60 



ANNUAL EEPORT SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION, 1910. 



Country. 



Lourenso Marquez.. 



Luxemburg 



Madagascar 



Madeira 



Malta 



Martinique 



Mauiitius 



Mexico 



Montenegi'o 



Montserrat 



Morocco 



Natai 



Netherlands 



Nevis 



Newfoundland 



New SoutH Wales . . . 



New Zealand 



Nicaragua 



Norfolk Island 



Northern Nigeria 



Norway 



Orange River Colony 



Panama 



Paraguay 



Persia 



Peru 



Philippine Islands. . . 



Porto Rico 



Portugal 



Queensland 



Reunion 



Rhodesia 



Roumania 



Russia 



St. Croix 



St. Helena 



St. Kitts 



For. 



255 

 123 



1 

 734 

 110 



514 



992 

 76 



33 

 2,019 



Country. 



St. Lucia 



St. Martin 



St. Pierre and Miquelon 



St. Thomas 



St. Vincent 



Salvador 



Samoa 



Santo Domingo 



Sarawak 



Senegal 



Servla 



Siam 



Sierra Leone 



Society Islands 



South Australia 



Spain 



Straits Settlements 



Sudan 



Sweden 



Switzerland 



Tahiti 



Tasmania 



Transvaal 



Trinidad 



TripoU 



Tunis 



Turkey 



Turks Islands 



Uganda 



United States 



Uruguay 



Venezuela 



Victoria 



Western Australia 



Zanzibar 



Total 



13 



11 



16 



14 



6 



169 



18 



19 



4 



5 



429 



217 



21 



12 



021 



853 



230 



43 



255 



029 



13 



285 



594 



126 



2 



44 



580 



21 



1 



989 



971 



283 



618 



564 



13 



221, 625 



During the year tbere were sent abroad 2,033 boxes (an increase over 1909 of 

 70 boxes), of which 220 contained complete sets of United States Government 

 documents for authorized depositories and 1,813 were filled with departmental 

 and other publications for depositories of partial sets and for distribution to 

 miscellaneous correspondents. 



EXCHANGE OP GOVERNMENT DOCUMENTS. 



The number of packages sent abroad through the International Exchange 

 Service by United States Government establishments during the year was 

 138,152, an increase over the number forwarded during the preceding twelve 

 months of 15,812 ; while 18,017 packages were received in exchange, a decrease 

 of 2,199. This disparity between the nu^uber of packages received and those 

 sent may be accounted for largely by the fact that many returns for the publi- 

 cations sent abroad are not made through the Exchange Service, but are for- 



