PERSONAL AND CIVIC HYGIENE 339 



Latham and Garland, The Conquest of Consumption; an Economic 

 Study. 



Morrison and Hilditch, "Does Money Carry Disease?" Literary 

 Digest, March, 1910. 



Metchnikoff, E., The Prolongation of Life. 



The New Hygiene. 



' "Rats as Pests. 1 ' Farmers' Bulletin No. 369, U.S. Department of 

 Agriculture. 



Sadler, W. S., The Science of Living, or the Art of Keeping Well. 



Overlook, M. G., How to protect the Health of the Working People. 



White, F. M., " The Occupation and Exercise Cure." Outlook, March, 

 1910. 



Curtis, E., Nature and Health. ^ 



Andrews, L. R., The White Peril. 



Burton-Fanning, F. W., The Open Air Treatment of Pulmonary 

 Tuberculosis. 



Dorset, M., "Some Common Disinfectants." Farmers' Bulletin No. 

 345, U. S. Department of Agriculture, 1908. 



Godfrey, The Health of the City. 



Mason, W. P., "A Plea for Wider Sanitary Science Knowledge." 

 Science, 29, February, 1910. 



Otis, Dr. E. O., The Great White Plague. 



Veiller, L., Housing Reform : a Handbook for Practical Use in Ameri- 

 can Cities. 



Frankland, Mrs. P., Bacteria in Daily Life. 



Bashore, H. B., Outlines of Practical Sanitation. , 



Shaw, E. R., School Hygiene. 



Dock, L. L., Hygiene and Morality. 



Richards, Helen M., Euthenics, the Science of Controllable Environ- 

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Tenner, Philip, Education in Sexual Physiology and Hygiene. 



SUMMARY VII 



A summary of the causes and prevention of disease 

 personal and civic hygiene. 



I. THE CAUSES OF DISEASE 



1. The work of parasites. (But one in forty die of old age.) Bacteria 



mostly. 

 a. Infectious. 



(1) Contagious. 



