Superior National Forest, Minnesota: Hearings Before the Committee on the Public Lands, House of Representatives, Seventieth Congress, First[-second] Session[-Seventy-first Congress, Second Session] on H.R. 12780 and [and H.R. 6981] a Bill to Promote the Better Protection and Highest Public Use of the Lands of the United States and Adjacent Lands and Waters in Northern Minnesota for the Production of Forest Products, the Development and Extension of Recreational Uses, the Preservation of Wild Life, and Other Purposes Not Inconsistent Therewith ; and to Protect More Effectively the Streams and Lakes Dedicated to Public Use Under the Terms and Spirit of Clause 2 of the Webster-Ashburton Treaty of 1842 Between Great Britain and the United States ; and Looking Toward the Joint Development of Indispensable International Recreational and Economic Assets

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Stran 120 - It is further agreed that the waters herein defined as boundary waters and waters flowing across the boundary shall not be polluted on either side to the injury of health or property on the other.
Stran 120 - It is agreed that, in addition to the uses, obstructions, and diversions heretofore permitted or hereafter provided for by special agreement between the parties hereto, no further or other uses or obstructions or diversions, whether temporary or permanent, of boundary waters on either side of the line...
Stran 121 - This International Joint Commission shall have jurisdiction over and shall pass upon all cases involving the use or obstruction or diversion of the waters with respect to which under Articles III and IV of this treaty the approval of this Commission is required...
Stran 118 - ... affecting the natural level or flow of boundary waters on the other side of the line shall be made except by authority of the United States or the Dominion of Canada within their respective jurisdictions and with the approval, as hereinafter provided, of a joint commission, to be known as the International Joint Commission.
Stran 179 - The following order of precedence shall be observed among the various uses enumerated hereinafter for these waters, and no use shall be permitted which tends materially to conflict with or restrain any other use which is given preference over it in this order of precedence: 1. Uses for domestic and sanitary purposes; 2. Uses for navigation, including the service of canals for the purposes of navigation; 3. Uses for power and for irrigation purposes.
Stran 120 - For the purposes of this treaty boundary waters are defined as the waters from main shore to main shore of the lakes and rivers and connecting waterways, or the portions thereof, along which the international boundary between the United States and the Dominion of Canada passes...
Stran 120 - ... waters or in waters at a lower level than the boundary in rivers flowing across the boundary, the effect of which is to raise the natural level of waters on the other side of the boundary, unless the construction or maintenance thereof is approved by the aforesaid International Joint Commission.
Stran 150 - The foregoing provisions are not intended to limit or interfere with the existing rights of the Government of the •United States on the one side and the Government of the Dominion of Canada on the other, to undertake and carry on governmental works in boundary waters for the deepening of channels, the construction of breakwaters, the improvement of...
Stran 151 - The High Contracting Parties agree to establish and maintain an International Joint Commission of the United States and Canada composed of six commissioners, three on the part of the United States appointed by the President thereof, and three on the part of the United Kingdom appointed by His Majesty on the recommendation of the Governor in Council of the Dominion of Canada.
Stran 10 - IV of the waterways treaty of January 11, 1909, between the United States and Great Britain...

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