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Show THE REVIEW. 4 tion of women in city government may do is well expressed Published Weekly. by New Ideas, which says, editorially: ANNIE M. BRADLEY, Editor and Manager. The women are developing a 241 East South Temple St. talent for several lines of municievinces their that pal caretaking I SUBSCRIPTION fitness for official pospeculiar One Year, ji.oo. itions of this kind. Especially Six Months, 50. their fitdemonstrated have they Rates for Advertising made known on ness as fadtory and sanitary application. and they are a valuable Entered at the Postoffice at Salt Lake City as fadtor in eliminating the sweat Second class matter . shop" nuisance. Wherever women appointees have predomSATURDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1897. inated in these lines, immediate has beand marked improvement Neof the At the Convention come apparent. Not long since Woof Federation State braska the Mayor of Chicago appointed men Clubs the president Mrs. a woman as sanitary inspedlor, Belle Stoutenborough in her adand the funny newspapers immedress made the following origito print pidlures of diately began remarks: nal boxes with bows of ribEducation plus confidence garbage bon knotted on the corners and enthusiasm education ; equals with ai- ornamented tastefullv livis minus selfishness beautiful grettes of defundt feather dusters. by oppormultiplied ability ing; But that's all right," says the edutunity equals responsibility; better cation minus selfishness multipli- undaunted inspedlress, have bows of ribbon than buned by adlivity divided by system, and worms that ches of equals the Nebraska Federation mean the bugs of disease. Betspread of Women's Clubs. Other strikter have a trifle of aestheticism said her were: by ing things carelessness and negliEnthusiasm must be diredted than the gence which charadterize present The of information." wealth by the world is intelligence. The methods." man who bought the Angelusfor In Jamestown, Kan., at last $105,000 paid sixty cents for the canvass and $104,999.40 for the spring's eledtion a woman mayor, and four women councilors were intelligence that made the picele&ed, the other officers of the ture." There is not an apartment in city being men. The ticket was the Woman's Club that can be suggested by the men of the made available for cold storage. town, and from all reports the "Club women must be able to results show that the women are command and willing to serve." discharging their duties in a and businesslike Some of the subjedts discussed were Fostering Art in the Public Schools; Public Libraries, Village Improvement Work ; and the Another evidence of the confimixed of advisability organizing dence imposed in the club women clubs. of a community, comes from In an editorial in "New Ideas," Denver, where the business men the editor expresses his approval and officials of the City have of the of women in turned the matter of building an auditorium, large enough to acmunicipal affairs. He says: commodate any of the national How much good the The Review. in-spedle- rs, a , satis-fadlor- co-operati- on co-ope- ra y conventions over to the Denver club women. This projedt has been discussed by the men for a long time, and now they feel convinced if the club women can be induced to take hold of the matter, it is an assured success. The following is taken from the Denver Evening Post: For their efforts they- should have a free lease of headquarters as long as the building remains intact. Besides this, they should be given a contfoling vote in directing its management. If it is left in their charge its conduct will always be of the dignified, rather than the loose and In Milwaukee it is hinted that the Board of has devoted the strudt-ur- e to questionable enterprises. With the women in control in the Board of Management, the possibility of a repetition of this in Denver would be forever pre- semi-disgracef- Man-ageme- ul. nt cluded. Another proposition upon which the men relv, if the execu- tion of the idea is placed in the hands of the Womans Club, is the matter of general thoroughness in detail to which the auditorium would be subjected, and the taking it out of the grasp of those imbued with speculative ideas. Real estate men could not "make or break" the affair, as some of them have asserted in the past. It would at once be placed on a basis combining the two essential elements dignity and success. Mrs. Kate Bridewell Anderson. Formerly of New Orleans, and recently of Ogden, has opened a vocal studio in Unity Hall, 28 W. 3rd South. Operatic repertoire a specialty. Hours from 10 until 2 p. m., except Wednesdays and Saturdays. fiFor Private Tea Parties, Musicales, Clubs, Socials, dancing, etc., there is no better place in thecitythan Landrum's Terps-ichorea- n College, 3d South St., between Main and West Temple. |