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upr000066-025
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    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 than somewhere but It is not the result, may I repeat again* of any studies sad© te determine the causes* That is merely a mental observation which I believe nearly everyene would think ©f, this is in watching the actions of the water—the sudden lowering ©f pressure and the sudden raising of pressure when other users of the town would cut their use off* and that is from ay own observance based entirely on that alone• Q, In other words* you didn’t attempt to d© tho engineer­ing! you just attempted to obtain an adequate supply of water• km that’s correct. MR. RRWWICK* Q. fou recognise* of course, that an «- cessiv® or extravagant use by the population slmultanooualy would be a very great contributing factor of the lowering of pressure all along the line* A. lea* MR. SMITH* Q, Mr. Anderson* referring to this question of storage, assuming that there is an adequate supply of under­ground water, which is natural storage* that a large part of the Water Company’s supply is socurod by pumping from ground water storage* wouldn’t Increasing the pumping capacity dc away to a large extent with any additional surface storage, in the way of reservoirsi that is, at times of heavy consumption^ increasing and pumping mere water frost the ground, would off-set the neces­sity of constructing new reservoirs, assuming that the ground water is there, and adequate? A. les, assuming that the ground water is adequate and would not reach a diminishing point. The reservoir capacity