CleaningNewYork'sSnow-Clogged
Streets With Motor-Trucks
���Motor-trucks mobilized by city
for snow removal dump their
loads into Hudson River
ON Monday morning, December 13, came New York's first heavy snow storm of the winter. When business men and wo- men started for work, the city's transportation lines were sadly disorganized. Street cars, 'busses and taxi- cabs floundered through the snow and took workers to their offices, hours late.
At noon, those who were hardy enough to venture out to lunch saw a novel spectacle. Great numbers of privately-owned motor-trucks were crawling through the streets laden with snow. Drawn up beside huge heaps of snow in the busiest streets were other powerful trucks, and gangs of men were speedily throwing the snow into their capacious bodies. The old-fashioned street-cleaners' wagons with their pa-
��One of the new motor-driven snow plows which
did much to make the streets passable after the
recent New York storm
tient horses were in evidence, too, but they were a minor consideration. The great work was being accomplished by the motor trucks.
Through the avenues came heavy- powered trucks with snow-plows fas- tened to their front axles. Many of these were furnished by a 'buss com- pany, while others were private trucks with a special plow attachment fitted for
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