Kidd V. Royal AgTicultural Socuti/ of England. 625 
I Mr. Justice Blackburn: It is not locked up, then? — No. 
Mr. Field : And the baijs are not tied or sealed ? — A. They are tied. 
Q. But not sealed, so that anybody can get at them ? — A. He has nothing to 
0 but to untie them. 
Q. Are you there night or day ? — A. Day. 
Q. Who is in your place at ni<;ht? — A. There is not anybody. 
[ Q. Oh, there is nobody at night ? — No. 
Q. Then who mixes the small seeds at night? — A, I mix them before I go 
rt-ay. 
; Q. Where do you mix tliem ? — A. Down stairs. 
' Q. You must have a large bin there to mix the seeds in. What quantitj' 
!' seeds do you use in the course of the night.?' — A. Well, 10 lasts on " pure " 
'ike. 
1 Q. And how much on " ordinary " cake ? — A. Well, I cannot say. 
' Q. How much on " Triangle Best " ? — A. Well, I cannot say. 
' Q. Then you mix the whole lot the night before? — A. The bins are made 
•ifiRciently large for me to get enough in in the daytime to serve the night 
-ell. 
Q. Do those small seeds go into the " Triangle Best " as well as the others ? 
■A. No. 
Q. You are quite sure of that? — A. Quite sure. 
Q. Then, if there are small seeds" in the " Triangle Best,'' what do you sav 
)out it ; where do they come from if they are found in it ? — A. "Well, they 
me with the seed. 
Q. I thought you said it was screened? — A, It is screened. 
Q. 1 thought you screened out all the small seeds ? — A. No ; not all of 
em. 
Q. Well, if there is any wheat or rice husks, or husks of oats or barley in 
e cake, where docs that come from ? — A. There is none, because the screens 
ill not admit anything bigger than the linseed. 
Q. If tliere is any, where does it come from ? — A. It must come from the 
an, if there is any. 
Q. I suppose it may come from the sesame-cake — you cannot tell that ? — 
. No, you will not find any, I think, in the sesame-cake. 
Q. You say it may come from the bran. Who has charge of the bran ? — 
. Well, I have in the daytime. 
Q. Who has at night? — A. Well, generally the men that use it put a bit 
of a night, if they want any. 
Q. Now, I do not understand what you said just now, that there were 
fferent spouts, oue for the seed for the " Triangle Best," and the other the 
ain " Triangle" — I do not understand that — will you exjilaia that to me? — 
. Yes ; supposiug there is a large parcel of seed at one end of the chamber, 
•A then a large parcel at the other end, there is a spout for that to come down 
to the bin, and a spout for that to come down into the bin (explaining). 
Q. Then do you store all the seed for the " Triangle Best " on one side, and 
I the seed for the " Triangle Ordinary " on another side.? — A. Yes. 
Q. You select the seeds? — A. Yes. 
Q. Then there is a different sort of linseed goes into the " Best" from what 
lies into the " Pure " ? — A. The same linseed makes the " Pure" as makes the 
Triangle Best," only we put a projwrtion of these small seeds in according 
j the linseed is in quality. 
Mr. Justice Blackburn: Just let me understand you; .sny that agnin. 
m say that the same linseed makes them both.? — A. Tl;c .same lia.iicii 
ikes the " Triangle Best " as makes the " Pure." 
Q. "Only"— you said something else? — A. Among the "Trimglc" \- c 
.t these small seeds into the plain " Triangle." 
VOL. VIII. — s. s. 2 s 
