26 SELLING LATIN AMERICA allowed our nation due to the fact that we are the largest consumers of her leading staple— coffee. According to government decree No. 9323, of January 17, 1912, flour imported from the States pays 30 per cent, less duty than if imported from any other land, while dried fruit, condensed milk, typewriters, rubber ar ticles, and supplies, scales, refrigerators, ce ment, corsets, school furniture, wind-mills, watches, desks and printing inks, pay 20 per cent, less duty than similar articles imported from other countries. Brazil exports coffee, rubber, hides, skins, cacao, tobacco, salt, cotton, sugar, woods, nuts, precious and semi-precious stones and gold. She imports foodstuffs, shoes, machinery, tex tiles, building woods, ammunition, wheat, automobiles, vehicles, codfish, dried fruits, glass, toilet articles, building and kitchen hardware, cement, scientific instruments, iron and steel, enamelled ware, paints and varnish, haberdashers’ goods, cottons, hats, corrugated iron, galvanized iron, tools, condensed milk, stationery, pipe, printing material and