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AN ARTICLE BY REX BEACH
ENTITLED "Modern
Miracle Men", Relating To Proper Food Mineral Balances by Dr. Charles
Northen, Reprinted From Cosmopolitan, June 1936
Presented by Mr. Fletcher June 1 1936 and Ordered to
be Printed by the United States Government Printing Office Washington:
1936 During the 74th Congress, Second Session, Document No. 264
This is the Unabridged Version
of this document.
MODERN MIRACLE
MEN
Dr. Charles Northen,
Who Builds Health From The Ground
Up
This quiet, unballyhooed pioneer and genius in
the field of nutrition demonstrates that countless human ills stem from
the fact that impoverished soil of America no longer provides plant
foods with the mineral elements essential to human nourishment and health!..
To overcome this alarming condition, he doctors sick soils and, by seeming
miracles, raises truly healthy and health-giving fruits and vegetables,
(By Rex Beach)
Do you know
that most of us today are suffering from certain dangerous diet deficiencies
which cannot be remedied until the depleted soils from which our foods
come are brought into proper mineral balance?
The alarming fact is
that foods -- fruit and vegetables and grains -- now being raised on
millions of acres of land no longer contain enough of certain needed
minerals, are starving us -- no matter how much of them we eat!
This talk about minerals
is novel and quite startling. In fact, a realization of the importance
of minerals in food is so new that the textbooks on nutritional dietetics
contain very little about it. Nevertheless it is something that concerns
all of us, and the further we delve into it the more startling it becomes.
You'd think, wouldn't you,
that a carrot is a carrot--that one is about as good as another as far
as nourishment is concerned? But it isn't; one carrot may look
and taste like another and yet be lacking in the particular mineral
element which our system requires and which carrots are supposed to
contain. Laboratory tests prove that the fruits, the vegetables, the
grains, the eggs and even the milk and the meats of today are not what
they were a few generations ago. (Which doubtless explains why our forefathers
[and foremothers] thrived on a selection of foods that would starve
us!) No one of today can eat enough fruits and vegetables to supply
their system with the mineral salts they require for perfect health,
because their stomach isn't big enough to hold them! And we are running
to big stomachs.
No longer does a balanced
and fully nourishing diet consist merely of so many calories or certain
vitamins or a fixed proportion of starches, proteins, and carbohydrates.
We now know that it must contain, in addition, something like a score
of mineral salts.
It is bad news to learn from
our leading authorities that 99 percent of the American people are deficient
in these minerals, and that a marked deficiency in any one of the more
important minerals actually results in disease. Any upset of the balance,
any considerable lack of one or another element, however microscopic
the body requirement may be, and we sicken, suffer, shorten our lives.
This discovery is one of
the latest and most important contributions of science to the problem
of human health.
So far as the records go,
the first man in this field of research, the first to demonstrate that
most human foods of our day are poor in minerals and that their proportions
are not balanced, was Dr. Charles Northen an Alabama physician now living
in Orlando, Florida. His discoveries and achievements are of enormous
importance to mankind.
Following a wide experience
in general practice, Dr. Northen specialized in stomach diseases and
nutritional disorder. Later, he moved to New York and made extensive
studies along this line, in conjunction with a famous French scientist
from Sorbonne. In the course of that work he convinced himself that
there was little authentic, definite information on the chemistry of
foods, and that no dependence could be placed on existing data.
He asked himself how foods
could be used intelligently in the treatment of disease, when they differed
so widely in content. The answer seemed to be that they could not be
used intelligently. In establishing the fact that serious deficiencies
existed and in searching out the reasons therefor, he made an extensive
study of the soil. It was he who first voiced the surprising assertion
that we must make soil building the basis of food building in order
to accomplish human building.
"Bear in mind,"
says Dr. Northen, "that minerals are vital to human metabolism
and health--and that no plant or animal can appropriate to itself any
mineral which is not present in the soil upon which it feeds.
"When I first made this
statement I was ridiculed, for up to that time people had paid little
attention to food deficiencies and even less to soil deficiencies. Men
eminent in medicine denied there was any such thing as vegetables and
fruits that did not contain sufficient minerals for human needs. Eminent
agricultural authorities insisted that all soil contained all necessary
minerals. They reasoned that plants take what they need, and that it
is the function of the human body to appropriate what it requires. Failure
to do so, they said, was a symptom of disorder.
"Some of our respected
authorities even claimed that the so-called secondary minerals played
no part whatever in human health. It is only recently that such men
as Dr. McCollum of Johns Hopkins, Dr. Mendel of Yale, Dr. Sherman of
Columbia, Dr. Lipman of Rutgers, and Drs. H.G. Knight and Oswald Schreiner
of the United States Department of Agriculture have agreed that these
minerals are essential to plant, animal, and human feeding.
"We know that vitamins
are complex substances which are indispensable to nutrition, and that
each of them is of importance for the normal function of some special
structure in the body. Disorder and disease result from any vitamin
deficiency.
"It is not commonly
realized, however, that vitamins control the body's appropriation of
minerals, and in the absence of minerals they have no function to perform.
Lacking vitamins, the system can make some use of minerals, but lacking
minerals, vitamins are useless.
"Neither does the layman
realize that there may be a pronounced difference in both foods and
soils--to them one vegetable, one glass of milk, or one egg is about
the same as another. Dirt is dirt, too, and they assume that by adding
a little fertilizer to it, a satisfactory vegetable or fruit can be
grown.
"The truth is that our
foods vary enormously in value, and some of them aren't worth eating,
as food. For example, vegetation grown in one part of the country may
assay 1,100 parts, per billion, of iodine, as against 20 in that grown
elsewhere. Processed milk has run anywhere from 362 parts, per million,
of iodine and 127 of iron, down to nothing.
"Some of or lands, even
unhappily for us, we have been systematically robbing the poor soils
and the good soils alike of the very substances most necessary to health,
growth, long life, and resistance to disease. Up to the time I began
experimenting, almost nothing had been done to make good the theft.
"The more I studied
nutritional problems and the effects of mineral deficiencies upon disease,
the more plainly I saw that here lay the most direct approach to better
health, and the more important it became in my mind to find a method
of restoring those missing minerals to our foods.
"The subject interested
me so profoundly that I retired from active medical practice and for
a good many years now I have devoted myself to it. It's a fascinating
subject, for it goes to the heart of human betterment."
The results obtained by Dr.
Northen are outstanding. By putting back into foods the stuff that foods
are made of, he has proved himself to be a real miracle man of medicine,
for he has opened up the shortest and most rational route to better
health.
He showed first that it should be done, and then that
it could be done.
He doubled and redoubled the natural mineral content
of fruits and vegetables.
He improved the quality of milk by increasing the iron
and the iodine in it.
He caused hens to lay eggs richer in the vital elements.
By scientific
soil feeding, he raised better seed potatoes in Maine, better grapes
in California, Better oranges in Florida, and better field crops in
other States. (By "better" is meant not only an improvement
in food value but also an increase in quantity and quality.)
Before going further into
the results he has obtained, let's see just what is involved in this
matter of "mineral deficiencies", what it may mean to our
health, and how it may effect the growth and development, both mental
and physical, of our children.
We know that rats, guinea
pigs, and other animals can be fed into a diseased condition and out
again by controlling only the minerals in their food.
A 10-year test with rats
proved that by withholding calcium they can be bred down to a third
the size of those fed with an adequate amount of that mineral. Their
intelligence, too, can be controlled by mineral feeding as readily as
can their size, their bony structure, and their general health.
Place a number of these little
animals inside a maze after starving some of them in a certain mineral
element. The starved ones will be unable to find their way out, whereas
the others will have little or no difficulty in getting out. Their dispositions
can be altered by mineral feeding. They can be made quarrelsome and
belligerent; they can even be turned into cannibals and be made to devour
each other.
A cage full of normal rats
will live in amity. Restrict their calcium, and they will become irritable
and draw apart from one another. Then they will begin to fight. Restore
their calcium balance and they will grow more friendly; in time they
will begin to sleep in a pile as before.
Many backward children are
"stupid" merely because they are deficient in magnesia. We
punish them for OUR failure to feed them properly.
Certainly our physical well-being
is more directly dependent upon the minerals we take into our systems
than upon the calories or vitamins or upon the precise proportions of
starch, protein, or carbohydrates we consume.
It is now agreed that at
least 16 mineral elements are indispensable for normal nutrition,
and several more are always found in small amounts in the body, although
their precise physiological role has not been determined. Of the 11
indispensable salts, calcium, phosphorous, and iron are perhaps the
most important.
Calcium is the dominant nerve
controller; it powerfully affects the cell formation of all living things
and regulates nerve action. It governs contractability of the muscles
and the rhythmic beat of the heart. It also coordinates the other mineral
elements and corrects disturbances made by them. It works only in sunlight.
Vitamin D is its buddy.
Dr. Sherman of Columbia asserts
that 50 percent of the American people are starving for calcium. A recent
article in the Journal of the American Medical Association stated that
out of 4,000 cases in New York Hospital, only 2 were not suffering
from a lack of calcium.
What does such a deficiency
mean? How would it affect your health or mine? So many morbid conditions
and actual diseases may result that it is almost hopeless to catalog
them. Included in the list are rickets, bony deformities, bad teeth,
nervous disorders, reduced resistance to other diseases, fatigability,
and behavior disturbances such as incorrigibility, assaultiveness, nonadaptability.
Here's one specific example:
The soil around a certain Midwest city is poor in calcium. Three hundred
children of this community were examined and nearly 90 percent and bad
teeth, 69 percent showed affections of the nose and throat, swollen
glands, enlarged or diseased tonsils. More than one-third had defective
vision, round shoulders, bow legs, and anemia.
Calcium and phosphorous
appear to pull in double harness. A child requires as much per day as
two grown men, but studies indicate a common deficiency of both in our
food. Researches on farm animals point to a deficiency of one or the
other as the cause of serious losses to the farmers, and when the soil
is poor in phosphorous these animals become bone-chewers. Dr. McCollum
says that when there are enough phosphates in the blood there can be
no dental decay.
Iron
is an essential constituent of the oxygen-carrying pigment of the blood:
iron starvation results in anemia, and yet iron cannot be assimilated
unless some copper is contained in the diet. In Florida many
cattle die from an obscure disease called "salt sickness."
It has been found to arise from a lack of iron and copper in the soil
and hence in the grass. A man may starve for want of these elements
just as a beef "critter" starves.
If Iodine is not present
in our foods the function of the thyroid gland is disturbed and goiter
afflicts us. The human body requires only fourteen-thousandths of a
milligram daily, yet we have a distinct "goiter belt" in the
Great Lakes section, and in parts of the Northwest the soil is so poor
in iodine that the disease is common.
So it goes, down through
the list, each mineral element playing a definite role in nutrition.
A characteristic set of symptoms, just as specific as any vitamin-deficiency
disease, follows a deficiency in any one of them. It is alarming, therefore,
to face the fact that we are starving for these precious, health-giving
substances.
Very well, you say, if our
foods are poor in the mineral salts they are supposed to contain, why
not resort to dosing?
That is precisely what is
being done, or attempted. However, those who should know assert that
the human system cannot appropriate those elements to the best advantage
in any but the food form. At best, only a part of them in the form of
drugs can be utilized by the body, and certain dieticians go so far
as to say it is a waste of effort to fool with them. Calcium, for instance,
cannot be supplied in any form of medication with lasting effect.
But there is a more potent
reason why the curing of diet deficiencies by drugging hasn't worked
out so well. Consider those 16 indispensable elements and those others
which presumably perform some obscure function as yet undetermined.
Aside from calcium and phosphorous, they are needed only in infinitesimal
quantities, and the activity of one may be dependent upon the presence
of another. To determine the precise requirements of each individual
case and to attempt to weigh it out on a druggist's scale would appear
hopeless.
It is a problem and a serious
one. But here is the hopeful side of the picture: Nature can and will
solve it if she is encouraged to do so. The minerals in fruit and vegetables
are colloidal; i.e. they are in a state of such extremely fine
suspension that they can be assimilated by the human system: It is merely
a question of giving back to nature the materials with which she works.
We must
rebuild our soils: Put back the minerals we have taken out. That
sounds difficult but it isn't. Neither is it expensive. Therein lies
the short cut to better health and longer life.
When Dr. Northen first asserted
that many foods were lacking in mineral content and that this deficiency
was due solely to an absence of those elements in the soil, his findings
were challenged and he was called a crank. But differences of opinion
in the medical profession are not uncommon--it was only 60 years ago
that the Medical Society of Boston passed a resolution condemning the
use of bathtubs -- and he persisted in his assertions that inasmuch
as foods did not contain what they were supposed to contain, no physician
could with certainty prescribe a diet to overcome physical ills.
He showed that the textbooks
are not dependable because many of the analyses in them were made many
years ago, perhaps from products raised in virgin soils, whereas our
soils have been constantly depleted. Soil analysis, he pointed out,
reflect only the content of samples. One analysis may be entirely different
from another made 10 miles away.
"And so what?"
came the query.
Dr. Northen undertook to
demonstrate that something could be done about it. By reestablishing
a proper soil balance be actually grew crops that contained an ample
amount of desired minerals.
This was incredible.
It was contrary to the books and it upset everything connected with
diet practice. The scoffers began to pay attention to him. Recently
the Southern Medical Association, realizing the hopelessness of trying
to remedy nutritional deficiencies without positive factors to work
with, recommended a careful study to determine the real mineral content
of foodstuffs and the variations due to soil depletion in different
localities. These progressive medical men are awake to the importance
of prevention.
Dr.
Northen went even further and proved that crops grown in a properly
mineralized soil were bigger and better; that seeds germinated quicker,
grew more rapidly and made larger plants; that trees were healthier
and put on more fruit of better quality.
By increasing the mineral content of citrus
fruit he likewise improved its texture, its appearance and its flavor.
He experimented with a variety
of growing things, and in every case the story was the same. By mineralizing
the feed at poultry farms, he got more and better eggs; by balancing
pasture soils, he produced richer milk. Persistently he hammered home
to farmers, to doctors, and to the general public the thought that life
depends upon the minerals.
His work led him into a careful
study of the effects of climate, sunlight, ultraviolet and thermal rays
upon plant, animal, and human hygiene. In consequence he moved to Florida.
People familiar with his work consider him the most valuable man in
the State. I met him by reason of the fact that I was harassed by certain
soil problems on my Florida farm which had baffled the best chemists
and fertilizer experts available.
He is an elderly, retiring
man, with a warm smile and an engaging personality, He is a trifle shy
until he opens up on his pet topic; then his diffidence disappears and
he speaks with authority. His mind is a storehouse crammed with precise,
scientific data about soil, and food chemistry, the complicated life
processes of plants, animals, and human beings -- and the effect of
malnutrition upon all three. He is perhaps as close to the secret of
life as any man anywhere.
"Do you call yourself
a soil or a food chemist?" I inquired.
"Neither. I'm an M.D.
My work lies in the field of biochemistry and nutrition. I gave up medicine
because this is a wider and more important work. Sick soils mean sick
plants, sick animals, and sick people. Physical, mental, and moral fitness
depends largely upon an ample supply and a proper proportion of the
minerals in our foods. Nerve function, nerve stability, nerve-cell-building
likewise depend thereon. I'm really a doctor of sick soils."
"Do you mean to imply
that the vegetables I'm raising on my farm are sick?" I asked.
"Precisely! They're
as weak and undernourished as anemic children. They're not much good
as food. Look at the pests and the disease that plague them. Insecticides
cost farmers nearly as much as fertilizers these days.
"A healthy plant, however,
grown in soil properly balanced, can and will resist most insect
pests. That very characteristic makes it a better food product.
You have tuberculosis and pneumonia germ in your system but you're strong
enough to throw them off. Similarly, a really healthy plant will pretty
nearly take care of itself in the battle against insects and blights
--and will also give the human system what it requires."
"Good heavens! Do you
realize what that means to agriculture?"
"Perfectly. Enormous
saving. Better crops. Lowered living costs to the rest of us. But I'm
not so much interested in agriculture as in health."
"It sounds beautifully
theoretical and utterly impractical to me," I told the doctor,
whereupon he gave me some of his case records.
For instance, in an orange
grove infested with scale, when he restored the mineral balance to part
of the soil, the trees growing in that part became clean while the rest
remained diseased. By the same means he had grown healthy rosebushes
between rows that were riddled by insects.
He had grown tomato and cucumber
plants, both healthy and diseased, where the vines intertwined. The
bugs ate up the diseased and refused to touch the healthy plants! He
showed me interesting analysis of citrus fruit, the chemistry and the
food value of which accurately reflected the soil treatment the trees
had received.
There is no space here to
go fully into Dr. Northen's work but it is of such importance as to
rank with that of Burbank, the plant wizard, and with that of our famous
physiologists and nutritional experts.
"Healthy plants mean
healthy people", said he. "We can't raise a strong race on
a weak soil. Why don't you try mending the deficiencies on your farm
and growing more minerals into your crops?"
I did try and I succeeded.
I was planting a large acreage of celery and under Dr. Northen's direction
I fed minerals into certain blocks of the land in varying amounts. When
the plants from this soil were mature I had them analyzed, along with
celery from other parts of the State. It was the most careful and comprehensive
study of the kind ever made, and it included over 250 separate chemical
determinations. I was amazed to learn that my celery had more than twice
the mineral content of the best grown elsewhere. Furthermore, it kept
much better, with and without refrigeration, proving that the cell structure
was sounder.
In 1927, Mr. W. W. Kincaid,
a "gentleman farmer" of Niagara Falls, heard an address by
Dr. Northen and was so impressed that he began extensive experiments
in the mineral feeding of plants and animals. The results he has accomplished
are conspicuous. He set himself the task of increasing the iodine in
the milk from his dairy herd. He has succeeded in adding both iodine
and iron so liberally that one glass of his milk contains all of these
minerals that an adult person requires for a day.
Is this significant? Listen
to these incredible figures taken from a bulletin of the South Carolina
Food Research Commission: "In many sections three out of five persons
have goiter and a recent estimate states that 30 million people in the
United States suffer from it."
Foods rich in iodine are
of the greatest importance to these sufferers.
Mr Kincaid took a brown Swiss
heifer calf which was dropped in the stockyards, and by raising her
on mineralized pasturage and a properly balanced diet made her the third
all-time champion of her breed! In one season she gave 21,924 pounds
of milk. He raised her butterfat production from 410 pounds in 1 year
to 1,037 pounds. Results like these are of incalculable importance.
Others besides Mr. Kincaid
are following the trail Dr. Northen blazed. Similar experiments with
milk have been made in Illinois and nearly every fertilizer company
is beginning to urge use of the rare mineral elements. As an example
I quote from statements of a subsidiary of one of the leading copper
companies:
Many States show a marked
reduction in the productive capacity of the soil * * * in many districts
amounting to a 25 to 50 percent reduction in the last 50 years * * *.
Some areas show a tenfold variation in calcium. Some show a sixtyfold
variation in phosphorus * * *. Authorities * * * see soil depletion,
barren livestock, increased human death rate due to heart disease, deformities,
arthritis, increased dental caries, all due to lack of essential minerals
in plant food.
"It is neither a complicated
nor an expensive undertaking to restore our soils to balance and thereby
work a real miracle in the control of disease," says Dr. Northen.
"As a matter of fact, it's a money-making move for the farmer,
and any competent soil chemist can tell them how to proceed.
"First determine by
analysis the precise chemistry of any given soil, then correct the deficiencies
by putting down enough of the missing elements to restore its balance.
The same care should be used as in prescribing for a sick patient, for
proportions are of vital importance.
"In my early experiments
I found it extremely difficult to get the variety of minerals needed
in the form in which I wanted to use them but advancement in chemistry,
and especially our ever-increasing knowledge of colloidal chemistry,
has solved that difficulty. It is now possible, by use of minerals in
colloidal form, to prescribe a cheap and effective system of
soil correction which meets this vital need and one which fits in admirably
with nature's plans.
"Soils seriously deficient
in minerals cannot produce plant life competent to maintain our needs,
and with the continuous cropping and shipping away of those concentrates,
the condition becomes worse.
"A famous nutrition
authority recently said, 'One sure way to end the American people's
susceptibility to infection is to supply through food a balanced ration
of iron, copper, and other metals. An organism supplied with a diet
adequate to, or preferably in excess of, all mineral requirements may
so utilize these elements as to produce artificially by our present
method of immunization. You can't make up the deficiency by using patent
medicine.'
"He's absolutely right.
Prevention of disease is easier, more practical, and more economical
than cure, but not until foods are standardized on a basis of what they
contain instead of what they look like can the dietician prescribe them
with intelligence and with effect.
"There was a time when
medical therapy had no standards because the therapeutic elements in
drugs had not been definitely determined on a chemical basis. Pharmaceutical
houses have changed all that. Food chemistry, on the other hand, has
depended almost entirely upon governmental agencies for its research,
and in our real knowledge of values we are about where medicine was
a century ago.
"Disease preys most
surely and most viciously on the undernourishment and unfit plants,
animals, and human beings alike, and when the importance of these obscure
mineral elements is fully realized the chemistry of life will have to
be rewritten. No one knows their mental or bodily capacity, how well
they can feel or how long they can live, for we are all cripples and
weaklings. It is a disgrace to science. Happily, that chemistry is being
rewritten and we are on our way to better health by returning to the
soil the things we have stolen from it.
"The public can help;
it can hasten the change. How? By demanding quality in its food.
By insisting that our doctors and our health departments establish scientific
standards of nutritional value.
"The growers will quickly
respond. They can put back those minerals almost overnight, and by doing
so they can actually make money through bigger and better crops.
"It is simpler to cure
sick soils than sick people -- which shall we choose?"
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