It is night and day, and I understand what you want perfectly, thank you!
So, do you have a bachelors in chemistry, or is the masters program integrated and you graduate your school with both a bachelors and a masters?
In terms of what types of things can apply chemistry, there is a lot of chemistry involved in circuits and computer chips. I attended a really interesting lecture from a chemist who works at Intel. He talked about all about the chemistry involved in the fabrication and new methodologies that being designed to increase circuit performance.
However, exactly what another poster said in a different thread, chemistry truly is a central science. It is involved in almost area of industry imaginable, and chemicals and chemist are needed for all of those.
If that's something that interests you, possibly Electrical or Computer Engineering? If you are interested in processes and manufacturing in automotive or other "bigger" fields (assuming computer circuits are "small"), maybe something like mechanical?
It really depends on what integrated type of chemistry you want to do when you graduate. Think about that first, and then decide what engineering will fit best. Or if you don't know, then maybe you want to approach it from what engineering you would enjoy the most, and find a job that suits it.