What must I do to get well? and how can I keep so?W.A. Kellogg, 1889 - 208 páginas |
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Página 21
... invalid appliance and device , and all cushions , etc. , were discarded : —and oh the heartfelt joy with which I saw the last of these nuisances dis- appear ! I now proceed to unfold the means of cure , How to get well . 21.
... invalid appliance and device , and all cushions , etc. , were discarded : —and oh the heartfelt joy with which I saw the last of these nuisances dis- appear ! I now proceed to unfold the means of cure , How to get well . 21.
Página 87
... invalid Make your last meal at night chiefly of one of these , or of broiled or roast meat , excluding fermenting foods and drinks as far as possible , so that there may be no disturbing element to interfere with your night's rest and ...
... invalid Make your last meal at night chiefly of one of these , or of broiled or roast meat , excluding fermenting foods and drinks as far as possible , so that there may be no disturbing element to interfere with your night's rest and ...
Página 107
... invalid and had died comparatively young , " solely because she had plenty of money to muddle on doctors , " and he added expansively that a great authority ' had said that " Every dose of medicine was simply a blind experi- ment ...
... invalid and had died comparatively young , " solely because she had plenty of money to muddle on doctors , " and he added expansively that a great authority ' had said that " Every dose of medicine was simply a blind experi- ment ...
Página 146
... invalid . Among the inscrutable dealings of man with man , this " cream ice " is surely one of the most bewildering and mysterious . The reason of it is far to seek ; the effect of it is not hard to understand . " No supper , " but " at ...
... invalid . Among the inscrutable dealings of man with man , this " cream ice " is surely one of the most bewildering and mysterious . The reason of it is far to seek ; the effect of it is not hard to understand . " No supper , " but " at ...
Página 148
... invalid in consequence of being very easy to swallow , when nicely and carefully pre- pared as it ought invariably to be . But when very tender steak nicely broiled , can be well masticated by a patient , and also well and easily ...
... invalid in consequence of being very easy to swallow , when nicely and carefully pre- pared as it ought invariably to be . But when very tender steak nicely broiled , can be well masticated by a patient , and also well and easily ...
Términos y frases comunes
acid gas animal food benefit better black pepper blood body boiled bowels bread Bright's Disease broiled carbonic acid carbonic acid gas cheer cold collops comfort Compound Menthol Ice Compound Menthol Powder constipation cooked cure daily diet and hot digestion and assimilation doctors drinks Edward Harrigan eggs experience farinaceous feeding feel fermenting foods flatulence friends gout happy hard Hay Fever heart heartburn hot water illness indigestion invalid keep lady writes lean beef lean meats little book mastication meal medicines ment minced beef diet minced collops mind morning mouth mutton nerves ness never nice nourishing once pain paralyse patient pint of hot puddings remedy rheumatism roasted Salisbury System Salisbury Treat Salisbury Treatment Salisbury's sick sleep soon soup stomach strict suffering sure things tion tumors unhealthy alimentation uric acid vegetable foods wise words
Pasajes populares
Página 91 - These to their softened hearts should bear The thought of what has been, And speak of one who cannot share The gladness of the scene ; Whose part in all the pomp that fills The circuit of the summer hills, Is — that his grave is green ! And deeply would their hearts rejoice To hear again his living voice.
Página 107 - ... of higher possibilities than the Catholic or any other Church has presented; and those who have strength to wait and endure are bound to accept no formula which their whole souls — their intellect as well as their emotions — do not embrace with entire reverence. The " highest calling and election " is to do without opium, and live through all our pain with conscious, clear-eyed endurance.
Página 129 - ... could not obviate the effects of the mischief done in September. It would be impossible here to do more than cursorily advert to the moot question as to how far the periods of sunspot activity are directly related to the monsoons in a form in which they can be of practical utility in forecasting. Pace all that has been said to the contrary, there is no doubt that the condition of the sun introduces a long-period oscillation, probably of similar eleven-year period and small amplitude, into all...
Página 99 - A physician is a man who pours drugs, of which he knows little, into a body of which he knows less.
Página 59 - A lonely branch upon a withered tree, Whose last frail leaf, untimely sere, Went down with thee? Oft from life's withered bower, In still communion with the Past, I turn, And muse on thee, the only flower In Memory's urn.
Página 156 - ... the time being, content with having called thoughtful attention to a great but much ignored TRUTH. It is my abiding hope that the PEOPLE may be brought to see these facts for themselves, and may by individual and intelligent selfcontrol aid their physicians to restore and maintain the oft-imperiled balance of HEALTH. Without it there is neither BEAUTY, USE, nor HAPPINESS for us : in its absence all the great glories and truths fade away from our sick vision. If we will not learn from NATURE'S...
Página 142 - ... gall bladder and gall ducts ; the patient becomes what is called " bilious," the urine is high colored and scanty, and stands at a density of 1.030 and upwards, and deposits a sediment on standing. V. UNHEALTHY ALIMENTATION A PRIMARY CAUSE OF DISEASE, AND HEALTHY ALIMENTATION A CURATIVE PROCESS. HEALTHY alimentation, or feeding upon such foods as the system can well digest and assimilate, is always promotive of health. Unhealthy alimentation always acts as a cause of disease. Special feeding,...
Página 127 - All successful men have agreed in one thing, — they were causationists. They believed that things went not by luck, but by law ; that there was not a weak or a cracked link in the chain that joins the first and last of things.