628 Kidd V. Royal Agricultural Society of England. 
Q. And then you get the cakes ? — A. Yes. 
Q. And are those brouo;ht into the building where the machine is ?- 
A. Yes. 
Q. And put ready for use? — A. Yes. 
Q. Then do you put them into the machine and grind them ? — A. Yes, 
feed the machine. I have a man to put them on the table to me. 
Q. When the sesame-cake is ground, what becomes of the meal ? — A. It 
blown through, by a blast, into some elevators, and they take it up. It 
blown through into the elevators by the blast from the machine, and then 
goes up into a screen — a revolving screen — and then I have a boy at tl 
spout where all the meal comes down. He takes it from there and he whec 
it into a corner of the warehouse on one side, and then it is left there, and 
have no more control over that. I have nothing more to do with it. 
Q. What is separated from the mill by the screen ? — A. There is whatcora 
down — returns. The machine does not grind it fine, and that is the reason \ 
have to have this revolving screen, and then all the returns goes back in 
the machine and she grinds that up fine and all. 
Q. Can any one interfere with this without your knowledge ?— J. No, 
have the charge of the engine, and no one durst touch it. 
Cross-examined ly Mr. Field. 
Q. Where is the sesame-cake put when it is first brought into the mill?- 
A, It is put on a table alongside of me. 
Q. When it comes from the ship is it brought by boats ? — A. It is. 
Q. Where does it go first? — A. It goes into the warehouse. 
Q Who has charge of the warehouse ? — A. It is locked ujj every night. 
Who has charge of it ? — A. I have charge of it in the daytime. 
Q. Then who breaks it up V — A. I break it up. I feed the machine th 
breaks it up, rather. 
Q. How long do you break it up before you use it ? — A. It may be twel 
hours, or happen not that. 
Q. Then, when it is broken up, where does it go ? — A. It goes into the mi 
Q. And where is the bran added to it? — A. I do not know — I have nothi 
to do with that, any further than I have told you. 
Q. Then you only attend to this machine To this patent machine. 
Q. All that you do is to break up the sesame-cake? — A. Yes. 
Q. And that passes through a machine which grinds it up ? — A. Yes. 
Q. Who takes it from you ? — A. A boy takes it to the mill. 
Q. What happens to it in the mill yoa do not know? — A. I have nothi; 
to do with that. 
Ee-examined by Mr. Seymour. 
Q. Mr. Stevenson and Mr. Kidd give directions there? — A. Yes. 
Q. Have you got a specimen of sesamd-cake with you ? — A. Yes. — i 
specimen of the sesame-cake, ex ' Ecsult,' was produced.) 
[Two letters, dated 23rd and 24th March, 1872, from the Sechetart of t 
Society to Mr. Wells were here put in and read by the Associate.] 
Mr. Setmour : That is my case my Lord. 
Mr. Field : Before I address the Jury, there was a question which I h 
omitted to put. Mr. Ayre stated yesterday afternoon a conversation with 1 
Wells. There was a conversation, no doubt, the terms of which he alleged 
a particular way on the 12th February last, and my own impression w; 
that Mr. Wells had already denied that conversation. 
Mr. Justice Blackdurn : Mr. Wells did in the course of one .part of) 
