OFFICIAL INSPECTION I4. I3I 



manufacturer that they are free from subsidiary products and represent 

 the actual substance the name of which they bear, may be used in foods. 

 In every case a certificate that the dye in question has been tested by 

 competent experts and found to be free from harmful constituents must 

 be filed with the Secretary of Agriculture and approved by him. 



The following coal-tar dyes which may be -used in this manner are 

 given numbers, the numbers preceding the names referring to the num- 

 ber of the dye in question as listed in A. G. Green's edition of the 

 Schultz- Julius Systematic Survey of the Organic Coloring Matters, pub- 

 lished in 1904. 

 The list is as follows : 

 Red shades; 



107. Amaranth. 

 56. Ponceau 3 R. 

 517. Erythrosin. 

 Orange shade; 



85. Orange I. 

 Yellow shade; 



4. Naphthol yellow S. 

 Green shade; 



435. Light green S. F. yellowish. 

 Blue shade; 



692. Indigo disulfoacid. 

 Each of these colors shall be free from any coloring matter other 

 than the one specified and shall not contain any contamination due to 

 imperfect or incomplete manufacture. 



M. r. D. R. 5. 

 STANDARDS FOR DRUGS. 



As empowered in Section 5, Chapter 124, Public Laws 1907, Charles 

 D. Woods, the Director of the Maine Agricultural Experiment Station 

 hereby adopts and fixes the following as the standards of purity, quality 

 and strength of drugs in the State of Maine. 



A drug, including beverages, bearing a name recognized in the United 

 States PharmacopcEia or National Formulary including the appendix, 

 without any further statement respecting its character, shall be required 

 to conform in strength, quality, and purity to the standards prescribed or 

 indicated for a drug of the same name recognized in the United States 

 Pharmacopoeia or National Formulary including the appendix, official 

 at the time. 



A drug including beverages, bearing a name recognized in the United 

 States Pharmacopoeia or National Formulary, and branded so as to 

 plainly show to the non-professional person a different standard of 

 strength, quality, or purity, shall not be regarded as adulterated or mis- 

 branded if it conforms to its declared standard. 



A beverage for medicinal purposes, not bearing a name recognized in 

 the United States Pharmacopoeia or National Formulary shall conform 



