OCR Text |
Show THE CITIZEN Robert Wilson Newman, a graduate of Leland Stanford university, arrived n- - in in home during the week. Mr. and Mrs. Royal Eccles have returned from their New York trip. Mrs. E. B. Edlind and daughter, tie j Evelyn, of Cleveland, Ohio, are visit--in-g ia Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Becker, para ents of Mrs. Edlind. Miss Frances Pedler has returned from the Lombard school at Galesburg and will spend Ogden. to iy 0- the summer in daughters, Mary and Margaret, and son, M. Carl, Jr., and wife, left Friday by motor to visit Canada, after which they will drive down the Pacific coast to Mexico. WOMENS CLUBS How New York City, June 22. women may lift themselves out of routine jobs into the field of real business opportunity is one of the subjects that will be given intensive study by 2000 delegates at the annual convention of the National Federation of Business and Professional Womens Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Rudiger are touring California. They expect to visit their sons, W. F. Rudiger in Rudiger in Los Ungeles before they return. Oakland and Edward - jy y of m le J. A vo n- - The following boys and girls have returned from school: Miss Eugenie Portland, j Smith from Reed college, jOre.; Miss Josephine Becker from Los Angeles; Miss Ruth Craven and Miss Frances Hobbs from Salt Lake; iMiss Barbara Browning from Ross, Cal. ; Alvin Reynolds from Waynes boro, Va.; James H. DeVine, Jr., from I San Rafael, Cal.; James Farnsworth from Lincoln, Neb.; Stuart Healy from Williamstown, Mass. Miss Chrissie Hodge will spend the 'summer in the Maine woods and re ctum in the fall. She has been attending Columbia University, New York. r, he! Mrs. M. Carl ed Rogers and two ntui c- PHoroGim - rn ft? to i re ec 9 into the million-dollclubs at the 9 to 14. insurance meet. Merchandising, buyAt a series of ten vocational round ing and selling will be discussed by tables scheduled for Monday, July executives of the great department stores of the country. A group of the 9, at convention headquarters in the Hotel Roosevelt leaders in the various countrys leading advertising women businesses and professions will serve will touch upon all phases of advertisas chairmen and will draw from the ing and promotion and upon the opwomen who attend stories of the obportunities open to women in that stacles they have encountered in their field. Ways Up and Ways Out will be considered at the roundtable for professional progress. How to invade the banking field those engaged in secretarial work. The successfully will be the topics of colhardships of the doctor and the lawloquy at the roundtable for banking, yer who start to build up a practice investment and credit women. Insur- will .furnish a subject for a lively ance women will discuss how to get discussion at the rountable on law and medicine. The subject assigned for the educational roundtable is The Business Woman and the Schools. Problems of ownership, financial and personal, will engage the attention of the scores of Federation members who operate large and small establishments of their own, while office managers and office employees will offer illuminating suggestions at a round table on office technique. These vocational roundtables for the delegates will be in progress while the National Executive Board is in session at the Hotel Roosevelt outlining policies for presentation to the convention at the opening session on Tuesday, July 10. Important topics scheduled to come before the convention include a resolution to endorse the renewal of conversations between the United States and other countries who are now in the World Court; a resolution calling for vigorous prosecution of the Federations program to secure an increase in exemption for single persons under the Federal income tax laws, and a proposal that the organization align itself with the Conference for the Cause and Cure of War. Leading convention speakers include Anne Armstrong, former personnel director for the Eastman Kodak Co., of Rochester, N. Y., who is one of the leading writers on business womens problems today; Harriet Taylor Upton of Warren, Ohio, veteran suffragist and nationally known lecturer on political problems, and Miss Mary Walker, stylist, of New York City, who will give the program a lighter, but none the less vital touch by telling what an wardimportant asset a robe may be to the business woman. Clubs in New Orleans, Louisiana, July ar well-select- e ne! er,: rs. IJwlMfc Besk.... ed I I I i i it ; t i i ! ! ! ! Li i I i : i i : SEND IT TO THE LAUNDRY a photograph DAD wants and the children, framed for his office desk And to you it will become more precious with each passing year. Make an ap pointment today Wilcox Studio 122jV4 i South Main Distinctive Work Vi. i State-wid- e 1 nmuAnom Bathing Girl Revue to be held at Saltair Hyland 190 ; |