A Yankee in the Far East. George Hoyt Allen
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George Hoyt Allen
A Yankee in the Far East
Published by Good Press, 2019
EAN 4064066219383
Table of Contents
II "MISSOURI" AND HIS FALSE TEETH
III WONG LEE—THE HUMAN BELLOWS
IV HAWAII—AND THE FISHERMAN WHO'D SIGN THE PLEDGE
VI THE JAPS' FIVE-STORY SKYSCRAPER AND A BASEMENT
VII JAPANESE GIRLS IN AMERICAN COSTUMES—THEY MAR THE LANDSCAPE
VIII CEREMONIOUS GRANDMOTHER—"MISSOURI" A HEAVENLY TWIN
X MISSIONARIES, TRACTS, AND A JOB WORTH WHILE
XI YAMAMOTO AND HIGH COST OF LIVING
XII THE SOLDIER SAID SOMETHING IN CHINESE
XIII TEN THOUSAND TONS ON A WHEELBARROW AND THE ANANIAS CLUB
XIV "MISSOURI" MEETS A MISSIONARY
XVI THE ISLANDS "DISCOVERED" BY DEWEY
XVII WHITE FILIPINOS, AGUINALDO, AND THE BUSY MOTH
XVIII SINGAPORE—THE HUMORIST'S CLOSE CALL
XIX THE HINDU GUIDE A SAINT WOULD BE
XX PENANG—A BIRD, THE FEMALE OF ITS SPECIES, AND THE MANGOSTEEN
XXIII THE RANGOON BUSINESS MAN WHO DROVE HIS SERMON HOME
XXIV THE GLASS OF ICE WATER THAT JARRED RANGOON
XXV THE CALCUTTA SACRED BULL AND HIS TWISTED TAIL
XXVI THE GUIDE WHO WOULDN'T SIT IN "MASTER'S" PRESENCE
XXVII ROYALTY VS. "TWO CLUCKS AND A GRUNT"
XXVIII ONE WINK, SIXTEEN CENTS, AND ROYALTY
XXIX THE ENGLISHMAN AND MARK TWAIN'S JOKE, "THAT'S HOW THEY WASH IN INDIA"
XXX ENGLISH AS "SHE IS SPOKE" IN INDIA
XXXI A FIVE DAYS' SAIL AND A MEASLY POEM
XXXII BEATING THE GAME WITH ONE SHIRT
XXXIII THROUGH HELL GATE STEERAGE
AUTHOR'S PREFACE
There are so many ways suggested these days by the various periodicals on how to make money at home, it would seem that all ingenuity in that direction must be exhausted; but how to make money abroad seems to me to be almost a virgin field.
New pastures have always interested me, and if I can add to the sum of human happiness by a wise suggestion, and point the way to satisfy an almost universal longing to see the world—for instance, if I can show how one can make a luxurious world tour and come out ahead of the game while doing it—I shall be only too glad.
It's no new trick to beat one's way around the world with the hardships attending such an enterprise, but to tell how to do it in ease and luxury surely ought to earn me the gratitude of my fellow-men.
Get a bunch of pencils and some pads of paper and announce to a waiting editorial world that you are about to take a trip around the globe, and that you propose to write some letters of travel and syndicate them. That, for a consideration, you'll let some good papers print 'em.
Don't be modest about naming a good round price for the consideration of letting your papers in. Because you'll need the money.
All editors you'll find are hankering for letters of travel.
Letters of travel are a novelty. The first editor you call on early in the morning, say about ten o'clock (that's early enough to get to work in this new enterprise I'm tipping you off to—gone is grinding toil and worry—let others moil), this first editor of some big daily (big dailies are the easiest)—don't be timid—brace right up to him, and give him your proposition in a nutshell—easy-like—right off the bat.
It will be a pleasure to you to watch him brighten up at your offer.
Managing editors of big dailies are hard-worked men.
Atlas' job (merely physical) is easy compared with the mental strain and worry the managing editor of a big daily paper is subjected to these days.
You'll find him feeling the need of something—it's travel dope.
Don't