V VOL. XLI PORTLAND, OREGON, SUNDAY MORNING, - DECEMBER 17, 1922 NO. 52 f Dr , J Maguire of Warren 0 . who showed how littl a mart needs when he lived a week on SO cents a do ' gained weight. lOUND! A. perfect stomach! It never aches; it has no hunger pangs; raange of climate doesn't affect it. It's Just a perfect stomach tut It's made of glass. About it, every day, where it stands in the organic laboratory of the bureau of chemistry of the department of agricul ture, Washington, D. C, are grouped many experts. They feed it apple pie, potatoes juicy steaks; even give it a drink at times Then they watch the process of digestion through its glass walls. When the food has been digested they do Just what bvery dyspeptic would do with his own stomach if it were possibla they take it apart, clean it thoroughly and then they feed it some more. According to Dr Breeze Jones, head of the laboratory, and Dr. Henry Waterman, his assistant, the Importance to human l:fe and longevity of this .atest triumph of science cannot be too greatly stressed. For through it science expects to discover new secrets of the mysterious process of building new tissue and new ways of prolonging life. , Under the long-employed experimental 1 III' id'JirfCvc V , . 'lki . I V.vv :5vV " " "U-br - Q2 1 ' T''i-YUV' -4f-"i .' " ni-T. w I - i x & ' JJSi 5 ? 4..jiwwiii "' uss9aa food : I H ! 1 : MSm .I'i'ir' 1 'till r -''?Tu ' i Mmhl n4 PPfeSkt: hrT quantity of food than any mechanical I fel S f . I I f ' . ' -.- -.- , How the Chemists at Washington Have Now Invented a Way to Watch What Goes on When a Dinner Is Digested, F The digestive effect is measured by th ratio of what is known as amino nitro gen to total nitrogen. After the food has been acted upon by the hydrochloric acid it is then treated be; trypsin and a dilute alkaline solution chemically similar to the digestive juices found in the intestinal tract. This in forms the observer just what happen? to food in the digestive process alter it leaves the human stomach. One of the things that the glass stom ach is expected to determine is the rela tive nutritive values of certain foods cooked and uncooked. Take cabbage, for instance. Many stomach specialists as sert that the only way to eat it is raw; that when cooked it causes indigestion. Yet the practical physician jointji to the healthy man who eats "his "cornbeef and" and never minds the fact that It is cooked and cooked well. But there la one man, at least, in the Imited States to whom the news of the perfection of the glass stomach gave great satisfaction. He isn't a scientist, unless of the domestic order. He isn't interested in the scientific results of the machine except in one particular. That particular is appie pie. Newton H. Whitis of Continental, O ' system en nutuan subjects it was impos sible to arrive at a perfect conclusion. Women, because they smoke less and drink less and nave fewer of the so-called ' pernicious" habits which ' contaminate the human system with foreign matter. Invariably were the experimental sub jects. But feminine imagination often offered a stumoling-block by eliciting re ports of "symptoms" that never existed. Now the glass stomach seems to be the end-all of science's experimental trou bles. The food ta be tested is dropped into the stomach into which a dilute so lution of hydrochloric acid of the strength found in the average human stomach has already been introduced.. Pepsin, which is manufactured by nature for digestive purposes, is also included. Then an elec tric heater is started beneath the stom ach "bag" and by the aid of thermostatic appliances a constant temperature of 37 degrees centigrade is maintained. Then the eye of the scientist watches and notgs just what happens to. the food inserted. is the man. Ha sees m the glass stomach a means of proving the value of his strange recipe for marital happiness. He expects the latest scientific wonder to corroborate what he says about apple pie. His observations on this old-fashioned and popular pastry are as follows: "If the young housewife would cut her apple pie differently there would be less marital unhappiness. She should do it as her grandmother did it. , She should cut it across twice, making four -pieces to a pie, not six, as the young idea does now. Avnen a man wants a piece he wants f piece, not a sample. And apple pie is the finest thin? that a wife can place before her husband." Mr. Whitis spoke from the fulness of the knowledge of 60 years. His mar ried life has been very happy he says." His wife is the old-fashioned sort of cook. His argument 'E so interesting as to de mand chemical analysis,- In "Diet and Health," written by Lulu Hunt Peters, woman dietitian, and physician of jLos Angeles, apple pie is revealed as' just what the practical Mr. Whitis says it is the most important part of the meal. She shows that apple pie contains 350 cal ories of energy. Beef, pork, lamb or mut ton, fish, eggs and milk contain 100 cal ories each; And the piece of apple pie cut into one-sixth contains that 'amount of calories! Following Mr. Whitis" re cipe the pie would contain 520 calories. Only 3000 calories a day is needed by the average business man. Therefore, if he ate two pieces of the pie he would be get ting more than one-third of the full day's needs in calories. It Is worth observing that the healthy Herbert Hoover eats ap ple pie. Also, that the book containing this secret about apple pie is dedicated to Mr. Hoover. - . - If the glass stomach at Washington does nothing else than determine what is a perfectly balanced diet it may pro long life to the 200 th year,; according to the theory . of Alfred W. Lawson. Mr. Lawson, who is known in the world of 'Ahoat the glass stomachy every day are grouped experts. They feed it apple pie, potatoes, nice . ocy steaks, even give it a drink at times ' aeronautics as the man who built and navigated from Milwaukee to New York, 'a 26-passenger air machine, hs turned Lis attention to the prolongation of life. He declares that long life can be obtained through a perfect balance between food, sleep and exercise. Each man should understand the operation of his own sys tem just as an engineer his engine or a good horseman his horse.' Enough exer cise and enough sleep should be had to digest the amount of food the dajt's ac tivities demand If the glass stomach at Washington determines what a perfect balance is, it will be the scientific instru ment through which-Methuselah's record may yet be approached or passed. This balanced living is practiced by the world's champion eater, Tobias Jason of Pecos, Tex. Mr Jason lays claim to the heavyweight title and is willing to meet all comers. Recently, on board the steamship President Harding, he amazed the other passengers and wearied the cooks and waiters by the demands of his appetite. His breakfast included sliced pineapples, oranges, bananas, fresh straw berries, cereals, eggs,, chops, potatoes, coffee rolls and toast topped off by two extra portions of eggs. " His dinner con sisted of well, he just went through the bill-o'-fare three times from soup to nuts. But he always exercises and sleeps prop erly and that accounts for his good health. The proper food is cheap enough, too, . according to results of dietary experi ments which are undertaken. at regular, intervals- by college girls; scientists, and .' even those disputing over the high cost of food. They have offered pretty good evidence that 50 cents a day can feed a healthy man or girl. College students should make dietary tests, according , to Director Francis G. Benedict of thj Nutrition laboratory . of Carnegie institution in Washington, D. C, who says that steers take better care of their stomachs than students. Steers which had been half-fed during winter months released to pasture in the spring suffered no ill effects from gour mandizing, but college students starving themselves for a test got colic from over eating when they returned to regulation fare, says Director Benedict. Six girls of the Pennsylvania State col lege lived for several weeks at an actual cost of 47.1 cents a day. They cooked their own food and purchased everything as cheaply as possible. But Dr. E. J. Maguire of Warren, O., went a week on 50 cents-a day, living on meals purchased at a restaurant. He actually gained one ounce during the week and thereby won a wager he made with Drs. C. A. Sted man and "A. A. Hallock. Here is the menu Dr. Maguire ate for a week at a total cost of only $3.50: Monday Breakfast, rolls and coffee, 10 cents. Lunch, vegetable soup, brown tread and butter, 15 cents. Dinner, two poached eggs, fried potatoes, brown bread and butter, 25 cents. Tuesday Breakfast, toast and coffee, 10 cents. Lunch, roast beef (small), boiled potatoes, brown gravy, bread and butter, 25 cents. Dinner, vegetable soup and crackers, brown bread and butter, 15 cents. . - Wednesday Breakfast, buttered toast, 10 cents. Lunch, vegetable soup, brown bread and butter, 15 cents. Dinner, two poached eggs, graham bread and butter, glass of milk, 25 cents. . Thursday Breakfast, oatmeal and milk, 10 cents. Lunch, vegetable soup, rye bread and butter, 15 cents. Dinner, two poached eggs, potatoes, brown bread and butter, coffee, 25 cents. Friday Breakfast, buttered toast, 10 cents. Lunch, one egg, cucumbers, bread and butter and milk, 15 cents. Dinner, two fried eggs, potatoes, graham bread and, butter, coffee, 25 cents. Saturday Breakfast, oatmeal and milk, 10 tents. Lunch, vegetable soup, brown bread, batter and milk, 15 cents. Dinner, two poached eggs, potatoes, gra ham bread, butter, coffse, 25 cents. Sunday Breakfast, cantaloupe, 10 cents. Lunch, hot egg sandwich and milk, 15 cents. Dinner, small roast beet, brown bread and butter, potatoes and coffee, 25 cents. Botulinus Toxin Deadliest of All Known Poisons. Inrinttexlmnl Potion Wonld Kill People of Earth. All POISON so powerful that all the people on earth could be killed by one-millionth of half an ordinary thimble full, Drs. Jaques Bronfenbrenner and M. J. Schlesinger of Harvard university have found that the strength of the botulinus toxin, which occurs in spoiled vege table food, is so great that the aver age man would die from a dose of 0.00000000000000001 cubic centimeter of it. . , As there are 473 cubic centimeters In a pint, only an infinitesmal amonnt would be required to swamp the immigra tion authorities in heaven. , One cubic centimeter would be enough to depopu late the whole earth with 999,999 parts left over. Botulinus . poisoning was first known as "sausage" poisoning and was detected after fatalities resulting from eating sau sage, meats and fish. Recently this poi soning has been more common after the eating of decayed vegetable foods. It is caused by the germ bacillus botulinus and, unlike the toxin of diphtheria or lockjaw, it is deadly poisonous wuen in troduced into the body by way of the mouth. ' Contamination of foodstuff producing this poison is not common, and should such poisoning be present it is usually ' readily" detected by the putrid odor of the food. If the poisoned food Is. boiled, it ceases to be harmful, while even when the poison is actually consumed, nature and an antitoxin may -protect, the Indi