The Poison Squad

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The Poison Squad Page 39

by Deborah Blum


  refusal to import canned meat from U.S., 150

  spices, laws regulating, 30

  Greatest Trust in the World, The (Russell), 127

  grocer’s itch, 2, 66

  Grocery World, 123–24, 138

  Grout, William, 25

  “Habit Forming Agents” (Kebler), 219, 220

  Haines, Walter S., 70, 199

  Hanna, Mark, 77

  Harding, Warren G., 279

  Harmsworth, Alfred, Lord Northcliffe, 142

  Harris, H. L. (pseudonym H. H. Langdon), 203–4

  Harrison, Benjamin, 35

  Harrison, Burton, 255

  Harvey Washington Wiley: An Autobiography (Armstrong and Wiley), 284

  Hassall, Arthur, 14

  Hay, John, 51

  Hearst, William Randolph, 123

  Heinz, Henry J., 179–80

  Heller, Albert, 70

  Henderson, David B., 26

  Hepburn, William P., 103, 105, 106, 120–21

  Hepburn-McCumber legislation, 103–6

  Herter, Christian A., 188, 189, 205, 245. See also scientific review board

  Hesse, Bernhard, 230, 233–34

  Heyburn, Weldon

  antagonistic nature of, 121–22

  brings food and drug bill to full Senate, 122

  political views of, 121

  resubmits Pure Food and Drug Act to Senate, 132, 133

  Heyden Chemical Works, 81

  Hipolite Egg Company, 203

  Hippocrates, 32

  Hiram Walker Company, 50–51

  History of a Crime Against the Food Law, The (Wiley), 283–84

  H.J. Heinz, 131, 141, 179–81, 194–95, 206, 215–16

  Hobart, Garret, 73

  Hofmann, Augus Wilhelm von, 13, 18

  Hollingworth, Harry L., 242

  home tests to identify adulterated foods, 110–13

  honey, 2, 16–19, 67

  Hoskins, Thomas A., 110

  Hough, Warwick

  liquor wholesalers, representation of, 104–5, 118, 122–23, 157, 159–60, 209, 210, 211

  Monsanto, representation of, 246, 270

  Houston, David, 270

  Howard, Burton, 111, 112

  “How the Baby Pays the Tax” (Dodge), 128

  “How to Detect Food Adulterations” (Peterson), 110–11

  Hughes, Charles Evan, 274, 276–77

  Hughes, William, 255

  Hull House, 109

  Hurty, John, 62–64, 82, 169

  hygienic table trials. See Poison Squad studies

  Indiana milk scandal, 62–63

  Indianapolis News, 63

  industrial chemistry, 2–4, 81

  industrial chemistry industry, 104

  industrial revolution, 2

  Influence of Food Preservatives and Artificial Colors on Digestion and Health (Department of Agriculture), 101–3

  International Pure Food Congress, 116

  iron, 37

  Jack Daniels Old No. 7, 49–50

  Jackson, Andrew, 11

  jar-canned goods, lead in, 60

  jellies and jams, 116

  strawberry jam, 2, 67

  Jones, James K., 26

  Journal of Commerce, 199–200, 264

  Journal of the American Chemical Society, 23

  Journal of the American Medical Society (JAMA), 204, 205–6

  Jungle, The (Sinclair), 120, 125–26, 129–31, 136, 141–43, 144

  Karo Corn Syrup, 186

  Kebler, Lyman, 105–6

  Coca-Cola case and, 220–23, 239–40

  defrauding government charges related to Rusby hiring arrangement, 247–59

  patent remedy reports of, 107

  soft drinks investigation and report of, 219–23

  Keen, William Williams, 215

  Kekulé, Friedrich August, 18

  Kelton, Anna. See Wiley, Anna

  Kelton, John C., 48

  Kelton, Josephine, 48, 49

  ketchup, 82–83, 177–81

  Kirchhoff, Gottlieb, 16

  Kolbe, Hermann, 33

  lab-created alcohols, 3

  labeling of products

  bills introduced in 1888 by Lee and Paddock, failure of, 38–39

  Lee’s bill requiring fails, 1888, 38

  saccharin listed as ingredient on product labels, 280

  whiskey counterfeit-label scam, 50–51

  whiskey labeling under Pure Food and Drug Act, 165–69, 209–11, 225–26

  Wiley advocates for, 18, 19, 34, 68, 103

  Ladd, Edwin, 82, 115, 194, 196, 198, 199, 200

  La Follette, Robert M., 3, 25

  Lakey, Alice, 108–9, 113–14, 131, 163, 226, 254, 264

  Lancet, The, 14

  Langdon, H. H. See Harris, H. L. (pseudonym H. H. Langdon)

  lard, 35–36, 116

  Lazarus, Richard, 290

  lead

  in canned goods, 59–60

  in coffee, 37

  lead chromate, 14, 27, 29

  lead poisoning, 59–60

  Lee, William H. F., 38

  Lexington Mills and Elevator Company, 231

  Libby, McNeil & Libby, 54, 58

  Liebreich, Oscar, 204

  Life, 123

  Life on the Mississippi (Twain), 24–25

  Lincoln, Abraham, 4, 11

  Linton, Fred, 252

  lithium, 219

  Little, Brown and Company, 99

  Loeb, William, Jr., 201

  Londonderry Lithia, 219

  Long, Chester, 46, 205

  Long, John, 253

  Loring, George, 20

  Los Angeles Examiner, 235

  Lowell, Josephine, 109

  Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, 106

  Lynch, J. L., 237–38

  MacLaren Imperial Cheese Company, 202–3

  McCabe, George P., 166–67, 174, 183, 187

  bleaching issue and, 216–17, 231–33

  Coca-Cola as test case for stimulants sold to children, 222

  defrauding government charges against Wiley and, 248–49, 251

  given full authority over regulation of food and drugs, 228

  leaves government service, 270

  Moss committee hearings and, 255–56, 259

  See also Board of Food and Drug Inspection (USDA)

  McCann, Alfred W., 267

  McCormick & Company, 273

  McCumber, Porter J., 103, 105, 106, 120–21, 122, 132, 211

  McDowell, Mary, 144

  McKinley, William, 47, 48, 51, 53, 73, 74, 76–77

  Macmillan Publishing, 120, 125

  Malt Mead, 75

  Manassas (Sinclair), 120

  Mann, James R., 157

  maple syrup, 16–19, 67, 116

  Marcosson, Isaac, 129, 130, 136

  margarine. See oleomargarine

  Marshall, John, 90–91, 241

  Mason, William, 65

  pure-food bill introduced by, 70–71

  Senate hearings held by, 65–70

  Mason hearings, 65–70

  Mease, James, 178

  Meat Inspection Act

  Beveridge Amendment and, 147–49

  Neill-Reynolds report and, 146–47, 149–50

  Pure Food and Drug Act, impact on, 150

  Roosevelt signs, 151

  Wadsworth Amendment, 148

  meatpacking industry, 287

  borax used as preservative by, 69–70

  butcher’s strike and, 119

  embalmed beef crisis and, 61–62

  embalmed beef scan
dal and, 51–59

  Mason hearings and, 66, 69–70

  Neill-Reynolds report and, 145, 146–47, 149–50

  oleomargarine made by, 24, 66

  opposition to Hepburn-McCumber legislation, 104

  response to The Jungle, 141–43

  Russell’s investigation of, 127

  stance on Beveridge Amendment, 147–48

  medicated soft drinks, 219–20

  Mège-Mouriès, Hippolyte, 24

  Methodist Episcopal Church, 254

  Miles, Nelson, 52–53, 149

  milk, 1–4, 128

  adulteration of, 1–2

  Agriculture Department report on, 23–24

  deaths attributed to drinking embalmed milk, 3–4, 62–63

  factory conditions, exposes on, 23

  Hurty recommends pasteurization for, 64

  Indiana deaths from embalmed milk, 62–63

  Mullaly on dairy industry practices, 2, 15, 23

  Omaha milk scandal, 62

  preservatives in, 2–4, 62–63

  swill milk, 23

  Wiley investigates, 23–24

  Milk Trade in New York and Vicinity, The (Mullaly), 2

  mineraline, 61

  Mitchell, A. S., 68

  molecular bonds, 17–18

  Molineux, Roland Burnham, 95

  Monsanto Chemical Company, 81, 244, 270, 274, 278, 279–80, 282

  Morgan, F. P., 239

  Morton, Julius Sterling, 39–46

  Morton, L. W., 26

  Moss, Ralph W., 255, 264–65

  Moss committee hearings on expenditures at USDA, 255–57, 258–59

  muckrakers, 145–46

  Mueller, Sebastian, 180–81, 195

  Mullaly, John, 2, 15, 23

  Munsey’s, 60

  Musser, John, 239

  mustard, 30

  Nabisco (National Biscuit Company), 83

  narcotics, 219–20

  National Academy of Sciences, 16

  National American Woman Suffrage Association (NAWSA), 228

  National Association of Food Manufacturers, 268

  National Association of State Dairy and Food Departments, 103, 124

  1908 conference, 193–97

  1909 conference, sodium benzoate vote at, 217–218

  Wilson censured by, 196–97

  write to Roosevelt to defend Wiley, 200

  National Confectioners Association, 229

  National Consumers League, 108–9, 226

  National Druggist, 220

  National Environmental Policy Act, 290

  National Food Magazine, 215, 264

  National Food Manufacturers Association, 104, 122, 157, 182–85

  National Millers Association, 231

  National Packing Company, 127

  National Pure Food and Drug Congress, 4

  National Retail Druggists Association, 268–69

  National Wholesale Liquor Dealers Association, 209

  National Wholesale Liquor Distributors Association, 104–5

  National Women’s Political Union, 275

  Needham, Henry Beecham, 164, 168

  Neely, Matthew M., 282–83

  Neill, Charles P., 145

  Neill-Reynolds report, 146–47, 149–50

  New Jersey Federation of Women’s Clubs, 108

  New York Evening Mail, 201

  New York Globe, 267

  New York Journal of Commerce, 122

  New York State Journal of Medicine, 202

  New York Times, 100–101, 149, 190, 194, 204, 252, 256, 264

  New York World, 201

  Nineteenth Amendment to U.S. Constitution, 277

  nitrates, 198, 231–33, 271

  nitrogen peroxide, 197, 198, 231

  Nixon, Richard, 290

  North Dakota food chemistry analysis, 83

  nutmeg, 2

  Nutria, 75

  Obama, Barack, 288

  O’Ferral, Charles, 25–26

  Oil, Paint and Drug Reporter, 264

  Old Dutch Mill Coffee Roasters, 253

  Old Taylor, 49–50

  oleomargarine, 24–27, 66

  borax used as preservative in, 69–70

  Butter Act of 1886, passage of, 26

  dyes used in, 27

  House and Senate hearings on, 25–26

  invention of, 24

  meatpacking industry and, 24

  Wiley’s evaluation, 26–27

  olive oil, 35–36

  Omaha milk scandal, 62

  100,000,000 Guinea Pigs (Kallet and Schlink), 285

  Osborne, Oliver, 239

  ozone, 197

  Pabst Brewing Company, 74, 75

  Pacific Coast Borax Company, 69, 203

  Paddock, Algernon, 38–39

  Page, Walter Hines, 129–31

  Pasteur, Louis, 64

  pasteurization, 64

  patent medicines, 105–6

  peanut butter, and salmonella poisoning (2008-2009), 288

  Peanut Corporation of America, 288

  People’s Lobby, 164, 166

  pepper, 2

  peppermint extracts, 81

  Perkin, William Henry, 229

  Perry, S. S., 91–92, 93

  Peterson, John, 110–11

  Pfizer, Charles, 81

  Pharmaceutical Era Weekly, 71

  Phillips, David Graham, 145, 150–51, 157–59, 236

  Pierce, Paul, 113–14, 116, 122, 129, 206, 264

  Pinchot, Gifford, 208–9

  Poison Squad studies, 5, 85–97, 101–3

  borax tested in, 89–97, 101–3, 202–3

  Brown’s reporting for Washington Post on, 92–94, 95–96, 97

  Congressional authorization of grant for, 86

  formaldehyde report, 202

  methodology of, 88–89, 91

  official report on borax experiment, 101–3

  salicylic acid studies of, 103, 116–17, 134–36

  sulfurous acid studies of, 160–62

  volunteers recruited for, 87–88

  Wiley proposes hygienic table trials to Congress, 85–86

  Wilson blocks publication of reports, 192–93

  polariscope, 18

  Popular Science, 18

  Preservaline, 3, 61–62, 68–69

  preservatives

  in butter, 69

  in canned beef, 61–62

  exhibit on, at Pan-American Exposition of 1901, 76

  industry perspective on uses of, 69–70

  in liquors and wines, 32–34, 66

  in milk, 2–4, 62–63

  Mitchell’s Mason hearing testimony regarding, 68–69

  new patents on, in early 1900s, 80–81

  sulfurous acid studies, 160–62

  Wiley’s Mason hearing testimony regarding, 67–68

  “Press Agents and Preservatives” (JAMA eds.), 204

  Proprietary Association, 106

  Pruitt, Scott, 290

  ptomaines, 57, 70

  Pure Food and Drug Act of 1906, 6, 287

  adulterated food, defined, 156–57

  Aldrich’s opposition to, 132–33

  American Medical Association (AMA) supports, 133

  dextrose proposed amendment defeated, 281–83

  enforcement funding for USDA, 163

  Hepburn-McCumber proposed legislation, 103–6

  Heyburn first brings food and drug bill to full Senate, 122

  inadequacy of, 278–79, 281

  industry opposition to, 104–5, 122–23

  investigative journalism and, 127–29
<
br />   lack of standards in, 157–59

  Mason’s pure-food bill, 1900, 70–71

  Meat Inspection amendment, impact of, 150

  Paddock’s food and drug bill passes in Senate 1891, 38–39

  passes Senate, 133

  Roosevelt agrees to support, 131–32

  Roosevelt signs, 151

  Sherley Amendment, 269

  slack-fill bill and, 278–79

  Tawney’s amendment, 163–65

  Pure Food Congress, 1904, 117

  Pure Food Cookbook, The (Good Housekeeping), 272

  Pure Food Law (Indiana), 63

  pure-food movement, 3–4

  fights Tawney Amendment, 163–64

  investigative journalism and, 127–29

  “Lessons in Food Poisoning” exhibit at 1904 world’s fair and, 113–16

  Pure Food Congress, 1904 and, 117–18

  renewed efforts of, following momentum of Meat Inspection amendment, 150

  Roosevelt meets with, 131–32

  women activists and, 106–110, 163–64

  Queeny, John F., 242–43, 245

  R.B. Davis Company, 258

  rectifiers (blended whiskies) and distillers, conflict between, 49–51, 165–69, 209–11, 225–26

  red lead, 14, 27

  Redpath Lyceum Bureau, 261

  Reed, Charles, 133, 141

  Reid, Murdoch and Co., 141

  Remsen, Ira, 185, 218, 252–53. See also scientific review board

  Remsen Board. See scientific review board

  Reynolds, James B., 145, 164

  Richardson, Clifford, 30–32

  Rixey, Presley Marion, 184

  Roosevelt, Franklin D., 285, 286

  Roosevelt, Theodore, 116

  agrees to support food and drug law, 131–32

  alienation between Taft and, 208–9

  angry at Wiley’s sugar policy testimony, 78–79

  annoyed with Wiley’s unwillingness to compromise, 185–88

  antitrust action of, 78

  appoints scientific review board, 185

  approves sodium benzoate regulation, 207

  corn syrup labeling and, 187

  death of, 276

  declines to support Hepburn-McCumber legislation, 106

  elected vice president, 73, 74

  election of 1912 and, 266, 267

  embalmed beef scandal testimony of, 55–56

  meeting with National Food Manufacturers Association and USDA, 182–85

  on muckrakers, 145–46

  names Dunlap as associate chemist, 170–71

  Neill-Reynolds report findings and, 146–47

  orders Neill-Reynolds investigation, 145

  as president, after McKinley assassination, 77

  releases summary of Neill-Reynolds report, 149–50

  rumors he will ask Wiley to resign and, 200–202

  Sinclair and, 144–45, 146

  views on Wiley’s contribution to Pure Food and Drug Act, 151–52

 

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