Kidd V. Royal Agricultural Society of England. 627 
Q. There is some suggestion made that a person might open the box 
3I0W? — A. Oh no, lie cannot. 
Q. But if he did? — A. If he did he coukl not get them in; the seed bins 
•e so fixed that no one can get anytliing in, or anything out, only by going 
irough the rollers. 
Q. Therefore, if he chose to do so, would he have to come up stairs for the 
wpose of getiing it in ? — A. Yes ; but he could not get it in. 
Q. Without your permission ? — A. Yes. 
Q. Therefore a man might steal it, but he could not use it.' — A. He might 
eal it and take it away. 
Q. Did you ever see any portion of the siftings that you keep in the bags 
iing used for the " Triangle Best" ? — A. No. 
Mr. Justice Blackburn : Just explain to me what I do not thoroughly 
iiderstand : when you are going to put in siftings in making plain " Tri- 
igle " who takes them for the piu-pose of putting them in? — A. I do. 
Q. Yourself?— J. Yes. 
Q. You carry them, if I understood the thing rightly, to the elevators, 
hich arc going to put the thing into the ho)ipers? — A. Yes, down stairs. 
' Q. Now what I wanted to understand is this, is the seed never raised by 
lese elevators into the hojipers except in your presence ? — A. No, there is no 
ie else has charge of them but me. 
Q. At night, when you are away, is it ever raised into the hoppers? — 
. No. 
DENNIS COGGIN, sworn : examined hy Mr. Cave. 
Q. Are you sesam^ grinder in Mr. Kidd's mill ? — A. I am. 
Q. And how long have you been with him ? — A. Ten years. 
Q, Now is the sesame-cake ground in Thomjison and Slather's machine ? — 
. It is. 
Q. And is that under your charge ? — A. It is. 
Q. Is that in the same part of the mill as the linseed — the grinding 
achine ? — A. No, it stands by itself, it stands in a compartment by itself, 
'id it has an engine to drive it itself. 
' Q. Have you a man with you ? — A . Yes. 
Q. A man of the name of Gates who assists you ? — A. Gates. 
Q. Is this machine of Thompson and Slather's used only for grinding 
:same-cake and nut-cake ? — A. That is all. 
Q. Is the sesame-cake used for the Triangle Best.? — A. Yes. 
' Q. And nut-cake for the Triangle Plain ? — A. Yes. 
Q. What notice do you get when you are going to change from grinding 
.it-cake to grinding sesame-cake.? — A. Gur foreman will tell me at 3 or half- 
ist 3 in the afternoon, he will say the mill is to go on witli either Triangle 
est or Triangle Plain, and then 1 change the machine according to what he 
Us me. 
Q. When you get notice that you are going to change from Triangle Plain to 
riangle Best what do you do with the machine ? — A. I clean all up in the 
jile where the machine blows it ; I sweep up, and then they mix that with, 
i^e ground. It goes among it; we take and sweep that up, and it goes 
nong the nut-cake that we have ground. 
Q. And do you make the machine quite clean? — A. Yes. 
Q. After that, when the machine is clean, do you go and get the sesame 
■kes? — A. Yes I do. I stop the machine then and go and get sesame-cake 
; and 1 have charge of the horizontal engine tliat drives it as well. 
Q. And when you leave the machine you stop the machine, do you ? — 
. Yes. 
2 s 2 
I 
