[4] Nansen, whom she met at dinner at our house.

[5] Mexico as I saw It quickly passed into a second edition in spite of its price, and then fell out of print. Nearly ten years later Nelson and Sons decided to add it to their shilling Library of Travel. Strange as it may appear, not a single copy of the old edition was on the market anywhere, and we had to advertise three times before we could get a dirty copy to tear to pieces for correction for the printers. In August, 1911, the cheap edition was selling in thousands on the railway bookstalls of Great Britain.

[6] Since reproduced in a volume, Herbert Schmalz and his Work.

[7] Lord Inchcape.

[8] Now Mrs. W. L. Courtney.

INDEX


Mexico as I Saw It
By MRS. ALEC TWEEDIE
(née HARLEY)