AlasKa and the KlondiKe 



By ANGELO HEILPRIN, 



Professor of Geology at the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, Fellow of the 



Royal Geographical Society of London, Past=President of the 



Geographical Society of Philadelphia, etc. 



Fully illvstrated from Photographs and with a new Map of the Gold Degions. 

 12mo. Cloth, $1.75. 



A JOURNEY to the New Eldorado. With Hints to the Traveler and 

 Observations on the Physical History and Geology of the Gold 

 Regions, the Condition of and Methods of Working the Klondike Placers, 

 and the Laws Governing and Regulating Mining in the Northwest 

 Territory of Canada. 



" Will take and retain immediate rank as a contribution of essential value not only to the 

 literature of travel, but to that of American commercial and political development. . . . 

 Should he in the hands of every person interested either in fad or in prospect in Alaska and 

 the Klondike.^' — Brooklvn Standard-Union. 



Imperial Democracy 



By DAVID STARR JORDAN, Ph. D., 



President of Leiand Stanford Junior University. 



12mo. Cloth, $1.50. 



" Dr. Jordan may truly be said to present his case, 

 and that of those who stand with him, with rare 

 force, completeness, and fairness. It deals with the 

 question from the economic and political as well as the 

 social and ethical point of view, and demonstrates the 

 author's firm belief that his cause is just. . . . Dr. 

 Jordan's book is -worthy of the notice of all true Ameri- 

 cans. He shows himself in its pages a patriot ready to 

 serve his country with all his heart and soul, with all 

 his great intellectual gifts. We may not agree with 

 him, but we can not fail to profit by his book." — 

 Mail and Express. 



" The book probably sums up better than anything 

 that is in print the arguments of those who oppose 

 the retention of the Philippines. . . . Recent events 

 have induced many to doubt the wisdom as well as the expediency of expansion, and they will 

 find many facts in this volume to strengthen their doubt. . . . Dr. Jordan's book must be re- 

 garded as the ablest contribution to this literature of dissent." — San Francisco Chronicle. 



