Table Showing Membership of the National Geographic 



Population of Bach State. 



Society in Proportion to the 



District of Columbia 



California 



Massachusetts 



Connecticut 



Nevada 



Montana 



New York 



Colorado 



Arizona 



Vermont 



New Jersey 



Delaware 



Wyoming 



New Hampshire 



Rhode Island 



Maine 



Washington 



Illinois 



Pennsylvania 



Idaho 



Oregon 



Maryland 



Utah 



Minnesota 



Ohio 



Michigan 



Florida 



New Mexico 



Missouri 



Wisconsin 



Iowa 



Indiana 



North Dakota 



South Dakota 



Kansas 



West Virginia 



Kentucky 



Virginia 



Nebraska 



Tennessee 



Louisiana 



Georgia 



Texas 



South Carolina 



Oklahoma 



North Carolina 



Arkansas 



Alabama 



Mississippi 



lember to every 97 of the population 

 98 " 

 132 

 141 

 147 

 150 

 170 

 180 



" " 218 



" " 222 " " 



234 " 



235 



245 



245 



246 " 

 252 " 

 " • " 255 



255 " 

 288 " 

 308 " 

 320 

 327 

 342 



346 " 

 367 " 

 41/ " 

 436 " 

 450 



466 " 

 496 



538 " 

 590 

 590 

 597 



744 " 

 766 " 

 871 " 

 882 



885 " 

 " 1,205 " 

 1,394 

 1,421 



" 1-457 " 

 " " 1,630 " " 



" i,673 " 

 1,685 " 

 1,918 



2,188 " 

 2,388 



"I am very much interested in the 

 Magazine, because it expresses more 

 than any other the healthiest, happiest 

 interest that one can know — Nature;/' 



"I feel that every adult (over 12 years) 

 should read — and see — it every month. 

 I am one of those people who believe that 

 war might be made impossible by ac- 

 quainting the peoples of the world with 

 one another. Certainly, your splendid 

 Magazine is one of the best means we 

 have of telling the American people about 

 their 'brothers across the seas.' " 



Housed in its new building, with addi- 

 tional facilities for work in every one 

 of its departments, with a rising tide of 

 enthusiasm among its membership of 

 285,000, which is scattered among 15,200 

 post-offices in continental United States, 

 222 post-offices in the territories and in- 

 sular possessions of the United States, 

 and in 1,782 post-offices in the foreign 

 countries of the world, the second quar- 

 ter-century of the career of the National 

 Geographic Society opens with a pros- 

 pect without parallel in the history of 

 geographic education. 



