ALUM

Wynther Blyth Method.—Add a little water to the sample and macerate. Soak pieces of gelatin in the solution and leave for a half day, remove the gelatin and dip the pieces in a mixture of equal volumes of a fresh tincture of logwood and a saturated solution of ammonium carbonate. The gelatin strips will turn blue if alum is present.

Bell & Carter Method.—Make a fresh 5 per cent tincture of logwood in methyl alcohol. Dampen about 10 grams of the flour with water and add 1 cc. of the logwood tincture and the same quantity of a saturated solution of ammonium carbonate. Pure flour gives a pinkish color which fades to buff or brown. The presence of alum produces a lavender or bluish tint which becomes more distinct as it dries.

COPPER SULFATE

This adulterant may be detected in either flour or bread, by soaking the flour or bread in a dilute solution of potassium ferrocyanid acidulated with acetic acid. If copper be present a purplish or reddish-brown coloration will be produced.