Leg bones, horns, and other soft bones which contain scarcely any fatty matter are not steamed for the reason previously stated, but in all other respects are treated like steamed bones.

It is of the greatest importance that the bones should be thoroughly freed from acid, since even the smallest quantity remaining behind exerts an injurious effect upon the finished glue. It is therefore recommended to test the water draining off, or the bones themselves, with litmus. If the tincture turns red, it is a sure indication of the presence of free acid, and the washing must be continued until the blue color of the tincture remains constant.

Gerland’s suggestion, to use dilute sulphurous acid in place of hydrochloric acid for dissolving the phosphates of the bones, and to evaporate the sulphurous acid by heating, whereby the phosphates are precipitated in an insoluble state, has now been quite generally introduced.

For the preparation of gelatine from bones, Jullion and Pirie’s process may be recommended. It requires a somewhat expensive plant, but saves hydrochloric acid and time. The process consists essentially in dissolving the phosphates of the bones in vacuum. A box of wood, or better of granite, which can be closed air-tight, is required for this purpose. The box is filled with bones, and acid of the previously-mentioned strength poured over them. The box is then closed and the air pumped out by water or steam power. The smallest cracks and pores of the bones are thus freed from air, and the latter is replaced by hydrochloric acid, which in this manner acts rapidly and is completely exhausted. The remaining crude glue is then further worked in the usual way.

Bones honey-combed by putrefaction, exposure to the weather, or burial in the ground are of little or no value to the glue-boiler, as nearly all the glue-yielding substance has been destroyed; they should therefore be thrown out in buying stock. The ammonia which is formed when putrefaction sets in, colors the glue dark.

3. LEATHER WASTE.

Leather tanned with a substance insoluble in water is not directly suitable for manufacturing glue, but can be made so by a special process, which, though somewhat tedious, nevertheless pays for the trouble.

In using such stock the manufacturer should make a distinction between old and new leather. The principal materials of this kind, large quantities of which contribute their quota to the glue-boiler’s stock, are old shoes, straps, harness, etc., and further, waste from shoemakers, trunk-makers, and in fact from the shops of all workers in leather except those using alumed leather.

Before boiling the leather waste to glue, the removal of all traces of tannin becomes absolutely necessary, since the retention of the smallest quantity prevents the animal tissue from dissolving in water.

The various methods proposed for the preparation of the leather waste differ either in the chemical solvent used, or in the mechanical manipulation of the waste.