POPULAR SCIENCE - May 1936 - Published Popular Science Publishing.
Uncle Sam Fights a New Drug Menace --- Marijuana" By William Wolf (page
14)
ONE DAY last summer, a squad-of men suddenly descended upon a vacant lot in a
large eastern city. Attacking a patch of innocent-looking weeds, they first
burned the stalks down to the ground and then spread chemicals to make sure that
every vestige of life in the roots was destroyed.
The weed was marijuana---better known as Indian hemp---and within that one
vacant lot there was enough, if converted into cigarettes or "reefers"
and peddled through underground channels, to be the potential cause of half a
dozen murders and other brutal crimes.
Its destruction was but one of the skirmishes along a nation-wide front in
the almost unheralded war being waged on this insidious drug. Federal, state,
and city officials are engaged right now in combating what was described by
Secretary of State Hull in a report to the League of Nations as "one of the
major police problems of America." They are carrying on the fight, against
enormous handicaps, in practically every state in the Union.
Within the past decade, marijuana smoking has ceased to be a Mexican Border
problem and has become a national menace. Another ten years of its phenomenal
spread and the suppression of opium, heroin, cocaine, and similar drugs will
seem like child's play in comparison. A strange combination of circumstances is
responsible for its rapid sweep through the nation.
The plant is nothing new. It has been in this country ever since the earliest
settlers in the New England colonies brought hemp seed to grow the plants from
which rope fiber was, and still is, obtained. For several centuries, Indian hemp
was cultivated and used in America for legitimate purposes. The fact that the
American plant was exactly the same as that from which hashish was obtained in
the Orient was not generally known. It emerged from the limbo of forgotten drugs
only within the past few years.
Today, the small towns of the nation are being invaded by the drug, while the
large cities already have vast numbers of smokers. It is being sold to school
children in more than one state. Marijuana cigarettes, or reefers," are
peddled at fifteen cents to several dollars each by men, who either raise the
drug in back yards or in carefully concealed plots in the country, or gather it
along the roadside. Before Pennsylvania passed laws against it, the chief of
Philadelphia County detectives declared that any particularly, horrible crime
was committed---especially one pointing to perversion---his officers searched
first in marijuana dens, and questioned -marijuana smokers for suspects.
The curious history of how the Indian hemp plant, Cannabis Indica or Cannabis
saliva, reached such unsavory prominence in America offers an example of how a
natural product, innocent in itself, can remain unnoticed and not used for evil
purposes for centuries, only to plunge into sudden disrepute. It-also reveals
why its use is a problem and how the average citizen can help stamp it out.
The New England colonists used hemp for the manufacture of rope and for
homespun cloth. Soon it was being grown in the Virginia and Pennsylvania
colonies, and it appeared, at an early date in the Kentucky settlements. Its
spread westward to Missouri followed and, at various times, hemp was grown in
Illinois, Indiana, Nebraska, Iowa, California, and other states.
It was employed solely for its utilitarian purposes, chief of which was, of
course, the making of rope. Practically all the rope and twine used in America
until the introduction of abaca, or Manila fiber, came from the hemp, plant.
The date of the introduction of hemp in Mexico is not known; but it probably
arrived with the earliest Spanish settlers.
Thus the stage was set for its skyrocket climb within recent years to become
the foremost menace to life, health, and morals in the list of drugs used in
America.
In all the years of its early use in America, it was not smoked. The,
colonists had tobacco, and weren't interested, in experimenting with hemp. But
somebody---who either knew that hashish sometimes is burned instead of eaten,
and the fumes inhaled, or who lacked tobacco and tried hemp as a substitue---learned
that it had powerful narcotic effects when smoked. This probably occurred in
Mexico.
Suddenly, the nation awoke: to, the fact that it had a major drug problem on
its hands. Marijuana smoking, which was confined at first to Mexico and the.
Southwestern States, started to spread. And worst of all, the plant from which,
the narcotic came not only could be grown anywhere, but actually was growing
wild in many states!
Early this year, a house was raided in a small New Jersey town, and marijuana
worth $6,000 was seized. The persons arrested had in his possession a large
quantity of the dried and prepared weed. He confessed that it was grown on a
small plot of ground belonging to the house he rented.
The commercial production of marijuana is as simple as that---a field is
planted and the weed grows. It needs no special preparation before being sold as
a drug, other than drying the leaves and flowers. The only thing that led to
this arrest was a quarrel with somebody who knew what the "patch of
weeds" was and told police officials about the secret back-yard crop.
Federal authorities reported last fall at the end of the growing season that
large acreages of Cannabis saliva were destroyed in Pennsylvania, New York,
Ohio, California,: and Georgia. At the same time, evidence of its widespread
cultivation was contained in the additional report that, within a few days time,
investigations and seizures were made at points as widely separated as
Rochester, N.Y., Fremont, Ohio, Sacramento, Calif., and Columbus, Ga. Because it
was circulated so generally in this, nation's early history, Marijuana now is a
roadside weed in many sections of the country.
For that reason, Federal authorities regard it as a puzzling problem.
Furthermore, over fifteen states failed to adopt the uniform narcotic drugs act
under which the Federal authorities could prosecute peddlers and growers of the
weed. Some of these states only forbid the importation of marijuana; and, since
it grows anywhere, such laws obviously are useless.
Where it is grown for sale as "dope," considerable ingenuity is
expended in concealing the fields containing it. In the Ohio case reported by
Federal officials, a large stand of Indian hemp was hidden by surrounding
cornfields. That is a favorite trick of growers, to hide the marijuana with
higher-growing crops.
The average citizen can help stamp out marijuana by reporting to the proper
authorities any suspicious growth hidden by corn, alfalfa, or similar crops. The
weed grows four to eight feet or more in height, has a sticky surface when
touched, and gives off a strong narcotic odor. When grown for its fiber, it, is
cut before reaching full growth; but when intended ,for illegal uses it is
allowed to blossom, since it is the flowering tops, the leaves and the small
stems that are gathered and dried for smoking.
The plant has erect, branching, and angular stems, while the leaves are
alternate and opposite on long, lax footstalks. The leaves have sawlike edges
and may be odd or even in number, but usuall about eight leaves are in one
group.
What, are the (Continued on page 119) most common effects of Cannabin, Which
is the active narcotic principle, affects the higher nerve centers, almost,
exclusively. A person smoking several marijuana cigarettes will first experience
a: feeling of exaltation and well-being. A happy, jovial mood is induced and
everything takes on a humorous aspect. Tell a person at this stage that his
mother has just died and he will laugh loudly at the news.
With this increased happiness, there comes a feeling of greater physical and
mental strength. Nothing seems impossible. Musicians and cabaret entertainers
are said to furnish one of the largest classes of users for this reason--- it
stimulates their imagination and temporarily increases their ability. Visions
sometimes of a pleasant nature, but more often gruesome.
THE smoker's sense of space and time becomes distorted. The room in which he
is located may appear minute, and everything in it is an infinitesimal spot upon
which he gazes curiously like some giant in a doll house. Time becomes
interminable. A second seems like a minute, a minute like an hour, and an hour
assumes the aspect of a whole day. The time consumed in walking from one chair
to another may seem like days on end.
Noises sometimes are magnified. A match dropping to the floor will sound like
a gigantic thunderclap reverberating through the universe, rolling on and on
until it fades away and is succeeded by deathlike silence. The flame of a match
or the glow from a lamp will fascinate the smoker. This delirious state will,
merge, if the dose is large enough, into a feeling of general weakness
accompanied by fatigue and a desire to sleep.
If the effects of marijuana were confined to such sensations, it would affect
the average person only as a moral problem. Unfortunately, it has a still worse
side.
Continued use of the drug, for example, will lead to a delirious rage in
which the addicts are temporarily irresponsible and inclined to commit the most
horrible and violent crimes. Any increase in crime in a community usually is
attributed by authorities to marijuana. Many murders are committed either by
persons not responsible while under the influence of the drug, or by persons who
deliberately smoke it to gain a false courage for the commission of a planned
slaying. Prolonged use is said to lead to mental deterioration and eventual
insanity.
THE dangers to which addicts are exposed and to which they expose others are
shown in some of the term associated with Indian hemp. In Malay, where it is
eaten as hashish the murderous frenzy in which the native dashes with a weapon
into a crowd screaming: "Amokl Amokl" (Kill! Kill!) is due to the
drug, according to some travelers. Our common expression "to run
amuck" is derived from this source.
The origin of the word "assassin" has two explanations, but either
demonstrates the menace of Indian hemp. According to one version, members of a
band of Persian terrorists committed their worst atrocities while under the
influence of hashish. In the other version, Saracens who opposed the Crusaders
were said to employ the services of hashish addicts to secure secret murders of
the leaders of the Crusades. In both versions, the murderers were known as
"haschischin," "hashshash" or "hashishi" and from
those terms comes the modem and ominous "assassin."
It ha, been said that the followers of Pancho Villa, the (Continued on page
120) Mexican bandit, derived their reckless courage from smoking marijuana, and,
that most of their outrages were committed under its influence.
Where Indian hemp is used as hashish or bhang, the leaves are rubbed between
the hands or pieces of carpet until the resin is expressed. This is then scraped
into a container and the product is treated with ether and eaten or,
occasionally, cooked and the fumes inhaled. This was the "emerald
green" drug of the Arabs, and the Count of Monte Cristo in Dumas novel was
addicted to hashish eating.
Authorities Federal and local, are employing the only possible weapon against
the drug---that is, destruction of any plants suspected of being used for
narcotic purposes. It is particularly abundant as a wild plant in western
Missouri, Iowa, Southern Minnesota, the Southwest, and the Western States. The
"slough district" of the Illinois River valley has large stands of the
wild plant but, curiously enough, it is used very little there as a drug.
Gathering the plant and seeds for legal purposes is a local industry in this
district. In addition to rope fiber, the plant yields a commercial oil used by
artists; the seeds are constituents of most manufactured bird foods, and dust
from the dried seed pods is sold to pharmaceutical companies.
Kentucky furnishes most of the legal crop for medicinal purposes. Little is
grown now for the fiber, the last survey showing only 2,400 acres under
cultivation; of that number, 1,700 were in Wisconsin and 300 more were reported
in Illinois.
As a result of Federal drives, states are gradually adopting and enforcing
laws against marijuana; but even so, the apathy of the public helps to prevent
the eradication of America's foremost drug. As one captain of a narcotics bureau
put it:
"We cleaned it up pretty well in this city after the state passed laws
against marijuana; but it is returning gradually because the public won't
cooperate with us. They don't know or don't care what it does. As for the
smaller towns---well, they don't even attempt to wipe it out until something
horrible happens, and by that time it usually has, too firm a hold on its
victims to yield to attempts at suppression."
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