The evening world. Newspaper, March 2, 1922, Page 20

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

1 SA RDN RRR SERRE: PMR Se HEL man and saw b these stair @ hundred ye: efore me at the top of wonderful doorway over old, 1 uized 1 was. about to discover something unique and surprising, even in a city like New York. 1 entered—and found house of 1 thousand wonders—a series of rooms that might have been trans GY MINASIO With an Unbroken View of Bay and Harbor, | Henry L. Doherty's Home Knows No Lack of Breeze or Sunshine. | THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, MARCH 2, 1922. the Oddest Home in All of New York City--- This Millionaires Palace on an Office Building Roof By Ruth Snyder. {s a lecture to woman, for woman and by woman! If there is a man in this country who thinks he is hen-pecked—at- tention! . If there is a man who thinks his wife does not appreciate his good qualities—tet him read on! If there is a man who thinks he should be boss of his own home—here is meat! To such a man there is much of interest in the sixty-page handbook entitled, “Some Women.” The au- Here creetly hidden her identity and her book has been penned with the simple reference—“by one of them.” Which is, perhaps, just as well, For, read on: “Always make your man the head of your house, but you can, with studying cause and your big love, very different thing) become the neck that moves the head!" The “neck” of the house must have nT ici mei | three qualities—“loving, giving and SSS from the closed-in room to sleeping) shrieks at you in accordance with bis | temperin right out in the open, near the | mood. “women as @ sex are most disap- Neaveng And perhaps one of the most valued) jointing, as they do not use to the Sates | no of the owner is the large| jest, put rather abuse their won. And here is a beautiful garden, | hall fillet from ceiling to floor with a| fe dove Ane. !}attice-walled, and in the tion of the ti ind old|derful gift of greatly loving—they price-| more often let their worst qualities, his surroundings so strongly indicate. It is hard to describe this home and | unusual features, so “far from the | madding crowd, but 1 do best will my Sos | is living room in which long windows reaching out to small iron balconies. The spacio we sat hi French im KN > By ALBER SUA XN Panted from a cottage-mansion in| And through these windows, which COPY RIGHT 1922 the Adirondacks, yet located in the |4"e plentiful, the view stretches almost | + very base of the busine world far the imagination, con In a word, J felt hat 1 was a thou-{Stuntly ehunging picture of sky «and | WHAT HAS HAPPENED, sand miles away from New York, yet| Water and ships, to say nothing of ‘i ROY BRENNER and ie collie, Scott, thrown from a Fort Lee Ferry boat, have e as the heart, or per yy | Battery Park and the people below wen rescued from an ice floe in the North River by fo as alias dara euons tel CTU eID ae Rees eae? HILDA DAYNE, who sees them from a motor boat, with a powerful night the heel, of the biggest city of the} SH kinds athier can be viewed | glass, and takes them to Red Ruin, an odd-looking place’on the Palisades, whic! world tnd doubtless felt—from this point, | is the girl's home, Hilda introduces Brenner to her When I looked out of the window] 48 / Went from one room into another UNCLE MAX, who invites the stranger to stay and offers him dry clothing, and saw. miles.and iniies of the bay|!t @ppeared to me that the acme of} CM when he thinks himself out of hearing scolds the girl for bringing a stranger : oa : OT wnvaise a rf to the place. Brenner declines to let Dayne take his wet clothing, He hastily | find the glorious sunset 1 could under- Hehtfulness us to comfort and] removes the contents of his pockets and hides them in the folds of the curtains. stand how a man could « such | betty had been reached Putting on the dry clothing given him he finds the sleeves of the coat unusually W dwelling, and yet marveticd at the| 2t Seemed as though you could enter Ong A Sew Aniutes later a servant enters the room and Brenner takes him for . : thew . from any ro {oi a a » Whom Dayne has spoken of as a friend. He notes that the servar penser Ih witch the-whole: thing: waa) dear et | acms. are very Yong, but the mani denies that he le Raul, Brenner remains) (07 ated unlight streaming in everywhere. If 1} dinner, which Is interrupted by a scream and roar. saree were to name this place 1 would call CHAPTER Iv. ® the man who has made | it The House of Sunlicht.ro aig wendental tor tn Gaal he Houne of Sunlight,tor this max RENNER wheeled about in hia| the luekless object of the attack. Now Wt home in the midst of |who made it believes strongly in ne in time to gee his| ley Were raising the man to his feet ‘ : ° ™S) And Brenner could see that the victim collie, cou, hurl himself | y WANT AUTO OWNERS | PRINCIPAL STREETS FORCED TO INSURE _ ACCIDENT VICTIMS Bills at Albany to Compel “Com- pensation Without Regard to 4 Fault” for Inj ALBANY, March 1 4 in bil r wed | Ser Straus, Democrat, of New 1 Assemblyman J Republican, of West 1 The meas grant to victims vutome “compensation without r t fault," which would be 1 1 through the New York bile Owner 1 ssoctation, neu. ance would t 7 W. G. WADOO WILL LIVE IN Lo ANGELES. rests y i a thin, little chap, swarth and beady of y of face | through the air and spring tor ¢ AL the throat of # man who had come] He was clad in tweeds, and he wore | L FREE OF SNOW in to the outer hallway fom the|* S¥ull cap. Instantly Rrenner tabu- | lestahon wihe 7 me hel tated him the Hindu deaf-mute Army of 15,000 Clear Offl Ing of the house |cook, of whom Paul had spoken. ‘This , , eat So silently had the man entered the| belief was borne out by the weirdly 3 1-2-Inch Fall—Sleet or hall that none of the diners had heara| Wordless sounds of pain and terror the . fellow was utteri Rain To-Da him. Mut by sound or by scent, his Was utterin | Roy also noted his costume, w presence had bec own to the : sar 3 The three anda half inches of ’snow |e ud been known to the dog}it had no trace of the kitchen about that fell in the city last night and lay on the threshold of the dining |it, He wo no apron nor white baie 1 And t ound «¢ ent was | Jacket. Nor did his clothes have any ee brought out an dally semblance of 4 cook's a sa : agg |Homicidally inimical to the great dog. - ; Workmen’ with 870] ) iiuwderbelt Yet this was during the dinner hour pieces of snow removal apparatus. |) 4 punderbolt he had launched! also, what should a cook be doing in ri himself upon the intrude bearing | this part of the house while the meal ul the main avenues of him to the floor and ther seeking to| wag stil! being served? 1 iat becn cleared sufficiently totdrive past the instinctively upraised| Tho pulpable deception reminded event congestion of vehictos,, : forearm (ol the victim and sink his) Brenner of his own role, And, before pew clecine Neniy von oily ves Mena IniG tho manin sult, [the others could turn back from lft i & 0. Ing © moment his pose ling the n ° enne men ed for by Cor ssioner Tay | babble: ‘ i ‘ WAS once More & ed low is \ ey its Rake en i he fs : ¢ Hed. Hie OF havin mythical chair, scolding the ungry Seott from otelock Me UHRE thecal wae Tacit eet oe 1 Ruin, had petween chattering tecth for r ie . Verdin an a Mirpose The Hindu, still mouthing and cous ‘masters end’ «pan (eeenalne 4 fans Bren- writhing, stood up, Seott, at th gore ps . soi in Ghe avian’ locrne te hime t sight, ar Ui iously and took ¥ business districts, and the new rotary} Hrenner wa my toward: Al in cleariag the brid, 1 t eae 4 eon, WAN OF id ont of th : erie “1 For tn hall and th door leading © Ww. but that there went It oud nigtit and torr N row, with north to northwest winds, | ‘The others had rust = F nay : the aid of | with that queer slublike sgure scut- ‘ a Thrilling Tale Of Mysterio Adventure Author of *Lad, A Dog Ov A RP TERHONE . it will be filled with beautiful plo of art work Garden and Gym and a Bed That Follows the | From this garden there is a bric Wh im.| SUCH as Jealousy pettiness and curl | “ : |unich leads to the roof of anotie of no small im-! osity come uppermost.” Air Are Some of the Features of the Roof) |buiding. And also from this garden, jal domicile, with) ““sptow few of us there are who un- a | another side, there are stair ad | Ht serating pant, its electrica’ a ea Residence. eto Still another roof, which 1 Machinery ani its spotiess, glistening| derstand cause and effect," continues = | my f » hur | tile, the lecturer. ‘In regard to our hus- ee ee mirht term the hurricane deck. Here | TeAiy. SHGHEURIBHE + 1 THE QUA Mr. Doherty and his friends 0 And there he way from his! bands we are invariably _short-sight- By Sophie Irene Loeb. |these blocks of cold mortar and brick | cs TSS ei Tee ee Sy Pale Mike | business and within a stone's| ed, and wonder when we cut off our F you had been where I had |*" dollars and deals. ‘This. man | SOME VIEWS OF THE “HOMEY” RESIDENCE OF HENRY L. DOHERTY Jane would get at the topmast of a. ‘row of noses we spite our faces. ‘The renson been—If you had seen what |'MZht be sald datly to rise from the | ATOP A STATE STREET OFFICE BUILDING. steamer. And he plans that thi Res — 7, awe Suaraee SnOwilaven, wate —Iy s | f al eye fe at n parlor © is a table, | ¢ 0 : Thed sesh |sordid to the sublime God-given sunshine and the ozone of| Mr. Doherty's bedroom certainly | WHI be chained down there | The) vic te. Doherty h his seere.| Phorically speaking, how to spell the | oo ee And what is hi By profession he | ir. exemplifies individuality and ingenu- | {Pere IS the saunas court, with its} on. ‘ f hisiwc words ‘love’ and ‘give,’ let along use | i nee . ony where friends can sit with L work. | ” You would have stopped to pinch micnt be said to be an engineer, by| The living room opens out into a/ ity. It is a very beautiful room, with a wit A fan sit SAU) vate tetephon them in the right wa: yourself and ruby es and gasp jp acur, . splendidly equipped billiard room, and |!0n& French windows, and the bed is nd watch a mateh—a game thi | ine nin 1 few min To prove her point, the authoress a 3 occupation a banker, by amusement this in turn leat Inte a moeenicent | built on a amall track hobby with Mr, Doherty Sete eae a cGas th te leaturs women, showing v an inventor, to say nothing of his} sun parlor, all glass, with plants and| OM the side of the bed there is an; ANd, if Mr. Doherty or his des ished possessions is a Wonderfully or-| HOW they fail in the game of “love I was to moet two men for an in-| nin chemicals, which brought | easy chairs and_couches, And trom | @Fay of push buttons, and these push | A&ts continue to develon this plan Of | nate pip and in this he finds} Md give” woman say: ‘I sted : i z|t model home, they ean build bri ny, re ys terview on the eleventh floor of ‘No, |M# t the subject of ‘gas. But that ta] nis you can Hors EMH ashen iMoe Wetton Ten IRR REGIE Neue [UPd ataics: trom pook tol root veoverina (oe his greatest plousures, He! cy good eare my husband did not £0 2 I a areal eM sium, to whieh there is being con-| the ong French doors | #re Stirs f g nee bas had it built in bis living room, . Btate Stroct, which overiboks the | one” Story—alre fet forth Instantly added a new idea in the realm| open and the bed moves out through, 22 area of three and a half acres |wieye fie can enjoy it to the utmost, | Out last night: T was not going to be Gaitere and -conmnetite vent "| these columns, of physical culture, Also, there is the} the French door into another room| cr that is what he and his associates | yyy, erty hay found the secret of| eft alone again.’ Well, if Sey oa attery and commands a free view! Mr, Doherty ix the senior partner | bathroom—"the last word’? on bath- | eMtirely walled in glass. own In this section: Wenoy three wit | succes < method of living in that | thought for a moment and analysed of the bay, the Statue of Liberty and|of Henry L, Doherty & Co., 60 Watt | Tooms. Another push button opens the| @ half acres of living room in a see-h-| he works hard, but, he ust aa|(helr great achievement (7). thoy hie. Navicen Street, and as President of the Cities}, THEM there are rose-colored guest] windows in this reon: as far as you| !¥ Section of New York, where a foot | yiy4 he works. ee eee ee a aay ee cy ind’ bene . See © CINCS Thedrooms and « delightfully inviting| want them and ushers in all the air, | Of SPace is worth its weight in gold. | jame PASC lala ice bene ore A I entered the elevator of an office |Service Company has provided some} dining room with its two splendid! Still another touch of the button —= | yet so tivities, {NO doubt where he wanted to xo. building such as one exters most |t¥® hundred cities in the United| paintings. As Mr, Doherty remarked, | opens another set of French glass| Mr. Doherty is a lover of birds \ house and | terefore they only had his presence, States and Canada with various sorts| “If there is anything deplorable it is|doors and the bed moves out right|there are birdcages het: bad Neful coca: | (0/212 Ree ee a ee a Overy day, and asked to be lett off at | oF nic xorviee utilities, ana dead fish or dead birds hung upfin al under the stars. {oa bright plumased pant thing. ¢ ¢ * Where's our pes the eleventh floor. ‘The elevator man ulives, Such 88 645+} dining room.’’ Instead, there are but] So that no one need fo to the’ coun-| whose name is Dr, Jekyll and Mr. | who Pasi witBtavenkon Pee ee on ee ee wie electric railways, & these two charming summer scenes of | try with a home like this, since every | Hy¢ because of his temperament op What pleasure is, for y{ think we have gained a bai ped told me when I arrived on the top| He is a man of ideals und spenda| pleasing und soothing coloring. variety of atmosphere may be enjo: ns himself all and coos of | tiave done good work Te ee ie cironieuu.ialit he 5 z 8 life x thei - = — = iN ee test of a man’s lov you is floor just to go up some stairs, where | his life carrying them out, Along with - tives you his time voluntarily,” I would find Henry L. Doherty, one| 8 Stolid business proclivities he has ee of the men Lwas to sec an innate love for the beautiful and | “We camouflage facts to comme knows how to express this feeling, as | \terribly."’ continues “One of Them,"'| And the moment I left the elevator | “thinking that because we expect the —— gi wil | mon to be just so, that they ought to ctl |be. But we reckon without our host, se: | viz: his sex and the intense selftsh- ness that accompanies it, (Point 1 | for the woman who ts being lectured); also his susceptibility to the charms of other women (point 2); they all have those characteristizs in a small or large degree, the latter mostly, and it remains with us women to make them less. It's no use trying to cope with what ought to be, but with what is, in order to bring about what ought to be SON TERHUNE tling past ike that and trying we ell £0) © ect of Bi me Ss Pevensey ; Mae Welly Dog Ht the peep. | sonce put a curb of exactness on a ge sight a f hd he made sure, | I'm Hable to have) man, and he'll chafe under it and wakeful time from no ass - , Then came full recoll he « t his news to the re mare: than: likely, Bree sve event= ually, and I can't buc s y it is of our nd boarded the Fort Lee boat at dusk | tien $ no cook. thoress, an “Englishwoman, has dis-| declares the writer, but} 'LET THE MAN BE HEAD OF HOME IF THE WOMAN IS THE NECK, COUNSELS A WOMAN WRITER —— For the Neck Manages the Head, Declares An- onymous Lecturer in Print, Who Gives Other Women Hints On How to Handle Husbands by “Love and Give’ System. | effect and tactfulness (not deceit—a/ ynteered the information jand | continu | women may own making if he docs, as we are meant to temper men." \ Oh, women! When will you learn? Then there ts the woman who spay domesticity by her ultracleanliness: “Women who make the cleaning of their homes a fetish,’ writes the au- thoress, ‘‘make it so apparent and wear an air of conscious virtue. It ig always most irritating to the peo- ple they come in contact with. If they must wear this virtue, let them do it as a sort of spiritual undervest, like a hair shirt, that can trrita) nobody but the person who wears it And the women who bombard men with questions as to what they've done all day, &c., almost having to, account for every minute of their] time! 1! “Now, asks the writer, “It they study cause and for one second t truth by asking very stupid, that going to tell you just what he wants to, so why ask questions? If he tells you off his own bat there is a pogsi- bility it may be true, for he has vol- But ques- jo they think y will get the », they ‘are man is only tioning him gives him an opporgu- [nity, should occasion arise, to bla j you for the untruth, because Questioned him. | “Why is it women of the preset day are alway iming to be man equal, they call it One ¢ almost hear the seathing voice of tfhe Englishwoman—"Why, they are finitely superior to men, if they of stop to think (Another point the woman reader.) ‘'And if they become their comme jal eq they will rob themselves of half thi charm; for woman is meant to be tempering and guiding influence man in life. “Why do women want rights, they can get their privileges s. “Why don’t they stay thelr own sphe greatly love, try to find the law of compensal which so few look for? Oh! how, short-sighted most of us are, You may do a temporary good by getting your votes or entering politics, but | never a permanent one. That can only come from within and in our own Province. Make the men better, then | you'll have all your laws and every- thing else better." Other cryptic remarks aimed at be summarized as fol- lows: “Women say and think such ‘catty* things about each other.’ “Why can't women be less hafd on thelr own sins, when committed by others? “Women do not go in for enough nalysis, and even if they do, camouflage facts to themselves—} a fatal mistake—as they only take on the propensity of the ostrich.’* “Look at the proverbial = mindedness of women over thirty forty, never wanting to tell their co rect age! ‘There is certainly no hat in not wishing to, but where they e1 is that they take off about ten yea or xo and expect you to believe iff * * © T heard of a very smart tort a man gave a woman who, whi asked her age, ave the stereot; reply of ‘I'm as old as T look,’ which he replied: ‘Surely to God, can't be as old as that,’ "* “But,"' concludes the authoress, “do not think I am taking the man's part all the time, as there are faults on both sides, and I could write good deal about man’s short-sighted- ness and shortcomings, but I cannot write from both points of view at on : So, Mr. Man, aren't you glad you read on? mong the last of the Tew sata AS it COO! told me [he had paused to light a cigarette case | should n around.” mitted his host and Paul to help him |And so suddenly had he stopped that! ‘The Dayn il were coming rs. ad heen collided with by some or into the ¢ room. Brenner| scott followed close at his master's close behind him ed ha ever and chat-|heels, sullen and watchful. Evi- | He had turned, and had been just inj tered at hi dently the encounter with Rham Dass time to se toslab-lke tt) Mr, Dayne! J never i made the collie warily suspicious. {with it, sent ; w him to do such « thing hefore.| At the stairhead as he slumped} amc s uw for yourself -how gentle he {backward with almost shut eyes, Roy | Brenner then. The man is a Hindu,|surprised a glance between the two slight ce t the? Verhaps the strangeness of|men, and at once Paul asked: |to hia min t ka And WIA Sane MAY NAVD 6 “Wouldn't you like me to put the the half-dout i the dog. ‘That and his creeping|eollle out of doors for the night, sir? |flerce shov lently. Seott thought he was|There is a fine Kennel in the yard, the my midst \ rt your cook, isn't he?*}and it has never been used since we runching of ico cakes against I can give him a good big “Rham D: asked Hilda, in sur-]eame here. any, Bogyan tes Ale “\ cook? Why of course not.|supper, tf you like, and tle him out And. now he Lt hat could have made you think sueh|chere tll morning iquesp. Ute man has Tollowir He's Uncle Max's assistant] ‘No, thanks," said Roy. “He al- {him and had sought th ways sleeps in my room wherever U He had hidden in eal aya 1 stumbled on a{happen to be," TR TORS Wi f ind. in. recov him i]. ‘I don't wish to seem inhospitable, {Scott, on the afterde \ Satan's the entire coffee service,|Mr. Brenner,"’ spoke up Dayne—and Jsought to throw him ove Aaa cxcitemont follow, | Roy could have sworn he spoke in re- And now Brenner unde aire Treanor ont of the{ ply. to a signal from Paul—'I don't jthing clue, The collie had 1 poet the butler touch |i8h to seem inhospitable, but T ob- Se Ot et AO Tete t t is he glaneed|Ject very strongly to dogs in my He had dived Ih pursuit of its asi n slightly at her, |house. I must ask you, as a favor, to jmaater, rather than stay on i * prompted [let your collie be taken to the kennel chastise Roy's assailant ee eateten |fon the night." But he had kept in mind ny ts r he Hindu is| ‘Where I stay, my dog stays," re- JOMIARES: AGERE ONG :AtOD, i issistant t turned Brenner, his teeth still chat- Jtrue collie’s uncanny Po the ee ’" spoke up Paul, |tering very creditably, And at their next on 1 deferent “told you he was the|eare to humor this whim of a sick sought to av t vt k. ‘The has 1 ‘Till a new|guest, [am ready to go. U" | Knowing ¢ 1 am doing the cooking, Again he was aware of that furtiv Geratood it all iH Assintin May I help you|signal between the two men jAnd even ‘wit pataiis, sit | seem too ill to be| Dayne made glum answer: | Was necretly ¢ p | “© ean‘t let you go out as sick as That Hindu be unbappy about}you are, If you won't stay without ruminated Brean mper, Mr nner,""}the dog then he can stay in your knows me He must Maul and he nele| room, of course, 1 will have som before In) some circur the shivering guest to eet, | thing brought up for him to ¢ Hmnade him know w und Ww ym Diss Will under-/the quinine and hot footbath are Me wome tod w 1 | explain lim that! brought te you. biboaeded the’ ' sed to foveline Another minute and Roy and the hia Ie ! 1 nd t were genn He were alone together In the Gray AL ' at Om. Leaning over his dog, Bren Tner whispered i t “They tie ket my aa they have t pistol away We're due to hav babar’ $9 + peep at m wakeful night, you and 1, Scotty!’ . f you don’t |¢Fust, and, creepin, ' ‘Ana | dead t when | Who I am | wainscoting. The dog paid less heed than ustal te his master's speech. A tiny gray mouse had crept out from the wary The dog made a littl playful rush at him, The mouse rat back into hiding. Presently there was a knock at thi © door. In came Paul, carrying unde> Jone arm a smoking mustard football In his free hand he bore a plate table scraps. These he set di Then, laying a round box of qu; pills on the dresser, he bowed parted. He went none too soon, for Roy ‘wa’ having trouble to keep Scott awa from the dish of food without drawin Paul's notice to his action, “Leave it alone!" he bade the dog curtly, as the door shut ! Obediently but reluctantly, See sighed and lay down, his deepsat-eye, fixed covetously on the heaping Other eyes, also, were on that Fa for in « minute the mouse venturiy forth n from the wainscot crag, lured by the smell of food. 4 Up to the dish it ran in ttle Jeri (” steps. There it glanced appreher sively at the moveless man and ti, dog. Then it nibbled a gravy-soake! on to the side the dish, it nibbled again. After which the mouse rolled off ti igo of the dish to the hearth, qulj Scott whispered Brenne’ in horror. ‘See? It's well I :to} you to wait. We're in for ali sorts [ things to-night. you and I, ‘The Hindu found time to tell thep, They'd never dare poisd you else." He struck a match to light a cigal ette. The flash of the match's fla was reflected from something In tar end of the room. “Good Lord!" gasped Brenner, be s of what he glimpsed m sick and dizay (To Be Continued.) |,

Other pages from this issue: