Vocational Guidance for Girls by Marguerite Stockman Dickson
page 36 of 219 (16%)
page 36 of 219 (16%)
|
From a consideration of water supply we pass naturally to questions of
the disposal of waste, and here again is found a subject too often neglected both in town and in rural communities. In the city the problems are not individual ones in the main, but rather questions of the best management and use of the public utilities concerned. Does the average city householder know what becomes of the waste removed from his door by the convenient arrival of the ash man, the garbage man, the rubbish man? Does he know whether this waste is disposed of in the most sanitary way? Does he consider whether it is removed in such a way as to be inoffensive and without danger to the people through whose streets it is carried? Does he know anything of the cost to the city of waste disposal? Is it merely an expense, and a heavy one, for him in common with other taxpayers to bear? Or is the business made to pay for itself? If not, is it possible to make it pay? Does any community make the waste account balance itself at the end of the year? [Illustration: Photograph by Brown Bros. An objectionable garbage wagon. Disposal of waste is a subject too often neglected both in urban and in rural communities] [Illustration: Photograph by Brown Bros. This new covered garbage wagon subjects the public to no danger] In the country, once more we face the individual problem rather than that of the community. Here proper provision for the disposal of waste often necessitates more knowledge of the subject than is possessed by the homemaker, or sometimes it requires the installation of apparatus whose cost seems prohibitive. A careful consideration of these matters will possibly disclose the fact that a smaller expenditure may |
|