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upr000186-188
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I agree.February 25# 1953 George Goto® &09 - 2nd Are., S.W., Hampton, Iowa. Dear Georges This letter is written in response to your inquiry of February 10, 1953 regarding our water supply. We do not have any rivers in this part of the desert, so we obtain our water from the artesian or underground channel. The water in the artesian channel comes from snow melt&ge In tile Charleston Mountains, about 35 miles west of Las Vegas, and flows underground until we tap the supply with a well, whereupon the water rises to the surface and overflows. We then capture the water in a pipeline and transmit It to a large concrete structure called a settling-basin. At this point it drops any small grains of sand it may have picked up in the underground channel, and emerges from the settling- basin as clear, sparkling artesian water. It is then carried through more pipelines to the big reservoir, thence into the city, where smaller service lines carry the water into homes and buildings. We have, at the present time, eleven big artesian wells, drilled to a depth of 400 to 1200 feet, and these wells produce more than fifteen million gallons per day. The population of Las Vegas is about 30,000 and it is located in Southern Nevada. We hope you get an “A1* In your Science Glass. Very truly yours, MED:an L.R. Maag General Manager