The defect complained of in the machine was of no consequence to employer or employee if the setscrew was used which was designed to lock the guide and keep it in place when it was so adjusted as to enable the operator to cut boards of the right width. The plaintiff testified that he was not advised and did not know what the function of the set-screw was and that he never used it. This is contrary to the evidence of two other witnesses, but the conflict raised a jury question on this point if it is material. The machine was not defective if properly operated, and the real question involving the negligence of the defendant arises *120out of its alleged failure to properly instruct tbe plaintiff bow tbe machine should be operated.
Plaintiff’s main contentions are: (1) Where tbe set-screw was not used there might be some play in the guide so that either end could be moved back and forth a short distance. (2) The defendant’s witness Joy testified that if this play was a quarter of an inch or greater it might cause pinching as a board was being ripped. (3) Defendant’s witness Bores made some experiments some time after the accident and found that the play of the guide might be as great as one-quarter or three eighths of an inch when the set-screw was loose. (4) The fact that the board that was being ripped came to a sudden stop indicated that such stoppage was not due to the ordinary pinching that is met with in the operation of such rip-saws, but was caused by the pinching due to the movable character of the guide, Here it might be remarked that the evidence is undisputed that pinching will frequently occur in the ordinary operation of rip-saws and that such pinching is due to a variety of causes. The plaintiff did not know whether the guide was in its proper place or not while he was ripping the board that caused his injury. Neither did he know whether the board was sawed straight or crooked, or of uniform width or wedge-shaped. He did testify that when he was pushing the board it stuck - and jumped, that he then pulled it back and “couldn’t get it through,” and then he ran it back again, and when it was through the saw, or nearly so, it pinched and came to a sudden or quick stop and his hand went into the saw. He thinks the loose guide must be responsible for the sudden stoppage-of the board, because on other occasions when he was operating the saw in question the stoppage would be more gradual.
The decision of the circuit court was right for a number of reasons.
1. There was no evidence to show that the guide was not-fast and in proper position when .the plaintiff was injured. *121He observed tbe operation of tbe saw and tbe guide some time thereafter, and after sncb observation came to tbe conclusion that tbe guide must bave been tbe cause of tbe pinching. Such conclusion rested largely if not wholly on conjecture. Tbe witness Kehrberg testified that be examined tbe guide immediately after the accident and that it was solid and properly set. There is no dispute of this evidence, except that Kehrberg testified that tbe thumb-screw was set, while tbe plaintiff’s evidence tended to show that it was not. Tbe guide might be held firmly in place, however, without tbe thumb-screw being set.
2. Tbe same witness testified that tbe board which was being sawed when plaintiff was injured was sawed straight and of an uniform width. This evidence is not contradicted, except that tbe witness and plaintiff do not agree as to tbe width or kind of a board that was being sawed. It may be that this difference would raise a jury issue, although Kehr-berg did not pretend to remember accurately the width of the board. There is no dispute that he examined the board which he found on the saw table immediately after the accident.
3. A number of witnesses testified that looseness in the guide would have a strong tendency to prevent pinching, instead of causing it. This evidence was not disputed. It is argued that the evidence of the witness Joy is to the contrary. The evidence of Joy is that looseness of the guide would not cause binding of the saw after a board was sawed through. This statement he qualified by saying, “It might pinch enough to require a harder pressure to force the board through.” This at best would amount to a case of ordinary pinching. We think the evidence shows conclusively that the board was sawed through when the plaintiff was injured. He so testified several times and on several different occasions. He also said that it was sawed through or was within a quarter or half an inch of being sawed through when the *122accident occurred. Another witness testified that the board was sawed through.
4. The evidence of all of the witnesses who testified on the subject, including the plaintiff, is to the effect that pinching is something that frequently occurs in the ripping of boards and that it is due to a variety of causes. It was one of the ordinary hazards of the employment. That the pinching which would result from a loose guide would be any different from that produced by other usual and ordinary causes is purely a matter of speculation and conjecture.
5. The physical situation negatives the alleged fact that the pinching was due to the looseness of the guide. If the guide was loose so that it might be moved back and forth laterally, it pivoted upon the point designated 5 on Exhibit A, which is reproduced in the statement of facts. The operator stood to the left of the lever marked 1, 2, and 9. The distance from the end of the table where he stood to the teeth of the saw was twenty-nine inches. The distance from the teeth of the saw to the fulcrum at figure 5 is not given in the testimony by any of the witnesses, but was stated on the oral ■argument to be about half the distance from the teeth of the saw to the end of the table. The photograph of the saw is taken from an angle that really shows the distance to be less than it is, but still it shows that the point 5 is considerably nearer to the operator than the teeth of the saw. If the end of the guide, marked I, was pushed to the right when plaintiff started to operate the saw, the tendency would be to cut the board wedge-shaped, and as the board was pushed along there might be some tendency to bind. However, after the end of the board which the operator was pushing passed the point 5, and the board was sawed through or nearly so, the pressure against the guide would have a tendency to throw the end marked I to the left and the end marked 8 to the right, thus relieving the pressure that might otherwise be exerted against the saw.'
*123Eor the reasons stated we conclude that no negligence was shown on the part of the defendant which had any causal connection with the accident.
By the Gourt. — Judgment affirmed.