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Word: eating (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1900-1909
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Usage:

...simple rules contain the gist of Mr. Fletcher's system. They are: Never eat unless you have a well defined true appetite. A false appetite will always refuse simple food. Give the appetite an opportunity to choose the food it craves. Chew the food until the swallowing impulse is overmastering. This practice will enable the body to run perfectly on one-third the amount of food under the old system, and will yet satisfy the appetite. Enjoyment of food is necessary to digestion. Do not be disturbed either while eating or digesting food. Any disturbance arrests digestion and assimilation...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: MR. FLETCHER IN UNION | 11/8/1905 | See Source »

Various suggestions have been made as to how we can best eat our cake, and have it too, that is to say spend more and ask for less. The most obvious of these is "for the debts to be paid off more gradually and "for the improvements to be made under borrowed money, if necessary." This proposal to lay our burdens on the future, will hardly appeal to any one who believes in a conservative management of our finances. If our present debt were to be spread over ten years, it would at that rate, take twenty years or more...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: ATHLETIC FINANCIAL POLICY | 6/21/1905 | See Source »

Pearson's--"The Poisons We Eat in Foods," by Dr.H. W. Wiley...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The March Magazines. | 3/8/1905 | See Source »

...present about 1010 students eat in Randall Hall and pay on an average $2.60 per week. This low rate is due to the fact that men pay only for what they eat and so lose nothing when they take a meals elsewhere...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Changes in Randall Hall. | 3/6/1905 | See Source »

...paths. From generation to generation, men follow somewhat in the same ways as the men before them. There is the way of sensuality, wherein follow men of many kinds of physical lust and hunger, but all alike in that their goal is the satisfaction of physical pleasure, men who--"eat, drink, and these are bitter and proud,--and they who have failed, and these are bitter and harsh. There are the ways of social ambition, of hypocrisy, of indecision. And, finally, there is the way of faith and of duty, the goal of which is harmony with the eternal things...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE BACCALACUREATE SERMON. | 6/15/1903 | See Source »

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