In some fruits, as oranges and prunes, the amount rejected in eating is practically the same as refuse. In others, as apples and pears, more or less of the edible material is ordinarily rejected with the skin and seeds and other inedible portions. The... Household Arithmetic - Page 177by Katharine Frances Ball, Miriam E. West - 1920 - 271 pagesFull view - About this book
| Julius Friedenwald - 1919 - 938 pages
...rejected in eating is practically the same as the refuse. In others. a» apple* and pears, more or lens or the edible material is ordinarily rejected with the...other Inedible portions. The edible material which In thus thrown away, and should properly be classed with the waste. Is here classed with the refuse.... | |
| Child rearing - 1919 - 464 pages
...of the edible material is ordr portions. The edible material which is thus thrown away, . . . _- , with the refuse. The figures for refuse here given represent, as nearly as can.be ascertained, the quantities ordinarily rejected. t Milk and shell. t The average of five analyses... | |
| Julius Friedenwald, John Ruhräh - Diet - 1919 - 956 pages
...amount rejected In eating is practically the same as the refuse. In others, as apples and pears more or less of the edible material is ordinarily rejected with the skin and sepcls and other inedible portions. The edible material which is thus thrown away, »nd should properly... | |
| Charles Dettie Aaron - 1921 - 960 pages
...the same as refuse. In others, as apples and pears, more or less of the edible material is JTOnaruy rejected with the skin and seeds and other inedible portions. The edible material •teA u thus thrown away, and should properly be classed with the waste, is here classed with the... | |
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