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Listen to rare audio recordings of the man who’s been called the Einstein of Nutrition, Dr. Royal Lee.

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The SRP Historical Archives Audio Series

New! Now you can listen to articles from our one-and-only Historical Archives. Check out the great preview samples here, and look for individual downloads as well as a CD collection of selected articles coming soon.

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Articles from Milk and Honey

By Edward A. Johnston, MD

Summary: This excellent report, a reprint from The Journal of the American College of Proctology, starts with a clear description of the all-important connection between vitamin complexes (as they are found in whole foods) and the endocrine system. "When we consider that vitamins in the food are the substances with which the endocrines are able to secrete their active principles, it is apparent that a glandular insufficiency may take place in the absence of vitamins....All of the ductless glands, the thyroid, para-thyroid, thymus, pineal body, pituitary, adrenals, gonads, pancreas, islets of Langerhans, and spleen must have one or more of the vitamins in order to secrete their vital fluids, and, if deprived of the vitamins, will atrophy and cease to function." Such events, Dr. Johnston says, are obviously bound to weaken the body and make it more susceptible to disease. "Stomach ulcers are probably the best instance of bacterial invasion primarily due to a lowered resistance resulting from a vitamin deficiency. Other instances of vitamin A deficiency, and often found in conjunction with infections of the intestinal tract, are infections of the eyes, tonsils, sinuses, lungs, buccal and lingual mucosa, and the skin." This is the Royal Lee Philosophy writ large. Reprint 2, circa 1940.

View PDF: Vitamins and Their Relation to Deficiency Disease of the GI Tract

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