The Manual of American Water-works

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Engineering News, 1889 - Water-supply engineering
Containing the history, details of construction, source and mode of water supply, pumping machinery, distribution, consumption, pressure, hydrant rental, revenue and expenses, cost and debt, etc., etc., of every water-works in the United States and Canada, with summaries for each state and group of states; and directory of water-works officials, engineers and contractors.
 

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Page liv - ... Officials of city, town, village, township, drainage district, or any other municipal organization will find it the CHEAPEST and MOST PROFITABLE medium for advertising their public works ; city engineers, railroad engineers and managers will make money by using its columns for advertising proposals : civil engineers and contractors will find it to their advantage to have in it a permanent card, giving their address and specialty, and everybody who has any interest in public works promotion, planning...
Page xlvi - ... fraternity, with the belief that they may be of assistance to beginners and of some Interest to all. TABLE OF CONTENTS. CHAPTER I.— MAIN PIPES— Materials — Cast-Iron — Cement-Lined Wrought Iron— Salt-Glazed Clay— Thickness of Sheet Metal — Methods of Lining —List of Tools — Tool-Box — Derrick — Calking Tools — Furnace — Transportation —Handling Pipe— Cost of Carting— Distributing Pipe. CHAPTER II.— FIELD WORK— Engineering or None — Pipe Plans— Special Pipe...
Page 346 - ... peas, apples, pears, grapes, &c. in abundance. It is abundantly supplied with wild game, water fowl, and fish of the finest quality. The tide of emigration is fast setting into the state, and it bids fair soon to become an important member of the Union. Towns. — DETROIT is beautifully situated on Detroit river, 18 miles from Lake Erie, and 7 from Lake St. Clair. It is regularly laid out, with spacious streets, on an elevation of about 40 feet above the river, of which it commands a delightful...
Page 123 - Notes on the Flow of the West Branch of the Croton River." With a large diagram and four tables. By JJR Croes. Trans. Am. 800. CE, vol. VI., pp. 78-86 and erratum on p. VI. "Description of a Line of Large Water-Mains, laid by the Croton Aqueduct Department of the City of New York; and an Inquiry into the Causes of Failure of a few of them.
Page 89 - Process of construction or Projected, in New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland and District of Columbia. NEW YORK. Water-Works Completed or In Process of Construction. ADAMS, Jefferson Го.
Page xlvii - It is used by a number of the leading electiic companies with great satisfaction. In the economical use of water it is without an equal, producing the highest per cent. of useful effect guaranteed. SEND FOB CATALOGUE AND PARTICULARS. Our horizontal " Victor" is highly recommended, as no gears aie required, and it can be celled directly to dynamo.
Page liv - PER LINE, which is half the rate of the city dailies, while it is many times superior, as it goes directly to the class for which it is intended. We especially solicit a trial of our advantages in this line of advertising. IT WILL PAY ADVERTISF.RS EVERY TIME, and it costs very little when its efficiency is well considered.
Page 46 - 79. the surface of the bed was not cleaned, and in this time 20 in. of silt had accumulated After being cleaned it supplied the gallery for only 9 days before another inch of silt entirely stopped the yield. Finding that the bed needed cleaning 3...
Page 309 - The latter had a surface area of 8,742 sq. ft., and was excavated 7 ft. below the river, On the river side of the upper basin, 7 ft. below the surface, a gallery 18 by 21 in. was built, emptying into the lower basin. From It 14 smaller galleries extended under the upper basin, the bottom of which was covered with graduated gravel and sand, the coarsest gravel being at the bottom and there being 7 in. of fine sand at the top.
Page 397 - MENOMINEE (me-nom'in-e), a city of the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, USA, on Green bay (Lake Michigan) at the mouth of the Menominee river, opposite Marinette (Wisconsin). It is "on federal highway 41, and is served by the Chicago and North Western, the Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific, and (by car-ferry through the Sturgeon bay canal and across the lake to Frankfort) the Ann Arbor railways and lake steamers. The population was...

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