FOREIGN TRADE 9 terminated her bloodiest revolution under Castro, harvesting and exporting a bumper crop of coffee, which immediately cleared up her monetary depression, and this rapid con valescent condition has been duplicated time and time again after every period of internal trouble experienced by all of these countries. Nature has been bounteous in her gifts to these favored lands of the sun. If in a given locality the soil is not fertile, it is rich in min eral wealth, or covered with luxuriant for ests. Throughout Latin America large and small rivers afford easy and cheap means of transportation. Drought or excessive rain falls are comparatively unknown. Despite the fact that a majority of the population lives primitively, epidemics of a severe nature have been few and far between. Revolutions, for merly the blight on these lands, are becoming rare and in most of these countries there have been no such uprisings or demonstrations of this character for more than twenty years. The opportunities for successful business in almost any chosen line in Latin America are