Book/Printed Material The people's health
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Image 1 of The people's health ■aMNMOTMOTMMMMW =9 THE PLE S HEALTH ORE COLEMAN
- Contributor: Coleman, Walter Moore
- Date: 1915
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Image 2 of The people's health OlassJLiAli Book Oopiglitl^ \°1\5 COPYRIGHT DEPOSIT;
- Contributor: Coleman, Walter Moore
- Date: 1915
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Image 3 of The people's health
- Contributor: Coleman, Walter Moore
- Date: 1915
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Image 4 of The people's health
- Contributor: Coleman, Walter Moore
- Date: 1915
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Image 6 of The people's health LOUIS PASTEUR. The founder of modern sanitation. Born 1822, died 1895. (Director of Ecole Normale, Paris, 1857-1889.)
- Contributor: Coleman, Walter Moore
- Date: 1915
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Image 7 of The people's health THE PRACTICAL SERIES THE PEOPLE S HEALTH BY WALTER MOORE COLEMAN ILLUSTRATED BY RETT A CARROLL, ALFRED SEILER AXD WITH PHOTOGRAPHS Nefo gork THE MACMILLAN COMPANY 1915 All rights reserved
- Contributor: Coleman, Walter Moore
- Date: 1915
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Image 8 of The people's health THE PRACTICAL SERIES o WALTER MOORE COLEMAN t*^ i. PHYSIOLOGY FOR BEGINNERS. x 2. THE PEOPLE S HEALTH. 3. A HYGIENIC PHYSIOLOGY. A Health Primer for supplementary reading in third and fourth...
- Contributor: Coleman, Walter Moore
- Date: 1915
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Image 9 of The people's health PREFACE This volume is a o?ie-book (half-year) course in personal, JwuseJwld, and industrial hygiene, public health, and human physiology. This plan permits the study of the several phases of the subject in...
- Contributor: Coleman, Walter Moore
- Date: 1915
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Image 10 of The people's health VI PREFACE cramming. On the other hand, to sugar-coat a subject by using books written in the diffuse style of popular maga- zines and by giving rambling talks, brings an equally unfortunate...
- Contributor: Coleman, Walter Moore
- Date: 1915
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Image 11 of The people's health PREFACE Vll indifference to others in matters of health is suicidal. The school prepares a pupil for his place in a social community. It must not only show him how to attain...
- Contributor: Coleman, Walter Moore
- Date: 1915
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Image 12 of The people's health Vlll PREFACE Number of Children, Oct. i HEALTH CENSUS OF SCHOOL Teacher asks questions counts hands raised. First Week in Oct. First Week IN April Gains Loss 10. II. 12. 13- 14....
- Contributor: Coleman, Walter Moore
- Date: 1915
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Image 13 of The people's health PREFACE ix placed in this preface with blank columns for the teacher s use. It is urged that the first of these columns be filled at the beginning of the term and...
- Contributor: Coleman, Walter Moore
- Date: 1915
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Image 14 of The people's health X PREFACE Carolina), W. F. Cogswell, M.D. (Montana), Calvin S. White, M.D. (Oregon), Joseph Y. Porter, M.D. (Florida), E. G. Williams, M.D. (Virginia), W. S. Leathers, M.D. (Mississippi), H. F. Harris, M.D....
- Contributor: Coleman, Walter Moore
- Date: 1915
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Image 15 of The people's health CONTENTS CHAPTER I. II. III. IV. V. VI. VII. VIII. IX. X. XI. XII. XIII. XIV. XV. XVI. XVII. XVIII. XIX. XX. XXI. XXII. XXIII. XXIV. XXV. XXVI. XXVII. Introduction Fresh Air...
- Contributor: Coleman, Walter Moore
- Date: 1915
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Image 16 of The people's health Courtesy of Indiana Board of Health. Having followed the jack-o -lantern of Cure, and fallen into the pit of darkness, they now see the bright stars of Prevention, and resolve to be...
- Contributor: Coleman, Walter Moore
- Date: 1915
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Image 17 of The people's health THE PEOPLES HEALTH CHAPTER I INTRODUCTION The Athenian s Vow. We will never bring disgrace on this our city by any act of dishonesty or cowardice, nor ever desert our suffering comrades...
- Contributor: Coleman, Walter Moore
- Date: 1915
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Image 18 of The people's health THE PEOPLES HEALTH This ease of communication spreads diseases from one place to another it enables selfish men to send and sell to others impure foods and medicines, clothing made in The...
- Contributor: Coleman, Walter Moore
- Date: 1915
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Image 19 of The people's health INTRODUCTION 3 This shows how far our ideals have departed from the Greek ideal of perfect living. Such a condition, even of elderly men bearing public burdens, could not be imagined in...
- Contributor: Coleman, Walter Moore
- Date: 1915
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Image 20 of The people's health THE PEOPLES HEALTH young or very old, and therefore delicate members. He will foresee and warn against threatened breakdown from wrong living. He will notify them of infection in the By courtesy...
- Contributor: Coleman, Walter Moore
- Date: 1915
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Image 21 of The people's health INTRODUCTION 5 The people of all civilized countries are slowly coming to realize what a costly thing illness is, and what a paying in- vestment is money spent for sanitary measures. This...
- Contributor: Coleman, Walter Moore
- Date: 1915
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Image 22 of The people's health 6 THE PEOPLES HEALTH care of themselves and how to fight both alone and with many, for higher ideals of public health. It will be a part of their sense of public...
- Contributor: Coleman, Walter Moore
- Date: 1915
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Image 23 of The people's health IXTRODCCTIOX will be less persistent in doing the things that they know will undermine the health when they cease to expect a magic cure of disease. 77/ health is usually proof of...
- Contributor: Coleman, Walter Moore
- Date: 1915
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Image 24 of The people's health s THE PEOPLE S HEALTH public hygiene. If every family milked its own cow, kept its own fowls, canned its own fruit and vegetables, taught its children at home, caught drinking water...
- Contributor: Coleman, Walter Moore
- Date: 1915
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Image 25 of The people's health INTRODUCTION g Even the blood is composed largely of cells. In its plasma, or watery portion, are floating millions of cells of two kinds. Most of them are red and round, but...
- Contributor: Coleman, Walter Moore
- Date: 1915
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Image 26 of The people's health IO THE PEOPLE S HEALTH and nails are dead, and we have no feeling when we cut those dry parts. The cells are like the citizens living together in a city. They...
- Contributor: Coleman, Walter Moore
- Date: 1915
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Image 27 of The people's health LXTRODCCTIOX II Disease Germs. Health and disease are not mere matters of chance. Health depends most of all upon following good habits and avoiding bad habits. We may weaken the eyes by...
- Contributor: Coleman, Walter Moore
- Date: 1915
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Image 28 of The people's health 12 THE PEOPLE S HEALTH i J a Yeast plants. to£fe called bacte ria, or to a class of one-celled animals called protozo a. The animal germs have various shapes some have...
- Contributor: Coleman, Walter Moore
- Date: 1915
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Image 29 of The people's health IXTRODl CTWX 13 has never been seen. Most germs are not disease germs, but are perfectly harmless. Germs ride on particles of dust and droplets of water va- por, but left without...
- Contributor: Coleman, Walter Moore
- Date: 1915
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Image 30 of The people's health 14 THE PEOPLES HEALTH flavor, the earth would be encumbered with dead plants and carcasses, soil would lose its fertility, and the earth become a barren desert. The greatest of the many...
- Contributor: Coleman, Walter Moore
- Date: 1915
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Image 31 of The people's health IXTRODUCTIOX A white cell devouring a germ (above) and a white cell destroyed by germs (below) of the individual. But the little white warriors of the body may sometimes be overcome by...
- Contributor: Coleman, Walter Moore
- Date: 1915
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Image 32 of The people's health i6 THE PEOPLE S HEALTH ens, the disease would be much less severe than if fresh germs were used, and the mild disease protected them from having the disease in its dangerous...
- Contributor: Coleman, Walter Moore
- Date: 1915
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Image 33 of The people's health LXTRODCCTION 17 thing or place for the purpose of killing disease germs. Sunshine is the best and cheapest disinfectant. To sterilize anything, as water or butter, is to kill all germs and...
- Contributor: Coleman, Walter Moore
- Date: 1915
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Image 34 of The people's health i8 THE PEOPLE S HEALTH of many healthy people and do them no harm. But these people may carry the germs to weak people, who take the disease at once. Test Questions....
- Contributor: Coleman, Walter Moore
- Date: 1915
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Image 35 of The people's health INTRODUCTION 19 What are bacteria? Protozoa? A coccus? A bacillus? A spirillum? Tell the differences between bacteria and common plants. What are spores? Give some idea of the rate at which germs...
- Contributor: Coleman, Walter Moore
- Date: 1915
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Image 36 of The people's health CHAPTER II FRESH AIR It is feeling that keeps us alive and active and all our organs doing their appointed work. The feelings from the skin are highly important. The changing play...
- Contributor: Coleman, Walter Moore
- Date: 1915
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Image 37 of The people's health FRESH AIR 21 we find unbearable on a sultry summer day. Even the purest air is unhealthful if it is warm, moist, and still. The prisoners in the Black Hole of Calcutta...
- Contributor: Coleman, Walter Moore
- Date: 1915
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Image 38 of The people's health 22 THE PEOPLES HEALTH no longer have the benefit of struggling with severe weather. Only the warm air afforded by tight houses and warm clothes reaches their lungs and skin. This is...
- Contributor: Coleman, Walter Moore
- Date: 1915
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Image 39 of The people's health FRESH AIR 23 people conditions are somewhat different, but hardly better. Cool rooms require more food and more clothing. The poor find that the best way to save food and clothing is...
- Contributor: Coleman, Walter Moore
- Date: 1915
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Image 40 of The people's health 24 THE PEOPLE S HEALTH they use open chimneys for warming. Rosy cheeks are not so frequent in Germany, where stoves are used, and, to save coal, the windows are closed with...
- Contributor: Coleman, Walter Moore
- Date: 1915