LETTER OF SUBMITTAL.
The Honorable the Secretary of Agriculture:
Sir: The undersigned, representing the Association of Official Agricultural Chemists of the United States and the Interstate Food Commission, and commissioned by you, under authority given by the act of Congress approved March 3, 1903, to collaborate with you “to establish standards of purity for food products and to determine what are regarded as adulterations therein,” respectfully report that they have carefully reviewed, in the light of recent investigations and correspondence, the standards earlier recommended by them and have prepared a set of amended schedules, in which certain changes have been introduced for the purpose of securing increased accuracy of expression and a more perfect correspondence of the chemical limits to the normal materials designated, and from which standards previously proclaimed for several manufactured articles have been omitted because of the unsatisfactory condition of trade nomenclature as applied thereto; and also additional schedules of standards for ice creams, vegetables and vegetable products, tea, and coffee. They respectfully recommend that the standards herewith submitted be approved and proclaimed as the established standards, superseding and supplementing those established on December 20, 1904, and March 8, 1906.
The principles that have guided us in the formulation of these standards are appended hereto.
The several schedules of additional standards recommended have been submitted, in a tentative form, to the manufacturing firms and the trade immediately interested, and also to the State food-control officials for criticism.
Respectfully,
William Frear,
Edward H. Jenkins,
M. A. Scovell,
H. A. Weber,
H. W. Wiley,
Committee on Food Standards, Association of Official Agricultural Chemists.
Richard Fischer,
Representing the Interstate Food Commission.
Washington, D.C., June 26, 1906.