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The Bismarck Tribune from Bismarck, North Dakota • 58
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The Bismarck Tribune from Bismarck, North Dakota • 58

Location:
Bismarck, North Dakota
Issue Date:
Page:
58
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Interagency Panel Talks Priorities What's Reservoir Water Worth? I'une Wednesday, May 9, 1973-The BISMARCK TRIBUNE The Tribune Treasure Hunt Name Address Phone City State Zip Are you an employe of the Tribune? Exact Date of the oldest complete Tribune you hold Vol! No Be Kind to Animals This week has been designated as "Be Kind to Animals as proclaimed by North Dakota Gov. Arthur A. Link and other governors throughout the nation. Celebrated for 59 years during the first full week of May, the special week points up the need for more humane care of pets, according to Mrs. T.

Clem Casey, executive director of the League of Animal Welfare here: Link's proclamation stresses the importance of educating children and adults about humane treatment of animals. "The people of North Dakota are deeply indebted to the animal anti-cruelty control and welfare agencies for the invaluable contribution they make in educating the public in humane principles'," Link said. 1 Mrs. Casey noted that because of the explosion in the number of horse owners, horses were selected as the subject for this year's posters marking the week. She said that printed material on the care and treatment of horses can be obtained by addressing a request to Horses, Box 339, Bismarck.

would like to see developed along the Missouri River. A boat marina for the Bismarck area has been discussed in the past. Corps representatives said reservoir levels for the 1973 season will average five feet lower than a year ago because of below-normal runoff from the west. Discharge rates will be correspondingly lower, they said. The State Highway Department made a report on perimeter road development for the Garrison and Oahe reservoirs.

Stuart said the Corps of Engineers has never "surveyed or marked their boundary lines, so the average individual does not know when he is on Indian land or private land or public land that the Corps owns." He said the Corps promised it would begin survey work after July so that access roads to popular bay areas can eventually be built. Representatives from Bismarck and Burleigh County got no promises of aid from the Corps of Engineers for recreational facilities they state law to conform with the federal act failed in the last legislative session. All states surrounding North Dakota have conformed with the federal law, he said. Also discussed at the meeting was confusion over jurisdiction of lands in Sioux County adjacent to.Oahe Reservoir. Stuart said two representatives of the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe appeared at the meeting to discuss the problem, which involves people trespassing on private and Indian land, littering and leaving gates open.

Return this form to THE TRIBUNE TREASURE HUNT Box 1498 Bismarck, N.D. 58501 MpMJf SUNDAE'S Today's Date WE DELIVER DIAL 223-3653 Independently owned operated. Order in by noon, delivered same day. 6 A.M. 'til 9 P.M.

daily except Saturday 8 A.M. 'til P.M. 225 WEST BROADWAY Y0 SAVEMORK, WHEN: YOU SHOP THESE VALUES AT SUNDAHIL'S! ii DO NOT SEND YOUR HISTORIC PAPER JUST THE ENTRY FORM What is water from Lake Sakakawea worth in terms of money? That question was the highlight of a day-long meeting Tuesday of the North Dakota Garrison-Oahe Interagency Council at Totten Trail State Park, according to State Game and Fish Commissioner Russell Stuart, chairman of the council. Stuart said there are no policies established for charges on reservoir water used for irrigation, industrial or other purposes. But a Bureau of Reclamation official told the 80 people in attendance at the meeting that water impounded by the federal government has been sold for $9 to $28 per acre foot.

Stuart said priorities on water use also was discussed, but he said it has not been determined what agency should have the authority to set priorities. The BOR official, Al Bielefield, Billings, said power generation generally gets lower priority than irrigation or navigation and that water for industrial uses also would have priority over power. Representatives of the U.S. Coast Guard made a presentation dealing with the Federal Boat Safety Act of 1971. Stuart said North Dakota has not changed its law to conform with the federal act, and that the Coast Guard has issued citations to boaters on Lake Sakakawea.

Under state law, he explained, boats with a mechanical motor of less than 10 horsepower do not need to be licensed. But the federal act requires all boats with mechanical motors to be licensed, and anyone with an unlicensed boat on a body of water subject to federal jurisdiction could get cited. He said a bill to change the RULES Swift's Premium ROUND STEAK Fresh! LEG OF PORK ROAST Hormel LITTLE SIZZLERS BONE-IN 12-Oz. Pkg. 1.

Entrant must complete the attached form or facsimile. 2. Entry information will not be accepted over the phone. 3. The Tribune edition to be considered for the contest is not to be sent to The Tribune Just the completed entry form.

4. Entries will be accepted through June 30, 1973. Entries postmarked later than June 30 will not be considered. 5. The winner will be announced in The Tribune as soon as possible after June i30, pending verification, 6.

An entry with missing pages will be disqualified. All pages must be intact. 7. Reproductions will be disqualified. All entries must beoriginal.

8. Employes of The Trib-. une will be eligible to enter the contest. However, if a Tribune employe should have the oldest Tribune, an appropriate cash award will go to him and to the non-employe holding the oldest Tribune. 9.

The Tribune reported to be the oldest by the end of the contest will be examined and checked against existing files to insure authenticity and completeness. It will be re- turned to the owner. 10. In the event of a tie Two or more people holding a copy of the same Tribune edition, the first one notifying The Tribune with an entry form wil.l be the winner. 11.

The total of the award will depend on the age of the oldest paper. The owner will receive $1.00 for. every year of the age of the paper. Maximum prize will be $100.00 Lb Lb. Cuiift'c Pi-ominm flnnpp Fresh, Center Cut, Leg of $139 89' PORK ROAST I09 ROUND STEAK Lb.

I Lb. Tender, Lean Swift's Premium, Boneless co Lean, Meaty, Center Cut BEEF SHANKS. Swift's Premium Boneless SIR. TIP STEAK. Wisconsin aMt $149 FAMILY STEAK L.

1 MINUTE STEAKS sujitT'c wram vn on x. i ipn wiimnnr 1 30 fin Tin nniCT $159 39 $Q9 Swift's Premium, Boneless Heel of ROUND ROAST 1 LONGHORN CHEESE i oin. nr nuHoi. Lb. i SIR.

TIP ROAST. Lb 1 11 Masons Set 97th Annual Dewy-Fresh Stronger Laws Urged Coal Spoils Difficult ORAKGE JUICE Florida Large Size JUICE ORANGES To Reclaim: Dobson Installation Cans 3 24-oz. Bags Golden Valley POTATOES Crinkle Cuts, Hash Browns or French Fried Potatoes Aunt Jemima 8 WAFFLES 57 California Fresh CAULIFLOWER DAKOTA MAID 223-8304 Each New California White GRANOLA BREAD ......39 FRONTIER BREAD 391 RYE BREAD 26" GLAZED DONUTS Bismarks POTATOES 3 Fresh, California ARTICHOKES 2 Fr 2 Long Johns Doz. Persians Doz. 30 Installation of officers of Bismarck Masonic Lodge No.

5, has been scheduled for Monday, May 14, at the Masonic Temple. It will be the 97th annual installation ceremonies in the history of the Lodge, dating back to 1876, when Col. C.E. Lounsberry, founder of The Bismarck Tribune, was the first master. To be installed as master is Robert E.

Gausvik, who will succeed Dr. Warren T. Lee. Other officers to be installed are Gary E. Lahr, senior warden; Roy S.

Towne, junior warden; Herman Bischof, treasurer; Kobes Tjaden, secretary; Donald J. Laschkewitsch, senior deacon; John A. Mclntyre, junior deacon; Lyle E. Holden, senior steward; Roger Reule junior steward; Vern A. Anderson, chaplain; Robert O.

Wefald, tyler, and Willard Yule, organist. Trustees are Thomas F. Baker, James J. Duffy, Donovan J. Eck, Erling Henrikson, Corliss F.

Nelson, John E. Schultz and F. Stanley Sharkey, with Tjaden, Bischof and Dr. Lee ex officio trustees. The installation, with John Craven as installing officer and Elmer B.

Larson as installing marshal, will begin at 7:30 p.m. Friends and families of Masons are invited. Drills studded with hundreds of coarse diamonds are preferred for boring oil wells, because the bits do not have to be drawn up thousands of feet for frequent replacement. sulphur coal has been getting most of the attention. This high sulphur coal is usually discarded, said Dobson, since it is not salable.

Dobson's slides indicated that these chemicals usually spelled the doom of reclamation efforts on mining sites. Another major problem, said Dobson, is responsibility for reclaimed areas once the mining companies have pulled out. Reclamation, a process which usually takes years, is sometimes abandoned by mining firms after they have extracted the coal from the area. Not only is the mining process harmful, according to Dobson, but the power plants fed by the coal are another danger. Even with pollution control devices, said Dobson, the emissions from huge power facilities constitute a major threat to the ecology of a given area.

Among the solutions presented by Dobson for problems created by mining and power plants are stronger laws, combined with more stringent enforcement. Since most of the power generated in Montana is used elsewhere, that state has raised its severance tax on coal. A bill creating a similar tax in North Dakota was vetoed by Gov. Arthur A. Link this year.

More important, according to Dobson, is research on other sources of power. Dobson said that coal is a particularly inefficient source of power. By TED QUANRUD Tribune Staff Writer A leader of a citizens' coalition that successfully promoted stronger strip mining laws in Montana warned an audience at Bismarck Junior College Tuesday evening, that reclamation has been generally unsuccessful in rectifying the ravages of extensive surface coal mining. Ed Dobson, who was raised near the Ohio coal fields, and who has studied coal mining in various parts of the United States, as well as in Wales and Germany, said that man's efforts to reclaim spoiled land cannot begin to replace what nature had created. Starting with Appalachia, Dobson showed slides of mining operations and reclamation efforts in West Virginia.

The slides showed that the steep terrain of that state made reclamation almost impossible. "It is difficult enough just to stablize this land, much less reclaim it," Dobson said. Although steep terrain is not the major factor in Montana (and North Dakota) as it is in Appalachia, Dobson noted that many other problems of the same variety are found in both areas. Undersirable chemical compounds, particularly acids and salts often occur when the coal which contains sulphur contaminates natural aquifers, said Dobson, noting that there is much high sulphur coal in the North Dakota-Montana region, although the low Del Monte Cream or Kernel 303 Cans Si com SAVE 20 V-10 Del Monte, Stewed TOMATOES. $1 3 303 Cans BAGGIES I SAVE 46 V-30 Folger's Coffee 3-lb.

Can urn SANDWICH 5 s2f 32 Roll QQc Pkgs. 03 Mb QQc Pkg. till Brach's Choc. Covered P'nutsor 79 Mb. Bag BAGS 16 Our Family White Cloud, Bathroom Kraft Parkay OLEO Del Monte FRUIT COCKTAIL.

sal: S3 19 $949 Iff Keebler Pecan Sandies or Rich 'n Chip Pkg 55 it; Pkg. Jy 3 Limit One With Coupon at Sundahl's thru May 12th. 5i Limit One With Zi S3 Coupon At Sundahl's JiJ tfj thru May nth. A Heinz Strained BABY FOOD 3 303 Si Cans I IV' MVtzu' V-10 SAVE47 V-12. Zi 1 GLAD If BOUNTY SAVE $T67 With All Four Bonus Buys ife' HB YARD LEAF TOWELS I 1 Boy Bonus No.

1 with $5.00 Purchase or More Buy Bonus No. 2 with J10.00 Purchase or More 1 1 Buy Bonus No. 3 with $15.00 Purchase or More Mf Buy Bonus No, 4 with $20.00 Purchase or More ess BAGS is i VMJ. Pure Veaetable Shorteninq 1 5-Ct Re9- Pkg. .5 SAVE 3-ib.

Reg. AL-LTi-LJ a Tin Limit One Willi '3 Coupon At Sundahl's thru May 12th. Limit With Coupon at Sundahl's thru May 12th. 5j Limit One With $5.00 Purchase. 5P; r.

Kingsford Re9-8'' try FZ1 jiSh iw ti i IK" v-i r. SAVE 44' 5 A SAVE 40' V-30 si BlO-lb. Bag 5 tzJ 2J OXYDOL If GLEAM Limit One With $5.00 Purchase Si LAUNDRY TOOTHPASTE ttiA iff M4 ii i DETERGENT JTfe PEPSI- ft 1 I 51 ml I Reg. 389' Reg. $1.13 Onartc (o) COLA For King 'Vs 61 Arbor Day Investment Size Limit 6 With $5.00 Purchase Plus Btle.

Deposit Limit One With Reg.4l Pleasmor Coupon At Sundahl's thru May 12th. Limit One With Coupon at Sundahl's V2-b. VO thru May 12th 9 mm Oakes Nursery southeast of Bismarck, they took to the park to get some practical experience. Nursery officials said the shade trees should grow to about 30 feet, which would certainly make them a good investment 1S7 Money doesn't grow on trees, but that didn't stop 18 officers and directors of First National Bank from planting hackberry trees at Tatley Park on Arbor Day. which was observed in North Dakota last Friday.

After the officers ajd directors oj the bank toured Lincoln- Loaves QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED Prices Effective thru May I2lh. Limit Three With $5.00 Purchase.

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About The Bismarck Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
1,010,183
Years Available:
1873-2024