FOREWORD v who compensated him accordingly. His ex perience in that line alone took him all over the world and the ramifications of the business brought him into close contact with the mar keting of nearly every other commodity. But even had this not been so, he is the sort of man who would have sensed a business oppor tunity because he is naturally a keen observer and everything interests him. He is the type of man who absorbs information; he does not have to be shown—he sees. Here, then, is a man possessed of a fund of particularly desirable information—especially valuable to-day when Europe is war-mad and, in her sanguinary frenzy, has left open the door of opportunity to peaceful Uncle Sam. Why not put this information in concrete form for the benefit of American commerce? These considerations were put up to the author by some of his friends who knew him to be a keen, accurate, analytical observer, a writer and a raconteur of more than ordinary ability, and this book was the result. Probably never—let us fervently hope never