No. 454.
Mr. Pendleton to Mr. Bayard.

No. 597.]

Sib: I inclose herewith clippings and translations from the National Zeitung of the 28th ultimo. They are the only response which I have seen in the Berlin papers to the public telegram touching the message of the President to Congress recommending legislative measures in regard to the exclusion of swine’s meat and the preparations thereof exported from Germany and France.

I have, etc.,

Geo. H. Pendleton.
[Inclosure 1 in No. 597.—National Zeitung, March 28, 1888, morning edition.]

In a pressing manner the police presidency warns against the use of uncooked swine flesh, and points out that only a thorough cooking (roasting through and through) of the pieces of swine flesh, as of the several preparations of swine meat (meat, blood and liver sausages, dumpling, pickled meat, etc.) suffices to kill the possible existing trichina and to exclude every injury to the health.

In order to make the thorough cooking or roasting of large thick pieces (hams or neck joints) possible, it is recommended to make deep incisions, about 8 centimeters apart, in the pieces of meat, in order that in this wise the boiling heat may sufficiently have effect upon the deep-lying layers of flesh.

[Inclosure 2 in No. 597—National Zeitung, March 28, 1888, evening edition.]

It is telegraphed from Washington on the 27th March:

President Cleveland has sent a message to Congress, in which legislative measures are recommended for the prevention of the importation of swine and products of swine from France and Germany, inasmuch as, according to reports of the American envoy in Berlin and the American consul at Marseilles, a disease prevails among the swine in these countries which makes the use of swine’s meat unhealthy.

In Germany it is not known that the danger from trichina—and this alone can, be intended—has increased lately. On the contrary, the microscopic examination for trichina increases more and more. One can see chat the proposal of President Cleveland has rather to do with the establishment of reprisals against the prohibition of American products of swine-breeding than with a sanitary regulation. So far as German prohibition is concerned, whilst in the beginning in America it was referred [Page 630] to the protective tariff-system tendencies, with time even these judges have come to admit that the manner of slaughtering in America for exportation has offered good grounds for it. Even in the technical works of Germany, concerning the agricultural competition of North America, a while ago mentioned by us, there are descriptions of that slaughtering, which support the supposition that, with this wholesale business, sick or dead swine are worked off for food. By the abolition of this evil the Americans will sooner effect the removal of the German prohibition than by the threats of reprisals. The German exportation to America consists mainly in the finer kind of sausages, and in their manufacture in Germany the greatest care is I taken.