NORTH AMERICA 



4257 



NORTHAMPTON 



Athabaska, subhead 



Athabaska Lake 

 Bras d'Or 

 Cayuga 

 Chumplain 

 Erie 

 George 

 Great Bear 

 Great Lakes, The 

 Great Salt Lake 

 Great Slave 

 Huron 



Lake of the Woods 

 Louise 

 Manitoba 

 Memphremagog 

 Michigan 



Muskoka 



Nicaragua 



Niplgon 



Nipissing 



Okechobee 



Oneida 



Ontario 



Pontchartrain 



Rainy Lake 



Saint Clair 



Salton Sea 



Seneca 



Simcoe 



Superior 



Tahoe 



Utah 



Winnipeg 



MOUNTAINS 



Minnesota 



Miramichi 



Mississippi 



Missouri 



Mobile 



Mohawk 



Monongahela 



Montgomery 



Moose 



Nelson 



Niagara Falls and River 



Ohio 



Ottawa 



Peace 



Pecos 



Penobscot 



Platte 



Potomac 



Rappahannock 



Raritan 



Red 



Red River of the North 



Restigouche 



Rio Grande 



Roanoke 



Rock 



Sabine 



Saco 



Sacramento 



Saguenay 



Saint John 



Saint Lawrence 



Saint Mary's 



San Joaquln 



Saskatchewan 



Savannah 



Schuylkill 



Scloto 



Shenandoah 



Skeena 



Snake 



Stikine 



Susquehanna 



Tennessee 



Tomblgbee 



Wabash 



Washlta 



White 



Willamette 



Wisconsin 



Yazoo 



Yellowstone 



Yukon 



NORTHAMPTON, north amp' ton, unrivaled 

 in Knuhmd for the manufacture of boots and 

 shoes, is the capital of Northamptonshire. It 

 is situated on rising ground on the left bank of 

 the River Nene, on a branch canal connecting 

 it with the Grand Junction Canal, sixty-five 

 miles northwest from London. The city is very 

 busy and enterprising. - Considerable trade is 

 carried on in various kinds of leather, and there 

 are large iron and brass foundries, breweries and 

 flour mills. The town hall, the corn exchange, 

 the museum and schools of science and art are 

 among the newer fine buildings. Of the thir- 

 teen churches, the most interesting are Saint 

 Peter's and Saint Sepulchre's, the latter being 

 one of the few remaining round churches of 

 England. Population in 1911, 90,064. 



NORTHAMPTON, MASS., the county seat of 

 Hampshire County, situated in the \\est-central 

 part of the state, eighteen miles north of Spring- 

 field and 105 miles west of Boston. It is sor\l 

 by the Boston & Maine and the New York, 

 New Haven & Hartford railroads and by < 

 trie interurban lines. The population in 1910 

 was 19,431; the state census of 1915 reported 

 21,654. The city, which includes H-\CIM| vil- 

 lages, covers an area of thirty square miles, and 

 is beautifully situated along the Connecticut 

 r. It is one of New England's most at- 

 tractive towns, with wide streets, arching elms 

 and pleasant homes, and is becoming a favorite 

 summer resort. From the summits of Mount 

 Tom and Mount Holyoke, easily reached, are 

 splendid views of the river and valley. 



