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- Calls Water Conference, Engineers of Three States to Discuss Supply Program, Source not known
- Call Water Supply Normal, Officials Declare Pressure Restored in All Parts of City, Source: Bulletin, July 24
- Cambria Steel Co. To Quit in Week Unless it Rains, Source: North American, November 23
- Camden Avoiding Polluted Delaware for Water Supply, Source not known
- Candidates for City Job, Source: Ledger, February 16, 192[?]
- Can't Get Water in Shamokin, Use Milk, Bakery Orders 150 Gallons to Keep Going in Drought, Source: North American, December 9
- Carey, Mathew
- Car Reveals Leak in Main, Sinks Several Inches Into Pavement at Sixth and Market, Source: Ledger, November 16
- Cartoon caption: "Now, Now! Boys Will Be Boys, You Know!" Source: Record, March 18, 1929
- Carts & wagons.
- Cast Iron Pipe
- Cast-iron pipe / Industries -- Pennsylvania -- Philadelphia
- cave
- Cave In at Broad and Arch, Northbound Traffic Diverted to 16th St. by Depression, Source: Bulletin, April 15
- Cave-in Near Broad St. Reveals Hidden Spring, Traffic Halted on Callowhill Street Below 15th by Miniature Chasm, Source: Inquirer, July 19
- Caven Adds 8 Names to City's Payrolls, Five Appointed in Surveys Bureau, Two in Highways, One in Water, Source: North American, September 16
- Caven Awards Pipe Contract, Source: Record, August 17
- Caven Lifts Ban On Bond Firm of Ex-Mayor Smith, Company to Make Good Forfeited Contract for Sewage Disposal Plant, Agreement Ends Eight Months' Fight Over Black-listing, Source: Inquirer, November 26, 1920
- Caven Makes Five Appointments, Source: Record, December 24
- Caven Names Ten New Public Works Employees, Source: North American, September 12
- Caven's Men Must Work, Director Declares Every Man Shall Earn His Full Pay, Source, Ledger, January 13, 1921
- Caven to Rush City Work to Aid Army of Idle, Jobs for Thousands Loom as Director Issues Orders, Source: Ledger, September 26, 1921
- C.E. Davis to Manage Springfield Water Co., Former Chief of Water Bureau Recalled Here From Indianapolis, Source: Record, June 3
- Centennial Exhibition (1876 : Philadelphia, PA)
- Centre Square
- Centre Square Benjamin Latrobe
- Centre Square Water Works
- Chamber to Study Final Water Plan, Committee, Including Engineers, to Confer With Kendrick's Commission, Murdock Refuses to Answer Further Attacks or Criticism of Report, Source: Inquirer, September 24
- Charge Murdoch Shows Favoritism, Amendment Filed to Injunction Suit Over Contract at Lardner's Point, Director Resents Action, Source: Bulletin, July 28
- Charges Politics in Public Works Jobs, W.H. Kreider Says Eligible Lists Are Juggled for Director Caven, Mentions Names, Source: North American, [July] 28, 1922
- Chart title: How City's Water Requirements Grow, caption: The chart is based on an estimated population of 2,800,000 in 1950, 3,500,000 in 1970 and 4,300,000 in 1990. The dotted lines show the estimated increase in consumption of water in that time on a per capita consumption of 170 gallons without meters and 130 gallons with meters, Source: Bulletin, January 16, 1929
- Checking River Pollution, Source: Bulletin, August 2
- Chemical engineering
- Chemically Treated Water, Source: Ledger, January 15, 1924
- Chemistry
- Chemistry, analytic -- Quantitative
- Chemistry, analytic -- Quantitative / Chemistry, technical
- Chemistry -- Organic / Laboratory manuals
- Chemistry -- Physical and theoretical
- Chemistry tables / Physics tables / Chemistry / Physics
- Chemistry -- Technical
- Chemistry -- Technical / Building materials
- Chemistry -- Technical / Chemical engineering
- Chester Council Fights Water Company Rates, Bitter Contest Forecast in Appeal to State Utility Commission, Source: Ledger, September 28
- Chestnut Hill 131, 183,184
- Chestnut Hill 95
- Chestnut Hill Dry For Several Hours, Householders Twice Cut Off From Water Supply by Breaks in Mains; Second Accident Quickly Followed Repairs to First; Stores Damaged, Source: Inquirer, May 26, 1926
- Chestnut St. 'Fountain' Caused by Leaky Main, Workmen Finally Stop Bubbling Between Trolley Tracks, Source: Ledger, April 2
- Chief Davis Resigns as Water Bureau Head, Noted Engineer to Quit City Service After 11 Years of Good Work, To Enter Private Service, Will Assume Direction of Indianapolis Company With Much Higher Salary, Source: Record, April 26, 1923
- Chief Davis Tells What Makes Phila. Water Taste Bad, Mine and Factory Wastes Are Just Some of the Things, Not Chlorine, Source: North American, November
- Chief Dunlap, Source: Bulletin, February 2
- Chlorination
- Chlorine Cocktails, "Terrible," Says Limeburner; "Pretty Bad," Adds Hall After Drink, Source: Inquirer, November [?]
- Chlorine in Water, Source: Record, November 1, 192[?]
- Church Wins Water Fight, Lansdale Company Ordered to Install Supply for St. Stanisiaus', Source: Ledger, March 22
- Cistern Water Kills Eight, Maryland Family Poisoned and Seven Others are Ill, Source: Bulletin, August 21
- Citizens Demand New Water Plan, Germantown and Chestnut Hill Residents Make Appeal to Mayor and Council, Fire Danger is Cited, Source not known
- Citizens O.K. Purchase of Local Water System, Source: Record, December 12
- City Acts to Oust Its Water Riv[er], Council Asks City Solicitor for Report on All Private Works, Rates Very High, Source: North American, October 8, 1921
- City Advised to Act to Stop Water Waste, New System Not Only Vital Point, Research Bureau Says, Source: Bulletin, June 5
- City Aims to End Bad Taste in Water, Contract Let for Aeration Flume to Release Cases Blamed for Disagreeable Odors, Source: Ledger, September 20, 1921
- City Awards Contracts, Water System Provides for Certain Needed Improvements, Source: Inquirer, August 2
- City Block Flooded When Main Bursts, Geyser, Leaping Ten Feet High, Rips Up South Street Paving; Fills Cellars, Thousands of Dollars Worth of Store Stocks Ruined by Rushing Torrents, Source: Inquirer, March 31
- City Buys Device to Thaw Fireplugs, 7 New Pieces of Apparatus to be Delivered Next Week, 6 Aerial Trucks, Source: J[P]. American, [November] 4, 1920
- City Called Chief Source of Pollution of Delaware River, State Board Divides Blame Between Philadelphia and Suburbs, Evil Being Curbed, Source: Record, June 14
- City Cannot Jump Into Water Project, Hall Points to Danger of Tying Up Entire Borrowing Capacity, Dunlap Attacks Again, Source: North American, June 10, 1924
- City Coal Supply Will Last 90 Days, Chief Davis, of the Bureau of Water, Believes System Can Be Run Until August, Fuel Stored for Plants, Hospitals, Insane Institution and Other Public Places are Well Supplied, Source: Ledger, April 1, 1922
- City Contract Data at Museum Probe, Source: Ledger, March 5
- City Contracts Approved, Source: Ledger, May 24, 1922
- City Engineers to have Outing, Source: Record, June 21
- City Expert Says River Water Can Be Purified, Engineer Allen Forced to Admit Delaware Can Be Made Safe Supply Source, Stream to Be Cleared, Northeast Business Men Advised of Sewage Disposal Plans of Nearby Cities, Source: Record, November 4
- City Faces Boost in Insurance Rates, Increase May Follow Added Fire Hazard in Inadequate Water System, Municipal Officials Get Findings of National Board of Underwriters' Survey, Source: Inquirer, March 2
- City Faces Fight on Water, Valley Residents Rally to Oppose Diverting of Perkiomen, Source: Bulletin, May 24
- City Fails to Find Artesian Water, Camden System Impossible Here Because of Dissimilar Soil Formation, Experts Say, Tried Using Wells Once, Source: Bulletin, February 2
- City Fund For 1926 Fair May be Used For Water, Council Called Upon to Take Prompt Action for Better Supply, Many Extensions Needed, Members Say Public Must Show Desire for Exposition Before Money is Given, Source: Record, November 24
- City Hall Annex Filling Gradually, New Building About 65 Per Cent Occupied - Work of Moving Departments Is Slow, Nine Still to Go, Source not known
- City Hall Made Dry, Water Cut Off Above Third Floor by Break in Main, Source: Inquirer, November 21
- City Has Own Little Trains For Pumping Stations Use, Source: Bulletin, January 13
- City Has Pure Water Supply, Mayor Insists, All Health Precautions Taken, Mackey Answers Dr. Emerson, 'Good for Batteries' Source: Record, June 1
- City Heads to Visit Sources of Water, Mayor, Cabinet and Council to Tour Perkiomen-Tohickon and Neshaminy Sheds, Repaving of Central City Broached at Round Table as Traffic Relief Move, Source: Inquirer, October 21, 1924
- City Loses $5000 Suit, Must Pay Big Damage to Woman Injured on Street, Source: Inquirer, December 10, 1920
- City Marking Time on Water Project, Public Hearing Before Council Adjourns for Summer Seems Unlikely, Map and Details by Engineers Promised by Mayor Not Yet Ready, Source: Inquirer, June 19
- City May Boost Its Water Rates Instead of Taxes, Hall Says System is Losing Money and Calls for Higher Meter Tariff, Works in Terrible Shape, Chief Murdoch Asks for Repair Money, But Item is Heavily Slashed, Wage Increases Denied, Bureau of Automobiles Called a Joke-Cash Appropriated to Maintain Stadium, Source: Record, November 19
- City May Pay $850,000 for 3 Water Plants, Mayor Proposes Buying Properties in the Northeast and Using City Water, Source: Ledger, March 3, 1922
- City Must Seek Water Up-State, Storage Basins on Perkiomen and Tohickon Creeks of Prime Importance, Could Keep Rivers High, Source: Bulletin, January 17
- City Now Helpless to Prevent Water Famine, Chief Says, New Shortage Possible Until Shawmont [Roxborough] Station Is Electrified, Murdoch Adds, Work, Costing $140,000, To Be Ready in 40 Days, Situation Might Have Been Avoided if Job Had Been Done Earlier, He Admits, Source: Ledger, March 1
- City Pay Increases Are Recommended, Mayor's Committee Report Favors Raise for 550 Individuals and Scores of Workers, Library Clerks Included, 28 Positions in Commercial Museum and 5 in Mayor's Office Are Affected, Source: Ledger, April 8, 192[?]
- City Pays $854,610 For Water Works, Purchase of Philadelphia and Bristol and Disston and Holmesburg Companies Completed, Will Extend System, Source: Ledger, July 31
- City Picks Counsel to Aid Fight on River Pollution, G.C. Ladner to Sue Offenders Along Upper Schuylkill, Source: Ledger, April 14
- City planning -- Environmental aspects / Human ecology / Landscape architecture
- City Plans Crusade for Purer Waters, Plants Dumping Waste Into Schuylkill Will Be Prosecuted, State Aid to Be Asked as Pollution Survey Gets Under Way, Source: Inquirer, February 1
- City Puckers on Chlorine, Drinking Water Here Tastes of Chemical, Cam[?] [?]oosters Told, Source: Ledger, March 30
- City Puts $121,971 Park Land Award Up to Judges, Source: North American, November 23, 1920
- City Receives Bids For Water Improvements, Source: Record, July 1
- City Rents Half of $20,000 Garage at $5520 a Ye[ar], Municipality Gives Ye[ar]ly More Than 25 P[ercent] of Value of Building, Facts Unearthed by Con[?] Sent to President Council, Source: Inquirer, March 31, 19[?]
- City Schools Get Supply of Coal, Enough is Rationed to Keep Buildings Opened for Three to Four Days, One Closed for Short Time, Source: Ledger, December 12, 1922
- City's Engineers Making New Plans For Water System, Turning From Schuylkill Tributaries to the Delaware, Source: North American, July 14
- City's Health Depends on Water, Says Expert, Source: North American, January 4, 1921
- City's New Sources Contain Hard Water, Industrial Leaders Stirred by Prospect of More Scale in Boilers, Schuylkill Worst, Says Ledoux; Poconos Would Give Softest Supply, Source: Inquirer, June 21
- City Soon to Have 100,000,000 Gals. More Water Daily, Belmont and Torresdale Plants to Provide Increased Flow, Additions to Be Made That Will Fit Into Future Upland Systems, Source: Inquirer, January 6
- City's Share in Water of Delaware 60,000,000 Gals., Tri-State Pact Defines Legal Rights to Use of the Stream, Engineers Declare, Source: North American, January 21, 1925
- City, State Ask Court's Aid to Purify Water, Charge Conshohocken Company With Polluting Schuylkill, Ignore County Lines, Source: Ledger, May 17
- City's Water Safest in U.S.. Save Boston's, Figures Show, Typhoid Mortality Rate Declined Steadily Since 1906; Perkiomen-Tohickon Hearing Friday, Source: North American, June 4
- City's Water Supply And Its Protection From Raw Sewage, With Improved Methods for Disposal Refuse, Doubt is Cast on Project for Mammoth Sewer, Source: Ledger, January 3, 1923
- City To Ask State Aid in Improvements, Water and Sewage Legislation to be Sought, To Go To Capital, Source not known, November
- City to Build Sewer to Protect Water Supply, Bids Opened Tomorrow for Pennypack Creek to Drain 2000 Acres, Source: Record, August 26
- City to Go Slowly on Water Project, Officials' Inspection of Proposed Sources Shows Need of Caution, Source: North American, [?] 1924
- City To Improve Pumping Station at Lardner's Point, Source: Record, January 20
- City to Pay Bills for Water Used, Council Finance Committee Approves Contracts With Springfield and Bristol Companies, 1926 Budget Amended, Source: Ledger, February 25
- City To Sell Its Useless Property, Mayor to Appoint Commission to Inventory Public Holdings No Longer Needed, Source: Ledger, November 3, 1920
- City Urged to Give General pay Rise, Municipal Research Bureau Declares Public Employees Are Underpaid, Source: Inquirer, February 2, 1921
- City Water Blamed in Family's Illness, Source: Inquirer, January 3, 1923
- City Water Carries Danger of Typhoid, Rivers Used to Supply Philadelphia Polluted by Sewage of Other Cities, Source: Inquirer, April 6
- City Water Chief John S. Ely Dies After Operation, Newly Named Phila. Official Fails to Recover From Jaw Ailment, Appointed by Murdoch, Source: Record, March 31
- City Water for the Northeast, Source: Inquirer, August 1, 1924
- City Water is Poison to Plants at U. of P., Botanists Gather Rainfall to Supply Certain Sensitive Vegetable Organisms, Source: North American, March 17
- City Water Makes Fish 'Flip" Bucket, Chlorine Kills Aquarium's Hardiest Denizens,-"Rich Flavor" Comes From Trade Waste, Says Davis, Safe for Human Beings, Source: Bulletin, November 16, 1922
- City Water Plants Put in Fine Shape, Source: Ledger, October 16
- City Water Plant to Cost $400,000, Supply to Be Increased by Nearly 100,000,000 Gallons Daily by Project, West Philadelphia to Get Double Present Quantity Through New Filter, Source: Inquirer, June 9
- City Water Project Abandoned by Hall, Council President Declares Administration Will Not Provide New Supply, Electoral Loan Bill Total Boosted to $54,750,000 by Finance Committee, Source: Inquirer, March 25
- City Water Pure, Survey Reveals, Filter Plants Disinfected 342,000,000 Gallons Daily in 1926, Research Bureau Says, Biggest is at Torresdale, Source: Ledger, [?] 8
- City Water 'Sick' and Being 'Doped', Chemist Also Charges it Dissolves Pots When Boiled and Pickles the Breakfast Egg, Hurts Liver Too, He Says, Source: Bulletin, December 22
- City Water Sold by Springfield Co., It Has Supplied 22,000,000 Gallons in Oak Lane Section at Price Above Municipal Rate, Patrons Demand Refund, Source: Bulletin, January 21
- City Water Supply a Crime Insurance Official Says, Source: North American, December 10
- City Water Supply Defended by Mayor, Dr. Emerson's Criticisms Declared to Be Based Upon Incomplete Date, Director Murdoch Answers in Detail Charges Made by Health Expert, Source not known, June 12, 1929
- City Water Supply Guards Are Sought, Two Chemically Trained Men to Patrol Schuylkill if Council Approves $3,300 Appropriation, Dunlap Voices Appeal, Source: Bulletin, July 13
- City Water Supply Held Health Peril, Torresdale Intake Should Be Abandoned; Warning Given by Dr. Horn, Source: Inquirer, January 23
- City Water Supply is Back to Normal, Cooler Weather Brings Halt in Excessive Consumption-No Complaints Received, Reservoirs Are Filling Up, Source: Ledger, July 25, 1926
- City Water Supply is Declared Ample, System Rehabilitated Since Shawmont [Roxborough] Breakdown, Murdock Reports to Biles, Immense Pumps Installed, Source: Ledger, October 30, 1926
- City Water Supply Plan to be Fought, Perkiomen Valley Club to Rally Opponents of Project, Source: North American, July 13
- City Water Supply Selection Expected to Be Made Friday, Mayor's Announcement Follows Official Inspection, Neshaminy and Upper Delaware Watersheds to Be Viewed on Trip Today, Source: Inquirer, October 2[6]
- City Water Supply, Source: Inquirer, August 31
- City Water Supply to Be Increased, Meter System Favored, Source: Ledger, January 6,1926
- City Water Supply Will Be Improved, Construction Program to Double Distribution Capacity in West Philadelphia, New Filter Plant at Belmont Station and More Pumps Listed in Specifications, Source: Inquirer, May 22
- City Water System is Praised by Davis, Chief Says Present Supply is the Best in the History of Philadelphia, Tells Council Extension of Plant, However, Is Necessary to Meet Needs, Source: Inquirer, [December] 2
- City Water Waste is Put at $700,000, Research Bureau Says Use of Meters Would Save Phila. That Sum, Finds Survey is Needed, Source: Ledger, November 1
- City Water Works Chief Resigns to Go to Indianapolis, Davis Head of Bureau Here Since Blankenburg Regime, To Leave June 1, Source: North American, April 29
- City-Wide Meters, New Water Plan, Ordinance Aiming at Conservation of Supply Introduced in Council, 400,000 To Be Installed, Source: Ledger, May 19
- City Will Boost Water Supply by 25 Per Cent, Improvements Completed This Summer to Make Daily Capacity 525,000,000 Gallons, Consumption During 1925 Was 360,000,000 Gallons, Controller Hanley Reports Gross Receipts of $6,000,000 for the Year, Source: Ledger, April 18
- City Will Drop Schuylkill For Water Supply, Source for Next 70 Years Will Be Definitely Settled Within Few Weeks, Perkiomen and Delaware Plans Are Considered, Latter Calls for 18-Foot Aqueduct 25 Miles Long Carved From Solid Rock, Millions Involved in Work, Old System Will Be Used Where Possible-Council Harmony Presages Action, Source: Ledger, April 7, 1924
- City Will Pay Water Experts $100 a Day, Four Engineers Will Begin Work on New Plan at Once, Biles Says, Source: Record, February 16
- City Worker Dies as Pipes Fall, Overturning Ladder, Skull is Fractured in Accident While Dismantling Garage, Source: Ledger, July 13
- Civic Heads Oppose Swaab Water Plan, Balk at Cost of $227,000,000 to Obtain Supply From Upper Delaware River, Northeast Makes Survey, Source: Ledger, February 10
- Civil engineering -- Handbooks, manuals, etc
- Civil Service Aids Removed Workers, Commission Ignores Inefficiency Charge and Returns Dismissal Cards to Directors, Halts Mayor's "Shake-up," Time, Place and Nature of Poor Service Must be Specified. Vare Men Jubilant, Source: Ledger, January 8, 1921
- Civil Service in Garbage, Commission Refuses to Exempt Men Needed on the Work, Source: Record, December 21, 1920
- Clash Likely Over Hall Water Plan, Weglein Declares Against Project That Will "Merely Dilute Schuylkill Soup," Factional War Imminent, Source: Ledger, no date given
- Clean Drinking Water, Source: Bulletin, March 20, 1929
- Cleaning Up The Delaware, Source: Bulletin, August 9, 1926
- Clean Water Rights, Correspondent Declares the Condition of Pennsylvania Watersheds Is Disgraceful, Source: Bulletin, March 21
- Clean Water We Must Have, Source: Ledger, April 8
- Cleveland Folk Rush Springs for water, Phenol and Chlorine in Lake Erie Make It Unfit for Domestic Use, Source: North American, March 7
- Coal 134
- Coal 58, 91,
- Coal Mines Sealed to Check Pollution, Source: Inquirer, March 19
- Coal Regions Await Promised Rainfall, Source: North American, December 11
- Coal Shipments Return to Normal, Rail Officials Say, Tonnage Same as That Which Prevailed Year Ago at This Time, 3 Trains of 80 Cars Each Bring 12,000 Tons Here, Prices Remain at Winter Levels, Despite Rise Within Last Few Days, Source: Ledger, February 23, 1926
- Coal Towns Drying Up, Scarcity of Water in Schuylkill Region Causes Anxiety, Source: Record, October 31
- Coates Street and Cohocksink Culverts
- C. of C. Will Urge New Water Supply, Campaign Plans Announced by Gadsden After His Re-Election to Presidency, 1926 Achievements Listed, Source: Ledger, January 24
- Cohocksink Creek
- Cold Bursts Main, Street and Subway Entrance Are Coated With Ice, Source: Inquirer, January 5
- Collieries Use Water From Mines For Boilers, Source: North American, November 20
- Colloids
- Colloids / Water analysis / Sewage analysis
- Coloring Book
- Coloring books / Indians of North America
- Combined and Separate Sewer Systems
- Commerce Chamber Plans Water Probe, Independent Investigation Decided After Receipt of Many Letters, Action Taken Prior to Mayor Kendrick's Arrangements for Public Hearings, Source: Inquirer, June 13
- Commerce Groups Begin Water Study, Gadsden Says Chamber Has No Thought of Politics in the Investigation, Meter System Advocated, Source: Ledger, April 25
- Commercial facilities.
- Commission Speeds Water Supply Plan in Brief Discussion, Mayor Announces Council Will Receive Recommended System Soon, "Clean-up Conference" With Members of Advisory Body Alone Delays Submission, Source: Inquirer, November 11
- Committee Dodges on Water Supply, Councilmen Crossan and Roper Declare They Will Demand Inquiry Into Dismissals, Report Not Printed Yet, Source: Bulletin, March 16
- Committee Holds Fate of Tri-State Water Pact, Opponents at Hearing Say New York City Would Get an Undue Share, Source: Ledger, February 3
- Community development, urban -- United States -- Case studies
- Complete Water Survey is Needed, Source: Evening News, September 29, 1926
- Compressed air
- Compulsory Water Metering, Source: Bulletin, May 21
- Condemned Dunlap Water Supply Plan Months Ago, Member of Mayor's Commission Attacked Proposal in News Article, Source: Bulletin, May 29
- Conference on River, Will Discuss Prevention of Polluting Delaware With Sewage, Source: Inquirer, May 19
- Connecting privies and water closets with sewers
- Conservation of Water, Source: Bulletin, January 14
- Conserving the Delaware, Source: Bulletin, January 26
- Construction and repair 134-139
- Construction and Repairs 138, 140-145
- Consumption 56, 91,
- Continuation of article from 2004.012.0154 - 2004.012.0156, "Perkiomen Plan is Urged in Final Report on Water," Source: Inquirer, September 19, 1924
- Continuation of article from 2004.012.0154 and 2004.012.0155, "Perkiomen Plan is Urged in Final Report on Water," Source: Inquirer, September 19, 1924
- Continuation of article from 2004.012.0154, Source: Inquirer, September 19, 1924
- Continuation of article from 2004.012.0186, Source: Bulletin, January 17, 1925
- Continuation of article from 2004.012.0215, Source: Ledger, December 12
- Continuation of article from 2004.012.0230, Source: Ledger, March 1
- Continuation of article from 2004.012.0242, Source: Ledger, March 5
- Continuation of article from 2004.012.0256, "Dunlap Flays Mayor's Firing of Water Aides,…" Source: Inquirer, March 15, 2004
- Continuation of article, "Perkiomen Urged as Cheaper Than Rival Watershed,…" from 2004.012.0125 and 2004.012.0126, Source: Inquirer, June 7
- Continuation of article, "Perkiomen Urged as Cheaper Than Rival Watershed,…" from 2004.012.0125, Source: Inquirer, June 7
- Continuation of article, "Water Supply Hearings" from 2004.012.0116, Source: Bulletin, June 4, 1924
- Continuation of article, "With Hooch Not Permitted How About Water?…" from 2004.012.0133, Source: Record, June 15, 1924
- Continuation of the article from 2004.012.0103, Source: Inquirer, May 24
- Continued article of "Should Start…Cannot be Maintained" article from 2004.012.0074, Source: Ledger, October 25
- Contract Given For New Fairmount Dam, Seeds & Derham to Build a Concrete Structure for $604,000, Thousand Feet Long, Source: North American, February 21
- Controller Insists Water Works Pay, Hadley Has No Fear of Hall Using Alternative Figures to Contradict Him, Rumors of Water Lease, City Hall Buzzing With Vague Talk of Syndicate Taking Over City System, Source: Record, November 4
- Corliss steam-engine / Steam-engines
- Corrosion and anti-corrosives
- Council Asks Davis To Keep Job Here, Resolution Urges Water Bureau Chief to Reconsider His Resignation, "Unfortunate For City," Source: Ledger, April 26
- Council Assails City Hall Secrecy, Roused by Delay in Purchase of Garbage Disposal Plant, Finally Permits Temporary Lease to Speed Municipal Operation, Source: Inquirer, December 29, 1920
- Council Dodges Roper's Demands to Fire Murdoch, Chamber Holds Stormy Session and Defers Action to Await Result of Mayor's Special Inquiry, Water Chief Declared Madman and Menace to City; Blamed for Present Shortage and Poor Plants, Source: Inquirer, March 5
- Council Forced to Halt Rush For Water Plants, Crossan Asserts Price Fixed by Appraisal is Entirely Too High, Filtered Sewage Served, Eighth District Member Insists That Suburban Companies Will Get Too Much, Source: Record, June 20
- Council for Water Pact, Indorses Tri-State Deal for Use of Delaware River, Source: Ledger, April 11
- Council Helps Oak Lane When Water Runs Short, Passes Ordinance Directing Installation of an Emergency Pump, Source: Ledger, June 19
- Councilman Conferees Indicate Intent to Cut Mayor's Figures, Leaders May Hold Total at $4,500,000 in Defiance of Administration Needs, Source: Inquirer, March 31
- Councilman Smith Defends Murdoch, Tells Lions' Club Water Bureau Chief is "More Sinned Against Than Sinning," Ledoux Reports Today, Source: Bulletin, March 9, 1926
- Councilmen Favor Pure Water Bill, Five Members Join Civic Organization Heads in Schyulkill Anti-Pollution Measure, Has Hearing March 26, Source: Bulletin, March 6
- Councilmen Throw Blame on Murdoch, Mayor and Biles Are Disposed to Consider Dismissals of Employees as Final, Crossan and Daly Rally to Support of Engineers Who Were Fired, Source: Inquirer, March 16
- Council Must Cut Budget $6,500,000; $85,039,559 Asked, Source: Inquirer, October 15
- Council Promises Fairmount Dam, Mayor Said to Have Failed to Use Available Money, Source: Ledger, December 8
- Council Refuses Action on Water, Decides It has No Right to Interfere at Shawmont [Roxborough] and Accepts Biles' Plans, Murdoch Sticks to Job, Source: Ledger, March 19
- Council Sets a Bad Precedent, Source: Inquirer, June 28
- Council Sidesteps Pro[ve]s o[?] Water, Puts Responsibilities of Maintenance of System Up to Kendrick and Biles, Culpability of Officials in Recent Breakdown is Also Dodged, Source: Inquirer, March 9
- Council Stirred by Water Protest, Bureau's Per Diem Employees Seek Relief From Only Five Days a Week Work, Say Chief Davis Told Them Council Didn't Appropriate Enough Money, Source: Inquirer, January 13
- Council Tackles Water Improvement Today, Important Ordinances Will Be Discussed by Committees, Source: Record, January 22
- Council to Hold Public Hearings on City Water, Acts on Measures Providing $13,500,000 to Start $100,000,000 Project, Immediate Development in Torresdale Sought, Bill Authorizing Expenditure of $2,000,000 on Filter Station is Presented, Hall Criticizes Dunlap, Roper Comes to Former Chief's Defense and Demands Hearing From Him, Source: Ledger, May 30
- Council to Keep Control of The City Water Plant, Cannot Delegate the Work is Opinion of Legal Adviser, Source: Record, July 7
- Council to Speed New Fairmount Dam, Committee Rushes Approval of Appropriation to End Menace, Advance Work for Transit Extensions in Northern Part of City Also Pushed, Source: Inquirer, December 14
- Council to Speed New Fairmount Dam, Special Meeting Friday to Expedite Passage of Ordinance, To Pay State Bill, Source: North American, January 24
- Council Votes $2,000,000 For Water Scheme, Bill Provides for New Basins, Conduits and Necessary Alterations in Station Buildings, Most of Appropriation Expected to Be Used in Improvement of Torresdale Filter Plant, Source: Inquirer, June 27
- Council Will Air Water Meter Bill, Cost About $20 to Each Property Owner Under Compulsory Use Proposed in Ordinance, Source: Bulletin, May 21
- Council Will Hear Public on Water, Dunlap Again Protests, Source: Ledger, May 30
- Country Water Blamed, Jersey Health Department Concerned Over Typhoid Fever Increase, Source: Inquirer, October 6
- Court Grants Curb on River Pollution, Chemical Company Enjoined From Permitting Flow of Waste Into Schuylkill, Source: Inquirer, October 19
- Court Holds Churches Liable for Water Rent, Source: North American, November 22
- Criticism of the Water Situation, Source: Inquirer, March 3, 1926
- Cry For More Water, Builders, Chief Davis Says, Are Reaching Limit of Supply, Source: Record, February 14
- Culm Fills Up Bed Of Low Schuylkill River, Source: North American, July 20
- Culm is Clogging Upper Schuylkill, Source: North American, April 20
- Culverts
- Culverts / Hydraulics
- Curious Pleading, Source: Bulletin, March 18, 1929
- Current Topics of the Town, Source: Ledger, October 7
- Customer service 34