The evening world. Newspaper, July 17, 1922, Page 19

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HAT is she like? ‘Tht is the SW first thing ore wongrs about any woman whose name ‘* being heralded from one erf of tl country to the other because of te contribution she is making to he affairs of her generation. Florence HB. Allen, the only wman Judge of an Americar Court of°om- mon Pleas, whose irienfs p@ this month getting 50,000 sgvituré to pe- titions which will nit her a candidate for the Su/eme Court of Ohio. The minute you s/ her, she reg- fsters favorably in Our mind and your heart. You pw at a glance that she is a fine *man and at the same time a most Pable comrade. If you see her fir discussing some weighty problem the administra~ tion of justice, y Will remark the set, firm line of ¥ mouth, her clear blue eyes and thproad whiteness of her high forehey If you catch her enjoying immeyly some humorous situation, you ¥ find yourself irre- sistibly drawnby the wholesome, quick, twisty gile that changes her whole expressh from judgely seri- ousness to on/of contagious amuse- ment. Judge illen his rosy cheeks and their colgis real om long daily walks in the ty and @untry as time allows. Herieavy far hair follows simply the le of he: shapely head, falling “by te grace if God" in be- coming wavs about br face, for this unusual wonan has sill another dis- tinction. {0 far a known Judge ‘Allen is th: only wan of position in America who doenot use a look- ing-glass,” There isio mirror in the Judge's private apément. In fact, simplicity, honesty 14 modesty seem to mark Judge Frence E. Allen's hours off the peneRS well as the ad- ministration of hepublic office. Elected to the/ourt of Common Pleas on an indendent ticket—ac- cording to her Wefs that the judi- ciary offices of t country should be non-partisan ar Judges free to act without considels the political con- ections bearir On the case—Judge Allen is carryi on her campaign for the Supreme «rt of Ohio seat along lines similar tier Previous campaign, and comes bre the people of Ohto again a non-ftisan independent with Jeading men!d women of the Repub- Mean and Imocratic Parties on her committee dorsing her on merit and record alon Just skiryur eye over this record of accomistments—and remember that this ) thi story of a woman who finds tim, inaddition, to be an ac- complishd msician, ~ Well, »erhps if we got up every morning at o'clock, as the Judce does, we cot! have had former As- sistant Attory General of the United States, Fra} Davis jr., favoring our election “pyly on the ground of abil- ity and fitps."’ Five o'clock getting up time is {itself an index of charac- ter these d's. Here's ;Sample of Judge Allen's way of ging things done: “Fror 1906-1909 she managed to hol@ position on the edi- torial #ff of the Cleveland Plain Dealerto take her M. A. deggee tm Poteal Science and to teach at Lel School for Girls in Clevend, following her gradua- tion Western Reserve Univer- aity. Trnext year she studied law at Chigo University, became legal invelgator of the New York F:MOUS WOMEN THIMARZHIONESS OF BRIN- VILLI LIERS. E Mrchioness of Brinvil- I lierewas a daughter of M. Drex ubray, a high offich! inhe reign of Louis XIV. In 161 #¢ was married to the Marquis f Brinvilliers, heir to an enornus fortune. din, comenly known . Croix, ye introduced into the family. She soon fell in love with hi and got a separation from hehusband. Her conduct becameh indal of Paris, and de Brirlliers had St. Croix im- prisonein the Bastile. Here the latter let an Italian adept in poison Who taught St. Croix his ap When St. Croix was r leased'e resumed his relations When the with @ Marchione: Italir came out of pris: teretthe services of the p: The poisoned woman's fath and her two brothers to getssession of the family for- tur While mixing poi the mé worn by St. Croix fell and hevas suffocated. Then the wie dark tale was unfolded a: all Were condemned to tor- te and death. ge, JOOGE FLORENCE E. ALLEN, [shat ne League for the Protection of Im- migrants, studying meanwhile at New York University Law School and graduating with honors in 1913, characteristically putting in her ‘“‘idle hours’ lecturing to women's clubs in New York and Philadelphia on current political history. In 1914 she was admitted to the Ohio bar and has practised actively ever since. In 1916 she carried the East Cleveland Municipal Woman's Suffrage case through the Su- preme Court of Ohio with the “best argument presented by any lawyer during that year,"’ accord- ing to local Judges and lawyers. In 1917 she appeared in a refer- endum case on the Reynolds Presidential Suffrage Law and as- sisted in throwing out nine out of every ten signatures in Cleveland; in 1918 she was chosen by the union of street railway employees to act as their arbitrator in the case of Yellon vs. the Cleveland Railway Company; in 1919 she ap- peared for the woman street car conductors before the National War Labor Board, at which time she was the first woman attorney to appear before the board, and won the distinction of having the board's Chairman, William Har- mon Black, say that it was the best presentation of a case ever ‘made before the board. In 1919 she was appointed As- That’s What You Smashing Good Service . Post Shock Troops By Neal R. O’Hara Suprene Bench Is Goal Oi Ohio Woman Judge Friends of Florerfe E. Aven of Cleveland Are Getting 50,000 Signatures for Domination of Woman With Notable Career. sistant County Prosecutor of Cuyahoga County and became the first woman upon the formal pro- grammes of the Cuyahoga Coun- ty Bar Association and of the Ohio State Bar Association. Judge Allen “in the good old days’ had a place also on the programmes of three national Woman's Suffrage Conventions. Her election to the bench in the Court of Common Pleas was the kind of a victory that~politicians dream of.* Out of ten candidates for four places, Judge Allen led her nearest rival by 10,000 votes, polling 118,000 votes on an inde- pendent non-partisan tickct. A desire to serve her community by helping to make good laws, as well as simply enforcing law, will be one activating motive in Judge Al- len's acceptance of the nomination which her friends are bringing to her. “After all,” she says, “what America needs is an understanding that law is just the expression of tae moral feeling of the community. The administration of justice may seem to falter sometimes; the people may not be interested enough to keep :n touch with the courts; but the iaw itself, the expression in words of tiie community's desire for right dealing, one with another, is something to be respected by every man, woman and child in the country and its enforce- ment supported by all.” In terms of simple American prin- ciple, Judge Allen gives the following planks of her independent non-part)- san platform: “Law enforcement; justice fo all; business methods applied to the courts; efficient work by pub- lic servants; respect for law, order and the courts; moral standards actively functioning in govern- ment. “I believe that women should be represented ‘in our highest State court,"" she says. ‘Cases affecting women are continually being consid- ered in the Supreme Court, which, moreover, combines with the functions of a court, functions of a somewhat legislative nature. Legislation vitally affecting women is now being consid- ered in important State organizations and may be interpreted or set aside by the Supreme Court within the next few years. It is, therefore, of partic- ular importance to women that their interests be represented now in the Supreme Court. Get From Parcel Copyright, 1932 (New York Evening World) by Press Publishing Company. No Package Too Large to Be Treated Rough; No Package Too Small to Be Riddled. NE of Thomas Edison's crown- O ing glories 1s that he didn’t in- vent the parcel post. Parcel post is Government riddle department. Riddles anything you drop in. Motto is E Unum Pluribus. Many pieces out of one package. Postal boys handle bundles neutral. Democrats treat parcels like they were Repub- lican mail. Republicans treat parcels like they were Democratic mail. Packages addressed to doubtful States are cancelled by threshing machine. Safe to ship anything by parcel post. Boiled eggs, dropped in Chi- cago package slot, delivered in New York perfectly scrambled. Marble tombstone sent from Quiney, Mass. arrives in New Orleans as rice pow- der, Congressman's speech, franked from Washington, D. C., reaches Towa as package of confetti, making no more sense than it did in @rst place. Send anything by post except TNT. That stuff is bad for hobnails in parcel clerks’ heels. To qualify as parcel postman, guy must hurdle steep exams, What is capital of Idaho? Idano. Correct! Identify Passaic River by sight, taste and smell. Terrible. Correct! Are youl unable to read “Use no hooks, “Fragile” and “This side up"? Ab- solutely. Good! Report for work Monday, with a pitchfork. f Package ruffians in P. O. make Houdini look lke paralytic. One box of merchandise it takes fourteen days to nail up looks like granulated tooth- picks after first sorting. Smears- Sawbuck ships you a crowbar by par- cel post, and when it arrives you've got a corkscrew. Experts can take fresh steel radiator and soften it up to look like accordion. There is no limit to service you grab from parcel post. For five-cent stamp you get full effects of million-dollar cyclone. All parcels handled with neatness and destruction. First, packages are hurled in heap by graduate long- shoremen and inspected by insurance adjusters, Caterpillar tractors cancel the stamps and mail is then ready for sweeping and sorting. Packages under three pounds eight ounces are care- fully, deposited in chute marked Debris. Heavier bundles are delicately side- tracked and thrown into mangling machines, Pulmotors extract surplus splinters and packages are soon mer- rily on their way to persons designat- ed on shredded tag. Delivery is slower than with first class mail, but destruc- tion is twice as sure. If insured hunk of merchandise is lost, sunk or stolen, you recover dam- ages assessed by filling out following blank: What is your name?...... Have you any aliases?...... Did you send @ package by parcel post, and if so, how long have you been feeble- minded?...... State value of ship- ment in round numbers...... In square numbers...... Was address written with right or left hand? (If typewritten give serial number of machine)...... Have you ever b ted be- fore?...0+e Who was Vice President in Van Buren's Administration? Are your relatives all naturalized citi- ENB? ... 26 Was the parcel securely riveted and wrapped in armor plate? sees Whom do you suspect?...... And you're sure you mailed the par- cel after insuring {t?....++ How would you like to spend six months in At- lanta Federal Prison?...... If so, write your signature here | A. H. G. Fokker, Leading Aeroplane Designer, at Work and Play “SHOT yoke Ras eu OTOCRAPHER Pann a Dutchman Thinks Commercial Flying in America Must Be Put Upon a Business Basis Before It Can Be Successful. (Spectal to The Evening World.) WASHINGTON, July 17.—A. H. G. Fokker, the Dutch inventor whose type of airplane made him famous in the World War, does not believe the $1,000,000 air race around the world is practicable and he will have noth- ing to do with it, American airplane interests, headed by Rear Admiral Bradley A. Fiske, retired, have challenged the nations to a race around the world in 100- Passenger planes, “Such a race is out of the question at the present time,” said the young Hollander, who is here to confer with naval experts in regard to his torpedo seaplanes, which he hopes to sel] to this Government. “I am interested only in developing commercial aviation and making air- Planes for the navy and the army.” Fokker is the foremost designer and maker of aircraft in Europe, !f not in the world, according to American ex- perts. His planes are flying in all Ain NE FOKKER, IYOR O-AERO- ON OPLANE KKE — oe parts of the world, but he does not believe that travel by air has reached a stage that would justify such a flight around the world. “Commercial aviation will progress more rapidly in the United Stater,"” said Fokker, ‘‘when a business-like survey has first been made of the field and its possibilities. Firms go- ing into aerial transportation should figure out carefully in advance what their costs are going to be and the character and volume of traffic which can reasonably be expected. Maxims of a Modern Maid By Marguerite Mooers Marshall Copyright, 1922 (New York Evening World) by Press Publishing Co. Love is the curtain raiser which precedes that dramatic mixture of tragedy, comedy and farce we call marriage—and thus rounds out the evening for the gods. SUMMER girl needs no further proof of the biologic law of nature's wastefulness when she combines @ moon, a garden, a moaquitoless night and then fails to produce the man, If skirts get long again it won't be any fun for the girls to roll their of remarking loyally fectly, innocent, BU1 stockings—or any thrill to the boys. A friend is a person who, whenever your affairs with the other sex are under discussion, makes a point “Of course, I know it's all per- Nobody ever knows anything so positively as a man knows things that aren't so, Jie: One definition of a bad loser is thy woman who fights to keep the shadow of her husband's presence after she has lost the Substance of his love. The one creditor no man ever pays in full is the woman to whom he owes everything. The professional gossip is the conversational “fence"’—she makes a bust- ness of receiving stolen confidences A girl on the beach these summer evenings is worth two in the ballroom “Commerical flying should no longer be on a sporting basis. To be successful, it must be conducted strictly along business lines."" The young Hollander's complete ab- sorption in his work is indicated by the condition of his sulte of rooms at one of Washington's principal hotels. The floor was littered with tools and there was a small bench-vise attached to his writing desk, on which were a collection of files and other tools He was only twenty-four years old when he began building the fast com- bat and pursuit planes that gave the aviators of tho Allies so many sleep- less nights. He is now thirty-two, and does not possess the phlegmatic temperament of the Dutch. He is always in a husry to get somewhere to do something. He seldom wears a hat “I do without a hat to keep down my overhead expense," he explained. Not even for an ambassador will he dress up formally. He dashed off to have lunch with the Dutch envoy, hatless and clad in a suit of clothes in which a short time before he had been flying over Washington, He does his own piloting on important tests He is not @ believer in stunt flying, confining himself to the more practi~ cal phases of the game. Before leaving Washington for Mtl- waukee Fokker said he would shortly return to Holland, but he expects to make frequent visits to the United States on business. MY FAVORITE COIFFURE How Film Favorites Like to Dress Their Hair By Lois Wilson _l am the more mature type of girl and have always played such parte; That is why | like this ‘sonality of my roles just desoribed and is in complete har- mony with my peculiar type of There is no set wave in this coiffure, the natural wave of my hair being sufficient —— Helps for the Vacationist - By Emilie Hoffman ———————_—’ you are closing up the house dur crown with gloves, handk: nlefs, ] ing your vacation disconnect the ribbons and other small soft articles furnace flue from the chimney be- Sufficient to prevent indentations tn the crown, Drive three or four pins fore leaving home and arrange for through the brim into the tray to some ventilation in the cellar with the keep the hats in place, then loosely outside air. These two precautions pack around the hats the blouses and are circulation safeguards that will do other light articles, In this way two much to prevent dampness and three hats may be put in the Hats can be safely carried in the upper tray of the trunk, Fill the trunk and will be tn perfect shape and condition when tho trunk reaches ite destination. _J[ SALLY’S SUMMER ‘By Caroline Crawford— Copyright, 1922 (New York Evening Worley, by Press Publishing Company. Does a Girl Ever Marry Her Summer Beau? jatly Peters, a New York girl, ts spending, her summer vacation in the country. On the train she met Richard Bonnington, in whom she took great interest and who has Promised to visit the piace where shé is staying. She has also mot Billy Croton and he has taken her for a row on the lake, which {# a feature of the vacation resort. His flattery has pleased Sally. A PICNIC LUNCH. HEN Sally awoke the next morning her first thoughts were of Billy Croton. To-day, he had invited her to take a row on the lake and to partake of a picnic lunch which he said he would get from the landlady of his cottage. To-morrow would be Saturday, the day Richard Bonnington would come down from Troy, but to-day she and Billy were to get “‘better acquainted,” as he expressed it. “You are a mighty pretty girl by. moonlight, but I want to see you in the sun,"’ he laughed, and with this thought in mind she began to primp for the At 9 o'clock Billy met her at the door of her cottage. She was plan- ning to read a few moments on the veranda before he called, but Billy, with a large shoe box under his arm, tnd a big Japanese parasol, came up the steps just as she opened the door, “Peach of a day,” he grinned, while Sally countered with ‘Almost as peachy as last night!" “Gee, you certainly do look well in the sun,” he said as he took her arm and started off in the direction of the boat hous Sally stopped short and young Croton. “Now, see here," she said half in earnest and half in fun, “you've sim- ply got to quit talking about the way I look. If you say another word about me, I'll get a little rowboat of my own and we'll paddle our own canges.”" “Cruel words,” grinned Billy. You girls certainly want things your own way, don't you? Well, I promise not to say another word about you, al- though you'll take notice I bought faced this old Jap parasol just to keep freckles away from your Grecian nose."* “It's a peach of a parasol,” promptly declared Sally, and without further ceremony climbed into the boat, which was waiting for them. “Too bad we didn’t invite the twins or some of the other young people around here," said Sally as she looked at the immense box which contained their lunch. “Wouldn't have them for worlds,”* declared Billy. ‘‘You are the first girl I've, seen up here whom I've in- vited to go round the corner. Give me the city girls every time. Gee, I'm glad you came in time to save my life."* “I'm going to have company to- morrow.’ “Bome old aunt of your mother, f suppose. “A Mr. Bonnington—Richard Bon- nington—who is staying in Troy, but ts coming down to Round Lake every Saturday while I'm here," replied Sally with dignity. “Oh, a little dickle bird is coming to see you," grinned Billy, not the least abashed. ‘‘Bet he's one of those Willies off the pickle boats. How many beaux have you got, Sally Pet. “Not any. I have an office pal named Tom Reed and a few young friends, but I haven't a beau in the world.’ “That's the way to talk," cried Billy enthusiastically. “Tell every fellow you meet the same story and they'll each think they are your first beau, , By the way, see that old fellow over there in the white silk shirt and jeans? I mean the one who is fishing, Well, he's the richest man up here, owns most everything here from the cot- tages to the boat houses. He's a widower and he’s loaded with money Better set your cap for hint" ’ “Row around him so [can get @ 00d look at him," commanded Sally, jokingly. ‘A man of forty-five, or even fifty, slightly bald, with dark brown hair, just beginning to be touched with si! ver, sat propped up in a newly paint- ed green rowboat. In one hand he held a fishing rod, while the other steqd'e4 a large book. He was not handsome or even attractive, but there was something about him which interested Sally, She wanted to meet him, to hear him speak, and, as young Croton rowed by, she theught she noted in- terest in his eyes as he looked at her To-Morrow—Meeting a Milliona BIBLE QUESTIONS and Answers. QUESTIONS. 1. For what purpose was the id the earth given? rth cursed? vatenee ? 5. Whose day is the Sabbath? 6. How long did God rest after the creation? ANSWERS. 1, “He created it (earth) not in vain. He formed it to be inhabited.’” 2. God gave the earth to the chil- dren of men. 8. The earth was cursed because Adam ate of the forbidden fruit. 4, “Sabbath,"'g In Hebrew, means rest. 6, The Sabbath ts God’s day. God rested one day after erents ing all things, i }

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