Panama and the canal in picture and prose .. . TIVOLI HOTEL FROM HOSPITAL GROUNDS MESTIZO GIRL OF CHORRERA to attempt building up foreign trade. Inci-dentally sometimes what is goodenough for a home market is oftentoo good for a Latin-American English and the Germans recog-nize this and govern themselves ac-cordingly. It is a far cry from digging a canalto the system of educating youngmen to represent a firm in foreignlands. Yet one finds in visitingSouth America, or for that matterOriental cities, that a great deal ofthe rapid expansion of German tradeis due to the systematic educatio


Panama and the canal in picture and prose .. . TIVOLI HOTEL FROM HOSPITAL GROUNDS MESTIZO GIRL OF CHORRERA to attempt building up foreign trade. Inci-dentally sometimes what is goodenough for a home market is oftentoo good for a Latin-American English and the Germans recog-nize this and govern themselves ac-cordingly. It is a far cry from digging a canalto the system of educating youngmen to represent a firm in foreignlands. Yet one finds in visitingSouth America, or for that matterOriental cities, that a great deal ofthe rapid expansion of German tradeis due to the systematic education ofboys for business in foreign weakest part of the educationalsystem of the United States is itsindifference to foreign tongues, anindifference possibly quite natural be-cause but few Americans have reallyany need for any language excepttheir own. But the German represen-tatives sent to South America are athome in the Spanish tongue, and care- pSffiS^-^. < ^ < 0. o t; ^ S - < ^ S N < ^E^o z < < 1^ 1- ^Ei M z f^ fll . to -2 W^. fj •St, cJ N Sr c! vH^ &. f .a o T Tll < ^-S Ja ;:itII ft- -iiff - S E ^ y ?^jI*^ f ;;:^ i: THE NEED OF OUR OWN SHIPS AND BANKS 393 fully schoolfed in the commercialneeds and customs of the Latin-American countries before theyreach them. They are backed,too, by a strong semi-official or-ganization in their own have in most of the princi-pal South American towns Ger-man banks quite as interested asthe salesmen themselves in theextension of German trade. Itis reported that whenever paperinvolved in an American trans-action with a South Americanbuyer passes through a Germanbank in South America a reportof the transaction is sent to somecentral German agency whichtries to divert the next businessof the same sort into Germanhands. I have no personalknowledge of such transactions,but the story is current in SouthA


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Keywords: ., bookauthorabbotwil, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookyear1913