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Show 16A The Salt Lake Tribune Monday, November 5, 1984 Dennin the Menace Hv Hank Keteham Bar Owner Would Welcome Loss of Business County Wants Standards - For Tepees and Yurts gets a steady water supply, but the owner doesnt seem to mind. We need this water desperately, says Bill Seward, whos planning a celebration at his tavern around the end of this month, when a new pipeline connecting the town with a spring 2Mi miles to the northwest is expected to begin operation. Teton Countys comprehensive JACKSON, Wyo. (AP) and plan currently makes no room for permanent tepee but county commissioners suggest stan- yurt dwellings, dards be developed to accommodate the alternative lifestyle." Commission Chairman Bob LaLonde said a one-yemoratorium has been placed on new yurts and tepees until standards can be developed. Yurts are circular tents developed by nomads in Mongodome-shape- d ceiling lia, with walls about 5 feet high and a with a central skylight. The county planning office received a complaint about a community of about a dozen yurts and tepees in Kelly. In county planner Dan Cowee told the commission permanent tepees and yurts didnt comply with county regulations and should be removed. But after a public hearing, the commission decided to form a committee to help develop conditional use permit regulations. LaLonde said they would include density provisions and requirements to meet sanitation and electrical standards. At the hearing, many people said they chose to live in the tents because of economic considerations. ar e 10 ; nov . i 29 m if- ;:i y - l: l7 - We Support . . . DISTRICT JUDGE BALDWIN FOR 3RD DISTRICT JUDGE Former Governor, Calvin L. Rampton Former Governor, J, Bracken Lee This ad paid for by the District Judge Baldwin Committee, D. Frank Wilkins, Chrmn. Re-ele- ct 7 . 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(AP) Adoption fees will be waived for 250 wild burros and 25 wild horses saved from starvation in California and Wyoming so the animals can find homes before winter, say members of a volunteer organization. We prefer to charge for the animals in the belief that people may take better care of something they pay for, said Diane Zaidlicz of the National Organization for Wild American Horses, which usually charges $100 for horses and $85 for burros. But we have to get rid of some of them because were running low on funds for feed. sheep-shearin- 41 Water conservation has been of life in Ingomar. The Wild Burro Adopters Get Fees Waived The Jersey Lilly and Ingomars grade school, post office and 46 residents have been hauling water by truck and catching what they could from the sky since the Milwaukee Road Railroad went out of business in central Montana four years ago. Before then, the town got free tank cars full of water. Folks would bring buckets and help themselves. Ingomar was founded around 1915 by homesteaders who transformed it g into the capital of the world, but it nearly disappeared in 1923 when an uncontrolled fire de INDIVIDUAL EMPLOYEE HEALTH snrine or from Forsvth, stroyed much of the town There was no water to put out the blaze. Since the railroad pulled out, people have had to haul in water, 2,000 gallons at a time, to fill their cisterns. The water comes from the The JerINGOMAR, Mont. (AP) sey Lilly Bar and Cafe, the watering hole in Montanas thirstiest town, may lose some business when Ingo-ma- r |