1 n £# 



National Geographic IVIagazine 



AN ILLUSTRATED MONTHLY 



Editor: JOHN HYDE, 

 Statistician of the U. S. Department of Agriculture 



Associate Editors 



General A. W. Greely, Marcus Baker, 



Chief Signal Officer, U. S. Artny U. S. Geological Survey 



W J McGee, Willis L. Moore, 



Ethnologist in Charge, Bureau of Chief of the Weather Bureau, U. S. 



American Ethnology DepaHnient of Agricultut e 



Henry Gannett, H. S. Pritchett, 



Chief Geographer, U. S. Geological Superintendent of the U. S. Coast 



Survey and Geodetic Survey 



C. Hart Merriam, O. P. Austin, 



Chief of the Biological Survey, U.S. Chief of the Bureau of Statistics, 



Department of Agriculture U. S. Treasury Department 



David J. Hill, Charles H. Allen, 



Assistant Secretary of State Governor of Porto Rico 



Eliza Ruhamah Scidmore, Carl Louise Garrison, 



Author of "fava, the Garden of Principal of Phelps School, Wash- 



the East,''^ etc. ington, D. C. 



Gilbert H. Grosvenor, lVashiftgto7i, D. C. 



SPECIAL MAPS 



PUBLISHED BY THE 



National Geographic Magazine 



Map of Alaska (28 x 24 inches). Vol. IX, No. 4. 



Chart of the World on Mercator's Projection (48 x 27 inches). Vol. VII, No. 3. 



Map of South Africa (46 x 33 inches). Vol. X, No. 12. 



Map of the Chinese Empire, Japan, and the Russian-Manchurian Railway 



(11 X 7i inches). Vol. XI, No. 8. 

 Twelve Maps on the Alaskan Boundary Dispute. Vol. X, No. 11. 

 Map of Cuba (18 x 7h inches). Vol. IX, No. 5. 

 Twent)'-five Full-page Charts, showing storm tracks and methods of weather 



forecasting. Vol. VIII, No. 3. 

 Map of Northeastern China (36 x 28 inches). Vol. XI, No. 9. 



By Mail for 25 Cents Each 

 CORCORAN BUILDING : : : WASHINGTON, D. C. 



Entered at the Post-office in Washington, D. C, as Second-class Mail Matter. 



