Abstract

THE visitor to the British Empire Exhibition who takes it au sérieux will find a plethora of good things to stimulate his mind, and if his bent is towards science or its applications he will revel in the exhibits of the Government Pavilion and in many of the attractions of the Palace of Industry. In the latter the signs and portents of chemical enterprise should convince him that the days of “dogmatic slumber” are fast disappearing, and that although British chemical industry cannot compare in magnitude with such industries as engineering, mining, shipping, and textiles, they are nevertheless of equal fundamental importance. As in 1924, the chemical exhibits have been organised by the Association of British Chemical Manufacturers, and the same commanding position in the Palace of Industry has been utilised.

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