THE STORY OF ARTIFICIAL SILK ra TE is right to-day may be wrong to-morrow. As yet, there is no right way that is generally agreed upon. There is very little routine. Hundreds of clever brains are at work, altering, improving and making experiments. At any time there may come a new invention that will put an Artificial Silk factory out of date. The whole industry is changing from month to month. No one knows what new miracle will happen next. It is a dynamic industry. For this reason I shall not go into details as to the technique. The technique is now in process of being created. I shall only describe it in a general way, so that those who sell or wear it shall know how it is being made Artificial Silk, at present, is being made of spruce pulp and cotton linters—the soft short fibres from cotton seeds. These are not cotton fibres, as Lancashire understands the word. Lancashire wants long fibres—the longer the better, but the Artificial Silk men want them as short as possible. Cotton waste is now being used, too. The waste in the back yard of the Lancashire “6