Plenty of Room for All Europe 



THE I'liiii'd Slates can swallow .ill 

 of Kuropc — area, population ancl 

 all — as will he seen in the accom- 

 panying map, which shows in a vixiil 

 i manner how wiile is the expanse of the 

 coimtr\- we live in. 



The entire comhineil (■i)nii:)nte<l area of 

 the foreign countries noted on the map 

 and the area of the western United States 

 ' are very nearly the same. The dis- 

 crepancy is a bare fifteen thousand 



more than fifty-one millions of people 

 accommodated within its boundaries. 



IMorc striking, however, is corpulent 

 Idaho witii its three hundred and 

 twenty-h\e thousand inhabitants li\ing 

 in an area sufficient to (quarter sixteen 

 millions of Europeans li\ing in four large 

 countries. Then there are Montana and 

 North Dakota with their nine hundred 

 thousand peoplcenjoyingenough room for 

 Spain and Portugal's twenty-five millions. 



A Map Showing How Snugly the ^Different European Countries Would Fit into the Western 

 United States, Mighcy Russia Occupying As Much Space As All the Other Countries Combined 



scjuare miles on Europe's side. At the 

 same time, however, Russia in Europe 

 would spread over the whole western 

 part of our country, crowding it to the 

 doors with its one hundred and eleven 

 millions of people, being the largest of 

 all the European countries. 



The State of California has ample 

 (juarters for seven European countries, 

 but its i5o[)ulation is only a little o\er 

 two millions, whereas little Roumania 

 alone harbors just about seven million 

 inhaljitants. 



Aiistro-Hungary fits rather tightly 

 •icross the shoulders in Texas, which has 

 a scatteretl population of nearh' four 

 millions, whereas Austro-Hungary has 



New American Porcelain Utensils a 

 Result of the War 



OXE of the results of the war was the 

 stoppage of the importation of la- 

 boratory porcelain, and this has resulted 

 in the manufacture of laboratory porce- 

 lain in this country, which has stof)d the 

 hydrochloric acid tests equalK- well with 

 that manufactured by the royal Berlin 

 pottery in Germany, which until now 

 has been regarded as the standard. 



The cooking porcelain ware is being 

 produced in ivory, white, brown bctty, 

 and olive green, plain and decorated, 

 and for private ward w-ork the pretty 

 ilecorations and delicacy of the ware 

 make the ptjrcelain highly attractive. 



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