This soap may be made in a crutcher by the method generally used in making soap by the cold process.

TEXTILE SOAPS.

Soap is a very important product to every branch of the textile industry. For woolen fabrics it is used for scouring, fulling and throwing the wool; in the silk industry it is necessary for degumming the raw silk, as well as for dyeing; in the cotton mills it is used to finish cotton cloth and to some extent in bleaching; it is, furthermore, employed in a number of ways in the manufacture of linen. Large quantities of soap are thus consumed in an industry of so great an extent and the requirements necessitate different soaps for the different operations. We will, therefore, consider these in detail.

SCOURING AND FULLING SOAPS FOR WOOL.

The soaps used to scour wool and for fulling the woven cloth are usually made as cheaply as possible. They are, however, generally pure soaps, as filling material such as sodium silicate does not readily rinse out of the wool and if used at all must be added very sparingly. Both cold made and boiled settled soaps are made for this purpose. The soap is generally sold in barrels, hence is run directly to these from the crutcher or soap kettle. As cold made soaps the following serve for wool scouring or fulling.

I.
Palm Oil200 lbs.
Bone Grease460 "
Soda Lye, 36° B.357 "
Water113 "
Soda Ash50 "
Citronella2 "
II.
Palm Oil (Calabar, unbleached)155 "
House Grease360 "
Soda Lye, 36° B.324 "
Water268 "
Sodium Silicate83 "
III.
House Grease185 "
Palm Oil (unbleached)309 "
Soda Lye, 36° B.309 "
Water391 "
Soda Ash70 "
Sodium Silicate60 "
Corn Starch10 "

These soaps are made in a crutcher by the usual process for cold-made soaps, crutched until smooth, dropped into a barrel and crutched by hand the next day or just before cooling.

As a settled soap for these operations the following charge is typical:

Palm Oil34 parts
Cottonseed foots or its equivalent in fatty acids33"
Rosin10"
House Grease23"