PARAGUAY 59 never has revived. Recent revolutions have set it back still further and whatever of good may come to this benighted land must be writ ten in the future tense. Paraguay is almost an inland country, hav ing but one outlet to the sea in the Parana River. Its 196,000 square miles of territory is bounded on the north by Brazil and Bolivia; on the west and south by Argentine, and on the east by Argentine and Brazil. The Paraguay River runs directly through its territory from south to north dividing it into two sections, Western Paraguay, or the Chaco, and East ern Paraguay. It is well watered with many- small streams, while toward the north and east are mountain chains. The climate of Paraguay is so equable that the country is sometimes called the “Sanitar ium.” The two seasons are the rainy and the dry. It never snows in this land and flowers in great variety and a riot of color bloom con stantly. The southern two-thirds are in the Temperate Zone, the northern one-third in the Tropic Zone.