NOTE.—Since February. 1908, the Topography Division has been preparing rural delivery maps of counties in which rural-delivery is completely establisned. They are published in two forms, one giving simply the rural free delivery routes starting from a single given post office, sold at 10 cents each; the other, the rural free delivery routes in an entire county, sold at 50 cents each. A uniform scale of 1 inch to 1 mile is used. Editions are not issued, but sun-print copies are produced in response to special rails addressed to the Disbursing Clerk, Post-Office Department. These maps should not be confused with the post route maps for which see Monthly catalogue for January, 1912, page 424.
Notes:
NOTE.—Since February. 1908, the Topography Division has been preparing rural delivery maps of counties in which rural-delivery is completely establisned. They are published in two forms, one giving simply the rural free delivery routes starting from a single given post office, sold at 10 cents each; the other, the rural free delivery routes in an entire county, sold at 50 cents each. A uniform scale of 1 inch to 1 mile is used. Editions are not issued, but sun-print copies are produced in response to special rails addressed to the Disbursing Clerk, Post-Office Department. These maps should not be confused with the post route maps for which see Monthly catalogue for January, 1912, page 424.