DETECTIVE WORLD - Dec. 1947 - Published by Detective World Incorporated -
Page 5
"Marihuana--- The Evil Weed" By Judge Carl F. Dieffenbach, Jr.
NEWSPAPERS and magazines throughout the country have been devoting plenty of
space to a growing drug menace in the United States, but we do not believe the
reading public has been given to understand how this insidious mind-destroying
poison is creeping into our homes and into our social life and gradually
undermining the moral, the mental, and the social structure of our society and
its institutions.
These seem like strong words but it is true that this growing snake of drugs
which began in the Orient, then traveled through Mexico, is now winding its
coils slowly around the United States. And it might have succeeded had it not
been for the fortunate interference of the Narcotics Bureau of the Treasury
Department and the other various police agencies of the nation. And those
apprehended, who have induced others into the nefarious drug habit, receive
little sympathy when they come into the hands of the officers of the law.
But the law cannot do a complete job. The police are generally informed when
it is too late. It is up to parents, educators, and our law-enforcement bodies
to educate the adolescent mind about the evils of the drug habit.
Perhaps you have heard of hashish. The word is synonymous with the Arabic
word assassin in reference to deadliness---and deadliness is marihuana. In
Persia, in 1090, was found the military and religious order of the Assassins,
whose history is one of cruelty and murder. Its members were confirmed users of
hashish taking their name from the Arabic hasshasbin, an ancient narcotic.
The word was known to the ancient Greeks. Of it the immortal Homer wrote:
"It makes men forget their homes and turns them into swine." It was
hashish which caused the Moros and the Malayans to "run amok" and
engage in violent and bloody deeds. Although an ancient drug, the menace of
marihuana is comparatively new in the United States. A score and a half years
ago the marihuana file of the United States Narcotics Bureau was practically
empty; today the bureau's reports crowd countless large cabinets.
Commonly, marihuana is called "Mary Warners," "sticks,"
"the weed," "muggles" and "reefers"; but by any
name at all its ultimate effect is the same. There is only one end for the
confirmed marihuana user---and that is insanity.
It is interesting to note from the bureau files that some of the main selling
places of the "reefers" today in the United States are located
principally around cheap dance places or "jazz" halls or "juke
joints." Also the habitues that hang around low-class places of
entertainment are the principal users. In the past, several killings, in which
young people have been involved, have been traced to this drug. It is the most
insidious, quick acting, enforcement agencies in many years. It is very similar
to cocaine in its unpredictable effects and harmful reactions.
A big, hardy weed is marihuana, of the Indian hemp family, with serrated
sword---like leaves topped by bunchy small blooms, and it grows wild in nearly
every state of the union. Every state has passed laws not only against its use,
but also against possession of it. As a result, hundreds of tons of this
infamous flower have been destroyed by the police in widespread areas.
Nevertheless, today its use has increased despite a most effective vigilant.
Naturally it is hard to curb as it grows in many climates. And once in a while
the police locate those who are foolish, enough to deliberately grow it on their
property. A stiff prison offense in a federal penitentiary awaits them.
WE HAVE read a report of some of the case histories released some time ago by
United States Commissioner of Narcotics H. F. Anslinger. Here are a few:
There are numerous cases on record like that of the young girl who heard
about a new thrill, a cigarette with a "real kick" which gave
wonderful reactions and "no" harmful after-effects. With some friends
she experimented at an evening smoking, party. Other parties followed (Continued
on page 96) and then, when she wvas behind with her studies and greatly worried
about her grades, suddenly, under the influence of this deadly drug, she walked
to and through an open window.
A few years ago a young marihuana addict was hung in Baltimore for criminal
assault on a ten-year-old girl.... In Chicago, two marihuana-smoking boys
murdered a policeman. . . . In Newark two girls, one the daughter of a highly
respected policeman, held up and murdered a bus driver for some small change.
"It was marihuana," they pleaded.
There should be a campaign of education in every school so that children will
not be deceived by the wiles of peddlers who speak so soothingly of the
"artificial stimulation" that marihuana affords---and "no
after-effects." From school age we should learn of the insanity, disgrace,
the horror that comes to those who use marihuana and other narcotics. There is
more need for unceasing watchfulness by every police agency and every civic
minded individual or organization. And the Narcotics Bureau stands ready to
investigate every complaint or information brought to their attention---and will
not reveal to anyone the sources of their information.
Articles have appeared in today's press of the use of marihuana by musicians
and vocal artists. "However, there is no proof that reefers, as musicians
call the 'supercharged cigarettes' add anything to the ability of a
performer," states Arnold E. Esrati, M.D. "The illusion appears to be
somewhat the same as that experienced by an intoxicated man while dancing,
driving a car, conversing, or even writing; he merely appears to himself to be
more brilliant."
In conclusion, for the sanity and health of all concerned, remember---it is
not smart to smoke marihuana.
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