Miss Cellania's Blog Posts

The Fight for Safe Milk: Swill Milk

The following is an article from Uncle John's Giant 10th Anniversary Bathroom Reader.

"Milk and kids" are virtually synonymous in our culture with "good health." But that wasn't always the case. Until the early 1900s, milk was often adulterated with foreign substances, taken from sick cows, or mis-handled during milking and storage. As a result, it was often host to tuberculosis, cholera, typhoid fever, and other life-threatening diseases. But few people knew that the milk made them sick. It wasn't until the late 19th century, when scientists began to understand germ theory, that they realized diseases were being transferred through milk -and that they could do something to eliminate the hazard. Here's a fascinating but little-known story from American history.

THE GOOD OLD DAYS

In the days before refrigeration, farmers who lived near towns delivered milk the old-fashioned way: they brought a cow into town and went door to door looking for customers. Anyone who wanted milk could step out into the street with a pitcher or a bucket, and watch the farmer milk the cow right before their eyes.

Since customers were standing only a few feet away, it paid for the farmer to take good care of his cows. Nobody wanted to buy milk from a beast that looked dirty, mistreated, or sick. So although there was a risk of buying bad milk, it was kept to a minimum.

City Slickers

But in cities, where door-to-door cow service wasn't practical or possible, buying milk was another matter. "Milks sellers" acted as middlemen between farmers and townspeople. Like used car dealers today, they were widely mistrusted and said to possess "neither character, nor decency of manner, nor cleanliness." Whether or not the reputation was deserved, they were notorious for diluting milk with water to increase profits. People said their milk came from "black cows," the black cast iron pumps that provided towns with drinking water. And if the pump was broken, horse troughs were always a handy source of water.

Although it actually spread serious diseases, water-down milk was seen as more of an annoyance than a health hazard, and nothing much was done about it. It wasn't until the 1840s that scandals in the liquor industry led to the first demands for milk reform.

THE SWILL MILK SCANDALS

In the mid-1800s, it was common for whiskey and other distillers to run dairy and beef businesses on the side. The manufacture of grain alcohol require huge amounts of corn, rye, and other fresh grains, which are cooked into a mash and then distilled. Once that distillation is complete, the remaining "swill" can be discarded... or, as the distiller discovered, it can be fed to cows.

Profit, not quality, was the priority with "swill herds." As a result, conditions in many distillery-owned dairies were atrocious. The cows spent their entire lives tied up in tiny pens, which were rarely cleaned. They received no food other than the swill -and no fresh water at all, since distillers though there was already plenty of water in the swill.

Spoiled Milk

With no exercise, no real food, and no water, even the hardiest cattle sickened and died in about six months. The failing herds were milked daily until the very end; when a cow became too weak to stand on its own, it was hoisted upright with ropes so that it cold be milked until it died.

Milk produced by swill herds, as muckraking journalist Robert Hartley wrote in 1842, was "very thin, and of a pale bluish color," the kind nobody in their right mind would buy. So distillers added flour, starch, chalk, plaster of Paris, or anything else they could get away with to make the milk look healthy. This adulteration only increased the amount of bacteria in milk that was already virtually undrinkable.

TAKING NOTICE

The toll that adulterated milk took on public health was severe: in New York City, where five million gallons of swill milk were produced and sold each year, the mortality rate for children under five tripled between 1843 and 1856.

No one knew for sure what was causing the child mortality rate to soar, and there was probably no single cause. But people began to suspect that bad milk was at least partially to blame. In May 1858, Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper, one of the most popular journals of the day, published a series of articles describing in graphic detail the conditions in some of New York's swill dairies.

REFORMS

Public exposure had a devastating impact on the industry. Some distilleries got out of the milk business entirely; other cleaned up their act. Those that remained were forced out of business in 1862, when the state of New York outlawed "crowded or unhealthy conditions" in the dairy industry. Two years later, the state outlawed the industry outright, declaring that "any milk that is obtained from animals fed on distillery waste, usually called will, is hereby declared to be impure and unwholesome."

Several other state followed suit, including Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, Illinois, Kentucky, and Indiana. As they took action, the spiraling infant death rate in the U.S. leveled off -and even began to decline. But there was plenty of work left to be done to ensure that milk was safe.

See also: part two of The Fight for Safe Milk: Pasteurization.

_____________________________

Reprinted with permission from Uncle John's Giant 10th Anniversary Bathroom Reader, which comes packed with 504 pages of great stories.

Since 1988, the Bathroom Reader Institute had published a series of popular books containing irresistible bits of trivia and obscure yet fascinating facts.

If you like Neatorama, you'll love the Bathroom Reader Institute's books - check 'em out!




Hamburgers in North Korea

The first hamburger franchise opened in Pyongyang, North Korea last summer. The unfamiliar hamburgers have become such a hit that customers must make reservations, and the lines are still long. Samtaesung (Food) and Cool Beverages calls their sandwiches "minced meat and bread" to avoid using the American word "hamburger".
According to rates displayed on the restaurant's menu, the cost of a hamburger is 228 North Korean won, or more than U.S. $2 according to the official exchange rate, putting it outside of the budget of the average citizen.

According to the Pyongyang resident, customers can pay in North Korean won, U.S. dollars, euros, or Chinese yuan.

Initially, the resident said, Samtaesung was frequented only by people who had traveled overseas or those who wanted to try the food out of curiosity, but the hamburger joint soon became very popular.

He said that many Pyongyang residents are now fond of hamburgers, though the greasier taste of the food takes some getting used to.

“The third time you eat a hamburger, you really get to appreciate it. By the time you’ve had your fifth, you’re already addicted to the taste,” he said.

The restaurant is owned by  Kim Jong Il's sister. Link -via Breakfast Links

Blackbeard's Sword?

The Queen Anne's Revenge was the flagship of Edward Teach, also known as Blackbeard. The ship was abandoned in 1718 when it wrecked on a sandbar off the coast of North Carolina. Archaeologists have been carefully studying the wreckage for a decade now, and have slowly released photographs of their finds. Recently they reconstructed a sword hilt from found fragments that may have belonged to Blackbeard or one of his companions.
Recovered from the Queen Anne's Revenge wreck site in 2008, the quillon could have been made in England or France, according to Wendy Welsh, conservator of the Queen Anne's Revenge artifacts for the North Carolina Department of Cultural Resources.

Beyond the hilt, only a stump of the blade remains, but Welsh said Jan Piet Puype, a Dutch arms historian, thinks the weapon was probably relatively short and was carried by a gentleman with some status—at least before a pirate got hold of it.

Although it could have been used for self-defense, the sword was mainly a decorative  accessory and was manufactured sometime between the mid-17th century and the early 18th century, according to Puype.

See more pictures and information at National Geographic News. Link

(Image credit: Wendy M. Welsh, North Carolina Department of Cultural Resources)

Crowded Train


(YouTube link)

A one-car train pulls into a station in Poland. The passengers get out. They keep coming. Then you start to wonder where they all came from. According to the YouTube comments, this is typical in Poland. -via the Presurfer


Cat Colors



DeviantART member Cedarseed constructed a large and thorough chart of house cat colors and patterns. In case you weren't sure whether your Fluffy is a flame point or dilute caliby or a Seychellois Neuvième, this chart will help. Even if you don't have a cat, it's quite interesting. Shown is very small part of this huge chart, which is also for sale as an art print. Click on "Download Image" to see the full size version Link -via Metafilter

Canoeing Through McDonalds


(YouTube link)

Parts of Australia are seeing the worst flooding in years. In Brisbane, a video crew paddles through a McDonalds outlet in a canoe. The song is "Fish Heads" {wiki} by Barnes and Barnes. -via the Presurfer


Twin Sisters Give Birth Minutes Apart

Identical twin sisters Amy Gilbert and Allison Oliverio of Clinton, Michigan grew up together, both married their high school sweethearts, went into the same profession, and then became mothers -on the same day!
Dr. Timothy Kim was back and forth delivering both babies.

"They were kind enough to put rooms next to each other, so not so much running. I've been doing this for 12 years and I never heard of twins having a baby on the same day," said Dr. Kim.

Amy gave birth to baby Claire and Allison gave birth to baby Garrett. The sisters both married their high school sweethearts six months apart to the day. They say they didn't plan on getting pregnant at the same

Only time will tell how alike the cousins who share a January 12th birthday will be. http://www.wxyz.com/dpp/news/region/macomb_county/twin-sisters-give-birth-minutes-apart (with video) -via Arbroath

Frankenstein Title Sequence


(vimeo link)

Jeremy Woods created a modern title sequence for the 1931 film Frankenstein. I think it works quite well! -Thanks, Jeremy!


This Week at Neatorama

Something neat happened just yesterday. I found out that Michael Rousselet, the aspiring screenwriter who figured prominently in the story of The Worst Movie of All Time? is one of the guys behind 5-second Films, which we featured on Neatorama last spring. They produce a new 5-second film every weekday! He wrote to say (among other things):
Wow! I can't thank you enough for that Neatorama article! It is by far the most accurate account I have read of the beginning of the cult movement.

I don't believe this, but is this article actually in a book?

Yes, that would be Uncle John's Heavy Duty Bathroom Reader, the newest in the series. Here's what else happened this week at Neatorama.

Also from the Bathroom Reader, we had a list of Unobtaniums, which are elements, chemicals, and other materials only found in fiction.

Jill Harness brought us Strange Stories Of The World's Most Famous Sleuth, meaning Sherlock Holmes, of course.

From the Annals of Improbable Research, we had the highly improbable article Bodybuilders Have Tiny Testes.

And from our friends at mental_floss magazine, it's a look at "Snake Oils, Hangover Cures, and Other Questionable Medicine" in Hooked on Tonics.

Steven M. Johnson gave us a double dose on Friday, with Missed Opportunities in Bicycle Design? in the Museum of Possibilities, and an article in The New York Times featuring his designs for a new kind of taxi cab.

In the What Is It? game, the scary-looking item is a “A corn husk shredder, it was used for making mattresses” It took 72 guesses before Julia Ross gave us the correct answer! The funniest answer selected was from D.Spencer, who said “It was attached to the inside wall of the outhouse and used to hold the sears and roebuck catalogue so that it wouldn’t blow out when the door was opened on windy days.” Both win t-shirts from the NeatoShop!

There are more ways to get your Neatorama fix: If you aren't checking our Facebook page every day, you're missing out on extra content, contests, discussions, and links you won't find here. Also, our Twitter feed will keep you updated on what's going around the web in real time. Have a great week!

Tomorrow’s Taxis



New York City held a design contest for new taxi cabs and have winnowed the finalists down to three designs, none of which are very exciting, but could make the manufacturer of the eventual winner rather wealthy. However, the city reserves the right to reject all three and start the competition over. Enter Neatorama's own Steven M. Johnson, who quickly supplied several ideas of his own. The taxi pictured is designed to allow bikes to pass easily, without changing lanes! See more of Johnson's taxis in The New York Times. Link to article. Link to slide show.

Sun Rises Two Days Early in Greenland

In the western Greenland coast town of Ilulissat, the sun is scheduled to rise on January 13th after six weeks of darkness. But this year, sunlight was seen coming over the horizon on Monday afternoon- two full days early!
The mysterious sunrise has confused scientists, although it is believed the most likely explanation is that it is down to the lower height of melting icecaps allowing the sun's light to penetrate through earlier.

Thomas Posch, of the Institute for Astronomy of the University of Vienna, said that a local change of the horizon was 'by far the most obvious explanation'.

He said as the ice sinks, so to does the horizon, creating the illusion that the sun has risen early.

So the anomaly apparently has nothing to do with the changing zodiac signs. That's a relief! Link -via The Daily What

The Real Details of the Hot Coffee Lawsuit

When the subject of frivolous lawsuits comes up, someone always mentions the McDonalds hot coffee lawsuit as an example, because the short version sounds so outrageous: a woman sued McDonalds because her coffee was served hot. But the short version doesn't tell us much.

The world’s most infamous cup of coffee spilled on February 27, 1992 in Albuquerque, NM. Stella Liebeck, a 79-year-old grandmother, was a passenger in her grandson’s car when they drove through at a McDonald’s, and after she received her styrofoam cup of joe her grandson pulled the car forward and parked so Liebeck could mix in her cream and sugar. Liebeck braced the cup between her knees, but when she tried to pull off the cup’s lid, the entire cup of coffee spilled into her lap. Although subsequent developments in the courtroom turned Liebeck and her case into objects of derision, it’s worth noting that she actually suffered legitimate injuries from the accident. Liebeck’s sweatpants absorbed the hot coffee and held it next to her skin, which helped lead to third degree burns on six percent of her body. Liebeck ended up spending eight days in the hospital and undergoing skin grafts to counter the effects of the burns.

But that's only the beginning of the story. Liebeck asked McDonalds for $20,000 to cover her medical expenses and lost wages. McDonalds offered $800. That's when the story starts to get complicated. Read the entire account of how a jury decided to award Liebeck $2.9 million when the case went to court (and that's not even the end) at mental_floss. Link


Fox in Socks


(YouTube link)

This girl read the Dr. Seuss book Fox in Socks in 2 minutes, twenty seconds flat! I hope you can keep up. -via reddit


Toxic Waste Nuclear Sludge Recalled

Would you be surprised to find that Nuclear Sludge has been found to contain contaminants that "potentially could cause health problems" if consumed? Maybe you should know that Nuclear Sludge is a variety in the Toxic Waste line of candy!
Circle City Marketing and Distributing doing business as Candy Dynamics, Indianapolis, IN, is issuing a voluntary recall of all Toxic Waste® brand Nuclear Sludge® Chew Bars, all flavors, Net wt. 0.7 oz (20 g) package. The product is imported from Pakistan.

A recent test performed by the California Department of Public Health has indicated that a lot (#8288A) of the cherry flavor of the above-listed product contains elevated levels of lead (0.24 parts per million; the U.S. FDA tolerance is 0.1 ppm) that potentially could cause health problems, particularly for infants, small children, and pregnant women.

Out of an abundance of caution, the company has determined to recall all lots and all flavors of the product distributed from the product's inception in 2007 through January 2011.

http://www.fda.gov/Safety/Recalls/ucm240012.htm -Thanks, Mitch B!

Turkeys Chase a Laser Dot


(YouTube link)

You've seen cats chase a laser light, in real life or in videos. Turkeys will chase one, too, as long as they have appropriate music to accompany them! (via Cynical-C)


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