THE STORY OF ARTIFICIAL SILK was in the end overwhelmed by the obstacles that he encountered. In 1845 he died by his own hand. Apparently, his life had been a failure. In reality, he had succeeded. He was the first filament-maker in the world. He started a new process which has now become world-wide. Unhappily for Schwabe, he did not know what was being done at that time by a German—F. G. Keller, of Hainichen. Keller was a clever and inventive man. One day, he noticed some little children at play. They were making chains of cherry stones. They put the cherry stones in small hollows in a board and ground holes in them with a erindstone. Keller noticed that the grindstone ground a powder of wood, which fell in a pan of water. - He picked up some of this powder and noticed that it had been wetted into a pulp. He understood paper-making. All paper was at that time made of rags. It was scarce and dear. He thought: “ Why not make paper from wood ? ”’ He at once made experiments. He suc- ceeded. He made paper from wood pulp. He made no fortune out of his discovery. Others