MILK DIET AS A REMEDY For Ck ronic Disease BY CHARLES SANFORD PORTER, M. D. ELEVENTH EDITION 19 2 3 Copyright, 1905, 1908, 1911, 1913, 1915, 1916, 1918, 1921 and 1923 by Charles Sanford Porter, M. D. Preface to Third Edition Since the first publication of this work in 1905, two large editions have been disposed of, and another is required. This is especially gratifying, in view of the fact that the sale of the book has not been urged, except as one purchaser or patient would recommend it to another. The succeeding editions have not differed materially, in describing the method of treatment, except in the effort to make the directions more explicit and to provide for certain contingencies. The fact that I have a large correspondence with people who contem- plate taking, or have, or are taking a milk diet in some way has afforded me very valuable information as to their needs, and enabled me to emphasize, or make clearer, features which may not have been sufficiently plain for everyone in the earlier editions. Valuable contributions regarding the treatment are frequently offered me, and, after a thorough test, may be incorporated in the book. Unless otherwise credited, all the statements made regarding reactions, results and the method of operation of the treatment are from my own observation. Orders for the book have come from every part of the United States, from Canada, England and other foreign countries; translations in whole or in part have also been made into other languages. I hope the new book will meet with the same favorable unanimity that its predecessors received. C. S. P. Burnett, California, January 31, 1911. In preparing this edition, a few changes have been made in the text, a chapter added on High Blood Pressure (hard arteries), and more infor- mation given about diet after taking the treatment. I wish particularly to call the attention of physicians to the great benefit and permanent cure of hard arteries and high blood pressure by means of this treatment. C. S. P. Burnett, California, October 1, 1913. Preface to Fourth Edition Preface to Fifth Edition In a little more than a year another edition is required, and I take advantage of this fact to revise the book throughout. Additions have been made to many subjects. The history of the milk cure has been presented more extensively and credit given to early investigators. A chapter has been added on the subject of auto-intoxication, and the use of sour milks, and the lactic acid bacilli. Much new information will be found on the treatment of constipation occurring on a milk diet, and also some new facts concerning diabetes. C. S. P. Burnett, California, January 1, 1915. Preface to Sixth-Seventh Edition In these editions I have added new matter throughout wherever required to make the book what I want it to be—a practical working treatise on the subject. I can report continued and almost unvarying success in the cure of such diseases as Anemia, Dyspepsia, Dysentery, Ulcer of the Stomach, Hard Arteries with High Blood Pressure, and Nervous Disorders of the Heart. The chapter on After Treatment, as revised and enlarged, will be valu- able to all, whether they have taken the cure as I recommend or not. I hope every patient will study the book, not simply read it. C. S. P. Burnett, California, March 81, 1918. Cures by diet, and especially by the Milk Diet, are now being accom- plished throughout the world. At last the importance of dietetics in healing is generally recognized. In my opinion, it excels any other method in curing chronic disease. This edition has been largely rewritten, and numerous additions made. At least 18,000 patients have taken the treatment under my direction In the last 37 years. C. S. P. Burnett, California, August 25, 1921. Preface to Tenth Edition Preface to Eleventh Edition Diabetes can now definitely be added to the list of diseases cured by the milk diet. C. S. P. Burnett, California. March 10, 1923. TABLE OF CONTENTS Page PREFACE 5 TABLE OF CONTENTS 7 SYNOPSIS 14 INTRODUCTION 15 Erroneous Modern Diets—Devitalized Foods—New Dietetic Discoveries—Vitamines—History of Milk Cure—Used by Ancients, Russian, Swedish, German, English and American Physicians— Skimmed and Unskimmed Milk—Direct Absorption into Blood— Secretion and Composition of Milk—Living Cells—Wrong Methods of Using Milk—Milk Cure Simple but Must Be Done Right—Kind of Milk Important—Thousands of Cases Treated in 37 Years— Directions Must Be Carefully Studied. CHAPTER I. PRELIMINARY ARRANGEMENTS 25 Complete Instructions—Arrange All Details Before Starting— The Room—The Bed and Bedding—Furniture—Large Supply of Air Required—New Way to Ventilate Rooms—Sleeping Garments —Toilet Necessities—Graduated Milk Glass—Striking Clock— Visitors—Water Heaters—Bath Tub—Cannot Take Cold on Milk Diet—How to Handle Milk—Holstein Versus Jersey Milk— Cream and Mineral Contents—Fresh or Old Milk. CHAPTER II. REST 36 Reasons Why Necessary—Relaxation Essential to Cure— Growth While Resting—Reason for Warm Bath—Vital Organs 8 MILK DIET Page Get First Benefit—Other Parts Improve Afterward—Energy Stored Up While Resting—Improvement of Generative Organs and Nerves—Of Dilated or Prolapsed Stomach and Intestines—Of Kidneys—Of Heart and Blood Vessels—Quick Relief of Dropsy —Of Apoplexy . CHAPTER III. PSYCHOLOGY OF THE MILK CURE 45 No Suggestion or Faith Cure About This Treatment—Elaborate Apparatus or Frequent Examinations Unnecessary—Difference Between Sanitarium and Home Treatment—Discomfort or Pain While on Milk Diet—No Danger in Crowding Milk While Rest- ing—Do Not Make Changes in My Tested Method. CHAPTER IV. STARTING THE TREATMENT 50 Importance of Details—Success Depends on Faithful Following of Directions—Fasting—Fmits Allowed—Who May Omit Fast— Who Must Take It—Injury from Too Long Fast—Weighing— Measurements—Amount of Milk to Be Taken—Danger of Too Lit- tle Milk—Of Too Much—Starting Amount—Interval Between Drinks—Method of Drinking—Foods Allowed with Milk—Sleep— Digestion of Milk—Indigestible Curds—How to Warm Milk— Night Drinking—Milk for Weak Stomach—Skimmed, Separated, Diluted Milk—Disagreeable Symptoms—Preparation of Bath— Temperature Very Important—Ventilation of Bathroom—Wetting of Hair—Bathing During Menstruation—Time Required for Cure —Length of Time Milk Can Be Used—Effective Work While on Milk Diet—Ella Wheeler Wilcox’s Endorsement—Milk Diet While Working—Disorders Cured in Four Weeks’ Course—Crises During Treatment. CHAPTER V. REACTIONS DURING TREATMENT 72 Changes in Circulation of Blood—Quick Return of Pulse Rate and Blood Pressure to Normal—Record of 32 Abnormal Pressure CONTENTS 9 Page Cases—No Strain on Heart—Effect on Heart, Lungs, Kidneys, Muscles, Skin, Hair, Stools and Urine—Stimulation of Milk Diet —Rapid Improvement of Diseased Stomach and Bowels—Growth of Muscles—Frequency of Urination—Hyperemia or Congestion of Blood—Pulse Rate—Effect on Fever, Diabetes, Goiter, Catarrh— Gain or Loss in Weight—Controlling Diarrhea on Milk Diet— Sweating—Cold Feet—How to Change from Milk Diet to Ordi- nary Food. CHAPTER VI. DYSPEPSIA 95 Easily Cured by This Method—Varying Effect of Diet on Different Patients—Dislike of Milk Unimportant—Removing Odor from Milk—Hunger—Thirst—Craving for Sour Foods, Lemons, Tomatoes, Apples—Sweet Fruits Allowed—Amount of Sleep— Curing Insomnia—Defective Breathing—Oxygen a Food—Making It Too Easy for Stomach—Worthless Manufactured Cereal Foods —Causes for Dyspepsia and Starch Indigestion—Meat or Protein Diet, Without Starches, Best for Some People—Acid Fruits. CHAPTER VII. CONSTIPATION 105 Common Trouble—Due to Ignorance or Neglect—Study of Parts Involved—Peristalsis—Hemorrhoids — Laxative Foods — Unneces- sary Worry Over Constipation—Simple Cure While on Ordinary Foods—Use of Enemas—Massage—Proper Exercises—Effect of Milk Diet on Constipation—Preventing Constipation on Milk Diet —Fruit Fast—Buttermilk—Cottage Cheese — Medicines — Oils — Seaweed—Dilators—Cold Water Enemas—Color of Stools—Per- centage and Permanency of Cures—Special Remedies for Obstinate Cases or Those with Piles or Adhesions. CHAPTER VIII. CONSUMPTION 122 Gain in Weight—Improvement in Blood—Changes in Lungs— Coughing Crises—How Cavities May Decrease—Importance of Air 10 MILK DIET Page —High Altitude and Low—Climate—Danger of Crowded Places —Danger of Hemorrhage—Begin Milk Gradually. CHAPTER IX. CATARRH AND ASTHMA 12T Varieties—Catarrh and Hay Fever Curable—Certain Cases of Chronic Asthma Helped but Not Cured—Effect of Ocean Air. CHAPTER X. AUTO-INTOXICATION ‘ 130 More Common Every Year—Cause—Symptoms—Large Por- tion of Digestive Tract Becomes Poison Factory—Disease Only Affects Man—Catharsis—Milk Diet Has Cured Hundreds—Sour Milk as a Remedy—Metchnikoff’s Discovery—Bulgarian Bacilli— Useful Books on Subject—Various Lactic Acid Products—Medical Opposition to Simple Remedy. CHAPTER XI. RHEUMATISM 13T Easily and Permanently Cured—Why Treatment Not Used More—Crises—Elimination of Rheumatic Poison Slow but Sure, and Impossible to Make More on Milk Diet—Common Cause for Rheumatism, Gout, Bright’s Disease, Bronchitis, Asthma, Etc.— Stiff Joints — Arthritis Deformans — One Form of Incurable Arthritis. CHAPTER XII. VARIOUS DISEASES 143 Not Practical to Use This Treatment in Acute Diseases— Mental Disorders—Dislike of Milk Immaterial to Treatment— Dilated Stomach—Chronic Diarrhea—Sprue—Kidney Disease— Floating Kidney—Heart Disease—Anemia—Dropsy—Bladder Dis- ease—Stone in Bladder—Fibroid Tumors—Painful Menstruation— Improvement to Generative Organs—Diabetes—Skin Disease— Cancer—Pellagra Cured—Addison’s Disease—Hodgkin’s Disease •—Thyroid Gland—Locomotor Ataxia—Paralysis Agitans—Perni- cious Anemia Cured. CONTENTS 11 Page CHAPTER XIII. HIGH BLOOD PRESSURE 157 No Failure if Treatment Correctly Taken—Record of Cases Treated—Tobacco Harmful—Hardening of the Arteries—Cause of High Pressure—Aneurism—Embolism—Apoplexy—Paralysis— Relation to Life Insurance. CHAPTER XIV. EXERCISE 167 Absolutely Necessary After Milk Cure to Continue Benefits— Object of Exercise—Simple Exercises Taken Regularly Best— Special Exercises Without Apparatus. CHAPTER X,V. AFTER TREATMENT 175 Proper Foods—Drinks—Bathing—Clothing—Keep Skin Active —Friction Baths—Reasons Why Some Lose Benefits Gained on Milk Diet—Excessive Reading Prolific Cause of Strain and Nerv- ous Disease—Correct Glasses When Needed—Talking—Drinking Water—Meat Eating—Vegetables — Raw Foods — Machines for Preparing—Eggs—How to Take Milk in Ordinary Life Without Causing Constipation—Wheat—Nuts—Sour Milk and Buttermilk —Junket—Proper Combinations—Monodiet Cures—Grape Cure— Apple Cure—Tomato Cure—Meat Diet—Antiscorbutic Foods. HEIGHT AND WEIGHT TABLES 197 INDEX 198 DISEASE CAN ONLY BE CURED BY, AND THROUGH, THE BLOOD, AND ITS CIRCULATION IN THE LIV- ING PARTS OF THE BODY. ANY MEANS THAT IMPROVES THE QUALITY, THE QUANTI- TY, AND THE MOVEMENT OF THE BLOOD, WILL ASSIST IN ELIMINATING DISEASE. THE TREATMENT described in this book makes the pur- est and richest blood possible, and al- ways increases the amount and rapid- ity of the circulation, if too low, as in anemic conditions. In fever, exophthalmic goiter, and toxic conditions generally, with a high pulse, there is always a reduction of the pulse rate, by this method. Where the blood PRESSURE is too high, it decreases rapidly and per- manently. On the other hand, if the blood pressure is low, it invariably raises slowly to near the normal. SYNOPSIS Briefly stated the milk cure consists of the following factors: First Complete rest for all the organs of the body except those concerned in the production and circulation of the blood, and those connected with the elimination of waste and poisonous matter. Second An ample supply of the only food that will make an immediate large production of blood possible—milk. Third An unlimited quantity of pure air to oxidize and cool the blood, and carry off the expired gases. Fourth Warm water baths, to soften the skin, equalize the circulation, relax tense muscles, calm the nerves, regulate the body heat—and, last, but not least, When the body is ready for it, EXERCISE, to strengthen the muscles, expand the lungs, limber the joints, stimulate the circulation, increase the elimination, purify the blood, develop normal secretions, train the nerves and, gen- erally, to fix and make permanent the benefits acquired while restiner and buildiner un the bodv. Fifth INTRODUCTION More interest is being shown in diet and food now than ever before. The subject is being investigated from many viewpoints, but that of health is the most important. More really valuable information has been obtained regarding nutrition in the last few years than in centuries before. Dread diabetes has been conquered and in the proc- ess many valuable facts have been added to our knowl- edge of the metabolism of the body. Since the beginning of the present century there has been a continuous increase in the manufacture and use of degerminated and devitalized foodstuffs. The modern grocery exhibits long rows of shelves filled with pretty packages, boxes and cans, containing prepared foods that have been cooked, or sterilized, and packed, months or years before. Twenty or thirty years ago the grocer’s shop sold vegetables, cereals, fruits, nuts, oils, eggs, butter and milk in the natural condition as they came from the farm or producing point. Wheat flour contained some- thing more than white starch, cornmeal had the rich germ ground with it, oatmeal was what it purported to be, and not a steam cooked flake. Natural, unrefined sugar was in common use. Is it only a coincidence that today there is more digestive disorder than ever before ? Nowadays a person is fortunate who never suffers from indigestion, headaches, foul breath, nausea, gas, 16 Milk Diet constipation, and the more serious diseases that follow these symptoms. The excessive use of ready cooked cereals, sold in pasteboard packages, pasteurized milk, imitation but- ter, cold storage products, candy, chemically refined sugar, and canned foods of all kinds, deprives us of the vitamines which are present in natural foodstuffs. Animal life and vitality cannot be properly main- tained in the absence of these substances. Preparations made from animal glands and egg yolks, extracts of vegetables and oranges, and cultures of yeast and lactic acid bacilli are advertised and recommended by the manufacturers to restore the missing elements, but it seems wiser to return to a more natural diet rather than use the artificial outputs of chemical laboratories. Fresh milk has all the vital substances designated as vitamines, and besides is a perfect food containing every element necessary for the nutrition of the human body. Owing to these facts the milk cure is gaining a won- derful popularity. There are some who antagonize the use of milk as a remedy, perhaps from selfish interests, perhaps because they have obtained poor results from wrong ways of taking the milk. After 39 years use of the method described in this book, I am more confident ihan ever that it is the best cure for the conditions de- scribed as suitable for the treatment. Milk, and milk products, have been used and highly esteemed as food by all nations possessing mammalian animals since the earliest records of history. In normal times some of the older European countries consume two or three times as much milk and cheese per capita as the United States does. A good food is a good remedy, and, as disease is only a disturbance of the mechanism of nutrition, it is only Introduction 17 natural that the use of milk in ill health should be al- most as old as its use as a food in health. Hippocrates advised consumptives to drink large quantities of asses’ milk. Camel’s milk, and whey cures were practiced by the Arabian physicians. Homer called the Scythians Galactophagi, or feeders on milk, and Herodotus describes their methods of handling mares’ milk. In recent times the popularization of the milk cure has been largely due to the efforts of Russian and Ger- man physicians. Dr. Inozemtseff, author of a work on “The Milk Cure,” published in Moscow in 1857, treated success- fully, with the help of his assistants, over a thousand cases. Dr. G. L. Carrick, physician to the British em- bassy at St. Petersburg, translated a work “On the Milk Cure,” by Philip Karell, M.D., and published an article on the subject in the Edinburgh Medical Journal of August, 1866. Karell claimed to have treated successfully “hun- dreds of cases” of all kinds of dropsies, asthma, ob- stinate neuralgia, diseases of liver, and conditions of faulty nutrition. In all these he considers milk “the best and surest of remedies.” Karell does not attempt to decide whether the beneficial influence of milk in cer- tain illnesses is due merely to its nutritive qualities or to some occult medicinal virtue. He simply calls atten- tion to the fact that milk and chyle* resemble each other very closely, insists that milk must be taken at regular intervals, under the direction of an experienced person, in doses of from two to six ounces of skimmed milk, and •Chyle is the milky fluid contained in the lacteals of the intestine after the digestion of food. It is lymph plus digested food. 18 Milk Diet that the best results are only obtained when the diet is an exclusive one. F. von Niemeyer, Winternitz, Bremer, Kuhner, Cohen, Ebstein, Gomberg, Scheiber, eminent medical authorities, have all advocated the milk diet in the treat- ment of different chronic diseases. Professor Bauer says emphatically: “It is an indisputable fact that in certain diseases a methodical use of milk cure gives results such as can be obtained by no other treatment.” Dr. A. S. Donkin, an American physician, wrote an interesting article on “The Curative Influence of an Exclusive Milk Diet,” for the London Lancet, in 1876. In the same volume of this medical journal appears an article by a celebrated English physician, Dr. Johnson, making a plea for a greater use of the exclusive milk diet in certain diseases. He especially notes, “in num- erous cases of acute Bright’s disease, the speedy dis- appearance of the albuminuria under the influence of rest in bed, a few warm baths, and copious libations of milk.” He also describes some remarkable cures of inflammations of the bladder by the same treatment. The only apparent difference between the milk cures of these two physicians was that Dr. Johnson recommends unskimmed or whole milk, while Donkin prefers skimmed milk. Dr. Donkin makes this interest- ing statement: “Constipation is a sure sign that the treatment is agreeing with the patient, whereas diarrhea is a very untoward indication and extremely more apt to be induced by unskimmed than by skimmed milk.” He claims that skimmed milk is superior in the treat- ment of diarrhea of typhoid fever and dysentery, and more powerful in reducing dropsy than whole milk. Donkin also claimed that diabetes could he cured by large quantities of milk, and said that some cases could take as much as fourteen pints per day. Introduction 19 Referring to Dr. Donkins opinion of diarrhea while on an exclusive milk diet, I will say here that we do not regard it as unfavorable now, as there are perfect means of control which I treat of fully in another place. Pa- tients having a diarrhea on three or four quarts of milk are practically sure to make a cure, no matter what their ailment may be. Weir Mitchell, who had, perhaps, the greatest ex- perience of any American physician with chronic dis- ease, said: “It is difficult to treat any of these cases without a resort at some time more or less to the use of milk.” Professor James Tyson, in Journal of American Medical Association, June, 1884, recommends milk diet in diabetes, calculous disorders, Bright’s disease, dys- pepsia, obesity and nervous prostration in women. He notes total disappearance of uric acid sediment in the urine, and also that a persistent use of milk cured stone in the bladder. He says that in gastric ulcer no food other than milk should he permitted. Hr. Tyson also declares that no treatment that has ever been suggested in obesity, is half so efficient as a limited milk diet. Hr. L. Huncan Bulkley, physician to New York Hospital and New York Skin and Cancer Hospital, believes that milk can be absorbed directly into the blood through the lacteals. He considers it absolutely neces- sary that the stomach should be free from other foods when taking milk as a remedy, so that there may be no acid in the gastric juice. If acid is present milk is curdled and has to undergo the regular process of digestion. Hr. Bulkley gives pure, warm milk, without the addition of any substance whatsoever. If cream has 20 Milk Diet separated, it cannot safely be re-combined with the milk. His favorite plan seems to be giving milk one hour before meals when stomach is presumably alkaline, patient lying still for 15 minutes thereafter. Dr. R. H. Babcock of Chicago thinks milk thus taken may pass into duodenum and be absorbed from there. He says his results correspond with those ob- tained by Dr. Bulkley in regard to the efficacy of this method. From my own observations, extending over many years, I believe that the principal parts of milk can be absorbed directly into the lymphatic circulation and thence into the blood. This assimilation takes place principally from the small intestine. Milk is secreted directly from blood, and the fluid portion of milk is similar to, if not exactly the same, as blood serum, and no doubt capable of being taken into the blood without change. The finely divided fat par- ticles in milk do not need any elaboration to become the fatty portion of the blood. The carbohydrates (sugar) and albuminoids of milk can probably be assimilated without digestion, as v. Leube’s clinic proved these parts of milk could be readily absorbed from the colon when introduced as nutrient enemata. There is a small amount of fibrin in milk similar to the fibrin of the blood. Milk also contains a number of important soluble ferments, diastase, galactase, etc. Marfan thinks the milk ferments act as stimulants and regulators of nutri- tion and that they are identical in function with the enzymes elaborated by the various tissues of the body. Woodhead and Mitchell have shown that milk con- tains opsinins in even greater quantity than blood serum. Introduction 21 All milk from healthy cows contains cells, or leuco- cytes, precisely like the white blood corpuscles, and, I have no doubt that these cells are taken into our blood vessels and reinforce the cells already there, or replace those exhausted by disease. An important function of the white corpuscles is to eliminate disease germs or products from the blood, and hence they have been called the “policemen” of the blood, or scavengers. They are found in quantity wherever disease or inflam- mation exists in the body. The normal of these cells in our blood is about 7000 per cubic millimeter. In the newborn babe they are usually much less, but increase rapidly, and have been observed to go as high as 4-0,000 under the influence of the first feeding of milk. If more evidence of the direct absorption of milk leucocytes into blood were required, it can be furnished by the fact that the jugular vein in kittens that have just finished nurs- ing, is full of white blood, loaded with leucocytes. Considering the known living elements in milk, and the vital character of the remaining parts, it can readily be seen how the application of heat, or any preservative agent, will have a serious effect on its value. The use of milk in the diet for nearly all cases of chronic diseases, is advised by all the principal textbooks with which I am familiar. The mistake is made by many of them of combining other foods, even meats and eggs, with milk, and consequently they usually add the pro- viso “if it agrees.” Very few physicians understand the proper amounts of milk to be given, and the proper way to give it in order to assure assimilation. The method of preparing the patient for the milk diet, and his con- duct while taking it, had never been published, that I am aware of, previous to the printing of the first edition of this work, in 1905. 22 Milk Diet My first introduction to the possibilities of an exclu- sive milk diet was in 1884 while living in New York City. A friend was cured completely and permanently of a rather serious condition, by following the advice of a gentleman recently from Germany and familiar with the milk cures practiced there at that time. Other mutual friends adopted the same plan for the relief of various ills, and all with good results. Shortly afterward I took the “milk cure,” as we understood it then, for a condition bordering on nervous prostration. I not only overcame that condition, but was cured of hay fever, which had claimed me as an annual victim for seven or eight years, but has never since returned. From that time to the present, I have never ceased to advocate the milk cure, and, of the many thousands of cases of chronic disease that have taken the treat- ment in the manner I recommended, nearly all have been either cured or greatly helped, and very few have failed to receive benefit. Such remarkable results have, of course, resulted in extending the treatment throughout the country. Many physicians, and some sanitariums, have endeavored to use the method. I regret that many of these have made changes in the original plan, which was apparently too simple. Very many times doctors and other patients under my care have advised me to add something to the milk, or to the method of giving it, in order to make the process more mysterious, and more attractive to many people, and more lucrative to myself. They said that people who had suffered for years without relief, travel- ing to many health resorts, and to noted specialists, tak- ing expensive and elaborate treatments, would not easily be induced to use a method apparently so simply Introduction 23 as to be within the reach of almost every person, or household, without expert advice. While admitting the force of the argument, I have always replied that there was only one way to do the milk cure, and that I would go on to the end advocating that way. For thirty-nine years I have watched the results of this way, always willing to add anything of real benefit that would not interfere with the results we were already getting, always investigating methods of treatment that seemed to have merit, or that made claims to be able to do more, or even as much as we could, but, with the exception of the preparation of the patient for the milk diet, the regulation of the amount, and the method of finishing the treatment, it remains practically the same as when first introduced to this country. It is true that my experience has shown me what kind of milk gives the best results in certain disorders and what parts of the treatment may be omitted or modified in certain cases, and I may also say that I have spent a great deal of time investigating the why and wherefore, the reason for doing certain things, and not doing others, and the cause of certain symptoms and results that occur during a course of milk diet. This book is particularly intended for patients tak- ing the treatment—and those who are under my per- sonal care, or corresponding with me, must he perfectly familiar with it. For this reason it is made as brief and simple as possible, but it contains all necessary instruc- tions regarding the treatment. It must be read carefully before beginning the treatment, and again soon after commencing, unless the patient’s condition is such that 24 Milk Diet reading is unadvisable, when it should be read to them, if possible. The book is not large; the size has been kept down so that almost any invalid can hold the book, and read it, without too much physical or mental effort. Notwithstanding my efforts to keep the work small and compact, each new edition becomes larger than the previous one, on account of the addition of useful in- formation. Educated people read so much stuff not worth remembering, in the shape of newspapers, maga- zines and books, that they skim over useful matter in the same way, so that I fear many people will lose sight of the essential principles of the treatment as more details are added. It is necessary to give all the instruction that I can, even though some of it may benefit only one case in a thousand, because the number of patients depending on the book is constantly increasing. The book has taken a long time to prepare, because it had to be written between the almost constant calls of my daily work, and also because the contents comprise, almost entirely, my personal experience. My library on Milk is as complete as I can make it, but in the scores of books, pamphlets and periodicals on the subject, there is little to draw on that would be of practical use in this work. CHAPTER I. PRELIMINARY ARRANGEMENTS. BEFORE commencing a course of milk diet, certain preparations are necessary. These preliminaries must be arranged beforehand, because the treat- ment always includes complete rest, for a time, at least. The consideration of the apartment where the pa- tient is to remain is of first importance. It must be remembered that, no matter what the previous habits of the patient may have been in this regard, a very large supply of fresh air will he required, if not at first, within a few hours. A room may be used, and often is, but the best results, in my experience, have followed the use of outdoor bedrooms, such as pavilions, screened porches, roofs, sheds, leantos, or even a good bed with nothing over it. In most climates some protection is required from the rain, snow, sun, or wind. On the whole, per- haps there is nothing more satisfactory than a pavilion, partially boarded or latticed up on the sides, with a good water-tight roof, and insect-proof screen over the openings all around. Some of the openings should extend to the roof, or ceiling, and some of them should come down to the floor. It is the lack of these that prevents a room being equal to an outdoor place; no matter how many windows there may be, there is a dead space above the tops of the windows where warm air accumulates, and there is a space between the bottoms of the windows and the floor where the heavy gases, such as carbonic acid, lie more or less stagnant until stirred up by some breeze of unusual strength or direction. Dust is also deposited in these dead air spaces. Anyone 26 Milk Diet who has not tried living and sleeping in a space open from floor to roof, even on only one side, cannot realize what a constant difference there is between the air in such a place and the air in a room, no matter how well ventilated it may seem to be. A room is always more or less draughty, with the windows open, while in these outside places the circula- tion of air, while thorough, is almost imperceptible, so gently and easily is the change made. A great improvement in a room with sliding sash windows can he made by removing the sashes. Take off the thin strip called a “stop” on right side of win- dow. Pull out bottom sash and remove ends of sash cord which are usually knots stuck in holes in sides of sash. Holding these knots, lower the sash weight inside of the casing as far as it will go. Put sash away in safe place. Now lower the upper sash to the window sill, and remove from right side the thin stick, “parting bead,” which keeps the windows apart. Then the upper sash can be removed just as the first one wras. This gives the full size of the window opening, more than twice as much as wiien the sashes are in. They can easily be replaced in case of a storm. It is the retaining of the gases and other cast-off material from the body in the room that makes indoor life so much more unhealthy, compared with life in the open. The greater warmth, too, indoors, prevents the same degree of oxidation that is possible outdoors. The cooler the air, the better it is, as a rule, and the more oxygen we are able to absorb. There are probably other substances besides simple oxygen, in fresh air, that are necessary to our well-being. When you have decided upon a suitable location to stay in wdiile taking the milk, arrange for a comfortable Preliminary Arrangements 27 bed, preferably one with a hair mattress. A hard bed, or a bumpy one, becomes irksome before the skin has de- veloped the protecting pad of flesh that belongs over the bony points. The head of the bed should be toward the openings where the light and air enter. Do not make the common mistake of putting the feet out in the center space, in a current of air, and the head in some corner where the circulation is at a minimum. The reverse should be the rule. Beds with solid headboards or footboards should not be used. Procure an iron bed, or a couch or cot without any headboard. Of all things, do not attempt to sleep in a modern folding bed where the head is put in a box- like space, eminently more suited to the destruction of one’s health than to its restoration. The bed clothes should be woolen blankets by pref- erence, with cotton sheets, fastened at the foot, and fold- ing down from the head of the bed, so that the patient can easily turn down a fold or two when less covering is required. In certain cases where this is much perspiration, or exhalation from the body, it is a wise plan to use a set of bed linen not over twenty-four hours at a time, not nec- essarily increasing the laundry expense, but putting one change of linen to air while the other set is in use. Re- member that it is necessary to stay in bed all the time, except when bathing, or performing other necessary acts, and that the skin is an important breathing organ, and must not be surrounded by foul odors. The sleeping garments should be changed twice a day, morning and night. I think a gown is preferable to pajamas, because it is very important that there be no constriction around the waist. Garments requiring to be buttoned, or belted, around the waist, interfere 28 Milk Diet with the proper development of the organs contained in the abdomen, and also prevent, to some extent, ab- dominal breathing. I am explicit about these directions, because a very rapid growth and development will take place in the or- gans of the digestive system, the stomach, liver, intes- tines, pancreas, etc., and this growth is greater in the first week than during any subsequent period. It is dur- ing this first week that the success or failure of the milk cure is usually determined, and this growth, or develop- ment, MUST not be interfered with. If possible, the patient should be within easy reach of the toilet and bathroom. There must be no dressing to go outside the room to a toilet. Have a capacious slop jar in the room and a urinal to use in the bed, especially in cold weather. By having the jar near the bed, the urinal can be used, and emptied into the jar, without getting up, or exposing the person. A small table, or stand, about two feet high, is re- quired near the head of the bed, to set the milk can and glass on, and for such other small articles as may be required. A two-quart tin can, or measure, is the most conven- ient and best receptacle to keep the milk in at the bed- side. It is lighter than any pitcher, and unbreakable. Have two napkins to cover the milk can and glass be- tween drinks. Two glasses will be needed, marked in some manner to indicate 5, 6 or 7 ounces of milk. A ring can be scratched around a plain glass with a file at the proper point. An old established custom in the milk cure is that of using one glass for twenty-four hours, without washing. If the weather is very warm it is necessary to serve a clean glass with nearly every quart of milk, or the resi- Preliminary Arrangements 29 due remaining after drinking will sour the next glassful of milk. A clock must be located where it can easily be seen from the bed. Clocks striking the hours and half hours are a great aid in calling the patient’s attention to drink- ing time. Good clocks of this description can be pur- chased from two dollars up. Outside of the necessary articles mentioned, the less furniture there is the better it will be. Chairs for visitors are not particularly required, for there should be no visitors. If absolutely necessary, visits may be toler- ated, but never for longer than half an hour at a time. A daily warm water bath will be required and the arrangement of the bathing facilities is one of the things that requires careful attention. It is necessary for the patient to enter the tub while the water is somewhat cooler than the body, and then gradually warm the bath to the body temperature, or to such a temperature as will be entirely comfortable. This necessitates a reserve supply of hot water, which may be drawn on at intervals during the bath, as the water cools off. The ordinary thirty-gallon reservoir, used in connec- tion with a range in most households, is not often satis- factory, because drawing the necessary amount of hot water to prepare the bath leaves no surplus, and it is most annoying to open the hot water faucet and get cold water. However, if the tank is full of hot water, and the fire in the stove is kept going, it may work all right, but there must be hot water up to the end of the bath. The instantaneous gas heaters, if properly arranged, are sat- isfactory. If the heater is in the bathroom, it must have a flue carrying the fumes outside of the room. The best arrangement is to have a gas heater in connection with a 30 Milk Diet reservoir, preferably in another room, so that the hot water when not being drawn into the tub, will be col- lecting in the reservoir. There is serious objection to having the water heat- ing apparatus in the bathroom, unless the room is large and well ventilated. The heater uses up more oxygen than the lungs of several people would. Many fatalities have occurred in Southern California from instantan- eous heaters, causing the asphyxiation of the inmates of bathrooms, perhaps chiefly on account of the habit some people have of shutting the bathroom up tightly while bathing. The tub itself is a matter of considerable impor- tance. I have not yet seen a modern white enameled iron tub that seemed as satisfactory as the old copper tubs, chiefly on account of the shape. The iron tubs are moulded somewhat like a huge box, with flat bottom and vertical sides. Even the head of the tub where the bather’s head and shoulders rest, goes almost straight down, whereas the old style had a gentle slope about two and a half feet long, making a comfortable support for the upper part of the trunk and head. The copper tubs had a rounding bottom which fitted the body better, and did not require so much water to cover one, and the metal itself being thin, was rapidly warmed by the hot water, while the thick iron tubs now used require the expenditure of considerable heat simply to warm up the tub. The iron tubs stand up so high as to be diffi- cult for a weak person to enter, and serious accidents have occured on account of the bather slipping as he left the tub. Another objection is the location of the overflow so near the bottom that the tub will only hold a few inches of water. This latter fault may sometimes be remedied by unscrewing the fixture and covering the Preliminary Arrangements 31 outlet with a thin rubber sheet, or filling it up with putty. Sometimes the overflow may be stopped by sim- ply putting a piece of paper over it, when the force of the water will hold the paper tight against it. The tub ought to be deep enough and long enough to hold suffi- cient water to cover the shoulders when the patient is extended at full length, and for this purpose a six-foot tub is usually necessary. A five and a half foot, or even a five-foot tub, may be used by short people, or ladies, but the six-foot is best. A canvas head rest may be used, if necessary, or a rubber cushion, or hot water bag full of air, to rest the head on. The trouble with most ladies is that they object to wetting the hair, while men as a rule enjoy lying in the tub with the water up to their mouths, and it is best that all should do this. The patient should have a bathrobe to wear in going from the sleeping room to the bathroom, and a pair of easy slippers. Felt slippers are the best, as they do not require stockings, and are warm and comfortable. Hun- dreds of times I have seen patients, after taking a warm bath, leave the bathroom with only bathrobes and slip- pers on, go outdoors to their beds, in all kinds of Aveather, and I never knew any of them to “take cold.” In regard to milk, a few necessary general rules will be given here. What is required is good, clean milk as it comes from the cow, without the removal or addition of any substance whatsoever. Boiled, sterilized or pasteur- ized milk, or milk artificially preserved in any way, can not be used for this treatment. In well-managed modern dairies the handling of milk is so systematized that there is no particular trouble in keeping the milk sweet until used. Dairies that are not cleanly, or have not proper appliances, often use some means of preserving the milk, by stopping the 32 Milk Diet activity of the acid-forming bacteria. These bacteria are not dangerous to health, and the methods of restraining or destroying them are without effect on the bacteria of consumption, typhoid or other fevers that might con- taminate milk in certain places. Prolonged boiling will destroy any germ, but boiled milk alone will not sustain life in either the infant or the adult. Pasteurizing milk or heating to 150 F., or less, can have no effect on the pathogenic bacteria and renders it unsuitable for human use. Dogs fed on pasteurized milk only, are liable to have the mange and other disorders, while others of the same litter thrive on raw, sweet and sour milk. There are several chemical preservatives sold to dairymen by manufacturers who claim they are harm- less. They are prohibited by the laws of most states. Some of them containing borax are not exactly poison- ous in the amount one would ordinarily get in milk; but they render the milk much less digestible and in a weak baby or invalid adult might readily be the con- tributing cause of death. Others, like salicylic acid, or formaldehyde or formalin, are distinct poisons. There is no harmless preservative of milk; whatever prevents its decomposition will render it more or less indigestible. The manner in which milk is handled makes a great difference in its keeping qualities. Milk which is cooled and aerated immediately after being drawn, will keep for days; while, on the other hand, milk which is left to stand with the animal heat in it, will often be stale within twelve hours, and sour in less than twenty-four hours. Milk from Holstein cowrs is the best for the purpose, next that from Durhams or Shorthorns, and last that of the pure Jersey and Guernsey, or Alderneys, as the two latter breeds were formerly called. Milk from Jer- Preliminary Arrangements 33 sey cows may be used, but it should tbe skimmed after standing two to four hours to reduce the amount of cream. So important is this question of the kind of milk to be used in this treatment that I quote from an article by Professor J. Allen Gilbert, printed in the New York Medical Record, October 27, 1906, on “Choice of Cow’s Milk.” The italics are mine: “Holstein milk is characterized by fat globules of small and uniform size, separating slowly by the gravity method, churning slowly, and carry- ing very little color. Set side by side with milk of no richer quality but of larger fat globules, in a given time less depth of cream will rise. Hol- stein milk coagulates the most slowly of any, and on account of its small globules and their evenness in size it has a decided advantage in ease of absorption. “This breed can be traced back for two thousand years and was always famous for dairy purposes. In temperament these animals are quiet and docile, bulls as well as cows, the bulls exceptionally so. Instead of being held at bay with a long stick hooked in the nose-ring, they can usually be led out for exhibition at the end of a loose rope. Their robust- ness makes them specially resistant to disease, whereas the more delicate breeds, such as the Jersey, have sad tales to record from the ravages of such diseases as tuberculosis. “All in all, if one were choosing a human wet nurse he would look for just the characteristics in her that we find presented in a Holstein cow, viz., vigorous constitution, quiet, easy-going temperament, unin- fluenced by external disturbances, good glandular development, abundance of good milk, freedom from disease or tendency to disease, a good healthy child of her own, and good family history. “Whether we are to grant any such thing as a vitality peculiar to a milk or not is a disputed question. However, Professor Carlyle of the Wisconsin Experiment Station is quoted as saying that the Physicians’ and Surgeons Association of Chicago recommends the milk of a certain Hol- stein dairyman receiving 12 cents a quart because of some reason not understood it has more vitalizing power than any other milk they can get. “Those buying milk by the quart, sold at a uniform price for all breeds, will receive more commercial value by purchasing Jersey milk, for in so doing they get a milk with a higher percentage of solids. Where good digestion, adults eating a mixed diet, and highest commercial value per quart axe the only elements to be dealt with in choice of a milk, th,e Jersey is undoubtedly the preferable milk. WHERE INFANTS, WEAK DIGESTION, AND LARGE QUANTITY OF MILK ARE AT STAKE, THE HOLSTEIN LEADS THE LIST AND THE JERSEY BECOMES THE LEAST DESIRABLE FOR NUMEROUS REASONS. “It is a well-known fact that certain Jersey cows give milk so rich in fat that they cannot suckle their own young. It is at least to be 34 Milk Diet suspected that the trouble is not so much in the ‘richness’ of the milk as in the size of the fat globules. The smaller the globules of fat, the more permanent the emulsion, and also the less irritation to the gastro- intestinal tract. Also, the finer the emulsion, the easier the process of diges- tion and assimilation. “The ingredient of our food which costs the most, which has the greatest physiological value, and which is most apt to be lacking in ordinary dietaries is protein. Skim milk has nearly all the protein of the whole milk. By removal of the fat in the cream it loses half its fuel value, but practically none of the protein. What is left has all the value of the whole milk for building and repair of tissue, for the making of blood, muscle and bone, and half the value of the whole milk for supply- ing heat and muscular power. When the facts are fully understood, skim milk will doubtless be more widely utilized. “The average composition of buttermilk, which is practically sour skim milk, is quite similar to that of skim milk, though it contains slightly less protein and sugar and a very little more fat. The fuel value is about the same, about 165 calories per pint. An ordinary glass of buttermilk con- tains as much nourishment as a half pint of oysters or 2 ounces of bread, or a good-sized potato.” Many people anxious to gain weight think they should take all the cream possible. This is a mistake, as the fat in the milk does not normally make flesh in the body. The flesh built up on a milk diet is derived almost entirely from the proteins and carbohydrates, namely: casein, albumin, etc., and milk sugar. If the fat of a full milk diet was deposited in the body it would mean a gain of about half a pound of pure fat daily. The fat in cream has little or nothing to do with the cure of disease. Many of my best cases were cured on skim milk, even separator skim milk. The addition of dream to the milk diet is an innovation which I do not approve of. Milk contains all the salts necessary for the building up of every part of the body. It has iron, potassium, phosphorus, sodium, lime, magnesium, fluorin, etc., and altogether contains about twenty elements. Dairy milk, or milk from a herd of cows, gives a more even average of fat and other contents than the milk from one cow would. There is no advantage in Preliminary Arrangements 35 having one cow set aside for your use, unless by so doing you secure Holstein milk. The milk should be delivered fresh, morning and evening, about two-thirds of the total quantity in the morning, and one-third at night. In the cities the milk is usually ten to fourteen hours old before being de- livered. Many of my patients have taken the diet suc- cessfully under these conditions, but I think the average results are better with fresher milk. CHAPTER II. REST. THERE are a number of reasons why complete rest must be had, at least during the first part of this treatment. One very practical reason is the fact that many weak stomachs cannot retain the milk unless the body is lying quietly and therefore more or less relaxed. A stomach that has long been making an insufficient supply of blood is in a rut, and is disinclined to take more food, and thereby be compelled to make more blood. Practical experience has shown that if the body (and stomach) is kept as motionless as possible, the necessary amount of milk is much easier retained in the stomach and digested. The same principle holds good on a sea voyage. All old travelers know that lying down at full length in the berth until used to the motion of the vessel often pre- vents seasickness. Another reason is that naturally, in all animals, di- gestion and assimilation go on better while the animal is at rest, or asleep. With the whole body relaxed, there is not likely to be any tension on the valves or sphincters of the bowels, and consequently, movements of the contents of these organs are facilitated. Nearly all persons evacuate the bowels most readily in the morning after a good night’s rest, and very few people indeed have a regular move- ment in the afternoon or evening. The kidneys only do their best work while we sleep. It is a common experience for those who take time in the latter part of the day, either for a nap or simply Rest 37 to lie quietly and relax the body, to notice that as soon as the strain is taken off the external muscles, there is a rumbling and moving in the bowels which causes the contents to pass through some previously obstructed place. There is a very definite scientific reason why rest is beneficial and work harmful in cases of injury or sick- ness. Take the case of an injured hand, in which germs have entered the tissues. Here the system marshals all its forces to destroy the invaders. If these forces can be concentrated upon this one task and not expended in part by the energy necessary to produce work, the chances of ultimate victory are greatly enhanced. Na- ture gives an imperative hint that the limb should be kept quiet by making movements painful; and most of natures hints are well worth heeding. But the most important reason for resting while tak- ing the milk diet may be explained as follows: The treatment is taken to correct some function, or to de- velop some part of the body; something is wrong, or lacking, or needs rebuilding. In short, growth is neces- sary, and growth is always a function of rest. We may, by exercise, build up big muscles, but the growth even of muscles is performed between the periods of activity, for work always uses up energy and wears out cells. Continuous work, without relaxation, would be impos- sible for muscles or other tissues. The intervals of rest between the periods of work enable the blood to flow freely into the part and carry the needed nourishment to replenish the cells exhausted by the previous energy. Work may be the stimulant which causes subsequent growth, but in itself work is exhaustive, destructive. Recovery and recuperation can only occur during relax- ation; we grow while resting. 38 Milk Diet The body requires its night’s rest after its day’s work, and for the same reason a body weakened by a long period of strain, misuse, illness, must have a period of rest, in some measure proportionate to the period of wear. If, during this period of rest, there is an increased supply of nutrition and blood, we have the ideal condi- tions for rapid repair. With the wear and tear and waste of the muscular system stopped, the nervous en- ergy which usually directs it is saved, or diverted to more useful purposes. The voluntary muscles are useful as organs of locomotion, prehension, etc., but they are not vital organs. Men have lived minus all four limbs. In chronic illness it is the vital organs that we have to deal with, those concerned with digestion, nutrition, respiration, circulation, innervation, and depuration. [By putting at complete rest as many of the muscles as may be possible, we save a large amount of nourishment and nerve force that would otherwise be expended with- out any useful return. Every unnecessary drain must be stopped to allow the vital organs to rebuild and restore themselves. The more complete the inactivity of the external muscles, the brain and nervous system, and the sexual organs, the better prospect of restoring the normal functions of the other organs provided plenty of blood is supplied. I deem it an unfortunate, but unavoidable feature of the treatment, that the organs of generation almost im- mediately share in the general improvement, because it is undesirable, at this time, to spare any of the blood from the important work of reconstructing the digestive apparatus and the lungs (if there is a pulmonary dis- ease), and there are too many men who cannot restrain themselves. Some people are unhappy with a few dollars in their Rest 39 pockets and won’t be satisfied until all is spent, instead of putting it in the bank and accumulating a good work- ing surplus. I hope this simile will be understood and appreciated by married folk, and others. The success of the Weir Mitchell treatment is largely due to the complete rest prescribed for severe cases. For weeks these patients are not permitted to sit up, or sew, or write, or read. They are even fed by a nurse, and talking is prohibited. Complete rest on an ordinary diet usually means that massage will be required to move the bowels, but on the milk diet this is unnecessary, and unwise. No patient with dilated stomach, or prolapsed bowels, or piles, or prolapse of any organ, or high blood pressure, can be cured by the milk diet, if they are al- lowed to sit up, or walk around. My patients usually are allowed to read if there are no headaches, and the stomach is taking the milk with- out difficulty. But the reading should not be continu- ous. Read for ten minutes between drinks, then lay the book or paper down for fifteen or twenty minutes. Reading helps to pass away the time, and satisfies peo- ple who, without it, would want to be doing something more harmful. But read as little as possible, and never by artificial light. Talking is usually unnecessary and seldom bene- ficial. Don’t think because you are lying abed for weeks and keeping quiet that you will get rusty. I never knew the rest part of the treatment to do any damage; most of the patients are inclined to get up too soon, rather than stay abed too long. But they all store up energy while resting and the good effect is apparent as soon as they return to ordinary life. 40 Milk Diet Many people with tired nerves and poor stomachs cannot take a sufficient quantity of milk to do much good without being completely relaxed. But this state of relaxation is a hard one for some people to get into. They don’t want to go to bed, and when they do, they stack up pillows behind their backs, until they are al- most in a sitting position. They are losing half the benefits of the treatment, and the opportunity of a lifetime to take a complete rest. Isn’t it worth while to really rest for a few weeks if comparative comfort can thereby be secured for all the remaining years of life? To enable these folks to let go a little, to reduce the tension, the warm bath is of great use. In the warm bath only do some of them first learn to relax. It is sufficient for some people, to tell them to lie out flat in bed, breathe deeply a few times, and then, beginning with the head and neck, relax all the muscles of the body, so that if the various parts were lifted they would fall like logs of wood. When all the muscles are relaxed there is a pleasant sensation, almost like floating in the air. Sleep secured after getting in this state is far more restful than where one simply drops off from fatigue, with all the weight of the day’s work and cares distort- ing the body. But many cannot properly relax at first. Here comes in the benefit of the warm bath. It is not “weak- ening” for these strained, nervous cases, any more than sleep is, but it does permit them to relax. Nothing sup- ports the whole body so gently and easily as a good tub bath. I notice the insane asylums have grasped the idea, and many of them are fitting up bathrooms where nervous cases may remain continuously in the neutral bath for weeks at a time, eating and sleeping therein Rest 41 until the nervous system has recovered. The same method has been used since the world war to relieve the pain of severely wounded soldiers. Persons who have suffered extensive burns of the skin may be kept in the warm bath and avoid the use of opiates or oily dressings. The relaxing and soothing effect of the warm bath is due to several causes. It is sufficient to mention here the warmth, which relieves the body of its heat generat- ing function; the moisture, which is absorbed externally and inhaled internally; the cleansing and opening of the pores of the skin, the softening and removal of the dead epithelial scales; the growth of new capillaries; the relief of pain and soreness and the wonderful buoy- ancy caused by the equalization of the pressure on the surface of the body. No cabinet, or vapor bath, or elec- tric light bath can do what the warm tub bath does in combination with the milk diet. When the patient has learned how to relax the body, and really rest, I have little doubt as to the final result of the treatment. To illustrate the great difference in taking the milk diet, with and without rest, I obtained permission to quote the following case: Mr. Aubrey Parks, of Omaha, Nebraska, was at- tacked by acute nephritis, or Bright’s disease, about fourteen years ago. It ran on for several months and finally became chronic, with a great deal of dropsy, in spite of treatment in two hospitals and by several good physicians. He finally went to a sanatorium where the treatment consisted of a long fast, followed by an exclusive milk diet, a glass at a time, at frequent inter- vals, as I recommend. But, instead of resting, he was ordered to exercise daily, and went to the milk room everv half hour for his milk. The result was that while Milk Diet 42 his dropsy and albuminuria decreased somewhat on the fast, both increased markedly as soon as he started the milk diet. He was ordered to take another fast of about two weeks and then again took the milk diet, with no better results than before. Shortly afterward he wrote me about his case, with- out informing me, however, that he was not resting while drinking milk. I replied that I could not under- stand it, as I had never had a case of dropsy that was not cured on the milk diet. Mr. Parks finally made the long trip to California to take the treatment in the manner I recommend. On his arrival here September 1, 1909, he showed a condition of general anasarca, or dropsy, literally all over the body. He could not wear any of his regular clothing, hat, or shoes, on account of the swollen, water- logged condition of his skin. His weight was 1861/0 stripped, although he had been fasting several days during his journey. By my direction, Mr. Parks went to bed and remained there over a month, except for the time he spent daily in a warm water bath. He took from six to seven quarts of milk in twenty- four hours, and passed some days over ten quarts of urine. In fifteen days his weight had gone down to 127 —a loss of almost sixty pounds. From that time he slowly gained weight, up to 154 pounds of solid flesh, although the dropsy did not en- tirely disappear for several weeks, the ankles being the last to become normal. The albumin in the urine per- sisted for nearly the two months he was under my care, but finally disappeared. Mr. Parks, fourteen years after this treatment, is living in Long Beach and is quite well. He has just passed a rigid examination for life insurance. No medicine was used in his treatment. Rest 43 No case that I remember shows so emphatically as this one does the great benefit of rest while on the milk diet. Another case almost as instructive is that of Mr. S , of Iowa, who being attacked by a slight stroke of apoplexy, went to the same sanatorium that Mr. Parks took treatment in. Mr. S. knew that his arteries were in a diseased condition and this condition had no doubt caused the ruptured artery in the brain. He took the usual fast for about two weeks and then started in drinking milk, exercising vigorously every day, according to the system in vogue there. In less than forty-eight hours he suffered a second stroke which paralyzed his right arm and affected his speech—a re- sult I should have expected under the circumstances, as the fast could in no way have strengthened his blood vessels to withstand the blood pressure consequent to exercise on a milk diet. This man came to me as soon as he was able to travel, in January, 1909, and after a short fast he went to bed and took five and a half quarts of milk daily for four weeks. I never had the slightest fear of another hemorrhage, because he was not making any exertion that could be avoided. After four weeks of rest and milk diet, I felt confi- dent his arteries were in condition to stand exercise and gradually he began walking and using his arms. In less than a week, he could walk over two miles at a time, and soon after returned to his home. He wrote a few months afterward that he was resuming his occupation as a traveling salesman, and felt well. The amount of permanent benefit obtained from the milk cure is usually proportionate to the completeness of rest obtained. The less talking, reading, or muscular 44 Milk Diet activity, the better the results. As far as possible, do nothing but drink milk and sleep. There is no danger of developing laziness. Everyone, at the close of a properly conducted milk and rest course, is stronger, more active, more energetic, more ambitious and has a better mentality, than before the treatment. All the organs share in the improvement, including the eyes, ears, skin, and sensory nerves. CHAPTER III. PSYCHOLOGY OF THE MILK CURE. 1AM glad to say there is no “suggestion” or faith cure about the milk diet treatment. You put some- thing in, and you get something in return for it every time. I have had patients who took the treatment because friends urged them to, but without the least faith in it, except that they thought “milk wouldn’t hurt them,” and these people have made as good a cure as others who had perfect confidence in the method. All my patients will bear me out in the statement that no psychological influence has been exerted. The milk diet treatment is a simple thing, and within any person’s reach. It is not necessary to have grand build- ings, expensively furnished apartments, showy bath- rooms, glittering apparatus, or complicated appliances of any kind. What is needed is a quiet, cool and airy place, with a comfortable bed and the necessary toilet utensils. A vase of fragrant flowers is always accept- able, but showy ornaments or pictures or lace curtains are out of place. Nor is it necessary to have frequent examinations of the body, of the urine, the blood, or the secretions of the stomach, etc. After a long sanitarium experience, and listening to the histories of many people who had been the rounds of the various institutions, I am firmly of the opinion that these “examinations,” as usually con- ducted, are mainly beneficial to the staff of young doc- tors who get the fees, and incidentally, some experience. Of what possible use is it for the patient to learn one week that he has “hypoacidity,” and the next week that he has “hyperacidity,” if his dyspepsia is not relieved? 46 Milk Diet Such things may have their use in sanitariums con- ducted with the idea of having the patients stay as long as their money holds out, but they are not needed in a place where the treatment does what it is claimed to do, and patients are steadily improving. The average person will get better results in a well conducted sanitarium than he will at home, not espe- cially on account of more skillful treatment, but from causes that are well understood by all physicians. The change of air and scene, the making a regular business of the “cure,” the relief from home cares and worries, the getting away from the well-meant but often harmful solicitations of anxious relatives and friends, often the exchange of a stuffy, over-furnished, over-cur- tained, badly ventilated bedroom for a more healthful one, all these, and many other details, frequently assist in getting an invalid started on the upgrade. But more than all other things combined is the wonderful influence of the new blood made so freely on the milk. Rest and quiet, daily warm baths, and plenty of fresh, pure air, are necessary to most people in order that they may take and assimilate the proper amount of milk, and eliminate the waste products. It is not necessary to have a daily “health lecture,” during this treatment, but frequently, at the start, a lit- tle encouragement is helpful to keep the milk going down, because the senses of hunger and thirst do not cry for it, and it is easy to stop drinking for a while. The best “cures,” in my experience, have been the patients who started in with the full amount of milk, and took it continuously, without interruption other than during the sleeping hours. They did not stop because their stomachs seemed full or for a bad taste in their mouth. Some of them have disregarded nausea and even Psychology of the Milk Cure 47 vomiting during the first days of their treatment. Oth- ers have suffered headaches and backaches, and, later on, the dull, stretching pain in the stomach, kidneys and liver, which may accompany the rapid growth of those organs. Very many have had returns of the old pains of rheumatism, neuralgia, earache, toothache, pleurisy, peritonitis and inflammatory conditions of the genera- tive organs, which they may have had years before. These pains usually last about a day, but in chronic cases of long standing, where there has been consider- able growth of inflammatory tissue, and adhesions, as between the serous surfaces of the peritoneum and vari- ous organs of the abdomen and pelvis, the duration of the pain is somewhat in proportion to the length and seriousness of the disease. The pain is never as severe as it was in the original disease, except perhaps in some women at the menstrual period, and the pain may be stopped by stopping the milk, and thereby taking off some of the pressure, but that is usually the wrong thing to do, for it is the excess of blood that works the cure. I do not ask the impossible of any person, but I tell those who are inclined to stop the milk that the pain is only a necessary reaction in the diseased part; that pain means a growth of new capillary blood vessels in a place where the circulation has been stagnant, that the part or organ is growing larger, getting straightened out, com- ing back to the place where it belongs, stretching its fibrous and sensitive covering (as in the liver and kid- neys ), pulling on the contracted ligaments, or abnormal fibrous bands which have bound it down and interfered with its action, or stimulating the normal movement where it had been paralyzed. It is easier to understand why there should be pain Milk Diet 48 with a curative process than it is to explain how there ever can be a cure without pain. When I have told patients what, to the best of my knowledge and experience, is going on, I leave it to them to decide whether they can stand the pain, or discom- fort, with the expectation of a complete cure, or whether they will have to stop the milk temporarily, and perhaps stop the curative process when it is at its height. I encourage them by stating the fact, which I cannot emphasize too strongly, and which every one should re- member, that in thirty-nine years’ experience with this treatment, on all classes of patients, suffering from heart and kidney disease, brain and nerve disorders, blood clots, paralysis, inflammation of the bowels, ulcer- ative processes in various parts of the body, chronic specific disease, dilated stomach, or chronic poisoning due to lead, mercury, arsenic, or any medicine, I have never known of any injury or bad results from pushing the milk diet, with the single exception of the hemor- rhagic cases, such as those specified under consumption and high blood pressure. I would advise against giving the full milk diet to any patient who had recently been operated on, or who had a ruptured artery from any cause. I am not afraid to give the milk diet in any case of diseased blood ves- sels, or in aneurism caused by disease, for I believe the blood carries its own cure for these conditions, but COMPLETE REST MUST GO WITH IT. It is not possible in this little book to follow each case to the end. There is an infinite variety. If you have learned the great natural principles upon which the treatment is based and follow the directions I have given, you will be ready for any condition which may arise. Psychology of the Milk Cuke 49 Don’t leave out some portion which you think is un- necessary, nor add something to it which has helped you under other circumstances. Try my way first. Those who take a full milk diet without resting, and fail to cure their disorders, should wait some time before taking the treatment in the proper way. It is best for them to lose the flesh they gained even if they have to wait several months, or take a long fast, before trying my method. CHAPTER IV. STARTING THE TREATMENT. IN SEVERE cases of illness, the success of the milk cure depends on the faithfulness with which the de- tails are followed. Some of these details often seem unimportant to those who know little of the treatment, but, in any case, where a successful result has not been obtained, it has always been easy to point to faults of commission or omission. » It is true that many people have derived great bene- fit from a milk diet taken otherwise than as I advise, or only partially following my instructions, but I believe that the plan I give herein is one that is always success- ful, enabling the patient to take the proper amount of milk, and secure the desired results, without any danger. Before commencing the milk diet, it is usually advis- able, and often necessary, to take a fast, from ordinary foods. For the ordinary case, where the digestion is more or less impaired, and particularly where constipation is present, the fast should continue at least thirty-six hours, but the patient is allowed to eat ripe fresh and dried fruits (except bananas) in such quantities as may be eaten with a relish, and as much water may be taken as possible with comfort. Diabetics should fast for five days, not even eating fruit. While I have started patients on milk only five or six hours after their last meal, sometimes I have re- gretted it and found that a day’s fast would have saved time. If there is a class of patients who can do without the fast, it is the thin, weak, anemic people, such as con- Starting the Treatment 51 sumptives, neurasthenics, etc., especially those whose bowels are in the habit of moving freely every day. Such patients take milk greedily; they soak it up like a sponge, there is no initial constipation nor nausea, and the rapid increase in circulation causes a quick elimina- tion of the impurities in the blood and bowels. On the other hand, those who are stout, plethoric, rheumatic, gouty, dropsical, constipated, or who have had skin or blood disease, diabetes, headaches, coated tongue, prolapsed or dilated stomach, or any displaced organ, should take at least one day’s fast, and many people will be benefited, and gain time in the end, by extending the fast over several days. Those who are not accustomed to fasting periods are usually agreeably surprised to find there is no particu- lar inconvenience to this part of the program, and when the time comes to start in drinking milk, it goes down with a relish; the stomach makes no objection, and the bowels move naturally. Another important considera- tion is the fact that the organs of digestion are, so to speak, caught at low tide, at their minimum bulk and activity, and building up rapidly in size and function, as they do on the milk diet, while the mind and body are in a state of as complete rest as possible, there is a natural tendency to make good cells, good tissues, and healthy organs, and to overcome any abnormal habit or loss of natural function that may have been contracted by any organ. During the fast it is not necessary to take rest, or refrain from the usual work or habits; in fact, I think most patients are benefited by active exercise the day before commencing the milk. A few months ago I received a letter from a young lady magazine writer, who had taken a course of milk 52 Milk Diet diet, after a fifteen days’ fast. She wished me to tell her of some way to prevent “decay of the teeth,” while on the milk diet. She claimed that cavities had formed in the teeth, not only in her own case, but also in the cases of a well known author, and his family, who had all taken the milk diet, after excessively long fasts. I was glad to be able to inform the lady that what- ever deterioration of the teeth she had experienced, was entirely due to the fasting period, and not in the slight- est degree to a milk diet. Some of her friends had fasted several weeks, until they were extremely emaciated, and, I believe, they had taken the milk rather irregu- larly, and usually started on only three or four quarts per day. In all my experience I never knew of anyone suffer- ing the slightest damage to their teeth, during, or soon after, taking a milk diet. In my own case, my teeth were in bad shape before I took the treatment, and I had had a great deal of dental work done, but for twenty years afterward no dentist saw the inside of my mouth, as it was unnecessary. Several experienced den- tists who have taken the milk cure fully agree with me in the belief that it is a great benefit to the teeth, either in young or old people, and that it can cure Riggs disease, or pyorrhea. Milk has all the elements necessary to build teeth with, and in fact, it is on an exclusive milk diet that babies grow teeth more rapidly, and more perfectly, than they ever do afterward, on any diet. Speaking of these long fasts, two, three and even four or five weeks long, I must say that I never saw any case that showed permanent benefit from them, and I certainly have seen a number of people who had hope- lessly wrecked their health and even their minds by this Starting the Treatment 53 unnatural starvation. Indeed, the mental condition of some of these patients who came from “fasting sani- tariums,” was pitifully weak. Perhaps this condition was present before they fasted, and possibly it was ow- ing to this fact that they were induced to continue the fast so long. I think I never ordered a longer fast than five days, but several years ago a young man insisted on taking a two weeks’ fast, under my observation. It was interest- ing and instructive to me, as I have been unable to find out from any book, or publication, recommending long fasts, just what happens to the functions of the fasters. This man remained in bed about two-thirds of the time, and at other times was taking rather long walks, about five miles daily. He took some light exercises sev- eral times daily, sat in the sun, read, etc. He had no serious disorder, was well muscled and nourished, but had a tendency toward constipation, and some lack of vigor not uncommon in men past thirty. About the third day of his fast, he was rather ir- ritable and nervous and felt uncomfortable, but not hungry. After that he seemed fairly contented, except on the days when his bowels did not move, and on these days, or rather the next morning, his temperature and Mood pressure would show a considerable drop, while the pulse was usually higher at the same time. He had difficulty in keeping warm, although the weather was mild. I could not see that anything was gained by the fast beyond the fifth day, although he responded quite well to the milk diet that he took following the fast. During his fast he had a daily warm water bath, drank warm or hot water, and slept outdoors, with hot water bottles to make him comfortable. 54 Milk Diet On the tenth day he took the juice of one orange; on the eleventh day the juice of five oranges, and the next day took two and a half quarts of full milk. Enemas were used several times to move the bowels, until he started on the milk, when the bowels began to move almost too freely. His vital functions showed the following reactions: Mouth Ounces Day Temper- of Bowels Weight Pulse Blood ature Water Moved Pressure 1 98.4 54 1 1193/4 66 130 2 96.6 60 1 116% 70 122 3 95.4 68 0 114% 64 122 4. 94.8 68 1 112% 74 108 5 94.6 60 1 111 78 110 6 96 60 1 109% 74 92 7 50 1 109 60 100 8 95 52 0 108% 80 92 9 95.5 42 1 107 81 90 10 96.5 30 0 106% 82 86 11 96.8 milk 1 105% 70 106 12 95.4 80 0 105% 72 94 13...... 112 2 106 70 94 14 96 128 3 107% 72 94 15 96.2 144 2 109 74 98 16 96 160 1 109% 75 104 17 98.1 144 3 111 72 100 18 98 144 3 112 76 110 19 97.4 144 2 112% 80 112 20 ...... 98.6 48 and 1 meal 2 113% 80 114 On account of the laxative effect of the milk a few dates were given with the milk, after the 15th day. In beginning the diet, take the weight in the morn- ing, with as little clothing on as possible. Make a list of what you wear, and at the end of the week, wearing the same outfit, weigh at the same hour of the day. More exact results are secured by emptying the bladder each time before weighing. Measurements can be taken of the limbs, hips, waist, neck and especially of the chest, both expanded and contracted, and comparisons made from time to time. Starting the Treatment 55 In regard to the amount of milk to be taken, I will make the following statement : The average adult, when consuming daily two to four quarts of milk containing 4 per cent of butter fat and 9 per cent of other solids, will not lose flesh; with another quart or two they will gain weight, and with a still further increase of a pint or two they will secure the necessary energy and stimu- lation to throw off disease. There are several arbitrary rides as to the quantity necessary, such as taking an ounce and a half of milk for each pound of the normal weight or the highest weight in health, or, taking a quart of milk for every foot in height, but none of these will fit all cases. They are, however, a useful guide, especially in estimating the amount to be given children, when the first rule can be safely followed. The last thousand cases that I have had under ob- servation have averaged about six quarts of milk daily, containing about 2 per cent of butter fat, and 9 per cent of solids not fat. The males usually go over that amount, and the average female patient will take slightly less. Lord Bacon in his Aphorisms says, “Many persons declare that they cannot take milk as a food, and the reason is that they do not take enough.” Dr. Stephen Smith of New York, in Dietetic and Hygienic Gazette, says his childhood experience at the farmhouse gave him a clew to the solution of Bacon’s unexplained maxim. Noticing that in making cheese the operator weighed first the milk, then the “rennet,” and recorded the result, he was led to inquire why so much accuracy, and was informed if there was too much “rennet” for the milk the curd would be so hard that it could not be pressed into a cheese, and that if there was too much milk for the 56 Milk Diet “rennet” the curd would be so soft that it likewise could not be formed into shape. A very soft curd is necessary for digestion, while a hard curd prevents the penetration of the digestive fluids. Hence it is easy to see why it is best to take plenty of milk with this treatment. It is wrong, if not positively dangerous, to attempt the exclusive milk diet on any amount of milk less than that required to noticeably stimulate the circulation and promote body growth. A possible exception might be made in the case of convalescents from severe, acute fevers, where a few glasses of milk daily might keep them going temporarily until the ability to digest solid food was recovered. Even in those cases, water would be a safer drink, and probably would do as much good. There is no half-way method of taking the milk diet for people who have much the matter with them. Enough milk must be taken to create new circulation, new cells, and new tissue growth, and cause prompt elimination of the waste and dead matter that may be poisoning the system. A patient should start with the full amount of milk; cases that begin on a smaller quantity and try to work up to the proper amount, often fail to get the best re- sults. They get the stomach in the notion of taking three or four quarts, and then find it difficult to increase the amount, while those who start on, say, six quarts daily, have little or no trouble after the first day or two. In beginning in this way we take the stomach by surprise, and as the milk keeps coming, the stomach is compelled to dispose of it, and soon does so, in the natural way, without difficulty. It is rather common for patients to say, the afternoon of the first day, that they feel so full they cannot take another glass, but as they Starting the Treatment 57 continue taking the regular quantity, ways and means are provided, and the sensation disappears the same day or that night, and does not return. On the contrary, if you humor the stomach, and stop when it desires you to, you will likely have to repeat the whole process the next day. It must be remembered that stomachs of this kind are not normal, and have been out of condition so long that they are not competent judges of what is best for them. When milk continues to come in and the stomach be- comes over-distended, the lower outlet opens and allows some of the contents to pass into the intestine. This is desirable because milk can be perfectly digested in the intestine and the process stimulates and improves intes- tinal activity. Undoubtedly this action goes on in the case of the suckling babe and assists in rapidly develop- ing its dormant digestive functions. If other food were taken with the milk this intestinal action would not take place satisfactorily, but with milk alone, digestion and assimilation may go on throughout practically the whole length of the alimentary canal. The addition of even a cracker to the milk seems to cause the stomach to hold all its contents for hours without discharging much into the intestine. Fruit does not have the same deterrent effect when eaten with milk, but it is not advisable to use fruit during the first few days of the start. On the morning the milk diet is commenced, the patient remains in bed and takes the first drink as soon as the milk is available, but starting on the even hour, or half hour, and takes the same amount every half hour. The next, the following day’s drinking begins as soon as the patient is awake in the morning, using the 58 Milk Diet milk supplied the previous evening. The amount of milk taken in twenty-four hours is caleulated from the time the first glass of the new day’s supply is taken, until the same time the next morning. If six quarts is the daily amount, use a glass marked to contain six ounces; if seven quarts is the allowance, take seven ounces in a drink. If five and a half quarts are taken, the glass should hold five and a half ounces, and so on. Using these amounts there will be thirty-two drinks taken in twenty-four hours. If the first drink is taken at 6 a. m., and none are missed, by 8:30 p. m. thirty drinks will have been taken, two to be taken any time in the night when awake. This is the only way that such an amount of milk can be absorbed by a weak stomach and it IS always ab- sorbed, digested, or discharged, where the directions here given are followed. It is necessary to be exact as to the time and quantity taken. Each glass should be sipped slowly, taking sev- eral minutes to finish it. The milk must be mixed witli the secretions of the mouth. Do not gulp it, or let it run down the throat, as you might water. Now and then I come across a patient who will take long draughts of milk, say two ounces at a pull, but drawn into the mouth in a rather small stream. They are young people with active salivary glands, and doubtless the action of suck- ing the milk through a small mouth opening at the same time draws saliva into the mouth. Such patients say the milk tastes better to them taken in that manner than it does where taken in small swallows and “swished” around in the mouth by the tongue, but the latter is the safest way to start on. A straw, or glass tube, or drinking cup may be used. Many patients sleep more than half the time. If Starting the Treatment 59 asleep when drinking time comes, take your glass when you awaken, but do not try to make up for lost time. Continue thirty minutes apart. Milk is supposed to require about one and a half hours for digestion, and all dietetic plans before this have allowed at least that much time between meals. I use the half-hour interval because it gives the best results. Milk is probably curdled as soon as it arrives in the stomach; the sugar, albumen, salts and water begin to be absorbed imme- diately, other portions are passed on to the intestines, where the fat is quickly absorbed by the lacteals. The nitrogenous portions may not be taken up into the blood for twenty-four hours. So it is useless to set any par- ticular time for the digestion of milk or other food. Doubtless a part of the milk will still be in the stomach at the end of thirty minutes, but its mixture with a fresh portion has no bad effect. On the contrary, it works well in practice. A patient, in describing the effect, once said: “After fairly started the first glasses seem to pull the others after them by suction.” If an invalid’s stomach is very weak, or particularly deficient in the digestive juices, and especially if the milk is taken too rapidly, tough curds, which are slow and hard to digest, may be formed in the stomach at first. In the vomit of persons who were drinking quan- tities of milk too quickly, or at too low a temperature, I have seen these cheesy bodies so large and firm that it seemed impossible that they could have come up through the oesophagus. Where the conditions that I recom- mend as to rest, bathing, air and the small, frequent and regular drinks of milk have been followed, I have never known of these curds being formed in such amounts as to prevent their digestion, with the exception of a few 60 Milk Diet very weak people who were attempting to take their milk too cold. It would be a sad mistake if we were to give up the idea of a milk diet because of a few curds in the stomach at first. It is also a mistake to peptonize the milk, or to add anything to it, to make it easier to digest. Let the fact be recognized that the fault is with the stomach and not with the milk. It is purely a functional fault and must be corrected, and, when the stomach is able to han- dle the milk right, it will also be able to digest ordinary foods as well. There is seldom any difficulty in taking the milk after the first day or two if the start is made under proper conditions, and, after that, all that is necessary is to continue building up the digestive organs and the system generally by three or four weeks of this plan of treatment. I usually start patients on milk which is near the room temperature, or at least not below 60 degrees F., but if there are symptoms within the first two or three days of indigestion, distress in stomach, nausea, or vomiting of thick curds, the patient goes on warm milk immediately and does not take any cold milk for several days. In cold weather, if any trouble of this kind is an- ticipated, it is better to start on warm milk at the begin- ning, but in most cases, especially in mild weather, it is unnecessary to warm the milk. On cold nights, if drinking the cold milk prevents the patient getting to sleep again, provision should be made for warming it. The most satisfactory way of warming the milk is to have a pan containing about three inches of warm, almost hot, water, and set each glass of milk in it for Starting the Treatment 61 two or three minutes until it is warmed through. The milk ought to be about blood heat, although it can be heated in this way to 115 degrees without harming it, but the milk must not be left long in the water, and must be taken immediately. No more than one glass can be heated at a time. The most convenient way of keeping the pan of water hot is a small oil stove, kept burning continuously at such a heat as may be necessary. An electric plate can be used. If the patient has no nurse the whole arrangement must be set near the bed so the patient can prepare the milk without getting up. Tak- ing this warmed milk, according to the other directions, indigestible curds are never formed. Do not let these patients take a glass of cold milk early in the morning, as it might affect them all day. It is not practicable to use thermos or vacuum bot- tles to keep warm milk in all night because the milk would spoil, but a bottle of hot water, or several of them, can be arranged for the night, and a glass of milk warmed at any time by emptying the hot water into a small pan, and setting the glass in it. The secretions of the mouth may have no digestive action on milk, as there is no starch in the latter, but the mechanical effect of the addition of the fluids is im- portant. Outside of the milk cure, some weak stomachs can take milk diluted with water, and assimilate it, where straight milk disagrees. Infants are usually given milk largely diluted with water, but a healthy infant can generally take pure milk without trouble. In any case the water should be gradually reduced and omitted as soon as possible. Skimmed milk is easier for a weak stomach to digest than full milk. Milk from which the cream has been extracted by a centrifugal separator just after milking, is better for dietetic purposes than 62 Milk Diet ordinary skim milk (except for diabetics) and either is preferable to milk diluted with water. The taking of at least one or two drinks during the night is a valuable assistance in getting down the neces- sary quantity of milk. Constipated people should never omit this. It is not necessary to give the stomach a rest while taking the milk cure. It does not need a rest on an exclusive milk diet any more than a baby’s stomach does. Other organs are resting, but the stomach is being built up to a state of maximum efficiency. It is very unwise to omit drinking the milk at a regular time be- cause you don’t feel like taking it. If the stomach has been out of order for a long time, there may be a good many disagreeable symptoms, such as bad taste in the mouth, thick coat on the tongue, gas on the stomach, with considerable pain, nausea, and even vomiting, but none of these should prevent the patient taking the regu- lar drinks. The omission of a glass or two, instead of making one feel more comfortable, really has the oppo- site effect, because the constant, regular procession of milk through the alimentary canal is interfered with, and it begins to “come hack,” when, if the milk was kept going down, it would carry the gas down with it into the intestines, where it belongs. The acidity of the stomach is also increased by interrupting the regular drinking. If, in a case of this kind, the milk is stopped for some hours, all disagreeable symptoms cease, and the patient will find he has a better stomach than he had before starting the treatment, hut the cure has only been a partial one, and it may be even harder to get over the critical point next time. It takes a long experience in this work to give one the necessary confidence to tell a patient to continue the treatment under these circumstances, hut it is an Starting the Treatment 63 absolute fact that I have never seen any harm result from sticking to the diet (while resting), and the troubles are only the natural explosions due to the revo- lution going on in the stomach. If there is any better way to cure an old chronic case of indigestion, with a shriveled up, weakened and almost juiceless stomach, I have never discovered it. If the patient is lacking in will power, and cannot, or will not, take the regular amount of milk each time, it is a great deal better to take half a glass than none, and resume the full amount at the earliest possible oppor- tunity. Fortunately, there are very few people who have such a hard time on the milk diet, and they are most all elderly people who have been in ill health for many years. But even in this class of cases, less than two per cent have failed to carry on the treatment to a satis- factory result. The patient must have a warm bath daily, and it is usually taken in the forenoon. When there is any tend- ency to insomnia the bath can be given in the evening and usually has a good effect in overcoming that trouble. The first bath should last only fifteen or twenty min- utes, increasing the time about fifteen minutes every day until the patient is staying in the water at least one hour. Use no soap in the bath. These three items in regard to the temperature of the bath water must be remembered: Start slightly below body temperature, Increase to the body temperature, Finish almost hot (but never hot enough to cause dizziness). The bath should be prepared with a temperature of 94 or 95 F., and, as soon as the bather becomes accus- 64 Milk Diet tomed to this sudden change from the air temperature, he should gradually add hot water until he feels per- fectly comfortable, neither hot nor cold. The thermo- meter will then indicate about 98 or 99, although people differ several degrees in their sensations. The tempera- ture must be kept at this point until nearly ready to leave the bath; then hot water should be added to pro- duce a thoroughly warm feeling throughout the body. In very hot weather I have found it wise to reduce the temperature of the bath at the start a few degrees— to abstract heat from the body instead of adding it. The principle to be followed is to keep the patient en- tirely comfortable, and if, for any reason, he is not com- fortable, he should get out of the hath. Having the water too hot on entering will cause a slight attack of indigestion, in the same way that a hot bath affects one when taken too soon after a full meal, because the blood is drawn to the skin, and away from the internal organs. The bathroom must be ventilated in every way pos- sible, and the milk taken at the regular time while bath- ing. Ladies who object to wetting the hair can wear rub- ber bathing caps, but it is better to do without them. The circulation of the blood in the scalp is so much greater than usual that the warm skin dries the head rapidly and there is no discomfort where the hair does not have to be “put up” immediately. With very serious cases it is better to cut the hair to a convenient length; it grows rapidly and will be much stronger. In any case the hair ceases to fall out, for it responds quickly to the general condition of the body. Regarding bathing by females during the menstrual period, I will say that I have never known of any harm- Starting the Treatment 65 ful results from the practice, but if ladies prefer, the baths may be omitted for a few days at this time. The following item in this connection is from the Nursing Times: A cold bath or sea-bathing will sometimes cause the suppression of the menses, but this does not apply to the ordinary warm bath which so many women quite erroneously consider should not be taken during the progress of a menstrual period. There is not the slightest justification for depriving oneself of this source of comfort and cleanliness. It can do no possible harm.—Nursing Times. One need not be afraid of putting the ears under water. If the eardrum is perforated the ear can be plugged temporarily with cotton. I have seen deafness unexpectedly cured by the combined diet and bathing while undergoing treatment for other diseases. The proper way to take the bath is to have enough water to submerge all of the body except the face and lie at perfect ease with all muscles relaxed and the shoulders supported by the sloping head of the tub, or some contrivance such as a water bag, air cushion or canvas strap. Do not keep the head bent forward at an unnatural angle to keep it out of the water. Breathe deeply and occasionally sink the face under water, closing nostrils, if necessary, with the thumb and finger. On finishing the bath do not use cold water or the shower bath, and if possible avoid draughts of cold air, not from any danger of “catching cold,” but to prevent the stimulation to the skin. The reasons for giving baths of this description, and the benefits derived from them, will be explained in an- other place. I will only say here that I would not under- take to give the milk and rest cure without the aid of these baths. On getting out of the tub, the patient should dry himself with a soft towel, without unnecessary rubbing, 66 Milk Diet or exercise, put on his bathrobe, and return at once to bed. Weak patients may have the aid of a nurse in dry- ing the skin and returning to their apartments. I think the minimum time for a milk diet course should be four weeks. Three weeks should be devoted to the rest cure, and the remaining week will be sufficient to gradually get the patient up, and on solid food. In a considerable number of cases patients may continue using milk as a diet, if their circumstances permit, after resuming their occupations, or ordinary habits. I have letters from different people who state that they have lived on milk for long periods, often several years, in one case twenty-one years, in another fifty years. All these persons began the use of milk for some serious ailment, and yet every one of them seems to be in a state of vigorous health and vitality now. The case of Dr. Herman Schwartz, an Austrian physician, who has lived on milk exclusively for twenty-three years, is inter- esting, as from all accounts he is in the best of health and strength. He is said to take three gallons daily. One of the best public speakers on the Pacific Coast has lived wholly on milk for four years. I have just received (1913) the following letter from Mr. W. F. Kitzele, of North Third Street, Bur- lington, Iowa: “I have lived on a strictly milk diet for the past forty-two years, not as a matter of choice, but from the fact that I am unable to take solid food of any kind, even a crumb of bread. “At the age of two years I took a dose of concen- trated lye, which caused a stricture of the food pipe and since then have lived on a milk diet, and I believe have gotten along better than the man who eats. I am five feet, six inches tall, weigh one hundred and forty pounds, and am married and have four strong, healthy Starting the Treatment 67 children. I take one quart at each meal time and none between meals. My health is good, in fact I have never been ill in bed in forty-two years.” This case is so interesting and instructive that, in preparing the tenth edition of my book in 1921, I wrote to Mr. Kitzele, who occupies a responsible position in his city, and asked him for more particulars of his case. He has very kindly given me the following data: He is still living on an exclusive milk diet, and will do so for the balance of his life. It is now fifty years since he has tasted solid food of any kind, his only diet being one quart of milk, three times a day. He never took more than this amount; may have taken less when a child. He does not drink much water, not a gallon a year; never gets dry. In the fifty years he has never been confined to bed by illness, and, physically, is as strong as any man doing office work. Mr. Kitzele is convinced that most of the ills of life are caused from eating improper food. (And I agree with him.) Regarding his bowels, he states that he has abso- lutely no trouble. They move twice each day as regular as the clock. At one time Mr. K. was acquainted with a Mr. Castel, of Chicago, who was in the same condition, from the same cause, and also living exclusively on milk. I would like to hear from Mr. Castel. The small amount of milk that Mr. Kitzele finds ample for his needs is surprising to me. As he began the diet when an infant, he accustomed himself to an amount that would, according to my experience, be in- adequate for an adult. Or, are we adults using too much food? If milk can be taken often enough one can endure more cold than on any other diet. I have lived in the open air in winter with patients where we had to thaw 68 Milk Diet the milk before we could use it. You can get more energy and heat out of a quart of milk than an Eskimo can out of a pound of blubber. I can state here as a positive fact that an immense amount of physical or mental labor may be done on a milk diet. A young friend of mine lived on about five quarts of milk per day during two terms of college just before graduation and won second honors in a class of over three hundred, and finished in fine physical condi- tion. His board cost him about $10 per month. Professor Weir Mitchell in “Fat and Blood,” page 125, says: “I have seen several times active men, even laboring men, live for long periods on milk, with no loss of weight; but large quantities have to be used—two and a half to three gallons daily. A gentleman, a diabetic, was under my observation for fifteen years, during the whole of which time he took no other food but milk and carried on a large and prosperous business. Milk may, therefore, be safely asserted to be a sufficient food in itself, even for an adult, if only enough of it be taken.” The gifted writer, Mrs. Ella Wheeler Wilcox, wrote me as follows in 1905: “I believe in the milk diet, be- cause I have taken it with results so marvelous, and so beneficial, that all Mr. Rockefeller’s money could not repay me, were I deprived of the knowledge that I gained by the experience. A man of my acquaintance who destroyed his digestion by years of wrong habits, has lived for the last five years in perfect health and strength on milk alone. He is able to work more hours with less fatigue, than any of his acquaintances. He possesses a marvelous complexion and is never ill. “Another friend who had been a hopeless invalid for ten years, through complications of diseases, has lived on milk for three years, and finds herself perfectly well Starting the Treatment 69 unless she attempts to return to solid foods. A dozen skilled physicians failed to give her even three days of health, until she gave up foods for milk. Seventeen other personal friends restored their health, and the ability to digest a natural, varied diet, by taking the milk treatment for a few weeks.” Where it is the intention of patients to keep on with the milk diet for very long after stopping the rest cure, it is advisable for them to take larger doses, at less fre- quent intervals. Some patients who had been a long time on a half-hour schedule, with a corresponding amount of milk, have said that they found it difficult to eat enough food at one time to last them until the next meal. There is usually no difficulty in taking twice the regular quantity of milk every hour instead of half as much every half hour. This gives more time between drinks for exercise, or business affairs, and, I think, tends to fit the stomach better for distension of a regu- lar meal, when ordinary diet is resumed. Business men often carry a handbag full of Mason pint fruit jars, containing milk, and drink one of these at convenient times. Quite a number of old patients have been able to drink a quart of milk at one sitting. But these experiments must not be tried until the stomach is taking the small and frequent doses without any discomfort, and the bowels are moving regularly. If the stomach is not handling easily the smaller drinks, it will be of no use to attempt the larger ones. A course of four weeks should ordinarily be suffi- cient to cure any of the following diseases: Nervous prostration, general debility, autointoxica- tion, mild skin troubles, such as pimples, eczema, sallow- ness, wrinkles, etc., simple anemia, catarrh, biliousness, ringing in the ears, pleurisy, constipation, dyspepsia, 70 Milk Diet indigestion, asthma, hay fever, piles, insomnia, ulcer of the stomach, colitis, or ulceration of bowels, goiter, malaria, arterio sclerosis (hard arteries), neuralgia, neurasthenia, acidity of stomach, chronic appendicitis, arthritis, urticaria or hives, cystitis, carbuncles, diarrhea or dysentery, dilation of stomach, gastritis, gout, im- potence, neuritis, lumbago, sciatica, migraine, leucor- rhea, enlargement of prostate gland, tobacco, morphine and cocaine habits, gallstones and liver disorders, rheu- matism, kidney disease, and the first stage of consump- tion. In colitis, if the condition of the stools does not indicate that the bowels are perfectly healed at the end of four weeks, the diet and rest should be continued longer, but the amount of milk taken may be decreased about one-third, and buttermilk may be substituted for some of the sweet milk, if it agrees. In more advanced cases of consumption or other chronic organic diseases the diet can be continued as long as visible improvement is made, or until cured. It may be well to say here that there are crises that come on in the course of the treatment, due to the revo- lution that is taking place in the body. None of them is an indication to stop the milk, quite the contrary. The most common formerly was an eruption on the skin of the face, body or limbs, usually coming out during the second or third week. I have seen large pimples and boils, but none that ever left a scar. Since I have been using the Holstein milk exclusively these eruptions do not occur except in patients who have previously been afflicted with them. Rheumatic patients nearly always have some of the customary symptoms or pains in the parts affected, but usually only once. I wish to speak particularly of crises occuring in spe- Starting the Treatment 71 cial organs that are or have been the seat of disease. You may think there is a recurrence of the disease, but do not have the slightest fear. After the inflammation or excitement has subsided the part is always in a better condition and probably entirely healed for the first time. CHAPTER V. REACTIONS DURING TREATMENT. BEFORE taking up the consideration of the differ- ent diseases, I will here describe some of the reac- tions that take place on a full milk diet. The great majority of cases of chronic disease, with- out fever, have defective circulation of the blood. The heart beats feebly or slowly, and there is actually too little blood in the arteries. The blood pressure is too low, perhaps 40 or 50 degrees below normal. The entire body is poorly nourished and unable to throw off the disease which afflicts it. In these patients we notice directly, in every case, a most remarkable change. Within two hours after com- mencing the diet, the action of the heart will be acceler- ated, and within twelve to twenty-four hours there will be a gain of over six beats to the minute. Within two or three days there will be an increase of about twelve beats to the minute; the pulse will be full and bounding; the skin flushed and moist; the capillary circulation un- der the fingernails, or wherever it may be examined, quick and active. The blood pressure will have raised ten to twenty degrees. All this takes place with the pa- tient lying as quietly as possible, making no movement unless necessary—conditions under which normally on an ordinary diet, the circulation would be much slower than usual. No one can deny the benefit of this condition in chronic disease. It is a result sought by every intelligent doctor, knowing that through the circulation only can chronic disease be cured. None of the usual methods of Reactions During Treatment 73 heart stimulation, such as alcohol or other drugs, exer- cise, massage, hot and cold baths, inhalations of oxygen, solutions injected into the veins, or transfusion of blood can equal the results of the milk diet treatment in effect, in permanency, in total lack of danger. This natural, physiological increase of circulation results from the increased amount of blood, created in the natural way, by the stomach and intestines, acting on an easily as- similated food. Physicians, investigating the milk cure, say that one of the most striking things about it is the quick return to a normal condition of the blood pressure, no matter whether it is too high, or too low. jThe blood pressure is entirely independent of the pulse rate. A very high, or very low blood pressure may exist with either a slow or a rapid heart. In anemia, consumption, auto-intoxication and wasting diseases generally, the pressure is away below normal. Persons subject to hardened arteries, apoplexy, Bright’s disease, asthma, bronchitis, etc., frequently have a very high blood pressure. Pressure varies somewhat according to age, register- ing on the instrument designed for that purpose, less than 100 degrees in children, and gradually increasing, until in the aged it may be over 150 without the health being seriously affected. In examining the records of the patients for 1915 I was astonished myself to see how ever}7- one of them with either a low or high pressure, tended to gravitate up or down, until they struck about the normal, which is probably around 130 for a middle aged adult. In some of these cases, especially of low pressure, the nor- mal amount was not reached during their four weeks’ 74 Milk Diet term of treatment, but I think that all of these made farther gains on resuming normal habits of activity and diet. The records were taken about every seven days, the first or top one showing pressure on starting treatment, and the last one, the record on leaving. The table in- cludes twenty of the unusual pressure cases under my care during the year. These tables do not do full justice to the improve- ment made. All of these patients with extra pressure had been running higher than the starting figure indi- cates, as the first record was taken after a fast and a night’s rest. Case No 166 203 204 205 207 Start 190 160 94 90 150 1st week 176 140 108 94 134 2d week 159 140 110 100 132 3d week 140 110 114 125 4th week 140 140 116 120 125 Number 166 returned for examination one month afterward, and the pressure was 136. Case No 240 249 251 259 271 Start 206 100 102 84 160 1st week 192 140 90 154 2d week 172 126 ii<5 100 144 3d week 162 128 116 116 4th week 156 130 118 116 i32 Case No 283 292 297 299 301 Start 80 170 118 90 210 1st week 110 156 120 124 216 2d week 122 140 126 124 160 3d week 128 128 152 4th week 124 MO 128 130 146 Number 301 got a bad start on account of not fasting long enough, and not having his bowels cleaned out, although he had taken a ca- thartic the day before coming. This was a bad case of kidney, liver and bowel disease. Reactions During Treatment 75 Case No 304 307 312 329 336 Start 160 114 92 100 160 1st week 140 130 116 116 146 2d week 136 120 118 140 3d week 134 120 135 4th week 130 i30 \22 122 135 Case No 8 46 62 91 135 152 Age 54 55 46 33 77 59 Start 240 210 80 74 210 210 2d day 234 4th day 226 iso 6th day 220 ... ioo . . • 7th day 82 180 iso 9th day 200 HO . . . 12th day 196 15th day 190 M6 108 ioo 166 HO 21st day 184 112 110 142 132 28th day 178 i24 114 112 138 136 I add twelve more cases, one from each month of 1917, Case No 208 216 245 284 312 363 Age 52 45 58 52 45 59 Start 92 100 180 210 90 162 7th day 110 105 162 196 96 142 14th day 105 115 152 190 102 21st day 118 118 140 184 110 i38 28th day 118 120 140 170 114 136 Of the above cases, No. 284, a man whose pressure had been 300 and who also had Bright’s disease in an advanced form, should have taken a longer treatment, for after several months he reports eye symptoms due, probably, to the kidney trouble, and his blood pressure is up to 190. As long as a patient is doing well, and making steady progress to- ward a normal pressure, the treatment should be continued, but the regular four weeks’ course is generally all that is necessary. There is no dangerous strain on the heart, in this treatment, because the heart itself is the first organ to share in the benefits derived from the better blood circu- lating through it. There is no greater stimulant for the heart than milk; there is nothing that will build up the heart like milk, but in all cardiac disorders complete rest must be combined with the diet. Many patients with serious diseases of the heart, organic or functional, 76 Milk Diet valvular or nervous disorders, have taken the milk diet and I have never heard of any but good results. The resting patient can stand a full milk diet and benefit from it, but if the milk drinker’s heart is compelled to furnish blood to exercising muscles or an active brain, it may be too great a strain on it, at first, and tend to prevent the recovery of dilated, fatty or otherwise diseased hearts. In certain diseased conditions of the body there is an unusually fast pulse. This is always to be expected in fever of any kind, but there are certain disorders which are accompanied by a very rapid pulse, and yet the temperature remains normal. Exophthalmic goiter (Grave’s disease, Base- dow’s disease) is characterized by so rapid a pulse that it is termed cardiac palpitation, but on the milk diet, resting, the heart slows down gradually but surely, and permanently. The same result follows in patients with fever or toxic conditions of any kind which cause a rapid pulse. So here again we see a return to the normal, al- though the condition is apparently the reverse of the slow heart. It simply shows how a natural remedy will restore the system to health, no matter what the symptoms may be. In taking the milk diet there is no danger to the kidneys, in spite of their greatly increased work, for invalids with badly diseased kidneys take the milk diet successfully. Some patients, it is true, have slight pains in the kidneys during the first days of their treatment. It is always temporary, and due, I think, to a rapid growth of the organs, so rapid that the sensitive cover- ing of the kidneys is stretched tightly at first. Reactions During Treatment 77 About five years ago a physician’s wife was brought to me to be strengthened up for an operation on a tubercular kidney. A well-known specialist had made the diagnosis and it was supposed the only thing to do was to remove the kidney. She was on the milk and rest treatment not quite four weeks. On re-examination no trace of the disease was apparent. She has never had the operation, and continues in good health; in fact, has since given birth to a healthy baby. The amount of urine is very much increased by this diet, and no matter what its previous condition, whether highly acid, or loaded with solids or salts in solution, it becomes bland, non-irritating, and almost as clear as water. The frequency of urination is a little troublesome at first, but in a few days the bladder seems to be able to retain a larger quantity without discomfort; more fluid leaves the body in the perspiration, which is increased by the improved capillary circulation in the skin, and probably the lungs throw off more moisture. However, even then many patients will find it necessary to get up in the night once or twice. It is not advisable to hold the urine very long, as a portion of the water may be absorbed into the system. It is really wonderful how the various parts of the body accommodate themselves to the great changes which they undergo on the milk diet. It is only possible because the greatly increased blood supply brings with it all the necessary materials to make these changes, and a plentiful supply of nourishment for every cell, of every tissue. 78 Milk Diet In ill health there is always one or both of two con- ditions of the blood, viz.: Insufficient quantity, Abnormal quality. Disease is a result of a disturbance of the mechanism of nutrition. There may have been predisposing or ex- citing causes in the way of bacteria or heredity, bad food, air or habits, but as the abnormal condition be- comes apparent to us, we see the evidence of some dis- turbance of the processes of nutrition. There is a continuous battle on between the forces that build up and the forces that pull down; between the cells that do good and those that do harm. Nature is always endeavoring to maintain a normal standard against any agent or condition that may attempt to alter it. And when temporarily or accidentally that standard may be departed from, we see immediately an attempt to repair the damage. No matter what the abnormal condition may be, whether a cut or bruise of the skin, an ulcer in the lung, or the presence of some poison in the system, there is a continuous effort on the part of the natural forces, al- ways acting through the circulation, to restore the nor- mal condition, and we can assist that effort by supply- ing food that may be easily turned into good blood. On the condition of the blood depends the outcome of the struggle, whether life or death, a short or long illness. The circulation of the blood is natures agent in elim- inating disease, and increasing the quantity and regulat- ing the rapidity of the blood current while improving its quality will assist that elimination. In a great many maladies, whether caused by errors of diet or not, the digestive or blood-making power is Reactions During Treatment 79 weakened, and to continue the usual food, or to take mixtures of meat, eggs, starchy materials and various drinks, including milk and alcoholic beverages, increases the burden on organs already overtaxed. If, in addition to the mixed diet, the patient is given medicines for the relief of pain, or for the reduction of temperature, stimulants or sedatives for the heart, ca- thartics for the bowels or diuretics for the kidneys, ex- pectorants and emetics, hypnotics and narcotics, etc., any one or more of them, the problem for the circulation to solve becomes indeed a complex one, for each and every medicine must act through the blood, whether given by the stomach or through the skin. Even such a simple hygienic measure as bathing, by bringing the blood to the skin and away from the internal organs, interferes with digestion, if that process is not already completed, or of the most simple character. The action of the heart, as I have said, is usually accelerated, soon after commencing the milk diet. There is no reaction from this condition. The effect continues with the diet, but after a varying time the heart may slow down a little because it has become strong enough to do the work with fewer pulsations. The arteries con- tinue full. The heart hypertrophies physiologically, just as a woman’s heart does in her first pregnancy. I have observed it many times. In health every organ in the body is hyperemic, or congested with blood, when in active operation, and as the activity increases, so does the blood supply. There can be no growth, or rebuilding, or regenerat- ing of any portion of the body, without an amount of blood being present in excess of the ordinary tissue- nourishing quantity. A condition of anemia, or lack of blood, will never 80 Milk Diet be found when the body is successfully overcoming disease. We hear a great deal of hyperemia as a curative agent, following the ideas of Professor Bier, and using hot air apparatus to cause a local congestion of the dis- eased parts. The use of such apparatus indicates that the natural circulation is defective and unable to push the necessary amount of blood into the part. But in thus interfering with the circulation, how can we be sure that we are improving matters? Do we know how to force just the proper amount of blood to a diseased part? Where does the blood come from? Is not the remainder of the body weakened, or left without protection? Does not such apparatus bring the blood more to the surface and away from the deeper and perhaps dis- eased parts? Why not increase the blood supply naturally all over the body? Why use apparatus to cause a local con- gestion when there is a well-known function of the body to attend to just such things, if given the material to work with ? When we suffer an injury to any portion of the body, such as a bruise, a burn, a foreign body needing removal, or the presence of irritating bacteria, or their products, we do not have to wait for the application of any artificial apparatus. The congestion begins at once, through the vaso-motor system, ordered and controlled by the sensory and sympathetic systems of nerves. There is never any mistake about it; the congestion ap- pears promptly in exactly the right spot and no other. Suppose harmful material has gained access to the Reactions During Treatment 81 circulation, be it chemical, bacterial, or simply a loading up with the natural poisons of the body which have failed to be eliminated. Fever results. Fever is only a name for general hyperemia, and hyperemia is abso- lutely necessary to throw off or neutralize the poison. If there is enough healthy blood present in the circu- lation, or if it is manufactured as rapidly as may be re- quired to carry off the poisons, the system is able to overcome the danger and restore the normal condition. New and healthy blood is necessary to perform cures; old blood, stagnant blood, impure blood (from improper foods), no matter how much of it there may be, is ineffective. In dropsical effusions there is always plenty of blood fluid, but of such a character that the hyperemia set up to repel disease only makes the tissues waterlogged. Place such a case on the milk diet, under proper condi- tions, and you will find that the dropsy is rapidly cured. The heart-beats vary greatly in number in different persons. I have started several patients on the milk diet whose customary pulse rate was around forty per minute. One lady started with thirty-six, and before the end of the first week showed about seventy-five per minute, while resting in bed and exerting herself as little as possible. From being a chronic invalid, almost bedridden, weak, listless, almost bloodless, without ap- petite, she became a strong, well woman, and has never lapsed to her former condition. In patients with fever and rapid pulse on the milk diet there is usually a slowing of the heart and nearly always a reduction of the temperature. The effect is chiefly caused by the larger blood current more easily removing the fever products, and by the cooling of the 82 Milk Diet blood through dilation of the cutaneous blood vessels, and by increase of perspiration. One young lady with goiter started with a pulse rate of 135 per minute, but it gradually reduced to 80 at the end of the fourth week. It is very unusual for a patient to have a temper- ature above the normal while on milk and resting, no matter what the previous condition may have been. If the fever does not stay below 100 soon after the patient’s bowels are moving naturally, a serious condition is indi- cated. The stimulation of a full milk diet is very similar to the primary effects of alcoholic stimulation on the circu- lation, but the after results are entirely different, due to the fact that the blood carries with it the food neces- sary to repair the increased tissue waste. Stimulation by alcohol is followed by a period of de- pression which is impossible with milk. Continuous stimulation by alcohol causes inco-ordination of muscles, which never follows that of milk. Indeed, the spas- modic, uncertain movements of the hand in writer’s cramp may be permanently cured by a proper milk diet. The effect on the lungs is to quicken the breathing at first; then as the respiratory muscles strengthen, the inhalations become deeper. No matter what disease one may have, the breathing capacity is increased. The cir- cumference of the chest enlarges and the measurement on inspiration increases week by week over that of ex- piration. The enlargement is too great to be accounted for by increase of muscular tissue or subcutaneous fat around the chest. In fact the capacity of the lungs in- creases from 25 to 100 cubic inches by measurement with a spirometer. These changes, remember, take place while the pa- Reactions During Treatment 83 tient is resting. The muscles all over the body increase in size. To one who has had no experience with this treat- ment, it seems incredible that the muscles should not only rapidly increase in size, but become much harder. Yet it is a positive fact that the voluntary muscles of the body become firm and solid, almost like an athlete’s limbs after a hard course of training. And this, too, while the patient is lying abed all the time, except when attending to the necessary calls of nature, or taking the daily bath. And that bath a warm one, usually con- sidered weakening! People are too apt to compare a patient taking the rest cure with one in the last stages of chronic disease, or bedridden from the weakness accompanying typhoid or other fevers. As a matter of fact the two conditions are entirely different. In the latter case, the patient is compelled to take to his bed because he is ill and weak and unable to take or assimilate nourishment, and the food that is given him does little or no good, and may be really harmful as he has no appetite and lacks the necessary secretions to properly digest food. But the great majority of patients taking the milk cure are “walking cases.” Indeed, many of them demur at the idea of going to bed at first. But go to bed they must to take the milk properly, and after the prelim- inary fast, they usually have all the necessary appetite and the right condition of the stomach, to take milk easily, and taking the amount usually given, they are assimilating more nourishment than the ordinary person takes, even while doing hard work. But milk is, so far as I know, the only food that can be taken in full 84 Milk Diet amount with benefit, while enjoying as perfect rest as may be possible. The hardness of the muscles, on a milk diet, is due largely to the fact that they are pumped full of blood, like all the other organs of the body. And, it is well to recall the fact that the internal organs themselves contain a great system of muscles. Not voluntary muscles, it is true, but muscles that are controlled by the wonderful sympathetic system of nerves; muscles which do their work without any effort or knowledge of the will; muscles that work while we sleep. Without them digestion would be impossible, for every movement of the stomach and intestines and the food products contained in them is due to these muscles. The whole alimentary canal (oesophagus, stomach and intestines), contains in its wall a double layer of these involuntary muscle fibers part of them circling around the organ, and the remainder distributed length- wise, and through the combined efforts of the fibers, the contents of the canal are mixed with the various diges- tive juices, and gradually pushed onward until absorp- tion has taken place, and the residue has been expelled. This is what takes place in the healthy individual without any consciousness or assistance on his part. But in the invalid these small but important muscles are thin and weak and unable to do their duty. It is not unrea- sonable to suppose that they build up and resume their normal functions just as do the external muscles, while a person is on a full milk diet. Indeed, although we cannot see these internal muscles develop, we have plenty of evidence that they do, as for instance, the increased size of the abdomen, the larger capacity for food, the facility with which the unusual amount of Reactions During Treatment 85 fluid and solid matter is handled, and the much larger amount of feces discharged. This increased power of the intestinal muscles, and the restoration of the peristaltic movement, is all that is necessary, in many cases, to overcome constipation. All the muscles, as I stated above, increase in size. I have noted an increase in the thigh of over an inch in a week. The abdomen is always first to show an enlarge- ment, then the thighs and buttocks, although at the same time the neck, shoulders, arms and face are mak- ing visible progress. The calves do not make a corre- sponding gain while the patient is resting, but rapidly assume proper proportions on being called on to support the body in walking. The rapid increase in girth of the abdomen is very significant. It means that the thirty-odd feet of the alimentary canal are being developed. From the condi- tion so often seen at autopsies where persons have died of malnutrition and the intestines are thin and juiceless, perhaps as brown and almost as dry as the casing from a bologna sausage, they are changing to the thick, juicy and normal condition of an infant’s bowels. The circulation of capillary blood vessels and lymph- atics in and around the intestines is greatly increased on a milk diet. The fat of milk is in such minute globules that is ready for absorption by the lacteals and from them it is carried almost directly into the venous circu- lation. The large amount of fluid in milk which must pass through the blood before leaving the body, the greatly increased amount of fat, sugar, nitrogenous matters and salts in the right proportion and condition required for nourishment, stimulate the millions of glands lining the canal and they are compelled to in- crease in size and capacity. 86 Milk Diet This abdominal increase is very largely in the walls of the stomach and intestines at first. Later on there will be more or less fat deposited subcutaneously. Every healthy person has a protecting pad of fatty tissue in front of the intestines and stomach. This intestinal development and enlargement is nec- essary to insure proper digestion and assimilation, but is occasionally objected to by ladies who note the loss of a wasp-like waist and the necessity for a new ward- robe with regret. They do not, however, object to the increase in the size and symmetry of the limbs and bust, the filling in the hollows in the neck, the smoothing out of the facial wrinkles and the “peaches and cream” com- plexion that go with it. I am able to offer some comfort by informing them that a portion of the waist development will disappear when they become more active, and another portion will be lost when they quit the milk diet, but with a correct manner of living and sufficient nutritious food the stom- ach will never return to the previous abnormal condi- tion. During the last few years I have noticed an increas- ing number of invalids with disorders of the bowels, principally the colon. These people have usually given a history of “catarrh,” or “inflammation of the bowels,” often of constipation, and rarely of diarrhea. Some of them say they are full of acid and rheumatic. In a small percentage of these cases I notice the amount of milk they can take is limited, because an excess brings on diarrhea. They may take three and one-half quarts of full milk daily, but another pint causes a watery, acid diarrhea. This acid diarrhea is often due to lack of pancreatic secretion. Examining the records of 820 recent patients, I find Reactions During Treatment 87 that a few days after starting on the milk diet 34 per cent of them were more or less constipated; 8 per cent of them had diarrhea on anything over three and a half quarts of milk daily, and 58 per cent were able to take enough milk to overcome the constipating tendency of the diet. This shows that about one patient of every twelve or thirteen has loose bowels on what is considered a normal amount of milk, or the amount that keeps them from losing weight. In the case of a patient commencing the milk diet and taking about six quarts, should diarrhea occur and continue for more than thirty-six hours, with passages loose, sour or greenish, or containing small undigested curds, it is evident that the bowels are unable to digest all the food. The amount, therefore, must be reduced about one-half until solid movements occur only once or twice daily. Too little milk will cause constipation, and then the amount must be increased. I have seen cases where a variation in the daily amount taken, of two glasses, would make the difference between constipation and diarrhea. When the proper dose is found, these patients re- ceive great and lasting benefits. On less than four quarts, the gain in weight is very small, and this is rather discouraging to some of them, but in every case of this kind where the quantity of milk has been carefully adjusted to the condition of the bowels, the ultimate result has been very satisfactory. Several ladies who were below weight and affected in this way only gained about two pounds a week, while on milk, but on returning to ordinary habits and diet, continued to gain at an even greater rate, and remained free from trouble for which they took the milk cure. 88 Milk Diet In severe cases of diarrhea on the milk where pa- tients can only take two or three quarts in 24 hours, I have found that a few dates, taken one at a time, two or three hours apart, and dissolved in the mouth, enable people to take a pint or two more every day. A cracker or two may have the same effect, but I do not approve of them because the same permanent cure does not seem to be obtained as on the exclusive milk diet. In bad cases of chronic dysentery, perhaps due to tubercular infection of the bowels (consumption of the bowels), I have cured several by administering a small cupful of boiled rice and milk, two or three times a day, in place of one of the regular drinks. The rice certainly helps to check the food from passing through too quickly. The skin, including the hair and nails, shows decided reactions in the milk cure. A healthy skin is a rarity nowadays, and the average candidate for the milk cure, with had digestion, poor circulation, and probably kid- ney trouble, shows plain evidence of his internal disease by a great variety of skin disorders, ranging from the pale, white, and dry leathery skin, to various forms of eruptions and inflammatory conditions. Remarkable changes take place in this important organ. The capillary circulation grows faster, perhaps, in the skin, than in any other part of the body. The prolonged warm baths greatly assist in this improve- ment, by softening up the dead cells of the external layers, and by the moisture and warmth penetrating to the deeper layers. The baths alter distribution of blood pressure by increasing vascularization of the skin and temporarily unloading internal organs. The warmth, moisture and water pressure increases oxidation, calms Reactions During Treatment 89 the nervous system, allays reflex instability, and pro- duces sleep. No matter how cold or dry or flabby or wrinkled the skin may be, between the warm baths externally and the increased amount of blood internally, the skin al- ways seems to get back to a healthy condition. Patients who had not visibly perspired for years, show a per- ceptible sweat within a few days, and frequently the skin starts up action suddenly, a short time after the patient has gone to sleep in the evening, and he wakes up bathed in perspiration. I have seen such cases where not only the bed linen, but the mattress as well, were so soaked with sweat as to require changing. Such a climax, weakening and discouraging to some invalids on an ordinary diet, has just the opposite effect on the milk diet, because it is the result of increased capillary circulation, and not due to weakness of the blood vessels and thin, watery blood, as in the ordinary “night sweats.” One symptom that many patients speak of while on the milk and resting, is cold feet. Not cold enough to be uncomfortable, but quite noticeable, especially as all the remainder of the body is warm and glowing. I have seen it so many times, even in patients who had never had such a thing before, that it seems quite natural to me. The reason is simple:—The feet are hardly used while in bed and there is no need of the circulation of blood rushing there, as it does to the body generally, and also, the blood stops mostly in the abdomen and vital organs, where it has work to do. Cold feet are noticed more in the afternoon than any other time. Never at night, after milk drinking stops. Just as soon as the patient begins exercising the feet become normally warm. 90 Milk Diet If the warm, moist skin be rubbed, soon after start- ing on the milk diet, one can often notice little black rolls of dirt, dead cells, and waste matter discharged through the sweat glands, and the odor coming from the skin saturates the atmosphere of the room, and will be found excessively strong on opening the bed to air, especially with rheumatic patients. Indeed, the rooms of these patients smell like a vinegar factory for a few days. A rapid increase in body weight occurs to every one below weight taking the full milk diet, no matter what their previous condition or disease. While this is usually welcome, there are certain patients who do not desire it, but they have to accept it, at first anyway, because it is almost impossible to take the cure correctly with- out gaining in weight. Someone has divided the human race into two classes—those who are too fat, and those who are too thin, and while the milk cure appeals more to the latter class, yet it seems to me that stout people get just as much benefit from it as thin ones, but it is harder to induce them to take it. The gain in weight made by a person who is overweight or about normal, is not as great as that made by a thin or emaciated person. The latter will take on weight rapidly, almost as a sponge soaks up water. Most of them are poorly nourished, whether they are eating much or little, and the milk alone, taken under proper conditions, seems to be just what they need, and they build up all parts of the body very easily. The average gain in weight for thin folks is about five pounds the first week, and after that about half a pound daily. This latter rate continues for weeks, or months, until they are near the normal weight. The greater increase for the first week is, in some measure, Reactions During Treatment 91 due to the fact that they have had more or less of a fast before commencing the diet, and are consequently al- most empty, and in a good condition to assimilate nearly all of the milk. A gain of fourteen pounds the first seven days has been made under my observation, and a young man gained ten and a quarter pounds in his first three days, but his was a very exceptional case, as his stomach had been in such a wretched state that he had been unable to retain even the simplest food, previous to taking the treatment. I started by giving him small and frequent doses of carefully warmed milk, while he was resting completely, in bed. Beyond a very slight pain in the stomach at first, he had no discomfort at any time, and rapidly regained his health. I am often asked if the average rapid gain of flesh is not too great to form healthy tissues, and even if it may not be unsafe. I say, emphatically, that all this increased weight is made of healthy tissues and that there is absolutely no danger while taking complete rest. There are certain preparations advertised, by the use of which, it is claimed, rapid gain is made in weight, while eating ordinary foods. I have seen very injurious effects from the use of some of these drugs, and I regard such methods as wholly unnatural. The flesh gained is probably largely fat, and the digestive organs, instead of being built up and fitted for normal digestion, are worse off than before taking the medicine. The gain made on milk diet, while resting, is not principally fat, as some people imagine. An increase of an inch a week in an emaciated person’s thigh, between the knee and the hip, cannot be called fat. There is very little fat in this part at any time, but there is an enor- 92 Milk Diet mous group of muscles and it is the growth of these muscles that produces the enlargement. The muscles increase because they are distended with blood. The inunction of fat, or so-called flesh foods, or “oil rubs,” cannot produce any permanent benefit and may cause considerable harm. The massage may tem- porarily stimulate the circulation, but it would be better to practice it without the oil. Only a few cases lose weight in the first week, while taking the amount of milk I prescribe. Some of these suffer from valvular disease of the heart, and after the initial loss go on as usual, gaining weight and health. One case had been the subject of severe surgical operations and lost several pounds at first, but then gained at a fairly satisfactory rate. Patients having dropsy are almost certain to lose weight at first. Sometimes the dropsy may be un- suspected, as in the abdomen, or around the heart, but when the quantity of urine voided exceeds the quantity of milk taken, the evidence of internal dropsy is clear. I have known a patient to pass 12 quarts of urine in 24 hours, while only taking 13 pints, or only about half as much milk. Nothing can equal milk in curing dropsy. Two gentlemen suffering from diabetes lost weight on the milk diet (six quarts) for a few days and both quit the treatment, but seemed to have derived some benefit from the short course. Since writing the above, another advanced case of diabetes tried the exclusive milk diet for a week, and then refused to go on with it as he was losing weight and becoming much weaker. I advised him to use all the buttermilk that he could assimilate, and have since Reactions During Treatment 93 heard that he had made a wonderful improvement. (See article on Diabetes in Chapter XII.) In discontinuing the diet, undoubtedly the best way to resume ordinary food is to stop the drinking of milk at noon and eat a very light supper the first day. A slightly cooked yolk of egg, bread and butter, salad or fruit, is enough. The next day start with the milk as early as usual, again stop at noon, and eat a somewhat heartier meal in the evening, if the appetite calls for it. Another meal that may be taken the first day is well cooked cornmeal mush and milk. Patients can eat all they desire, but nothing else may be taken with it. I have never known this “first meal” to disagree with anyone. Always have some uncooked foods with your meal; salads, fruits, nuts, cheese, raw egg yolks served in various ways, olives and olive oil, or peanut oil, etc. A diet of two or three quarts of milk, taken in fore- noon and an evening meal, can be used as long as de- sired. If cream has risen on the milk, remove it. Do not attempt to mix cream with milk, when drinking milk alone. A breakfast of milk, not over a quart, with an apple, and two meals a day, will enable anyone to hold their weight, if proper combinations of foods are made. Always remember this: Never stuff on ordinary foods. Milk is the only thing that can be used safely for forced feeding, and it must be taken alone, or, in most cases, fruit can also be used. After taking the milk cure, all patients who pre- viously suffered from dyspepsia, and particularly, nervous dyspepsia, must use care on resuming solid food. It is necessary to have a simple diet, to eat very lightly, and to observe regular hours for meals, never eating anything between meals, until the stomach be- 94 Milk Diet comes used to the change. If constipation returns, after a course of milk diet, it is almost a certain sign of over- eating. I have noticed in a few cases that some distress has occurred during the first few days after resuming solid food, but this symptom has soon disappeared as the or- gans became used to the diet. Usually there is not as much trouble in changing from milk to solids, as in changing from the usual food to the milk. CHAPTER VI. DYSPEPSIA. PROBABLY the simplest trouble that may be cured by the milk is dyspepsia or indigestion. Usually brought on by an incorrect way of liv- ing, when the condition is relieved and the patient in- structed how to avoid a return of the disorder, there is no good reason why he should suffer from it again. When you tell people that they are not eating right, they may say they eat the same as other members of the family who are apparently having no trouble. Now, it is a fact that there are no two people with stomachs just alike. Among thousands of cases who have taken the milk diet under my observation, I do not remember any two who acted, or reacted just the same. With a score of patients taking the milk diet at the same time, with all conditions as to amount of milk, time and manner of taking just the same; all resting in bed, all bathing daily, everything just the same, as nearly as may be, yet no two will have the same symptoms. With some the bowels are constipated; others have a diarrhea, some have regular movements. Most people have a chalky white color to the stools at first; some start off with a normal yellow color. Some of these with white stools will suddenly change to a deeper tint, as the liver starts up; others make the change very gradually. Some patients complain of a bad taste in the mouth; others never have it. More of them have a heavy coating on the tongue, at first brownish or yellow, later white; others manage to keep their tongues clean. Great va- riety is observed as to the way the milk tastes. Most pa- 96 Milk Diet tients seem to have a relish for it, in greater or less degree; a few declare it is like taking medicine and they only take it for the effect. Some will say it tastes very sweet, like sugar; others that it has a bitter or sour taste. Precisely the same milk, mind you. The disagreeable taste may disappear at any time, and perhaps not re- turn. Some who do not have free evacuations of the bowels will say the milk gets “flat” toward evening. If given an enema, the proper taste of the milk soon re- turns. Many patients taking the cure have said they would never want any more milk after they had finished their course. Doubtless they felt that way while they were “stuffing” it, or taking more than the stomach called for, or wanted, but nevertheless I believe it to be a fact that no patient has permanently lost their liking for milk through taking it as I recommended. After com- mencing on solid foods, only a short time elapses before they miss the milk, crave some, if only a glass a day. It frequently happens that people take the treat- ment Avho do not like milk, and in some cases they have not used it, in any way, for many years, forty and fifty years, respectively, in two cases that I recall. With one single exception, all these people have used milk freely afterward and would not like to be without it. Milk that has been incorrectly handled may have an appreciable odor that is disagreeable to sensitive pa- tients. This odor can be entirely removed by pouring the milk through a sieve, or strainer, containing freshly cooked popcorn. If the popcorn is ground up in a coffee mill it will work even better. It is very seldom that patients become hungry on the milk diet, and where they do, it probably is because they are not taking their milk regularly. But there have Dyspepsia 97 been cases who felt like eating most of the time during the first two weeks. In these rare cases the craving has been generally for some special article of diet, as bread, or some kind of vegetable or fruit. I have never known anyone to desire meat, except perhaps bacon. Thirst is a very rare symptom while on the milk diet, and I do not remember any patients in New York who took water in addition to their milk, but in California I have seen several such cases, perhaps due to the drier atmosphere. There is probably no reason why water should not be taken during the treatment, but I hardly see the need of it, as most patients get over five quarts of water in their milk daily. It is not uncommon for those taking the milk to wish for something sour, and particularly sour fruit, apples, oranges and even lemons. Lemons can be used benefi- cially by those who suffer from nausea while commenc- ing the milk diet. Others prefer the sweet fruits, figs, peaches, grapes and melons. Nearly everyone relishes dried fruits, like raisins, figs, dates, prunes and apricots, and all these are frequently useful in overcoming the initial constipation. Sliced tomatoes with lemon juice and salt are a most useful addition to the milk diet of the constipated. Canned tomatoes have also been used. In the matter of sleep patients vary widely; some want to sleep all the time, while others only sleep a few hours at night. Cases of insomnia sometimes notice no improvement for several nights, and then, all at once, they begin to sleep like children. I have taken considerable space to explain how the milk diet affects different people, while speaking of dyspepsia, because nearly every disease is accompanied by more or less stomach trouble, although the symptoms are quite varied. 98 Milk Diet Indigestion is almost a national disease with Ameri- cans, and in very many eases it is due to over eating and imperfect breathing, or lack of exercise. There is not much use of my wasting the reader’s time in giving advice as to the amount of food they should eat, or what kinds they must avoid and what they may eat, and how long they should chew it, and how many meals they should take, because all dyspeptics have had plenty of such advice, without being cured, but I will, later on, give some directions to be followed after putting the stomach in good order by the milk diet. I firmly believe that defective breathing is more of a cause of dyspepsia than over-feeding. Few people realize how important breathing is to health. We breathe mainly to absorb oxygen. The function of oxy- gen is to combine with the food we eat, and if sufficient orygen is not taken into the system to oxidize the food, indigestion results. Food is taken into the body just as fuel is taken into a furnace, for the same purpose—to be burned up, and burning always means oxidation. A lamp or a stove cannot burn without a plentiful supply of oxygen, nor can the human body perform its functions more than a minute or two without air. Oxygen should really be considered a food, for none of the regular foods would be of any use in the body unless they combined with oxygen. Animal life is an incessant process of combustion; it may also be said that life is combustion. Oxygen is the great supporter of combustion, although not combus- tible itself, hence the fires of life burn with increased brightness when oxygen is plentifully supplied. Cold air, if pure, is one of the most powerful aids in eliminat- ing those poisonous substances that are perpetually Dyspepsia 99 forming in the human body as the result of the digestive process. Oxygen possesses an affinity for nearly every other element with which it forms compounds, innocuous in themselves or susceptible of easy elimination. The oft-quoted term, “oxygen is life,” is not so much a mis- nomer as some might imagine, in view of the important part it plays in Nature. It is impossible to place too great a value on cold, fresh air. Experience has shown that nearly all patients suffering from various diseases of the lungs have recovered in the open air cure. The indifference, not to say aversion, that many people dis- play to fresh air, especially in their sleeping apartments, would be ludicrous if it were not pitiable. Yet it is a fact that any person would be warmer in a bedroom through which a current of cold air was passing (pro- vided they were well covered), than they would be in a heated room, illy ventilated, for no warmth can equal that produced by active combustion. Some people never breathe right; many people work and sleep in places where the air is bad, and, while it is possible for either class to enjoy fairly good health, if the defective breathers have to breathe the bad air, the result is always ill health. A man may work every day in a place where the air is impure and lacking in oxygen, and yet, if his work calls for vigorous exercise, and therefore copious breath- ing, he may appear to be in the best of health. But let the shallow breather work in the same place, at some sedentary occupation, and before long his health fails, he becomes pale-faced, anemic, has less strength, less endurance. His desire for food decreases, and what he does take is not thoroughly digested, hence he has less blood, and that of a poorer quality. Perhaps, real- izing that his stomach is not performing its functions 100 Milk Diet properly, he assists it with some digestive medicine, or he takes foods that are recommended to him because they are predigested. In either case he may notice an apparent improvement, but in either case he has further weakened his stomach by usurping its natural functions, and if the primary cause of the trouble is not remedied, his temporary expedients will soon fail to have even an apparent or transient effect. I want to make this point clear: We cannot habit- ually perforin for the body any of its functions that should naturally be performed unaided, without weak- ening the part concerned. We cannot use massage or kneading of the bowels for any length of time to produce defecation, without weakening the natural peristalic movement of the intes- tines; nor can we use cathartic medicines long without the same result. The stomach should digest our food, and we cannot live on predigested foods long, without weakening those glands which normally secrete the digestive juices. We certainly cannot add pepsin to our food before we eat it, without taking away the function of the peptic glands, and, while they may have been secreting too little pepsin before, they are likely to produce still less when the food comes into the stomach already pepton- ized. The simple act of cooking, which is one kind of pre- digestion, may, in some cases, be a contributory cause of weak digestion. Our digestive apparatus was originally designed to work on uncooked foods, for fire was a later invention, and all animals at the present time, except man, use by preference uncooked foods. We are too much inclined in the hurry and worry of modern life to eat those things that may be swallowed Dyspepsia 101 and digested quickly, without regard to the ultimate ef- fect on the stomach. Professor Einhorn says: “The diet in health should not always comprise the most easily digestible sub- stances. For by so doing we weaken our digestive sys- tem.” Stomachs can be spoiled by giving them too little to do, and they must be able to digest much that is difficult of digestion, as well as that which is easily digested. But aside from the fact that the stomach must be able to take care of such foods as come to it on an ordinary diet, the great question remains, are these pre- digested foods able to make as good blood as natural foods do? It is a fact that the great majority of patients apply- ing for relief from digestive troubles are in the habit of using foods designed to save the stomach some of its natural work. A story I hear very often runs about this way: “Some time ago my health began to fail; my stomach was bad, and the only thing I could eat with comfort was Somebody’s breakfast food (or Dr. So-and-So’s prepared food, or some grain combination claiming to be predigested and all ready to eat). But while this food caused no distress I have been getting weaker and cannot touch the ordinary food that my family eat.” And these people always lay stress on the statement that they have been very careful of their stomachs! Most of these prepared cereal foods are steamed or boiled into a mush, with various ingredients like salt, glucose, molasses, or malt, added. Then they are usually either made into a dough and baked, and ground up into crumbs, or rolled into flakes and parched. After being sealed up more or less tightly in pasteboard boxes, they 102 Milk Diet are ready for sale. When finally the retail dealer gets such foods, they may lie on the grocery shelves for months before being sold. Every country store is stacked to the ceiling with preparations of this kind, for which an artificial demand was created by enormous advertising, but when the advertising stops, so does the demand. The manufacturers of many of these products who have become rich by buying cheap cereals, or grains that have already been used in making malt liquors, and selling them for ten times their cost, employ high- salaried advertisement writers, who dilate on the clean- liness and thoroughness with which the goods are han- dled and cooked, but I do not believe that stuff pre- pared in this manner can be of much service in the human stomach, and even animals refuse it unless they are very hungry. I do not include in this class foods composed of the germ of wheat, which is not cooked, nor sterilized by any chemical method, nor the rolled preparations of wheat, oats and rye. The latter are steamed for some time and while still wet are run between rollers and pressed into thin flakes. After drying the product is ready for marketing. Such rolled grains do not pretend to be more than partly cooked and are supposed to be thoroughly recooked before serving. Grain prepared in this manner does not lose all of its vitality, or blood- making power. Some grocers raise the objection that such foods do not keep for long periods, like the ready- to-eat, sterilized brands, as they are apt to be attacked by weevils and other insects. This, in my opinion, is a pretty good test of the food quality of an article. In- sects, with their magnified sense of sight, smell and taste, are better judges of the food value of an article than Dyspepsia 103 human beings. As an example, I have known ants to find an opened package of Germea on a pantry shelf, and when discovered, the wise little animals had a line many yards long between the cereal and their nest. Each ant returning to the nest carried a little particle of the food, doubtless for the nourishment of the home colony. An instructive feature of the incident was the fact that the ants, to get at the preferred article, had to climb over several opened packages of other foods, each of which was guaranteed by the manufacturer to be all ready to eat. Grant’s Hygienic Crackers, made in California, are an excellent food for dyspeptics. They consist of a pal- atable combination of grain, well baked, and are rather hard, requiring some beneficial effort of the jaws, in chewing. The cause of much indigestion, particularly of starchy foods, is deficient secretion of pancreatic fluid. Digestion of starchy foods is either performed by the action of the saliva, in the mouth and oesophagus, or after passing through the stomach, by the juice secreted by the pancreas. The stomach itself has no action on starch. The pancreas is very often at fault in people of sedentary habits, and if such people do not very thor- oughly chew their bread, potatoes, etc., and thereby largely digest the starch before it is swallowed, it passes through the stomach unchanged and is very apt to fer- ment in the intestine. Persons with this trouble can often live in comfort on meat, yolks of eggs, fruits, buttermilk and non- starchy vegetables, but bread, for them, is by no means the staff of life. 104 Milk Diet The secretion of a healthy pancreas, which is dis- charged into the small intestine, amounts to about a pint in twenty-four hours. This amount may be greatly reduced, in ill health, through inactivity of the gland. Total absence of the juice from disease or removal of the gland, results fatally. The pancreatice juice is of great importance in the digestion of milk, and on a milk diet, the gland becomes very active, and presumably returns to a healthy condi- tion, for, on resuming a normal diet, patients do not suffer from starchy indigestion and fermentation. Other forms of indigestion, or inability to digest certain foods, as berries or acid fruits, nuls, and certain vegetables, like cabbage, are always completely cured by this treatment. To sum the matter up in a few words, it puts the stomach in a normal, healthy condition. CHAPTER VII. CONSTIPATION. CONSTIPATION is a very frequent accompani- ment of digestive disturbances, and while it is usually only a symptom in itself, and disappears as the trouble which caused it is cured, it deserves sepa- rate consideration. It is my impression that a great deal of constipation, or irregularity of the stools, is due to the fact that many people do not know how to attend to the important function of defecation. They either do not understand it, or they wilfully neglect it. A little study of the parts involved, and their physio- logical action will be interesting and instructive. Food, after passing through the small intestine rather rapidly, enters the colon, or large intestine, as a liquid, or of a liquid consistency. The fluid is largely absorbed during the slower passage through the large intestine, leaving a residue of feces to be discharged from the rectum. The large intestine is about five feet long, including the rectum, which comprises the last eight inches. The rectum, like the rest of the intestinal canal, has involun- tary muscles in its walls, running both longitudinally and circularly. The circular muscular fibers near the outlet are increased in thickness and form a well defined ring, about one inch wide, called the internal sphincter muscle. Just beyond this, but entirely separate from it, is the external sphincter, of voluntary fibers, which ordinarily keeps the anus closed. Now notice the different kind of muscles composing 106 Milk Diet the internal and external sphincters. The external sphincter is a sort of purse-string muscle, under control of the will, which keeps the outlet closed except when we wish to discharge the contents of the rectum. The internal sphincter is, like all the rest of the muscular fibers in the intestinal wall, an involuntary muscle, and we cannot directly compel it to open or shut by will power, no matter how much we may desire it. The contents of the intestinal canal are propelled onward by peristaltic, or worm-like movements, which are entirely involuntary. These movements are caused by wave-like contrac- tions of the muscles in the walls of the tubes, each part of the tube as the wave reaches it, narrowing its caliber, and then gradually relaxing and dilating. This wave of contraction is gentle, and progresses slowly from above downward. The advancing wave is always preceded by a wave of relaxation, or inhibition. When we inhibit or relax the tension of the muscular fibers in any circu- lar organ, as intestine or blood vessel, the organ natur- ally dilates and the space in its center becomes larger. As the contents of the large intestine arrive at the rectum they are composed of undigested and indigest- ible matter, about 75 per cent of water, and considerable waste matter, including cast-off cells, inorganic salts, putrid products, and bacteria. When a sufficient quan- tity of feces has arrived in the rectum there is felt a need of expelling it. This sensation varies greatly, according to the amount of matter present, and the susceptibiltv of the individual, but principally owing to the nature of the discharge. If the matter is rather solid, and of a non-irritating nature, it may be retained in the rectmn for hours, or even days, while if it be watery or acid, as in diarrhea, the strongest effort of the will is sometimes Constipation 107 insufficient to keep the external sphincter closed and prevent a passage of the contents. The act of defecation is normally an involuntary one, as may be seen in infants and animals on a natural diet. In most adults it becomes partly voluntary, owing to a variety of causes, such as the habit of preventing the stool until a convenient time, and to unhygienic habits in general. The voluntary part is, however, smaller than generally supposed, consisting mainly in the relax- ation of the outlet, and the compression of the abdom- inal contents by holding the breath and contracting the diaphragm and abdominal muscles. The compression of the abdomen, or straining, prac- ticed by many persons, and particularly constipated people, usually does more harm than good. It has no effect on matter in the lower part of the rectum, as Professor Foster says in his Textbook of Physiology: “A body introduced per annum into the empty rectum is not affected by even forcible contractions of the ab- dominal walls.” If the peristaltic movement is not operating in the rectum, and the internal sphincter is not properly re- laxed, we should not try to have a movement. If under these unfavorable circumstances, after long straining, we do succeed in our object, what happens is about as follows: We have so compressed the abdominal portion of the large intestine that its contents, perhaps unready for the movement, are squeezed downward, while the absorption of the fluid portion is unnaturally hastened, and matter thrown in the blood that should have been further elaborated in the bowel, or discharged with the feces. Although a passage may sometimes be affected by such unnatural straining, its results, both immediate 108 Milk Diet and remote, are bad. The immediate effect includes the disarrangement of the digestive processes, not only in the large intestine, but in the small as well, and probably other abdominal organs, in the forcible pushing into the blood and lymphatic circulations of unsuitable sub- stances, causing headaches and auto-intoxication, while the after consequences are that the constipated habit is more firmly fixed, the next stool almost certainly being dry and hard, and the natural mechanism of defecation more weakened and less inclined to perform its duty. Piles, or hemorrhoids, are probably always caused by straining at stool, as the pressure prevents the venous blood returning to the heart and it accumulates in the mucous membrane of the rectum and distends it until tissue gives way and a blood tumor, or pile, results. The contents of the bowel act in different ways to produce a normal stool. By irritating the mucous mem- brane, nervous centers are excited which cause a reflex peristaltic movement of the intestinal muscles, and by the secretion, or production of osmotic conditions, which cause fluid to flow into the cavity of the intestine, until it becomes so watery that it may be discharged. Various laxative foods act directly on the arrival of their undigested portions at the rectum, as the coarse fibers of cereal coverings, small seeds of fruit, or indi- gestible skins of tomatoes, prunes, etc., or they may act immediately through the circulation, as it is not uncom- mon for people to have to go to stool within a short time after eating the first peach, or pear of the season, or any fruit that is unusually well relished. And some people say that eating any article which causes a copious flow of saliva will bring on a movement. A small amount of laxative fruit usually acts better than too large a quan- tity. Some doctors advise the eating of just one fig at Constipation 109 bedtime, or one apple before breakfast, knowing that eating a larger amount, or perhaps overeating, seems to have frequently the opposite of a laxative effect. Over- eating of any food or foods is a prolific source of consti- pation. The habit so many people have of sleeping on the right side may be a cause of constipation. It is a fact that many constipated persons make a regular practice of sleeping on the right side, to make it easier for the heart, as they think, but it places the principal portion of the colon in such a position that the contents have to go straight up, against the force of gravitation. An excellent plan for such cases is to sleep with the back up, with the face turned to one side, say the left, with right arm down by the side. Anyone can do this with a little practice. While constipation is an unsanitary habit, to say the least, it is nevertheless a fact that many people who have it magnify the condition and its dangers. There are many such persons, whose one object in life seems to be to have a daily movement, whether there is anything to be moved or not, and they are in misery unless they have it. And, after having it, by force, if necessary, they are not happy, because they immediately begin to plan for the next day. Everything they eat or drink is judged by the test: Is it constipating or not? They stuff them- selves with unsuitable foods, because someone declares them laxative, and they decline really nutritious articles, because they have a reputation for causing costiveness. Their drinks, also, have to pass the same test, and healthful fluids are rejected, perhaps, in favor of some foul smelling and tasting mineral water, because the latter moves their bowels, disregarding the fact that these waters are often artificially impregnated with salts 110 Milk Diet by the manufacturers and may contain many impurities. It is but a step from them to out-and-out cathartic medicines, and then, usually, all chance of restoring the normal movements of the bowels is gone, except by radical action. A simple and good cure for many of these cases, which I have often successfully applied, where the peo- ple had common sense and will power enough to carry it out, is to have them eat, in moderation, anything they relish, chewing it well, and instead of trying to have a movement of the bowels, try hard not to have one. In- stead of yielding to the first faint hint that the bowels might move, restrain it, until the next day, or two or three days, if necessary. Retain even the gas, if any is inclined to pass, and, my word for it, there will come a time when an impulse will be felt about which there can be no mistake, and a satisfactory evacuation will result, without straining or forcing into the circulation a lot of stuff which does not belong there. Don’t try to force out every particle that you think may be in the rectum, but keep some for next time, so to speak, and the next time will also be easy, and the next time after that, and all the other times. This plan will not suit the manufac- turers of expensive machines intended to wash all the food out of the colon, by using large hot-water injec- tions. They may claim that you will get ptomaine pois- oning, or auto-intoxication, but such things, in my ex- perience, have usually been caused by bad food, imper- fectly digested, forced out of the colon into the body against the wishes of the absorptive cells, which could not stand the pressure put on them. As to the use of injections, I will say here, that occa- sions may arise when they are temporarily of great use, but as a means of curing constipation, it is irrational to Constipation 111 distend the bowel, already weakened and dilated, with large enemas of warm, or hot water, and the most diffi- cult cases to cure are those where the colon and rectum are paralyzed from long use of such measures. There would be very little constipation with anyone if the internal sphincter relaxed readily and the peristal- tic movements were active. When contracted the sphinc- ter acts very much like a valve or gate, opening in- wardly, and the more pressure we put on it the tighter it shuts. Just why it does not open, or relax, when we wish it to, is a difficult question to answer. It cannot be re- laxed by simply willing it to as we would relax the muscles of the arm, for it is not a voluntary muscle. Some people, who are always on a nervous tension, put so much extra force on the external sphincter all the time that it gets in a state of continuous or tonic con- traction, and communicates its rigidity to the internal muscle sympathetically. Such people may suddenly de- cide that it is time to have a movement, and they relax the outer muscle, and attempt, by pressure, to overcome the resistance of the inner muscle. But this is not the right way to go at it. A better way is outlined above; simply wait until the desire is irresistible then the inner sphincter is sure to be relaxed and the peristaltic movement sufficient to move the contents out without using abdominal pres- sure. Another, and perhaps opposite method of securing the desired result is to obtain a general relaxation of the body, which will secondarily or sympathetically affect the involuntary muscles. This is explained in another part, under the title of Rest. A method frequently advised is the use of massage 112 Milk Diet over the abdomen, by manipulation with the hands, or rolling a cannon ball over the location of the colon, or bringing the abdomen forcibly against some object, as a strap between two posts. All these are unnatural pro- cedures, and while possibly useful temporarily, in some cases, they never tend to produce a cure, but instead, further weaken the intestinal muscles by usurping their functions. As contrasted with passive exercise, active exercise is far better. Exercise of any part of the body makes deeper breathing necessary, and that means more up and down action of the diaphragm, which in turn produces more movements of the abdominal contents. More oxy- gen enters the blood, and more blood circulates through the vessels, everywhere, stimulating all the muscles. This induces warmth, and perspiration, and when there is ex- ternal perspiration, there is usually a watery excretion through the mucous membrane of the intestines as well, for the inner lining of the intestines is really outside of the body proper, in the same way that the skin is. Not only does proper exercise bring into use the ex- ternal muscles of the abdomen, whose action is readily apparent, but also important muscles lining the abdom- inal cavity, connecting the backbone and pelvis and thighs, the movements of which must have a consider- able influence on the abdominal viscera. There can be no question about the benefits of exer- cise to the constipated, it is a necessity. Movements par- ticularly useful in these cases will be explained under Exercise. Directions in regard to diet will be given in the chapter entitled After Treatment. The reader will note that, so far, in treating of con- stipation, I am speaking of persons in ordinary circum- stances, and not those on the milk diet, or resting. Constipation 113 What does the milk diet do for people afflicted with constipation? It is the only perfect and natural cure that I know of. On no other diet can the bowels be restored to their natural functions, while the patient remains in bed, rest- ing. On no other possible diet can anyone build up the entire muscular system of the body, both voluntary and involuntary, while taking complete rest. On no other diet is it possible for one to gain healthy flesh rapidly, without exercising, or submitting to mas- sage. Most people find that drinking fresh milk with other food increases the tendency to constipation. Even when they attempt an exclusive milk diet, using a few pints daily, the trouble is increased. A few people of this class say that milk acts as a laxative to them. The use of but- termilk, sour milk, and sour milk cheese, tends to pre- vent constipation in nearly every case. It is impossible to use anything but fresh milk in the milk cure, because that is the only substance that the stomach can take continuously, for unlimited periods, without tiring of or rejecting. However, it is often use- ful to give a glass or two of buttermilk, or some cottage cheese (made without scalding) if the bowels do not move naturally while taking the full amount of milk. Sour milk that has coagulated, called “clabber, or loppered milk,” may be beaten up with an egg beater, and makes a very good substitute for buttermilk. But the best of all ways of overcoming the initial constipation on a milk diet is to take more milk. In every case there is necessarily a considerable portion of the milk undigested at first, and the percentage of un- digested matter increases as we increase the amount 114 Milk Diet taken. On a generous milk diet regular stools occur largely as a mechanical result at first; the accumulated feces are too great in amount to be retained. This is often noticed where patients are taking an amount of milk somewhat too small to cause daily movements. In- creasing the amount one or two pints daily generally has an immediate effect, changing the discharge from dry, hard, round balls to a soft, continuous cylinder, with more frequent movements. It is possible that only a small portion of the additional milk is digested, al- though an increased rate of gain in weight is always shown in such cases. While it is true that certain parts of the milk, as the fat and casein, or cheese, are never entirely digested, there are other parts, as albumen, milk sugar, and min- eral salts, that are always completely assimilated. The cells lining the alimentary canal have a selective action; they take out what is needed, and reject the remainder and, under the natural conditions surrounding the milk cure, it is always better to provide too much food than too little, in order to be sure of getting enough of the absolutely necessary materials. Where only one kind of food is taken, it is a simple matter for the digestive ap- paratus to select from it the needed ingredients, and pass on the residue. The dream of theorists that some day we may be able to supply all the needs of the body by meals of a daily pill and a swallow of liquid, and not have any undigested residue to bother with, will never come true. Before starting the milk diet, constipated persons should have at least thirty-six hours’ fast from ordinary foods, but any ripe, fresh or dried fruits (except bana- nas) may be eaten. If the stomach is too weak to handle raw fruits, they may be cooked, without using sugar. Constipation 115 Several glasses of water, either hot or cold, should be taken, but do not distend the stomach with it too much, for water, taken in unusual quantities, is almost as indi- gestible and uncomfortable as some foods are, to a weak stomach. It is not absolutely necessary to have fruit during the fast, and if patients cannot find fruit that they can eat with a relish, they had better omit it. But where fruit is eaten, it is frequently the case that, on beginning the milk diet, the bowels move spontaneously the first day. If the bowels do not move the first day, let them go until the next morning, unless positive discom- fort is experienced, and, if no indications of a movement on the second day, an enema of warm water (at the body temperature) may be taken. No more water should be taken than is necessary to accomplish the purpose, and if even a small passage is secured, do nothing more until the next morning, unless the bowels move naturally. Do not strain, or attempt to force a movement. The movement on the morning of the second day of milk drinking will contain the undigested part of the fruit eaten just before starting the milk, and perhaps the last part of it will be tinged white or yellow by the milk. The movement on the third morning may still con- tain traces of the fruit, but will be mostly a milk stool. If any trouble is experienced in passing feces from the rectum, even with the aid of an enema, it will be on this third morning, and seldom after that. It is only a local trouble, right at the outlet of the rectum ,and copious injections of warm water, with perhaps a little soapsuds or common salt, will overcome it, and it will not recur, if the milk is kept going regularly. It is best to secure an evacuation every day, if only a small one, and the warm water enema will be all that is necessary to obtain it. If the injection is needed for sev- 116 Milk Diet eral days, decrease the amount of water used every day until only about a teacupful is used. The rectum will be getting more power all the time, and probably the feces will become softer. After about a week using the warm water injections without securing spontaneous movements, it is a good plan to use a very small injection of cold water, the colder the better. Cold water acts as a stimulant to the rectal muscles and causes a contraction which brings on the movement. Usually two or three trials with cold water will put the bowels in shape to have natural move- ments. The color of the stools, after the bowels are clear of food previously eaten, is a chalky, or grayish white, in nearly every case. A few persons have soft stools, of a yellowish color, right from the start. As the patient goes on with the diet, more yellow color appears, and the discharge is softer, and movements more frequent—two or three a day. A light orange color usually indicates a good condition of the bowels. When normal evacuations are established, there is never any return to a constipated condition so long as the same conditions of rest, milk, etc., are continued. An exception may be noted in regard to women at the men- strual period, as they may be constipated preceding or during that period. When ordinary diet and habits are resumed there is very seldom any difficulty, because the regular habits established while on the milk, and the increased power of the peristaltic muscles, the improved digestion, and increased circulation, all tend to prevent a relapse. There have been patients with obstinate and long- continued constipation, who, for lack of time, could not stick to the milk diet long enough to entirely overcome Constipation 117 their trouble, but who found their movements entirely regular on resuming ordinary diet. Of all the constipated people who have taken the treatment correctly, for at least four weeks, at least 98 per cent have been completely and permanently cured. In my correspondence, I frequently receive requests to prescribe some cathartic medicine to those on the milk diet. Until recently, I have not recommended any such medicine, and do not wish to now, because if I mention anything of the kind, each constipated person will be sure they require it, while, as a matter of fact, nothing of the kind is necessary in ninety-nine cases out of a hun- dred. The cure of the constipation is not apt to be so permanent if medicine is resorted to, but there are cer- tain cases where a laxative helps to get started. In bad cases of bleeding piles; in those who have extensive ad- hesions of the bowels and abdominal walls; in diabetes, and perhaps others, some laxative may be useful. A preliminary dose of castor oil, the night before starting on the milk diet, will cause a movement the next day, and half as much oil for two or three days will gen- erally tide anyone over the danger of having impacted feces. If the milk is taken regularly, and in sufficient quantity, the movement will, after once being estab- lished, always arrive at the rectum sufficiently soft to be removed by an injection of warm water. There is one thing to be said in favor of castor oil, aside from the fact that it is one of the safest laxatives, and that is, that its taste is not sufficiently pleasant to most people to endanger a habit, as is often the case with sugar-coated pills. Beware of the “A. B. S.” pill. That combination of aloes, belladonna and strychnine taken for any length of time, causes the most difficult constipation to cure that 118 Milk Diet I ever met, because the unnatural stimulation has finally exhausted and paralyzed the muscles. Another oil that I sometimes use because it has some good effects, and no bad ones in most cases, is liquid pe- troleum, called by different makers, alboline, neutrol, nujol, calol, stanolax, neutralol, etc. This does not operate in the same way that castor oil does, as it is not a cathartic medicine. It does not hasten the time of passage of the intestinal contents, so that its effects will not be noticed for a day or more. But, in nearly every ease, where an ounce is given three times a day, with the milk, it prevents fecal impaction and renders the stool softer and easier to discharge. As this mineral oil is probably not absorbed into the system, but simply acts as an oily diluent to the bowel contents, its use is not detrimental, either on an exclusive milk diet, or ordinary diet. It is odorless, colorless, and almost tasteless. It usually prevents the feces forming hard, round balls, and considerable of the oil is passed in an oily, liquid condition. With ordinary food, the feces become quite soft, of a brownish or reddish color, and some peo- ple complain that a portion of the feces or oil, may slip out before they are aware of it, and stain the clothing. It is possible that the oil coating on the lining of the bowel may prevent proper assimilation of food in certain cases. If it causes an excess of gas in the intestines, better discontinue the oil. Another inert material which is supposed to absorb water, and carry it through the intestines, preventing the drying out of the stool, is agar-agar, a whitish, flaky substance, which is chewed with the food. It forms the base of several much advertised remedies. Whatever its merits may be in connection with ordinary diet, it af- fords no great benefit with the milk diet, but the seaweed Constipation 119 from which it is prepared, seems to have more effect. I am able to secure this dried seaweed in certain stores on the Pacific coast, and find that chewing up a small por- tion of one of the flat, broad leaves, helps to overcome the constipation of the milk diet. In fact, I now regard this seaweed as a most useful aid. Where the liver is inactive, and the secretion of bile deficient, a small amount of ox gall can be given at night, and it will insure a movement in the morning. From two to five or six grains daily is usually sufficient. It can be given in capsules, but I always keep on hand a supply of specially prepared pills to use in these cases. This use of a remedy which is normally made in the body seems to be a contradiction of the principles pre- viously expressed, hut after long experience, I find that the temporary use of the preparation stimulates the liver and certainly helps the constipation. As the circulation of blood derived from the milk diet increases, the func- tions of the liver always become more active, and better regulated. This is shown plainly in those patients who have suffered from gall-stones, as they are permanently cured of the trouble. In the first few days of milk diet and rest, in the very constipated, or those whose bowels are practically para- lyzed, the combination of milk stool with the matter de- rived from food previously eaten, or the dead matter from the lining of the bowels, makes a putty-like sub- stance, which may collect in dilated portions of the rec- tum, and be difficult to expel, even with the aid of ene- mas. This only occurs once, and after that the matter can always be removed by using a small, warm water injection. As this book, and treatment, is being used more and more by physicians, and others at a distance, I feel im- 120 Milk Diet pelled to give the methods which I have found efficacious in these rare cases, and save some one the trouble and delay of writing, or telegraphing me for instructions, as has happened several times. In the first place, enemas, when used, should be taken while the patient is lying down, and retained a few minutes, if possible, to soften the matter and give better effects. Where there is an irritable condition of the rectum, or patients say that enemas “always upset them,” I have the nurse inject about an ounce of warm olive oil, late in the evening. They retain this over night, and a small warm water enema in the morning usually causes a movement without discomfort. Or an enema of water and oil may be prepared by mixing the two just before using by rapidly pouring back and forth from one vessel to another. If plain water has no effect, the addition of a table- spoonful of common salt is a good plan. The strong, salty water draws water from the tissues, and this se- cretion washes out the matter in the rectum. The in- jection of glycerine acts in the same way, but more strongly. An ounce of glycerine thrown into the rectum by means of a small syringe acts effectively, and within a few minutes. It is not wise to use the glycerine more than one day at a time, as its continued use irritates and inflames the mucous membrane. A powerful enema used in hospitals when they have a bad case of hardened feces in the rectum, is composed of a pint of pretty warm water, two drams of ox gall, and four ounces of glycerine. To be repeated if neces- sary. Proper care and attention to the stools for a few days in starting the milk diet will prevent any trouble Constipation 121 requiring such strong measures as are given above. It is much better to use a small enema daily, or even twice daily, rather than have an impaction in the rectum. The use of enemas on the milk diet while completely resting does not create a habit. The bowels will move satisfactorily when the patient becomes active and uses a coarser diet. Patients often ask me whether the use of dilators is harmful, or beneficial. I certainly do not approve of the continual use of the plugs sold for that purpose; if used at all, they should be removed immediately, and not left in long, as some of the manufacturers recom- mend. A better instrument is made somewhat like a surgeons speculum, so that the blades can be separated as far as advisable, and closed up before withdrawing. Dilation is useful, not only in constipated conditions, but in some forms of nervous trouble, and insomnia. It is not really necessary to buy an instrument, be- cause the old fashioned way of greasing the two fore- fingers, squatting down, inserting the fingers by putting the hands under the hips, and stretching the anus, is just as good, and under better control. CHAPTER VIII. CONSUMPTION. PREVIOUS to 1905 my practice of the milk cure was principally among patients suffering with tuberculosis. Since coming to Long Beach I have been unable to advise many consumptives, except by correspondence, as the climate here on the coast is not as suitable for them as that of localities drier and more elevated. The milk cure, with complete rest in the open air, has been more successful than any other treatment that I know of, for consumption. Dr. J. E. Crewe, of Rochester, Minnesota, now has a sanitarium for tuber- cular cases, where this treatment is successfully given. He uses three to nine quarts daily, taken at half hour intervals. Fresh, raw, warm milk is given, and fruit or fruit juice is also taken if patient is constipated. Pa- tients are kept resting in bed for eight weeks, on this plan. All consumptives know that a decrease of weight nearly always means an increase in the disease; con- versely, they believe increasing weight indicates a gain in health. Of far greater value than the mere increase in weight caused by this treatment is the improvement in the blood, both in quantity and quality, and the changes in the lungs it brings about. In addition to the increased capacity of the lungs Consumption 123 previously spoken of, some characteristic reactions oc- cur in pulmonary tuberculosis. Many people, at some period of their lives, contract consumption and are completely cured simply because their vitality is strong enough to overcome the germs. Just as soon as a consumptive has sufficient blood to prevent the wasting of the tissues, the loss in weight stops, and on a further increase of the nutritive fluids, the healthy cells are so strengthened as to prevent any extension of the disease. Next follows in natural order the recovery of the affected cells, or the development of new ones, and the elimination or absorption or encap- sulation of the germs. . Almost every case of tuberculosis with consolidation of lung tissue, starting in on the milk diet, has a cough- ing crisis, generally about the end of the first week. The cough and expectoration greatly increases as the con- solidated portions of the lung loosen up and air enters the cells which have been filled up with the products of the disease. The cough is easy and the sputum comes up from the lungs readily, while previously the cough may have been hard and ineffective. Most of the authorities on tuberculosis include among the first signs of improvement a decrease of the cough and expectoration. This may be the case in a dry climate on an ordinary diet, because the inflammatory products would be grad- ually absorbed and largely eliminated through other channels or perhaps even made over and used in the system. 124 Milk Diet Probably this process also occurs to some extent in this treatment, but I have seen almost a quart of sputum come from a patient in twenty-four hours at this time. Later on, of course, the coughing and sputum decrease. On physical examination, after the increased expec- toration has ceased, air is heard entering the previously solid portions of the lungs and as the air cells become cleared out, the breathing sounds become normal. In cases where cavities have formed from the breaking down of the consolidated area, sounds are heard later on, indicating the hardening of the walls of the cavity and cessation of the extension of the disease. After another period of time the cavity may decrease in size. I have observed cavities as large as a sugar bowl become cleared out and firm walls formed around them and years after have noticed a sinking in of the chest walls and almost complete obliteration of the cavi- ties with normal lung tissue around them. I do not say that consumption with cavities in the lungs can be always cured, or even usually cured, but I certainly have seen some cases that have lived many years and had fair health after taking the milk cure. Much depends on what the patient is willing, or able, to do. I have a patient now in California whom I treated thirty years ago in New York state and he has better health than the average man of his age. If he had re- turned to New York City to live he probably would not have done so well. No matter how perfect a cure you may make, there is always danger of re-infection. This danger decreases with years, and those past the age of forty are not so susceptible. It may seem a great hardship to a “lunger” to give Consumption 125 up the theater and the church, to avoid all crowds or social gatherings, not even to go into a car filled with people, but this is the only safe course. It is easy to carry out this regime on the desert, or the mountain, and therefore the cure is not difficult in those places. Air is more important to a consumptive than to any other individual. In my opinion it does not matter what kind of air so long as it is pure. If the condition is serious you must stay in the open air day and night. Keep out of rooms, churches, thea- ters, cars or any crowded place. Under ordinary hygienic treatment many cases have been cured at high altitudes, others in the Salton sink below sea level, others on long sea voyages or on sea islands, others in the dry air of Arizona and others in the moist air of Cuba and Florida. On a milk diet or not, a third stage consumptive who has regained his health in a certain climate should stay there. The lung tissue built up on a Colorado mountain will not long stand the air of a big city. Many, many cases that come to Arizona and get “cured,” return to other states to live, and after again losing health, come back to Arizona. But the “cure” seldom works the second time, never the third. I say to you, pick out a place where you are satisfied to live and when you regain your health you can remain there and retain it. One thing I wish to caution third stage consumptives about. There is only one possible danger to anyone taking the milk cure and that is the rupture of an artery or aneurism from the increased blood pressure. I heard of a patient who had an aneurism or blood 126 Milk Diet tumor caused by a wound of the large artery of the thigh and on beginning a milk diet the pressure of the blood ruptured the aneurism, causing a fatal hemorrhage be- fore medical aid could be summoned. The same danger would be present soon after a major surgical operation, and is well understood in hos- pitals, where such patients are given very little fluid for some days after an operation. I do not believe this danger would be present with an aneurism caused by disease of the artery, because the new blood would rapidly strengthen and restore the weakened walls. I do not hesitate to apply the milk diet to such a case, beginning it rather gradually, and usually expect a complete cure, but such patients must have complete rest for several weeks. I can imagine a patient with a cavity in the lung crossed by an artery, whose walls are eroded and weak, which might break and cause considerable loss of blood. Out of several hundred lung cases I have never heard of any serious hemorrhages, but where cavities are known to exist, the beginning of the diet should be gradual, commencing with, say, three quarts and in- creasing a few ounces daily until the regular amount is reached about the second week. There may be small hemorrhages from capillary ves- sels which are extending into the diseased tissues, where the circulation had previously been absent, but they amount to nothing. They soon close and the loss of blood is not noticed where it is being made so rapidly. Bleeding from the mucous membrane of the nose and throat may also occur where there has been a ca- tarrhal condition, but it is always slight and never harmful. Those living in high altitudes and subject to hemor- rhage should always begin milk gradually. CHAPTER IX. CATARRH AND ASTHMA. CATARRH is a very common disorder, affecting the mucous membranes in various parts of the body. It varies from a slight, transient, “cold in the head,” to chronic and serious conditions of the nasal passages, throat, lungs, stomach, intestines, etc. At first one may be subject to the attacks only at certain times of the year, following exposure to unusual weather conditions, usually after being overheated, but afterward it may be present, more or less, all the time. The milk diet treatment seems to have a direct and invariably beneficial effect on catarrhal conditions of any mucous membrane. The very first result is a strengthening and general building up of the softer tissues of the body, those which are first influenced by a richer blood supply, and the cells of which these mucous membranes are composed, are very quickly in- fluenced. If no serious complications have set in, there is no case of catarrh or hay fever that cannot be permanently cured by a four weeks’ course of milk diet. Some of the happiest cases I have had were asth- matics, and I can state positively that, if the disease has not progressed to the stage where the air cells of the lungs have broken down into emphysematous cavities, a complete cure may be made. At first, asthma is only a nervous disorder, but after years of straining, and wheezing, and “doping,” most asthmatics develop emphysema and bronchitis. As with other nervous troubles, here, too the milk diet is a spe- 128 Milk Diet cific. But patients must throw away their medicine bot- tles, inhalers, and smokers, and depend entirely on the milk, with complete rest, and warm baths. The cure cannot take place as long as applications of cocaine, or other “deadeners” are made to the air passages. Dis- ease cannot properly be eliminated from the body while the nerve centers are stupefied by anything (medicine) that prevents their sending out calls for help (pain). The first thing to learn to do after starting the milk, is to relax the whole body, and lie down flat in bed, and asthmatics are usually able to do this within the first two or three days. After that time the recovery goes on without interruption. Do not discontinue the rest part of the treatment too soon, but let it bear some relation to the time the disease has existed. As the patient gets stronger, the lungs clearer, and the breathing regular, increase the air in the room and remove some of the cov- ering from the bed. Harden them off before getting up and beginning exercises. Continue the milk for weeks, perhaps, after getting up, if the case has been serious. It is important, even more so than in other diseases, to do the cure completely at the first trial, and not stop, after a certain amount of improvement is obtained, with the expectation of finishing up some other time. Asthma is easily curable previous to the time that actual breaking down of lung tissue takes place, and after that I know nothing that wrill give more relief than the milk diet. Old cases of asthma, with chronic bronchitis and emphysema look, and I suppose they feel, like the most miserable people in the world. But there is always a great improvement on the milk cure, es- pecially if they break away from their depressant medi- cines—a thing they are very loath to do. I make no distinction between the different forms Catarrh and Asthma 129 of asthma, as usually classified: Cardiac, renal, peptic, thymic, nocturnal or various forms of hay fever; the greatest possible benefit for all of them is obtained on the milk diet. A regular asthmatic does not do well near the ocean, as a rule. Probably three-fourths of them find their trouble aggravated at the seaside. In California the favorite location is in the foothills, at an elevation of one or two thousand feet. Most of them are free from the disorder on the desert, if it is not too hot, and especially if there is not a great deal of wind. One lady of my acquaintance could not live in the interior, or anywhere, in comfort, except right on the ocean beach. CHAPTER X. AUTOINTOXICATION. Auto-intoxication, or seif - poisoning, seems to be becoming more common every year. Two-thirds of the people applying for sanitarium treatment suffer from this trouble. The name indicates a condition rather than a disease, hut it is a condition that induces many chronic diseases. It is caused by the absorption into the circulation of some portion of the contents of the large intestine, particularly those con- tents which have remained there too long. The condi- tion is easily diagnosed, as indican is usually found in the urine, and its presence is good evidence of the exist- ence of the disorder. The symptoms of poisoning of the system by toxic substances in the colon are so characteristic that it is usually unnecessary to make an examination of the urine. The drowsiness and lack of energy, headaches, frequent periods of misery and depression, giddiness and dizziness, lack of circulation, anemia, dyspepsia, muscular weakness, loss of appetite or irregular appe- tite, flatulence, discomfort after a full meal, furred tongue, pasty complexion, offensive perspiration, all plainly show the condition. Constipation is usually at the bottom of the trouble, especially the constipation that has been created by ca- thartic medicines. Overeating, or eating too often, is or has been the rule in most of these cases. The stagnation probably starts in the lower end of the colon, or rectum, and gradually extends upward, until the whole colon becomes a poison factory instead of being the principal Auto Intoxication 131 absorptive organ of digested food. Under these condi- tions, the whole system can be poisoned by food that was pure and wholesome when eaten. These people, as I tell them, ‘‘live on the last meal they have eaten” They get some benefit from their food in the stomach, and upper intestine, but in the re- mainder of the alimentary tract, perhaps twenty feet in length, the amount of energy expended by the system, in keeping out the harmful material, more than counter- balances the benefit derived from the good material ab- sorbed. This is especially true of the colon, or large intestine, which includes the last five feet of the tract. In the colon, in health, most of the food value is ab- sorbed into the body, after it has been elaborated by passing into the mouth, through the stomach, and down- ward through the small intestine. But in the class of cases under consideration the colon seems to have lost its useful function, and is filled with a mass of dead and decomposing matter and putrefactive bacteria. This condition is all wrong, and seems to be confined to the human race, as no other animal is known to suffer from this chronic disorder. Civilized man, occupied with the pursuit of business, or pleasure; the attainment of mental development, or the grind of daily work, gives little thought to those functions of the body that seem unimportant, or that may be postponed until a more convenient time. Animals, living in more natural con- ditions, do not hesitate to relieve themselves at the first call of nature, and their colons, if they have the organ, remain in a healthy state. Man restrains the impulse to evacuate until some convenient time, and each time the natural desire is suppressed, the function is more or less weakened. The time comes when he feels that the bowels should be 132 Milk Diet emptied, and being unable to bring on the act by natural efforts he resorts to some artificial method. This usually fixes the condition called constipation, meaning delayed, infrequent, or insufficient fecal evacuation. In resorting to remedies to relieve the trouble, few people use any systematic method. Usually, when dis- agreeable symptoms arise, resort is had to medicines— laxatives, purgatives, cathartics, hydragogues, chola- gogues. It cannot be denied that there are many things that will force the bowels to move. In the whole practice of medicine nothing so nearly approaches an exact and reliable art as the giving of cathartics. In every other disarrangement of the body functions, the physician, no matter how great his experience, gives his accustomed remedy, and—waits to see if it works. But if the patient be constipated, he stands on sure ground. The bowels can be made to move. The medicine may not work the second time, or it may require more of it for repeated effects, or another medicine may have to be used in time, but there is usually some way to force the desired end. The intelligent doctor does not claim that this method will ever cure constipation. If very intelligent and very frank, he will admit that it does not relieve the cause of the constipation, and probably makes the con- dition more permanent. Catharsis is a convenient thing, and profitable to the druggist. If the sales of cathartics, oils, salts, min- eral waters, and all the so-called constipation cures were suddenly stopped, the drug trade would lose its prin- cipal support. I have the same opinion expressed by Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes, that, if all these medicines were thrown in the sea, it would be all the better for mankind and all the worse for the fishes. Auto Intoxication 133 I have treated hundreds of cases of auto-intoxica- tion, and cured them, by using an exclusive milk diet under proper conditions. I have found that two or three days of the milk diet, and rest, was usually sufficient to stop the bad symptoms. In some cases relief was not obtained for several days, or until the patient began to sweat. In only one case did the headaches continue for so long as fourteen days, and in this particular case active measures were taken on the fifteenth day to clean out the intestines. Offensive matter was then discharged which came from food eaten before the milk diet was started, and the headaches stopped almost immediately. While it is true that a few days of exclusive milk diet will relieve the symptoms, I do not mean to say that the trouble will be cured that quickly, because if ordi- nary diet were resumed then, the symptoms would prob- ably return soon. But a continuation of the diet for several weeks causes certain changes for the better in the organs and circulation, and then no difficulty ap- pears on resuming the usual foods. In the last few years a new method of treating auto- intoxication has been employed. I refer to the use of soured milk, or cultures of lactic acid bacilli. In previous editions of this book, I have not recom- mended this treatment, indeed, the tablets said to con- tain the life-prolonging bacilli that I experimented with, seemed inert and useless. But now it is possible to obtain in most cities true cultures of the so-called Bacillus Bul- garicus, and, after using them, and milk soured by them. I have come to the conclusion that a discovery of great value has been made. Undoubtedly the researches of Professor Elie Metchnikoff have made this remedy available. His in- vestigations practically prove that man’s tissues are 134 Milk Diet deprived of their best work and his life actually short- ened because of a constant daily poisoning of his vital organs from myriads of putrefactive bacteria in the large intestine. Metchnikoff and his assistants in the Pasteur Insti- tute made exhaustive studies of the soured milks, espe- cially those used by Bulgarian peasants, and discovered a particularly strong lactic acid bacillus now called the Bulgarian bacillus, or bacillus of Massol. A large num- ber of reputable physicians have made enthusiastic re- ports on their use in many different cases. There can be no doubt of the benefit of the bacillary treatment in dia- betes. I have not space to go into the details of the lactic acid bacillary treatment, especially as the ground has been so thoroughly covered by Professor Metchnikoff’s book, “The Prolongation of Life,” and “The Bacillus of Long Life,” by Douglas. I should not neglect to mention also Dr. Lorand’s splendid book, “Old Age Deferred.” For several years I have been using Bulgarian bacilli in connection with an exclusive milk diet, and with good results, particularly in cases of intestinal putrefaction. There can be no doubt that the lactic acid germ discov- ered by Metchnikoff is a powerful aid in disinfecting the colon. However, the fact must not be lost sight of that all milk contains lactic acid bacilli, and it is possible that the good results obtained by means of an exclusive milk diet are to some extent due to the large number of these germs taken into the system. In other words, as a person living on milk alone must absorb countless millions of the ordinary lactic acid bacilli, this immense amount and the continuous action Auto Intoxication 135 may equal in effect a smaller number of the stronger im- ported germs taken two or three times a day. People may overcome illness and prolong their lives by using the Bulgarian bacilli, hut I am well satisfied that the same effect has often followed a course of ex- clusive milk diet during my long experience with the latter treatment. In revising the 1921 edition of this book, I wish to note an important fact that has come to my attention. The importation of the Bulgarian bacilli, which com- menced several years before the European war started, has resulted in the permanent establishment of these bacteria in the United States. Several institutions, laboratories, both pharmaceutical and dairy, and butter culture manufacturers, have spread the bacilli through- out the country, and being stronger and more resistant than the other forms of lactic acid bacilli, the bacillus of Massol is now, in many dairy centers, more common than any other. Therefore common buttermilk, sour milk and ordi- nary dairy milk in many places, may have just as many Bulgarian germs as the same articles might contain in Bulgaria, or Armenia. I have also to note another fact not quite so agree- able to contemplate, and that is that some doctors are now opposing the use of lactic acid products. None of these men claim, so far as I know, that any damage has ever resulted from the use of buttermilk, but they say that its value as a therapeutic remedy has been greatly over-rated. I believe that all lactic acid products, buttermilk, 136 Milk Diet sour milk, clabber milk, koumiss, Leben, keffir and yog- hurt , are invaluable in the treatment of the sick, and their use is deservedly increasing. The opposition in certain medical circles may be due to the fact that there is no particular profit in prescribing these simple foods as there is in dispensing medicines. CHAPTER XI. RHEUMATISM. I KNOW the term “rheumatism” is now considered unscientific, as many of the manifestations that used to be grouped under that head are now considered as separate and distinct diseases, but the term is a pop- ular one, and well understood. The milk diet treatment can be applied to rheuma- tism with the greatest confidence in a successful out- come. I have never seen nor heard of a return of rheu- matism in anyone who had taken the milk cure. It may well be asked: Why are there so many suffering from rheumatism if such a simple thing will cure them? There are several answers to this question, but there is no good reason. Many people with rheumatism, gout, chronic bronchitis, and similar diseases are fleshy, plethoric and overweight, and the milk diet does not appeal to them because, if correctly taken, it may mean an increase in weight, at first, anyway. Very many of them are gross eaters; some hygienic writers go so far as to say that they all are. Not many are willing to give up the pleasures of the table for an exclusive milk diet. A fast is often beneficial to this class, but most of them will not listen to it. If they fast for a time they commit such excesses when they resume eating as to nullify all the benefits. Those who can afford it go from one hot spring to another, drinking vile tasting and smelling waters, tak- ing mud baths and being doctored by all kinds of quacks, with all sorts of medicines. The resorts where a “good table” is set appeal to them the most and hold 138 Milk Diet them the longest. Very few permanent cures are per- formed in these places. Some ,like the Arkansas Hot Springs, often greatly benefit invalids, but there the water is quite pure, and the good results come from the change to the pleasant mountain air, drinking large quantities of water, taking a daily warm bath, and experiencing a general improve- ment of hygienic conditions. I have seen fully as good results in Long Beach, California, from a free use of the soft, artesian water, together with a more correct diet. The milk cure does not meet with the ideas of most rheumatic people because they must take a fast to begin with, and next they must cut off their meat, eggs, tea, coffee, whisky and tobacco. They cannot see the need of going to bed, for they think that would make them weak; they would rather hobble around for years like cripples than go to bed for a fortnight and get well. Many sufferers from rheumatism have started in bravely on the milk diet, but have stopped short when a natural reaction occurred. In this disease, as in many others, the first sign of a cure is a stirring up of the old trouble, causing often a recurrence of the rheumatic attacks. It is very common, almost the rule, I should say, for a case of chronic rheumatism, starting on the milk diet properly, to have a return of the old symptoms. If the disease has previously taken the form of lumbago, after a few days of the diet, some movement or muscular effort will suddenly bring on a typical attack of the pain and spasm. If the patient keeps on with the milk the attack disappears after a day or two, but within a few days more a second attack may come on, but Rheumatism 139 always much lighter than the first. I have seen even a third attack, but so slight as to cause no inconvenience. If the patient goes through the first attack without ceasing the regular taking of the milk, any further appearance of the trouble will not hinder a cure, because it will be evident from the lighter form that the disease is being mastered. The explanation of these “crises” may be found in the fact that the circulation of the blood is greatly stimulated while it is not yet purified. The excess of fibrin, the uric or lactic acid, or whatever the rheumatic poison may be, is still in the blood and being driven around with greater force, or into parts where previously the circulation had been stagnant, so it is only natural that such reactions should occur. These things are discouraging to people who have been in the habit of taking medicine to relieve the attacks, and who have considered that medicine the best which most com- pletely and quickly stopped the pain and discomfort. It is the old story of something quick and easy, some immediate effect, the suppression of some symptom which is only the surface indication of deeper trouble; present relief regardless of future trouble. The process of eliminating the rheumatic poison on a milk diet, if slow, is sure. Milk does not contain the elements from which this poison is made, and gradually, the new blood, working within the body, assisted by the baths keeping the external skin soft and porous, drives rheumatism out of every tissue of the body, and, best of all, there is a complete correction of the abnormal process of assimilation, digestion, or elimination which allows this poison to accumulate in the blood. It is a genuine cure, not simply temporary relief. We do not know why certain people should have rheumatism, when others, living apparently in the same 140 Milk Diet way, should be free from it; why one class of people is subject to rheumatism, but never have tuberculosis, and another class is liable to be consumptive, but never rheumatic. Innumerable volumes have been written on rheumatism, gout, Bright’s disease, chronic bron- chitis, asthma, etc., but to my mind they are all different manifestations of the same disease, and that disease is simply the deranged condition of the assimilative or eliminative organs, which permits the poison to accu- mulate in the blood. Undoubtedly, the class of food eaten has an impor- tant influence, for meat extract, meat, eggs and fish always increase the amount of acid in the blood, while a vegetarian diet always decreases it. Tea, coffee and cocoa also contain the so-called purin bodies or bases, of which group uric acid is a member. Milk is abso- lutely free from these bodies. Dr. Sherman, Professor of Food Chemistry at Columbia University, in his new book, “Food Prod- ucts,” says of milk: “It has the advantage of not con- taining the substances which yield uric acid in the body.”—Page 77. Professor Weir Mitchell says uric acid disappears from the urine while skimmed milk alone is being taken, but reappears on the addition of other foods, especially meat. I am sure that some of my rheumatic patients obtain freedom from uric acid by the use of unskimmed milk, but if the cream has separated I always remove it, as it is unwise to attempt to replace the cream in the milk. The urine of these patients from being strongly acid, changes very quickly to the normal condition of a very slight acidity, due to acid phosphates. The per- spiration, however, continues highly acid for several Rheumatism 141 days, and sometimes for weeks. The odor from a rheu- matic patient on the milk diet is distinctive and unmis- takable, but becomes gradually less as they go on to a cure. Many other patients have odor of more or less intensity emanating from the skin, and none of them may be considered cured as long as this persists, no mat- ter how well they may otherwise appear. Epileptics often have a most disagreeable odor at first, similar to that of people of African descent. There is no form of rheumatism, acute or chronic, of the bones or muscles, so far as I know, that cannot be successfully treated by the milk diet. But there are some cases with obscure, deep-seated pains, prob- ably in the bones and worse at night, which are not rheumatism at all, and cannot be cured in as short a period as rheumatism. Arthritis is not difficult to cure by this method, and even deformity and stiff joints may gradually straighten out. I have treated numerous cases of rheumatoid arthri- tis, or arthritis deformans, with badly ankylosed or stiffened joints. The progress of the disease always stops on the milk diet, and, to my surprise, at least two patients recovered movement in joints which I had thought permanently stiff, but the diet was continued for some months in both cases. One disease difficult to treat by the exclusive milk diet, and incurable by any other method that I am aware of, is a form of arthritis, or rather periarthritis, where the tissues around joints, such as the synovial membranes, the cartilages and the ligaments are in- fected by bacteria. These particular tissues are almost bloodless and if the germs once find a lodging place there, the blood can seldom dispossess them. 142 Milk Diet The most common form of this trouble is a sero- fibrinous arthritis, with a marked swelling composed of a soft exudate from the capsule of the joint and the sheaths of the tendons nearby. The disease is very chronic, but not particularly painful except at times, when it seems to take a fresh start. The milk diet may cause a definite but futile reaction in these cases, futile because the germs are outside of the direct influ- ence of the blood. Good results may sometimes be obtained from the milk, but only when the patient is completely resting, as milk diet and exercise only aggra- vates the disorder and seems to increase the number of joints affected. CHAPTER XII. VARIOUS DISEASES. I AM often asked if the milk diet is good for this or that disease, or if it will suit certain cases, as, for instance, where there is an aversion to milk, or a dilated stomach, or where it causes constipation or diarrhea, or if it is not dangerous to use in heart or kidney disease. Anyone can take the milk diet, if he starts right, and it may cure any chronic disease, not too far advanced, with the possible exceptions of diabetes, cancer, loco- motor ataxia and mental disorders. I have never seen it used, in full amount, for acute diseases like typhoid fever, nor would it be practicable to give it during the height of an attack of appendicitis, but I have seen many cases where health was lost through typhoid and restored on the milk diet, and other patients, subject to periodical attacks of appendi- citis, have remained in perfect health after their course of milk diet. It makes no difference whether a person likes milk or not. One of my most satisfactory cases was a lady who had not been able to take any milk for over forty years, and another patient had not tasted milk for nearly fifty years, but is now well and drinking a quart of milk daily. There is no great difficulty in handling the proper amount of milk if it is taken in the small and frequent doses that I recommend, and the patient kept at rest until the stomach and bowels are working well. Certain specialists say that a dilated stomach is a bar to an exclusive milk diet. This is a great mistake. A 144 Milk Diet dilated stomach is one of the easiest things to cure on a milk diet taken while resting. Probably if only a small quantity was taken it might aggravate the trouble, but where the proper amount, or anywhere near it, is given, there is no difficulty in restoring the tone, strength and proper size of a weakened and dilated stomach. I think the stomach is the first organ to be restored to a healthy function, in nearly every case. Chronic diarrhea can be cured on a milk diet in a few days, if the patient can take sufficient milk to raise the blood pressure and heart pulsations. One lady with a long standing case of this trouble took milk for four weeks, with little apparent improvement, except that her weight increased from eighty-five to ninety-four pounds. She had been weak and nervous, largely, I think, as a result of a severe capital operation she had undergone at Battle Creek, Michigan. She could only take about three quarts daily, and this seemed to be too little to restore the proper circulation. But, fortun- ately, when she resumed ordinary diet her bowels oper- ated in a perfectly normal manner, and after ten years her health continues good. A gentleman from Maine who suffered from membranous colitis, which had be- come so acute that he was losing five pounds a week in weight, took the milk diet carefully under my super- vision, and at the end of five weeks I discharged him permanently cured, and he remains well after fifteen years. An Asiatic disease called sprue has connected with it a severe form of chronic diarrhea or dysentery. I have heard of several cases being relieved by the milk diet, and a medical missionary from China informs me that over there a milk diet is the only known cure. I have now treated over a dozen cases of this disease, with Various Diseases 145 milk and fruit, and all of them were cured. They were all resting while on the diet. Regarding kidney disease, some doctors without per- sonal knowledge on the subject have declared that such excessive quantities of milk would ruin any kidney. In answer, I say that the amount is not excessive, but only the natural amount required, and that the kidneys do stand it, and grow healthier every day. It is no hard- ship for any organ of the body to exercise its natural function when it is given the proper material to work upon. The function of the kidney is to separate from the blood and eliminate from the body certain salts and waste materials, and regulating the blood pressure and increasing the amount of blood makes this function eas- ier. The fact that a much larger quantity of urine is passed on the milk diet than usual only indicates that the work of elimination is assisted by the larger amount of water passing through the kidney. The urine of a healthy person is more or less poison- ous. It contains toxic materials eliminated from the blood. In Bright’s disease these poisons are reduced in quantity or disappear from the urine because the dis- eased kidney is no longer capable of separating them from the blood. The sweat glands are able to excrete a portion of this matter through the perspiration, but sooner or later its retention in the blood is apt to cause uremic convulsions. As the urine is increased to three or four times the usual amount by this treatment, either one or both of two things must happen. The waste and toxic matter is very much diluted by the additional water, or a very much larger amount of waste is excreted. In the first case the elimination should be easier by reason of the greater amount of fluid washing out the 146 Milk Diet tubes; in the second case the blood is purified more rapidly. The human kidney is never found in a perfect con- dition. Sections for microscopic study in physiological laboratores are usually made from the kidney of some of the lower animals, or possibly from that of a child. The adult kidney always shows more or less patholog- ical change in the delicate structure and complicated arrangement of the uriniferous tubules. I have seen many very serious cases of albuminuria and Bright’s disease take the milk cure, during the last thirty-nine years, and none of them failed to receive improvement, and, in most cases, a cure. Of the few who have not survived, some had resumed the use of tobacco, and others did not continue the treatment long enough to bring a high blood pressure down to a safe figure. I believe that diseased kidneys can be restored to almost perfect condition by the milk diet. I have had several children and young men, aged from eleven years to nineteen, affected with albuminuria, with various symptoms, such as high blood pressure, dropsy, head- aches, casts and sometimes blood in the urine, and the general results have been very good, but some of these have retained a small amount of albumen in the urine after everything else had been restored to a healthy con- dition. All these cases that I have been able to keep in touch with are still well, and in some cases the albu- men has disappeared. Long courses of milk diet, even several months, failed to eliminate all the albumen in one or two of these cases, but the patients are in good health, apparently. So it seems possible, in children, anyway, to obtain health and still carry some albumen in the urine. Floating, or movable, kidney are easily restored to Various Diseases 147 their normal condition in the milk cure, and they stay fixed, because the normal support of kidney fat is built up around them and holds them in place. Regarding heart disease, meaning usually organic or valvular disease, there is a general impression that the less fluids given the better it is for the patient. Schroth’s method of an almost dry diet was thought to be good for heart disease; Oertel’s method of dry diet, with active exercise, helped many cases, and Tuff- nell’s treatment of absolute rest with a dry and very restricted diet has made some remarkable cures. I was for many years under the impression that the milk diet could not be given in severe forms of heart dis- ease, but I have so completely changed my views, simply from the result of observation, that I now feel sure the milk diet can be given to any case of heart disease, with the greatest success possible by any treatment. Further than that, I make the prediction that the future treat- men of severe forms of organic and functional, or nervous, heart disease, and aneurisms, will consist al- most entirely of the milk diet and rest. A broken or ruptured valve may not be restored by the milk diet, or any other treatment, but it can be com- pensated for, so that the possessor may live in compara- tive comfort. Almost any other form of heart disease can be successfully treated by means of the milk diet. The simplest case of all is the weak heart of an anemic person. Such people, with poor circulation, white, pasty looking skin, usually under weight, but some- times fat and flabby; weak and languid, disinclined to exertion and easily tired, with typical heart sounds— the “anemic murmur,” and a small, undeveloped heart, can obtain perfect health on milk and rest. I have seen some of them lose the murmur in two or three days, 148 Milk Diet followed by a steady growth of the heart in size and strength, with a corresponding improvement in the general health. Every doctor sees young people with the disease, or condition, rather, called chlorosis, or “the green sick- ness,” which is often benefited by the administration of iron, because the blood of such people lacks the neces- sary amount of iron.* Milk always contains iron, and a short course of the milk diet always cures chlorosis, and puts the general system in good order, a fact which is not always the case after the administration of medicine. Some of the more severe forms of heart disease are complicated by dropsy of the feet and ankles, and other parts. Although perhaps of months’ standing, this dropsy always disappears in a few days on the milk and rest. Rest alone often relieves these cases, but rest without milk will not cure them. Regarding dropsy of any part of the body, from whatever cause, I have never heard of a failure of this treatment to cure it, unless the patient was too far gone to take the milk. Any form of valvular disease may be treated by the milk diet, with the greatest possible advantage, but in these cases, more than in anv others that we are called on to treat, rest, COMPLETE, ABSOLUTE REST, is essential. Two cases of valvular disease of the heart have lost several pounds in weight in the first few days on a full milk diet, but afterwards gained satisfactorily. I men- *Prof. Sherman says on page 78 of Food Products:—“Iron is pres- ent in milk in only small quantity, but evidently in a form exceptionally favorable for assimilation, and adequate for the maintenance of iron equilibrium in man.” This footnote for the benefit of critics who claim milk contains no iron. Various Diseases 149 tion this fact (which I cannot explain) because it is rare for any patient (except those having obesity) to lose weight while on the milk. I have stated elsewhere that the heart increases in size, and this is true of every case, except the dilated weak heart. It is not difficult to prove this, as any patient with a weak heart can observe the apex beat of the heart move downward as the cure goes on. Growth of the heart follows the laws governing all muscles, that, if the nutrition is kept up, increased work is followed by increased size. The very first work that the blood made on a milk diet has to perform is to nourish the heart itself, for the first arteries leading from the aorta, or main artery of the heart, are the coronary arteries, which turn back into the heart muscle to supply it with blood. One disease that is difficult to treat with a milk diet is cystitis or chronic inflammation of the bladder, espe- cially the tubercular form. This is usually considered incurable, and I know nothing better for it that this treatment, but these old, inflamed bladders with thick- ened walls and degenerated linings have a very small capacity, so that even on ordinary diets urination must be performed very often. With the amount of urine increased three or four times, and the diseased organ showing no immediate improvement, it requires consid- erable faith, or persistence, on the part of the patient to carry on the treatment. The rubber urinals sold by druggists are of material assistance, and as the urine becomes soft and unirritating, the bladder can hold more of it than while the person is on an ordinary diet. Indeed, it is a great relief to these people to have the urine change from the fetid, irritating, ammoniacal, 150 Milk Diet decomposing stuff to the almost colorless and odorless water characteristic of the milk diet. Stone in the bladder and gravel can be cured by this treatment every time, I believe. Stone in the kidney has disappeared during four weeks’ treatment. The milk diet has proved invaluable to many young women with painful menstruation, misplaced or unde- veloped wombs and other disorders peculiar to the sex. Fibroid tumors of the uterus have been known to dis- appear under this treatment, and many other condi- tions, apparently requiring operations, have been reme- died. There is a great development of the pelvic organs while resting and taking the milk diet. A good time to start in with the milk is right after a menstrual period. The next period may be, and often is, ahead of time, but if three weeks elapse before it comes on it is almost always the case that the pain will be greater than usual, and some patients are inclined to stop the milk to get relief. The pain is due to the unusual amount of blood, in excess of the ordinary con- gestion at this period. If a woman can stand the pain, and keep the milk going, greatly improved conditions will be noticed at the next menstruation. The relief experienced by these cases is similar to that occurring after a normal childbirth, after which, as most married women are aware, menstruation almost always ceases to be painful. There is, perhaps, no part of the body that receives greater and more uniform improvement in this treat- ment than the generative organs. Milk is the best nerve food that we possess, and the connection between the nervous system and the sexual organs is a very close one. The improvements in the two go on coincidentally. All the glands of internal secretion which are known Various Diseases 151 to be of the utmost importance in the nutrition and growth of the body, as well as the testicles and ovaries, are regenerated and developed markedly on the milk diet. Of all the changes that occur, this is probably the most interesting and significant. The deterioration of these glands is thought to be the cause of weakness and disease, and their rapid rebuilding on the milk diet is very important and proves the great benefit of the treat- ment. An exclusive milk diet has been in use for patients with diabetes mellitus since 1868, when it was intro- duced by Donkin. Professor Tyson tells of one case taking fourteen pints daily. He regards the diet as the most important part of the treatment of this ordi- narily fatal disease, and is confident that the exclusive milk diet is the most effectual way of treating it. My experience with diabetes has not been as large as I could wish, but the few patients who carried the treatment out for four weeks have all been benefited, and, in some instances, at least, permanent cures were made. One case, complicated with Bright’s disease, carried the treatment through successfully, for five weeks. The first week he lost nine pounds in weight, from dropsical tissues. Then he gained about fifteen pounds, and felt very well. The last report I have from him says no sugar, no albumen. Other cases of diabetes and Bright’s have since been treated and all with good results. It seems that this combination is easier to cure on a milk diet than diabetes alone. Perhaps it is a different form of diabetes. A diabetic patient should not omit the preliminary fast, and they should abstain from all food until there is no sugar in the urine, whether it takes one day or 152 Milk Diet more, but it is harder for them to stop eating than any other class of patients. The constipation must be over- come as quickly as possible, and I find that ox gall, in five-grain doses, works very well. After a few days, if constipation continues, give liquid petroleum, in tablespoon doses, three times daily. Prominent medical men in New York are reporting wonderful cures made by the administration of cultures of the Bulgarian lactic acid bacilli discovered by Pro- fessor Metchnikoff, and they are claiming these bacilli are a specific for diabetes. All milk contains lactic acid bacilli, and, while the ordinary milk may not contain bacilli as powerful as the Bulgarian species, the immensely greater number of the germs taken on an exclusive milk diet should more than make up the difference. Until recently it was a mystery to me how milk could cure diabetes 60 or 70 years ago, and yet, in my hands, be comparatively unsuccessful. Donkin used skimmed milk, and in his time there were no cream separators, so he had to let his milk stand several hours, perhaps all day. They did not then understand the sanitary handling of milk, and the lactic acid bacilli doubtless increased rapidly, and con- sumed the milk sugar. Therefore, he was feeding his patients little or no assimilable sugar. Today a diabetic taking sweet milk would get 5 per cent of sugar, and would soon be poisoned. Separator skim milk, or milk which has creamed in a refrigerator and then been skimmed, still contains nearly all of the milk sugar, and will not do for a diabetic. Milk which has been set in ordinary room tempera- ture until the cream can be separated has been acted Vabious Diseases 153 on by the bacilli sufficiently so that about all the assim- ilable sugar is gone. It is true that Joslin in his excellent book (A Dia- betic Manual), states only about one-quarter of the sugar of milk has disappeared in sour milk, but it is a matter of common observation that milk loses its sweet taste long before it gets sour, and it is this first sugar acted on by the bacilli that is so dangerous to the diabetic. Dr. Guelpa of France was the real discoverer of the fasting or abstinence cure for diabetics, and in his orig- inal work on the subject very commonly used skimmed milk to break the fast. The doctors in this country who have made use of the starvation plan have not used or recommended milk for diabetics. My knowledge of the curative effects of milk induces me to think that they are making a mistake. My time for several years has been fully occupied in the handling of digestive and circulatory disorders, for which the milk diet is particularly adapted, and I have been unable to give the necessary attention to diabetes. I have no doubt, however, that the rational cure lies in the use of skimmed milk, and buttermilk or sour milk, in connection with the periodical fasts advised by Guelpa. My last eight cases of diabetes have all been cured. Regarding the treatment of cancer with the milk diet, I am not certain that it has ever cured it, but I do know that enlarged lymphatic glands in true cancer cases are very much reduced in size, and the patient’s general condition improved. I have treated successfully many cases of skin dis- ease, including some cases of Pellagra, which has recently been well recognized in this country. When I heard that the treatment used in Europe, 154 Milk Diet where the disease has existed for hundreds of years, con- sisted only of rest, fresh air, bathing and a nutritious diet, I felt confident that the milk diet would be the proper thing for it. Two gentlemen took the treatment in other states, on my advice, after pellagra had been diagnosed by experienced physicians. Both were cured. The most serious case had been examined by experts in the dis- ease, and pronounced hopeless. Because he rcovered so quickly, I presume, it was stated afterward that he had not been afflicted with pellagra. The discoverer, or original describer, of pellagra was Gaspar Casal, who lived in the Asturias, Spain, 1679- 1759. Regarding the treatment, I quote his own words: “I have observed constantly that the change from ordi- nary diet for another more substantial and more nour- ishing is most useful in controlling this disease. If it were possible to apply to these poverty stricken sick the same remedies as to the rich ... I would prescribe for them warm baths . . . and, above all, good and nutritious food.” This disease is very prevalent in our Southern States and it is said thousands of people die of it annually. Dr. J. Lewis Day of Normal, Okla., says: “Our most successful form of treatment has been dietetic. We have fed our pellagra patients on a diet rich in ani- mal proteins and low in carbohydrates. This has been done regardless of diarrhea or stomatitis. Patients sleep in the open air when possible, and they are per- mitted to lie down a few hours each day.” Dr. S. H. Ensminger states in the New York Med- ical Journal, May 1, 1915, regarding diet for pellagra: “In all cases milk should be given, if possible. The most important feature of the whole subject is rest Vabious Diseases 155 Dr. Joseph Goldberger, surgeon of the United States Public Health Service, not only showed that a diet containing animal protein foods would cure this disease, but actually caused pellagra to occur in a large percentage of convicts who consented to an experi- mental diet largely composed of corn and vegetables, but with no animal food. Surgeon General Rupert Blue of the United States Public Health Service says these experiments have led up to the greatest achievement in medical science in the last decade. Besides the various diseases mentioned above, I can recommend the milk diet and rest treatment for Addi- son’s disease, Hodgkin’s disease, or any disease of the thyroid or lymphatic glands. It has been shown that milk contains the internal secretion of the thyroid gland, and this secretion is now supposed to have an important influence on the preven- tion of some diseases, and the cure of others. While I recommend the treatment for locomotor ataxia because the general condition of the patient has always been improved, I cannot say that the disease has been cured, except in the first stages. The same can be said of paralysis agitans, although in this last disease I have only had experience with advanced cases. One severe case treated in 1922 was completely cured. I can report some wonderful cures in pernicious anemia. The last three or four patients treated seem to be out of all danger, but each case required one or two blood transfusions to complete the cure. One of 156 Milk Diet these patients had previously tried blood transfusions (ten, I think), with the arsenic treatment, without any permanent help. A doctor in another state also reports a complete cure of a pernicious anemia case by means of the milk diet. CHAPTER XIII. HIGH BLOOD PRESSURE. THIS is a very common, but serious, disorder, the treatment of which by the milk diet is so successful that the fact should be universally known. It is usually caused by hardening of the arteries, or ARTE- RIOSCLEROSIS, sometimes spoken of as a physi- ological process. “A man is only as old as his arteries” refers to the fact that, while hard arteries are a frequent accompani- ment of old age, they may also be present in a young or middle-aged man who has lived improperly. Hardening of the arteries is perhaps the first appar- ent change in the blood vessels that indicates beginning degeneration. It is included by medical writers in the descriptions of degenerations, and, while it is admitted that the condition may continue for years before it be- comes dangerous, it is generally considered the begin- ning of the end. It is surprising to see how little hope is held out to persons afflicted with this disease by writ- ers on the subject, who seem to take it for granted that there is no cure, nothing to do but to make them as com- fortable as possible, “enjoin them to lead a quiet, well- regulated life, avoiding excesses in food and drink.” “It is usually best to frankly explain the condition of affairs,” etc. After a certain time, the duration of which varies in different cases, the inner lining of these hardened arteries softens, ulcerates and breaks down, resulting in aneurism, embolism, apoplexy and paralysis. I believe that almost every case of this disorder can 158 Milk Diet be cured, if treatment is used before the ulcerative stage begins. One old gentleman whose pulse felt like a wire took the milk diet treatment in 1905, and in less than four weeks his arteries were soft and the neuralgia of the heart, from which he suffered intensely, disappeared. He remained well for years as long as I kept in touch with him. With hardening of the arteries there are nearly al- ways distinctive symptoms. It is associated with high blood pressure, headaches, kidney disease and often, finally, hemorrhages in the brain, with resulting paralysis. The milk diet has been so uniformly successful in these cases that, in preparing the fifth edition of the Milk Diet Book, I decided to run over the list of pa- tients with this trouble who had taken treatment under my care and give the results, as far as I knew them, whether good or bad. I do not think I can remember all that were affected that way, and only since 1906 have I been able to measure the blood pressure, by means of the convenient little instruments made for that purpose. I found records of forty-eight patients who had taken the milk diet and rest treatment in the eight years following 1906 that had distinct evidence of high blood pressure. Their ages varied from forty-two to seventy-six, the majority being between fifty and sixty. At least thirty of them had Bright’s disease of the kidneys, and probably half of them had some form of rheumatism, asthma or bronchitis. At least ten of them had suffered paralytic strokes. Two had angina pec- toris, three gallstones, and some had gravel. Their blood pressures ran from 160 to 265, on be- ginning treatment. High Blood Pressure 159 I was able to trace the subsequent history of nearly all of these cases, and, with the exception of six peo- ple, I found that they remained in either good health, or fairly comfortable condition. Of the six cases referred to, three took less than two weeks’ treatment. Two others died from the results of accidents, and one old lady suffered a fatal stroke two years after treatment, after a day of great bodily and mental strain. These records, although incomplete, show a percent- age of cures that cannot be equaled by any other treat- ment, in these almost hopeless cases. In fact, I know of nothing else that even helps them, outside of relief from work and worry, abstention from the foods that produce poor blood, and stopping the use of tobacco. To show what the treatment will do, in an admit- tedly bad case, I give the following: Man of seventy- six years, who had three apoplectic strokes, came to me with a blood pressure of 265 and pulse of thirty-eight beats to the minute. I took the case under protest, knowing that I would not dare to give him a large amount of milk. On four quarts of milk daily, having complete rest, he could only reduce the pressure twenty- five degrees, to 240. His heart remained just about the same because he was not taking enough to greatly stim- ulate the circulation. His pulse did not go over forty until about the end of his four weeks’ treatment, when I noticed once that it went to forty-two just after he had walked up a flight of stairs. Ordinarily, I would not have been satified with such a result, knowing that the only hope of a cure was in so increasing his circulation that it would carry off the deposits in the walls of the blood vessels, but I simply had to be, in this case. To show how near we got to the limit in his case, one 160 Milk Diet morning he reported that his hand and arm were numb, and that his previous strokes had come on in that way. But this symptom went away in a day or two, and he finished his treatment in quite satisfactory condition, everything considered. Another gentleman of the same age, seventy-six, who had a pressure of 195 and had suffered with asthma for nearly forty years, reduced his pressure to 150 in the four weeks’ treatment. Six months later he reported for examination, saying he had not had a trace of asthma since, and I found his pressure 145. This man after five years remained well with blood pressure unchanged. A lady, forty, took treatment in 1912 for severe headaches, facial paralysis following a slight stroke, blood pressure of 185, and entirely recovered from her bad condition, including high blood pressure. For two years she reported herself as perfectly well and feeling fine. However, two years afterward she returned for treatment, when I found the following condition: Blood pressure again back to 185, headaches returned, and symptoms of another stroke impending. On inquiry I found this lady was eating meat regularly, with starchy foods, had increased her flesh nearly forty pounds, and, to stimulate her faculties for her strenuous mental work, was using both tea and coffee. She had even gone so far as to take headache powders, when she found herself confronted by a particularly hard day’s work. I was unable to reduce her blood pressure the second time, at least, during the two weeks which she declared was all she could spare for the treatment. This lady, a most estimable church worker of Los Angeles, recently died, about two years after her last treatment. High Blood Pressure 161 I give these actual cases, especially the poor results, for the guidance of other practitioners. Patients who have a high blood pressure, from hard- ening of the arteries, must not attempt the exclusive milk diet unless under the care of an experienced and competent person. If the pressure is over 200 milli- meters extra precautions should be taken to avoid all exertion or sudden strain, and mental excitement or worry should be prevented. They must stay quietly in bed, except when taking the bath, which must never be anything but a neutral tub bath without any sudden changes of temperature. The treatment will cure this disease, and it is the only cure for it, but caution must be observed, especially with people who have had a stroke. A change takes place immediately, on the milk diet, while resting, so that the drop in pressure the first few days is often twenty or thirty degrees, but after that the improvement is slower, ten or fifteen degrees a week, but the arteries are continually getting softer and more normal. In the chapter on Reactions During Treatment I give a number of actual examples of high blood pres- sure cases, showing how quickly the pressure drops to normal. In revising the book for the sixth edition, I wish to report continued success in treating arterio-sclerosis and high blood pressure. Only one case refused to respond satisfactorily, a man of about fifty-five years of age, who refused to stop smoking cigars and pipe while on the milk diet. In ad- dition to excessive smoking, he had the extremely bad habit of relighting a cigar several times after it had gone out. He had Bright’s disease, together with other trou- bles, and died a few months after trying this treatment. 162 Milk Diet I am so thoroughly convinced of the bad effects of tobacco where kidney disease exists that I will not treat hereafter any such case unless the patient agrees to stop smoking. This is no hardship on the milk diet, for the desire is lost if the habit is stopped for even two or three days. But the use of even one cigar or cigaret a day seems to keep up the craving for the weed. Very few smokers care to continue the practice on the milk diet, but it is a hard thing to stop as long as meat and coffee are used. A recent article by Professor Bishop of New York* covers so well the diseases treated of in this chapter that I take the liberty of quoting from it quite fully. He says, in part: “The natural history of the production of arteriosclerosis is, I believe, as follows: The person goes through a period of great nervous shock or strain, some very acute illness, or some acute food poisoning, and this produces a change in the relation of the body cells to the customary food proteins. The person may be sensitized to meat, fish, eggs, or other pro- teins. When a person has been sensitized to food protein and goes on eating that food, the cells of the body are irritated and some of them destroyed, and the organs become defective and are not able to do their work properly. When the kidneys become markedly sclerotic (hardened) they do not function normally and Nature attempts to make them function better by a rise of blood pressure. This rise of blood pressure leads to hypertrophy of the heart. It leads to thickening of the bloodvessels and that creates a vicious circle. The high blood pressure damages the blood- vessels and the kidneys are further and further damaged until finally we get the picture of cardiovascular renal disease. “Such a person coming under medical observation is ordinarily said to be suffering from one or other of several conditions—either heart disease, bloodvessel disease, or kidney disease. In reality, it is all one thing. It is cardiovascular renal disease to which for convenience we have given the name arteriosclerosis. “The cardinal symptoms of arteriosclerosis are hard to define because the disease is not a symptomal disease. Nature provides a margin of safety in the heart, bloodvessels, and kidneys that is very wide. So the heart is very badly damaged, the kidneys are very defective, and the * Arteriosclerosis as a Cellular Disease, by Louis Faugeres Bishop, A. M., M. D., New York, Clinical Professor of Heart and Circulatory Diseases, Fordham University School of Medicine.—New York Medical Journal, Dec. 4, 1915. High Blood Pressure 163 bloodvessels are greatly thickened before nature complains. Thus the person with arteriosclerosis has no symptoms in the earlier stages of the disease. “This disease is not found in any of the textbooks, but I believe that a clear conception of its nature as a general disease that attacks so many people is of great importance. I know that it is of great importance to me in my work, which is limited to cardiovascular renal disease. When I treated kidneys, I never helped my patient. When I treated the heart, I never helped my patient. When I tried to soften the arteries I did my patient a good deal of harm. But since I have treated the body as a whole, and regarded the sufferers as victims of disturbed metabolism, I am sure the hygienic measures that I have advised have helped a great many of them. “Thus it would seem that the disease called arteriosclerosis, which is really cardiovascular renal disease, is primarily due to a disturbance of metabolism extending over a long period of time. This process is subsymptomal for five, ten or fifteen years until such time as a suffi- cient number of cells have been destroyed to impair the functions of the organs. This gives rise to symptoms and the disease is discovered. “The remedy in this disease is to be found in the discovery and removal from the dietary of the offending proteins, meat being most common, and in the correction of metabolism by physical methods, particularly exercise. Exercise is the greatest stimulant of metabolism there is. Exercise makes the patient breathe deeper, it helps the digestion of food, and stimulates the kidneys. It is the great stimulant of metabolism. Exercise has an important place in the treatment of arteriosclerosis. First diet and then exercise. The third important thing is attention to the intestinal tract.” I have so many patients suffering from this condi- tion that I am sure the following, by Dr. John D. Quackenbos of New York, will prove interesting and instructive, for it is true to life. It is quoted in full from his article, read before the Medical Association of Greater New York, March 15, 1915: ARTERIOSCLEROSIS IN ITS RELATION TO LIFE INSURANCE. “I am going to devote the space allotted me to a discussion of the relationship existing between arteriosclerosis in its insidious approach and life insurance risks—an application of what has been said to be a business problem of supreme moment, and involving a presentation of experiences that will lend emphasis to the opinions advanced by others. The early detection of tendency to hardening or to atheroma, as revealed by ab- normally high blood pressure, has come to be regarded as of pre-eminent importance in the examination of applicants for policies, as even more significant than the existence in the urine of a few casts or a trace of 164 Milk Diet albumin, which may be fleeting as due to a mere temporary irritation from the products of suboxidation or putrefaction. In other words, the exam- iners for life insurance companies have begun to look not only for indica- tions of the actual existence of cardiovascular renal disease, but for symptoms that suggest its imminence in the future. It cannot be long before inquiry will be made regarding habits of life that account for the appearance of such symptoms, as the conviction exists among all investi- gators that hypertension is the indisputable forerunner of organic com- plications that will shorten the life of an apparently well man. The quality of an insurance risk must be determined by the daily habits of an applicant, inasmuch as those habits pave tne way for a premature break- down or a green old age. “It is well known to our profession that a common victim of nephritis is the man, apparently robust, ‘whose blood test excludes anemia and specific disease, whose urinalysis may show no sugar, albumin, nor casts, whose heart, lungs, and liver are organically perfect—the man who never does anything morally wrong, but labors all day long in the employments of a sedentary office life for his family’s comfort (60 per cnt of our popu- lation ar working indoors), lays a heavy strain on his liver and kidneys by overloading his stomach three times a day beginning with a hearty breakfast of proteids, following it with an equally substantial luncheon, and coming home at night exhausted in more ways than one to swallow a meat dinner out of all proportion to his powers of assimilation. After which he seeks an easy chair and smokes himself into a poisoned sleep— practically no exercise to burn up what he eats, the revenues of his body vastly in excess of the outlay, compensation destroyed, nutritive equilibrium disturbed, corpulence and breakdown impending. Such a man is a bad risk; and the insurance companies are finding out to their cost that, in the words of a country doctor I once knew, he is digging his grave with his teeth, and he fills it in his sixth decade. It is probably no exaggeration to ascribe 50 per cent of all deaths of insured persons to the hypertension and sclerosis consequent upon this kind of life, either directly or indirectly, as the proximate cause of pneumonia, bronchitis, pulmonary edema, and allied conditions. “Overeating, through the immediate action on the vascular system of irritant poisons formed in the intestines, creates hypertension, and this is the unambiguous cause of arteriosclerosis which may reach a climax in apoplexy, or by overtaxing the heart induce myocardial conditions or lead to renal disease. The insurance companies fully apprehend that longevity is indeed a vascular question, and so require a perfect understanding of the vascular status of the man who applies for a policy. “The automobile and other means of easy and rapid transit which the pressure of vocational and social obligations demands in this day, has stolen from our business men their opportunity for exercise that a necessity for walking so freely offers, and well-to-do women have essentially given up the practice and are whirled from place to place in their cars. The automobile habit is thus breaking down constitutions where the remoter bicycle habit upbuilt them. It has crept into the country districts also; and rural dwellers are affecting it, making no difference in their dietary of heavy proteid foods, and depriving themselves further of health-giving High Blood Pressure 165 exercise by relegating to farm machinery the manual labor that formerly enabled them properly to digest and to eliminate. Such dwellers of the open, so long associated with vigor and length of life, are not as good risks as they used to be. “It is doubtless true, as stated by Elmer Rittenhouse, the conserva- tion expert, that American vitality is gradually lowering, and that there are more deaths than formerly between forty and fifty years, from the degenerative disorders of mature life—apoplexy, cardiorenal and circu- latory diseases, and cancer. The increasd death rate during the last twenty years (from twenty-seven to thirty-eight per 10,000), which is rightfully attracting the attention of our insurance companies, cannot be laid to general causes, but rather to habits of living that have developed with the refinements of civilization, notably the excessive consumption of alcohol, tobacco and protein fare, and the lack of active exercise properly to oxidize the food and carry off the accumulated poisons. Dr. Oscar H. Rogers, chief medical director of a prominent New York life insurance company, has stated in a letter to me that there are numerous cases which would have formerly been regarded as normal insurable lives that are now rejected by reason of high blood pressure, and that in his experience the underlying cause of hypertension in 50 per cent of the cases is intestinal toxemia, and in most of the remaining 50 per cent habitual overeating. Now, as intestinal poisoning is due to erroneous diet, it is fair to assume that overindulgence and improper indulgence at table explains the abnor- mally high arterial tension in the majority of these applicants for life in- surance. “These questions now appear in the examiner’s certificate: Do you use malt or spirituous liquors in any form? Daily quantity? (Based on the belief that if alcohol does not harden arteries it inhibits elimination of the poisons that do.) Do you use tobacco in any form? Daily quantity? (Based on the assumption that nicotine causes a rise in blood pressure followed of course by a fall, which demands repetition of the narcotic.) “I predict that within a few years will be put the equally important inquiry: What do you eat? How much? What are your habits of exercise ? “Whereas the average length of human life is greater, and there is no evidence that ordinary policy holders are dying earlier than formerly, the average age of dissolution among the industrial policy holders of a great industrial insurance company being forty-two, among the ordinary policy holders forty-six years, greater caution is exercised by life insurance examiners, who are better informed as to the causes of such deaths, in the interpretation of blood pressure. A pressure above 150 at the age of fifty years is regarded as prohibitive by this company. Another prominent company regards a blood pressure higher than the average by about 15 per cent as probably safe, accepting the following averages as normal: Age 20 120 Age 30 123 Age 40 126 Age 50 130 Age 60 134 •'Cases of blood pressure exceeding the probably safe limit, when 166 Milk Diet kept under observation, have been found sooner or later to show albumin and casts, and are likely to terminate in Bright’s disease or apoplexy. “Low blood pressure is less significant from the viewpoint of the insurance companies. An adult pressure under 105 is regarded with suspicion. It is interpreted to imply diminished powers of resistance, and in persons belonging to tuberculosis families or living amid unhygienic surroundings, to intimate quiescent tuberculosis. “The appalling strain that human beings are subjected to in this modern civilization may be evolving a stronger race, better adapted to endure it. But a life insurance company is without prescience, and cannot intelligently select from the ranks of those who are playing with fire the few wno will not be burnt, without the exercise of all but superhuman precautions.” CHAPTER XIV. EXERCISE. A COURSE of milk diet alone does not insure a person forever against future illness or the en- croachment of old age, but it certainly tends to do so when combined with right living, and by right liv- ing I mean correct eating, drinking, working, thinking, sleeping, breathing and exercising. Of all these, the last is by no means the least; for many people it is the most important of all. There are many useful books and periodicals de- voted to exercise and physical culture, and I advise all my patients to keep up their interest in the subject by studying them, for it is easy to drop back into the old habits of inactivity and weakness. I cannot fully cover the subject in this wTork, but there are some points that I will speak of, not always mentioned in exercise instructions. THE OBJECT of all exercises should be to im- prove the circulation of the blood, increase the breath- ing power, and develop organic vigor in those vital parts of the body on which our well-being depends. Exercise simply to build up big muscles and to do imposing feats of strength is largely a waste of vitality. In exercising any muscle, we also exercise the brain and nerves, because they control the muscles, and when we get tired it is because the nervous apparatus is tired, not the muscle itself. When we decide to make a muscular movement the brain sends an impulse over the nerve or nerves extend- ing to the special muscles involved, ordering the muscles 168 Milk Diet to contract. As a muscle in contracting uses up a cer- tain amount of food carried by the blood the artery sup- plying the blood to the particular set of muscles in use becomes enlarged or dilated in order that the necessary food and oxygen may reach the part. This itself is a muscular act, the little involuntary muscles in the walls of the artery being controlled by the sympathetic sys- tem of nerves. After the muscle has worked the vein leading from it to the heart carries a larger volume of blood containing the waste matter created by the mus- cular effort. The brain itself requires more blood when engaged in manipulating the muscles, just as it does when engaged in any purely mental process, for tissue cells in any part of the body cannot be active without necessitating a supply of blood in excess of the amount ordinarily sufficient to nourish the part. So in muscular exercise there must be also nervous exercise. Just as the muscle grows larger, stronger and firmer by exercise, so the brain and nerve cells become more efficient in the way of rapidity, acuteness and pre- cision in the execution of the movements. And muscu- lar effort, by throwing into activity a different portion of the cerebrum, and causing a greater flow of blood in perhaps little used channels, may relieve conditions like worry, anxiety, insomnia, nervous exhaustion, and even pain. The most important effect of muscular exercise is to increase the number and depth of respirations, and thereby the quantity of air passing in and out of the lungs, leading to an increased absorption of oxygen, and elimination of carbonic acid. It is estimated that a man at rest draws in 480 cubic inches of air per minute; if he walks four miles an hour he draws in five times as much, Exercise 169 or 2,400 inches; if he walks six miles an hour he draws in seven times as much, or 3,360 cubic inches. The effect of exercise on the skin is to dilate the cuta- neous blood vessels, and increase the amount of perspir- ation, thereby allowing more water, salts and acids to pass from the system. The evaporation reduces the temperature of the body, which otherwise would tend to rise. Exercise increases the appetite, as the result of the wear and tear of the muscles and other organs, and ac- celeration of the lymphatic circulation. Digestion is more perfectly performed and the blood flow through the liver and portal system is quickened. There are many different systems of exercise, and probably they all have good points, but whatever sys- tem is used, especially where no apparatus is required, it must be kept in mind that real exercise must be taken, to produce good effects. That is, the muscles must be firmly contracted, and the mind kept occupied with the matter in hand. It will be of little use to flop the hands back and forth in a languid manner, while the eyes are gazing out of the window, and the brain making plans for the day’s work, or something else. Throw energy and concentration into the move- ments; they need not necessarily be made rapidly, al- though rapidity is a factor in some exercises, but con- tract the muscles to the utmost limit. The alternate contraction and relaxation of the muscles is what drives the old blood out and pulls in new, and the greater the concentration the more efficient the movement. Make the limb or portion of the body being exercised as rigid as possible. In the arm movements, especially the over- head ones (and these are particularly useful bcause bringing into play muscles that are otherwise little 170 Milk Diet used) leave the hands open so that the muscles of the forearms will not be much affected. These movements should be concentrated in the upper arm, shoulder, neck, chest and upper back. Taken in this manner, they are of the utmost benefit to the chest, neck and spine. A few moments* exercise of the arms in this manner stimulates the circulation in the great blood ves- sels in the neck and along the spinal column into the brain, and particularly brings into activity the great nerve centers which lie along this tract. After patients have finished the resting part of the treatment they dress and sit up an hour or two the first day. This is usually enough where patients have been in bed several weeks because the muscles, although big and firm, are unused to exercise and they tire easily the first day. As soon as patients begin to be up and around, the length of the bath is decreased a little every day, until only a short ten or fifteen-minute bath is taken. In- stead of finishing with the water quite warm, no more hot water is added, and, when the short bath is reached, a cold sponge bath or shower can be used after the warm bath. The second day the patient is up a short vralk can be taken, and every day afterward the exercises are increased, and the time in bed decreased, until only the necessary time for sleeping is spent in bed. Two or three days after stopping the complete rest, start in on the following exercises and take them every morning and night. They should be done standing in front of a mirror, with very little or no clothing on. The exercises are simple and few in number, so as to be easily remembered, and not take too long in execu- tion. It is better to do a few exercises twice a day Exercise 171 regularly at home, then go to a gymnasium two or three times a week and work hard for an hour or two. All these exercises can be made as hard as desired by simply increasing the tension or rigidity of the muscles. EXERCISE NO. 1.—Stand upright before the mirror, arms down, palms facing downward. Breathe deeply and regularly. Make the muscles of arms and shoulders as rigid as possible. Flex the arms at the elbows alternately and bring the hand up in front of the shoulder. As one hand comes up the other goes down. After doing each up and down movement relax completely all the muscles of that side. Do the move- ments slowly, starting with five for each arm and increasing one a day until ten is reached. EXERCISE NO. 2.—Stand upright, arms ex- tended sideways as far out as possible, palms up. Make as rigid as possible all the muscles of arms, shoulders and neck. Bring hands forward until almost touching are near face, then extend to starting position and relax. Do this the same number of times of Exercise No. 1. EXERCISE NO. 3.—Stand upright, arms ex- tended sideways as far as possible, palms facing for- ward. Make rigid muscles of arms, shoulders, back and neck. Bring hands forward until amost touching in front of face, and while doing so exhale or empty the lungs as completely as possible. Then return hands to starting position slowly, inhaling as you do so until lungs are completely filled. Then relax. Always in- hale through nose with mouth closed. Repeat same number of times as Exercise No. 1. EXERCISE NO. 4.—Stand upright, arms at sides, palms inward. Make rigid muscles of arms, shoulders, back, sides and abdomen. Bend body at waist sideways to left side as far as possible. At the 172 Milk Diet same time bend right elbow and bring hand into arm- pit, closing fingers. Relax momentarily and straighten up. Repeat to other side. To be done five times. EXERCISE NO. 5.—Stand upright, arms ex- tended sideways, palms up. Make arms and neck as rigid as possible, and raise hands straight over head, without bending elbows. Return to starting position and relax. Repeat same number of times as Exercise No. 1. EXERCISE NO. 6.—Stand upright and raise arms sideways until hands are above head. Then bend over forward until finger tips touch the floor as far as possible from feet. Gradually straighten up, rais- ing hands with palms facing toward body. As you assume perpendicular, rotate hands outward until palms are facing forward. This, like No. 3, should be made a breathing exer- cise, exhaling as the body is bent forward, beginning to inhale as body comes up, and expanding chest as much as possible at the moment you rotate hands out. When the expansion is as complete as possible, hold the breath as you raise arms sideways as far as possible, and com- mence exhaling as body bends over, etc. To be done slowly five times, allowing eight to ten seconds to each complete movement. I have given principally arm exercises, because it is the upper part of the body that stands in greatest need of development, and these movements markedly help the breathing and also are beneficial to the brain and nervous system in general. The body-bending exercises are particularly useful in constipation, but should be done by everyone. All these movements assist in maintaining the poise of the Exercise 173 body, and tend to gracefulness and agility in men or women, old or young. The man of forty-five would be in greater demand by employers if he would keep up his strength and quickness and brush the cobwebs out of his brain by vigorous exercise daily. He who is slow of speech and movement and unwilling or unable to stand an occa- sional “rush” in his work will likely be superseded by a more alert and active employe. Age is no drawback, but inefficiency is. For the lower limbs walking is good exercise when properly done, with the head up ,the chest expanded, and the limbs swung vigorously and not dragged along. Running is still better and helps immensely to improve the lung capacity. If outdoor running cannot be prac- ticed a good substitute may be found in the room by dressing in a light costume, or none at all, and going through the motions of running, but dropping the feet in the same place all the time. Rope skipping is another strenuous exercise that can be practiced in a room. Handball is excellent, but if you have no court get a light, hollow rubber ball which you can throw up in the corner of your room, near the ceiling. It is per- fectly noiseless, often a valuable consideration, and the return direction is so variable that it keeps every muscle on the jump to catch it. Every year I am more convinced of the benefits of exercise after taking the milk diet treatment. The patients who remain in the best condition are those who systematically exercise. A simple test that can be made by anyone is to per- form, night and morning, the tensing exercises, as given in this book for, say, ten days, noting carefully the gen- eral condition every day as to strength, activity, appe- 174 Milk Diet tite, bowel movements, mental condition, etc., and then stop them entirely. After another ten days resume the exercises, and, I am sure, on comparing your condition, with and with- out exercise, that you will decide in favor of keeping up the exercises. Regardless of the amount of exercise that you do, cultivate the use of the diaphragm in breathing. Noth- ing can be more important and effective for a consti- pated person than the constant use of this big muscle, which fills the bases of the lungs with air, and raises and lowers the transverse colon with every movement. Pro- lapse of the abdominal organs is usually caused by inactivity of the diaphragm. CHAPTER XV. AFTER TREATMENT. ALMOST all patients who have taken the milk diet under my personal direction have asked me what they should eat afterward, how they can be sure of holding the benefits gained on milk. The permanent results of this treatment are invalu- able, and I believe better than those obtained by any other method, and permanent cure is what is wanted in every case, and not simply temporary improvement while taking the treatment. While there is a great apparent improvement in all patients taking the diet, yet it is a fact that many of them often have to wait until ordinary habits and diet are resumed before they realize the full benefit gained. All persons taking the milk cure properly will find their physical condition better, perhaps, than it ever was before. The circulation is active, digestion perfect, and all the functions of the body working well. There is no good reason why these satisfactory conditions should not be retained on a return to ordinary life. It is impossible to give one set of rules that will fit every case, on account of variations in the individual, such as age, habits, condition of teeth, financial circum- stances, location, previous disease, etc., but I can give here certain general directions which will no doubt be helpful, comprising, as they do, the observation of this class of patients for many years. Most people have some idea of what caused their previous lapse from health, and they should avoid their former errors. 176 Milk Diet One very common source of ill health is improper breathing and breathing impure air, day or night. This condition must not be returned to. Another very important thing to avoid is heavy clothing. No matter how good the circulation or how perfect the regulation of the body heat, if thick, heavy, tight fitting undergarments are resumed there is little chance that the natural animal heat will continue to be generated as freely as before. The warm clothing obvi- ates the necessity of producing heat within the body, and the oxidation of the blood becomes less perfect be- cause it is not necessary to use or burn so much oxygen. The stomach does not make as much blood, therefore cannot digest as much food. The food, if not digested, becomes a tax on the system, the appetite is interfered with, and the general vitality lowered. On the other hand, with light clothing and open mesh underwear the circulation in the skin will be more active and assist in retaining the body heat; oxidation and metabolism in the body will be promoted; a larger amount of food assimilated and more air respired. People will put on clothing, and more of it, every time there is the slightest suspicion of being cold, or even if the skin becomes cool, not appreciating the fact that cold is one of the best stimulants we have for the circula- tion in the skin. And, while quick to add clothing, they are slow to quit it, and when the weather warms up again they have not only missed the stimulus of the cold air, but now are enervated by the superfluous heat of their garments. Wear light garments and keep the skin in a state of activity. Make your own heat by taking in plenty of oxygen and food and using it as nature intended. If you have to move a little quicker, or breathe a little After Treatment 177 deeper, to get the necessary oxidation and animal heat, all the better. Your muscles will work better, and even your brain will be more active, if your vital processes are not smothered under heavy clothing. Notice a man with cold hands or feet, and see if his limbs are not swathed with garments three or four lay- ers deep. How can you expect sufficient blood to get down to the extremities if it has to go through several feet of flesh that is already too warm? If the man with cold hands, instead of wearing close, heavy undergarments, with tightly knitted wristbands, will wear sleeveless undershirts his hands will be warm as soon as the system is accustomed to the change, and his general health better. I have seen Patagonian Indians, splendid specimens of manhood, dashing around in freezing weather, appar- ently perfectly comfortable, and wearing only a single thin garment made of bird skins. Keep the skin active by frequent baths. Friction baths, using a dry, coarse towel or a brush, are excel- lent, and can be taken every morning. Many people do not have the facilities for a com- plete bath every morning, but everyone, I think, can go over the upper part of the body with a wet cloth or sponge, and follow this with a friction rub until the skin is dry, warm and reddened. In those subject to low blood pressure, subnormal temperature and generally weak vitality, it is of the utmost importance to take the measures described above. The towel should be long enough to grasp one end in each hand and draw it back and forth over the front, back and sides of the chest, under and above the arms, and around the neck. 178 Milk Diet A warm water bath is necessary once or twice a week, and a daily sponge bath or rubdown of all the body usually covered with clothing helps to keep the skin in order. In regard to losing the weight and vitality gained on the milk diet, I think my long and peculiar experi- ence has taught me that there are several ways of doing it not usually thought of. Nervous and anemic people are advised by their physicians to avoid overwork, worry, sexual excess, too close confinement, irregular meals. They probably know that they should have good, plain food, exercise, regular hours for sleep, fre- quent baths to keep the skin in good order, sufficient water to drink, and as much fresh air as possible. But there are other ways of losing. One of the great- est causes of nervous and digestive troubles is reading. Yes, reading. Many people have expressed surprise when I said this, as if it had not occurred to them. Peo- ple are so accustomed nowadays to get all their ideas from printed matter that no other source is looked for, but it will be a long time before the daily newspaper in- forms its purchasers that reading may be bad for some of them. Do you expect the weekly story paper, or the monthly magazine, to tell you not to read too much? Will the publishers of the thousands of new novels that come out yearly ever print on the cover: “Do not read this book unless your eyesight is perfect, your nerves under good control and your digestion normal?” Perhaps the optician or the oculist should tell you the truth, but if they do they may injure their best friends. If it were not for the daily newspapers spec- tacle shops would not be opening up on every city block, until they are as common as dry goods stores. Analyze the act of reading. You look at a little, After Treatment 179 crooked mark, a letter. You find a group of them, a word. You see a number of words combined to make a sentence. Overlooking the defects of English spelling, certain letters close together stand for a word, and the words, arranged in different ways, convey ideas through the eyes to your brain. In the brain the storehouse of memory is called on to compare, translate and store away the new ideas with the old ones, where each can be found on a moment’s notice. The senses are stimulated and the emotions aroused, if what we read interests us. On the eye falls a great part of the actual work of reading. The light reflected from the printed page car- ries an impression through the lenses of the eye to the retina, where the nerves, by some wonderful process which we will never understand, carries the picture, or the idea, to the seat of memory and understanding. So we read. Large print, small print, capitals, italics, many styles of type, five hundred words and more a minute, thirty thousand an hour, if you read con- tinuously, as many do. The muscles of the eyeball are kept on a strain, tugging the organ up and down, jump- ing from the end of one line back to the beginning of another; from one column to the next, from page to page. The internal muscles of the eye, concerned with focusing and regulating the light, are even harder worked, considering the irregularities in the paper, the varying distances from the eye, and the changing light. Few people have perfect sight, and it is not always possible to fit glasses that will entirely correct the vis- ion. And a pair of glasses that fit you well one day may not be suitable the next, on account of changed condi- tions of the system or fatigue of the body. Near work, such as reading or sewing, is what makes 180 Milk Diet nearly all the trouble with our eyes, and, according to a great specialist, eyestrain is responsible for very many ills of the body. Reading is really a wonderfully com- plicated act, and calls for a very large supply of blood to the brain. This blood must be drawn from other por- tions of the body as soon as we begin reading, and as the act of reading is usually performed while the body is quiet, there is no incentive to the heart to take on extra force, and therefore some portion of the body must suffer for lack of blood. The part that suffers the most on such occasions is probably the digestive system. To sit down and read immediately following a meal is very likely to bring on indigestion, if there is the slightest tendency to that trouble. A large amount of blood is always needed in the stomach, liver, intestines and kidneys after a meal to furnish the necessary diges- tive juices, carry off the products of digestion and elim- inate the waste matter. I have many times cured an inclination to constipa- tion by simply telling the patient that he must not read within an hour after a hearty meal. Too many people eat breakfast and then sit down to wade through many pages of a morning paper. And, perhaps, even a greater number, after a heavy meal in the evening, usually sit down and read. Many business men and women eat a hearty mid-day meal and immediately return to eye-straining work, such as reading, writing, accounting or other clerical work, with the usual result of causing more or less indigestion. They think they cannot spare an hour, or even half an hour, after their meal, to permit digestion to get a start, but they do not stop to think that there is another way to avoid trouble, and that is to omit the noon meal, or, After Treatment 181 at least, make it so light and simple that the mental work will not interfere with the digestion. An important aid to health in many cases is a cor- rectly fitted pair of glasses or spectacles. It is wise to have the eyes tested after taking this treatment, because the eyes undergo changes as well as everything else, and glasses that were used previously may cause eye strain afterward on account of being too strong. Illustrating a very common way of losing vitality, I quote from Health Culture: “Most women and some men are addicted to the talk habit. Talking uses up more nerve force than almost any work in which a human being can engage; yet women who are nervous, weak and incapacitated for work will indulge in excited and wholly needless conversation by the hour and fancy themselves doing nothing—resting! Mistaken but well-meaning friends visit the invalid for an entire afternoon and extract more vitality from the ailing one than would, perhaps, if rightly applied, restore her to health. Women unfit for household duties, hire a maid to do their work, and then spend a large proportion of their time flitting about among their friends recklessly expending their already flagging nervous energy in purposeless talk, talk, talk.” Very many people in ill health have not been in the habit of drinking sufficient water. Water is the one natural food that we cannot live without, and while all solid foods have some, there is not enough taken into the system that way to supply all the juices required in the body. A plentiful supply of water must be taken daily, and the time to begin the water drinking is right after you stop drinking milk. Take a glass the first thing in the morning, and the last thing at night, and two or three drinks between meals. It is best not to drink any fluid with the meals, as it tends to wash the food down before thoroughly masticated, and also stops the secretion of saliva, and stops the starch-digesting action of that already secreted. It is a mistake to order people to drink several pints 182 Milk Diet of water daily, whether they want it or not. Water may be just as indigestible as any other food, in excess. The first drink in the morning should be taken any- way, even if not thirsty. But during the day it is better to take frequent small sips of water, rather than over- load the stomach. Beneficial results accomplished by taking regularly and often spoonful doses of water in which inert pellets have been dissolved, are entirely due, I believe, to the fluid, and not to the homeopathic medi- cine. The stomach can be gradually accustomed to taking water in increasing doses, and will assimilate it. A glass of water half an hour before meals stimu- lates the appetite in a healthful way, and the meal is better digested. So, also, the glass an hour after the meal helps to carry the digested food from the stomach and into the circulation. If there is any tendency to constipation the water drinking will generally prevent it, and especially if a lit- tle fruit juice is added to the water. Lemonade is a good drink, but the “bracers” dispensed at the soda water fountains should be avoided. Ice cold drinks of any kind are a poor thing to put in the stomach, and equally detri- mental are the very hot drinks that many people take. When it comes to the question of food I am inclined to be rather liberal in my views, and do not lay down hard and fast rules, except perhaps for some former rheumatic or gouty patients, where I advise against a resumption of meat eating on general principles. But some of them are eating meat occasionally, and none of them have had rheumatism since taking the treatment. Many of the patients are vegetarians, but some of them believed in that before taking the treatment, and still lacked health. After Treatment 183 Of late years the patients who have been using a diet of mostly natural or raw foods have all kept in good health, and I believe in this diet. With milk and yolks of eggs, cream and cheese, tree nuts and peanuts, fruits and vegetables, bread made from whole wheat, rye, oats or corn, and butter, anyone should be able to select a bill of fare. Cabbage, beets, turnips, carrots, radishes, spinach, green corn, onions, leeks, chives, tomatoes, celery, let- tuce, cucumbers, endive and water cress are all more digestible raw than cooked, and have a better flavor. Combinations of these vegetables ground up in a chop- per, together with sweet potatoes, or nuts, or fruits, with various kinds of dressings composed of olives and olive oil, or peanut oil, lemon juice, yolk of eggs, cream or milk, and cottage cheese, make perfect food dishes, taste good, and are easily digested. Better than food choppers are the graters, with a drum turned by hand, where the food is placed in a hop- per at the top and grated rapidly without danger of grating the fingers. Some call these cheese graters, but they grate carrots and apples perfectly and make dishes that can hardly be secured any other way. A few apples, bananas, carrots and celery ground or grated up, with or without dressing, makes an excellent dish, call it salad, vegetable or whatever you like. On- ions may be added for flavoring and, if desired, raisins, dates or dried figs may be chopped in. Children are fond of these dishes and nothing could be better for them. With one other cooked dish, bacon, yolks of eggs, or even vegetables such as potatoes, beans, spinach, squash, peas, parsnips, onions or cauliflower, and graham bread with butter, a complete and nutritious meal may be had. I am not a believer in a meatless diet for the Ameri- 184 Milk Diet can people, and for those who do not use milk meat may be absolutely necessary. If your thyroid, or other glands of internal secretion, are not functioning properly, you can best obtain the secretion from meat. Do not buy glandular extracts at the druggist’s; get them first hand from nature’s laboratory. Probably beef, not cooked too much, furnishes the best supply. With the meat meal use vegetables like spinach, to- matoes, string beans, cabbage, carrots, cauliflower, cel- ery, onions, green peas and turnips. Avoid all forms of starchy vegetables, potatoes, hominy, rice, sago, tapi- oca or dried peas or beans, at the same meal with any kind of meat except bacon. It may even be necessary for the dyspeptic to leave out all bread or cereals at this meal. If a piece of stale bread is permitted it must be thoroughly chewed. Rare cooked meat needs little or no chewing, as the saliva does not affect it, and your stomach will take care of it. Save your jaws for the starchy stuff that requires thorough insalivation. The “proof of the pudding is in the eating,” and the meal that digests easily, gives you vitality, does not clog the bowels, and permits a healthy appetite for the next time is certainly better than a combination of cooked starch and greasy food, sweetened drinks and dessert that is sure to cause trouble sooner or later. Only recently have the poisonous properties of white of egg for many persons been discovered. In this con- nection it is well to remember that the white of egg con- tains the embryo of the chick; the yolk is the food that the chick subsists on, both in the shell and after hatching, until it begins to assimilate external food. The yolk comprises a little more than one-third of the edible portion of the egg, but measured in food value After Treatment 185 the yolk has 60 calories, compared with only 17 in the white. The yolk is about one-half water, one-third fat and one-sixth protein, while the white is about seven-eighths water and one-eighth protein. Thus the yolk is a much more concentrated food material than the white, con- taining in a given weight about seven times as much energy. The white of an egg looks big, especially when cooked, but you are losing comparatively little by throw- ing it away and using only the yolk. The fat of egg yolk, like milk fat, exists in a finely emulsified condition, so that it is capable of digestion both in the stomach and intestine. The white of egg can only be digested in the stom- ach; if carried through with other foods into the intes- tine it decomposes into the familiar substance so easily recognized in a rotten egg, and this is probably what causes the trouble in those who are sensitive to egg poi- soning, and this includes practically all constipated people. Egg white was formerly a favorite food in hospitals, and was given indiscriminately to all classes of patients, in the shape of albumin water, white-of-egg lemonade, cream lemonade, etc., to say nothing of the coddled or soft-boiled and poached eggs, custards and eggnogs. White of egg, or any food containing it, should not be given to any inactive persons, to any invalid, or to any person whatever who has a longer digestive period than 24 hours. That is, from the time you eat food until the waste is passed out must not exceed 24 hours. To ascertain time of passage, eat a charcoal tablet or tea- spoonful of powdered charcoal. A consumptive or a diabetic can assimilate 15 to 20 186 Milk Diet egg yolks daily without difficulty, but the white of one egg might easily more than counteract all the good done by the yolks. Yolks can he separated from the whites when the shell is broken, but it is difficult to remove all the white from the yolk. If the egg is boiled until the white is firm the yolk can be slipped out clean. In restaurants one can order eggs, fried on one side, and simply eat the yolks. There are some persons, even after taking the milk diet, who cannot use milk as a drink with other foods without noticing a costive effect, but they all, I believe, can take milk alone, or milk and fruit, or bread and milk, and make a satisfactory and easily digested meal. Bread and milk suppers are a favorite with some of my former patients, who are past eighty and have no teeth. Bread and milk and fresh, ripe apples can be used by some, with benefit. Any bread to be used in milk should be slightly stale, never fresh and soft. The bread should be broken into the bowl or cup of milk, and mixed with it. It is incorrect to take a portion of bread into the mouth and follow it with a swallow of milk. Whole wheat or graham or bran bread is far better than the white bread made from the patent bolted flour, which contains little but the starchy part of the grain. There are several “milk modifiers” on sale and used for the purpose of making cow’s milk more easily digest- ible. For invalids on a mixed diet, and babies who are having difficulty in assimilating cow’s milk, I find Den- nos Food, made in Portland, Oregon, an excellent ar- ticle. This food contains specially prepared whole wheat, lactose, cane sugar, rice flour and a small proportion of malted barley. Complete and practical directions come After Treatment 187 with each package. Instead of cooking the food, as the makers recommend, I have sometimes used it raw, stir- ring it into hot milk. It is better than white flour for thickening broths, vegetable preparations or sauces. There is a way to take milk for one or two meals of the day that will not cause trouble, either with the stom- ach or bowels, even if you have to use Jersey or other rich milk. Fill a glass half full of the milk and add hot water of a temperature that will bring the mixture to about 110 degrees. By using a pint of this milk this way, or even a pint and a half, for breakfast, you have a very satisfactory meal, and it will not interfere with your noon meal, but you must not take any other food with it, least of all starches or eggs. The only thing that can be taken sometimes is a raw apple or other rather acid fruit, to follow the milk. For supper I can recommend the same mixture, using as much as a quart of milk with the water. The legumes, beans, peas, lentils and peanuts afford valuable nitrogenous food. Green peas are excellent ground up, without cooking, seasoned and slightly heated. Adding milk and butter improves them. Green corn in the “milk” is good served the same way. Haw peanuts are liked by many people better than the roasted nuts. Raw peanuts are usually laxative, or neutral, but roasted peanuts are invariably constipating. Dried beans as sold in the markets now are almost invariably treated in some way to make them insect proof. They may be fumed with formaldehyde, carbon disulphide or other preservatives. This must be ex- tracted before eating or serious effects may follow. Navy and kidney beans, as well as limas or butter beans, should be soaked in water over night. After draining carefully, add boiling water and let stand five minutes. 188 Milk Diet Pour off or drain and add more boiling water and cook thirty minutes, and pour this water of also. Then add more boiling water and cook until tender. Season to taste before removing from fire. Some kind of fat is usually added in the last cooking, either oil or salt pork, and a small amount of molasses. Beans cooked this way are not indigestible, and, with the fat and molasses omitted, may be eaten by diabetics, as the assimilable carbohydrates are eliminated. Uncooked wheat may be used in several ways. Like beans, wheat is sometimes treated with preservatives, es- pecially the seed wheat that you may buy in city stores, and it is best to soak it in several waters, one of which may be boiling. Hard wheat is the best kind, and it may be made into a very palatable dish by soaking for 36 hours, changing the water two or three times to pre- vent it souring. It is then so swollen and soft that it can readily be eaten with cream or honey. It may be warmed before using. This is a sovereign remedy for constipa- tion. After soaking wheat about twelve hours it can be parched in a hot skillet until the grains puff up and become crisp and palatable. This is called spargo, and may be chewed or ground up and eaten with cream or hot milk. Raw wheat makes a splendid gum after soaking a while. Simply chew up a spoonful until all the starch is dissolved by the saliva, leaving the pure gluten as a gum. The latter can be chewed a long time, as the alkaline saliva has no effect on it. The gum can be swallowed, as it readily dissolves in an acid stomach, or by adding a bite of acid fruit it goes into solution in the saliva. This kind of gum is really nutritious, while the common “chicle” gum sold in the shops is very indigestible, and little pieces which are unavoidably After Treatment 189 swallowed may cause distress in the intestines, possibly, as some claim, even appendicitis. When wheat, or any grain, or even beans, is soaked for a day or more, or, after soaking, is left damp, it germinates, sending out a root and a stem. This is the first step in the process of forming malt. The grain, at this time, is no longer dead or dormant, but living and growing, and possesses properties different from the dry grain. It has an active antiscorbutic element, and, if this fact had been known in earlier times, sailors and prospectors who contracted scurvy from the continued use of cooked, canned and dried foods could easily have prevented this disorder, or cured it, by the use of sprouted grains or beans. Chinese prepare a tasteful and vitalizing dish from bean sprouts, using the soya bean for this purpose. A favorite food in America, during the season, is green corn, a sweet maize, which is usually boiled on the cob. If allowed to ripen and dry it may be parched like wheat and makes an excellent spargo, particularly good when ground up and added to milk. Spargo is the prin- cipal diet of some of the Sicilian peasants. American Indians used to make a preparation of corn and dried meat, a sort of pemmican, to be used on long trips. Some people like toast, or zweiback, probably be- cause it tastes crisp in the mouth and affords something to chew, but toast is a very poor article of food and usu- ally constipating. As often made, it is nothing but a cinder of carbonized starch and gluten. The day of toast and tea for invalids is gone and will never return in sensible households. Nuts are a good food, but rather concentrated. Most of them are improved by soaking in water for a day before cracking. English walnuts and Brazil nuts 190 Milk Diet are laxative foods when eaten as they should be, for the main portion of the meal, but perhaps not if used as a dessert after a full meal. Milk and sour milk are prepared in various ways to render them more easily digestible. It is well, in this connection, to remember that it is possible to give the stomach too little to do and that continuous feeding of predigested foods may weaken that organ. I never advise the use of sweet milk as a drink with meals, but certainly buttermilk and sour milk can be used, in moderation, with good effect. If buttermilk is eaten with a teaspoon it is not apt to cause any trouble with a meal. Even dyspeptics find buttermilk and sour milk digestible and helpful in the digestion of other foods. One way to prepare buttermilk, or, rather, sour milk, is to take the fresh warm milk and put it away in a glass fruit jar in a warm place. If the weather is cool or the drink wanted soon place a teaspoonful of sour milk in the jar as a starter. In about twenty- four hours the milk will be coagulated or “clabbered.” Now empty the contents of the jar into a bowl and beat up with an eggbeater until liquid and frothy, when it is ready to drink. Junket tablets to coagulate sweet milk can be bought at grocery stores and many useful recipes come with each little box. With their aid most delicious and di- gestible foods can be made from milk and eggs without cooking. I am amazed that so many American house- holds are ignorant of these dessert dishes and still de- pend on pies and more or less indigestible puddings. No matter what food, is given the stomach, it makes an effort to digest it, and nearly always succeeds with any simple, natural food; but combinations of various After Treatment 191 classes of foods render the stomach’s work more diffi- cult. Professor Pawlow’s researches have thrown great light on the subject of gastric and pancreatic digestive secretions. He showed that each kind of food ingested was instrumental in causing the secretion of digestive juices especially adapted to that food, but when several kinds of food were taken at the same time a stomach had to be in very good order to make gastric juice suited to all. When you eat meat your stomach makes a gastric juice that is unfit to digest starchy foods, and it is un- wise to combine the two totally different foods. Most disorders attributed to the use of meat are really caused by a wrong combination of foods taken with the meat. Meat alone, or with non-starchy vegetables, such as salads, is easily digested and passes out of the stomach, but when taken with other foods that require a totally different form of digestion the whole mass is imperfectly acted on by the gastric secretions. This question of combinations probably makes little difference to the man in perfect health, or to the outdoor laborer, but, un- fortunately, for most of us it is a very vital question. The same rule that applies to meat also applies to white of eggs, poultry, shellfish, fish, cheese, broths, most soups, and all the protein foods. Yolks of eggs, cottage cheese, bacon, beans and nuts also contain much protein, but practical experience teaches us that they can be used in combinations and in ways that would be dangerous with meats. It is impossible to give general directions that will apply to every case, on account of personal idiosyncra- sies or different conditions surrounding patients. Ar- ticles might be prescribed that would be difficult to se- cure or the preparation or cooking method might nullify 192 Milk Diet the inherent values of the food. All foods are good for some people, but some can make poison out of the best of foods. Study your combinations and when in doubt take the safe course and leave out the doubtful element. It may be considered an established fact that almost every adult eats too much food, and this particularly ap- plies to those past forty years of age. After the physi- cal structure of the body, including its various organs, has been developed and habits of life fixed, we do not need nearly so much nourishment as when the body and brain were growing and new work being undertaken and new ideas being developed. For the grown and settled adult to continue using the same quantity of food that they assimilated when young invites many disturbances of the digestion and disorders of the blood, kidneys, heart and liver. Of the different classes of food that may cause trou- ble, undoubtedly the worst offenders are the starches and sugars, when taken in connection with other foods. These carbohydrates, most essential to the growing child and youth, can well be spared in the adult. The man or woman who persists in using cereals, breads, pastries, candies or sugar in any quantity with the ordinary diet may soon have delayed digestion, fermentation and con- stipation, with the usual attendant disorders. It is quite possible for such people to eat well cooked cereal, with milk or cream, or buttermilk, and this makes a well-balanced meal, but that should be the whole meal. On the other hand, many people with digestive dis- orders can handle a meat meal with ease, if little other food is mixed with it. A broiled steak not too well done, with tomatoes or a salad, and possibly a piece of stale bread, makes an easily digested and very nourishing meal, and I have frequently advised this for people who After Treatment 193 had had rheumatism, high blood pressure, kidney or heart disease, and have never known of any ill effects from it, after their course of milk diet. As a rule, what is eaten at one meal should not be repeated the same day, or even the next day. The sys- tem has enough of that article to last some time. The great majority of people who have stomach trouble get along best by not drinking anything with the meal, but a drink of water should be taken about half an hour before meals and half an hour or an hour after meals. I recommend for all, particularly constipated people, the drinking of considerable water, always including a glass the first thing in the morning. Cold water is usually best. No tea or coffee should be taken with meals, because of the stimulating effect from the drug caffeine and also because cream and sugar is so often added, making the digestion doubly difficult. Some also use the hot drink to wash down food which has been insufficiently chewed. Eating food dry, or in its natural state, requires con- siderable mastication before it can be swallowed. I am very much opposed to the use of black pepper as a condiment, as it imparts an irritating quality to the blood which is difficult to eliminate, and may be one of the causes of high blood pressure and Bright’s disease. Cayenne, paprika and chili pepper do not seem to have this bad effect, and furthermore are stimulating to the bowels, while black pepper is constipating. A method which often has all the virtues of a com- plete fast and is without some of the fasting draw- backs is the mono-diet. Perhaps one of the oldest of these is the so-called grape cure, which has been and is still used in various parts of the world. The method of giving this treat- Milk Diet 194 ment varies in different places. Usually the patients go to the vineyard and live outdoors while eating several pounds of grapes daily. As high as ten or twelve pounds can be taken, but the usual daily allowance is two to four pounds. In some cases a small amount of coarse bread is added to the fruit. The diet is quite laxative, and has been considered excellent for digestive disturb- ances and consumption. In some places the custom is to swallow the seeds, while in other localities this is not advised. The skins are usually, but not always, re- jected. The soreness of the mouth frequently caused by this diet is relieved by rinsing the mouth with cold water containing a little bicarbonate of soda. A dis- advantage of this cure is the fact that it is only avail- able at one season of the year. Another remedy is the apple cure, which is now available at almost any time of the year. A very good remedy for malarial poison, and, per- haps, other disorders, consists in living exclusively on tomatoes for weeks at a time. In my experience with this diet the tomatoes were cooked, but with little or no seasoning. I presume the fresh, uncooked fruit would be satisfactory. Cranberries are said to have a curative effect on rheumatism, and the use of uncooked vege- tables, as carrots, for instance, is beneficial in skin dis- ease. Recently an exclusive diet of cooked turnip and mustard tops and spinach has been tried in a large Eastern hospital for diarrhea and dysentery, and with excellent effect, it is said. The meat diet, called the Salisbury treatment, was popular in this country thirty years ago, and may be valuable in certain cases, such as obesity. The meat used consisted of very slightly cooked lean beef. I have known of patients taking as many as eighteen After Treatment 195 steaks daily, with a crust of bread, and usually hot water and orange juice to relieve the constipation. This method is dangerous in certain conditions and certainly has not the general application of fruit cures. Unlike the milk diet, the exclusive meat diet gives very little heat to the body, and people using it require artificial heat in the room and hot water bags in the bed to keep them warm. In some forms of sprue, or amebic dysentery, the exclusive meat diet may be used with great benefit. None of the above named foods contain in them- selves a well balanced ration for the human body, and sooner or later the diet would have to be changed to prevent starvation. Some writers claim that eggs are a perfect food, but certainly there are few people who can five on an exclu- sive diet of whole eggs. The “yolk cure,” as practiced by Stern, is quite different, and is excellent for diabetics. Luigi Cornaro, who lived in Padua (1467-1566), had ruined his health by excesses and adopted, when forty years of age, an abstemious diet of twelve ounces of solid food and fourteen ounces of fluid. His health rapidly improved and continued good until he died, al- most a centenarian. He published his first discourse on the Sober Life when 83 years old, an addition to it when 86, a Third Discourse at the age of 91, and the Fourth Discourse, on the Birth and Death of Man, when he was 95 years old. I quote from his writings: “It is certain that habit, in man, eventually becomes second nature, compelling him to practice that to which he has become accustomed, regardless of whether such a thing is beneficial or injurious to him. . . . Coming, then, to that evil concerning which I propose to speak— 196 Milk Diet the vice of intemperance—I declare that it is a wicked thing that it should prevail to such an extent as to greatly lower, nay, almost abolish, the temperate life. ... It is this craving to gratify the appetites which has allured and inebriated men to such a degree that, abandoning the path of virtue, they have taken to fol- lowing the one of vice—a road which leads them, though they see it not, to strange and fatal chronic infirmities through which they grow prematurely old. . . . For there is a remedy by which we may banish this fatal vice of intemperance—an easy remedy, and one of which every man may avail himself if he will; that is, to live in accordance with the simplicity of Nature, which teaches us to be satisfied with little, to follow the ways of holy self-control and divine reason, and to accustom ourselves to eat nothing but that which is necessary to sustain life. . . . The unbounded virtue of this is that that which I eat and drink—always being such as agrees with my constitution, and in quantity such as it should be—after it has imparted its invigorat- ing elements to my body, leaves it without any difficulty, and without ever generating within it any bad humors.” After Treatment 197 Average height and weight of males, based on reports of over 74,000 accepted applicants by life insurance medical directors. HEIGHT 20 30 40 50 60 5 feet 128 133 134 131 S feet 1 inch 122 129 134 136 134 5 feet 2 inches 124 131 136 138 137 5 feet 3 inches 127 134 139 141 140 6 feet 4 inches 138 143 145 144 5 feet 5 inches 141 146 149 148 5 feet 6 inches 138 145 150 153 153 5 feet 7 inches 150 155 158 158 5 feet 8 inches 146 154 160 163 163 5 feet 9 inches 150 159 165 167 168 5 feet 10 inches 154 164 170 172 174 5 feet 11 inches 159 169 175 177 180 6 feet 165 175 180 182 185 6 feet 1 inch 181 186 188 189 6 feet 2 inches 188 194 194 192 6 feet 3 inches 195 203 201 HEIGHT Average Minimum Maximum 5 feet 98 132 5 feet 1 inch 120 102 138 & feet 2 inches 106 144 5 feet 3 inches 111 150 5 feet 4 inches 115 155 6 feet 6 inches 119 161 5 feet 6 inches 121 165 5 feet 7 inches 123 167 5 feet 8 inches 148 126 170 5 feet 9 inches 131 179 5 feet 10 inches 160 136 184 5 feet 11 inches 138 190 S feet 141 196 Average height and weight of females, all ages, including ordinary clothing. Pulse Blood Pressure Weight No. Pounds Date Date Amount Date Respirations Ratio Pulsations Ratio Temperature 18 80 99 F. 19 (plus) 88 100 21 (plus) 96 101 23 104 102 25 (minus) 112 103 27 120 104 28 (minus) 128 105 80 136 106 INDEX Page Acidity of Stomach 62,69 Addison’s Disease 155 After Treatment 175 Agar-Agar 118 Albuminuria 41,146 Alcoholic Stimulation 73, 82 Anemia 69,73, 79 pernicious 155 Aneurism 49,125 Angina Pectoris 158 Appendicitis 69,143 Apple Cure 194 Apoplexy 43, 73 Arterio-Sclerosis 70,157 Arthritis 69 deformans 141 sero-fibrinous 141 Assimilation of Milk 20,57,114 Asthma 70,73,127 Auto-Intoxication 69, 73, 130 Babcock, Dr. R. H 20 Bad Taste in Mouth 46, 62 Basedow’s Disease 76 Bath, in hot weather 64 temperature 63 tubs 30 warm 29, 40, 63 Bathing 76 during menstruation 65 Beans 184 Bed 27 Bile 119 Biliousness 69 Bishop, Prof 162 Bladder, Inflammation 149 Blood Circulation 78 cells 20 pressure 72,177 Blue, General Rupert 155 Boils 70 Bread 186 Breathing 98,168, 176 Bright’s Disease 18, 41, 73,151 Bronchitis 73 Bulkley, Dr. L. Duncan 19 Buttermilk 34, 70,113,133,190 Cancer 153 Carbuncles 70 Castor Oil 117 Catarrh 70,127 Page Cathartic Medicines 117,132 Cereals 101 Charcoal 185 Cheese 16 Chlorosis 148 Chyle 17 Circulation of Blood 72, 78 Clock 29 Cocaine Habit 70 Cold Feet 89 Colitis 70,144 Color of Stools 95 Constipation 70,105 from overeating 94 on milk diet 113 remedies 110 Consumption 70, 73,122 of Bowels 88 Cooking 100 Cornaro, Luigi 195 Cough 123 Cream 140 Crises 70,139 Curds 59 Cystitis 70,149 Danger of Hemorrhage 48,126 Dates 88 Dennos Food 186 Devitalized Foods 15,100 Diabetes 15,51,92,151 Diarrhea 18, 70, 86,106,144 Dilated Stomach 39, 70,143 Dilators, anal 121 Donkin, Dr 18,151 Dropsy 41,81,92,148 Dyspepsia 69, 93, 95 Dysentery 70 Ears 65 Earache 47 Eczema 69 Eggs 183,184,191,195 Einhorn, Prof 101 Enemas 119 cold water 116 glycerine 120 salt 120 Enlargement Prostrate 70 Eruption on Skin 70 Examinations 45 Exercise 112,167 on Milk Diet 41, 43 Page Exophthalmic Goiter 76 Eyestrain 178 Fasting 50, 52, 54,114,153 Fast Pulse 81 Feces 106 color of 95 impacted 115,119 Fever 81 Floating Kidney 146 Fresh Air 25, 99 Fruits 50,97,114 laxative 97,108 Gallstones 70 Gas on Stomach. 62 Gastritis 70 General Debility 69 Generative Organs 38,150 Gilbert, Prof. J. Allen 33 Goiter 70, 82 Gout 70,137 Grants Hygienic Crackers 103 Grape Cure 193 Gravel 150 Graves Disease 76 Growth 37 Guelpa, Dr 153 Hair 64, 88 Handball 173 Hard Arteries 70, 73,157 Hay Fever 70,129 Headache 133 Heart Disease 75,147 dilated 149 stimulation 72,75, 79 Height Tables 197 Hemorrhage 126 capillary 126 High Blood Pressure 157 Hives 70 Hodgkin’s Disease 155 Homeopathic Remedies 182 Hot Water Apparatus 30 Hunger on Milk Diet 96 Hyperemia 80 Impotence 70 Indigestion 63,70, 98 Inozemtseff, Dr 17 Insomnia 70, 97 Iron in Milk 148 Johnson, Dr 18 Junket 190 Karell, Dr., Milk Cure 17 INDEX Page Hodgkin’s Disease 155 Kidneys 36,76,145 disease 70,145 floating 146 stone 150 tubercular 77 Lactic Acid Bacilli 134,152 Laxative Seaweed 118 Legumes 187 Leucocytes 20 Leucorrhea 70 Liquid Petroleum 118 Liver Disease 70 Locomotor Ataxia 155 Long Beach, California 138 Low Blood Pressure 177 Lumbago 70,138 Lungs 82 Malaria 70 Massage Ill Measurements 54 Meat Diet 194 Migraine 70 Milk, Amount of 55 asses’ 17 buttermilk ... .34, 70,113,135,190 camel’s 17 can 28 curds 56, 60 digestion of 114 Durham 32 fat 86 glasses 28, 58 Holstein 70 Jersey 32 long course of 66 mare’s 17 way to warm 60 odor of 96 on mixed diet 189 pasteurized 31 preserved 32 salts 34 separated 61 skimmed 34, 61 sour milk 113,135,190 taste 95 temperature 60 warming 60 work on milk diet 68, 69 Mineral Water 137 Mitchell, Dr. Weir 19, 39, 68,140 199 200 MILK DIET Page Morphine Habit 70 Muscles 82,167 of Alimentary Canal 84 sphincter 105 Nausea 46, 62 Nervous Prostration 22, 69 Neuralgia 47, 70 of heart 158 Neurasthenia 70 Neuritis 70 Night Drinking 62 Nuts 189 Odor from skin 90 Oertel’s Treatment 147 Organs of Generation 38,150 Ox Gall 119 Oxygen 98 Pain 47,150 during menstruation 47 Painful Menstruation 150 Pancreas 103 Paralysis 159 agitans 155 Parks, Aubrey 41 Pavilions 25 Pawlow, Prof 191 Pellagra 153 Pepper 193 Peristalsis 85,107 Peritonitis 47 Pernicious Anemia 155 Perspiration 89 Petroleum Oil 118 Piles 70,108 Pimples 69, 70 Pleurisy 46, 69 Popcorn 96 Preliminary Arrangements 25 Prostate Gland 70 Psychology of Milk Cure 44 Pulse 72,76, 81 Pyorrhea 52 Quackenbos, Dr. John R 163 Raw Vegetables 182 Reactions during treatment 72 Reading 39,178 Relaxing 40 Rennet 55 Rest 36 Rheumatism 46, 49,70,137 Rheumatoid Arthritis 142 Rice 88 Page Ringing in Ears 69 Riggs Disease 52 Salads 183 Salisbury treatment 194 Sallowness 69 Schroth’s Treatment 147 Sciatica 70 Seaweed 118 Skin 69, 88 odor from 90 Sleeping 58,109 garments 27 Smith, Dr. Stephen 55 Smoking 161 Spargo 188 Sphincter Muscles 36,105,111 Sprue 144,195 Starting the Treatment 50 Stools, Color of 95 Stopping the Milk Diet 93 Talking 39,181 Teeth, Decay of 52 Thirst on Milk Diet 97 Thyroid Gland 155 Tobacco Habit 70,161 Tomato Cure 194 Transfusion, of Blood 73 Tuffnell’s Treatment 147 Tyson, Prof. Jamas 19 Ulcer of Stomach 70 Ulceration of Bowels 70 Urinals 149 Urine 77,92,140,145 in auto-intoxication 130 Urticaria 70 Various Diseases 143 Ventilation of Bedroom 25 Visitors 29 Vitamines 16 Vomiting 46 Warming Milk 60 Water Drinking 181,193 of Long Beach, Cal 138 Weight, Increase of 87, 90 loss of 42, 92 tables 197 Wheat 186 Wilcox, Ella Wheeler 68 Windows 26 Wrinkles 69 Writer’s Cramp 82