THE STORY OF ARTIFICIAL SILK mills has suddenly become valuable. If the cotton men had only known what to do with it, there would never have been any slump in the cotton trade. They are now sending this waste in bags, wonderingly, to the Artificial Silk mills. Spruce trees are cut down in Canada or Scandinavia. The making of Artificial Silk has provided a new customer for the lumber trade. The logs are floated to a saw-mill, where they are cut into 6-foot lengths. The bark is taken off. As yet, we have found no uses for the bark of spruce trees. These logs are then cut into 1-inch wheels and broken up into small chips. Forty tons of these chips are put into a * digester ""— a huge cylindrical boiler. Chemicals are put in and the chips are boiled. They remain in the “digester ” for 24 hours. This is the first mechanical process in the making of an Artificial Silk gown. Then the chips are emptied into draining chests. From these they pass to sand traps— long narrow troughs in which they are cleaned of impurities. They are then bleached in large vessels 7