Show t I. II Getting Credit 1 1 E most successful man is the one who L works in devotion to his calling Some lE ip 0 busy looking after the credit lines th that t te e are re unable to get the most out of their rk Few there are re who can resist the pall fan all claim the credit for a t successful movement They are human and want t to ti Known as the authors of their works They not to be condemned for it and yet vet we wel l k noticed that the biggest perso persons s are aree i e who stick to their tasks and let glory a h them out he big thin thing in life is to render s service Ih the he world and humanity It is one of the things that lives after death eath and the only ng g that counts Who Vho in America g book comprising the leading lights of The great majority of its subjects l len Ben who who have been given official credit heir work york In some quarters the book hook is as s the final estimate of worth fied If I day or so ago the name of Mrs Flo mison Miller was mentioned in our presence I ant nt to nothing us and wasn't even men- men menI I ned Ined in Who A little research i revealed that she is a social Mr r r and public speaker She is corre- corre I aries of the the international council of wen n in the United States and nd one of the Caries of the in ten rational council of I men en n. n She is district president of the mii Illi- Illi j i Federation of Women's clubs and at one i ne ivas was vas Republican state chairwoman for It rotate te She was formerly president of the omens omen's Relief corps of the United States lit Lu these and various other patriotic legis legis- iv and philanthropic capacities Mrs Miller Millers s abeen b been en prominently identified with a lon long J j II li list of accomplishments She She- has done her work without regard to the glory or the credit as is evidenced by the fact that she is still unlisted among the national leaders It would appear that there is still a little discrimination against women in our republic But while women like to bask under admiring glances they have always been broad enough to forego credit for their work Some prominent men in the United States would lose much of their glamour if their wives were given full credit for th their ir work |