20(3 



MOSQ VI TO ERA DICA TION 



nej^s or fire-places in it, the cost of screening an ordinary four- 

 room or six-room house should not, as a rule, much exceed $25 

 to $50, if ordinary galvanized iron screening material is used. 

 An itemized table of the cost of screening 31 houses at Kress, 

 Va., in 1918 is given by Snidow. 1 On this job, Snidow says, it 

 was unnecessary to screen any chimneys. Galvanoid screen 

 wire, used in the work, cost $3.50 per 100 square feet, wholesale. 

 The table follows: 



Detailed costs of the screening at Lake Village, Ark., already 

 referred to, with galvanized iron wire, costing $3.00 per 100 

 square feet, are furnished by Derivaux, Taylor and Haas, in a 



1 Transactions of First Annual Conference of Sanitary Engineers, U. S. 

 Public Health Service. 



