PROPAGANDA AGAINST U. S. N S. AMERICA FROM EUROPEAN SOURCES At first the charges that European ‘ was suddenly thrown upon her own nations and interests through their| resources after she had spent two press services and newspaper control| years at Smith College. Forced to inâ€" were disseminating propagand.!cmm her small income, she went to against the United States in Latin} work during a Christmas rush in a America were dismissed by a great department store as Sectional Floor many people as the remarks of posâ€" Manager and with the double idea of sibly too zealous nationists in the developing a profession for herself United States. Bdt gradually it is and to helping the tired sales girls getting to be understood that there is command better pay, she decided to a great deal in these charges of Eurâ€" specialize in salesmanship. opean propagandizing against the She finally induced the store to perâ€" United States in the countries to the mit her to enter the School of Eduâ€" south of us. A great many representaâ€" cation for Store Service and, after tive Pusiness men and educators from learning all that was available there, our country have been traveling in Sshe began installing similar schools South America during the past year in stores which had not developed or twa and~nearly all of them bring them. back the same storyâ€"and it is the "At first," she told The American â€"tory of a very cleverly conducted Megazine, which tells of her work, cumpaign of propaganda against your "I spend hours shopping in a store to Unole Samuel in the countries of :C just what it needs in the way of South America. improved sales service. The imporâ€" No Doubt About it Recently a wellâ€"known middle westâ€" ern newspaperman said in Washingâ€" ton on his way back from the Latin republies that there was no doubt about this program, this it was apâ€" parent to anyone who took the trouble toâ€"investigcte in anvy of the South Press dispatches recently quoted Mr. E. J. Sader. director of the Standâ€" ard Oil company of New Jersey, as stating on his return from a trip to the south that antâ€"North American propaganda is being broadcast in South America and is being paid for by business competitors of the United States. Mr. Sadler is quoted as sayâ€" the south t propaganda South Ame: by busine=s States. Mr. ing: "North Americans are pictured as selfish, boorish and money grabbing. We are particularly handicapped by the type of news which the news buâ€" reaus send down there; mainly prize fights. bomb outrages and sensational divorces. They don‘t hear about flood relief. civic betterments and such things." * ‘ It may be stated in all fairness that most of the news agencies supplying the South American newspapers with their foreign news are controlled by European capital. Now it is to the interest of European interests to preâ€" sent the United States in as unfavorâ€" able a light as possible in South Amerâ€" ica. Hence all the outery in the Eurâ€" opéan press about our ‘"imperialism" when we intervene in some warâ€"torn country to the south of us to protect human life and property. Trade Gains > Since the Wotld War the United States has made great inroads on the South American trade. European naâ€" tions have naturally suffered and they hope to get a great deal of this busiâ€" mess back by creating as many rifts as possible between the United States and the countrics of Latin America. American countrics That these efforts are not uniformly successful we can be sincerely thankâ€" ful. One indication that our< Latin neighbors are not always fooled may be found in a recent statement by President Lequiaâ€"of Peru who said that imperialism and declared that our influence in Latin America is essential to guard our interests there. The Monroe Doctrine and the doctrine of intervention, he maintained, were necessary to safeguard the right of So, in spite of the false propaganda, | Uncle Sam has a great many good | friends in South America. The way | to increase the number is to get betâ€" | ter acquainted with our‘ neighbors to | the south and to show them that we are none of the things which the Euâ€" ropean propagandists paint us. Keeping pace with the demand for manufactured gas in the Chicago disâ€" trict, the capacity of gas holders will be increased 30,000,000 cubic feet mer will visit America on a combina tion lecture and osculatory barn storming trip.â€"â€"The American Maga within the next two years. This will bring the total capacity of gas holders serving the region to 125,483,000 cubic feetâ€"32 times the space enclosed by the Tribune Tower, one of Chicago‘s skyscrapers, having a content of about 4,000,000 cubic feet. * in the world, to be erected on Chiâ€" cago‘s southâ€"side by The Peoples Gas Light and Coke Company, will bave a capacity of 20,000,000 cubic feet. Anâ€" other. now being built at Maywood, a suburb, by the Public Service Comâ€" pany of Northern Illinois, will have a content of 10,000,000 cubic feet. The first named company only reâ€" cently completed a 15,000,000 cubic feet gas container on the north side of the city. kiszs the leudest. Doubtiess the .winâ€" Champion Radio Kisser A radio contert is being held in France to see which contestant can GAS TANKS IN CHICAGO DISTRICT TO BE LARGER ( Mistening to an opposition speaker Latin America Warns in size to any TEACHING SHOP GIRLS HOWâ€"TO BESTâ€"DO WORK College Woman Makes Place for Herself in Big Store by Using Head COLORADO BUILDS ROAD MINUS GRADE CROSSINGS years ago a shop girl in one of the large Boston department stores has outlived the grind of bargain day rushes and is now teaching other girls how to get out of the rut of dull Miss Gilmore of Cambridge, Mass., was suddenly thrown upon her own resources after she had spent two years at Smith College. Forced to inâ€" crease her small income, she went to work during a Christmas rush in a "At first," she told The American Mogazine, which tells of her work, "I spend hours shopping in a store to ~c just what it needs in the way of improved sales service. The imporâ€" tance of instituting a school of sales service is to make the employes want it because of the additional opportuâ€" nities it will give them." After installing a store service, Miss Gilmore leaves it in a self supâ€" porting state and goes on to another field. Mundreds of store employes owe largely increased salaries and better working conditions to the inâ€" tensive study of their own jobg and the wants of the customers, through Miss Gilmore‘s plan. Seventyâ€"four â€" miles of â€" concrete read reaching from Denver to Colsâ€" rado Springs, during the construction ufâ€" which thirteen â€" grade | crossing» were thrown into the discard by mean~ of grade separation, is one of the â€" accomplishments | of â€" Colorado this year, according to a bulletin issued by the highway department of the Chicago Motor club. Sharp turnâ€" aund arzles have been convers»d into broad sweeping curves, and step grades have been leveled down to easily negotiable hills, thus setting zn example which other communities may consider w h profit when conâ€" templating highway buildmg activiâ€" ties. If the politicians do as much for the farmers as they promise, farm land ouzht to be selling at a thousand dolâ€" lars an acre a year from now. Vitaphone and Movietone will be at the . Alcyon Theatre PORTLAND CEMENT ASSOCIATION Pavements Stay Smooth as Built A National Organization to Improve and Extend the Uses of Concrete Pavements in any growâ€" ing district must be cut occasionally to install water and sewer conâ€" nections. Cuts in portland cement concrete pavement can be quickly and neatly patched, leaving a perâ€" manently smooth surâ€" face, with no unsightly blemishes. Watch For Dates but a few oncrete 33 West Grand Avenue ) CHICAGO Offices in 32 INTERESTING FACTS ABOUT THIS STATE The electors of this: partly rural and partly suburban township reâ€" cently voted a $200,000 fund to illâ€" uminate every street corner, highway intersection and railway crossing withâ€" in its confines. editor in lllinois is Harry C. Manâ€" gold, 19 years old, of the Cobden Reâ€" interurban track by electric railways during 1927. lilinois, with more than $3,843,000,â€" 000 deposited in its national and state banks, ranks third among the states in ‘bank capitalization and deposits. lllinois ranks fifth among the states in the production of wheat. More high pressure transmission mains for manufactured gas were laid in Illinois than in any other state during 1927. Geologists agree that at least five glaciers have passed over the terriâ€" tory that is now Illinois. An important step toward rural clectrification in Wisconsin has been taken in Lake townâ€"hip, just south of Milwaukee. Lake township will be the best lighted rural township in the state. Three lighted rural township in the state. Three hundred and seven lamps are to be installed with a combined brilliance of 124,600 candlepower. . Pontiac and Blackhawk are the most prominent Indians in Hllinois history. lllinois ranks second among the states in the number of horses, third in the number of swine, and fourth in the number of cows. The first national legislation relatâ€" ing to Illinois was enacted by the Continental Congress in 1775 when Illinois was designated as one of the Indian departments. The first Congregational church in Illinois was built at Princeton in 1835. WISCONSIN TOWNSHIP TO LIGHT HIGHWAYS The lllinois Traction System holds THE HIGHLAND PARK PRESS, HIGHLAND ?ARK, ILLINOLS Slip Covers, New Tops, Curtains Bevel Plate or Celluloid Windows, Floor Rugs, Auto Trimmings J. M. 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