10 The Man Who Made It Safe To Take a Drink By FRANK M. CHASE THIS is the story of the man who madi it sate to take drink. He is Or. Samuel J. Crumbine. who banished the common drinking COS from Kansas, the first state to legislate it out of tWMtncil He alto originated the "Swat the fly" slogan, as well as the movement bearing its name, both of which have gone around the world. Pr. Crumbine was bom ID Emlenton, Pennsylvania. September 17, 1862, and was educated at the Cincinnati College ol Medicine and Surgery He went to Kansas in 1885, For a location he chose the frontier settle ment of Dodge C -v. then notorious throughout the Weal ai probably the most lawteti town on the whok long cattle trail iron- Texas to the Dakotas. The yip-yip-yippy of the cowboys was still heard there when fhe young physician hung but his sign, and Boot Hill the ipecial burying ground -'.ear the city for the men who died with their boots i ti still received its victims. Crumbine, however, blessed with the ense to mind his own business, .cot along without trouble. Despite its trials, too. he came to en; the strenuous lite of the region, developing a self-reliance and knowledge of Western ways thai have stood him well in the battles that were to come. Meanwhile he prospered, marrying Miss Katherine Zuercher. ot Springfield. Ohio, in 1890. He aNo became the health i nicer ot his county, and in 1898 was appointed a member of the State Hoard of Health. On the death of the board's former secre tary, I)r I". B Swan, in the summer of ll02, Crumbine was offered the position. Salary Only $1,200 Then DR. CRUMBINE w a not certain that it would be ad visable to accept it. for the secretary's position was then small indeed The salary was but $1,200 a year, this being for part time services, the incumbent devot ing the remainder of his time to private practice. Ac of the offer thus meant the abandonment of an established business at Dodge City and the itarthttj of a new one at Topeka a matter not to be decided offhand. After delaying his decision two years, how ever, and at the urgent solicitation of the board, he accepted the secretaryship, taking up its duties July i, 1904 On becoming secretary, he realized at once the hope less inadequacy of tne work of the State Board of Health. He had but one assistant, a Stenographer, who. like himself, served only part of the time. Nor was the pitiful appropriation of $2.XH)a year the only reason for the lack f action. The real reason was that the Statute book- contained almost n laws concerning health, so that the secretary was practically powerless. Crumbine accordingly planned to obtain laws granting his office more authority, and in 19i7 the legislature adopted several -uch measures. Among them were two pi ring very important, the f"d and drug law and the water and sewage law. both ot which have been copied by I merous states. Meanwl he went ahead with a great deal of new work vrstl u having specific legal authority. In 1905 he b Ught samples of many foods on sale in Topeka, at d sent them to the University of Kansas for analysis. This investigation revealed astonishing cases of adulteration and use of preservatives, the findings helping materially toward obtaining some of the d -sin d legislation. Later he kept numerous pens of do. at his home. s.me of which he fed "embalmed beet and meat preserved with benzoate ot soda, comparing the results with those trm the dog! receiving equal quantities of less questionable meats. Posting the Public IN THE same year he began to publish the monthly I Hi-tin of the Kansas State Board of Health, the pur; e being to inform the public of the work of the secretary's office; and in the issue for January, 1906. printed the results of the food analyses. Tl caused a sei latsost, and headed Crumbine into his first big fight It not only aroused the first state -wide interest in the hoard of health, but likewise the war dogs of the fo d interests affected. Influential business men waited on the governor, with the obvious intent of having Crumbine 'hred." But the secretary, backed b the governor and the r suits of his own investigations, stood his ground, and after a hard fight in which the hand of the "interest ' was plainly seen, the legislature passed the food and drug law. As a result of this and other legislation, the seeretary's office was jut on a full-time basis and permitted to employ six food inspectors and a clerk, while the passage of the water and sewage bill enabled I)r. Crumbine to add an engineer, to be stationed at the state university, to enforce that law. The office force thus quickly increased from the se retary and his stenographer, both on part time, to nine persons on full time. By passing the food and drug measure in 1907. the same year as th 1 d ral food and drug act beeame law. Kansas assumed the lead among the stat I m tackling the false claims made for patent medicines It wa while working on ?h. adulterated food prob lem that, in the spring ol 1906, he laid the foundation for the vigorous warfare against flies in which we .ir, still engaged. Of course. se fought flies fa those days but not so pointedly and persistently as now; we weren't then aware ol the long list of sin- that ait now placed at the door or more properly, the feet of the rly. So, in preparing the copy for the pril issue of the Bulletin, winch was to be I special hV number, he planned, as usual, to emphasise the screen ing ot homes to keep tins out, targe!) J a matter o( personal comfort. But he was also thinking of the discovery, made during the Spanish-American War. that the fly carries disease, and. still interested m pure ooi, came to the conclusion that to protect it against flies is quite as important as to insure its freedom from adulterants. All these ideas were to be presented in the next Bulletin, so that lor the time his thoughts were well seasoned with flies. Origin of "Swat the Fly" TOPEKA was then in the Western Baseball l eague, and while he was engaged in writing his issue the first game of the season occurred. Nearly everybody in town went to the opening game and Crumbine, a deep-dyed enthusiast for the sport, was there, of course. The teams were evenly matched, and in the last half of the eighth inning the score Stood two to two. To peka was at the bat. with one man out and one on third. Naturally the fans were an excited lot at this point, and many of them yelled, as the next batter Stepped to the plate. "Sacrifice fly! Sacrifice fly!" At the first ball pitched, the batter struckand missed. Then, during that lull which always accompanies dis appointment in the bleachers, some stentorian voice boomed out. "Swat thtU ball!" Crumbine didn't see the next play, for he was engaged in pulling an old envelope from his pocket and jotted down the slogan destined tO circle the globe : "Swat the fly." For a day or two he forgot about the notation, but when the COpy for the Bulletin was ready he placed it on the front page. This in itself, of course, did not make "Swat the fly" famous, but succeeding events brought it quickly into prominence. Annual clean-up campaigns were then being started in many places, and in connection with the one at Weir City, Kansas. teacher had the idea of using the Hoy Scout organiza tion in this work. This ide a he put in a letter tO Dr. Crumbine. Crumbine instantly saw the value in the plan and could scarcely wait tO write the teacher tO compliment him on his vision. The teacher also had asked for suggestions concerning the kind of work which the boys might do. In answer the secretary sug gested an anti-fly campaign, and sent the teacher a copy of the current Bulletin, He also wrote the teacher a long letter giving details for arranging such a project, and urging particularly that stable refuse piles, the special breeding places of flies, be removed from the town. The teacher acted immediately on all these sug gestions. This was perhaps the first instance of Boy ScotltS engaging in eivic work. From this beginning the dean-ttp and anti-fly cam paigns spread apace and with them the slogan, except that "Swat the fly" traveled faster because of its brief ness and epigrammatic form. Soon it was known from t to coast, and then taken up across the seas. Aboard a through train to the Southwest one day HEALTH Br DR. S. J. CRUMBINE UEALTH is a atate of physical, mental and moral equilib rium, a normal functionating of body, mind and soul. It is the state when work is a pleasure, when the world looks good and beautiful, and the battle of life seems worth while. Health is the antithesis of disease, degeneracy and crime. The laws of health are as inex orable as the law of gravitation, as exacting as eternal justice, as relentless as fate, and their viola tion is the beginning and cause of all disease, suffering and sin. Health is the most desirable of earthly blessings. When finally lost it cannot be purchased by uncounted millions, restored by the alienist, nor returned by the pulpit. Health is that state of happi ness, faith and love whose proto type was the first man Adam; whose ideal is the Christ. DK. S. J. CRUMBIN1 Srcreitr kantat Slate Board of Health in 1008, Hr. Crumbine noticed two persons obviously Suffering from tuberculosis in its later stages, drinking from the CUp at the water fountain, while shortly afterward their fellow travelers men. women ar.d chil drenused the same cup. Dr. Crumbine had just beeti studying the methods of disease transm watched the foregoing procedure, became deeply con cerned over the danger involved. The insincl to in vestigate then arising, he strolled casually through the train, on which he found 11 persons who were obviously tubercular. Here, he saw, was a situation challenging his attention; for. inasmuch as every tram bund for the Southwest passed through Kansai I several hun dred miles and each was probably carr j or more tubercular persons, the drinking cups on these trains were a potent means of seeding the -tate with tuber culosis. He Proved It hy Evidence PLACING his facts ar.d oh fcioi ' :ion$ before the State Hoard of Health at its next meet ing, he asked that it tSSUC an order abolishing the com mon drinking cup on railroad trains, in schools and in all public places. But those were the days of tremendous railroad influence and the board, while previously giv ing Crumbine excellent support, balked at this request. The secretary, now faced with the n cessity of prov ing the wisdom of his stand to the b lei 1 Ut for evidence that would convince the most skeptical At the state university he obtained the set CS oi a bac teriologist who. under Crumbine's direction, took cul tures from all the drinking cups on trains running fata the old union station at Kansas City during one week. The results showed thai a great v of diseases was being passed around by this medium, some of the worst known to science among them. So conclusive was this evidence that Dr. Crumbine did not wait for a meeting of the board, but mailed copies of the report to the managers of all railroads operating in Kansas, asking them whether they would agree tO abide by a board ot healtl Utttd, prohibiting the use of common drinking cups on trams and in other public places. In every isi where the matter was referred to the medical d s ,: tu' railroads, there was hearty agreement. Hlis won the battle for Crumbine, and at the next meeting of the board the order was issued This i ffective September 1. VW, since which Federal ai I State WS, as well as public opinion, have rapidl) removed one of our national terrors the common drinking cup. Drives Out the Common Towel THAT other arch-spreader of disease, the common towel, was the next to receive his attention Herv!; method of attack was similar to that on the pUDHC drinking cup. the material adhering tO the towels JUlUV ered in the public places of li Kansas towns being analysed at his direction. Twenty-five per cent oi tne towels examined were found to be contaminated wn fecal material, their haard tO health thill enormous. This evidence convinced the I the State Hoard of Health of the danger urinJz! d mmon towel, and they at once decreed that its -"in hotels, railway trams, railway itati 1 ;t )11C' private schools" should cease, the order taking en September I, 1911. . twt.rcu- Dr. Crumbme'i work toward the control UD los.s has not only placed Kansas bu; most states for intelligent handling ol !r it has also established htm as i leading th?nS He organised the Kansas Tuberculosis - oi serving as its first president He if now JJ ' r the National Tub rcttlosil Association, and n- a number ol other important org-ww.- - . . .t I V I IIV - h,Kh capacitiea. Early 13 Health Coond dfctr.l Mcrctarjr of the National Heaii 1h luper-organuation of nearly i down natw n . ancirv his Mkctioa for Ull - y-u be. f compliment to Mi ah.l.ty ana The work of Or. Criimbinr has been BMtW kind that s.t. Il world ahead.