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Show NOTICE i United States Land Office, Salt Lake ! City, Utah March 18, 1926. I To Whom It May Concern: Notice is hereby given that the State of Utah has filed in this office lists of lands, selected by the said t State, under section 6 of the Act of Congress, approved July 16, 1894, - as Indemnity School lands, viz: ' E1-2NW1-4, Sec. 10, Twp 26 South Range 12 West, S.L.M. Serial 039449, List 2292. Copies of said lists, so far as they relate to said tracts by descriptive subdivisions, have been conspicuosly posted in this office for inspection by any person interested and by the public generally. During the period of publication of this notice, or any time thereafter, there-after, and before final approval and certification, under departmental regulations of April 25, 1907, protests pro-tests or contests against the claim of the State to any of the tracts or subdivisions hereinbefore, described on the ground that the same is more valuable for mineral than for agricultural agri-cultural purposes, will be received ! and noted for report to the General Land Office at Washington, D. C. Failure so to protest or contest, within the time specified, will be considered sufficient evidence of non-mineral character of the tracts and the selections thereof, being . otherwise free from objection, will be approved to the State. Eli F. Taylor, Register First published, March 26, 1926. " Last published April 23, 1926. concerns was in a serious way because be-cause of the failure of this winter's sales to come up to expectations. That doesn't mean losses or anything of the kind: it means that an unnatural unnat-ural boom period, left to run wild, has petered out .Florida decency did what it could to straighten out the worst of the fakes, but it began too late. A good deal of the damage has been done. If a community has a boom thrust upon it, you cannot blame it for taking all the money offered of-fered to It, but surely we are old enough and wise enough in business matters by this time to understand that such things cannot last. One permanent, effect a boom has, never-the never-the less; it always raises the level of normal prices. Unless a panic should ensue, Florida prices will never recede re-cede very far below the boom levels But the trading will be slower. And here and there a loss will be taken." Dearborn Independent. |