I keep thinking that if I was back home in Milwaukee I would know a ton of folks bilingual in Polish and English and many of them would have relatives in those Illinois locations, at the very least. When I was growing up in Milwaukee about half of the shops needed at least on employee who was bilingual in Polish and nearly all of the South Side stores had signage in both languages. That was just an accepted part of city life. Funny thing, when the same thing started to happen with Spanish speakers who had moved in from Texas (yes, from Texas, folks) there was an uproar about signs and service in 2 languages. Go figure.
(In the later 1960s and early 1970s, thousands of Texas based migrant farm worker families that ha previously worked each summer the Wisconsin fields were displaced by mechanization. As it happened, I worked with some of the folks that helped them to resettle in Milwaukee where there were plenty of jobs., and got to know quite a few of the families.. They immediately founded a credit union and a weekly newspaper. Their ancestors had become US citizens when we annexed Texas, not by immigrating.)
Based in MD, near DC
Shopping from the Carolinas to New York
Have video cam; will travel
Poor customer service? Don't get mad; get video.