NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC MAGAZINE 
Important Aids in Teaching 
Geography 
# 
National Geographic Monographs 
ON THE 
PHYSICAL FEATURES OF THE EARTH’S SURFACE. 
Published Monthly during the School Year 
And designed especially to supply to teachers and students of geography fresh and 
interesting material with which to supplement the regular text-book. 
LIST OF MONOGRAPHS COMPRISING VOLUME I. 
General Physiographic Processes. 
J. W Powell. 
General Physiographic Features. 
J. W. Powell. 
Physiographic Regions of U. S. 
J. W. Powell. 
Beaches and Tidal Marshes of the At- 
lantic Coast. Prof. N. S. Shaler. 
Present and Extinct Lakes of Nevada. 
Prof. I. C. Russell. 
Subscription price for one set of ten 
Five sets to one address . 
Single monographs .... 
Appalachian Mountains— Northern Sec- 
tion. Bailey Willis. 
Appalachian Mountains— Southern Sec- 
tion. C. Willard Hayes. 
Mt. Shasta— A Typical Extinct Volcano. 
J. S. Diller. 
The New England Plateau. 
Prof. W. M. Davis. 
Niagara Falls and Its History. 
G. K. Gilbert. 
monographs . . $1.50 
6.00 
.20 
Remit vnth order to the 
AMERICAN BOOK COMPANY 
New Xorl< - Cincinnati . Chicago 
CONSTANTINOPLE 
By EDWIlVJ A. GROSVENOR, 
with an introduction by General Lew Wallace, and two hundred and fifty illustra- 
tions of important places, rulers and noted people of Ancient Constantinople. 
2 vols., royal 8vo, cloth, gilt top, |io.oo ; half morocco, |i4.oo. 
" Just the_ book for which there is really a definite demand, and to supply it in a way that in 
scholarly merit, comprehen.siveness of range, charm of narration, and splendor of pictorial embellish- 
ment may readily be accepted as final. The qualifications of Professor Grosvenor for the great task 
he has undertaken and carried to so successful a conclusion are obvious.” — Beacon. 
‘‘ Will prove of double use in the world of letters. For tho.se who read at home of far-away cities 
this exhaustive and admirable work will open a mine of pleasure and information, enabling them to 
find in fancy the old city almost from its early mythological beginnings down to the present hour.” — 
Transcript. 
•‘An important and vahiable work on this famous city. * * * Constantinople is at present a 
subject of eager European interest and discussion, owing to the unsettled state of affairs between the 
Porte and the great Powers, the constant reports of grave insurrections, and the graver fears of a 
possible and momentous war. A de.scription of the city and its surroundings has, therefore, a timely 
intere.st far beyond the ordinary.” — Churchman. 
It is a book for all who have an interest in the world outside their own door, for the unlearned 
and the learned, for the traveller and for him who stays at home .” — Mail and E.vpress. 
“The book is a monument of .scholarly, conscientious work, and should have a place in every 
well-equipped library the country through.” — Christian Work. 
“There could hardly be a more propitious time than just now for the appearance of the great 
work ‘ Constantinople.’ It is no exaggeration to say that it is the most important iiopular treatise 
on CoiLStantinople from the historical and archaeological point of view that has yet appeared in 
English, and coming as it docs at a time when the fate of the capital of the East is hanging in the 
balance, it can hardly fail of being one of the books of the year. 
“ An immen.se collection of the choicest photographs was gathered for the enrichment of its 
pa^es, .so that after finishing the book the reader has almost the sensation of having himself 
visited the places described.” — Kepuhlican. 
At all Bookstores, or mailed, po.stpaid, on receipt of price. 
ROBERTS BROS., Publishers, Boston. 
