“Green limed stock should be smooth and soft, any remaining hair being easily detachable, while the liquor should be fairly clean, sweet, and not too alkaline.
“A large quantity of waste bones accumulates in the preparation of tinned provisions. If these have not been overheated and are in good condition, a considerable amount of glue can be obtained from them, the bones of the head, ribs, and feet giving a better yield than those of the thighs and legs.
“Horn piths should not contain over 12 per cent. moisture, and should not have been overheated in drying; they should have been cleansed from skin and hair, which are of little value to the glue-maker.
“The age of the animals yielding glue stock has an important influence on the product. While from younger animals the product, as a rule, is of lighter color, more abundant and more easily obtained, it contains more chondrin, so that from solutions of equal strengths, those from mature animals will be found to be of greater consistence and the glue more solid.
“Abroad, dry hides are often, for weighing, soaked in chlorbarium, a solution of barium chloride, and then in a bath of dilute sulphuric acid, 1½ per cent., which readily soaks in, combines with the barium to form the white insoluble powder of barium sulphate, leaving weak hydrochloric acid in the fibre, to be afterwards neutralized in liming, the chloride of calcium dissolving out. This treatment affects considerably the subsequent making of glue, as, beside the effects of the acids, the sulphate of barium will render the liquors cloudy and difficult to clarify. Of course if colored glues are to be made this will be no detriment.”
To prevent putrefaction, which is always accompanied by decomposition of glue-yielding substance and consequent loss, the scraps must be carefully preserved, especially in summer.
The tanner prepares the waste by liming, i. e., steeping it during fifteen to twenty days in milk of lime which is frequently renewed. By the action of the lime, adhering particles of blood and flesh are dissolved and the fatty matter is saponified. After this treatment the glue-stock is dried.
In case this work is not done carefully in the tanyard, as is only too frequently the case, the stock is of but little value to the glue-boiler.
By allowing the refuse to lie too long in a heap, as is sometimes done, putrid fermentation sets in, the injurious effects of which cannot be remedied by subsequent liming, or the lime bath has not yet been strong enough, or has not acted sufficiently long upon the scraps to destroy the adhering particles of blood and flesh. The lime bath, on the other hand, may have been too strong, so as to attack the glue-yielding substance. Frequently it is also the case that the scraps having been dried under unfavorable circumstances, mould has commenced to form, and finally they may be spoiled in winter by allowing them to freeze. Frozen glue leather yields glue of very little consistency.
It will be seen from the foregoing that great precaution and care are required when buying glue leather. The manufacturer should especially see that it is dry and tough, free from mould and all organic and inorganic substances, and not too strongly limed.