FOREWORD ni he is still a young man with a modern view point. He speaks the languages of many countries and speaks them well. His infor mation is first-hand, reliable data gathered on the ground where he lived and worked, whose people he knew and could speak to in their own tongue, not the unreliable, superficial va- porings of some dilettante globe-trotter who has given the high-spots of civilization the “once over” and therefore considers himself a competent authority to write upon the com merce, customs and manners of foreign coun tries the very languages of which he does not understand without the aid of an interpreter, or who could not find his way back to the railway station or dock without the assistance of a guide. Doctor Aughinbaugh is no such lightweight. He has not written this book because he be lieves he knows it all. Left to himself he would never have written it. It was only after repeated urgings on the part of some of his friends who appreciated his ability to write an unusual book, that he consented to