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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
John Harvey Kellogg was born in l852 in Livingston County,
Michigan, to John P. Kellogg, a prominent member of the Seventh-day
Adventist Church. Growing up in the Seventh-day Adventist
Church, J.H. Kellogg was, quite naturally, interested in proper
diet and health. This interest would not only lead to a degree
in medicine, but a desire to travel around the world to learn
from the best medical men of the day. But J.H. Kellogg developed
another keen interest: he shunned many of the medical remedies
of the time and sought to find natural cures for man’s
ills. This, in turn, led to his understanding about preventive
medicine. His unique program of preventive medicine and natural
cures soon made Dr. Kellogg quite famous around the world:
"Rich and poor, high and low, including royalty, came
from far and near to be treated by him."1
Besides his advocacy of natural cures, Dr. Kellogg promoted
vegetarianism. This led to his development of the corn flake
and other breakfast cereals that still bear his name. "In
addition to being an able physician and a famous surgeon he
was also a great writer. He wrote more than 50 books, most
of them large scientific works . . . He was also an interesting
instructive lecturer on health and temperance and a good preacher."2
As a lifelong seventh-day Sabbath-keeper, Dr. Kellogg was
well acquainted with the Old Testament and undoubtedly took
very seriously the admonition of God not to eat pork. Additionally,
he obviously understood the old addage that "you are
what you eat." After reading the results of Dr. Kellogg’s
research, few thinking individuals would want to have pig
meat as a part of their bodies!3
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1Information and quotes from The Seventh-day Adventist Encyclopedia,
Revised Edition, Vol. 10, 1976, pp. 722-724. Dr. Kellogg was
also an inventor, chiefly of medical machinery and instruments.
Many of his inventions are still in use in hospitals around
the world.
2ibid. By agreement, Dr. Kellogg’s brother, Will Keith,
took over the manufacturing of Kellogg’s Corn Flakes
and became known as the "Cornflake King." Becoming
tremendously successful, Will Kellogg made the name Kellogg’s
Corn Flakes a household word, literally, around the world.
3Dr. Kellogg remained a Sabbath-keeper all his life, but
left the Seventh-day Adventist Church in 1907. He died in
Battle Creek, Michigan, on Dec. 14, 1943.
PORK -- OR THE DANGERS OF PORK-EATING EXPOSED
Pork-raising has come to be one of the great industries of
this country; and since the supply is wholly regulated by
the demand, it may be taken as a proper index of the prodigious
quantities of swine’s flesh which are daily required
to satisfy the gustatory demands of the American people. No
other kind of animal food is so largely used as pork in its
various forms of preparation. The Yankee makes his Sunday
breakfast of pork and beans, while the same article is a prominent
constituent of at least two meals each day during the remainder
of the week. Pork and hominy is almost the sole element of
the Texan farmer; while in the Western States pork and potatoes
constitute the most substantial portion of the farmer’s
bill of fare. The accompanying dish may be hominy, beans,
or potatoes, but the main reliance is pork in each case.
In the case of no other animal is so large a portion of the
dead carcass utilized as food. It seems to be considered that
pork is such a delicacy that not a particle should be wasted.
The fat and lean portions are eaten fresh, or carefully preserved
by salting or smoking, or both. The tail is roasted; the snout,
ears, and feet are pickled and eaten as souse; the intestine
and lungs are eaten as tripe or made into sausages; black
pudding is made of the blood; the liver, spleen, and kidneys
are also prized; the pancreas and other glands are considered
great delicacies; while even the skin is made into jelly.
In fact, nothing is left of the beast, not even the bristles,
which the shoemaker claims. Surely it must be quite an important
matter, and one well deserving attention, if it can be shown
that an animal which is thus literally devoured, and that
in such immense quantities, is not only unfit for food, but
one of the prime causes of many loathsome and painful maladies.
Let us examine the hog a little, and see what can be determined
respecting his real nature, and his office in the economy
of nature, if he has any.
A Live Hog Examined
Look at that object in a filthy mud hole by the roadside.
At first, you distinguish nothing but a pile of black, slimy
mud. The dirty mass moves! You think of a reptile, a turtle,
some uncouth monster, reveling his Stygian filth. A grunt!
The mystery is solved. The sound betrays a hog. You avert
your face and hasten by, sickened with disgust. Stop, friend,
admire your savory ham, your souse, your tripe, your toothsome
sausage in its native element. A dainty beast, isn’t
he!
Gaze over into that sty, our pork-eating friend. Have you
done so before? And would you prefer to be excused? Quite
likely; but we will show you a dozen things you did not observe
before. See the contented brute quietly reposing in the augmented
filth of his own ordure! He seems to feel quite at home, doesn’t
he? Look a little sharper, and scrutinize his skin. Is it
smooth and healthy? Not exactly so. So obscured is it by tetter,
and scurf, and mange, that you almost expect to see the rotten
mass drop off as the grunting creature rubs it against any
projecting corner which may furnish him a convenient scratching-place.
As you glance around the pen, you observe that all such conveniences
have been utilized until they are worn so smooth as to be
almost inefficient.
Rouse the beast, and make him show his gait. See how he rolls
along, a mountain of fat. If he were human, he would be advised
to chew tobacco for his obesity, and would be expected to
drop off any day of heart disease. And so he will do, unless
the butcher forestalls nature by a few days. Indeed, not long
ago a stout neighbor of his was quietly taking his breakfast
from his trough, grunting his infinite satisfaction, when,
without a moment’s warning or a single premonitory symptom,
his heart ceased to beat, and he instantly expired without
finishing his meal, much to the disappointment of his owner,
who was anticipating the pleasure of quietly executing him
a few hours later, and serving him up to his pork-loving patrons.
Suppose his death had been delayed a few hours, or rather,
suppose the butcher had got the start of nature a little,
as he generally contrives to do!
But we have not yet finished the examination of our hog.
If you can possibly prevail upon yourself to sacrifice your
taste in the cause of science, pork-loving friend, just clamber
over into the reeking sty, and take a nearer view of the animal
that is destined to delight the palates of some of your friends,
perhaps your own. Make him straighten out his fore legs. Now
observe closely. Do you see the open sore or issue, a few
inches above his foot on the inner side? Do you say it is
a mere accidental abrasion? Find the same on the other leg;
it is rather a wise and wonderful provision of nature. Grasp
the leg high up and press downward. Now you see its utility,
as a mass of corruption pours out. That opening is the outlet
of a sewer. Yes, a scrofulous sewer; and hence the offensive,
ichorous matter which discharges from it. Should you fill
a syringe with mercury or some colored injecting fluid, and
drive the contents into this same opening, you would be able
to trace all through the body of the animal little pipes communicating
with it.
What must be the condition of the body of an animal so foul
as to require a regular system of drainage to convey away
its teeming filth? Sometimes the outlet gets closed by the
accumulation of external filth. Then the ichorous stream ceases
to flow, and the animal quickly sickens and dies unless the
owner cleanses the parts, and so opens anew the feculent fountain,
and allows the festering poison to escape.
What dainty morsels those same feet and legs make! What a
delicate flavor they have, as every epicure asserts! Do you
suppose the corruption with which they are saturated has any
influence upon their taste and healthfulness?
Perhaps you are thoroughly disgusted now, and would like
to leave the scene. Pause a moment. Now let us look at the
inside of this wonderfully delicious beast!
A Dead Hog Examined
Do you imagine that the repulsiveness of this loathsome creature
is only on the outside? That within everything is pure and
wholesome? Vain delusion! Sickening, disgusting, as is the
exterior, it is, in comparison with what it covers, a fair
cloak, hiding a mass of disease and rottenness which grows
more superlatively filthy as we penetrate deeper and deeper
beneath the skin.
What Is Lard?
Just under the foul and putrid skin we find a mass of fat
from two to six inches in thickness, covering a large portion
of the body. Now what is this? Lard, says one; animal oil;
an excellent thing for consumptives; a very necessary kind
of food in cold weather. Lard, animal oil, very truly; and,
we will add a synonym for disease, scrofula, torpid liver.
Where did all that fat come from, or how happened it to be
so heaped up around that poor hog? Surely it is not natural;
for fat is only deposited in large quantities for the purpose
of keeping the body warm in winter. This fat is much more
than is necessary for such a purpose, and is much greater
in amount than ever exists upon the animal in a state of nature.
It is evidently the result of disease. So gross have been
the habits of the animal, so great has been the foulness of
its body, that its excretory organs--its liver, lungs, kidneys,
skin, and intestines--have been entirely unable to carry away
the impurities which the animal has been all its life accumulating.
And even the extensive system of sewerage with its constant
stream, which we have already described, was insufficient
to the task of purging so vile a body of the debris which
abounded in every organ and saturated every tissue. Consequently
this great flood of disease, which made its way through the
veins and arteries into the tissues, and there accumulated
as fat! Delectable morsel, a slice of fat pork, isn’t
it? Concentrated, consolidated filth!
Then the fatter the hog, the more diseased he is? Certainly.
A few years ago, there were on exhibition at the great cattle
show in England a couple of hogs which had been stuffed with
oil cake until they were the greatest monsters of obesity
ever exhibited. Of course they took the first premium; and
if a premium had been awarded to the animals which were capable
of producing the most disease, it is quite probable that they
would have headed the list still.
Lard, then, obtained from the flesh of the hog by heating,
is nothing more than extract of a diseased carcass! Who that
knows its character would dare to defile himself with this
"broth of abominable things?"
Disgusting Developments
Now let us take a little deeper look, prepared to find disease
and corruption more abundant the deeper we go. Observe the
glands which lie about the neck. Instead of being of their
ordinary size, and composed of ordinary gland structure, we
find them surrounded by large masses of scrofulous tissue.
Perhaps tuberculosis degeneration had already taken place.
If so, the soft, cheesy, infectious mass is ready to sow broadcast
the seeds of consumption and premature death. For, according
to some excellent authorities, tuberculosis disease is capable
of communication by means of tubercles. If the animal is of
sufficient age, the further process of ulceration will have
occurred.
Now take a deeper look still, and examine the lungs of this
much-prized animal. If he is more than a few months old, you
will be likely to find large numbers of tubercles. If he is
much more than a year old, you will be more likely than not
to find a portion of the lung completely consolidated. Yet
all of this filthy, diseased mass is cooked as a delicious
morsel, and served up to satisfy fastidious tastes. If the
animal had escaped the butcher’s knife a few years,
he would have died of tuberculosis consumption.
But what kind of a liver would you expect such an animal
to have? Is not excessive fatness one of the surest evidences
of a diseased and inactive liver? —infallible! Then
a fat hog must have a dreadfully diseased bile manufactory.
Make a cut into its substance. In seventy-five cases out of
a hundred you will find it filled with abscesses. In a larger
percentage still will be found the same diseased products
which seem to infest every organ, every tissue, every structure
of the animal. Yet these same rotten, diseased, scrofulous
livers are eaten and relished by thousands of people who cannot
express their contempt for the Frenchman who eats a horse
or the China man who dines upon fricasseed puppy.
Now just glance at the remaining contents of the abdomen.
In every part you notice evidences, unmistakable, of scrofula,
fatty degeneration, and tuberculosis masses.
Where Scrofula Comes From
The word scrofula is derived from the Latin scrofu, which
means a sow. The ancient Romans evidently believed that scrofula
originated with the hog, and hence they attached the name
of the beast to the disease. Saying that a man has scrofula,
then, is equivalent to saying that he has the hog disease.
After we have seen that the hog is the very embodiment of
scrofulous disease, can any one doubt the accuracy of the
conclusion of the Romans who named the disease?
Origin of the Tapeworm
We shall attempt to trace the history of this horrid parasite
only so far as concerns its introduction into the human system.
With this end in view, let us glance again at the diseased
liver. It will be no uncommon thing if we discover numberless
little sacs, or cysts, about the size of a hemp seed. These
do not present a very formidable appearance, certainly; but
as soon as they are taken into the human stomach, the gastric
juice dissolves off the membranous sac, and liberates a minute
animal, which had been lurking there for months, perhaps,
awaiting this very opportunity. This creature, although very
small, is furnished with a head and four suckers, attach themselves
firmly to the wall of the intestine, and the parasite begins
to grow. In a short time an addition to its body is produced
posteriorly, attached like a joint. Soon a duplicate of this
appears, and then another, and another, until the body attains
a length of several yards. Not infrequently tapeworms measuring
thirty to one hundred feet in length are found in the intestines
of human beings.
Under some circumstances the eggs of the tapeworm find entrance
into the body, when the disease is developed in another form.
The embryonic worms consist of a pair of hooklets so shaped
that a twisting motion will cause them to penetrate the tissues
after the fashion of a corkscrew. Countless numbers of these
may be taken into the system, since a single tapeworm has
been found to produce more than two million eggs. By the boring
motion referred to, which seems to be spontaneous in the young
worm, the parasites penetrate into every part of the body.
Penetrating the walls of the blood vessels, they are swept
along in the life-current, thus finding their way even to
the most delicate structures of the human system. They have
been found in all the organs of the body, even the brain and
the delicate organs of vision not escaping the depredations
of this destructive parasite.
When this lively migrating germ gets fully settled in the
tissues, it becomes enveloped in a little cell, and remains
quiet until taken into the stomach of some other animal, when
it is liberated, and speedily develops into a full-grown tapeworm,
as already described. But although quiet, the imprisoned parasite
is by no means harmless. The cysts formed often attain such
a size as to endanger life. When developed in the eye, they
occasion blindness; in the lungs or other organs, they interfere
with the proper functions of the organs; in the liver, which
is the frequent rendezvous of these destructive creatures,
a most serious and fatal disease known as hydatids is occasioned
by the extraordinary development of the cysts, which are originally
not larger than a pea, but by excessive growth assume enormous
proportions. The same disease may occur in any other part
of the body in which the germs undergo development.
The germs of these dreadful animals are found not only in
the liver, but in other organs as well. Pork containing them
is said to be "measly." Sometimes the condition
is discovered; but that such is not always the case is evidenced
by the fact that tapeworm is every year becoming more frequent.
It has long been common in Germany. In Iceland it has become
extremely common. In Abyssinia the occurrence of the worm
has become so frequent, owing to the bad dietetic habits of
the people, that it has been said that every Abyssinian has
a tapeworm. In this country the parasite is most common among
butchers and cooks.
Some time since, we received from a friend in the South a
specimen of pork which was so densely peopled with the germs
of this dreadful parasite that every cubic inch of flesh contained
more than a score of them. The writer has in his microscopical
cabinet specimens of the embryonic worms taken from hydatid
tumors of the liver of a patient who died of the disease in
Bellevue Hospital, New York.
The poor victim who is forced to entertain this unwelcome
guest suffers untold agonies, and finally dies, if he cannot
succeed in dislodging the parasite.
The Terrible Trichina
Now, my friend, assist your eyesight by a good microscope,
and you will be convinced that you have only just caught a
glimpse of the enormous filthiness, the inherent badness,
and the intrinsic ugliness of this loathsome animal. Take
a thin slice of lean flesh; place it upon the stage of your
microscope, adjust the eyepiece, and look. You will see displayed
before your eyes hundreds of voracious little animals, each
coiled up in its little cell, waiting for an opportunity to
escape from its prison walls and begin its destined work of
devastation.
An eminent gentleman in Louisville has made very extensive
researches upon the subject, and asserts that in at least
one hog out of every ten these creatures may be found. A committee
appointed by the Chicago Academy of Medicine to investigate
this subject reported that they found in their examinations
at the various packing-houses in the city, one hog in fifty
infested with trichina. Other investigations have shown a
still greater frequency of the disease.
A few years ago I obtained a small portion of the flesh of
a person who had died from trichina poisoning. Upon subjecting
it to a careful microscopical examination with a good instrument,
I discovered multitudes of little worms. Each individual presented
the appearance shown in the accompanying accurate engraving.
The animal is there seen enclosed in a little cyst, or sac,
which is dissolved by the gastric juice when taken into the
stomach. The parasite, being thus set at liberty, immediately
penetrates the thin muscular walls of the stomach, and gradually
works its way through the whole muscular system. It possesses
the power of propagating its species with wonderful rapidity;
and a person once infected is almost certain to die a lingering
death of excruciating agony.
In Helmstadt, Prussia, one hundred and three persons were
poisoned in this way, and twenty of them died within a month.
It is doubtless not known how many deaths are really due
to this cause; for many persons die of strange, unknown diseases,
which baffle the doctors’ skill both as to cure and
diagnosis. Trichinosis very much resembles various other diseases
in some of its stages, and is likely to be attributed to other
than its true cause. It is thought by prominent medical men
that hundreds of people die of the disease without suspecting
its true nature.
Pork Unclean
Have we not seen that a hog is nothing better than an animated
mass of physical defilement? Few who have seen the animal
will dispute that his filthiness is a most patent fact. How
wise and sanitary, then, was the command of God to the ancient
Jews: "It is unclean unto you. Ye shall not eat of their
flesh nor touch their dead carcass."
Although it may not be said that this law still exists, and
is binding as a moral obligation, it is quite plain that the
physical basis upon which the law is founded is as good today
as at any previous period. Could it be proved that the hog
had kept pace with advancing civilization, and had improved
his habits, we might possibly feel more tolerance for him;
but he is evidently just as unclean as ever, and just as unfit
for food.
Adam Clarke, when once requested to give thanks at a repast
of which pork constituted a conspicuous part, used the following
words: "Lord, bless this bread, these vegetables, and
this fruit; and if thou canst bless under the gospel what
thou didst curse under the law, bless this swine’s flesh."
The Mohammedans, as well as the Jews, abstain entirely from
the use of pork. Such is also the case with some of the other
tribes of Asia and Africa.
Evil Effects of Pork-Eating
At the head of the list we place scrofula. How almost universally
it abounds. How few are entirely untainted by it. How do chronic
sore eyes, glandular enlargements, obstinate ulcers, disfigured
countenances, unsightly eruptions, including the long list
of skin diseases, all proclaim the defilement of the blood
with this vile humor. So, too, do the vast army of dwarfed,
strumose, precocious children tell the same story.
Erysipelas, too, a dreadful scourge, owes more to pork than
to any other predisposing cause.
Leprosy, that terrible disease, so common in Eastern countries,
and now beginning to show itself upon our own shores, is thought
by many to be largely attributable to pork-eating.
"Biliousness," a name which covers nearly every
bad condition for which no appropriate name can be found,
is notoriously the result of pork-eating. This is the main
reason why so many people complain of biliousness in the spring,
after gorging themselves with fat pork all winter. The liver
is overworked in attempting to remove from the system such
a mass of impurity as is received in the eating of pork. It
consequently becomes clogged, congested, torpid. Then follow
all the ills consequent upon the irritating effects of the
accumulation of biliary matters in the blood. The skin becomes
tawny and jaundiced. The kidneys are overworked. Perhaps fever
results. A partial clearing out then occurs, which enables
the individual to pass along for a time again until some epidemic
or contagious disease claims him as its lawful victim.
Consumption is another disease which is not easily separable
from pork-eating. In fact, scrofula is its great predisposing
cause. The narrow chests, projecting shoulders, thin features,
and lank limbs of so many young boys and girls are evidence
of a consumptive tendency, of which a scrofulous diathesis
is the predisposing cause.
Dispepsia, that malady of many forms, frequently results
from the use of pork, especially when fat and salted or smoked
pork, one of the most indigestible of foods, is used. Pork
requires between five and six hours for its digestion, while
wholesome food will digest in half that time. This is the
reason for the notion that salt pork is an excellent thing
to "stick by the rib."
Tapeworm, we have already mentioned as the result of eating
measly pork. It is a very difficult disease to cure, and often
baffles the best medical skill for many years. Few ever detect
the cysts in the flesh of the hog unless their attention has
been directed to the matter.
Trichinae produce in man an incurable disease. No remedy
can stay the ravages of the parasite. All pork-eaters are
in constant danger; for the worm is too small to be seen without
the aid of the microscope. However, this disease is not nearly
so formidable as the others named; for it is not so common,
neither does it entail any weight of suffering upon posterity.
Apologies For Pork-Eating Examined
On every hand we are met by all sorts of excuses for continuing
to make swine’s flesh an article of diet in spite of
the striking evidences of its dangerous character. Let us
examine a few of the most common of these apologies, and test
their value.
Pork is Necessary as a Heat-forming Food in Winter —
Are there not plenty of more healthful animals than hogs to
supply all the animal fat necessary? Certainly there are;
and, better still, we have the various grains and farinaceaous
vegetables, which are abundantly sufficient to furnish all
the heat required by man in any latitude.
Our Fathers and Grandfathers Ate Pork, and yet Lived to very
Old Age — Ah! yes, my good friend, and you are suffering
the penalty of their transgressions. You may not be aware
of it yet; but more than likely your old age will not be so
free from ills as was theirs. And quite as probably you may
even now see in your children the results of your own, as
well as your fathers, disregard of the dictates of sound sense
in feasting upon the hog. Their frequent sore eyes, sore mouths,
tetter, crysipelas, and other eruptions, are all evidences
of the scrofula which they have inherited.
Neither can you urge the plea, "Pork does not hurt me."
No man ever became a drunkard who did not make the same excuse
for liquor. You may not feel it now; but the future will expose
your delusion.
The Hog is Cleanly if You Give Him a Chance to Be so —
It is surprising to us that any one who knows anything of
the real nature of a hog can make such an assertion. Who has
not seen hogs wallowing in the foulest mire right in the middle
of a green, fragrant clover pasture? The dirty creature will
turn away from the nicest bed of straw to revel in a stagnant,
seething mud hole. If one of his companions dies in the lot
or pen, he will wait until putrefaction occurs, and then greedily
devour the stinking carcass. The filthy brute will even devour
his own excrement, and that when not unusually pressed by
hunger.
The hog is by nature a scavenger, and is especially adapted
for that purpose. Let him pursue his natural hunger.
Sufficient Heat Will Kill the Trichinae and Incipient Tapeworms
— Surely, dead worms cannot kill any one; but it must
be delightful for the pork-eater to contemplate his ham or
sausage with the reflection that he is partaking of a diet
of worms. The Frenchman sometimes eats earthworms; the African
relishes lizards; and one philosopher so far overcame his
natural prejudices as to eat spiders. "How disgusting!"
you say, and you shut your eyes and swallow a million monsters
at a meal, because they are cooked and so cannot bite. The
louse-eating Patagonian cannot equal that. But it should be
remembered that in order that the parasite should be killed,
every part of the meat must be subjected to a heat of at least
2l2° which is quite difficult to do, and is seldom accomplished.
A whole family was poisoned by eating pork-chops, which were
well cooked upon the outside.
What Shall We Do With the Hog?
Stop raising him. Turn him loose. He will soon find his place,
like the five thousand which ran down into the sea in the
days of Christ. If he must be raised, use him for illuminating
our halls and houses. Lubricate our car and wagon with his
abundant fat. Do anything with him but eat him. It would be
dangerous to adopt the principle that we must devour everything
which is in the way, or which cannot be otherwise utilized.
Adam Clarke thought of one appropriate use to make of the
hog. He said that if he was going to make an offering to the
devil, he would employ a hog stuffed with tobacco.
Reader, what will you do? Can you continue to use as food
such an abominable article as pork, and in so doing run so
many risks as you must do? And if you decide that the animal
is unfit to claim a place upon your own table, can you conscientiously
raise and sell him to your neighbors’ injury?
Cases of Trichina Poisoning
The reported cases of death from this terrible cause have
become so frequent that we are no longer startled by them.
Ten years ago the description of the death of a person literally
infested with worms, and tortured to death by their inroads
upon the system, would have excited feelings of the deepest
horror; but these accounts have now become so common that
little interest is shown in them, and death from this cause
is one of the regular causes of additions to the mortuary
list. Nevertheless, the disease is divested of none of its
real horrors by its common occurrence. No one is safe; any
one who uses swine’s flesh as food in any form is liable
to the disease. Salting, smoking, and the other ordinary means
of curing pork do not destroy the parasite.
A few years ago, Dr. Germer, health officer of Erie, Pa.,
was sent for in haste to see a patient who was supposed to
be suffering from the cholera. He hastened to the bedside,
and found a whole family sick with the symptoms much resembling
those of cholera, though the season was then midwinter. Suspecting
the possible cause, he secured a specimen from the pork barrel,
and hastened to his office. Upon making a careful microscopic
examination, he found myriads of the loathsome parasites in
every part of the flesh examined. The writer prepared numerous
microscopic specimens of the worm in various aspects from
a portion of the infected meat kindly furnished by the doctor.
These have been shown to hundreds of persons who were skeptical
respecting the existence of such a pest.
In this case the hog had been fattened on the premises, having
been purchased when quite young by the owner, a German, from
a drove of hogs which passed through the city. It was known
that, previous to the purchase of the hog, two of the drove
had died on the road, and had been devoured by their scavenger
companions. No doubt the deaths were the result of trichinosis;
and by devouring the victims the whole herd became infected.
It would be difficult to estimate what an amount of suffering
and death was entailed by the consumption of this great herd
of trichinous hogs. Several members of the German family died,
together with several of the neighbors. Those who survived
the acute stages of the disease escaped only to linger out
a painful existence in the chronic and incurable state of
the malady.
Some three years later the writer received a specimen of
pork from a gentleman in Wisconsin who requested an examination
of the same, stating that he procured it from the pork barrel
of a neighbor whose family were suffering from a disease which
the doctors called cholera infantum. Several of the children
had died, and other members of the family were still dangerously
ill. The pork had been suspected and examined, but no trichinae
were found by the observers, though several physicians had
inspected it. Upon making a careful microscopical inspection
of the specimen, it was found to be alive with young trichinae.
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