478 



Figure 7 is from a photograph said to have been taken by a traveling 

 salesman at the corner of Maple street and Second avenue south. This 

 point is about four blocks north of the axis of the storm path. The other 

 photographs were made by the writer. 



The weather map of June 23, 1914, reproduced herewith (Fig. 8), 

 shows the weather conditions prevailing on the morning preceding the 

 storm. A trough of low pressure extends toward the southwest from a 

 low central in Canada between an area of high pressure central in southern 

 Alabama and an area of high pressure on the South Pacific States. 



Fig. 6. View of tornado Watertown, S. D., June 23, 1914. Photo by Ward Carr. 



All students of meteorology are familiar with the atmospheric condi- 

 tions which prevail when tornadoes occur as well as with the usual freak- 

 ish behavior of storms of this type. Tbe writer has not discussed these 

 points for this reason, nor does he wish to make a comparative study of 

 this storm in this report. He has aimed only to state as many of the facts 

 concerning this one meteorological event as he was able to ascertain in 

 the brief time at his disposal, trusting that they may add a smalt part 

 to the great fund of information already recorded concerning these small 

 but violent atmospheric disturbances. 



State College, 



Brookings, South Dakota. 



