OCR Text |
Show Dye-Making Industry Difficult to Master Adolph Junck, the millionaire former for-mer brewer of San Francisco, said on disembarking from the Leviathan in New York: The bottom baa fallen out of the English bome-mada dye boom and many large fortunes have been lost. The English thought that with a few stolen German recipes they could rival ri-val the German dye Industry. Well, It wasnt bo easy." Mr. Junck drew a trade paper from his pocket. "German dye-mnklng Is difficult and complicated," he said. "If you don't believe It, listen to this: And he read from the trade paper: "'Betaamldonllzarln Is the reduction reduc-tion of one of the oldest alizarin colors known, namely, alizarin orange, which chemically Is nltro-allzarln. When be-taamldoanthraqulnone be-taamldoanthraqulnone Is subjected to the .identical reaction which produced from anlhraqulnone sulphonlc ncld the first synthetic nnzarln that Is, melting melt-ing of the product with caustic nlknl) nt high temperature a dlliydroan-thraqutnoneasslne dlliydroan-thraqutnoneasslne Is obtained.'" Re-hohoth Re-hohoth Sunday Heralds |