[Ranching, Sport and Travel by Thomas Carson]@TWC D-Link book
Ranching, Sport and Travel

CHAPTER IX
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New York, incomparable for its fabulous wealth, its unequalled shops, its magnificently and boldly-conceived office buildings and apartment blocks, its palatial and perfectly-appointed hotels, its dirty and ill-paved streets, is the marvel of the age and is every year becoming more so.

Its growth continues phenomenal.

If not now it will soon be the pulse of the world.
There is never occasion in American hotels, as there is in English, in my own experience, to order your table waiter to go and change his greasy, filthy coat or to clean his finger-nails! No, in the smallest country hotel in the United States the proprietor knows that his guests actually prefer a table servant to have clean hands, a clean coat, etc., and waiters in restaurants are obliged to wear thin, light and noiseless boots or shoes, not clodhoppers.
That phenomenon and much-criticized individual, the American child, is blessed with such bright intelligence that at the age of ten he or she is as companionable to the "grown-up" as the youth of twenty of other countries, and much more interesting.
English people are inclined to think Americans brusque and even not very polite.

Let me assure them that they are the politest of people, though happily not effusive.

They are also the most sympathetic and, strange as it may appear, the most sentimental.


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