ffce Only New?piper Published in the Three Most Westernly Countie? of Western North Carolina. CHEROK EE?CLAY?GRAHAM The Leadi VOLUM XXXVII. NO. 51 MURPHY'S NEW FILTER PLANT IS COMPLETED Ha* Caf. ty of 500,000 Gnllons Per Day And Was Erected At a Cost Of $30,000.00 The Municipal filtering plant, which h been in course of construct ' for the past five months, wi? com ?id this week, water filtered thr' , an?l the system and pumps thorough... tested by C. R. Quinn. superintendent of construction. The plant ompleted and in operation in le> '.an two weeks over the estimated t . and the delay was caused hv :i 'li't in the motor e<minmuot from tor to a gasoline engine, it was st by Mr. Quinn and former Mayor I . in. The J. B. McCrary Engii Corporation, of Atlanta, G re designers and builders. The > v.- plant is located in the Pat t ei * field on the Hiawassee River t a mile above Murphy. It wa. i d at a . ost of $.'$(>,0?*0 and ha> a a parity of 500,000 gallons daily Tin latest design and engineer in; kill is represented in the plant. \ testing room or laboratory, eqaipi < ; in accordance with the spevi: '.ions of the State Board of H< provided a a part of the eit> a water system. In this room water can be analized and testi ' m time to time by the water super! ndent, and although samples must i nt to the state chemist at . ftali. at regular intervals, any impurit can he detected even before the ales leave Murphy. This will ^ assur tire water for the city at all times. A large concrete intake has been con- icted near the middle of the river i d. and the water is carried by gravit; through a fifteen-inch pipe into what is known us the suction well. From this well it is pumped into the coagulation basin, where it is nuved with chemicals. The mixing proic - comprises l."J4 baffles through which the water passes after the chemicals are deposited in it, which insui i a thorough mixing. Water Lifted 288 Feet Ft in the coagulation basin, the Water passes through two quarter million tiIter units, with a capacity of ' 500.uUO gallons per day, and is de- ' poc.ivd in a 12,000 gallon clear water * wel.. located between the plant and the river. It is then lifted by a pump 1 through an eight-inch main t.? the ;l 10" "oo gallon reservoir <?n Sop of the mountain above the riant, a ? height of 288 fee:. It is then car- ' lied by gravity through a r other tight-inch main into the city mains. * A wash water tank of 34,000 gal- * Ion .-opacity has been built across the * roa l fifty feet above the plant to be u teed in washing the filters as the s Bevd arises. Mr. Q j nn, scptr ntend- 1 en o: construction, explained that e th:- tank gave the required amount ^ of preasure for washing the filters without disturbing or blowing up the 1 bed, and also makes it unnecesary to c draw on the feed reservoir located on * top of the mountain. Three Pumps Required The plant is equipped with three pomps, two run by motor and one by c u gasoline engine. One motor pump u dikes the water from the river into the filter at the rate of 350 gallons 1 pvr minute, and the other - motor 9 pump carries water to the filter wash- 1 tank at the rate of 250 gallons per minute. The gasoline engine pump lifts the water from the clear water I well a height of 288 feet to the res- 1 e< voir on top of the mountain at the 1 rate of 350 gallons per minute. The gasoline engine being used is ' a four cylinder Hercules auto type, f equipped with batteries and starter. ^ iwu tnousnnu ?UIIUII guauimc avui - ^ age tank is located just outside the building. The entire plant is operated from the platform inside the building by eight valve stands, with indicators I registering the amount of water pas- * sing through the filters. The pumps, i motors and engine are located in a i pit or basement beside and below the J surface of the filters, which insures the prevention of any oils or greases I Retting into the water either before 1 or after it passes through the filters, ? The foundation of the building, the 1 'Odlgulation basin and the filtering ] basins are concrete, while the upper I portion of the walls are brick. It is | so constructed that it can easily be I kept clean and sanitary, and is one of the finest and most complete small i Plants of its kind in the south. The (C?rtiHMl on page ) Hilt i ng Weekly Newspaper in \ r 1 V ::A 1 u. , , ..,u * s r > ABSENTEE VOTE T ATTACK LOOMS Vlccklrnburg Delegation Will Saek Its Repeal In State : V (1. < Asheville Citizen) D Raleigh, N. C., July 12?The Meek- <j< enburg county nominees for the next ni General Assembly have chosen for hemselves what the politicians re- U Curd as a stupendous task in their de- 0i rision to seek the repeal of the State- w vide voting law in the 1027 session. Press despatches from Charlotte, t| -epotting that the Democratic nomi- a] lee for thte Senate and three Demoratie nominees for the Househavc \| initcd on such a program, recalled e| lere that for several sessions >axt members uf the Buncombe #lelegufion have been trying to ex- ^ mpt that county from the law. Vnd? since Buncombe has failed n its attempts to extricate itself, 1)1 ilone, from the law, the politicians c' ee the Mecklenburg delegation's pro sal to repeal it for the State at lt argc as an unpromising venture. ^ The reason for the stronghold of c< he absentee voting law on the Legi- c< la til re is difficult to understand. ^ Nobody speaks any good of it, and ftentimcs some very- bad things are 1>S aid about it. But suggestions for ts repeal have invarably been smothred, ami the Legislature has never ci riven them much attention. At the iast session, Representa- '!l ive Marcus Erwin, of Buncombe w ounty, succeeded in getting through ^ he House, by a meager majority, a l) ill to exempt his county from the tl1 provisions of the law. But Mr. Erwin'a bill was chloroformed in lommittoe when it reached the Sen- ^ ite, and Buncombe's Senator Plato Cbbs, told his consttuents in the last irimary campaign that he didn't tand a chance of getting it through hat body. If the Mecklenburg delegation aunches its attack, it may find sup)ort from some of the members of he Buncombe delegation. The Republicans, too. may rush to their lelp, but the very activity of the Remblicans will shoo off any other otential Democratic assistance. 3PENS DENTIST OFFICE HERE Announcement was made this week >y Dr. E. L. Holt that he will open in office in the Brittain-Axley buildng on August 3rd, for the general >racticc of denistry and dental sur tery. Dr. Holt is a native of Princeton, M. C., and is a graduate of the Atlanta-Southern Dental College, one >f the foremost institutions of its Icind in the South. He comes to Murphy highly recommended, and states that he has already been much im n.uyuanJ nritK ?)>o p<u?nnfiAn QP/'ftrtlorl 1 """ ?* ' Kim by the people of Murphy. < Dr. and Mrs. Holt have already ar- j rived in Murphy and are occupying an apartment with Mr. and Mrs. J. ( H. McCall. IffTOT Vestern North Carolina, MURPHY. NORTH CAROLINA nnocence Abroi 4 ~\si iJEW DRUG STORE I TO OPEN SAT DAY! i Mr. Walker I l.imloniun. of fashinirlmt, Ind., arrived Wudnesay to take eh a r ire of the People's rujf Company, which ojnna its aors to the public on Saturday orning. Mr. Limicmaii is a graduate of the niversity of North Carolina School C Pharmacy, and comes to Murphy itli high recommendations. He will I p drug clerk and house manager of' le new company, in which he holds n interest. Announcement of the opening of lurphy's new drug store is found Isewhere in these columns. Complete Road Saturday Cvei street and Nance ami The Apalachinn Construction Company, the infractors who arc paving Highway o. It) from Balsam to Sylva, hope i complete pouring the concrete on aturday of this week, if weather mditions continue favorable, ac>rding to Mr. W. A. .McNeill, resi nt engineer in charge of the work. The lower end of the road, being ived by Overstreet and Nance, halt a short link from Scott's Creek ridge, this side of Addie, to the imp at Foster siding, to be poured; r. Waldrup, while his distance is a ttle long, on the other end. expects, ith his larger paver, to pour to 'oodfin creek bridge, and complete le job as soon as the lower end is nished. Engineer McNeill states that he jpes to open the road for travel by ugust first.?Jackson Journal. FILLS NEW OFFICE Creation of a new division in the Post-Offlee department to handle gen era1 engineering problems of the postal service has Just been announced by Postmaster General New. The uew division will be known as post-offlce quarters and engineering, and Frank 0. McMillan will be Its chief. tfctr I Serving a large and Porter. FRIDAY, JULY 30, 1026 ad ^ ^ ^ 1 [ Dk. GEO. TRUE IT AT FRANKLIN AUGUST 6 TO 16 Trurtt-McConnell Meeting To Be Held Again in Big Tabernacle Franklin People Making Preparations t Franklin Press) l> George Truett, of Dallas, Texas, uurlde renowned divine, and Dr. F t . >Ict'onnell, of Atlanta, will again at : l a great revival meeting in Franklin's big tabernacle on the southern outskirts of town, for ten days com August Oth to 10th. Rev. A. J. Smith, formeily of Franklin, und now pastor of the First Buptist < hurch at Goldoboro, will arrive next week to assist the local people in the necessary preparations. In July of last year these two minent divines preached to approximately To.noo people during a ten days revival at Franklin. Both Dr. Iruett und Dr. McConnell were born nd reared in the mountains of this immediate section, the former in lay county, North Carolina, and the .utter in Towns county, Georgia, fhey have never lost their love for the mountain people, from among whom so many great men go out into i.e woild to leave an indelible im cession of the rugged honesty and deeply religious characteristics of the? mountain folks. The tabernacle in which the coming meeting will be heid is located in a natural amphitheatre, and will seat approximately 4,000 people, whi.e thousands of others may gather unJer the trees and listen to each sermon. The roads leading into Franklin are all in excellent condition. With good weather conditions, Mr.1 Stikeleather reports that No. 10 across the Balsams will be opened by August 5th. Asheville will then be within two hours of Franklin. The road from the south by the way oi Tallulah Falls, while not surfaced, is nearly all graded and in excellent condition. The road to Murphy by way of 286 and No. 10, is open approximately all the way. Good detouis are provided where tnc road is i under construction. In view of these' better road conditions Franklin this VPfir is PYnprtintT ta Ka knot ta 1 OA 000 people who will come to hear Drs Truett and McConnell. Our exchanges are requested to g.ve publicity to the Truett-McConnell meeting.?Franklin Press. Mrs. Mattie A Taylor returned home Saturday from a few days visit with her daughter^ Mrs. Mary E. Nelson at Topton, N. C. Mr. and Mrs. S. A. Wilson who are spending the summer at their summer home at Topton came down in their car to bring Mrs. Taylor home, Mr. Tom I^anier, of Tampa, Fla., accompanied them. Mr. H. T. Gaddis, of Ducktown, Tenn., was a business visitor here | Monday. r itiall y Rich Territory in tl Great Meeting Will Mark Cc Appalachiai CAPTAIN ORR PRAI<JPC NEW "a. sTh. route Road Follows Along The Crest Of Mountain Practically AH Way That the new route, north to south on the .rest of the range of mountains, practically all the way from Canada to Ashoville, will prove the most popular for touring during the ensuing season, is the prediction ot Captain T. V. Orr, at the Kenitworth I inn for a brief sojourn. Captain Orr lives in Villa Tasfo, Florida, but has recently been motoring o\er the route of the Appalachian j Scenic Highway, which extends frcn; Quebec to New Orleans, almost a straight line on the map when drawn through Ashevillo. The new route iover roads paved practically all the way. There are a few short stretches that are under process of hard-surfacing, hut the few detours are all good roads and there is no longer any apprehension that one may gel through safely and speedily. This route was discovered and logged by Uoscoe Marvel, who is now president of the corporation called the Appalachian Scenic Highway. Maps have been made and the AS11 as it will Inknown ?s now officially recognized by most of the tourist bureaus and prom inencc being given in motor publications, and guide books. Road signs of metal have been placed over u good portion of the ASH, and more will be placed as funds are 011 hand to defray the expense of so doing. The route is officially recognized in club circles and all that is now required to make this prove of wonderful benefit to Asheville is to advertise the beauty and advantages of a trip over the ASH, and thus attract them to Asheviilc and Western North Carolina, according to Captain Orr, who further said: "My recent travels over the route of the ASH is a revelation. Two years ago when I made the journey there were many stretches of frightful roadway and rather difficult to negotiate. Now these gaps have been filled in with smooth paving anil from .Montreal to Asheville the road is fine. From Asheville to Murphy it is mostly hardsurfaced or paved. Severalsections of paving have been completed within the past few weeks, and this portion of the ASH is one of the most beautiful in Eastern America. Beyond Murphy the state of Georgia is rushing its connecting roads to completion and by early fall will be finished. Even now the sand clay roads are good and quick time can be made all the way to Atlanta. "I learn that early in the fall it is proposed to form a motorcade at Montreal, add to it representatives of various other parts of Canada, and proceed to Atlanta via ASH and Asheville. Enroute it is proposed to add recruits from various cities passed through. All these folks will be interested, I believe, because it is the first opportunity this route has had to be placed prominently before the people of every state through which it runs. Canada expects to have fifty in line and hundreds more will join as the motorcade proceeds upon its southbound schedule, t "Practically all the large cities ol Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, New York, New Jer sey, Delaware, Pennsylvania, Mary'lands and portions of Virginia and Tennessee. The AHS comes dowi the Shenandoah Valley to Roanoke Bristol and Johnson City, Tennessee into North Carolina. "Atlanta is making wonderfu preparations "to entertain this motor cade which will probably be the larg est one ever assembled, and certainlj the first long distance Internationa motorcade ever opevated. However the occasion will mark an epoch in th< history of scenic mountain highway? and bring prominently to the atten tion of the traveling public the oppor tunity afforded to make a plcasan all-year trip, in all kinds of weathei under pleasant conditions." Mr. Orr stated that the motorcad itinerary will be arranged by Pres dent Roscoe Marvel so that amp] time will be allowed in Asheville an other places where 'members of th .MURPHY is the Jobbing Center of Extreme Western North Carolina, North Georgia a d Eaat Tcnneuiee, . r.d is Served by Two Railroads. lis state 6c COPY? $ 1.50 PER YEAR At Murphy >mpletion Of n Paving Work COMMITTEES TO BE ANNOUNCED BY MAYOR HILL SOON Date Of Georgia- N. C. A. S. H. Committee Meet Set for August 21 Prominent men and women from Gcorgic, North Carolina, Tennessee and Virginia will attend the big Appalachian Scenic Highway meeting in .Murphy, on Saturday, August 21, I when the citizens of this city will celebrate a general holiday and serve a bounteous picnic lunch at some beautiful and picturesque spot on the I lliawassee river. This meeting at Murphy is being arranged by the Georgia and North Carolina divisions of the Appalach inn Scenic Highway association to plan further development and advertisement of this wonderful highway and to celebrate the completion of the paving of that entire section between Murphy and Asheville, a distance of about la"? miles, and the surfacing of that section between the North Carolina line near Murphy to a point near Cleveland, Ga., with waterbound macadam. Mayor Prank S. Hill announced this week th.it committees for the entertainment and reception of the visitors expected here oil that date had not yet been completed and would be announced next week. Also at the Murphy meeting plans for the unnuul convention of the Appalachian Scenic Highway association in Atlanta on October 12 and 13 will he discussed as will plans for the great Atlanta-Ashevillc-Montreal motorcade to be run over the Appa lachian Scenic highway in the summer or foil of next year under the .Tv<i?vV?iip Ui Ii.? nviaiuu uuuillill. Among the cities to be represented at the Murphy meeting will be the following: Georgia: Atlanta, Lawrenccville, Buford, Gainesville, Clermont, Cleveland and Blairsville. North Carolina: Ashevillc, Andrews, Bryson City, Sylva and Waynesville. Tennessee: Bristol. Virginia: Roanoke and Staunton. Speakers ol' Occasion Short addresses will be delivered by Roscoe Marvel, of Ashevillc, president of the Appalachian Scenic Highway association; Henry 11. Estes, of Gainesville, president of the Georgia division of the association; Major John S. Cohen, edtor of The Atlanta Journal; Charles Webb, editor of the Asheville Citizen; John N. Holder, chairman of the Georgia highway board; James G Stikclcnther. of Asheville, Highway commissioner for the Ninth North Carolina district; W. D. Hoffman, president of the Atlanta Chamber of Commerce; Roger Miller, executive secretary of the Asheville Chamber of Commerce; Preston S. Arkwright, president of the Georgia Railway and Power company. and Mayor Frank S. Hill, of Murphy. In addition to the picnic luncheon the Murphy people will provide other , entertainment features for their guests, many of whom will remain * over Sunday. Mountain City Cate i Opened By Mesdames Axley And Akin Mrs. J. W. Axley and Mrs. H. I). I Akin have recently opened a new cafe in the Meroney drug store stand on - i Tennessee Street, known as the } I Mountain City Cafe. A number of II tables have been placed, a lunch coun , | ter built, and the inside repainted eland otherwise made neat and ati, I tardive. -! Signs have been placed on all the * i leading highways into Murphy, and * they are already enjoying a splendid '? business, which they expect will continue to grow as the cafe and service e they give becomes more widely known e caravan will likely enjoy a few hours d time for closer inspection.?Ashevflle ie Citizen.

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