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There are 21,708 people in the Soviet Union who are over 100 years old, according to the 1959 census. And there are quite a few who have reached the respectable age of 150 and over.
Some years ago the famed Russian scientist, biologist and experimental botanist, Dr. Nicolai Tsitsin, was engaged in research on longevity. The aim of his inquiry was to find out ways of prolonging human life.
“We decided to send letters to 200 people claiming to be over 100 years old with the request to answer the following three questions: what was their age, how had they earned their living most of their lives, and what had been their principle food.”
Dr. Tsitsin received 150 replies to his 200 letters.
“We made a very interesting discovery. The answers showed that a large number of them were bee-keepers. And all of them, without exception, said that their principal food always had been honey!”
But as sensational as this discovery was, this was not all!
“We found,” continued Dr. Tsitsin, “that in each case it wasn’t really honey these people ate, but the waste matter in the bottom of the beehive. They were poor and they sold all the pure honey on the market, and kept only the dirty residue for themselves.”
After a series of laboratory experiments and tests, Dr. Tsitsin discovered that the “dirty residue” of the honey scrap was neither dirt nor honey, but almost pure pollen, which falls off the bees’ legs while they deposit their honey. Tsitsin was on the verge of a great nutritional discovery!
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