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304 results
  1. ... the proportion of nitrogenous matter in a given weight far exceeds that of meat. One pound of cheese has been estimated as equi- valent to 3| lbs. of lean beef. Taken with bread or other vegetable diet it is very nutritive to persons of active ...
  2. NLM Digital Collections - The home doctor : a guide to health 
    Publication: [San Francisco] : San Francisco News Co., 1878
    ... 51 to be occasionally had, constituted my sole diet. During the thirty-four and a half days I consumed thirty-nine pounds of crackers. My loss of weight was one and a half pounds. During many ...
  3. ... the proportion of nitrogenous matter in a given weight far exceeds that of meat. One pound of cheese has been estimated as equi- valent to lbs. of lean beef. Taken with bread or other vegetable diet it is very nutritive to persons of active ...
  4. ... the proportion of nitrogenous matter in a given weight far exceeds that of meat. One pound of cheese has been estimated as equi- valent to 3| lbs. of lean beef. Taken with bread or other vegetable diet it is very nutritive to persons of active ...
  5. ... the proportion of nitrogenous matter in a given weight far exceeds that of meat. One pound of cheese has been estimated as equi- valent to 3| lbs. of lean beef. Taken with bread or other vegetable diet it is very nutritive to persons of active ...
  6. ... the proportion of nitrogenous matter in a given weight far exceeds that of meat. One pound of cheese has been estimated as equi- valent to 3| lbs. of lean beef. Taken with bread or other vegetable diet it is very nutritive to persons of active ...
  7. ... the prevention, treatment, and cure of disease, from diet than from water. Water, which composes at least eighty parts in the one hundred, of the whole living body, by weight, is a most wonderful thing to help men ...
  8. ... to be sensitive, for they have too much weight for their muscle, and hence usually perform badly. In addition to cooperating with the individual’s physician in encouraging the individual to persist in the prescribed reducing diet, the teacher of physical education should attempt to ...
  9. ... of tepid water. When there is sense of weight and oppression with heat in the region of the liver, cold wet cloths, covered with dry, should be applied. In diet, tho patient should be abstemious, and mainly fru- ...
  10. ... question can hardly be overestimated. The loss of weight was undoubtedly due in a great measure to the excessive muscular exer- tion ; but in part, also, to change in diet. This propo- sition does not demand discussion. The ...
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