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At the Doll House, Palm Springs' swankiest night club,. Mr. and Mrs. W. go wild for the boogie beat of Felix, the Drumme.r. Felix is a permanent fixture, having been there for the past six years.
Prices at the Doll House are anything but hush-hush. Since Pat is the economical housewife, Cornel, tried to conceal the tab on the filet mignon — $4.50. Vegetables, dessert, coffee (only 15c per cup) are all "extra."
palm springs
Dancing into the dawn presents no health problem for stay-up-lates. They're convinced that the Palm Springs sun has "special properties" that will bake their tired bones and send them home fit as a fiddle.
(Continued from preceding page) money as celebrities. Non-citizens who have as much money as celebrities could probably get in, too.
Racquet Club members are serious about their tennis. Paul Lukas lives close by, and he never misses his ten sets a day.
Palm Springs specializes in what are referred to as Dude Ranches (some of them are Smoke Tree, Thunderbird, Deep Well), but the only bona fide ranch touches are the horses. And the dudes.
For thirty dollars a day (which is the average ante) a man comes in and lights the fire in your fireplace in your bedroom every morning — -it gets nippy in the desert — and there are waiters with towels, telephones and cocktail shakers standing around the pool, hoping you'll want something, so they can service you.
They may even have those under-water pens.'
One of the terrific places to eat, in town, is the Doll House, where Pat and Cornel went on our picture-taking day. At the Doll House, a (Continued on page 95)
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