5 SETS OP TWINS Monticello, Ky. — Mrs. Rosie Lee Bell, 33, of Briar, Ky., has had eleven children in her eleven, years of marriage — five sets of twins and one single birth. 7 RINSES ! ■ chase all soil < , and suds away < ; to leave clothes * | radiantly clean 1 ; (XlhlnCpooC ffully-aulomatic . WASHER Term* HASTY Plumbing and Heating Co. Co. — Mt. Olive piAL.2584 Explains Needs for Filter Plant at Site of New Well Eddice King, superintendent of the Goldsboro water department, who lives in Mount Olive and has worked with this city’s water sys tem in an effort to alleviate the iron-colored water condition aris ing from the new well, urges the people of this town to give more thought to the bond issue for in stallation of a filter plant. King asserted he is giving his views on the issue, not because of any political motive or in support of any candidate, but because a number of citizens had asked him to pass along information which may be overlooked by the general public. The $40,000 bond issue for instal lation of a filter plant at the new well comes up for public vote Monday. Such a plant, if properly operated, will correct the trouble now present in the city’s water system, King said. For some time, many residents, particularly those in the north east section, have complained of heavy iron sediment in their water. Water from the new well has over five times as much iron as the amount engineers estimate will cause trouble. Authorities report, King' said, that iron in the amount of 0.3 parts per million—that is 2.2 pounds in a million gallons of water—will cause trouble. The new well here has 1.7 per million of iron, he de clared. Some people in town are not bothered by iron in the water, King said, because they get their sup ply from the treated well at the high school. He predicts, however, it will not be long until all' of Mount Olive will be depending on the new well for most of its water. King, in coming out in support of the issue, said, “I sincerely hope the people who are not bothered at the present will give considera tion to the town as a whole and take advantage of this opportunity to unite together for a cause that will make our town a better place to live and and to attract others who would like to join us.” King himself gets his supply from the Luby Bell Candidate For The Board of Aldermen In Monday's Election. Your Vote and Support Will Be Appreciated well at the high school and'is not bothered by heavy iron sedimerft. "Water,” he continued, “is the most essential commodity, other than air, for the continuation of life. Without it man quickly dies. The existence of the great concen tration of population in our pres ent-day cities and the pursuit of the myriads of activities therein would be impossible without the availability of water. “A city with restricted water supply is a city with restricted growth,” he declared. With a treatment plant, King said the city will be in a better position to attract industry to lo cate here. Among the greatest benefits to be secured from an ample public water supply are protection against disastrous conflagrations and re moval of disease-bearing organ isms, the water engineer said. In recent years, he continued, the public has become more demand ing of a better quality or water; such as: removal of iron, manga nfese, copper, zinc, chloride, sul fates, and phenolic compounds. He declared when these chemi cals are present in certain-amounts they cause serious trouble to the water system, especially the iron, which ruins plumbing fixtures and plays havoc with the launder ing of clothes, giving them a rust color that is impossible to re move without injuring the mater ial. In stating his belief that a fil ter plant will eliminate the pres ent trouble, King pointed out the well at the high school contained 1.8 parts of iron per million, 0.1 more than the new well, before a filter plant was installed there. Now those getting their supply from this well have no trouble with iron. Faison also had trouble with high iron content in its water sys tem until a filter plant corrected the situation, King, a native of that town, pointed out. Historical Treatment of water supplies is nothing new. Indeed, King stated, it is as ancient as history. He point ed out waterwork structures are found in the excavation of prehis toric ruins. The remains of Lake Moeris in Egypt indicate its con struction about 2,000 B. C., the water engineer said in bringing out it was the largest of the re servoirs of the Nile Valley, which supported 20 million people—four times the present day population. In ancient time, he continued, the valleys of the Euphrates and Tigris, now almost a desert, were densely populated, but four thous and years ago rulers of Assyria Your Vote and Support for Ray Scarborough For Alderman in the City Elections Next Monday, May 2, will be Greatly Appreciated ' * » ' ;i>!. ’ 4[, :f V\t* * T.«vA 0 M *pf. : :i Jpl' r wl' \ \o"%e , fo° A* 0v-<. «** „*> ■ **< '!Si'rf*A i'j4^ «£»<*•* 'v&f&ife , - > ; - - • • ' • - 'r .\y •’* -A . a- ;. '• 1 .' •• -f./. ; ;r.-:* - • - •■ •■ -<‘ ■.■-'• had converted these sterile plains and valleys into gardens of ex treme productiveness by the con struction of artificial lakes for the conservation’of flood waters of the rivers and great distributing canals for irrigation. Of these canals, King said, the Nahravan, supplied by the Tigris, was over 400 miles long and from 200 to 400 feet broad and with suffi cient dept for the navigation of ves sels of that time. In India, tanks, reservoirs and irrigation canals were constructed many centuries before the Chris tian area, and the greatest part of that country was in the highest state of cultivation. King said some of the tanks and artificial lakes covered many square miles and were often 50 feet or more in depth. Evidence also exists, he pointed out, in New Mexico and Arizona that in prehistoric times a race, now extinct, had extensive irrigation works and culivated large areas. Biblical references to water works are frequent. King used as an illustration 11 Kings 20:20 and said “ . . .And the rest of the acts of Hezekiah and all his might, and how he made a pool and a conduit, and brought water into the city. Reference to a water system and purification of the system in re lated in II Kings 2:19-22, King stat ed. The water supply for the City of Rome is one of the marvels of ancient times, he declared. The water was brought from surround ing hills in aqueducts totaling about 381 miles in length. The first aqueduct, King explained, was built in 312 B.C. and was 10 miles long. The Claudia aqueduct was constructed along the hydramatic grade lines in order to avoid the necessity for building pressure conduits. Iron pipe was unknown at that time, with' lead being the only material available to carry water under pressure. However, lead was not suitable for' high’ pressures, fling said, and therefore it was necessary to convey the water in aqueduct at atmospheric pressure. King threw a sidelight on Rome’s water system, reporting that Fron tinus, water commissioner of Rome about 100 A.D., who kept records of njost human documents, reveal ing the intimacies of the life of the people, had trouble with peo ple stealing water from the aque ducts. King grinned, and then turned serious and stated that dur ing the middle ages in Europe there was more destruction than construction. “It is very probable that the use of polluted water was the cause of the epidemics that swept the continent in that period,” he remarked. Purification The first water purification prob ably began in China -and India thousands of years ago, King de clared, and related that for centur ies it has been the practice of the Chinese to put alum in tubs of water to clarify it. Alum also was used in Egypt, and today still is the most widely used chemical for the clarification of water in the United States. The first filter was constructed in 1829 by James Simpson, and this filter, King said, was called the “slow sand” filter or the “English” filter. Treatment of water to remove pathogenic organisms had its be ginning about the middle of the nineteenth century. King said that after Koch had made known his findings, filtration of water for the London metropolitan district was made compulsory in 1855, and about the same time the so-called English filters were installed else where in England and on the con tinent. One of the earliest filters installed in the United States was at Poughkeepsie, N. Y.-, in 1870. Thirteen years later, Prof. Wil liam R. Nichols, who had studied the filter systems in Europe, pub lished the first authoritative book on the subject of purification. A year later the first filter plant for a public water supply in which alum was used as a coagulant was constructed in Somerville, N. J. The first filter plant constructed along modern lines was at Little Falls, N. Y., 'in. 1902. This followed a notable step in the advancement of scientific knowledge of rapid sand filtration, which took place in 1895, and since then the number of rapid sand filters have increased greatly in the U. S., King asserted. summary Waterworks includes the struct ures and equipment necessary for securing, purifying and distribu tion of a wateir system, King re marked. The construction of such works is in the field of the civil and the sanitary engineers. “The magnitude of their work, as meas ured by their, cost, their size and their importance, is second to no other engineering activity,” the Mount Olive man declared. King concluded by saying, “We, the people of Mount Olive, have a chance to pass or reject this issue of vital importance to our town by going to the polls and casting our vote the way we honestly feel about our water situation,” and by repeating his support of the issue is politically motivated. LONG SMOKER - Freeport, 111. — Eli Bennethum, who recently celebrated his 100th birthday by taking it easy at his. son’s farm home, doesn’t think much of today’s excitement over smoking. “I think I was smoking at 2,” he told a reporter. “I know I was smoking cigars at 5,” he declared. Men who can’t find something, to occupy their minds usually have, little minds to occupy, ~ ;/ ] t t,f ■■ »- ' -• '• -* * /A • • i,- • • PEACEFUL PATROL PACKS PUNCH—Freighter seen at upper left plods along peacefully under the Watchful eyes of Uncle Sam’s air defense network, somewhere off the U. S. coastline. \ Humpbacked plane is a radar-equipped Constellation, and humps on back and belly of fuselage contain radar scanning equipment; under attack conditions plane would radio approach of enemy aircraft to combat-ready carrier, which might be many miles away. All Americans Should Soon Know What 'Conelrad' Signal on Radio Stands For' Spot announcements to make the public “Conelrad conscious” are being beamed at Americans over some 2,700 standard AM radio sta tions. Unlike most commercials, these lively, 30-second “spots” could be a life or death matter. For their purpose is to publize the Federal Civil Defense Administration’s Conelrad radio system for warning civilians of impending aerial at tack, and how to survive it. In rural areas especially, where people are scattered and fast com munications are difficult, know ing the Conelrad frequencies of 640 or 1240 would be like being able to listen in on a huge party line whose sole purpose was to keep the country folks informed of the situation in an H-bomb blasted city. At the same time, it would warn them to'take cover or evacuate if necessary from areas threatened with heavy radioactive fall-out. v Nat S. Linden, director of FCDA’s radio-television section, with Louis E. Aiken, a member of his staff, found that the cosmopolitan per sonnel at FCDA headquarters pro vided an ideal cross-section of voices and accents from all parts of the United States to dramatize the question: “What is Conelrad?” Conelrad, an abbreviation of “Control of Electromagnetic Radi ation” is actually more technical than dramatic, however. It is a special system to make possible broadcasting of Civil Defense in structions over standard radio sta tions, even while enemy bombers are approaching, without allowing them to follow the radio beams in to their target. During World War II all radio stations had to go off the air as enemy planes approach ed. Since radio stations in the Conel rad cluster will broadcast only at 640 and 1240 kilocycles on the ra dio dial, FCDA officials hope to make those numbers as familiar to citizens as their own telephone numbers. Already almost all new radios for the home and most of the new cars, have dials specially marked at 640 and 1240 to indi cate the emergency Conelrad fre quencies. To fix these important numbers in people’s minds, Aiken, one-time ':.v .Hi a A' •'Sm mm Mmmwi ' M ■