| OCR Text |
Show 157 Ernest Burnham farm cut rushed we s twar-d it left f arrn covered with washed out a deposit ou -b.'lctrd to v:ay we s t into the in the storm exacted but, age, As Front depth a majority rejoiced in of' the what left WaS estinated 250,000 tons of de- en during the flood and the not r- human places. in the began for the 'were its fury and piled The property dam the \1asatch those eno!'TIOUS 5 hig- life.6 along situated in task of salvaging reconstruction of vlhat larGely in vain. afternoon of August 11, 5"C1oudbursts 1930, single life-giving rain, side east of Centerville p. a of the boulders in feet of the farmers p.l.ann i.ng cloudburst unleashed 1930, areas by leaving thirty-five 'l'heir efforts gone. later of miraculously, the wake in ;,','eber Canyon, estimated $1,00.0,000 toll an the a.Lkal.Lne pasture- ocliterating large canyon, a then fanned 2-Yld are 2., depth, left h i.ghway I state few rai.Lc s north, and the Union Pacific tracks upon them to was of the deep A , crest in four feet to itself upon the level, cloudburst w2.shed another bris 2- expand the Laye r of silt up foot the As large portion of the Hiram Ford a 500-foot strip of silt to a of $10.,000 swath a through his property by the wake. damage lands destroyed in wer-e against the Farmington. 1930., A month 2. second barren mountainAlmost bllinediately Hit Utah," Salt La.'ke Tribune, July 11, 1. 6ttI,:ight 6. Have Been \1orse," Salt La.'ke Tribune, July 12, |