1.4
Modern Business Geography
A
a.
-»
3"
~
" HUNDRED THOUSAND MILE.
Fi16. 133. The railroad mileage of the different continents in 1923, from the latest figures available.
North America has almost half of the total mileage. Compare this map with Figure 158 (page 236)
and Figure 176 (page 284). With which of the two does it correspond more nearly ?
One reason for the contrast between the United States and Europe
is the size of the countries. Our own country is so large and the popu-
lation so scattered that people take long journeys. The passengers
need room to move around and to make themselves comfortable, and
thus corridors are necessary. People must be provided with food,
either in dining cars or at regular restaurant stations, and they must
have places to sleep. In western Europe, on the other hand, trains
rarely run beyond the limits of a single country. The countries are so
small and the great cities are so close together that journeys of more
than ten or twelve hours are rare, and therefore there is little need
of so many conveniences to make people comfortable. In the larger
countries, however, such as the former Austrian Empire and especially
Russia, the distances are so great that people take long journeys,
as they do in the United States. and there the trains are more like
ours.
How electric railways are useful. Electric railways, or tramways,
as they are called in Europe, are a type of railroad especially adapted
to cities and their suburbs. There they transport passengers and
freight for short distances much more easily and cheaply than can
railroads. One reason is that their tracks cost much less than those of
ordinary railroads. Moreover, their right of way — that is, the privi-
lege of running in the street — costs little or nothing. Since the
streets have already been graded and since the light cars can climb
steep grades, little cutting, filling, and tunneling have to be done.