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Show Nye's One Experience With Cyclone Enough j 1 have not the necessary personal magnetism to look a cyclone in the eye and make It quail. I i stern and even haughty in my intercourse with men. but when a Manitoba simoon takes me by the brow of my pantaloons and throws me across township -S. range 1. west of the fifth principal meridian, I lose my m. -111111 reserve mid become anxious and even taciturn. As the people came into the forest with laments i.r.d pulled fc out of the crutch of a husswood tree with a "tackle and fall." I remember I told them I didn't yearn lor any I'.ioie atmosp'-.f-ric phenomena. The cyclone is a natural phe:,onie lion, eii.icyl'.'.g tkj most robust l.o:.P h. it may no a pleasure for a jmtn wrb great will power and an iron - tution to study more carefully into Hie; habits of a cyclone, but as fur as I I am concerned 1 could worry along , some way if we didn't have a i phenomenon iu the house from one ! year's end lo the other. As I sit here. ' w ith my leg in A silicate of soda cor- ; set and watch the merry throng pnun- I eluding dow n the street. I cannot re- iress a feeling toward a cyclnne that ; almost amounts to d'gust. l-'n m ' -Hill .yp. His Own I. lie Siori." by' Prank W. Nye. j |