E-text prepared by Juliet Sutherland, David Cortesi,
and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team
()
Several minor typographical errors have been corrected in transcribingthis work. The corrected words are shown with a light underscore likethis: continue. Hover the mouse overthe word to see the original text. Typos aside, the text is original and retainssome inconsistent or outdated spellings. This HTML file uses the Latin-1(ISO 8859-1) character set, but all non-ASCII characters are renderedusing HTML entity notation, for example Æ for Æ.
The original contains two lengthy addenda supplied by the publisherwhich were not named in the Table of Contents.Entries for these have been added to the Contents for convenient linking.
The 44 full-page illustrations from the original are shown inline inreduced form. Click any illustration to open a larger version thatwill print at the original size.
Despite the many testimonials in this book, as of 2008, the source ofthe Mississippi is considered to be Lake Itasca. Following a five-monthinvestigation in 1891 it was decided that the stream from Elk Lake (thebody that Glazier would have called Lake Glazier) into Itasca is tooinsignificant to be deemed the river's source. Both lakes can be seen,looking much as they do in the maps in this book, by directing anyonline mapping service to 47°11'N, 95°14'W.

