, and 
^t for the purpose of grinding for oil ? — A. No. 
Q. Then what is the object? — A. Simply on account of the 
ke. If I wanted to disguise the bran, as I said before, I should 
■cp it in three-quarters of an hour, and Dr. Voelcker would 
ive no more found out the bran then than he found out the 
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