The woman citizen's library : a systematic course of reading in preparation for the larger citizenship . because there will be no political boss todraw revenue from protected vice, and because thepolice force, freed from political control, will honestlystrive to enforce all laws enacted for its is reasonable to suppose that in the ideal city, pub-lic prostitution will cease to exist. The ideal city will thus maintain order through thehonesty and efficiency of its employees even as the pri-vate housekeeper maintains order through the efficiencyof each member of her household. For


The woman citizen's library : a systematic course of reading in preparation for the larger citizenship . because there will be no political boss todraw revenue from protected vice, and because thepolice force, freed from political control, will honestlystrive to enforce all laws enacted for its is reasonable to suppose that in the ideal city, pub-lic prostitution will cease to exist. The ideal city will thus maintain order through thehonesty and efficiency of its employees even as the pri-vate housekeeper maintains order through the efficiencyof each member of her household. For a Clean City Order being assured, cleanliness will follow. Theprivate housekeeper knows that dust is the great enemyof comfort and health. Her house is cleaned by thevacuum process, which eliminates the old fashionedbroom by whose means the dust was spread over thefurniture, as well as the old fashioned duster which re-turned the dust to the floor. The ideal city will knowthat dust is the great carrier of infection. Its streetswill be cleaned by the vacuum process. They will be 2228 THE IDEAL CITY. A dirty u&rd 15a pI&a-drBondfar D&rdtslt^Rot /or children. Pirt &na discAse ^ f7And In-tl&nd. ^ the s&Vfe e^ Hear repuTedieiz ? Maiaztjtiar neidbbcr%/n?r7f o&rd THE IDEAL CITY WILL REQUIRE CLEANLINESSThe greatest menace to health and life Is diet Sprinkled, swept, and the dirt lifted by the samemachine. All the waste of each household will be put into onereceptacle, to the great relief of the housewife. Shewill not need one can for garbage, another for ashes,and another for papers and miscellaneous waste. Allthe waste will go into one can and the result will becleanly and sanitary, since the dry ashes will disinfectthe garbage and the garbage will hold the ashes andpapers and prevent them from flying over the morning all the citys waste, whether it be streetsweepings, household garbage, ashes, papers, tin cans,broken crockery, old bottles, old clothes, old iron, or THE


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectwomen, bookyear1913