THE STORY OF ARTIFICIAL SILK very much averse to publicity. They did their iob and let fame take care of itself. Chardonnet discovered how to make fila- ments by an accident. He dropped a piece of film on a hot stove. The cloths that he made were inflammable. They were pro- hibited by a French law from being sold. He had to sell them in South America, where there was no such law. And he had to adopt an English denitrating process, eventually, in order to prevent his cloths from being in- flammable and dangerous to wear. He was helped all through by an English firm in I eck. In 1927 the League of Nations, for some strange reason, published a Report on Arti- ficial Silk. This Report said : ‘ The Artificial Silk industry began in France in the closing years of the last century, and thence spread to the countries of Central Europe.” It does not mention the English pioneers. It gives very few British figures. This Report was prepared by an Italian, a German, a French- man and a Pole, and it is wholly inaccurate and misleading—a distinctly anti-British Re- port. One of my purposes in writing this book is to correct the entirely wrong im- 3