588 Kidd V. Royal Agricultural Society of England. 
Q. You have no doubt about it, have j'ou ; you must have got a good stock 
of screenings out of that week's manufacture of pure? — A. Well, we should 
have a good bit. 
Q. And that went into the ordinarj' that you made on the 12th ? — A. It 
would not all go in. 
Q. I know that ; I am thinking, j'ou know, some went somewhere else ; 
did any of it go into the best by mistake? — A. It cannot get in there, it is all 
bagged up. 
Q. But the best was made on the morning of the 13th. Could not some of 
that have got into the best that was made on the morning of the 13th ? — 
A. No. 
Q. AVhy not? — A. Because we always keep it bagged up. 
Q. What.? — A. The screenings. 
Q. And who does the mixture, the putting of the screenings into the 
ordinary? — A. The men that work upstairs. 
Q. Oh, you don't do it ?— J. No. 
Q. What is the name of the man who does it ? — A. There are two or 
three. 
Q. All of them do it? — A. They are all working upstairs ; the man Uiey 
call Logdon has the charge of it. 
Q. Is he here ? — A. No. 
Q. I thought not ; Logdon, who has the charge of putting the screenings 
into the pure, is not here ? — A. We do not put any screenings into the pure. 
Q. No, not into the pure, I mean into the ordinary. 
Mr. Justice Blackburn : Let me understand if I know rightly what you 
mean. You say the screenings are in bags upstairs, and when you are putting 
them into the ordinary somebody carries the bag down and puts them under 
the stones ? — A. No, it is put in in small proportions, and goes up among the 
seed. 
Q. Do you mean that it is put into the seed before the seed goes bttween 
the rollers ? — A. Yes. 
Mr. Field : In what room is it that the screenings are put into the lin- 
seed? — A. It is brought down and put into the elevators, and that takes the 
.seed up. 
Q. If I understand rightly, the linseed is stored on the top floor.'' — It is. 
Q. And the screenings are on the top floor? — A. Yes. 
Q. Now tell me when do the screenings get into the linseed ? — A. We bring 
it down stairs. 
Q. Wlien ? — When we want to make a mixed cake. 
(}. Then Logdon is the man who has charge of the doctoring ? 
]VIr. Seymour : Don't say that. 
Mr. Field : Well, he has to put the screenings into the linseed ? — A. Lot;- 
don is there ; he is one of the men ; he is what we call the up-stairs man. 
Q. Does he send the screenings down by the elevator? — A. No, we can'y 
them down. 
Mr. Justice Blackburn : Just let me try if I can understand it a Uttle 
better. I have understood that when you arc going to put it through the 
rollers, you put it into the hoppers from whence it goes to the rollers — A. 
Yes, but it has to go into the elevators first. 
Q. Then the elevators you speak of take the linseed and lift it up and put 
it into the hoppers, and from there it goes to the rollers ? — A. Yes. 
Q. When you want to put any sittings in order to lower the qu.ality of the 
seed, you take them down and jnit them into the elevators along with 
the seed, so that the linseed and siftings go together into the hoppers ? — A. 
Yes. 
Mr. Field : Now I understand it ; the elevators are for the purpose of 
carrying it up into the hoppers ? — A, Yes. 
