FINANCE AND CREDITS 305 can gold is in demand. By taking ad vantage of these conditions much money can be saved in the course of a long trip. The opening of American banks in Latin America will do much toward making the dollar popular and travelers are advised to take out letters of credit through United States banks with local branches in these lands. It has been the understood custom for the correspondent banking house on whom a letter of credit was drawn to give the holder all in formation desired as to the rating and financial standing of local merchants and to aid him in every way possible. This was done in theory more than in practice. Assuming that your letter of credit was on an English bank in Buenos Aires, and that you were selling cot ton goods, it would be most natural for the bank manager in Argentine to evade all direct information as to a possible customer’s stand ing, especially if his home institution had been discounting bills for a good client in England drawn against the local merchant. This is generally the attitude of bank managers in