12. State the advantages of drinking pure water.

13. If all the food that one needs to take at a single meal can be thoroughly masticated in fifteen minutes, why is it better to spend a longer time at the table?

14. What is meant by the overlapping of meals? What bad results follow? How avoided?

PRACTICAL WORK

Examine a dissectible model of the human abdomen (Fig. 75), noting the form, location, and connection of the different organs. Find the connection of the esophagus with the stomach, of the stomach with the small intestine, and of the small intestine with the large intestine.[pg 169] Sketch a general outline of the cavity, and locate in this outline its chief organs.

Where it is desirable to learn something of the actual structure of the digestive organs, the dissection of the abdomen of some small animal is necessary. On account of unpleasant features likely to be associated with such a dissection, however, this work is not recommended for immature pupils.

Fig. 75—Model for demonstrating the abdomen and its contents.

Dissection of the Abdomen. (Optional)—For individual study, or for a small class, a half-grown cat is perhaps the best available material. It should be killed with chloroform, and then stretched, back downward, on a board, the feet being secured to hold it in place.

The teacher should make a preliminary examination of the abdomen to see that it is in a fit condition for class study. If the bladder is unnaturally distended, its contents may be forced out by slight pressure. The following materials will be needed during the dissection, and should be kept near at hand: a sharp knife with a good point, a pair of heavy scissors, a vessel of water, some cotton or a damp sponge, and some fine cord. During the dissection the specimen should be kept as clean as possible, and any escaping blood should be mopped up with the cotton or the sponge. The dissection is best carried out by observing the following order: