item: #1 of 7 id: 37389 author: Race, Joseph title: Chlorination of Water date: None words: 42921 flesch: 62 summary: | coli_ | Parts +------+--------+ Index | per +------+-------+ Index | per | Agar | Agar |per 100|million. | Agar | Agar |per 100|Million. |1 keywords: + =; = +; = =; acid; action; ammonia; bacteria |; bleach; c. |; c.cms; cent; chlorination; chlorine; chlorine gas; chlorine water; coli; concentration; contact; cost; cubic |; dosage; effect; germicidal; hours |; hypochlorite; increase; liquid; matter; method; nil |; organisms; ottawa; p.p.m; period; plant; process; results; sodium; solution; table; temperature; treatment; typhoid; use; water |; | +; | b.; | neg; | pos; | | cache: 37389.txt plain text: 37389.txt item: #2 of 7 id: 38455 author: Conway, G. R. G. (George Robert Graham) title: ASCE 1193: The Water-Works and Sewerage of Monterrey, N. L., Mexico The 4th article from the June, 1911, Volume LXXII, Transactions of the American Society of Civil Engineers. Paper No. 1193, Feb. 1, 1911. date: None words: 45715 flesch: 72 summary: +-----+------------+---------+-----------+---------+----------+--------+ | | Monthly | Liters | Price for | Minimum | Rate for | Total | |Class| property | of | 1,000 | monthly | drainage | rate | | | rental. +----------+-----------+--------+-----------------------------+--------+ | | INTERNAL |Cost of | EARTHWORK AND LABOR: | Total | | | DIAMETER | mater- |-------+------------+--------| cost of| | | OF | ials | | Cost of |Cost of | sewer | | | SEWERS. keywords: + =; --------------+----------+-------+------------+--------+----------+ |; = +; = =; = centimeter; = inch; = |; boy |; caulkers |; city; cm =; concrete; cutter |; fig; foreman |; hour |; linear |; monterrey; plate; reservoir; rings |; river; sewer |; supply; total |; | +; | =; | cost; | diameter; | employees; | lead; | meter; | peons; | pesos; | pipe; | quantities; | rate; | south; | square; | water; | | cache: 38455.txt plain text: 38455.txt item: #3 of 7 id: 45703 author: Spon, Ernest title: Water Supply: the Present Practice of Sinking and Boring Wells With Geological Considerations and Examples of Wells Executed date: None words: 72891 flesch: 66 summary: +------+----------+ Cubic Feet | Laid | Laid in | of | Laid | Laid in | of | Dry. | | | | | | | | | | |Barnet, East | Herts.|Lion's Down | 122 | 270 | 162 | 230 | 130 | | | | |Shaft half steined, half iron cylinders.| | | | | | | | | | | Ditto, New | |Near Railway | 137 | 302 | 159 | 280 | 130 | | | |Station | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |Battersea | S. |Jones's Works| 249 | -- | 249 | | | | | | | | | | | | | Ditto | |Beaufoy's | 240 | -- | 240 | -- | -- | | | |Works |Yield said to equal 15,000 gallons a | | | | | day. keywords: -----+-----+ |; boring; boundary |; clay |; fig; gallons |; grit |; hole; illustration; inches; lane |; london |; oolite |; park |; road |; series- |; slate |; strata; t. |; thames |; town |; union |; water; | +; | brickwork; | ditto; | e.; | feet; | ft; | k.; | m.; | marl; | minute; | mortar; | north; | pressure; | s.; | sandstone; | thickness; | |; | |beaumont; | |bottom; | |brewery; | |bromley; | |broxbourne; | |company; | |croydon; | |edgware; | |factory; | |good; | |gravesend; | |hall; | |hampstead; | |hill; | |house; | |mitcham; | |old; | |pinner; | |square; | |station; | |street; | |supply; | |through; | |woolwich; | |yield; |isleworth |; |near |; |reservoir |; |sand.|clay.| |; |tottenham |; |waterworks |; |workhouse |; |works | cache: 45703.txt plain text: 45703.txt item: #4 of 7 id: 54454 author: Boulnois, H. Percy (Henry Percy) title: Dirty Dustbins and Sloppy Streets A Practical Treatise on the Scavenging and Cleansing of Cities and Towns date: None words: 22585 flesch: 53 summary: This amounts to the | | | lecting house refuse | following:-- | |Name of Town.| and cleansing and +--------------+-------------+ | | watering streets and | Per 1,000 of | Per mile of | | | courts. | Description of | When paved. keywords: ashpit; authority; cart; chapter; cleansing; cost; day; ditto |; dust; house; public; refuse; sanitary; snow; streets; time; town; water; watering; work; | +; | |; |van | cache: 54454.txt plain text: 54454.txt item: #5 of 7 id: 62605 author: Simons, Joseph Winslow title: Sewage and Garbage Disposal on the Farm date: None words: 9378 flesch: 68 summary: Tile disposal fields, such as are used with septic tanks, and earth-pit privies accomplish this if the water table remains several feet below the surface and if the location is remote from water supplies. [Illustration] +---------------------------------------------------------------------------+ | CAPACITIES, DIMENSIONS, AND CONCRETE MATERIALS | | FOR SEPTIC TANKS SERVING INDIVIDUAL DWELLINGS | +---------+--------+--------------------------------+-----------------------+ |_Maximum keywords: disposal; feet; field; figure; joint; pipe; septic; sewage; sewer; soil; tank; tile; water; | +; | | cache: 62605.txt plain text: 62605.txt item: #6 of 7 id: 62676 author: Smith, Theobald title: Sewage Disposal on the Farm, and Protection of Drinking Water date: None words: 8260 flesch: 73 summary: Besides the protection of the ground-water near the well from pollution emanating from cesspools, etc., the surface of the ground about the well should be kept free from manure, slops, and other waste water; hence the well should not be dug under or close by the house,[3] nor should it be located in the barnyard, where the ground is usually saturated with manure. In the city the sanitary condition of homes is maintained chiefly by a system of cooperation and centralization which brings into existence extensive sewerage systems, water supplies, and the collection of house waste by public authority. keywords: closet; country; dry; earth; ground; house; sewage; soil; surface; water; wells cache: 62676.txt plain text: 62676.txt item: #7 of 7 id: 7980 author: Adams, Henry Charles title: The Sewerage of Sea Coast Towns date: None words: 38118 flesch: 60 summary: High water is two hours and a quarter after the current; therefore the latest time for the period of discharge would be from two hours and a half to half an hour before high water, but, as during the first quarter of an hour the movement of the current, though slight, would be in the opposite direction, it would be advisable to curtail the time of discharge, and say that it should be limited to between two hours and a quarter and half an hour before high water. In some cases gun-metal bolts are used, as they resist the action of sea water better than steel, but they add considerably to the cost of the outfall sewer, and the principal advantage appears to be that they are possibly easier to remove than iron or steel ones would be if at any time it was required to take out any pipe which may have been accidentally broken. keywords: cement; current; discharge; fig; float; flow; height; hour; moon; observations; outfall; point; position; sea outfall; sea water; sewage; sewers; storm water; surface; tide; time; velocity; water; water level; water mark; wind; | gallons; | nil; | | cache: 7980.txt plain text: 7980.txt