THE STORY OF ARTIFICIAL SILK lated by a skilled workman, but there are now automatic regulators of pressure. If there were variations in the pressure, there would be thick places in the filaments. This act of forcing the syrup through the holes is called “ spinning,” although, of course, it is no such thing. As yet, we have no word to describe it. The Germans call it ““ wire-drawing,” which is a more suitable word. A filament is a single strand. When several filaments are twisted together, they form a thread. The twist given to the filaments is very slight. It averages 2; turns per inch. The threads are reeled into skeins, 1,680 or 3,360 yards in length-—z-mile lengths. Some experts think that every filament has a skin, and that when the skin is thin, the filament has most elasticity. These tiny filaments, in fact, are a new product of the brain of man. There is nothing else that is precisely like them in Nature. We do not vet know all that we shall know about them. The water used in making Artificial Silk must be chemically pure. If it has lime or iron in it, the silk will be less lustrous. - Wi