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Show 161 $1,000, 000 Horth of y!"operty da.TJ2.ge had been a fifty-mile stretch of tl1e :·.as2.tch Front, been 1-::illec. :people in the Centerville-Farmington h ad been killed that hed been strange, seven at '\'lillard 12 years that therefore, count-your-blessings type of July 10, the along people seven had and two area, in Box Elder County. It ago. exac ted was Salt Lake of editorial not But particularly Tribune issued flood the following a 19301 in the mountains /the conclusion ran? we suffer no cyclones or tornadoes 2nd we h2.ve been The recent of earth tremblinGs. ore or less free stOIT.1, which did he2.vy property d2Dage, but ex ected no clains on human life, should innress us with the extraordinary s2i'ety of our geogaphical :-Iere loc2.tio-,,!.13 For had the cept i b.Ly follm'rinG ibune's te flood of August 11, occ2.sion it 1"eninded te flood victins er.tire sJpathy &d encouraGement e editorial then commended the t!le expeditious hi&\'l<:.ys those of manne r debris strips which 12F'ire ch ange d per- editorial tone in wh i.ch th2.t of the On that 1930. they enjoyed the people of Uta. state road commission for it had cleared much of the and had created t empor-ary detours required extensive labor. more and excessive grazing had been around The 'determined of the devastatinG floods of 1923. :i. P2:l1 and F. S. Bake r The Floodf1 of 1923 in -·ort:;_er.r.. Gt2r, University of Uta': Bulletin, Vol. 1.5, rIo. :3 (Salt La}:e City : University of Uta.Y1, 1925), un. 9-18. the See';. s prim2Y , ?his report had 12, causes 13"r,:ight 1930, p. 6. no inmediate ave impact Been ',:o1"se, " on public policy. Salt LcJ:e Tribune, July |