REFERENCE BOOKS 



73 



fainted. Abundant fresh air and loose clothing are helps. 

 Enforced respiration often shortens an attack. Respi- 

 ration may be 

 stimulated by 

 throwing cold 

 water upon the 

 face and chest. 

 Ammonia may 

 also be inhaled, 

 but avoid letting 

 any drop into 

 the eye or irri- 

 tating the air 

 passages unduly 

 by holding it too 

 near the mouth 



or nose. 



Why is the head lower than the rest of the body ? 

 (After Tolman.) 



REFERENCE BOOKS 



Allen, Civics and Health, Chapters V, VI (For teacher). Ginn and Company. 



American Red Cross Textbook on First Aid. Blakiston's Son and Company. 

 Broadhurst, Home and Community Hygiene, Chapters IX, XI (Teacher's use). 



J. B. Lippincott Company. 



Chapin, Sources and Modes of Infection (Teacher's use). J. B. Lippincott Company. 

 Fisher and Fisk, How to Live, Chapter I (Advanced readers). Funk and Wagnalls 



Company 

 Hill, The New Public Health, Chapters III, IX, XV (Teacher's use). The Mac- 



millan Company. 



Hough and Sedgwick, The Human Mechanism. Ginn and Company. 

 Hunter, A Civic Biology, Chapters XXI, XXII. American Book Company. 

 Hunter, Laboratory Problems in Civic Biology. American Book Company. 

 Lee, Health and Disease, Chapters VIII, XII (Teacher's use). Little, Brown, and 



Company. 



New York State Ventilation Commission Reports (Advanced readers). 



Prudden, Dust and Its Dangers. G. P. Putnam's Sons. 



Ritchie, Primer of Sanitation, Chapters XX, XXI. World Book Company. 



Woods Hutchinson, Preventable Diseases. Houghton Mifflin Company. 



