FDA History 04
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HISTORY OF A CRIME AGAINST
THE FOOD LAW
CHAPTER IV: WHAT IS WHISKY?
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.”
RECTIFIED WHISKY THE FIRST CAUSE OF PARALYZING
THE FOOD LAW
Whisky is a distillate,
in a pot still, of the fermented mash of a cereal
or mixtures of cereals, containing
all the natural elements of the grain and
the ethyl alcohol and its congeners,
volatile at the temperatures of
distillation. It contains also
the coloring matters and other soluble products
extracted from the wood (oak),
in which it is stored and any new compounds
arising during storage. Potable
whisky is kept in storage for four years.
--Definition
by Bureau of Chemistry.
Whisky is used extensively
as a medicine. Physicians differ widely in regard
to its medicinal value. The greater number
of physicians think it has medicinal
value. A very respectable number look
upon whisky as unsuitable for any
medicinal purpose whatever.
The ethyl alcohol in whisky,
when taken in moderation, is oxidized and thus,
to that extent, becomes a food product.
The damaging effects of whisky, however,
are so great as to render it impractical
for food purposes. As a beverage whisky
was used extensively in this country before
it was prohibited by Constitutional
amendment and the Volstead Act was passed
regulating the enforcement of the
Constitutional provision. At the present
time whisky for beverage purposes can
only be obtained illegally. The sources
of all illegal alcoholic beverages are
shrouded in mystery, and severe and often
fatal results follow their illegal
use. The Volstead Act prescribes the conditions
in which they may be used for
medicinal purposes.
UNE CAUSE CELEBRE
In the fight for the food
law the question "What is Whisky?" cut quite a
figure. As early as 1898 the question
of the character of distilled alcoholic
beverages became quite acute. A heavy
tax was laid on manufactured alcohol, both
for beverage and industrial use. A great
change had been made in the method of
making pure alcohol. The continuous still,
an implement which was continuously
charged with a fermented mash and which
continuously produced a very pure spirit
revolutionized the process of distillation
and made pure untaxed alcohol
remarkably cheap. This method of making
neutral spirit was entirely different
from the manufacture of beverage whisky.
The Congress of the United States had
legalized the mixing of genuine whisky
with this neutral spirit, and coloring
and flavoring the mixture, by an Act defining
rectifying. The so-called
rectified product was placed on the market
under the name and appearance of the
genuine article. Existing law provided
no penalties for this fraud.
In order that consumers might
be able to protect themselves, certain
precautions were provided in the law.
When a genuine whisky was first made it
was always placed in oak barrels for aging
purposes. A stamp was placed on the
package, giving date produced, distillery
making it, and other data required for
revenue purposes. When the package was
tax paid and ready for consumption, an
additional stamp was affixed. The double
stamp was the consumer's evidence that
no rectifier had handled that package.
This assurance however, affected only the
first owner. When he decided to put the
contents on the retail market he was
under no further obligation. He sold it
by the drink at the bar or in small
packages to carry away.
For the protection of the
individual consumer, Congress, in 1898, passed the
bottled in bond act. This law permitted
dividing the product in fractions of a
gallon, each package having a United States
little green stamp pasted over each
cork, showing the distillery where made,
the size of the package, the date of
manufacture, and a guarantee of freedom
from rectification.
This guarantee followed a
rigid investigation of the wiles of the rectifier,
carried on in 1898, in which the Bureau
of Chemistry took an active part. It was
then learned that there was a radical
difference between a genuine whisky at
least four years old and the rectified
product bearing the same name. Under the
pending food bill the rectifiers clearly
saw that the products they were making
would have to bear labels showing just
what they were. Their whole business was
founded on fraud. They made heroic efforts
to prevent the passage of the Act.
After its passage they moved heaven and
earth, or better, hell and earth, to
nullify its provisions. In the following
pages will be found the high lights of
these efforts.
In the final hearings the
rectifiers made every possible endeavor to kill the
bill. Anticipating the probability of
the passage of the bill, it was deemed
advisable to study ab initio the whole
question, historical and technical, of
the manufacture of whisky in this and
other countries. The investigations made
by the Bureau of Chemistry covered fundamentally
all angles of the problem. The
results were collected in typewritten
form and were the basis of all the
testimony before the courts in the cases
subsequent to the passage of the law. A
witness to the sound conclusions drawn
therefrom is the universal approval given
by every Federal court before which the
problem has been presented. No further
publication of this brief has been made.
I have, as one of my most precious
documents, a copy, which, by the way,
was the document called for by Judge
Thompson of Cincinnati in the effort of
the rectifiers to have Food Inspection
No. 65 declared illegal.
In closing the discussion
of the pending food bill before the Interstate and
Foreign Commerce Committee in 1906, the
following reference to whisky (page 322)
was made:
Now we are ready, Mr. Chairman,
for a short talk on whisky, if my assistants
will bring the samples forward.
I will not call attention
to the testimony of Mr. Hough, because he was not
under oath; it is not expert testimony,
but I want to say just this in regard to
his contention: As you know, I was instructed
last year, with a view of
executing our food law respecting imported
food products, to visit the
manufacturers in Europe, as far as I could
in the time I had at my disposal;
and, especially, I was instructed by the
Secretary to visit the distilleries in
Scotland and Ireland, where Scotch and
Irish whiskies are made. I may say that
it was a very pleasant task to which I
was assigned. [Laughter.] I was also
instructed to visit the Charente to see
how the real French brandy is made, and
the Gironde to see how the real French
wines are made, and the Rhine and Mosel
to see how the real German wines are made.
I spent three months in this very
delightful task.
On my return I made a report
to the Secretary of Agriculture, which he gave,
in abstract, to the press, and which was
published all over this country and in
Europe. I stated that I had found that
in Scotland whisky was made solely from
pure barley malt, fermented in the proper
way and distilled in a pot still, and
that nothing else, in my opinion, was
entitled to be called Scotch whisky except
that product.
I stated also that in Glasgow
and Edinburgh I found distilleries importing
American maize, Indian corn--I was glad
they were doing it; it is a good market
for us--and making a spirit out of it,
and that this spirit was mixed with the
real Scotch whisky and sent to this country;
and I doubted if there was a
barrel--and that was about true, as events
have shown--of real Scotch whisky in
the United States.
I went to Ireland, and I
found that whisky was made there exactly as it is in
this country in Kentucky, just as Mr.
Taylor (who is the only expert called on
the question) has testified it was made.
It is made there of barley malt and
unmalted grain, just as in this country,
the malt being used to convert the rest
of the starch, and then it is fermented
and distilled in a pot still and placed
in the warehouse, just as it is in England
and in Scotland.
In this country, too, we
have great distilleries of spirits which make
immense quantities of alcohol, and our
law permits the mixing of different
spirits, under what is known as the rectifiers'
clause of the internal-revenue
law, which says that anyone who "mixes
without rectifying" these spirits and
makes a spurious whisky or gin or brandy
shall be deemed to be a rectifier and
must take out a rectifier's license. So
that the law specifically says in this
country that every mixed whisky is a spurious
imitation of whisky. That is the
act of Congress of the United States,
a pretty good authority when it comes to
definitions of that kind.
I said to the Secretary that
in my opinion, if I were enforcing the law about
whiskies coming to this country--I am
not; I have simply tried to get all the
information I could, and I did not want
to begin to enforce a law without
knowing what I was doing--I believed I
could exclude from this country, under
our law, any of these rectified whiskies
which were offered.
At that time, while I was
in London, they were about to begin a great trial,
which it was said would be the greatest
trial that ever took place in that city
in regard to a manufactured product, in
which a publican had been cited under
the English foods act for selling a bottle
of whisky which was not of the
character, quality, and kind demanded.
That is the language of the English food
act, and a very good one it is. That one
sentence is the whole essence of the
act.
This publican was cited to
appear. He was defended by the greatest lawyer in
England, Mr. Frederick Moulton, the leader
of the English bar; and I was told
that $50,000 (£10,000) had been
raised simply to pay the legal expenses of the
defense. This poor publican was worth
nothing, but he was the man who was
charged with this offense, and this great
rectifying industry was behind him.
They wanted to establish the fact that
a rectified whisky was a Scotch whisky;
and that was what this suit was brought
for, to show that it was not. I was
asked to go over there as a witness, and
of course I could not go; but they
introduced my report to the Court, which
the judge promptly ruled out unless
they produced me.
Yesterday, after I left the
committee, I got this cablegram from London:
"Wiley, Agricultural Department, Washington.
Whisky defendants convicted." And
it is the best news I have had across
the ocean in my opinion, for a long time.
MR. MANN: Did you not see
the account in the newspapers?
DR. WILEY: Yes, this morning;
but this came yesterday.
Now, I want to say, Mr. Chairman,
that I have not the least opposition to
rectified whisky. I will admit, for the
sake of argument, that it is better than
the straight whisky. I. will admit it
for the sake of the argument; I do not
really think so, but I will say that it
is better. That is what the magistrate
said. I got the printed proceedings of
the trial as they came off every week;
they sent out a. bulletin, and they had
expert witnesses to testify that the
rectified whisky was less injurious, had
less poisonous matter in it than the
straight whisky, and the magistrate said:
"Well, perhaps that is true. If so,
why not say 'This is a rectified whisky'?
because then you will get the trade."
MR. RYAN: But that was not
the question at issue in that case, was it?
DR. WILEY: That was not the
question at issue. The question was whether a
spirit that had any Indian corn spirit
in it was a Scotch whisky or an Irish
whisky.
MR. RYAN: That was it?
DR. WILEY: Yes, sir.
MR. BARTLETT: It was sold
as Scotch or Irish whisky?
DR. WILEY: It was sold as
Scotch or Irish whisky.
MR. BARTLETT: And it turned
out to be a rectified whisky.
MR. RYAN: The extract of
corn is what they objected to?
DR. WILEY: Yes--spirit made
from Indian corn. That covers this whole
contention.
A STRANGE OBSESSION
When Lloyd Bowers reached
the opinion that a neutral spirit, even one made
from grain, was not entitled to the designation
of whisky, even if it should be
colored and flavored, it is difficult
to understand why he decided that this
article which was not a whisky could be
added to real whisky, and then the
mixture could be called whisky, provided
the characteristics of the real whisky
would not be too greatly diluted. Especially
is this true when he had before
him, not only the decisions of the Federal
Courts, but also the opinion of the
father of President Taft to the effect
that neutral spirit was an entirely
different article from whisky. He also
had before him the opinion of the English
Courts contained in Bureau of Chemistry
Bulletin No. 102, issued Dec. 20, 1906.
1 give here a synopsis of the decision
of the English case:
A whisky claimed to be Irish
on the one hand and a second sample which
claimed to be Scotch on the other, was
sold to a customer as the best Irish and
the best Scotch whisky. On analysis it
was determined that it contained not less
than 90% of silent or neutral spirit made
of maize. In passing sentence the
magistrate said:
"The offence
committed by both defendants is the same, and the same
practically in degree. * * *
"It is time the
fraud upon the public in the matter of the sale of whisky
was stopped, and, though doubtless
these prosecutions are very costly to those
who engage in them, the information
obtained and published in the course of
the hearing of these two summonses
is most valuable, and the result of this
trial seems to me to afford ample
justification for the prosecutions.
"Great blame
attaches, in my opinion, to the 'blenders' who supplied Wells
and Davidge with the articles they
sold. I do not think much moral blame
attaches to the defendants themselves,
as I believe they trusted to those who
sold the articles to them to supply
them with that which they might fairly and
honestly retail to the public as
Irish and as Scotch whisky, respectively; but
at the same time, in my judgment,
it was careless of the defendants to sell
what they, did as they did, and
since they only are before me they must pay
the penalty for their infringement
of the law. * * * The defendants, Thomas
Samuel Wells and James Davidge,
will each pay a fine of 20s and 100 pounds
costs or be imprisoned in default
of distress for two months in the second
division.
To continue the quotation
from the final hearings:
"Now, I say that
that is a business which is perfectly legitimate in this
country. I am sorry that our laws
are so hard on the man who makes a straight
whisky, and so easy on those who
make the mixed whisky; because you can not
make or sell straight whisky except
under a Government stamp, under Government
supervision. You can add nothing
whatever to it, not even coloring matter,
except that when you take it out
of bond and sell it you are permitted to
reduce it with distilled water
under the supervision of Government officials,
to proof--that is, half alcohol
and half water.
That is the only
thing that can be done. Then, if it is in a barrel, it has
the double stamp put on it to show
that it is whisky right out of the
distillery. It can be. sold in
bottles; you can pay the tax on it and take it
out of bond and put it up in any
shape you please, or you can, under the law,
if you want to, have it bottled
in bond. Those are the three forms in which
straight whisky can reach you.
It can come in barrels, or it can be put up in
any kind of a package you please
after you pay your tax on it, it makes no
difference what; or it can come
bottled in bond, as this is. If any of you
have never seen a bottle of whisky
bottled in bond, this is one.
MR. RYAN: The fact that it
is bottled in bond is no evidence of purity or
quality?
DR. WILEY: It is evidence
of quality; it shows that nothing has been added to
it except what nature put in the distillate.
MR. RYAN: Do you believe
that when a blender or a rectifier adds anything to
whisky he is doing something deleterious
to health ?
DR. WILEY: I do not think
he intends to. He may do it unwittingly.
MR. RYAN: The blenders and
the wholesale liquor dealers and rectifiers in New
York, for instance, are very much disturbed
about this. I will state that I have
received some seventy or eighty telegrams
since last evening in connection with
this matter. They fear that this law will
show to the public, or attempt to show
to the public, or the public will assume,
that whisky bottled in bond is the
proper thing and will injuriously affect
their business, when, as a matter of
fact, it is no evidence of quality or
purity that it is bottled in bond, as you
state now yourself.
DR. WILEY: Oh, I do not think
you have quite quoted me, Mr. Ryan. I said it
was a guaranty of quality.
MR. RYAN: Of quality, yes.
DR. WILEY: But the word "purity"
is used in two senses, unfortunately.
With regard to foods, I never
use the word "purity" except in one sense. A
pure food is what it is represented to
be. It has nothing to do with its
wholesomeness at all. A pure food may
be unwholesome, as has been testified
here. You will see in my manuscript there
that in showing what things occur in
nature in foods I show that hydrocyanic
acid, the most violent poison, occurs in
a great many food products. They are pure
foods, but they contain poisonous
matter."
TROUBLE BEGINS
The food bill became a law
June 30, 1906. Immediately activities were began
by the fake whisky interests to nullify
its requirements. Rectifiers appeared by
counsel or in person before the committee
forming rules and regulations to carry
the law into effect. They made no impression
on that body. They then began to
get in touch with the Secretary of Agriculture.
These rectifiers were deeply in
earnest. They wanted to know "just where
they were at." They feared most of all
the decisions of the Bureau of Chemistry.
Here is one of the problems
propounded:
(FOOD INSPECTION DECISION 45.)
BLENDED WHISKIES
Many letters are received
by the Department making inquiries concerning the
proper method of labeling blended whisky.
Manufacturers are anxious to know the
construction placed by the Department
upon this particular part of the food and
drugs act of June 30, 1906 and to ascertain
under what conditions the words,
"blended whisky" or "whiskies" may be
used. The following quotation from one of
these letters presents a particular case
of a definite character:
"On account of
the uncertainty prevailing in our trade at the present time
as to how to proceed under the
pure-food law and regulations regarding what
will be considered a blend of whiskies,
I am taking the liberty of expressing
to you to-day two samples of whisky
made up as follows:
"Sample A contains
51 per cent of Bourbon whisky and 49 per cent of neutral
spirits. In this sample a small
amount of burnt sugar is used for coloring,
and a small amount of prune juice
is used for flavoring, neither of which
increases the volume to any great
extent.
"Sample B contains
51 per cent of neutral spirits and 49 per cent of
Bourbon whisky. Burnt sugar is
used for coloring, and prune juice is used for
flavoring, neither of which increases
the volume to any great extent.
" I have marked
these packages 'blended whiskies' and want your ruling as
to whether it is proper to thus
brand and label such goods.
"My inquiry is
for the purpose of guiding the large manufacturing interests
in the trade that I represent."
In a subsequent letter from
the same writer the following additional
statement is made:
"The reason for
wanting your decision or ruling in this matter is just
this: No house in the trade can
afford to put out goods and run the risk of
seizure and later litigation by
the Government on account of the odium that
would be attached. to fighting
the food and drugs act."
To this a formal answer was
prepared by the Bureau of Chemistry, and signed
by the Secretary.
The question
presented is whether neutral spirits may be added to Bourbon
whisky in varying quantities, colored
and flavored and the resulting mixture
be labeled "blended whiskies."
To permit the use of the word "whiskies" in the
described mixture is to admit that
flavor and color can be added to neutral
spirits and the resulting mixture
be labeled "whisky." The Department is of
the opinion that the mixtures presented
cannot legally be labeled either
"blended whiskies" or "blended
whisky." The use of the plural or the word
"whisky" in the first case is evidently
improper for the reason that there is
only one whisky in the mixture.
If neutral spirit, also known as cologne
spirit, silent spirit, or alcohol,
be diluted with water to a proper proof for
consumption and artificially colored
and flavored, it does not become a
whisky, but a "spurious imitation"
thereof, not entirely unlike that defined
in Section 3244, revised statutes.
The mixture of such an imitation with a
genuine article can not be regarded
as a mixture of like substances within the
letter and intent of the law.
(Signed) JAMES
WILSON,
Secretary of
Agriculture.
Washington, D. C.,
December 1, 1906.
Early in January, 1907, in
the very first days of the enforcement of the law
it was discovered that the Secretary of
Agriculture was very much perturbed in
regard to F. I. D. 45. At that time the
star of the Solicitor of the Department
was rapidly increasing in brilliancy.
The time was speedily approaching when the
head of the Department became only the
vehicle to carry the will of the
Solicitor into action. I was cited to
appear in the Secretary's office on the
22nd of February, 1907, for a conference
on the whisky question. The birthday of
Washington was used to perpetrate the
first overt act against the food law.
There were present at this conference
the Secretary, and the Assistant Secretary
of Agriculture, the Solicitor, Mr. George
P. McCabe, and the Chief of the Bureau
of Chemistry. The conference began by
a statement by the Secretary that this
conference should be behind closed doors
and no report of it should be made in
any way to the press.
I was first asked by the
Secretary if the Bureau of Chemistry still held to
the principles contained in F. I. D. 45.
I replied in the affirmative. He asked
the Assistant Secretary, Mr. Hayes, his
opinion in the matter. Mr. Hayes
promptly voted in favor of the Bureau's
definition of whisky. He then asked the
Solicitor his opinion. He replied, "Dr.
Wiley's definition of whisky is absurd.
Whisky is any alcoholic beverage made
from grain, properly colored and flavored,
according to the prevailing custom of
the trade." The Secretary said, "I agree
with my Solicitor." I immediately called
his attention to the fact that there
was only one body appointed by the Act
to make an initial decision as to what
constituted misbranding or adulteration
of foods and drugs, namely, the Bureau
of Chemistry. The only authority recognized
by
the Act to review this decision
was a United States judge. I said, "The
Bureau of Chemistry decision will
therefore stand until over-ruled by a
court of the United States." He replied,
"I will not take your construction of
the law, but that of my Solicitor; that is
what he is here for, to interpret the
law to me." This act of the Secretary and
Solicitor constituted the first abrogation
of the Food Law by executive
authority and laid the foundation for
a succession of similar violations.
As a matter of history I
may say that I obeyed the Secretary's injunction to
make no report of this matter to the press.
Immediately on leaving his office I
went to the Cosmos Club and called up
Mr. Loeb, secretary to President
Roosevelt. I related to him what had happened
in the Secretary's office and
asked him if he could come over to the
Club and take luncheon with me. Loeb was
immediately and greatly interested in
this decision. I pointed out in detail all
the circumstances which led to it. I felt
certain that Secretary Wilson would go
to President Roosevelt with this illegal
decision.
I asked Mr. Loeb to acquaint
the President of what had happened and to get a
promise from him, if possible, that he
would not give his approval to Secretary
Wilson's decision until I had an opportunity
to lay the whole matter before him.
Later in the day Mr. Loeb called me over
the telephone and said the President
had agreed to this delay. Meanwhile the
papers were full of this decision. It
had been given to the press by some one
of the four people who were present at
the conference. I was not the one who
gave it to the press.
A DAY OF JUBILATION
The following day was one
of rejoicing by the rectifiers all over the
country. They felt assured that F. I.
D. 45 would be repealed without carrying
the matter to the courts. There was a
slight error in their judgment. For two
weeks subsequent to this event the newspapers
were filled with accounts of
pilgrimages, under the leadership mostly
of United States Senators, of bodies of
rectifiers to the White House. Senator
Foraker conveyed the rectifiers from
Cincinnati. Senator Lodge accompanied
those from Boston. Senator Penrose led the
Philadelphia delegation. Meanwhile I was
patiently waiting word from President
Roosevelt. One day while I was taking
lunch at Harvey's a telephone message from
my office said the President would see
me at two o'clock. I had prepared a
movable laboratory with all the elements
necessary to manufacture ten year old
Bourbon or Scotch in a minute. I carried
with me samples of pure, refined
alcohol from half a dozen different sources,
namely from corn, barley, molasses,
and fruits, all alike in character, and
all of equal degree of purity. I carried
an assortment of colors and flavors used
by the rectifiers. When I drove up to
the White House with this peripatetic
laboratory, I encountered a dozen or more
newspaper men who were eager to know what
it all meant. I told them I had been
invited to give a lecture to the President
of the United States. One of the
well-informed correspondents said to me:
"You may think so, but you will find
that the President will do the lecturing."
I carried my laboratory into the
President's office where I was politely
received by the attendant and told that
the President would soon be in. In five
minutes my audience appeared, the
President of the United States, and Mr.
William Loeb, his secretary. For two
hours I performed experiments showing
the President how all kinds of rectified
whisky, brandy and rum could be made in
a minute. I received his undivided
attention. If he interrupted me at all
it was only to ask for more definite
information on some points. At the close
of this two hour lecture he came around
to my side of the table and grasped my
hand, saying to me, "Dr. Wiley, I have
heard nothing but whisky for the last
three weeks, and you are the first person
who has ever given me a single idea that
I can comprehend. Then turning to Mr.
Loeb he said, "Send all these documents
and samples, together with Dr. Wiley's
brief to Mr. Bonaparte, and ask Mr. Bonaparte
to advise me on this question." Mr
Bonaparte did advise him. He sustained
every single point that had been
presented by the Bureau as to what is
really whisky. President Roosevelt ordered
the Commissioner of Internal Revenue and
the Secretary of Agriculture, both of
whom were friends of the rectifiers, to
publish jointly a decision defining
whisky in the light of evidence which
had been presented. Thus ended the first
attempt to violate the Food Law by a complete
triumph of the law itself. The
Secretary was convicted but not convinced.
The breach thus made was never
closed. The Secretary was irrevocably
allied with the foes of the food law.
BONAPARTE'S DECISION
The decision of the Attorney-General
was sent to the White House on April 10,
1907. President Roosevelt wrote a letter
to Secretary Wilson in the following
terms:
The White House,
Washington, April 10, 1907.
My Dear Mr. Secretary:
In accordance
with your suggestion,* I have submitted the matter concerning
the proper labeling of whisky under
the pure-food law to the Department of
Justice. I inclose the Attorney-General's
opinion. I agree with this opinion
and direct that action be taken
in accordance with it.
Straight whisky
will be labeled as such.
A mixture of
two or more straight whiskies will be labeled 'Blended whisky'
or 'whiskies.'
A mixture of
straight whisky and ethyl alcohol, provided that there is a
sufficient amount of straight whisky
to make it genuinely a 'mixture,' will be
labeled as a compound of, or compounded
with, pure grain distillate.
Imitation whisky
will be labeled as such.
Sincerely yours,
(Signed) THEODORE
ROOSEVELT.
Hon. James Wilson,
Secretary of Agriculture."
*The President sent this problem
to Bonaparte at his own suggestion as I have
already stated, not by request
of Secretary Wilson.
The full opinion of Attorney-General
Bonaparte is printed as an appendix to
Food Inspection Decision 65, issued April
12th, 1907. The Attorney-General's
opinion is a blend of legal learning and
charming sarcasm. Those who are
interested in documents of this kind will
do well to read the opinion in full.
As an illustration of the
keen satire used by Attorney-General Bonaparte I
quote the following closing paragraphs
of his decision:
" The following
seem to me appropriate specimen brands or labels for (1)
"straight" whisky, (2) a mixture
of two or more "straight" whiskies, (3) a
mixture of "straight" whisky and
ethyl alcohol, and (4) ethyl alcohol flavored
and colored so as to taste, smell,
and look like whisky:
(1) Semper Idem
Whisky: A pure, straight whisky mellowed by age.
(2) E Pluribus
Unum Whisky: A blend of pure, straight whiskies with all the
merits of each.
(3) Modern Improved
Whisky: A compound of pure grain distillates, mellow
and free from harmful impurities.
(4) Something
Better than Whisky: An imitation under the pure food law,
free from fusel oil and other impurities.
In the third
definition it is assumed that both the whisky and the alcohol
are distilled from grain."
THE RECTIFIERS REFUSED
It is hardly necessary to
add that the rectifiers who had been engaged for
many years under Government license in
the manufacture of compounded and
imitation whiskeys failed to avail themselves
of the method of labeling
suggested by the Attorney-General. After
having secured the support of Secretary
Wilson for continuing their frauds upon
the consumers of whisky, they were
dumbfounded by their failure to have F.
I. D. 45 repealed. They were still more
greatly disturbed by having F. I. D. 65
substituted in its place. They were
defeated and discouraged, but not eliminated.
They immediately took steps
to secure Court decisions for the purpose of
declaring both F. I. D. 45 and F. I. D.
65 illegal and void. To this end they
were wise in selecting the courts before
which they proposed to bring their
petition.
They filed their first petition
before the Federal District Court, sitting at
Cincinnati, Hon. A. C. Thompson being
the presiding judge. Cincinnati was the
great center of the rectifying industry.
For years the rectifiers had been
making in that city compounded and imitation
whiskies designated by
high-sounding names and sold under claims
of great age. This product was
derisively known locally as "Nigger whisky."
The income from these spurious
whiskies was too large to be given up
without a struggle. Some of the most
influential citizens of Cincinnati were
engaged in the rectifying industry. They
were also supporters of the dominant political
party. For this reason the court
of Cincinnati was considered the most
favorable one in which to secure a
judgment declaring these standards of
whisky illegal. The filing of this suit
was not made known to me until the Saturday
previous to the hearing of the case
on the following Monday. I received an
S. 0. S. telegram from the United States
District Attorney asking for my immediate
presence in Cincinnati. I had only
time to secure a copy of the brief which
I had left with President Roosevelt,
and which he had forwarded to Attorney-General
Bonaparte, and take the train on
Sunday afternoon. The train was late and
I did not reach the District Attorney's
office until 15 minutes before ten o'clock
on Monday morning. The District
Attorney was utterly helpless in this
matter. He knew nothing of the case and it
was impossible to instruct him in fifteen
minutes. I told him the only hope was
to obtain from the judge a postponement
of the trial, in order that we might
secure proper witnesses and that he should
have opportunity to understand the
case properly. When Court opened the District
Attorney promptly moved for a
postponement of two weeks. The attorney
for the rectifiers, Mr. Warwick M.
Hough, vigorously opposed any postponement.
The Judge also seemed reluctant to
grant the District Attorney's petition.
Finally, however, he consented to an
adjournment of one week. At the end of
the week the District Attorney was fully
acquainted with the nature of the proceeding
and a number of competent witnesses
were on hand to defend the Government's
position. Judge Thompson was
acknowledged to be one of the best District
judges on the Federal Bench. He was
held in high esteem, not only for his
legal ability, but as a citizen, always
interested in what was right and proper
in regard to civic duty. At the
beginning of the trial he announced that
it must be completed on that day,
including an hour granted to each side
to make arguments before the court. He
also declared that each side should have
an equal time for presenting the views
of witnesses. The matter for the state
was forcibly presented, particularly by
Dr. Joseph P. Remington of Philadelphia,
and Dr. John Uri Lloyd of Cincinnati.
Competent chemical testimony was also
presented by the Bureau of Chemistry
before the Court.
After the arguments were
made and the trial was over, all the witnesses for
the Government congregated in the office
of the District United States Attorney.
We were speculating as to what the verdict
would be. The Judge had taken the
matter under consideration and we knew
there would not be a decision on that
day. The District Attorney was very hopeful
of securing a favorable verdict and
based that hope largely on the testimony
of Dr. John Uri Lloyd, who was not only
a most eminent pharmaceutical chemist
but a very personal friend of the Judge
himself. We of course realized that the
Judge's opinion would not in any way be
influenced by personal friendship, and
this was particularly the case because
some of the most prominent rectifiers
of Cincinnati were also intimate friends
of the Judge.. While we were discussing
these probabilities a messenger came
from the Judge's chambers with a note
to the District Attorney asking that he be
furnished with a copy of the brief of
Dr. Wiley which had been offered in
evidence in the court. We all felt that
this was an important request, believing
that if the Judge would read this report
in full he would not be inclined to
support the contention of the rectifiers.
Our fondest hopes in this matter were
justified. When Judge Thompson issued
his report in about three weeks subsequent
to the trial, it was found to be a complete
vindication of F. I. D. 45 and F. I.
D. 65.
Not at all discouraged by
their failure, the rectifiers appealed to other
Federal Courts in other localities. Among
these localities were Springfield,
Illinois; Covington, Kentucky; Indianapolis,
Indiana; Buffalo, New York;
Baltimore, Maryland; and San Francisco,
California. In each case the opinions of
the Court were entirely in harmony with
the original opinion of Judge Thompson.
Meanwhile the Bureau of Chemistry, shackled
by the Board of Food and Drug
Inspection, deemed it inadvisable to bring
any cases against rectified spirits
masquerading as whisky as long as the
matter was still before the courts. It was
known that finally the decision would
have to be made by the courts anyway and
any punitory steps might prove to be entirely
futile.
Mr. H. Parker Willis in an
article published at this time made the following
comment on this procedure under the heading,
"The Public Will Not Buy Whisky
Labeled 'Imitation.'"
"The new regulations,
and the cases brought under them, developed one
particularly interesting fact in
the situation: the distillers and rectifiers
could not dispose of their goods
for drinking, either as alcohol or as
'imitation whisky.' The actual
name 'whisky,' without modification, was
necessary to disposal of their
product, notwithstanding that it was precisely
the same article under another
name. This was clearly brought out when the
Western distilleries applied to
Judge Van Fleet of the Northern District of
California for an injunction restraining
the marking of alcohol as ordered by
the Bureau of Chemistry, alleging
that they had been obliged to shut down
their plant through inability to
dispose of their product when marked
'alcohol.'
"Because of the
hostile attitude of the courts, whisky manufacturers
resolved to turn their attention
in other directions. They had hoped to secure
an easy victory through the judicial
machinery of the Government; but having
been defeated there, and knowing
that there was nothing to expect from
Congress, they now turned again
to the Executive. The new rules, with the
requirement that whisky be branded
as 'imitation' when it consisted of neutral
spirits primarily, had gone into
effect July 1, 1908, although prior to that
date the distilling interests had
accumulated as large stocks as possible
under the old regulations for marking
in order that they might continue to
send out their goods as 'rye,'
'Bourbon,' or 'copper distilled' whisky,
instead of being compelled to use
the term 'imitation.'
"Pressure upon
the Roosevelt administration for action designed to
'relieve' the rectifiers now became
acute. Congressman Longworth, son-in-law
of President Roosevelt, and friend
of representatives of the Cincinnati
distilling district, exerted himself
in behalf of the rectifiers, and a simlar
position was taken by numerous
other members of Congress. Representative
Perkins of New York, now chairman
of the Foreign Relations Committee of the
House and a historian of some reputation,
had already devoted himself to
securing a favorable ruling in
the interest of Duffy's Pure Malt Whisky. An
interesting correspondence passed
between Mr. Perkins and the Department of
Agriculture, in the course of which
Mr. Perkins noted for the benefit of
Secretary Wilson that 'the Duffy
Malt Whisky Company * * * is controlled by
our most prominent and leading
citizens, and I trust matters can be adjusted
in such a way as not to injure
a long-established industry.' Other statesmen
wrote that the Duffy Company 'controlled
considerable political influence.'
Not to be outdistanced in his efforts
for the rectifying interests was
Representative Sherman, now Vice-President.
APPOINTMENT OF THE 'WHISKY COMMISSION'
"During the winter
a committee of rectifiers and spirit distillers,
represented by A. J. Sunstein and
others, visited Washington, and sought to
persuade the administration of
the great harm that was being done to the
rectifying interests. The President
finally harkened to the representations of
the rectifiers, and appointed a
'Whisky Commission,' consisting of Secretary
of Agriculture James Wilson, Dr.
F. L. Dunlap, Associate Chief of the Bureau
of Chemistry, and John G. Capers,
head of the Bureau of Internal Revenue of
the Treasury Department. Secretary
Wilson and Commissioner Capers were already
known as advocates of the views
of the rectified whisky interests, while Dr.
Dunlap had shown a strong disposition
to dissent from the existing rulings of
the Government. There was a good
deal of mystery about this Commission.
Although the Associated Press sent
out a frank statement by President
Roosevelt to the effect that such
a Commission had been appointed, Secretary
Wilson took occasion to assure
newspaper men that the Commission did not exist
as such, and that the President
had merely asked for a little advice.
Commissioner Capers admitted the
existence of the Commission, but Dr. Dunlap
said nothing.
"After several
weeks of discussion and inquiry, the three advisers reported
to the President in favor of allowing
liquor made from neutral spirits to be
designated as whisky. Mr. Sunstein
and his committee had said that they would
be satisfied if they could, be
allowed to brand their liquor as 'redistilled
whisky,' 'rectified whisky,' or
'neutral whisky.' The three commissioners, or
conferees, now advised that some
such plan be followed, telling the President
that this was substantially the
verdict that had been arrived at by the Royal
Commission. on Whisky, which had
been sitting in England, and which, they
stated, had decided that any spirits
made from grain was whisky. In a letter
written on behalf of the Commission,
Dr. Dunlap said, 'It is my opinion that
the term 'whisky' should not be
denied to neutral spirits diluted with water
to a proper strength and colored
with caramel,' though he recommended the use
of some qualifying name, such as
'rectified whisky.'
The approval of President
Roosevelt of Attorney-General Bonaparte's
definitions of whisky created a curious
environment in the Bureau of Chemistry.
The Secretary of Agriculture, the associate
chemist, Dr. Dunlap, the solicitor,
Mr. George P. McCabe, together with the
chief of the Bureau of Internal Revenue,
Mr. John G. Capers, were all on the other
side of the question. The President,
Attorney-General Bonaparte, and the Chief
of the Bureau of Chemistry were all
agreed on the definitions.
It was hard, however, to
get Court action. Attorney-General Bonaparte was
very insistent that cases be brought in
order to test the accuracy of his
definitions. Cases could only be brought,
under the existing conditions, when a
majority of the Board of Food and Drug
Inspection would initial requests either
for criminal action or seizure of goods.
There was much hesitation on the part
of two members of the Board of Food and
Drug Inspection in regard to this
matter. It was not until the Secretary
of Agriculture ordered them to proceed
that they joined me in bringing actions
before the Court. All effort to bring a
criminal action, however, was negatived.
We did bring a number of cases of
seizure of goods; that is, action in rem.
In every ease of this kind which
reached the courts, unanimous approval
of the Attorney-General's opinion on
whisky was obtained. In all seven cases
were finally brought to the bar of
justice out of hundreds recommended by:
the Bureau.
CASE 1. Notice of Judgment
15. The United States of America, Libelant, vs. 93
Cases, containing 12 bottles each, of
alleged Whisky, C. Person's Sons,
Defendants, before the Western District
Court of New York, Case No. 79. Judge,
the Hon. John R. Hazel.
This Whisky was adjudged
adulterated and misbranded and, under the law, the
seized liquor was ordered to be destroyed
or, after proper branding, delivered
to the claimants under a bond of $2,000
that it would not be sold in
contravention of the existing law. Date
of judgment, August 27, 1908.
CASE 2. Notice of Judgment
45. United States vs. 4 Barrels of Liquid
Purporting to be Whisky. This case was
brought in the District of Columbia, Case
No. 790. The libel alleged that the product
was, 4 'colored and mixed by the
addition of coloring matter, in a manner
whereby inferiority is concealed and in
order to imitate old mature whisky and
whereby the said product does imitate and
appear to be old mature whisky."
The Judge who issued the
decree of condemnation was the Hon. Thomas H.
Anderson. Date of the Judgment, March
13, 1909.
CASE 3. Notice of Judgment
68. United States of America vs. Fifty Barrels of
Whisky, Labeled "Bourbon Whisky," Manufactured
in New Orleans from fermented
molasses. The presiding Judge was the
Hon. Thomas J. Morris of Baltimore. The
decree of condemnation was in the same
terms as those already reported. In his
decision Judge Morris was particularly
luminous. This was a jury trial. After
the evidence had been given and the counsel
for the defense had addressed the
jury, Judge Morris said: "I will not call
upon the counsel for the United States
to reply. The case as it is presented
to the jury is a very clear one. I reject
the only prayer offered by the defense.
Really, that prayer concedes the
misbranding of the liquor, and asks me
to say to the jury that if they shall
find that this was done under the control-
and by the agents of the United
States, the United States is estopped
from proceeding to condemn these goods and
forfeit the goods from misbranding." The
examination of this whisky by the
Bureau of Chemistry disclosed that it
was distilled from fermented molasses, and
was called Bourbon Whisky. Date of Judgment,
May 14, 1909.
CASE 4. Notice of Judgment
112. United States vs. 10 Cases of Quinine-Whisky,
Case No. 10142, the Hon. Kenesaw M. Landis,
United States District Judge. The
goods were ordered destroyed or to be
released on a bond of $1,000. Not to be
sold contrary. to the Food and Drugs Act
as is usual in such cases. Date of
Judgment, November 20, 1909.
CASE 5. Notice of Judgment
349. United States vs. H. A. Thierman & Co. of
Louisville, Ky. Seizure of five barrels
of whisky transported from Kentucky to
Indiana. The name of the Judge in this
case is not disclosed. The decision was
not rendered until after the advent of
the administration of President Taft, and
the notice of judgment carried this statement:
"This decree was rendered prior
to the issuing of Food Inspection Decision
113, which revoked Food Inspection
Decisions 45, 65, 95. In other words,
the Secretary of Agriculture, under the
law, was forced to, regard the opinion
of this Court although it had
been-determined that the Bonaparte decision,
which was the one which had been
supported by all of these decisions, was
soon to be revoked by the action of the
United States itself, thus nullifying
the Court's decision to the effect that
the Bonaparte opinion was wholly legal.
Date of Judgment, May 17, 1910.
CASE 6. Notice of Judgment
353. United States vs. the Hannis Distilling Co.
of Philadelphia, Pa. The usual course
was followed and the decision rendered,
but the name of the Judge is not given.
The date of the decision is May 17,
1910. It has the same notice in regard
to decision 113 as carried by the former
case.
CASE 7. The final case is
Notice of Judgment 361. United States vs, Davis &
Atkins of Richmond, Va. The name of the
Judge is not given, but the whisky was
condemned in the same manner as those
just preceding. This also contains the
same notice in regard to decision No.
113 as the two preceding cases.
This makes seven cases in
the Federal Courts supporting the validity of the
opinion of Attorney-General Bonaparte,
and in not a single instance did any
United States Court before which the matter
was presented, nullify that
decision. Nevertheless, in spite of all
these Court decisions the opinion of the
Attorney-General Bonaparte was revoked
by executive authority and a
diametrically different opinion supporting
all the contentions of the rectifiers
substituted in its place. Thereafter,
no mention of any case against whisky is
found in the Notices of Judgment. It was
not necessary because the United States
authorities, in plain violation of Court
decisions, had decided that the
Bonaparte opinion was all wrong.
I never was able, even in
the two years that intervened from the time of the
decision of Attorney-General Bonaparte
to the close of the Roosevelt
administration, to get the Board of Food
and Drug Inspection to approve of any
criminal case against any dealer who was
an offender of the law. I have all the
correspondence in which Attorney-General
Bonaparte urged that his decision be
taken before the Courts, and in every
instance when it did reach the Court he
was sustained. In all the attempts of
rectifiers to nullify his decision by
bringing Court cases themselves, and this
they did in eight separate cases, the
rulings of the Court were always against
them.
To show the attitude of the
Board of Food and Drug Inspection in this matter,
I made determined efforts to bring a case
against Duffy's Pure Malt Whisky,
either to seize the whisky or to bring
a criminal action against the
manufacturers. Every move in this direction
was blocked by my collegues on the
board. Under date of October 3rd, 1908,
the following note in regard to this
matter was made:
"Doctor Dunlap
states that he initialed the first named seizure under a
misapprehension, thinking that
the Duffy Malt Whisky hearing was to be held
here instead of in Buffalo, although
it had been signed by the Secretary. I
understood from Doctor Dunlap that
the matter was held up by the Solicitor and
that it would not be sent to the
District Attorney until after the report of
the hearing at Buffalo had been
received. In regard to the seizure of October
3, he refused to initial the recommendation
on the ground that it would not be
proper to do so until the hearing
of the Buffalo case had been received. I
stated to him that the cases were
entirely distinct, the Buffalo case being a
criminal action recommended several
weeks ago and the seizures are actions to
be brought at the time mentioned,
namely September 30 and October 3, 1908, a
and if not seized without delay
the goods would escape. I stated that Duffy's
Malt Whisky was one of the most
gigantic frauds of the age and a flagrant
violation of the law, and that
there was no necessity that we delay at all in
the matter. He still, however,
refused to initial."
This sufficiently illustrates
the determined efforts of my colleagues to
protect Duffy's Pure Malt Whisky from
being molested either by seizure or
bringing any criminal case against the
maker. The few cases that were brought
against rectified whisky were at the direct
request of the Attorney-General,
followed by the order of Secretary Wilson
to proceed as the Attorney-General
requested.
On the 3rd of October, 1907,
1 addressed the Solicitor of the Department of
Agriculture, as follows:
"In a recent
conversation with me the Attorney-General urged that cases be
prepared as soon as possible in
the whisky case. Fortunately, acting under the
direction of the Secretary, we
had already secured a great many cases. I have
prepared three of these typical
cases to be sent to the Attorney-General
according to his request, with
the least delay possible. They represent types
of mixture which might well be
seized under the law for a test case. The
Attorney-General informed me that
he believed Mr. Hough was trifling with him
and it was not possible to secure
any agreement and that he proposed to go
ahead at once if such an agreement
as dictated by him should not be
acceptable. These cases are all
ready for seizure and I urge that they be sent
to the Attorney-General as requested
without delay."
Following this, I cited to
the Solicitor fifteen localities in the City of
Washington where illegal whisky was on
sale, describing each one minutely.
On November 6, 1907, the
Attorney-General addressed a letter to the Secretary
of Agriculture, in which he informed him
that he bad been unable to come to any
agreement on a statement of facts, and,
therefore--"it will be appropriate for
you to proceed with the enforcement of
the law relating to the subject of
labeling whisky in accordance with the
procedure prescribed by law."
In the midst of these discussions
the Secretary of Agriculture received a
letter from John G. Capers, Commissioner
of Internal Revenue, looking to a
reopening of the questions decided by
Attorney-General Bonaparte which it
appears was due to the express desire
of President Roosevelt. The letter dated
Dec. 17, 1907, is as follows:
"I have the honor
to acknowledge receipt of your letter of December 13,
written following the conference
between you, Mr. McCabe of your Department,
and Assistant Secretary Winthrop
and myself of this Department. In conformity
with the suggestions made by you
at that time and the suggestion made in your
letter of December 2, the Secretary
of the Treasury has referred the matter to
the Attorney-General for an opinion
upon the matter of labeling whisky, etc.,
under the pure food law in its
application to internal revenue laws, as well
as to the Department of Agriculture
as set out in his opinion approved by the
President and addressed to you
April 10 last.
"This action
by the Secretary is also taken in view of the expressed desire
of the President in a communication
addressed to the Secretary December 8,
that the matter be taken up by
the Treasury Department. The Attorney-General
has been requested to render an
opinion as early as possible."
I referred to this movement
on the part of the President in a letter which I
wrote to Dr. James H. Shepard of Brookings,
S. D., Jan. 4, 1908, which I quote:
"I cannot tell
you much about the present status of the whisky case except
this: The rectifiers, through Senator
Hopkins and other influential senators,
made a proposal to the President
that they would withdraw all suits to set
aside the present regulations if
the present regulations could be modified so
as to suit their views, or in so
far as this could be. I understand the
President appointed a commission
consisting of Commissioner Capers, the
Secretary of Agriculture, and Dr.
Dunlap, to make the necessary revision of
the regulations. In so far as I
know the revision is to be made on a brief
submitted by the rectifiers. I
do not think that anyone who is in favor of
maintaining the present regulations
requiring imitation and compound whiskies
to be so marked has been invited
to appear before the Commission. Commissioner
Capers has said in at least two
printed interviews that he was going as far as
he could to meet the requests of
the rectifiers, even if possible to open up
the question of like substances.
I don't know what attitude either the
Secretary or Dr. Dunlap will take
in this matter but I would like to wager you
a peanut that I could guess.
ASK FOR A REHEARING
President Roosevelt communicated
to Attorney-General Bonaparte the protests
that had been made against his decision,
and their plea for a rehearing. On May
29, 1907, Attorney-General Bonaparte filed
with the President his reasons for
not re-opening the case in which he made
the following statements:
"The President,
The White House.
SIR: In accordance with your instructions,
I gave a hearing on Wednesday, May
15, to persons desiring to submit
to the Department criticism or other comment
on my opinion of April 10 last
past, as to the construction of section 8 of
the act approved June 30, 1906,
and generally known as the Pure-Food Law.
About thirty persons appeared on
this occasion and a number of oral arguments
were presented; some critical and
some approbatory of the opinion in question.
At the conclusion of this argument
I announced my willingness to receive and
consider any matters in writing
which might be submitted to me touching its
subject-matter, and, in response
to several requests for a further hearing,
stated that I would give these
requests due consideration and announce later
whether I saw any sufficient reason
to comply with them. As heretofore stated
to you verbally, I do not think
any useful purpose would be served by another
oral argument, and, with your approval,
I have, therefore, announced that, in
this respect, the matter must be
considered closed. I received a large number
of written communications from
various persons commenting on the opinion in
question, and I have carefully
considered all of them. I find no reason to
withdraw the said opinion, or to
modify it in any respect, and I respectfully
report that, in my judgment, this
opinion correctly states the law on the
subject to which it relates."
(Signed) Charles
J. Bonaparte.
CHARLES JOSEPH BONAPARTE
Attorney-General, who wrote the answer
to "What Is Whisky?"
while Roosevelt was President
BONAPARTE'S STATE PAPERS
Attorney-General Bonaparte
issued three short state papers on the subject
"What is Whisky?" The first of these papers
bears the date April 10, 1907. In
this paper the question of what is whisky
was answered in harmony with the
provisions of the food and drugs act.
The points covered in this paper were so
distasteful to the rectifying interests
as to call for numerous requests for
rehearing. The Attorney-General granted
them a rehearing. On May 29th, 1907, he
gave his new opinion in which he stated
that he found no reason to modify in any
respect the opinion of April 10th. Toward
the close of the Roosevelt
Administration, the rectifiers made a
last desperate effort to have the
Attorney-General's opinion changed. This
has been thoroughly set out in the
quotations from the article of H. Parker
Willis. The new effort was evidently
inaugurated by the President who often
referred to Dr. Dunlap, Associate Chemist
of the Bureau of Chemistry, as "my chemist."
In the light of Dr. Dunlap's career
in the Bureau no one will likely dispute
Roosevelt's often repeated claim to
proprietorship. The Committee having in
charge this matter was thoroughly
devoted to the rectifying interests. It
is only natural therefore that the
report they brought in, which was written
by Dr. Dunlap, would be favorable
thereto. The gist of Dr. Dunlap's report
is as follows:
"Under the Pure
Food Law as administered now, neutral spirits, diluted to
proper strength and colored with
caramel, must be marked 'imitation whisky.'
The spirit distillers request that
this name be not forced upon them, but that
they may use in its place one of
the three names, 'neutral whisky,' 'rectified
whisky,' or 'redistilled whisky.'
* * * It is my opinion that the term
'whisky' should not be denied to
neutral spirits diluted with water to a
proper strength and colored with
caramel. I believe that the use of the term
'whisky' on such a product should
be qualified by some term which will carry
notice to the consumer of the nature
of the product. For this purpose the term
'neutral whisky,' 'redistilled
whisky,' and 'rectified whisky,' have been
suggested."
Mr. Bonaparte proceeds to
comment on this suggestion of Dr. Dunlap's with
rare sarcasm for which lie was distinguished.
He says:
"It seems obvious,
from the juxtaposition of these extracts from my two
opinions and those from Dr. Dunlap's
letter, that the Associate Chemist of the
Department of Agriculture suggests
that, on the question of the construction
of a statute, a very carefully
considered and reconsidered opinion of the
Attorney-General should be disregarded.
He bases this recommendation upon
certain conclusions which he says
have been reached by the English 'Royal
Commission on whisky and other
potable spirits,' in what is described as an
'interim report.'
"He describes
this Commission as composed of 'eminent scientific men,' but
it does not appear from his letter
that the said Commission consists of
lawyers, or that they have had
under consideration the construction of the Act
of Congress generally known as
the Pure Food Law. I am, therefore, unable to
recognize their conclusions as
entitled to weight in determining the above
mentioned question of statutory
construction, and I may add that I am unable
to see how these conclusions, in
so far as stated by Dr. Dunlap, have any
bearing upon the question considered
in my two opinions.
"It appears to
me that these 'eminent scientific men,' in these
conclusions, made suggestions as
to what legislation on the subject should
contain. They do not assume to
construe legislation already enacted.
Especially they do not express
any opinions as to the construction of an
American law dealing with American
conditions.
"Inasmuch, however,
as I cannot fail to recognize in Dr. Dunlap's
recommendation a challenge of the
correctness of my conclusions as announced
in the two opinions heretofore
rendered you, I think it is but proper that I
should call your attention to certain
judicial decisions rendered upon the
questions discussed in his letter
subsequently to the date of the said two
opinions. In the case of Levy vs.
Uri, the Court of Appeals of the District of
Columbia, speaking by Mr. Justice
Robb, says on this question:
'Each
kind of whisky mentioned has its own peculiar flavor and character
and is sought after
as a beverage because of that flavor and character.
Neutral spirits, on
the contrary, as the term suggests, is a colorless
liquid, has neither
flavor nor character, and is not a beverage at all. It
may be produced from
any fermented substance, such as corn, potatoes, and
sugar beets.
'Formerly
it was used exclusively in the arts, but with the advent of
cheaper methods of
production it has been palmed off on the public as a
beverage by mixing
it with something to give it flavor and character. Since
it costs far less to
produce than rye whisky, it is apparent that its use by
the distiller increases
his profits in proportion as the public is deceived.
* * *
'As
before stated, neutral spirits is not a beverage, has none of the
distinguishing characteristics
of rye whisky, and is, therefore, matter of
another kind."
Mr. Bonaparte then proceeds
to quote the decision of Judge Thompson of the
Southern District of Ohio and also the
opinion of the District Court of the
Southern District of Illinois, and refers
to other Court decisions in which his
definitions of whisky had been unanimously
supported. He then says:
"It thus appears
that the correctness of the conclusions reached by this
Department in the two opinions
to which I have referred has been tested in at
least four decisions by competent
courts upon the precise question discussed
in Dr. Dunlap's letter; and the
decision in every instance has been that what
he advises is forbidden by the
true construction of the Pure Food Law. So far
as I am aware, there has been no
decision by any court to the contrary. * * *
At present, however, in so far
as informed by the decisions heretofore made on
this question, I can only advise
you that the conclusions announced in the
opinions of April 10th and May
29th, 1907, are sound, and that to give effect
to Dr. Dunlap's suggestions would
be to violate the Pure Food Law."
The action of President Roosevelt
in again sustaining the Attorney-General
received universal press support. Mr.
Louis Ludlow, then President of the
National Press Club and now member of
Congress elect described the event in the
Indianapolis Star under date of February
23rd, 1909. He says:
" The President
indorses and makes public an order of Attorney-General
Bonaparte, which declares the position
of the rectifiers and the conclusions
of the commission to be in error.
Dr. Wiley's views on whisky are thus
upheld."
In the same publication under
date of Feb. 24, 1909, is an editorial, "A
Victory for Wiley," from which I quote
the following:
"For the third
time Attorney-General Bonaparte has decided that neutral
spirits diluted with water to a
proper strength and colored with caramel is
not whisky, but 'imitation whisky'
and must be labeled as such. This was the
ruling of Dr. Wiley. * * * It is
evident that the authorities have no
intention of weakening the Pure
Food Law any further at the present time. The
benzoate of soda ruling is enough
for the present time. It is realized, of
course, that there will always
be pressure to have the law construed favorably
to those who want to evade it.
Probably it will gradually be much weakened.
One concession will be made, and
then another. The people will be less
watchful, and at last we may find
that we have virtually no law at all."
This prophetic disaster has
long since been realized.
ADDITIONAL COMMENTS
In view of the positive character
of Mr. Roosevelt to stand by his own
decisions, at first it was thought that
this investigation was not at his
suggestion. A letter written by H. Parker
Willis, published in Collier's Weekly
of April 6, 1912, throws additional light
upon this matter. Mr. Willis says in
his letter:
Secretary Wilson
was now in a position of peculiar strength. He had full
charge of the Food and Drugs Act;
he understood the precedents that had been
established during the past four
years; the matter had been referred to the
Department of Justice by his own
assent; he had nothing to do but apply the
law vigorously. But it was well
known that neither he nor his Solicitor
approved the decision in the whisky
case. The politicians were more and more
active. Mr. Perkins of New York
brought strenuous pressure to bear upon the
Department of Agriculture in behalf
of Duffy's Pure Malt Whisky, which would
have to be labeled 'imitation'
under the new rules. He was strongly seconded
by Vice President Sherman. President
Roosevelt finally designated Secretary
Wilson, Dr. P. L. Dunlap, and John
G. Capers, the head of the Bureau of
Internal Revenue, as a Whisky Commission.
Secretary Wilson was thus given full
power to shape the decision as
he pleased. A report from him would have
settled the situation once for
all. No such report was forthcoming. Secretary
Wilson even denied in conversation
that any such commission existed, and
finally the three men rendered
a report in favor of allowing liquor made from
alcohol to be branded as 'rectified
whisky,' thus giving the use of the word
whisky to the interests that had
been demanding it."
There is no longer any doubt
that the new committee to inquire into the
accuracy of the opinions of Attorney-General
Bonaparte was appointed by the
President. Dr. Dunlap, in submitting the
report of this committee under date of
February 19, 1909, says:
"In accordance
with the request of the President, I have continued the
consideration of the labeling propositions
submitted to him by the spirit
distillers."
The Secretary of Agriculture
in a letter to the Hon. W. W. Armstrong, member
of the State Senate of New York, under
date of December 17, 1908, says:
"Pursuant to
my conversation with you of yesterday in regard to a proposed
hearing on the 21st instant concerning
'Duffy's Pure Malt Whisky,' I beg to
inform you that this hearing will
be postponed pending the report of the
gentlemen appointed by the President
to take up questions in connection with
the labeling of products such as
you manufacture."
On December 13, four days
prior to the writing of this letter by the
Secretary of Agriculture, the Washington
Post carried this editorial under the
caption "Keep the Ginger in the Pure Food
Law!"
"It is good to
read a direct denial of the report that the President has
reopened the whole subject of what
is whisky. The story was that he has
selected the Commissioner of Internal
Revenue and one of the officers of the
Agricultural Department to take
up the existing regulations and revise them
with the Secretary of Agriculture.
* * *
"Above everything,
the President has not reopened the main question. * * *
At the instance of Dr. Wiley that
query has been answered with a loud 'NO.'
Any other answer would have jeopardized
the whole * * * regulations governing
'compounded' and 'imitation' whisky.
To the outsider those regulations would
seem to be already sufficiently
considerate.
A few days before the Washington
Post had carried the story of the
appointment of the above commission. It
printed another news story as follows:
"The uncertainty caused some
of the large distilleries of the country to
present the matter to the President to-day.
They were introduced to him by
Senator Hopkins and Representative Graff,
of Illinois. Secretary Wilson and Mr.
Capers were present."
Although the President repudiated
the report of his own commission and again
sustained the opinion of Attorney-General
Bonaparte, the activities of the Board
of Food and Drug Inspection in protecting
the interests of Duffy's Malt Whisky
and Canadian Club Whisky were continued
right along just as if nothing had
happened.
On June 12, 1908, after a
large number of shipments of Canadian Club whisky
had been seized by the officials of the
pure-food law, the following order was
issued:
"By direction
of the Secretary, no more seizures of imported whiskys are to
be made until further orders. There
have been twenty-one cases reported and,
in the Secretary's opinion, that
number is sufficient for the present. Please
cause the necessary instructions
to be sent to the Inspectors.
Very respectfully,
(Signed) G. P. McCabe
Acting Chairman,
Board of Food and Drug Inspection."
The reason for suspension
of seizures is probably the following incident
which occured at the hearing accorded
Duffy's Malt Whisky representative. I
quote from this hearing:
"Senator Armstrong
urged that the Bill of Libel against carloads of goods
shipped to Boston be dismissed,
stating that the Company had stopped shipment.
Dr. Wiley suggested that if they
would stop interstate shipments of this
material, it would be very proper
to grant them additional time until after
election. Mr. Perkins, Mr. Armstrong
and Mr. Duffy raised vigorous objections,
stating that the firm had been
in business for fifty years, had spent millions
of dollars in advertising, had
built up a trade, and that it ought not to be
interfered with."
Following this hearing came
the order of suspension of further seizures.
These official data show
that the President appointed this commission, that
the commission considered the subjects
referred to it, that it made its report
through Dr. Dunlap on the 19th of February,
1909, and that the Attorney-General
most decidedly and emphatically repudiated
the findings of this commission and
the President thereupon approved the Attorney-General's
report.
An unconfirmed rumor current
at the time was the effect that Bonaparte told
the President that would immediately resign
if his report did not again receive
approval.
MR. BONAPARTE REFUSES TO ACCEPT THE
"WHISKY COMMISSION'S" DECISION
Mr. H. Parker Willis says:
"Attorney-General
Bonaparte was now in an embarrassing position. He had
already rendered his opinion with
reference to the nature of whisky, and the
proper methods of branding it under
the existing law of the United States.
President Roosevelt had sent Mr.
Bonaparte the report of the Whisky
Commission, which had just been
transmitted to the White House, with a request
for the Attorney-General's opinion.
" Two questions
presented themselves to Mr. Bonaparte--whether he should
reverse himself and accept the
findings of Messrs. Wilson, Capers, and Dunlap,
or whether he should stand neutral
and idle, in case President Roosevelt
should see fit to put into effect
his Commission's recommendations. Mr.
Bonaparte decided both of these
points negatively. In a rather scathing letter
to President Roosevelt, he pointed
out that the Whisky Commission had based
its suggestions almost entirely
upon work that had been done in England by a
body not known to American law,--the
British Royal Commission,--while he had
found it his duty to guide himself
by the laws of the United States. He could
not, therefore, as a matter of
law, consent to the proposal now made. Noting
that 'the assistant chemist of
the Department of Agriculture suggests that on
the question of the construction
of a statute (the Pure Food Law) a very
carefully considered and reconsidered
opinion of the Attorney-General should
be disregarded,' he went on to
say that he could not 'fail to recognize in Dr.
Dunlap's recommendation a challenge
of the correctness of' his conclusions. He
therefore called attention to the
interpretations of the Food Law, in line
with the views of the Department
of Justice that had lately been handed down
by the courts. It was stated by
officers of the Government that he had
privately conveyed to the President
the intimation that although only about a
week remained before his termination
of office as Attorney-General, he should
feel compelled to resign, in the
event that the President saw fit to overrule
his decision in the whisky matter.
The President had been largely animated by
his own sense of fair play in giving
the rectifiers every opportunity to set
forth their ideas; and he now made
his own stand evident by approving Mr.
Bonaparte's views, and continuing
the existing methods of marking and branding
liquors."
In the Washington Herald
of Feb. 27, 1909, is an editorial from which I
quote:
"VICTORIOUS MR. BONAPARTE
Our good right
hand, palm up, to Mr. Charles Joseph Bonaparte in warm
congratulation extended! 'Whisky
is whisky, and nothing else is whisky,' says
the Attorney-General; and so sayeth
his Chief, the President of the United
States! * * *
"We regard this
as -a great victory for the common people, and we trust
they appreciate fully its momentous
significance. Heretofore every old thing
that could assume the most remote
whisky-like disguise has labeled itself
whisky, and posed in the open market
as the real, genuine, simon-pure article.
* * *
"Mr. Bonaparte
need not fear that it is not the people's tremendous
applause he hears ringing in his
ears! It is just that very thing. Pat with
him they stand. 'Whisky is whisky,
and nothing else is whisky.'"
If the rectifiers had only
been endowed with prophetic vision, they would not
have made a continuous fight for two long
years against the Attorney-General and
the President and the Food Law. They would
not have commenced numerous actions
in Federal Courts, all of which they lost
with monotonous regularity. They would
not have spent hundreds of thousands of
dollars in retaining great advocates
like Mr. Choate, and others of the same
character as mentioned in the article by
H. Parker Willis. They would simply have
waited. This final rebuff by President
Roosevelt occurred on the 19th of February,
1909, thirteen days. before the
advent of the new administration. On the
morning of the 5th of March the storm
clouds which had darkened the sky of the
rectifiers for two long weary years
broke asunder. The rays of victory shot
through the rift, and the full sunlight
of triumph shone forth. The principles
which had guided the Roosevelt
administration were eternal and just.
The law was not altered, but its
interpretation was radically changed in
the interest of the rectifiers of whisky
and other alcoholic distilled beverages.
ADVENT OF PRESIDENT TAFT
When the last of these cases
was finally decided in the District Courts,
President Taft came into the White House.
A very remarkable event is now to be
recorded. He ordered a rehearing of the
whisky problem. A classmate of President
Taft, Mr. Lloyd Bowers, had been made
Solicitor of the Department of Justice.
President Taft first requested Mr. Capers
to conduct the new hearings on whisky.
This was equivalent to instructing the
jury to bring in a verdict. Owing to the
protests of the straight whisky interests
President Taft finally appointed his
Solicitor-General, Lloyd Bowers, to hold
these hearings. They have been printed
under the title "Proceedings Before and
By Direction of the President Concerning
the Meaning of Whisky." They cover 1328
printed pages. Following is the order of
the President constituting this tribunal:
In the Office of the Solicitor-General,
Thursday, April 8, 1909.
These proceeding
are had pursuant to an order of the President of the
United States, reading as follows:
EXECUTIVE ORDER
A number of distillers
and importers of spirits and whisky, represented by
Lawrence Maxwell, Esq., Hon. Joseph
H. Choate, Alfred Lucking, Warwick M.
Hough, and Hon. W. W. Armstrong,
having appealed to the President for a
hearing with respect to the order
issued by the Commissioner of Internal
Revenue, known as Order No. 723,
pursuant to the rules and regulations for the
enforcement of the food and drugs
act and food and inspection decision No. 65,
promulgated and made by the Secretary
of Agriculture under date of May 14,
1908, claiming that the provisions
of said order are in violation of the terms
of the said act in that they require
to be branded as imitations or compounds,
or otherwise, whiskies which have
well-settled names in the trade, and which
it was not the intention of Congress
by the said food and drugs act to require
to be described by any other designation;
and certain distillers of whisky
having appeared by Edmund W. Taylor
and the Hon. John G. Carlisle, after
consideration the matter is hereby
referred to Hon. Lloyd W. Bowers,
Solicitor-General of the United
States, to take testimony and report to the
President his opinion upon the
following points, namely:
I.
What was the
article called whisky as known (1) to the manufacturers, (2)
to the trade, and (3) to the consumers
at and prior to the date of the passage
of the pure food law?
II.
What did the
term whisky include?
III.
Was there included
in the term whisky any maximum or minimum of congeneric
substances as necessary in order
that distilled spirits should be properly
designated whisky?
IV.
Was there any
abuse in the application of the term whisky to articles not
properly falling within the definition
of that term at and prior to the
passage of the pure food law, which
it was the intention of Congress to
correct by the provisions of that
act?
V.
Is the term whisky
as a drug applicable to a different product than whisky
as a beverage? If so, in what particulars?
The Solicitor-General
will from time to time determine the extent and
character of the hearing and will
report with his opinion the evidence taken
by him pursuant hereto.
(No. 1061, Apr. 8, 1909.)
(Signed) WM.
H. TAFT.
PRESIDENT TAFT DRAWN INTO THE WHISKY CONTROVERSY
Quoting further from the article by H.
Parker Willis:
"When President
Taft entered the White House, on the 4th of March, 1909,
the rectifying interests were by
no means inclined to let the whisky question
rest. They knew that, while Secretary
of War, he had been decidedly friendly
to their views at the time when
the subject had originally come up before the
Cabinet for settlement. It was
determined to make a fresh and vigorous effort
to secure a reversal of the Roosevelt
rulings that would permit the rectifiers
to continue placing their neutral
spirits on the market under the name of
whisky. Consequently, shortly after
the President took office, he was
approached by all the original
interests that had urged a change in the
methods of marking whisky and,
yielding to their pressure, he consented to
reopen the question and to hear
argument in person.
"Early in April
a distinguished array of counsel appeared at the White
House. Straight whisky interests
had employed ex-Secretary John G. Carlisle to
coöperate with Edmund W. Taylor,
the original representative of the straight
whisky distilleries, while for
the rectifying interests appeared Joseph H.
Choate, former ambassador to England,
Senator Armstrong of New York, Lawrence
Maxwell, Esq., and Warwick M. Hough,
the high-priced lawyer who had been sent
to Washington as a representative
of rectified interests and of the wholesale
liquor trade. Mr. Alfred Lucking
also appeared in behalf of the Canadian Club
whisky interests, which had found
themselves hampered by the rulings of the
Government, and in whose interest
the powerful offices of Ambassador James
Bryce had been enlisted with President
Roosevelt to secure the admission of
the Canadian product without the
imitation label.
"President Taft
listened to the arguments on both sides, and showed a
strong disposition to refer the
matter directly to Commissioner Capers, the
head of the Bureau of Internal
Revenue. Mr. Capers, however, had long been
associated with the work of the
Bureau of Internal Revenue, under the old
regulations which permitted the
marking of rectified spirits as whisky; and he
was known to be favorable to the
retention of the old system of markings,
having shown this feeling when,
in conjunction with Secretary Wilson and Dr.
Dunlap, he had recommended the
changes demanded by the rectifying and blending
interests. The President's disposition
to throw the question back into adverse
hands at once called forth a protest
from the straight whisky men, based upon
the ground that Mr. Capers was
somewhat prejudiced, and President Taft.
necessarily recognizing the justice
of this claim, directed Solicitor-General
Bowers to serve in place of Mr.
Capers.
"The points that
Mr. Bowers was to take up included an inquiry as to the
true definition of the term 'whisky'
at the time of the passage of the Pure
Food Law, and an inquiry into the
chemical constituents whose presence
necessarily designated a liquor
as being unmistakably whisky. He was further
called upon to determine whether,
as urged by the 'Duffy's Pure Malt Whisky'
interests, whisky as a drug was
a different product from whisky as a beverage.
The old controversy burst forth
afresh, and, beginning April 8, (1909), Mr.
Bowers conducted almost continuous
hearings, lasting nearly a month. More than
twelve hundred pages of printed
testimony were taken. At times the room in
which the meetings were held resembled
a chemical laboratory more than it did
a courtroom, while at others, as
the witnesses sat about a table, freely
tasting the various samples that
had been submitted for examination, it was
strongly reminiscent of a German
drinking club.
At the completion of the
testimony and the arguments of the attorneys the
Solicitor-General made his report to the
President on May 24, 1909. This report
is found in the Whisky hearing above referred
to beginning on page 1243. Mr.,
Bowers' opinion, summarized is as follows:
"1. A neutral
spirit derived by distillation from any thing else than grain
has not been known to the consumer
as whisky, whether or not it was colored or
flavored or both colored and flavored;
and a neutral spirit derived by
distillation from grain, but lacking
a substantial amount of by-products
(other than alcohol) which are
derived by distillation from grain and give
distinctive flavor and properties,
has not been known to the consumer as
whisky, whether or not it was colored
or flavored or both colored and
flavored.
2. A neutral
spirit derived by distillation from grain, but lacking a
substantial amount of by-products
derived by distillation from grain and
giving distinctive flavor and properties,
was not at or prior to the passage
of the Pure Food law, and has not
since been, whisky.
3. There was
included in the term whisky a minimum of congeneric substances
as necessary in order that the
distilled spirit should be properly designated
as whisky, viz., such substantial
amount of those congeneric substances as is
requisite to give to whisky distinctive
flavor and properties, differing from
the flavor and properties of alcohol
and of other distilled spirits. There was
no maximum of such congeneric substances,
however, except as potability might
demand.
4. There were
many abuses in the trade. The evidence, however, has not been
such as to make possible, or to
justify an attempt at, enumeration of the
particular abuses, beyond saying
that they included the application of the
term 'whisky' to spirits distilled
from other substances than grain, or to
mixtures of such spirits with whisky,
or to neutral spirits derived from grain
but not whisky within the description
of it given in answer to question II, or
to such mixtures of neutral spirits
and whisky as do not fall within the
description of whisky given in
answer to question II.
5. The term whisky
as a drug is not applicable to a different product than
whisky as a beverage."
:
LLOYD BOWERS
Solicitor-General, who conducted the re-hearing
of "What Is Whisky?"
On page 404 of my brief on
whisky (unprinted) I draw the following
conclusions:
"FIRST: The principle
enunciated in Food Inspection Decision No. 45 is
correct, and no modification of
this decision should be made.
"SECOND: When
Neutral spirits are diluted with water and artificially
colored and flavored, the resulting
product should not be called whisky. Under
the ruling of the Internal Revenue
such a product may be called imitation
whisky if not sold as a genuine
whisky, or spurious if it be sold as a genuine
whisky.
"THIRD: If whisky
be mixed with neutral spirits and colored and flavored,
it forms that well-known class
of bodies called compounds, and should be
marked 'Compound of whisky and
neutral spirits' or some similar appellation.
"FOURTH: If two
or more whiskies be mixed together, the resulting mixture
should be marked 'blend,' 'A mixture
of two or more whiskies' or some similar
appellation.
UNIVERSAL CRITICISM OF BOWERS' REPORT
Perhaps no public decision
ever issued received such unanimous condemnation
as Bowers' report. Everybody was dissatisfied.
Warwick M. Hough and Lawrence
Maxwell objected to it because it denied
to neutral spirit the name of whisky.
Joseph H. Choate and Alfred Lueking objected
on behalf of Canadian Club whiskies
for the same reasons. John G. Carlisle
and Edmund W. Taylor objected on behalf
of the straight whisky producers because
it permitted the addition of alcohol to
whisky provided the congeners which gave
the whisky its character were not too
greatly diluted. Wm. W. Armstrong objected
to it on behalf of Duffy's Malt
Whisky. J. D. Rouse objected to it because
it denied alcohol made from molasses
to be called whisky. The Columbus Distilling
Company objected to it for the same
reason. The Michigan Chemical Company
objected to it because alcohol to be mixed
with other whisky must be made out of
grain. All appealed to the President of
the United States for help. The President
appointed a hearing which was held in
the Executive Mansion on June 28, 1909.
There were present the President of the
United States, presiding; Hon. George
W. Wickersham, Attorney-General of the
United States; Hon. James Wilson, Secretary
of Agriculture; Mr. Warwick M.
Hough, Mr. Lawrence Maxwell, Mr. Joseph
H. Choate, Hon. John G. Carlisle, Mr.
Edmund W. Taylor, Mr. William W. Armstrong,
Mr. J. D. Rouse, Mr. Bullitt, Mr.
Youngberg, Mr. Brangier, Mr. Smith, Mr.
Thompson, and others.
THE PRESIDENT: We are here
this morning to hear the exceptions to a report,
and I believe that the report has the
first indication of correctness in that
there are exceptions from every side.
MR. CARLISLE: Nobody satisfied.
THE PRESIDENT: Nobody satisfied.
President Taft, after considering
the protests made by the rectifiers in the
decision of the Solicitor-General on the
whisky question, disapproved the most
important of these findings of his own
Solicitor-General and adopted in toto
many of the principles presented to him
by the rectifiers. However, he suggested
a method of labelling which was in some
respects distasteful to the rectifiers.
DECISION OF PRESIDENT TAFT OVERRULING
ATTORNEY-GENERAL BONAPARTE AND
THE
HONORABLE LLOYD BOWERS
"It is undoubtedly
true that the liquor trade has been disgracefully full
of frauds upon the public by false
labels; but these frauds did not consist in
palming off something which was
not whisky as whisky, but in palming one kind
of whisky as another and better
kind of whisky. Whisky made of rectified or
redistilled or neutral spirits
and given a color and flavor by burnt sugar,
made in a few days, was often branded
as Bourbon or Rye straight whisky. The
way to remedy this evil is not
to attempt to change the meaning and scope of
the term 'whisky,' accorded to
it for one hundred years, and narrow it to
include only straight whisky; and
there is nothing in the Pure Food Law that
warrants the inference of such
an intention by Congress. The way to do it is
to require a branding in connection
with the use of the term 'whisky' which
will indicate just what kind of
whisky the package contains. Thus, straight
whiskies may be branded as such
and may be accompanied by the legend 'aged in
wood.' Whisky made from rectified,
redistilled, or neutral spirits may be
branded as whisky made from rectified,
redistilled, or neutral spirits, as the
case may be.
"With this result,
the question arises what ought the order to be so that
the purpose of the Pure Food Law
can be carried out. The term 'straight
whisky' is well understood in the
trade and well understood by consumers.
There is no reason, therefore,
why those who make straight whisky may not have
the brand upon their barrels of
straight whisky with further descriptive terms
as 'Bourbon' or 'Rye' whisky, as
the composition of the grain used may
justify, and they may properly
add, if they choose, that it is aged in the
wood.
" Those who make
whisky of 'rectified,' 'redistilled,' or 'neutral' spirits
can not complain if, in order to
prevent further frauds, they are required to
use a brand which shall show exactly
the kind of whisky they are selling. For
that reason it seems to me fair
to require them to brand their product as
'whisky made from rectified spirits,'
or 'whisky made from redistilled
spirits,' or 'whisky made from
neutral spirits,' as the case may be; and if
aged in the wood, as sometimes
is the case with this class of whiskies, they
may add this fact. * * *
"This opinion
will be certified to the Secretary of the Treasury, the
Secretary of Agriculture, and the
Secretary of Commerce and Labor to prepare
the regulation in accordance herewith,
under the Pure Food Law; and to the
Secretary of the Treasury and the
Commissioner of Internal Revenue to prepare
the proper regulation under the
Internal Revenue Law.
(Signed) WILLIAM H. TAFT.
The White House,
December 27,
1909.
President Taft in revising
the opinion of his Solicitor-General that neutral
spirits or alcohol, even when carrying
flavor, were not entitled to be defined
as whisky, also revised the opinion of
his distinguished father, Alphonso Taft,
who rendered an opinion, as Attorney-General,
on the 21st of August, 1876, as
follows:
"I agree with
my predecessor's opinion that the shipment of alcohol under
the name of whisky (the offense
charged), is a violation of section 3449,
Revised Statutes, notwithstanding
'the trade,' generally may have fallen into
such a practice. Alcohol and whisky
are, unquestionably, different articles,
in contemplation of law, as they
are in fact, having different qualities and
different values. It appears, also,
that they are placed by common carriers
under different rates in their
freighting schedules; * * *
"When the act
prescribes how spirits may be stored or bonded, it must be
presumed that it means spirits
that have been lawfully distilled.
"This being patent,
it is obviously important that there should be an
absolute agreement in character
of all the acts which together go to make up
the act of shipping; and I must
believe that the law intends to secure this. *
* * This would be difficult or
impossible if shippers, carriers, consignees,
etc., were permitted to use one
name for another, at their pleasure, or for
any purpose."
Very respectfully,
(Signed) Alphonso Taft,
Attorney-General.
Accordingly the three Secretaries,
who under the authority of the law were
empowered to make rules and regulations
for carrying the law into effect,
prepared the definitions which did not,
however, follow President Taft's
directions above.
Food Inspection Decision
No. 113 is as follows:
" Under the Food
and Drugs Act of June 30, 1906, all unmixed distilled
spirits from grain, colored and
flavored with harmless color and flavor, in
the customary ways, either by the
charred barrel process, or by the addition
of caramel and harmless flavor,
if of potable strength and not less than 80°
proof, are entitled to the name
whisky without qualification.* If the proof be
less than 80°, i.e., if more
water be added, the actual proof must be stated
upon the label and this requirement
applies as well to blends and compounds of
whisky.
"Whiskies of
the same or different kinds, i.e., straight whisky, rectified
whisky, redistilled whisky and
neutral spirits whisky are like substances* and
mixtures of such whiskies, with
or without harmless color or flavor used for
purposes of coloring and flavoring
only,
are blends under the law and must be
so labeled. In labeling blends
the Act requires two things to be stated upon
the label to bring the blended
product within the exception provided by the
statute: First, the blend must
be labeled, branded or tagged so as to plainly
indicate that it is a blend, in
other words that it is composed of two or more
like substances, which in the case
of whisky must each be of itself a whisky
and Second, the word 'blend' must
be plainly stated upon the package in which
the mixture is offered for sale.
A mixture of whiskies, therefore, with or
without harmless coloring or flavoring,
used for coloring and flavoring only,
is correctly labeled 'Kerwan Whisky.
A Blend of Whiskies.'*
*All three of these statements
are not in harmony with Taft's decision.
"Since the term whisky
is restricted to distillates from grain, and
distillates from other sources
are unlike substances to distillates from
grain, such distillates from other
sources without admixture with grain
distillates are misbranded if labeled
whisky without qualification, or as a
blend of whiskies. However, mixtures
of whisky, with a potable alcoholic
distillate from sources other than
grain, such as cane, fruit or vegetables,
are not misbranded if labeled compound
whisky, provided the following
requirements of the law are complied
with: First, that the product shall be
labeled, branded or tagged so as
to plainly indicate that it is a compound,
i.e., not a mixture of like substances,
in this case whiskies; and, Second,
that the word 'Compound' is plainly
stated upon the package in which the
mixture is offered for sale. For
example, a mixture of whisky, in quantity
sufficient to dominate the character
of the mixture, with a potable alcoholic
distillate from sources other than
grain and including harmless color and
flavor is correctly labeled 'Kerwan
Whisky. A compound of whisky and cane
distillate.' Unmixed potable alcoholic
distillates from sources other than
grain and including harmless color
or flavor, are not misbranded if labeled
'Imitation Whisky.'
"When an essence
or oil is added to a distillate of grain, which without
such addition is entitled to the
name whisky, and the effect of such addition
is to produce a product which simulates
a whisky of another kind different
from the kind of whisky to which
the essence is added, the mixture is an
imitation of the particular kind
of whisky which is simulated, e.g., if rye
essence be added to a highly rectified
distillate of corn, the mixture is
misbranded if labeled rye whisky.
Such a mixture is not misbranded if labeled
'Whisky--Imitation Rye.'
"Nothing in the
Food and Drugs Act inhibits any truthful statement upon the
label of any product subject to
its terms, such as the particular kind or
kinds of whisky, vended as whisky
or as blends or compounds thereof, but when
descriptive matter, qualifying
the name whisky, is placed upon the label, it
must be strictly true, and not
misleading in any particular. The law makes no
allowance for seller's praise upon
the label, if false or misleading, and the
product is misbranded if a false
or misleading statement be made upon one part
of the label and the truth about
the product be stated upon another part.
Similarly a product is misbranded
if the label is false or misleading through
the use of a trade-marked statement,
design or device. The fact that a phrase,
design or device is registered
in the U. S. Patent Office gives no license for
its deceptive use. All descriptive
matter qualifying or particularizing the
kind of whisky, whether volunteered
or required by the law to be stated, as in
the case of blends and compounds,
must be given due prominence as compared
with the size of type and the background
in which the name whisky appears, so
that the label as a whole shall
not be misleading in any particular.
Food Inspection
Decisions 45, 65, 95 and 98 and all rulings in conflict
herewith, are hereby revoked.
(Signed) Franklin
MacVeagh,
Secretary of the Treasury.
James Wilson,
Secretary of Agriculture.
Charles Nagel,
Secretary of Commerce and Labor.
Washington, D. C., February 16,
1910."
This decision directly contrary
to the findings of many Federal Courts,
promulgated by the three Secretaries charged
with the duty of making rules and
regulations for carrying the law into
effect, is the most astonishing exhibition
of illegality ever perpetrated. No higher
flight of open contempt of judicial
findings has ever been made by any one
whose duty it is to follow the courts'
decisions. It would have been bad enough
as an attempt at construing the meaning
of a law prior to judicial opinions. In
the face of the facts it is a flagrant
contempt of Court.
The regulations made by the
three Secretaries are most remarkable. In the
first place they attempt to decide what
is an adulteration or misbranding, a
function which was never committed to
them but was specifically given to the
Bureau of Chemistry.
In the second place, they
utterly failed to include the fundamental
principles of branding laid down by President
Taft in the above extract from his
letter. There is absolutely no trace in
this decision of requiring whisky to be
labeled neutral spirit whisky, or a blend
of that whisky and a whisky made from
neutral spirits. Those were the fundamental
principles which President Taft laid
down for correct labeling. These two phrases
were highly objectionable to the
rectifiers. Under the very nose of the
President the rectifiers so controlled
the action of the three Secretaries that
neither one of these phrases was
incorporated into the necessary labeling
of whiskies made from neutral spirits.
Not only was every decision of the courts
violated by this order, but President
Taft's specific directions for labeling
were also disregarded. It is very
strange that the President himself did
not make a protest against the utter
disregard of the fundamental principles
upon which his labeling order was based.
RECTIFIERS GAINED EVERY POINT
On publication of this food
inspection decision in which the rectifiers
gained everything they had lost in the
decisions of the Federal Courts, their
petitions of appeal to the Circuit Courts
were in all cases withdrawn. By
executive proclamation they had obtained
what the courts had denied them. All
the interests which were engaged in adulterating
and misbranding foods were
greatly heartened by this victory of the
rectifiers. If one class of misbranders
and adulterators could receive immunity
by executive order, why not apply the
same principle to all forms of adulteration
and misbranding?
BECOMING A PROHIBITIONIST
I am very strongly of the
opinion that this approval of neutral spirits
colored and flavored as whisky and this,
of course, would apply to gin and rum,
and all other distilled spirits, including
brandy, and by implication also, to
adulterated and misbranded beer and wine,
was one of the principal causes which
enabled the doctrine of prohibition to
achieve such a sweeping victory a few
years afterward under the stress of promoting
the public welfare during the
period of the world war. At least in so
far as I was concerned I had spent many
years of hard labor in trying to have
all kinds of distilled spirits as well as
fermented beverages comply with ethical
requirements and pure food laws. The
dikes that held the swelling floods of
adulterations and misbranding of our
beverages were broken down and waves of
food adulterations swept over and
devastated the country.
THE LAST WORDS OF LLOYD BOWERS
On the morning after the
President issued his proclamation Mr. Lloyd Bowers
called me over the telephone. He said:
"Have you read the President's decision?"
I said, "I have, with great astonishment."
He asked, "What do you think about
it?" I replied, "I feel as if I had been
spanked," to which he replied, "So do
I." This was the last time I heard Lloyd
Bowers' voice. The next morning the
newspapers carried the notice that the
Solicitor-General had left Washington for
a few weeks' rest. About three weeks after
that I saw, with great regret, a
notice of his death. Thus passed a great
lawyer and a great jurist. I think I
was right in thinking that probably his
premature death was due to a broken
heart. Nobody was satisfied with the laborious
effort which he had made. Upon
the whole my deep sympathy was with Lloyd
Bowers. I was impressed with the
conviction that he was earnestly seeking
the truth. Three-fourths of his,
decision was in harmony with my own views,
so that I believe that he was at
least three-fourths right.
JUSTICE HARLAN SPEAKS
On the evening after the
President Is decision was published Mr. Charles H.
Butler, reporter of the Supreme Court,
entertained the Supreme Court at his
residence, 1535 Eye St., N. W. I was one
of the invited guests at this function.
Among other members of the Supreme Court
who were there was Justice Harlan of
Kentucky. Accosting me he said, "Come
over here, my boy, where there are not so
many people. I would like to talk to you."
Retiring to a secluded spot somewhat
distant from the punch bowl we sat down
upon a sofa. Justice Harlan said to me,
"What is this I hear about holding Supreme
Court in the White House?" I replied,
"You know as much about it as I do, Mr.
Justice, you have read the newspapers."
To which he replied, "Things are coming
to a pretty pass in this country. The
question of 'What is whisky?' was on its
way to my Court and now it will never
reach there."
What a pathetic void in classic
Supreme Court decisions was caused when
Justice Harlan was denied this opportunity
of writing the opinion of the Supreme
Court on this case!
Fortunately the rectifiers
did not have many years to enjoy the fruits of
their great victory. The enactment of
the Prohibition Amendment and the Volstead
Act placed all dealings in beverage alcoholic
drinks outside of the law. The
question now is not "What is whisky?"
but "Where is whisky?" The adulterations
of the bootleg brand are now more deadly
than were the combinations of the
rectifiers in the old days. These illegal
decisions that permit alcohol to
masquerade as whisky have never been repealed.
They remain sonorous witnesses of
the triumph of the unholy.
DISASTERS PREVENTED
All of these disasters would
have been prevented if the food law had been
administered as Congress enacted it. One
of the most amazing events in the
recital I have just made is to see the
three
Secretaries who were authorized to
make rules and regulations for carrying
out the food law attaching their
signatures to a decision which clearly
prevented the law from being enforced.
This misconception of the law has continued
until the present day and has been
the cause of all the crimes committed
against it.
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