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2accommodation.
Times have changed.
Our people are looking to foreign fields.
Our merchants expect to derive some business from this section.
They must reach these fields by rail or ship travel, and when they arrive at their destination they have to take quarters in a dirty little hotel and get their food, worse than that to which they have been accustomed.
Of course, a few might argue that these hardships would only lend zest or interest to the trip and make the commercial triumphs OF ARCHIVES that much more appreciated, but the great majority of STATES Americans seeking foreign trade would remain no longer THE than necessary under unfavorable conditions and naturally seek to return to the comforts to which they are accustomed.
The German and French commercial pioneer has already set up a tollerance for bad hotels and food.
The German can endure it for weeks at a time, whereas an American traveling man will rush through his business in the hope or getting to a more comfortable place to life.
His haste is not entirely due to the bad hotel, but the hard ships he endures prod him to make haste and it is almost impossible to do a successful business in a Latin American country by crowding your purchased unduly.

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