FDA History 01
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HISTORY OF A CRIME AGAINST
THE FOOD LAW
CHAPTER I: THE FIGHT FOR THE FOOD AND
DRUGS LAW
by Harvey W. Wiley, M.D., the very
first commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), then known
as the “US Bureau of Chemistry.”
It would be impossible and
perhaps unnecessary to survey the whole field of
effort which led to the enactment of the
Food and Drugs Law. It will be
sufficient to take the last of the hearings
as typical of all those that had
gone before. If the Latin motto is true,
"ex pede, Herculem," we can judge the
whole of this opposition by its last expiring
effort, just as we can recreate
Hercules if we have a. part of his big
toe.
The final hearings were before
the committee on Interstate and Foreign
Commerce, beginning on Tuesday, Feb. 13,
1906. This was just before the time the
bill was completed in the Senate and after
an agreement had been made to vote on
it the 21st of February. These hearings
are printed in a volume containing 408
pages. Pages 1 to 40 are taken up with
testimony that benzoate of soda is a
perfectly harmless substance. These witnesses
were made up of both manufacturers
and experts. The experts were Dr. Edward
Kremers, of the University of
Wisconsin, Professor Frank S. Kedzie of
the Agricultural College of Michigan,
and Dr. Victor C. Vaughan, Dean of the
College of Medicine of the University of
Michigan. The manufacturers who testified
in this case unanimously said that the
business of keeping food could not be
carried on without the use of some
preservative and that eminent scientific
men had declared that benzoate of soda,
borax, etc., in the proportions used were
entirely harmless. Ex-Senator William
S. Mason was also before the committee
in the interest of a bill prepared by Mr.
Meyers, editor of the American Food Journal,
ostensibly offered by food
manufacturers. This was a publication
devoted to the propaganda of rectified
whisky.
EXCERPTS FROM FINAL HEARINGS
Although food bills of various
kinds had been continually before Congress for
a quarter of a century, the character
of the opposition thereto had not changed.
The excerpts here given are typical of
the whole struggle.
Inasmuch as this closing
testimony was the final effort to block the passage
of the food law, it is summarized at some
length. Testimony of Walter H.
Williams, President of the Walter H. Williams
Company, of Detroit, Michigan.
(Page 19 of the hearings.)
In the most palatable foods
that we can find there are traces of benzoic
acid, and it seems to me if the Almighty
put it there, the manufacturer ought to
be allowed to use it, if he don't use
it in the same quantities as put in the
fruit by nature. * * *
We went to three men, each
of them connected with one of the largest
universities in the United States, men
who stand at the very top of their class
in the chemical and physiological world.
MR. TOWNSEND: Who were they?
MR. WILLIAMS: Dr. Victor
Vaughan, who is dean of medicine and physiology at
the University of Michigan, a man whom
I do not believe any one can speak too
highly of, a man right at the top of his
profession. Another gentleman, Dr.
Kremers, dean of chemistry of the University
of Wisconsin. Another man who has
given the subject the very closest attention
is Dr. Frank Kedzie of the Michigan
Agricultural College. * * *
MR. TOWNSEND: Do you know
of any manufacturer of these goods who does not use
some form of preservative?
MR. WILLIAMS: I do not.
MR. TOWNSEND: As a manufacturer,
do you know of any way to manufacture these
goods and keep them as they have to be
kept for sale, without a preservative?
MR. WILLIAMS: I do not.
MR. BURKE: Have you had any
trouble in any of the states by reason of the
state laws interfering with your using
this preservative?
MR. WILLIAMS: Our firm has
not. We have been told that as soon as this
committee gets through with the hearings
on this subject there is going to be
trouble in Pennsylvania. That is all we
know about it.
MR. RICHARDSON: How? What
troubles? In what way?
MR. WILLIAMS: We understand
that the use of benzoic acid will be condemned,
and we also know that as soon as this
bill becomes a law, if it ever becomes a
law, it will be condemned by the Bureau
of Chemistry. * * * Now, the only point
is--and all I wish to bring out now--that
I don't think this committee ought to
recommend any legislation that will give
one man the absolute power to say what
the manufacturers of this country shall
do and what they shall not do. There is
a difference of opinion as to what is
injurious and what is not injurious. We
can show that the best scientific thought
in this country will differ with the
present Bureau of Chemistry. Now, gentlemen,
do not understand for a moment that
I am attacking Dr. Wiley or the Bureau
of Chemistry or the Department of
Agriculture. I am simply pointing out,
or trying to point out, the principle of
this bill. The principle is wrong. It
is not fair; and I think before you allow
anyone to condemn any preservative about
which there is a question that you
ought to investigate the subject fully
by a committee of scientists--the best
that we can find-appointed by the President
or by Congress.
In this connection it is
interesting to know that the bill subsequently
passed by the House of Representatives
contained, a clause, with my full
approval, and written by myself, in which
such a committee was recognized. Its
composition was one eminent chemist, one
eminent physiologist, one eminent
pharmacist, one eminent bacteriologist,
and one eminent pharmacologist. In view
of the attitude which the Secretary of
Agriculture held toward me at that time I
was very certain that he would consult
me in regard to the personnel of this
committee which was to be appointed by
him, and that not only eminent, but
fair-minded members would be appointed
on this committee. When the bill went to
conference with the Senate bill the conferees
on the part of the Senate would
not consent to encumbering the bill with
an additional authority paramount to
that of the Bureau of Chemistry. The Senate
conferees contended that the whole
matter of wholesomeness and unwholesomeness
of ingredients in foods would go
before the Federal Courts for final determination.
The House conferees yielded
on this point and the food bill was passed
without the nucleus of the Remsen
Board. This view of Mr. Williams was shared
by practically all the objecting
witnesses, both scientific and legal,
as well as all of those interested in
commercial matters throughout the whole
course of the discussion of the various
food bills before the committees of Congress.
It was also voiced on the floors
of both the Senate and the House. In spite
of all this publicity and opposition
the Congress. of the United States conferred
upon the Bureau of Chemistry the
sole function of acting as a grand jury
in bringing indictments against
offenders or supposed offenders of the
law. The Congress specifically provided
that all these indictments should have
a fair, free and open trial before the
Federal Courts for the purpose of confirming
or denying the acts of, the Bureau
of Chemistry.
TESTIMONY OF PROFESSOR KREMERS
Professor Kremers at the
close of his testimony before the Interstate and
Foreign Commerce Committee disclosed the
fact that Mr. Williams was the party
who secured the participation of Professors
Kremers, Kedzie and Vaughan in this
hearing. I quote from page 39:
MR. KREMERS: I would like
to state just what I have been invited to do. I
have been asked as a plant chemist, for
that is my specialty in chemistry, to
find out what could be learned about the
occurrence of benzoic acid in the
vegetable kingdom, and also to find out
what the best literature, the
physiological and therapeutic literature
on the subject, has to say with regard
to the administration of benzoic acid
to the human system and with regard to the
course that it took in the human system.
That is the extent of my knowledge on
this particular subject. I have not gone
outside of that.
THE CHAIRMAN: Is there an
employment in connection with this matter by you I?
MR. KREMERS: I was employed;
yes, sir.
THE CHAIRMAN: By whom?
MR. KREMERS: By Mr. Grosvenor.
THE CHAIRMAN: What Mr. Grosvenor?
MR. KREMERS: Mr. Grosvenor
of Detroit. Mr. Elliott O. Grosvenor.
THE CHAIRMAN: Was there a
compensation fixed?
MR. KREMERS Yes, sir.
THE CHAIRMAN: Do you have
any objection to stating it?
MR. KREMERS: No.
Mr. Kremers in detail stated
in the testimony the amount he was to receive
for the work and the amount he was to
receive in reporting the results of his
work to the committee. In his testimony,
which I was asked to summarize by the
Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce,
Mr. Kremers gave the results of
his many investigations into natural food
products in which he found traces of
benzoic acid and related bodies. I quote
from his testimony, page 33:
MR. KREMERS: Gentlemen, I
don't want to take up more of your valuable time
unless you desire to ask some questions
of me, for I fear I may not have made
myself perfectly clear. I will admit that
I am accustomed to talking technically
on technical subjects, and that I am not
an expert in the popularization of
scientific subjects. I trust you will
pardon my shortcomings in this respect.
But briefly let me summarize the facts
I have tried to make clear to you.
Benzoic acid is found in the vegetable
kingdom; it is fairly widely distributed
in the vegetable kingdom. We find it among
others in the products of the
vegetable kingdom which we use for food
purposes. We find it even more widely in
food products which are used by herbivorous
animals. In addition to benzoic
acid, we find closely related compounds,
namely, benzaldehyde, commonly known as
bitter-almond oil, cinnamic aldehyde and
quinic acid.
I have tried to make plain
the fact that benzoic acid is formed in the human
system and that the amount of hippuric
acid eliminated from the system is
increased whether we administer benzoic
acid as such or whether we add it
through certain food products; in other
words, that benzoic acid is a natural
product of the human economy.
Finally, I have tried to
make clear to you, gentlemen, that whether it seems
desirable to you or not to prohibit the
use of benzoic acid from any artificial
source rather than the natural source,
and there is no bitter-almond oil which,
after it is a day old, but that contains
some benzoic acid,--that benzoic acid
directly or indirectly will be administered
to the system through the
bitter-almond flavor, as I have explained.
MR. TOWNSEND: You are not
a physiologist, are you?
MR. KREMERS: I am not.
MR. TOWNSEND: Are you able
to answer as to whether benzoic acid has an
injurious effect upon the body?
MR. KREMERS: I told you that
I am not a physiologist, but I have prepared
myself for a question of that sort, because
it occurred to me that it would be a
natural question for you to ask. I have
here, in order that I might not be
compelled to rely entirely upon my memory,
a copy of the National Dispensatory,
one of the standard commentaries on the
United States Pharmacopoeia, a statement
concerning the physiological action of
benzoic acid. This statement is written
by Professor Hare, one of the most prominent
writers in this country on
therapeutic subjects (Reads) :
"Ordinary doses
cause a sense of warmth over the entire body, which feeling
increases with the amount ingested,
large quantities causing severe burning
pain, etc. The drug increases the
acidity of the urine as it is eliminated by
the kidneys as hippuric acid."
Now, lest the statement might
be misunderstood, let us read the last
paragraph; but it will be apparent to
you that Mr. Hare does not speak of
benzoic acid here in quantities such as
have been under consideration before
you, but in totally different amounts.
"It may be given
with benefit in certain diseases due to alkalinity.
Benzoic acid is given in the dose
of from ten to thirty grains.
Those amounts may be administered
by a medical man, and they are very much
larger than any amount that is necessary
to bring about the preservative action.
MR. TOWNSEND: Does any antiseptic
that is taken into the system interfere
with digestion?
MR. KREMERS: I dare say it
does.
MR. TOWNSEND: In that respect
it is injurious?
MR. KREMERS: Not necessarily.
I thought it would be better
for me to quote the summary that Mr. Kremers
himself made of his testimony rather than
to attempt any condensation of it
myself. I may add here for the further
information of the reader of this story
that Dr. W. D. Bigelow, my first assistant
in the Bureau of Chemistry, repeated
many of the investigations reported by
Mr. Kremers, as to the wide distribution
of benzoic acid in food products, and
failed to confirm them.
PROFESSOR KEDZIE'S TESTIMONY
Dr. Kedzie testified that
he is the son of Professor Kedzie, the
distinguished chemist of the Michigan
Agricultural College. He was associated
with his father as professor of chemistry
at that institution, that he undertook
these investigations under the same auspices
and practically for the same
remuneration as was given to Professor
Kremers and Professor Vaughan. I quote
from page 58:
MR. KEDZIE: I took up this
matter of finding where benzoic acid was
distributed among materials which I could
purchase in the market. I will read
these articles in about the order in which
I found the greatest quantity of
benzoic acid: cranberries, huckleberries,
plums, grapes (the Malaga grape),
grapefruit, oranges, pineapples, carrots,
parsnips, cauliflower, rhubarb, and
green peppers. The amount of benzoic acid
which I found present in cranberries,
taking the dry material, we find the dried
substance of the cranberry contains
about, on the average, 1/2 of 1% of benzoic
acid, but when we calculate it as to
the wet substance, it then falls to 5/100
of 1% on account of the water present,
or, to put it differently, it is one part
in two thousand. * * * In analyzing
the sample of catsup in the Michigan market
I have found that the amount of
benzoic acid varies from one part in twelve
hundred to one part in two thousand.
These are the first class goods, such
as Heinz sells in Michigan, and also sold
by Curtice Brothers.
THE CHAIRMAN: Do you find
any benzoic acid in catsup made by Heinz?
MR. KEDZIE: Yes, sir; when
it is sold in Michigan we do.
MR. MANN: Do you find it
labeled that way?
MR. KEDZIE: The Michigan
law requires that it shall be labeled with the
preservative used.
MR. MANN: Was it so labeled?
MR. KEDZIE: I believe that
it was, but I am not absolutely certain. Living at
the capital, I would expect that the law
would be complied with. The
commissioner's office is right where I
live.
MR. MANN: I have been told
that it never had been done, and wondered whether
it had or not.
MR. KEDZIE: I am sorry that
I can not be absolutely certain in regard to
that.
MR. WAGNER: How recently
have you examined Heinz's goods?
MR. KEDZIE: I collected a
sample about three weeks ago, and I inquired
particularly in getting the bottle, whether
it had been long in stock, and was
told that it had just been received about
two or three days before.
MR. MANN: Have you a memorandum
showing the percentage of benzoic acid in
these other fruits?
MR. KEDZIE: I made a thorough
test of each one and I am prepared to say that
in the grapefruit and the pineapple the
amount of benzoic acid present there
will not probably be far from 1/100 to
2/100 of 1 per cent in the fresh fruit.
MR. MANN: Did you ascertain
in each of these fruits just how much benzoic
acid was there?
MR. KEDZIE: Only in the cranberries,
and that I did over and over again. * *
*
THE CHAIRMAN (Mr. Hepburn):
What would be the effect of a large dose of
benzoic acid upon the human stomach?
MR. KEDZIE: Well, now, Mr.
Chairman, I am not a physiological chemist. My
work is analytical and what I know about
that question is not much. I never took
a large dose of benzoic acid-that is,
a large dose, of course, would be 60 or
100 grains or more. I never took it and
know nothing about it. I am not a doctor
of medicine.
THE CHAIRMAN: From your knowledge
of the properties and qualities of the
acid, what would be the probable effect
of benzoic acid upon the human stomach?
MR. KEDZIE: I should expect
that if it were taken in very large doses up to
100 grains that it would have an inflammatory
action on the stomach.
THE CHAIRMAN: It would be
an irritant?
MR. KEDZIE: It would be irritating;
yes, sir.
THE CHAIRMAN: You regard
it when used as a preservative, in the proportions
that were spoken of by Mr. Williams yesterday,
as entirely harmless, do you?
MR. KEDZIE: That is my opinion;
yes.
Perhaps the wisest comment
I can make upon the testimony of these experts is
that they were honestly of the opinion
that because some of these preservatives
were found in natural food products it
was perfectly proper to imitate nature
and increase these amounts. The weakness
of this argument is so apparent that
only a few of the causes of the fallacy
need be mentioned. Hydrocyanic acid,
perhaps one of the most poisonous organic
acids known, exists in minute traces
in the fruit of peaches and plums, associated
often with benzaldehyde, a
flavoring agent. It exists in some varieties
of cassava in such proportions that
fatal effects have resulted from eating
the cassava starch. Salicylic acid is
present in a flavoring product known as
oil of wintergreen and may exist, in
traces, also in other food products. Passing
from the ranks of organic poisons,
arsenic is a widely distributed poisonous
material which is often found in our
foods, due to absorption from the soil.
The presence of these bodies, instead of
being a warrant for using more of them,
points to the necessity of reducing
their quantity to the minimal amount possible.
Another point in this connection
is worthy of mention. These experts were
paid for the work they did and for the
expense of laying it before the
committee. I mention this without even
a suspicion of criticism. I think payment
of this kind is perfectly ethical and
proper. On the other hand, during the
twenty-five years in which food bills
of various kinds were discussed before
committees of Congress, not a single expert
appeared before these committees
urging the enactment of the good sort
thereof who received any compensation
whatever for his services. Probably officials
of the various states who appeared
frequently before committees of Congress
to urge the passage of these bills had
their expenses paid by their respective
states, but received -no other
compensation. In the twenty-five years
of active opposition to the use of
preservatives it never occurred to me
to think of any compensation save that of
my regular salary.
SUMMARY OF THE TESTIMONY OF VICTOR C.
VAUGHAN
MR. VAUGHAN: I am thoroughly
desirous that something should be done to
regulate the use of preservatives in foods.
MR. BURKE: Where would you
draw the line? Where would you fix the point
beyond which it would be dangerous to
go in the use of benzoic acid, as to
quantity?
MR. VAUGHAN: That brings
up a very interesting point. * * * It seems to me
that that ought to be settled by a commission
of experts, as to what
preservatives could be used and in what
amounts they could be used, and in what
foods they might be used.
MR. STEVENS: In other words,
you want a board or bureau of standards?
MR. VAUGHAN: I think so.
MR. BURKE: Have you not an
opinion of your own in regard to the matter?
MR. VAUGHAN: Yes; I have
an opinion of my own, but that opinion might be
changed by further study of the subject.
I am sure that benzoic, acid in the
quantities in which it is used in tomato
catsup, sweet pickles, etc., does not
do any harm. I should be opposed to the
use of formaldehyde in milk in any
quantity, or the use of any other preservatives
in milk. I have testified
repeatedly against the use of sulphite
of soda on Hamburger steak. I am
thoroughly in sympathy with the Hepburn
bill. It does seem to me, however, that
it is the part of wisdom not to say that
preservatives shall not be used at all,
but to find out what foods need preservatives,
and in what quantities they might
be used with safety.
MR. BURKE: Is not formaldehyde
used very generally now in preserving cream
and milk?
MR. VAUGHAN: I do not think
it is used generally. It is used to some extent.
MR. BURKE: Where cream is
gathered up and shipped some distance to a creamery
they use some preservatives, and usually
formaldehyde, do they not?
MR. VAUGHAN: I do not know.
I have not found much formaldehyde in cream.
Borax is used some, and one-half of one
per cent of boric acid is used.
Formaldehyde is used to some extent.
MR. MANN: Do you understand
that the Hepburn bill absolutely forbids the use
of preservatives?
MR. VAUGHAN: No, Sir; but
I find that it puts into the hands of one man, or
of one Department, at least, the question
of deciding as to the harmfulness of
preservatives.
MR, MANN: You say in the
hands of one man or of one Department. Eventually it
must be put into the hands of somebody
to decide the question, in your opinion,
I take it?
MR. VAUGHAN: Certainly, certainly.
MR. TOWNSEND: Right there
I want to ask you this question; as I understand,
some experiments have been made with benzoic
acid to determine whether it is
harmful or not, by giving doses of pure
benzoic acid to patients. What have you
to say in regard to that method of determining
the safety of benzoic
acid--whether it is harmful or otherwise?
MR. VAUGHAN: The experiments
upon benzoic acid, I understand, have been
finished by Dr. Wiley, but there is no
report on them up to the present time.
Dr. Wiley has made a report on boric acid
as to preservatives, and while I am a
personal friend of Dr. Wiley's, appreciate
him very highly and think greatly of
him, his experiments have shown that boric
acid in large amounts disturbs
digestion and interrupts good health,
but they have not shown that boric acid in
the small quantities which would be used
as a preservative, if used at all, has
any effect on the animal body.
MR. ADAMS: About what do
you mean by "small quantities"?.
MR. VAUGHAN: I mean one-half
of one per cent.
Dr. Vaughan then engaged
in a somewhat animated discussion with members of
the committee in regard to what kind of
board should be provided for in the law
to decide all these questions. At the
end of this discussion the following
questions were asked:
MR. BURKE: When benzoic acid
is taken in excessive quantities what is the
effect?
MR. VAUGHAN: In large quantities
it irritates the stomach. In very large
quantities it causes acute inflammation
of the mucous membranes of the stomach,
nausea, and vomiting.
The maximum medical dose
of benzoic acid is about ten grams, or one hundred
fifty grains, and larger amounts are likely
to cause inflammation of the
stomach.
MR. MANN: How much benzoic
acid could one eat, day after day, year after
year, without injury?
MR. VAUGHAN: I could not
answer that.
MR. MANN: Have you any idea
about it? How much can you eat wholesomely
without injury?
MR. VAUGHAN: I should say
certainly that the amount that is found in your own
body, which is from one to ten grains
a day.
MR. MANN: That is formed
in addition to your own body. I asked how, much can
you eat?
MR. VAUGHAN: I would have
to answer only in a general way and say a grain or
two, I am sure, taken day by day for one's
life, would not do any harm.
MR. MANN: Do you mean one
grain or two grains?
MR. VAUGHAN: One grain.
MR. MANN: Would two grains
do any harm?
MR. VAUGHAN: Well, I do not
know. I would not like to set up my dictum. I do
not know enough about it.
MR. MANN: I appreciate your
position, Doctor; but still, as far as you can,
we would like to have your opinion.
MR. VAUGHAN: Well, I should
say one grain would be perfectly safe. I do not
know whether two grains would be or not.
It is not at all surprising
that at the end of this examination by Mr. Mann,
Dr. Vaughan had put himself in a most
ticklish position. He was arguing for some
amendment to the bill which would permit
the use of benzoic acid in food
products, but he, was under the impression
that even one grain a day for every
day would be safe, but by eating two grains
a day for all one's life it might
not be safe. As two grains a day is a
most minute quantity of benzoic acid, a
quantity which would be exceeded if benzoic
acid were used in foods in general,
it is evident that such a course of reasoning
could have little effect upon a
deliberative body.
TESTIMONY OF DR. ECCLES
The most spectacular of the
witnesses who appeared against the bill was Dr.
Eccles of Brooklyn. Dr. Eccles describes
himself as a physician residing in
Brooklyn and he appears at the invitation
of the National Food Manufacturers'
Association. There was evidently a period
approaching when some kind of food law
would be enacted. To protect the manufacturers
a bill was introduced by Mr.
Rodenberg, of Illinois. Mr. Lannen, a
lawyer in the interest of this measure,
who had been actively opposed to the pending
bill, was also present at the
hearing. Dr. Eccles stressed the fact
that instead of trying to prevent the
addition of preservatives to foods their
use ought to be encouraged. Quoting
(from page 131):
MR. RICHARDSON: Is vinegar
deleterious?
DR. ECCLES: No, Sir; I do
not think anything is. I would compel them to use
substances less deleterious than vinegar.
I would not let them go below vinegar.
I would allow them to use substances the
dose of which is smaller than a dose of
acetic acid or vinegar. Substances of
larger doses than vinegar I would allow
them to put in a certain fraction of the
dose, and I would make the fraction the
same for every substance, with no exception.
I would have those gentlemen fixing
the Pharmacopoeia say that no substance
could be used that is stronger than the
acid of vinegar under any circumstances.
* * * In other places, where the
preservatives have been stopped, the death
rate has risen. Two notable
illustrations have occurred lately--exceedingly
notable. In North Dakota, the
state of pure food--Senator McCumber's
state--they tried the experiment. In
Germany, particularly in Berlin, in the
same year they tried the experiment.
These two places were put up as tests.
I predicted that the death rate in both
those places would rise fifty per cent
in that year. Now, what are the official
figures? The official figures given by
the Board of Health of the State of North
Dakota and the :figures of the German
Government in their own publications show
that they transcended my prediction; that
the deaths were nearly three times as
many as they were during the same period
the year before.
THE CHAIRMAN: From what cause?
DR. ECCLES: I predicted it
would occur if they stopped the use of
preservatives, and it did occur just as
I predicted from the stopping of the use
of preservatives. In no other place in
the world did the death rate rise as in
Berlin, and in no other state in the United
States did it rise as it did in
North Dakota.
THE CHAIRMAN: The use of
what preservatives was stopped?
DR. ECCLES: All.
OTHER WITNESSES
Mr. Lannen followed Dr. Eccles
with a long tirade against the pending measure
and in favor of substituting the Rodenberg
bill therefor. Warwick M. Hough,
attorney for the National Wholesale Liquor
Dealers Association of America,
endeavored to have the pending measure
changed so that deleterious substances in
compounded and blended whiskies should
have the same protection that similar
substances had in straight whisky. Mr.
Hough had appeared many times before the
committees endeavoring to secure immunity
for the artificially compounded
whiskies. He evidently saw clearly what
would happen to artificial whisky if the
pending measure should become a law. His
foresight was prophetic. After the law
became effective and the definitions of
the Bureau of Chemistry for whisky went
into effect, Mr. Hough carried the case
to several United States Courts. In all
about eight different suits were instituted,
the purpose of which was to declare
the standards of whisky established, by
the Bureau of Chemistry illegal. In
every single instance Mr. Hough's clients
were defeated.
FAVORING WITNESSES
Appearing in behalf of the
pending measure Mr. Edward W. Taylor, of
Frankfort, Kentucky, reviewed Mr. Hough's
arguments and showed to the committee
their fallacy. On page 173 he says:
MR. TAYLOR: This investigation
in 1893 of the whisky trust showed that the
people of the United States were being
imposed on to such an extent that this
committee recommended to Congress that
it incorporate into law a suggestion made
by the deputy commissioner of Internal
Revenue, Mr. Wilson, which was the origin
of what is known as the "Bottling in Bond"
act--a national law which enjoys so
much disparagement that it is a pleasure
to me to have the opportunity to
explain it. The reason it has such disparagement
is because the other 95 per
cent of the so-called whisky on the American
market today is the spurious
article and can not get the guarantee
stamp which is put over bottled in bond
whisky. * * * And I have here the report
of the Ways and Means committee in the
House, in recommending the bill for passage--approving
the bill. Here is the
official report. It is all very well for
Mr. Hough or myself to come up here and
express an opinion as to the intention
of the law, but I think it is to the
advantage of this committee if we can
produce some official expression as to the
purpose of the law, and take the matter
out of contention. * * *
" The obvious purpose of
the measure is to allow the bottling of spirits
under such circumstances and supervision
as will give assurances to all
purchasers of the purity, of the article
purchased, and the machinery devised
for accomplishing this makes it apparent
that this object will certainly be
accomplished.
STATEMENT OF ROBERT M. ALLEN, OF LEXINGTON,
KY.
Mr. Allen was the militant
administrator of the food laws of Kentucky. As a
state official he realized most keenly
the need of a national law. He had heard
the arguments against adopting this measure
most patiently. The impression he
gained from listening to this testimony
is thus illustrated by his own words
(page 20-5).
ROBERT M. ALLEN
I want to say in this connection
right here that there are two sides to this
food proposition. There is the side which
agitates and clouds the issue, brings
up this point and that point, which, perhaps,
does not materially affect the
question; but when you come specifically
down to these questions: Should glucose
be sold as glucose or as honey or maple
syrup? Should any synthetic product be
sold under the name and trade terms of
the genuine product which it is designed
to imitate? Should a preservative be allowed
use without any control or
restriction?--when you come down to those
propositions I think that not only the
food commissioners, but the majority of
the reputable manufacturers are agreed.
But I say, Mr. Chairman, that I can take
a committee from food manufacturers
which would meet good men like yourself
and others in Congress who are
interested on this subject and cut aside
from all of these issues that have been
clouding and confusing the main central
idea, and I believe that you could all
agree upon a bill which would be fair
and equitable to all and which would
accomplish the purposes for which we are
working along the lines of national
pure-food legislation. In our Kentucky
work we are not only the food
commissioners of the people, the consumers,
but we are also the food
commissioners of every reputable manufacturer,
and he has a hearing, a frank
man-to-man hearing, whenever he wants
to come in and discuss the subject.
At that time the chairman
of the committee, the Hon. W. P. Hepburn of Iowa,
gave notice that the hearings in favor
of and against a food law preventing
adulterations of the kind described were
closed. Thus those who had for
twenty-five years favored all kinds of
adulterations and misbranding were
finally shut out of any further participation
in forming a food and drug act.
CLOSING ADDRESS OF DR. WILEY
The Chief of the Bureau of
Chemistry had been informed by Mr. Hepburn and his
lieutenant, the Hon. James R. Mann, that
he should have the final summary of the
evidence both for and against preservatives
in foods. Accordingly he was given
ample time to summarize the principal
arguments for and against preservatives as
affecting the public health. His testimony
begins on page 237 and extends to the
end of the report on page 408.
DR. WILEY: Mr. Chairman and
gentlemen of the committee: At the request of
your chairman and in harmony with the
terms of the resolution passed by your
honorable body, and with the consent of
the Secretary of Agriculture, I appear
before you for the purpose of summing
up the expert testimony which has been
offered in the hearings held before your
committee during the past fortnight on
the pending measure concerning the regulation
of interstate and foreign commerce
in foods. Numerous expert witnesses have
appeared before your body, mostly in
opposition to the pending measure, and
a few witnesses have appeared in favor
thereof. I appear before you not as the
advocate of any particular measure, but
as an advocate of legislation of some
kind controlling interstate and foreign
commerce in adulterated and misbranded
foods and drugs. I shall support with
what influence I may possess any bill
which your honorable body in its wisdom
may report, although it might not, and
probably would not, meet with my entire
approbation. I do not believe it is possible
to draw any measure of this kind
which would receive the unqualified support
of all parties. It becomes
necessary, therefore, in measures of this
kind to keep in view the principle of
the legislation and to regard as of minor
importance the various details which
may be devised to obtain the end in view.
In the discussion of some
of the principal points which have been presented,
I wish to be understood as according to
each witness the same sincerity, the
same desire to present the facts, and
the same freedom from bias in interpreting
them that I shall hope may be attributed
to me. The cause of truth is never hurt
by unjust attacks and its citadel never
reached by the devious ways of unworthy
foes, but it is sometimes weakened by
the unguided enthusiasms of its defenders.
I therefore accord honesty
of purpose and sincerity of effort to those whose
contentions I feel impelled to resist.
I desire to point out wherein I think
they have fallen into errors of statement
followed by fallacious reasoning
leading to wrong conclusions. I want to
point out how they have misunderstood
the efforts which have been made to ascertain
certain facts relating to the
effect of preservatives, coloring matters,
and other substances added to foods
on health and digestion; how they have
misinterpreted the purpose and scope of
the food standards which have been proclaimed
by the Secretary of Agriculture in
accordance with an. act of Congress, and
have, as a result of these erroneous
views, created what seems to them a demon
of future dangers, but which is
nothing more than a phantom of a perturbed
imagination.
In doing this I shall speak
frankly and freely, without any bias or rancor,
without any feeling of resentment for
the many denunciations and anathemas which
have been published all over this broad
land and in Europe during the past two
years.
I hope you may not conclude
from the necessary trend of my argument that I
oppose all use of preservatives and coloring
matters in foods. On the contrary,
there are doubtless often conditions when
the use of preservatives is indicated.
In countries which are unable to produce
their own foods, as for instance
England, on journeys to distant or difficultly,
accessible places, such as mines
and logging camps and long journeys on
the sea, and in other exigencies,
preservatives may be indicated. I also
think that the consumer who prefers them
should not be denied that preference.
My argument, therefore, applies to the
usual conditions which obtain in this
country and especially to the apparent
fact that the great majority of our people
seem to prefer their food untreated
with noncondimental preservatives.
As it has appeared to me
from listening to a part of the testimony and
reading a part thereof, the character
of the opposition to the pending measure
may be described as follows:
Opposition to the cardinal principles
of the bill.
Opposition to some of the prohibition
principles of the bill.
Opposition to the method of enforcing
the bill.
Opposition to the officials who
may be called upon to enforce the bill.
Opposition of special interests
engaged in certain industries which apparently
may be affected to a greater or
less extent by the provisions of the bill
should it become a law.
I will begin by a statement
of the grounds of the opposition of the first
class of objections. This opposition has
not been brought out by any of the
witnesses who have been called upon to
testify; but is based upon broad
Constitutional grounds and is of a character
to command profound respect and
careful consideration. I refer to the
views which are held by many distinguished
and earnest men to the effect that the
cardinal provisions of the bill are
unconstitutional. This is a matter, therefore,
which does not call for any
further consideration on my part.
The second class of objections
to the bill: The prohibition principles of the
pending bill consist in the elimination
of harmful and injurious ingredients
which may be added to foods. I may say,
and the statement is rather a broad one,
that there is no opposition to such a
prohibition, as no one has advocated, in
so far as I have been able to find in
the testimony, a permission to add
harmful, deleterious, or poisonous substances
to foods, except Dr. Eccles.
The objections have rather
lain against the possible decisions as of the
courts in such matters, and especially
against the, method of collecting
evidence for the prosecution. It is, of
course, self evident that no prosecution
could be brought, under these prohibition
provisions unless some one should
certify that any given added substance
was harmful, deleterious or poisonous.
The opposition, therefore, to this provision
of the bill has voiced itself in an
argument that the committee. should insert
prohibitive provisions in the bill
against this prohibition. Plainly stated,
the contention has been made that the
Congress of the United States should declare
by act that certain substances in
certain proportions are not harmful, deleterious,
or poisonous substances.
The only expert testimony
which has been submitted on this question, which is
worthy of any consideration by your committee,
is that which was offered by
Professor Kremers, of the University of
Wisconsin, Professor Kedzie, of the
Agricultural College of Michigan, and
Professor Vaughan, of the University of
Michigan. The high character and attainments
of these experts entitle their
views to the most profound and respectful
consideration.
The wide distribution of
benzoic acid in vegetable products, as described by
Professor Kremers, is well known to physiological
and agricultural chemists. He
says that in the destruction of certain
proteins in the human economy benzoic
acid is formed, which is then changed
into hippuric acid. There is no evidence
that I have been able to find to show
that hippuric acid may not be formed from
the benzol radical without its passing
through the benzoic acid state. But this
is of little importance, because even
if benzoic acid should precede the
formation of hippuric acid it could only
exist in the most minute quantities and
for a relatively very short period of
time. Hippuric acid is one of the natural
toxic or poisonous bodies produced in
catabolic activity, which, like urea and
other degradation products of proteins,
must be at once eliminated from the
system to avoid injury. Uremic poisoning
at once supervenes on the suppression
of the excretive activities of the kidneys,
and unless this condition is removed
death speedily results.
This brief summary of the
opposition to the food and drugs act during the
time it was before Congress accentuates
the fact that it is essentially a health
measure, as has been officially confirmed
by a decision of the Supreme Court of
the United States.
There had been little discussion
during the whole twenty-five years of the
subject of misbranding. This was such
an apparent and unnecessary evil that it
had few defenders. During all this time
the chief discussion was the effect upon
health of certain preservatives and coloring
matters, and as to the selection of
officials for carrying the law into effect.
It was the unanimous opinion of all
opponents of the law that the Bureau of
Chemistry should have nothing to do with
its enforcement. It was well understood
that the attitude of the Bureau of
Chemistry was distinctly hostile to the
use of chemical preservatives of any
kind in food and that all such manipulations
threatening the health of the
American consumer would be frowned upon.
In spite of many attempts to prevent
it, Congress deliberately and overwhelmingly
decided to submit the execution of
the law to the Bureau of Chemistry.
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
In the future the student
of history who may wish to review all that was said
and done during the fight for the enactment
of the pure food law will find all,
the hearings in the libraries connected
with the various committees in Congress
in charge of these hearings. They are
a thesaurus of interesting facts which the
future historian ought not to overlook.
FURTHER EXCERPTS FROM THE CLOSING SUMMARY
MR. BARTLETT: I would conclude,
then, that you think benzoic acid as a
preservative is not necessary.
DR. WILEY: I think you forecast
my argument very well.
MR. ADAMSON: Before you became
a chemist, you saw women make catsup and put
it up hot in sealed bottles and keep it
a long time, didn't you?
DR. WILEY: Yes, sir.
MR. ADAMSON: Without putting
anything in it?
DR. WILEY: Excepting the
ordinary spices and condiments. I want to call the
especial attention of this committee to
this argument which I am presenting. I
will state it again without reading from
my manuscript, so as to make it
perfectly distinct.
The human body is required
to do a certain amount of normal work. That amount
of normal work is a beneficial exercise
of these organs. If you diminish the
normal work of an organ you produce atrophy--lack
of functional activity. If you
increase it hypertrophy ensues, and increase
of functional activity. Nearly all
of the organs that wear out do so from
one of those causes, not from normal
exercise of their functions. Therefore,
assuming that the food of man, as
prepared by the Creator and modified by
the cook, is the normal food of man, any
change in the food which adds a burden
to any of the organs, or any change which
diminishes their normal functional activity,
must be hurtful.
MR. ESCH: If the organs were
always normal, death would not ensue?
DR. WILEY: I will not go
so far as that, Mr. Esch. I do, refer to longevity,
though, and I believe this with all my
heart, that when man eats a normal food
normally the length of human life will
be greatly extended. That is what I
believe. But if we consume abnormal food
abnormally we shall lessen the length
of human life.
MR. TOWNSEND: Who is going
to define normal food; there is a great difference
of opinion about that?
DR. WILEY: I will admit that.
MR. MANN: Doctor, do you
think the action of eating cranberries with turkeys
is detrimental to health in any way or
to any degree?
DR. WILEY: I will answer
that as categorically as I can. I do not believe
that a healthy organism is going to receive
any permanent injury or measurable
injury by eating cranberries because they
contain benzoic acid. And I want to
add this, that it is not because they
contain benzoic acid that they are
wholesome, but that if they did not contain
it they would be more wholesome than
they are.
I want to accentuate this
point: I noticed very many questions from many
members of the committee which lead me
to think that you have this feeling, that
if a substance does not hurt you so that
you can measure it it is not harmful.
That does not follow at all. Take this
one substance of benzoic acid. Benzoic
acid never takes any part in the formation
of tissue, and its. degradation
product is hippuric acid, which is a most
violent poison. If the kidneys should
cease to act for twenty-four hours there
is not a man on this committee who
would not be at death's door from the
hippuric acid and the urea which would be
in the blood. Hippuric acid is perhaps
far more poisonous than urea; it is a
deadly poison. Therefore nature gets rid
of it directly it is formed, otherwise
health would be destroyed.
Now, is there force in the
argument, gentlemen, that in view of the fact that
this degradation product comes from the
natural foods which we eat--and I am not
criticizing the Creator at all for putting
them in the food--then benzoic acid,
which occurs in natural foods and of which
the degradation product is a violent
poison if increased by an infimitesimal
amount, and although we may not be able
to note any injury coming from it, yet
should we be advised to use it? There is
a subtle injury which will tell in time.
For instance, a mathematician desires
to make a curve to express inflnitesimally
small values which only the
mathematician can consider, and to do
that he has to have experimental evidence.
He can not experiment at the small end
of his curve; it is impossible. He
experiments upon the part of the curve
that he can measure, fixes the ordinates
and the abscissas with the points that
he can measure. Then he draws his curve,
passing into the infnitesimally small
values. And it is the same with the
substances added to food. You must construct
your curve on data which you can
measure, and then you draw your curve
down to the inflnitesimally small. That
curve is a curve the moment it varies
from zero, although you can not see it or
measure it. If you add any substance to
food--add, I say--which produces a
poisonous degradation product, or adds
one additional burden to the secretory
organs, you have changed that infinitesimal
small part of your curve that you
can not measure, but the change is there
all the same.
MR. MANN: Take the case of
cranberries. Does benzoic acid in the cranberries
to the extent that the benzoic acid exists
injure cranberries as a food?
DR. WILEY: It is so small.
that you can not measure its harmful effects.
MR. MANN: But to the extent
that it exists at all; or that the other values
in cranberries as a food in the normal
use of them overcome the injurious
effects of benzoic acid. If that be the
case, might not that be the case of
other preservatives in other foods?
DR. WILEY: What is true of
one is true of all.
MR. MANN: But with artificial
preservatives. Might not the case arise where,
although the food is injured to the extent
in which the preservative exists, yet
it has preserved the food so that it is
better food, the total product is better
than the food would have been without
the preservative. That is what we want to
get at here.
DR. WILEY: I stated that
particularly in my introduction. I said there were
many places where preservatives were indicated.
Wherever you can make food
better, where it is impossible to have
it without having a preservative,
certainly the preservative is indicated.
MR. ADAMSON: I am curious
to ask you, before you leave the subject of
cranberries, about the effect of berries,
in which I am locally interested. I
can give up cranberries, but I can not
give up blackberries and huckleberries. *
* *
MR. BARTLETT: Did you see
the account in yesterday's Herald about the dinner
that some chemist gave to a friend in
New York, at which everything they ate was
made out of acids and things of that kind?
MR. MANN: Synthetic products?
MR. BARTLETT: Yes.
DR. WILEY: Yes, sir; I saw
the account, and I know the gentlemen very well. I
don't believe any of them would care to
eat that kind of a dinner every day. It
is like my very distinguished friend,
Professor Chittenden, perhaps the most
distinguished physiological chemist in
this country, who proved conclusively to
himself that man in his natural tastes
ate too much protein. The average man
instead of eating 17 grams of nitrogen
in a day, as he does, ought not to eat
more than 10 or 11. But almost every man
taught to do that, I understand, has
gone back to the old way, although apparently
it was beneficial at the time.
MR. TOWNSEND: Professor Chittenden
does not agree with you in regard to the
use of preservatives.
DR. WILEY: I think not; I
think he does not agree with me. I want to say
here, Mr. Chairman, that experts never
think the less of each other because they
disagree; it is the natural condition
of humanity.
MR. ADAMSON: You did not
really run a boarding house on pills, paregoric, and
other things, did you?
DR. WILEY: I ran a boarding
house something of the kind you describe for four
years, and I am running it to-day; and
would be pleased to have you come down
and take a meal with us.
MR. ADAMSON: I think I would
prefer to have a colored woman do the cooking
for me.
DR. WILEY: We have a colored
cook. You will hear more about that boarding
house later on.
MR. BARTLETT: I understood
you to say you knew these gentlemen in New York
who gave this dinner that we were speaking
about a moment ago?
DR. WILEY: I know them very
well.
MR. BARTLETT: They are reliable
gentlemen?
DR. WILEY: Oh, yes; perfectly
so. In fact, I have a very high opinion of the
chemists of this country. Just as high
when they differ from as when they agree
with me.
MR. ADAMSON: While you have
such a high opinion, yet you do not take their
judgment in these instances?
DR. WILEY: Certainly not;
I should not occupy such a position. I do not want
anybody else to judge for me the results
of my own work. I want to do that
myself.
MR. ADAMSON: I wanted to
give you a chance to disclaim that.
DR. WILEY: Not only disclaim
it, but I never have put myself in any such
position and never intend to.
Now I will go on with my
statement.
Because nature produces an
almost infinitesimal quantity of substances in
foods which add to the quantity of these
poisonous excreta appears to me to be
no valid argument for their wholesomeness.
Could even the small trace of
substances in our foods which produces
hippuric acid be eliminated, the
excretory organs would be relieved of
a useless burden and the quantity of work
required by them be diminished. This would
be conducive to better health and
increased longevity. I fail to see the
force of the argument that a deliberate
increase of the work required by the adding
of substances capable of producing
poisonous degradation products is helpful
and advisable. Granting, for the sake
of the argument, the grounds of a trace
of benzoic acid and its analyses in all
the substances mentioned by Professor
Kremers, we do not find that this is a
warrant to add more of these bodies, but,
on the contrary, a highly accentuated
warning to avoid any additional burden.
That benzoic acid is a useful medicine,
no one who has ever studied medicine will
deny, but I think almost every
practicing physician will tell you that
the exhibition of drugs having a
medicinal value in case of health is highly
prejudicial to the proper activity
of these drugs when used in disease. The
excretory organs of the body become
deadened in their sensibilities by the
continued bombardment to which they are
subjected and do not respond at the proper
time to the stimulus which a medicine
is supposed to produce. Keeping the hand
in cold water constantly would unfit it
to be benefited by the addition of a cold
application for remedial purposes.
I think that I need only
call the attention of the committee to the wide
distinction between a drug used for medicinal
purposes and a food product to
show them that all reasoning based on
the value of drugs as medicines is totally
inapplicable to their possibly beneficial
effects in foods. I further think I
shall be sustained almost unanimously
by the medical profession of the United
States when I say to this committee that
the "drug habit," which is so
constantly and so unavoidably, I am sorry
to say, formed in this country is one
of the greatest sources of danger to the
public health and of difficulty in the
use of remedial agents that can well be
imagined. Professor Kremers, on page 33,
seeks to justify the statement he reads
from Professor Hare respecting the
properties of benzoic acid by saying that
benzoic acid is useful in diseases of
the urinary organs which produce alkalinity.
I will show this committee later on
that small doses of borax bring about
this abnormal condition of the urine, and
therefore it might be advisable in using
borax, which has been pronounced
harmless by some experts here, to be able
to counteract one of its particularly
certain effects by administering a remedy
at the same time that you supply the
cause of the disease. For this reason
your committee might well say in the bill
that whenever borax is used in foods benzoic
acid should also be used as a
corrective of its dangerous influences.
I am somewhat surprised also
at the reference that Professor Kremers makes to
salt, on page 34. Salt is not only a delightful
condiment, but an absolute
necessity to human life, and the fact
that excessive doses of salt are injurious
has no more to do with this argument than
the fact that you can make yourself
ill by eating too much meat. It seems
to me astonishing in these days of rigid
scientific investigation that such fallacious
reasoning can be seriously
indulged in for the sake of proving the
harmlessness of a noncondimental
substance. Yet this is the argument advanced
by Professor Kremers on page 34 in
respect of salt, wood smoke, and other
useful, valuable, and necessary
condimental bodies. The argument in regard
to benzaldehyde in ice cream is on
the same plane. The substance known as
ice cream, as usually made, is an
inferior food product at best, and how
it could be improved by the addition of a
substance which increases the quantity
of poisonous principles in the excrements
is a matter entirely beyond my comprehension.
I am perfectly familiar with the
argument that this small quantity would
not produce any harm. It is doubtless
true, Mr. Chairman, that a slight increase
for one day or even oftener of these
bodies in the food would produce practically
no measurable effect upon a healthy
individual for a long time, but that in
the end it would produce no harmful
effect is contrary to all the rules of
physiology and logic.
The body wears out and death
supervenes in natural order from two causes:
First, from a failure of the absorptive
activities of the metabolic processes,
and, second, by an increased activity
of the catabolic processes, producing
increased amounts of poisonous and toxic
matters in the system, while the
excretory organs are less able to care
for them. Thus the general vitality of
the body is gradually reduced, and even
old age, which is regarded as a natural
death, is a result of these toxic activities
carried through a period of time
varying in extreme old age from eighty
to one hundred years. This process is
described by Professor Minot, of Harvard
University, as the differentiation and
degeneration of. the protoplasm. On the
contrary, it is not difficult to show
that .every condimental substance, by
its necessary and generally stimulating
effect upon the excretory organs which
produce the enzymes of digestion,
produces a positively helpful result,
while its preservative properties are
incidental merely thereto. Condiments
are used not simply because they are
preservatives, but because without them
the digestive organs would not respond
to the demands of nature, and therefore
I ask your very careful consideration of
the arguments based upon a comparison
of noncondimental preservatives added to
foods and the use of the condimental substances
which are natural and necessary.
I do not believe that your minds will
be misled in the consideration of this
important and radical distinction.
A careful review of other
parts of the argument of Professor Kremers shows
that he unwittingly admits the poisonous
and deleterious properties of benzoic
acid by calling attention, on page 35,
to the fact that when doses of it are
added to an kinds of stock, so called,
preserved in large quantities, it is
boiled out or disappears by sublimation
during subsequent treatment. If benzoic
acid is a. harmless substance, as suggested,
why should so much importance be
attached by its advocates to the fact
that it is practically eliminated? Thus
the advocates of benzoic acid at once,
by their own words, show the insecurity
of the platform on which they stand.
MR. TOWNSEND: Did you understand
him to testify in that way as showing that
that was the reason it was not harmful?
DR. WILEY: No; excepting
it was boiled out.
MR. TOWNSEND: That was in
answer to a question.
MR. ESCH: The use of it more
particularly with reference to the preparation
of the stock.
DR. WILEY: Yes; I have mentioned
that in large quantities, in relation to the
stock.
You are asked to insert in
this bill a provision which will allow the use of
one-fourth or one-fifth of 1 per cent
of benzoic acid in food products, which is
practically ten times that found, as stated
by Professor Kremers, in the
cranberry, which, of all known vegetable
substances used as foods, contains the
largest quantity. Fortunately, cranberries
are not an article of daily diet. Do
not, I beg of you, lose view of the fact
that because a single dose of benzoic
acid does not make you ill its daily consumption
is wholly harmless. This is a
non-sequitur of the most dangerous character.
Professor Kremers says that
he has searched through all literature and has
not found a statement that benzoic acid
administered even in medicinal doses
would produce harm. I would like to compare
this with his own quotation of
Professor Hare, in which it is said:
Ordinary doses
cause a sense of warmth through the entire body, which
feeling increases with the amount
ingested, large quantities causing severe
burning pain.
Asked by Mr. Richardson,
Professor Kremers acknowledged that there might be
many persons who would be injuriously
affected by benzoic acid. Now, when anyone
is accused of a crime it is no defense
to prove that the crime was not committed
against a hundred or a million individuals.
It is sufficient to prove that it
was committed against one. Professor Kremers
acknowledges that benzoic acid may
be harmful, therefore Professor Kremers
has convicted benzoic acid as being a
harmful substance; and, therefore, his
argument that it should be used
indiscriminately in foods, or, as asked
when before this committee, be permitted
to the extent of one-fourth of 1 per cent,
being ten times the quantity produced
in its most abundant natural substance,
seems wholly illogical.
MR. TOWNSEND: That would
be true of any article; that not only applies to a
preservative, but it applies to all kinds
of foods as well.
DR. WILEY: Well, yes; but
foods and drugs must be regarded differently.
MR. BARTLETT: There are people
who can not eat food ordinarily regarded as
harmless. There are certain people who
can not drink sweet milk; and I know
people who can not eat eggs of any description,
nor anything that has an egg in
it. Now, do you think that everybody ought
to be prevented from eating eggs or
drinking milk if a half a dozen people
in a thousand are injuriously affected by
them?
DR. WILEY: Certainly not;
nor would I prevent anybody from using benzoic acid
who wanted to do it, but I certainly would
help persons from using it who did
not want to use it. I am not advocating
the prohibition of the use of benzoic
acid by anybody who wants to use it. I
would be in favor of putting benzoic acid
in a little salt-cellar, the same as is
used for salt and pepper, and letting
the people use it if they want to. I think
benzoic acid would not hurt me, or be
injurious to my system, if I used it one
day--
MR. BARTLETT: You know some
people have tried to eat a quail a day for thirty
days, but they get sick.
MR. ADAMSON: Is there not
a great difference between the occasional use of
these poisons medicinally, in cases of
emergency, and the use of them in any
quantities in food?
DR. WILEY: I think that is
a great point. I will come presently to the
statement of Professor Vaughan, which
covers that case beautifully in the
testimony he gave here.
There are two points that
I wanted to call to the attention of the committee.
One is that we have examined a number
of substances in which Dr. Kedzie
testified that he has found benzoic acid,
and we have found none.
MR. BARTLETT: What substances
are those?
DR. WILEY: Dr. Kedzie testified
that he had found benzoic acid in
cranberries, huckleberries, plums, grapes,
grapefruit, oranges, pineapples,
carrots, pears, cauliflower, rhubarb,
and green peppers.
We have obtained from the
open market samples of the following fruits and
vegetables, said by Professor Kedzie to
contain benzoic, and tested them for
benzoic acid:
Malaga grapes, grapefruit,
oranges, pineapples (two varieties), carrots,
parsnips, cauliflower, rhubarb, and green
peppers. We were unable to obtain any
indication of benzoic acid in any of these
fruits with the exception of
pineapples, where in one test of one variety
there was a reaction which might
have been caused by a trace of benzoic
acid. On repeating the test on a fresh
portion of the sample, however, the test
could not be confirmed. The test
obtained, however, even if caused by benzoic
acid, was so slight that the
substance could not have been present
in greater quantity than one part per
million, or one ten-thousandth of 1 per
cent. It is certain from our analyses
that benzoic acid is not present in this
substance in the quantities stated by
Doctor Kedzie, viz., from one one-hundredth
to two one-hundredths of 1 per cent.
In 1904 1 obtained samples
of huckleberries grown in three regions of the
United States and did not succeed in obtaining
the slightest indication of
benzoic acid in any of them.
Professor Kedzie also dwells
upon the fact that in the process of cooking a
great deal of the benzoic; acid escapes.
Inasmuch as he contends that it is
harmless, the object of enforcing this
view of the case is not apparent,
although I do not doubt its accuracy.
Professor Kedzie found catsup
made by Heinz, when sold in Michigan, to
contain benzoic acid. Mr. Allen finds
that when sold in Kentucky, it does not
contain any benzoic acid. Professor Kedzie
states that he has determined that
the amount of benzoic acid in grapes is
not far from one one-hundredth to one
two-hundredths of 1 per cent. It requires,
of course, very delicate
manipulations to quantitatively determine
these small quantities and very large
quantities of samples must be taken. We
feel certain that Professor Kedzie has
utilized much more delicate methods than
we have been able to develop in our own
laboratory and I regret that he .did not
disclose the methods employed to the
committee.
Professor Kedzie testifies
that the artificial product added to a food does
not differ from the article naturally
present in food. He testifies that it is
present as pure benzoic acid in either
case. This statement would mean that if
you should take some butter and skim milk
and beat them up together the product
will be exactly. the same as that of the
original full-cream milk. This is a
remarkable doctrine in physiological chemistry,
and upon this doctrine could be
established the perfect wholesomeness
of all synthetic foods. This will be
strange doctrine to the makers of champagne.
For instance, a still wine having
practically the same composition as champagne,
when artificially carbonated with
the same quantity of carbonic acid which
would be found in the natural
champagne, is exactly the same substance
as the article made naturally by
fermentation in the bottle by the slow
and tedious process employed. Every
physician who prescribes champagne and
every man who drinks it will without
hesitation doubt this statement.
Professor Kedzie testifies
that he is not a physiological chemist and not a
doctor of medicine. On the same page,
however, he testifies that between 60 and
100 grains, a large amount, a teaspoonful
or a tablespoonful or something like
that, would have an inflammatory action
upon the stomach. When asked in regard
to its specific effect in small doses,
he said:
I eat cranberries
right straight through the season. I like the
cranberries, and I see no untoward
effects whatever from their use. I never
took benzoic acid except in that
form and in the form of catsup.
He therefore testifies, as
he says, from his own personal experience, and. at
the same time says that he never took
any except that which was natural to
certain foods and introduced in catsup.
Professor Kedzie has already testified
that cranberries contain only five one-hundredths
of 1 per cent of benzoic acid.
The amount which he took daily he does
not state, but it evidently must have
been quite small in quantity, and, more
than that, it was in the form in which
the Author of Nature had placed it and
not in an artificial or adulterated form.
From this remarkable metabolic experiment
Professor Kedzie says that he can
testify from his own experience that benzoic
acid is not harmful. I ask you,
gentlemen, to consider in all seriousness
expert testimony of that description
and compare it with the elaborate trial
and continued experimental work
conducted in the Department of Agriculture
on similar lines of inquiry which I
have mentioned.
I quote Professor Kedzie's
experiments with boric acid and salicylic acid:
I investigated
bulk oysters, for instance, and found the presence of boric
acid in a small amount. We investigated
shrimps, also, which I found at the
market and brought to the laboratory.
That is my way of teaching. I
investigated the shrimps and found
in the shrimp liquor, on evaporating it,
that there was a considerable amount
of boric acid. Then, I took a sample of
pickles from my grocer--pickles
that I eat myself--and tested them and found
in the vinegar of the pickles sulphurous
acid to prevent that little growth of
mold that is so objectionable to
the consumer.
MR. BURKE: To what extent
did you find sulphurous acid in the vinegar that
you have just spoken of?
MR. KEDZIE: I did not estimate
the exact amount, but it was very small. It
takes very little to inhibit the growth
of a mold in the vinegar.
MR. ESCH: What determination
did you reach in regard to cranberries?
DR. WILEY: His analysis and
ours agreed almost exactly.
MR. TOWNSEND: Did you examine
more than one specimen of the cranberries?
DR. WILEY: We examined a
large number. That is only a question, however, of
analytical detail. I only present that,
not to throw any doubt on the fact of
the wide distribution of benzoic acid,
which no one denies.
I also want to call the attention
of the committee to Doctor Kedzie's expert
testimony to the effect on his health,
and ask you to compare the few samples of
cranberries that he has eaten, and few
samples of ketchups, with the careful
determination which we have made. That
is all. The rest is confirmatory of what
Professor Kedzie says.
I say here that I am sorry
that Professor Kedzie did not submit his methods
of examination; and I would like to incorporate
in the minutes the methods which
we have used so he can review our work
if he desires.
MR. EXCH: Do you know of
any other analysts who have found benzoic acid in
these fruits?
DR. WILEY: No; I do not.
I have never seen any results excepting these of
Professor Kedzie and Professor Kremers.
DR. VAUGHN'S TESTIMONY
Now I come to the most important
testimony, that of Dr. Vaughan, and I shall
ask the indulgence of the committee to
speak at some little length on that
point.
DR. VAUGHAN'S thorough training
and large experience and scientific methods
of work have fitted him particularly well
to speak on a subject of this kind. I
quote, therefore, with pleasure from his
testimony.
I want to say,
and I should have said in the beginning, that I am very
anxious that Congress should do
something to regulate the use of preservatives
in foods. I think that the use
of preservatives in foods may be and often is
overdone and that great harm may
come from their excessive use. The law
requires of a physician before
he can prescribe benzoic acid or sulphurous
acid or anything of that kind a
certain degree of education and that he must
pass a State examination.
I am willing to stand with
Dr. Vaughan on this one proposition, which I
indorse in every word. Of course he must
agree with me that if a physician, who
of all men knows the responsibility which
rests upon him in connection with his
profession, is not allowed to prescribe
benzoic acid until he has studied four
years or longer in a medical college,
received a diploma, and passed an
examination before a State board of examiners,
then surely no manufacturer
without any education of a medical character,
without ever having passed any
examination, without having a single faculty
of knowledge respecting the use of
drugs, should be allowed to put any benzoic
acid or any other drug of any kind
in his foods. I think I might omit any
mention of the rest of Dr. Vaughan's
testimony with that simple statement of
his, which covers the ground so
absolutely and effectively.
MR. TOWNSEND: He was testifying,
was he not, as an expert who had had
experience with benzoic acid, and he stated,
as an expert, as a physician, who
was trained and experienced in administering
this drug, that such an amount was
not harmful. That is what he stated, is
it not? He did not state that they
should be allowed to use all that they
saw fit; in fact, the trend of his whole
examination was that this should be passed
upon by a board of experts as to the
amount that should be used. That was his
conclusion.
DR. WILEY: That is true.
I only call attention to the basic proposition. He
says in the beginning--I do not think
it is unfair to quote Dr. Vaughan's words,
word for word.
MR. BARTLETT: Oh, no, I did
not say that; but people can take a Bible and
prove by words and quotations from it
that they are justified in believing that
there is no God.
MR. KENNEDY: A doctor would
not be permitted to prescribe anything as a
doctor until he had been licensed, but
I can prescribe if I do not charge for
it. I can advise the use of meats and
other things to be eaten, and so on, with
profit and benefit, and I would not come
within any prohibition of law, would I?
MR., BARTLETT: No; not unless
you prescribed for pay.
MR. GAINES: Unless I did
it as a doctor.
DR. WILEY: The manufacturer
charges for his goods; he does not give them
away; and the doctor receives pay for
his prescription.
MR. ESCH: If a physician
prescribed the amount which could be used without
detriment, would it be dangerous to the
manufacturer to use, that or a less
amount?
DR. WILEY: I think so.
MR. ESCH: Provided you could
be sure?
DR. WILEY: Yes; because the
physician prescribes constantly very poisonous
substances. A drug and a food are quite
different things. The physician
prescribes after his training and after
an examination of the patient. The
manufacturer asks legal permission to
use the same drug that the physician does
in his practice and to put it in the foods
with certain restrictions, which, of
course, would be proper if he is permitted
at all. But I want to contrast the
difference in the position of the trained
man who uses a drug and the untrained
man who uses a drug. I think it is perfectly
fair, Mr. Chairman, to call the
attention of the committee to that important
distinction.
MR. MANN: There is no difference
of opinion between you and Doctor Vaughan on
that subject, as I understand his testimony;
you both agreed.
DR. WILEY: We agreed in almost
every particular. I indorse almost every word
he said to this committee, absolutely.
THE CHAIRMAN: Dr. Vaughan's
statement, you will remember, was made after a
manufacturer had testified that he put
6 ounces of benzoic acid in powder in a
barrel of catsup and trusted to oscillations
from the ordinary movement of that
as freight to distribute it.
DR. WILEY: Yes, Sir.
MR. CUSHMAN: As I understand
your position, then, you agree with Dr.
Vaughan's statement on technical points,
but disagree with his conclusions?
DR. WILEY: Yes; I don't think
they are logical in those particular instances.
I think all of his statements and his
facts are without question so far as his
examinations have gone.
MR. BARTLETT: Do you agree
with him that each one of us, in eating our daily
food, consumes from 1 to 10 grains of
benzoic acid? That is one statement that
he made.
MR. KENNEDY: He said that
was formed in the human body.
MR. BARTLETT: Do you agree
with him upon that?
DR. WILEY: I have never measured
the amount of benzoic acid that may be
formed by metabolic activity. We surely
do not eat ten grains a day in ordinary
foods, or even one. It is only in rare
cases that you would eat one grain a day.
MR. TOWNSEND: Where does
it come from if his conclusion is correct that it is
in the system?
DR. WILEY: It is claimed
by some physiologists that the benzol ring that I
showed you yesterday--the product of destructive
metabolism--that small
quantities of the benzol radical might
be formed in the system or unite with
glycocol and form hippuric acid.
MR. TOWNSEND: And would be
eliminated by the kidneys?
DR. WILEY: And would be eliminated
by the kidneys; yes, sir.
Will Congress pass a law
permitting physicians to prescribe a quarter of 1
per cent benzoic acid, or 10 grains or
30 grains of salicylic acid, or any
quantity of boric acid, or any quantity
of strychnine or of arsenic in patent
medicines, without medical education and
medical training and without studying
the character of the condition of the
patient to which it is to be given? I
really do not believe that any claim of
that kind would meet with a single vote
of this committee or on the floor of the
American Congress. And yet Dr. Vaughan,
after having laid down a principle of
ethics, broad, comprehensive, and
indestructible, immediately proceeds to
claim for a manufacturer, without any
technical knowledge of medicine, the right
to do exactly the thing which he says
no physician by law should be allowed
to do. Dr. Vaughan was asked about the
proper law in regard to the use of preservatives,
and very promptly says:
That brings up
a very interesting point. If you will permit me, I would
like to say just a word about that.
I do not know that I am prepared to answer
the question just now. It seems
to me that that ought to be settled by a
commission of experts, as to what
preservatives could be used and in what
foods they might be used.
Now, Mr. Chairman, let me
ask, if Dr. Vaughan, with all his extensive
experience, with all his work in pharmacology
and physiology and chemistry, has
not yet reached an opinion, where can
you expect any commission or anybody else
to be able to reach one? And, in view
of that fact, can Dr. Vaughan or any other
man logically come before your committee
and ask to be allowed the use of a
definite amount of certain medicines of
the highest value, of which Dr. Vaughan
himself says he does not know what quantity
can be used, and which can not be
used by a physician in any quantity without
a license?
Then Dr. Vaughan goes immediately
on and says, on the same page, that he "has
an opinion," that he is "sure" that benzoic
acid in the quantities in which it
is used in catsup, :sweet pickles, ete.--1
part to 1,200 or 2,000--does not do
any harm. He immediately says: "I should
be opposed to the use of formaldehyde
in milk in any quantity, or the use of
any other preservatives in milk." Why,
may I ask? If it is harmless in catsup,
is it harmful in milk? If it is harmful
in milk, is it not harmful in catsup?
DR. VAUGHAN also says: "I
have testified repeatedly against the use of
sulphite of soda on hamburger steaks.
I am thoroughly in sympathy with the
Hepburn bill." I desire the particular
attention of the committee to this part
of the testimony. Dr. Vaughan has said
that a physician should only prescribe
benzoic acid after training and license.
He then says that he himself, with all
his vast experience, has not reached any
conclusion in the matter. He next says
that he believes that the quantity used
in tomato catsup does no harm. Then he
says he is opposed to its use in milk
in any quantity. I should think a jury
would be somewhat confused by expert testimony
of this kind. I believe, with Dr.
Vaughan, that a physician should not be
allowed to prescribe benzoic acid until
he has shown the necessary qualifications.
I believe, with Dr. Vaughan, that no
preservative of any kind should be used
in milk. I agree With him,--that
sulphite of soda, should not be used on
hamburger steaks--three points on which
we agree. I agree with Dr. Vaughan that
I have not yet reached any conclusion as
to the minimum quantities of benzoic acid
which are harmless. Four points,
logical, sequential, and on which perfect
agreement is certain. Just what there
is in tomato catsup which should except
it from the logical sequence I beg some
one to enlighten me.
It is impossible for me in
any way to discover it. Dr. Vaughan states that
nobody but a bacteriologist can decide
how much of a preservative must be used
to preserve a food, and therefore objects
to the results of the experiments
authorized by Congress. I beg to state
to the committee that Congress never
authorized the Secretary of Agriculture
to determine how much preservative was
necessary to preserve foods. All it did
was to authorize him to study the effect
of preservatives, coloring matters, and
other substances added to foods upon
health and digestion. In so far as I can
see, bacteriology has nothing in the
world to do with it. It is a question
of physiological chemistry and
pharmacology only, and it has been answered
solely by the methods of those
sciences.
I will explain in full these
methods when I speak of the effect of borax. Dr.
Vaughan states that the experiments with
borax did not prove that it was
injurious in small quantities, and when
asked what he meant by small quantities
he said, "One-half of 1 per cent." I suppose
he means by that, in the foods.
That is all he can mean. I will show you
gentlemen that the amount of boric acid
which we used and which produced most
disturbing effects upon the health was far
less than one-half of 1 per cent of the
weight of the food used. Dr. Vaughan's
statement in this respect is hardly the
statement of an expert. It is his
opinion of another expert's findings,
and he adduces no evidence on which to
base his opinion.
I may say to you that the
Secretary has never taken up the subject of
determining what preservatives shall be
used in foods and in what quantities, as
he is authorized to do by act of Conaress.
When he does, he will, under the
authority of Congress, be able to call
experts on these subjects who shall be
able to help him to a just decision. All
the Secretary of Agriculture has done
so far is to determine the effect of preservatives,
coloring matters, and added
substances to foods upon health and digestion.
These experiments have been
conducted in the manner which I shall
soon relate to you.
No board of experts could
come in and help another expert decide what his own
experiment taught him. That would be quite
an impossible thing to do. Dr.
Vaughan would resent five men going into
his laboratory and telling him what the
result of one of his own experiments was.
He, being a man of judgment and tact
and knowledge, alone can decide what his
own experiments have taught him, and
then when he submits the data on which
his judgment is based the board of
experts can come in and criticize the
data and reach another conclusion. The
data on borax, which was used in the experiments
which I will soon describe, are
here before you. Every fact in connection
with that investigation is set forth,
every analysis has its data, every event
connected with the conduct of the
experiment, which lasted nine months on
twelve young men, is set forth in
detail. Dr. Vaughan did not attack a single
fact nor deny its accuracy in all
this mass of material, and then, without
doing this, says:
Dr. Wiley has
made a report on boric acid as to preservatives, and while I
am a personal friend of Dr. Wiley's
and appreciate him very highly and think
greatly of him, his experiments
have shown that boric acid in large amounts
disturb digestion and interrupts
good health, but they have not shown that
boric acid in the small quantities
which should be used as a preservative, if
used at all, has any effect upon
the animal body.
Now, Mr. Chairman,. I do
not see how Dr. Vaughan, after reading my report,
could make a statement like that. He certainly
did not read it carefully. I
therefore take this opportunity to lay
before this committee at this opportune
moment a synopsis of the results of the
work which has been accomplished under
authority of Congress in feeding borax
and boric acid to. young men in splendid
health and to place before you the proof
of the deletrious effects which even
small quantities--far less than one-half
of 1 per cent-produce. I will
supplement this also by a similar statement
from the chemists and physiologists
of the imperial board of health at Berlin,
which fully confirms in every
particular every conclusion reached by
my own experiments, and candidly ask the
consideration of this committee of these
two reports.
Now, that shows how close
our agreement is, as I have already stated to the
committee, and I would like to repeat
it here: That if benzoic acid is harmful
in milk, and Dr. Vaughan admits it, in
any proportion, there is no logical
reason that I can see why it is not harmful
in any other food. I admit the
argument, however, that it may be placed
there and produce a benefit. Then we
could say that it was placed there to
correct some other and a greater evil, and
on that ground alone would I advocate
the use of preservatives in food, and not
that they are harmless. I do not see,
gentlemen, how anybody can ever admit the
use of preservatives in food on such testimony
as Dr. Vaughan has given, and I
will rest it right on his words, on the
ground that it is harmless. But you
could very justly, as I said yesterday,
admit it on the ground that it is less
of two evils. That is the point that I
wanted to insist upon.
MR. TOWNSEND: Have you changed
your mind on that subject in the last few
years?
DR. WILEY: Yes, sir; very
materially. I formerly believed that certain
preservatives could be used, as Dr. Vaughan
believes now, simply by having its
presence mentioned on the label. I was
strongly convinced of the truth of that
proposition. I have, before committees
in Congress and in public addresses,
stated those sentiments. I was converted
by my own investigations, Mr. Chairman,
and by nobody else's in this matter. My
former opinion was based upon the weight
of expert testimony. I read the opinions
of men that I respected, and the weight
of that opinion was in favor of the position
which I have just stated. I
inclined to that view. And I will state
that Dr. Vaughan's association with me
was one of the things that led me largely
to adopt that view.
LIEBREICH JOINS VAUGHAN
When I went to my office
yesterday one of the young men said: "Have you seen
this criticism on your work which has
just come out in a German magazine in
January?" As I have been pretty busy in
the last few weeks, I had not read the
magazine. It is an adverse criticism of
this report of mine on borax. I am
having it translated and typewritten,
and I am going to put it in the evidence
so that you can read it. Professor Liebreich
I know very well. He is a personal
friend of mine, a very eminent gentleman,
and it is fair to say that he is
employed by the borax syndicate; but I
don't think -that impugns his testimony
at all, and I accept his criticism as
if he had been employed by the German
Government. One of those is the original
report of the imperial board of health
and the other the reply to a criticism
made by this same Professor Liebreich.
And to show how experts disagree, Professor
Liebreich came to this country last
year to testify in some cases in Pennsylvania
on behalf of borax and sulphite of
soda, which Professor Vaughan condemns--he
would not allow it used in any
quantity.
Professor Liebreich appeared
before the court in Philadelphia in the case
where the hamburger-steak people who had
been treating hamburger steak with
sulphite of soda were made defendants;
and he testified that in his opinion
almost any quantity of sulphite of soda
could be used with impunity in meat; and
the court asked him, "Professor Liebreich,
do you use it in your meats at your
home I" And he said: "No; I do not." "Would
you use it if you wanted to?" was
asked; and he replied, "I don't want to,"
and his whole testimony fell just on
that. I was told--I don't know just how
true it was-that he received $4,000 for
coming over here. One of our young men,
who was not nearly so famous as
Professor Liebreich, went over to Philadelphia
and testified before the same
court, and on his testimony the judge
and jury found against the testimony of
Professor Liebreich, whose criticism of
my report I will submit as soon as it is
ready. That shows that Liebreich and Vaughan
agree on borax. Vaughan and Wiley
agree on sulphite, and I differ from both
of them on the borax question, and
they differ from each other on the sulphite.
That shows the conflict in
opinions which you gentlemen are called upon to
consider. It is something confusing, but
of course you have to rely upon the
character of the data after all. If you
find that the data which I present are
not reliable, have not been obtained in
a proper way, my opinion is worth very
little, and, as Professor Liebreich says,
"I will accept the data as they are,
and then I will draw an opinion which
is entirely different," just what I told
you yesterday could be done.
MR. RYAN: Do you believe
a Congressionaf committee, none of whom are
chemists, are competent to judge between
those opinions of eminent chemists who
have formed those opinions after having
analyzed the food?
DR. WILEY: I think they are
absolutely competent, just as a jury would be
upon the same thing in the weighing of
evidence.
You see the evidence as the
weigher of evidence, and not as experts. You see
it as a jury. I think this committee is
absolutely competent to decide a
question of that kind on the evidence
submitted here.
MR. BARTLETT: We have a good
many bills before us, and there is where this
question must come before the court and
the jury.
DR. WILEY: That is true so
far as the Hepburn bill is concerned somebody must
render an opinion before you can bring
an indictment, and then that opinion is
subject to review of the court. That is
the plain principle of the law, and
surely you would never try to bind the
court by any statements or anything else
which any expert might set up.
MR. BARTLETT: You will find
one court and a jury deciding that a certain
thing ought to be put in, and another
that it ought not.
DR. WILEY: It should be carried
up to the highest court.
MR. BARTLETT: In one locality
a jury and a judge, with men on trial for not
permitting a certain statement, might
acquit one man and convict another.
DR. WILEY: Exactly, and you
will find when I submit the evidence from the
English courts that that very thing happens
all the time. You must leave it to
the court. Every man can have his opinion,
but that must not bind the court; an
expert's opinion never can.
MR. ESCH: I noticed that
Rost came to the conclusion that the use of borax or
boracic acid resulted in almost every
case in a reduction of weight. Did you
find that true in your experiments?
DR. WILEY: Yes, sir; you
will find that in this chart. We never found an
exception.
MR. MANN: Before you pass
from the subject of borax, I would like to have
your statement in reference to the use
of borax under the provision of the bill,
which in the Hepburn bill was removed
by maceration.
DR. WILEY: I heartily approve
of that provision in regard to preservatives of
food products intended for export. I have
a little article that I am going to
submit on that, Mr. Mann, in better form.
There is a chart here (in Bulletin 84)
showing by the position of the lines,
the loss of weight which these young men
suffered. I don't think it is a very serious
matter if a man loses a couple of
pounds in weight.
MR. TOWNSEND: You found some
of them were gaining weight, as I understood
you, and you had to reduce their food.
DR. WILEY: Our foods were
constant as long as they could eat. Until they
became ill their food was never diminished
throughout the preservative period.
MR. TOWNSEND: Didn't you
state that you had to watch them closely to see if
they were gaining?
DR. WILEY: That was before
we began to establish the equilibrium; that was in
the fore period.
Now, I have a transcript
there which I think will prove. very helpful to you
gentlemen. You have heard a great deal
about the finding of the English
departmental committee. I want simply
to quote the evidence of Professor W. D.
Halliburton, who is the most distinguished
physiologist of the English-speaking
people. Professor Vaughan would be very
glad to tell you the same thing. He came
over here last year and gave a series
of lectures. His work is a textbook on
chemical physiology and pathology. I want
to read you just one or two things,
which you might not read, that I have
extracted from his testimony.
The English committee forbade
the use of preservatives in certain food
products, and recommended that a limited
quantity, which they mentioned, should
be permitted in other food products. While
that has never been made a law by act
of Parliament, the courts are all guiding
their decisions on the report of this
committee. For instance, if they do not
find any more than one-half of 1 per
cent of borax, they do not convict a defendant.
If they find less than 1 grain
of salicylic acid to the pound, they do
not convict a defendant. But they
convict any defendant who puts preservatives
in milk of any kind. The evidence
of Professor W. D. Halliburton is as follows--that
part which I wish to
read--and it can be verified if anybody
wishes to.
I would say at
the outset that the kind of evidence that I have to offer is
not very largely clinical. The
amount of medical practice which I have seen is
limited. Very soon after my student
days, I took to physiological work, and I
have remained at that more or less
ever since, so that the actual observations
that I have to make are in the
nature of physiological experiments, and deal
principally with the two chief
substances that you have under investigation,
as I understand--compounds of boron
and formaldehyde. On general principles
one would object to the continuous
use of antiseptics. The substance which
would destroy the life of micro-organisms
could not be expected to be
beneficial to the life of a higher
organism; it would be largely a matter of
dose. I mean to say the same dose
that would kill a bacterium would not
necessarily kill a man, but still
it would be hostile to the protoplasmic
actions that constitute the life
even of a high animal like man.
Q. 7541 (p. 264).
Then, as to boric acid, you have made extensive
experiments?--A. With borax and
borates I have made a fair number of
experiments. In the introduction
I allude to what is known as "borism." The
eruption occurs on the skin of
certain individuals as the result of the use of
either boric acid or borax. There
have been other cases recorded--although
here again I can not speak personally--in
which dyspeptic troubles have
arisen. There have been a fair
number of experiments performed upon animals.
Q. 7544. Boric
acid is the commoner preservative, is it not?--A. I am not
so sure. I think very largely a
mixture is used that is called "glacialin"--a
mixture of boric acid and borax.
In animals the chief advantage, if one may
put it so, of the poison is that
it is not cumulative; it does not accumulate
in the body, but it is rapidly
eliminated by the urine.
Now, I put it to the committee
this way: Here is an opinion of a man whose
fame is far greater even than that of
Dr. Vaughan. I believe that every person
acquainted with medical and physiological
literature in the United States will
say that Professor Halliburton is the
greatest living exponent of physiological
chemistry in English-speaking countries.
Could there be a more sweeping
indictment brought against these preservatives
than Professor Halliburton has
stated? He says of borax and boric acid
that the chief advantage of these
poisonous bodies is that they are rapidly
eliminated from the system, and he
further states that the continual passage
of these foreign bodies through the
cells of the kidneys, to put it mildly,
as he does, is not likely to do them any
good. And yet Professor Vaughan advises
this committee to permit the use of
boric acid in foods in quantities not
to exceed one-half of 1 per cent.
Professor Halliburton says
further, in answer to question 7572: " May we take
it, then, that in your view you are absolutely
opposed to the use of
formalin?--Yes.
Q. 7573. And
with regard to the other preservatives, if they were labeled
that would meet your objection;
is that your position generally?--A. No; I
feel that the ideal condition of
things would be to prohibit them all.
Q. 7574. All
preservatives?--A. All preservatives.
Q. 7575. Even
salt?--A. No; I am not speaking of substances which are
normal constituents of the body.
Q. 7576. Would
you prohibit nitrate of potash, too?
A. One knows,
even from smoking cigarettes, that nitrate of potash is not
absolutely harmless.
So I say to our manufacturers:
"Take the American people into your confidence
and your business will be placed upon
a foundation from which it can not be
shaken nor removed." I say, as a plain
business proposition, that the men who
put preservatives in foods had better
stop it for their good and for the good of
their business; and they will. And in
five years from now (mark my words, Mr.
Chairman), bill or no bill, we will not
have to come here to argue about this
matter, because there will be nothing
to argue about--because this ethical
principle, aside from any injury to health
or anything of that kind, is one
which appeals, not only to the people
who consume, but to the people who make
the goods which they eat. With these remarks,
I submit the case to your
judgment, saying that whatever your action
is I shall heartily support, with
what little influence I have, any measure
which you bring forth, to have it
enacted into law. [Applause.]
PREVIOUS LEGISLATION
Congress enacted a law conferring
plenary power on the Secretary of
Agriculture to exclude adulterated and
misbranded foreign articles from entry
several years ago. Its terms are as follows:
The Secretary
of Agriculture, whenever he has reason to believe that such
articles are being imported from
foreign countries which are dangerous to the
health of the people of the United
States, or which shall be falsely labeled
or branded either as to their contents
or as to the place of their manufacture
or production, shall make a request
upon the Secretary of the Treasury for
samples from original packages
of such articles for inspection and analysis,
and the Secretary of the Treasury
is hereby authorized to open such original
packages and deliver specimens
to the Secretary of Agriculture for the purpose
mentioned, giving notice to the
owner or consignee of such articles, who may
be present and have the right to
introduce testimony; and the Secretary of the
Treasury shall refuse delivery
to the consignee of any such goods which the
Secretary of Agriculture reports
to him have been inspected and analyzed and
found to be dangerous to health
or falsely labeled or branded, either as to
their contents or as to the place
of their manufacture or production or which
are forbidden entry or to be sold,
or are restricted in sale in the countries
in which they are made or from
which they are exported.
DR. WILEY: I will say that
the Germans no longer attempt to send boraxed
sausages to this country. They were making
them and sending them to this country
when they were not permitted in their
own country; but our law says that
anything that is forbidden in any country
can not be sent from that country
here, and so we simply excluded those
goods because they were excluded in
Germany; not on account of any decision
respecting their health.
The same way with salicylic
acid. You can not import anything into this
country from Germany or France that contains
salicylic acid because that is
forbidden in those countries but you can
from England.
MR. TOWNSEND: We do not propose
to be as liberal as they are. We forbid their
manufacturing and selling it here but
allow them to sell it abroad.
MR. MANN: Is the amount of
borax in these duck eggs of such a percentage as
to be, without question, injurious to
health?
DR. WILEY: If consumed as
food, absolutely without question; and we are not
required, I think, to say that we will
follow a man and see whether he tells the
truth or not as to what he is going to
do with it. I do not think that this firm
in this case would have done anything
but what they said,. because they are most
reputable and honorable men; but suppose
some other person had done it?
MR. MANN: If this provision
in the Hepburn bill had been in the law, you
would have been required to take some
action of that sort, I suppose?
DR. WILEY: Yes; and I hope
the committee will read the paragraph where I have
spoken about that. I think it is a very
unfortunate thing that we are required
to go into a man's kitchen and supervise
his cooking, and I think that when you
come to look into that thing you will
find it would be the one unconstitutional
thing in it, because it is a pure police
regulation, which is solely committed
to the States.
MR. TOWNSEND: In what bill
is that?
DR. WILEY: The Hepburn bill--the
clause which says that the thing must be
judged when it is fit for consumption.
Now, the preparation of a food for
consumption is certainly under the supervision
of the police powers of the
States, and it is not in the unbroken
packages which the law specifies as the
only goods to which this law shall apply.
MR. MANN: The provision of
the Hepburn bill is not quite that, Doctor.
DR. WILEY: But I want to
say to you, gentlemen, that I am not frightened
about that clause of the bill at all.
That is just a little principle of ethics
and constitutionality. Not being much
of a constitutional lawyer I only suggest
it; but I would like to have my distinguished
friend here [Mr. Bartlett] look
into that point of it particularly.
MR. ESCH: Is saltpeter still
used as a preservative anywhere, Doctor?
DR. WILEY: I do not think
saltpeter was ever used as a preservative. It was
used to preserve color, but not to preserve
food.
MR. MANN: Is it injurious?
DR. WILEY: I think saltpeter
is a very injurious substance. It acts
specifically on the kidneys very injuriously,
and Professor Halliburton, whom I
quoted this morning, agrees perfectly
with that statement.
MR. ESCH: Corned beef is
colored with the use of saltpeter, is it not?
DR. WILEY: That is just the
same principle again. I would not be afraid to
eat a piece of corned beef, because the
amount of injury would be immeasurably
small. Do not misunderstand me. I am not
saying that it should not be used in
corned beef. I would be sorry to see it
left out. But if you put it on the
principle of harmlessness, it could not
go in. And that reminds me that I did
not show you the thing which is most indicative
of my argument. I am glad you
mentioned that just now. I want that chart
that was made this morning. A little
graphic representation of an argument
sometimes helps a great deal.
The suggestion has been repeatedly
made here that because food was injurious
we should legislate against it. Now, I
have drawn here my argument in a graphic
form. This is a graphic chart showing
the comparative influence of foods and
preservatives. Of course we have to assume
the data on which this chart is
constructed. You will understand that.
We will suppose that a normal
dose of a drug in a state of health is nothing.
We do not need it at all. Now, imagine
that the lethal dose of a drug--that is,
the dose that will kill--is 100; and then
we go to work and measure at three
points--at 75, at 50, and at 25. There
are points at which we can measure. We
can not measure up toward the right there,
because the line almost coincides
with the basic line, and the deviation
is so slight that no method of
measurement that we know of could distinguish
them.
Then, if we use a little
drug I can measure it here. I can measure it again
here [indicating], and I can measure it
again here [indicating]. Now from those
three points I can construct a curve and
calculate the lethal dose, which we
will assume to be 100. That much drug
would kill; no drug would not hurt at all.
The relative injury of a
drug can be calculated mathematically from a curve
constructed like that on experimental
data, and I could tell you mathematically,
by applying the calculus there, just what
the hurtful value of that drug would
be at an infinitely small distance from
zero. You have doubtless, an of you,
studied calculus, and you know how you
can integrate a vanishing function. I
used to know a good deal about calculus
myself, and I could by integral calculus
tell you the injurious power of a drug
at an infinitely small distance from
zero--that is, an infinitely small dose.
Now, see what a contrast
there is between a food and a drug.
The lethal dose of a food
is none at all. What kills you? You are starved to
death. The normal dose is what you eat
normally, 100. I starve a man, and I
measure the injury which he receives at
different points. I can mathematically
plat the point where he will die.
That one chart shows to this
committee in a graphic form, better than any
argument could, the position of a drug
in a food as compared with the food
itself. They are diametrically opposite.
The lethal dose of one is the normal
dose of the other, and vice versa. Therefore
the argument de minimis as far as
harmlessness is concerned is a wholly
illogical and unmathematical argument, and
can be demonstrated by calculus to be
so.
When the committee went into
executive session to put this bill into its
final shape, I was asked to sit with them.
This is as near to being a member of
Congress as I ever reached.
FINAL ACTIVITIES
Thus ended the struggle for
legislation controlling interstate commerce in
foods and drugs. It had been going on
nearly a quarter of a century. In the
beginning the efforts were feeble and
attracted very little attention. As the
work continued more and more interest
was taken in the problem. Many of the
state authorities were keenly alive to
the importance of national legislation.
They felt that without some rallying point
their own efforts in individual
states would be lacking in completeness.
The state officials who were most
active in this crusade were Ladd of North
Dakota, Sheppard of South Dakota,
Emery of Wisconsin, Bird of Michigan,
Abbott of Texas, Frear of Pennsylvania,
Barnard of Indiana, Hortvet of Minnesota,
Allen of Kentucky, and Allen of North
Carolina. Many other food officials were
interested and helpful, but these were
the outstanding members of the state food
commissioners who took the most active
part in the matter. All the great organized
bodies interested in the health of
the people, namely, the American Medical
Association, the American Public Health
Association, together with the Patrons
of Husbandry, and the Federated Labor
organizations of the country were actively
engaged in promoting this measure.
Perhaps the greatest and most forceful
were the Federated Women's Clubs of
America and the Consumers League, They
took up the program with enthusiasm and
great vigor. Two of the leaders of this
movement were Mrs. Walter McNab Miller,
representing the Federated Women's Clubs,
and Miss Alice Lakey, representing the
Consumers League. Their services were
extremely valuable.
EDWARD FREMONT LADD
Militant Food Administrator of North Dakota,
at Denver Convention
MRS. WALTER McNAB MILLER
Representing Federated Women's Clubs
MISS ALICE LAKEY
Representing the Consumers' League
Finally the movement received
the approval of President Roosevelt in a
one-line sentence in his message to Congress
at the opening of the fifty-ninth
Congress in December, 1905. The stage
was set for action. The force of the
movement had passed beyond all restraining
influences. The opposition of the
vested interests had lost all momentum.
Victory was in the air. People talked
about the food bill on the streets, discussed
it in clubs, passed resolutions in
favor of it in their meetings. It was
evident the day of success so long looked
for and so eagerly awaited was at hand.
It remained only for the Congress of the
United States to compose the differences
between the Senate and the House bills
and put the final touches on legislation.
It was a foregone conclusion that a
measure so popular and so universally
acclaimed would receive without hesitation
the approval of the President.
The bill passed the Senate
February 21, 1906, yeas 63, nays 4. The House
passed a similar bill June 23, 1906, yeas
241, nays 17. The conferees agreed
soon thereafter and President Roosevelt
signed the bill June 30, 1906.
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