THE XEW MAP OF EUROPE 



165 



ESTHONIAN NURSES WITH THEIR CONVALESCENT PATIENTS AT A TYPHUS HOSPITAL 



IN NARVA 



Esthonia is one of the three Baltic States whose independence has not heen recognized 

 by the United States. It set tip a republican form of government in February, 191S. Narva 

 is,.on the Narova River, the ontlet of Lake Peiptis into the Gulf of Finland. 



th£ Magyars was so shorn was handed to 

 the Hungarian delegates at Neuilly, near 

 Paris, on January 15, 1920, but was not 

 signed until the following June 4, in the 

 long gallery of the Grand Trianon at 

 Versailles. 



By the Peace Treaty of Neuilly, signed 

 November 27, 19 19, Bulgaria sustained a 

 smaller proportion of territorial losses 

 than any of the other Teutonic allies. Its 

 principal cessions of territory accrue to 

 the benefit of the Greeks, who gain Bul- 

 garian Thrace and thereby wrest the im- 

 portant ^Egean littoral from their hated 

 enemy of the Second Balkan War. 



To Jugo-Slavia the Bulgars surrender 

 a strip of territory which includes the 

 town of Strumitsa ; also two fragments 

 along the West Bulgarian front, one of 

 which contains the town of Tsaribrod. 



The estimated area of Bulgaria before 

 the war was slightly in excess of 43,000 

 square miles (about the size of Virginia), 

 with a population of 4,750,000. The new- 

 boundaries give the kingdom an area of 



approximately 41,000 square miles (the 

 size of Ohio). 



SUBJECT PEOPLES RELEASED FROM 

 TURKISH MISRULE 



By the provisions of the document 

 which will be known in history as the 

 Treaty of Sevres (not yet ratified by the 

 Turkish Government), the "Sick Man of 

 Europe," concerning whose health Tsar 

 Nicholas I of Russia first expressed grave 

 alarm nearly three-quarters of a century 

 ago, is dead. "Turkey in Europe" is now 

 scarcely more than a name — a small tract 

 of land (the Chatalja District) west of 

 Constantinople, embracing the area from 

 which the Sublime Porte gets its water. 



The Dardanelles, the Bosporus, and 

 the shores of the Sea of Marmora be- 

 come "The Zone of the Straits," con- 

 trolled and governed by an Interallied 

 Commission, and a small area, known as 

 the Suvla Reservation ( Gallipoli Penin- 

 sula), is set aside as a cemetery for the 

 Allies who fell in the attempt to take 



