636 MAN AS A CONQUEROR 



SUGGESTED READINGS 



Broadhurst, Jean, How We Resist Disease, J. B. Lippincott Co., 1923. 



The best book of its kind, although now not up to date. Interesting 



and authentic as far as it goes. 

 Dublin, L. I., Health and Wealth, Harper & Bros., 1928. 



A comprehensive discussion of economic factors as related to health. 

 De Kruif, Paul, Microbe Hunters, Harcourt, Brace & Co., 1926. 



The first, and still among the best, of many popular books on the con- 

 quering of parasitic diseases. 

 Downing, E. F., Science in the Service of Health, Longmans, Green & Co., 



1930. 



An elementary but interesting account of the conquest of parasitic 



disease by men who gave their all for science. 

 Haggard, H. W., What You Should Know about Health and Disease, Harper 



& Bros., 1928. 



General, but interesting and authentic. 

 Moore, H. H., Public Health in the United States, Harper & Bros., 1923. 



Valuable for statistical information up to date of publishing. 

 Park, W. H., and WiUiams, A. W., Who's Who among the Microbes, Cen- 

 tury Co., 1929. 



Practical applications pertaining to public health and preventive medi- 

 cine which have been made from the study of bacteria. 

 Roddis, L. H., Edward Jenner and the Discovery of Smallpox Vaccination, 



George Banta Publishing Co., 1930. 



Interesting account of the man and his work. 

 Smith, Theobald, Parasitism and Disease, Princeton University Press, 1934. 



One of the latest and best books on the subject by one who has done his 



part in conquering parasites. 

 Tobey, J. A., Riders of the Plagues, Charles Scribner's Sons, 1930. 



An interesting history of outbreaks of parasitic diseases from the time 



of the Crusades to the present. 

 Vallery-Radot, R., The Life of Pasteur, Doubleday, Doran & Co., 1926. 



(Garden City Pub. Co., 1926.) 



A classic (translated). 



