WOOL SUBSTITUTES
Growth in Activity A SERIOUS COMPETITOR. LONDON, April 23. The challenge provided by substitutes for wool in the form of staple fibre (made largely from wood) and lanital (produced from casein, whicn in turn is derived from milk) is to form one of the chief subjects of discussion when representatives of European and Dominion wool . growers nect. in London shortly, ft is expected that a plan will be decided upon to promote the interest of the woollen industry generally and to avoid overlapping. In Great Britain itself, in Germany, in Italy, and in Japan, there is a rapidly-expanding trade in these substitutes for wool. It is likely that Holland may also become a producer of lanital, and the suggestion is evidently entertained by a Belgian engineer that New Zealand also might be interested in its production! At anv rate, Dr S. I. Vies has secured from Mr G. W. Clinkard, New Zealand Trade Commissioner in Europe, an introduction to Mr R. S. Arthur, the Dominion’s representative on the International Secretariat in London. Dr." Vies is acting on behalf of a largo Dutch co-operative dairy organisation, which has engaged him as a technical adviser. The company anticipates the manufacture of a substant ial quantity of casein for the production of lanital under a special process which it has patented. It is expected that this artificial wool will be sold nt Is a lb (The price of scoured woo) to-day is in the vicinity of 13d a lb for medium crossbred and 20d a Id for finer grades.) Mr Arthur understands that Vics whom he has yet to meet, has already considered the possibility of the production of lanital in New Zea land under the patents held by his company. not TO BE TAKEN LIGHTLY “It looks like a case of taking the war into the enemy's camp,” was Mr Arthur’s comment this week. “Dr Vies will receive no encouragement from the secretariat, of course, but it shows the potential opposition wool growers 1 have to face. Lanital is produced exItcnsivelv in Italy, but it is considered that it does not hold We same ihreat Ito wool that staple fibre does. It has been proved that lanital has nothing like the wearing qualities of staple fibre, but it has also been discovered that by mixing, or coating, lanital with fish albumen its strength >s greatly increased. . . ' “A German firm in Hamburg is interesting itself in the production of fish albumen, which, it claims, can be I used for several purposes. Many peoI pje have been deceived, and have been unable to tell the difference lor instance, between fish albumen cooked as scrambled ekk and the real <uticle.
"Recently, the German company approached an English fishing concern and suggested that it should supply by contract 160,000 tons of white fish, which suggests that thev are producing it on a big scale. “The increasing use of substitutes is one of the most serious things with which the wool industry has to con tend to-day, and the competition of staple fibre,lanital, and other substitutes must not be regarded lightly. “A member of the secretariat has been wearing coivtantly a suit made with a large percentage of staple fibre and finds, regretfully, that it wears extremely well.”
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Grey River Argus, 20 May 1938, Page 9
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543WOOL SUBSTITUTES Grey River Argus, 20 May 1938, Page 9
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