. The miller, millwright and millfurnisher. Fig. 304. Fig. 305. b, which separates them ; then they are sent to other appropriate sacks. Theflour from the reels a, a, is taken to the sacks by the spouts c c. Fig. 306 shows the arrangement for high milling. There are four reels, ofwhich a lets fall the flour, fine middlings and offal, and sends the coarse mid-dlings to the cylinder b; this one lets the flour, fine middlings, etc., through,and the other material tails over to the reel c. The flour and the fine mid-dlings are sent to the reel d, which separates them and discharges them intoproper


. The miller, millwright and millfurnisher. Fig. 304. Fig. 305. b, which separates them ; then they are sent to other appropriate sacks. Theflour from the reels a, a, is taken to the sacks by the spouts c c. Fig. 306 shows the arrangement for high milling. There are four reels, ofwhich a lets fall the flour, fine middlings and offal, and sends the coarse mid-dlings to the cylinder b; this one lets the flour, fine middlings, etc., through,and the other material tails over to the reel c. The flour and the fine mid-dlings are sent to the reel d, which separates them and discharges them intoproper spouts. The reel c sorts the fine middlings, the red stuff, and the bran,which it sends to proper spouts. Wheat Meal Purification.—The object aimed at by wheat mealpurification is to produce a pure granular flour, free from any admixture ofthe outer coatings or the abraded portions of the berry produced in the actof reducing the wheat to flour. The inventor claims that it being lighter inspecific gravity than the pure flour, it readily


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, booksubjectflourmi, bookyear1882