| OCR Text |
Show 164 of t}1e SUlT.ner, three, a.gain and ve only sliGhtly less torrents sent of water-borne ge t at.Lon down upon the rerr:aining acreage, of his neighbors. r.:ost Ln '!"'ec18-::2.tion "las previous soil, boulders, battered homes Centerville and Farmington. of his than the severe of and farms Hiram Ford lost another- slice The of the negated in same 'was true for several progress which had been made a matter of minutes, 2..."1d the fc.rr:-ers er:erGed disconsolate f'r-ora their ni&t of terror. T.,-. ':. h ad Pc.rrish of Centerville, covered. Vii th debris entire riorrth clearing, that way now, hills and give pressed a observing th2t land which he "I'm reported: that the had going to spent storm an leave it they do something to reforest the unless us upon chance.,,20 An unidentified neighbor ex- similar sentientl a I'm can fix our farms up or let them lie. oin£ to let mine lie-:at least until I know ',',:e \[lether any th i.ng is going to be done to protect there are a lot of others who feel the we::: now, 21 And us. S arne The edito:dc..l 6, 1930, September policy storm of the it reflected as also served Tribune. In to crystallize the its issue of September followsl recurrence of dage in the Davis Coupty dis"trict as the result of wother flood but em phe.s i ze a the necessity for action which vlill e 20nSection Tribune, Sept. 21Ibid• Checks 6, 1930. on New Storm Damage, II Salt Lake |