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THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1922. ‘ 10 7 6é 9° having spent nine months in Holly-|at the Camera Man's ball at the Am-|ndvantagos. It costs little to lve bloc wore vojeed at the twelfth annual ywooD GETS CLEAN BILL wood, 1 lived in tho head and centré|bassador Hotel, attended by practi-| there. Food is cheap. The warm dinner of the Wedatchester County of Hollywood life—the Hollywood Ho- |cally the whole colony, a very brillant | climate makos one, fairly Independent | Bankers’ Association in the Hotel Coni- % tel, It was full of actresses, actors, |and interesting affair, when she re-| of coul. A car can be kept In @ &8-/modgore inst night. About 400 were DE ATHERTON WHO woreen wiltels, editors, authors and| marked to me: ‘Realy, I haven't at- | rage at (rom $12 to $20 a month. Here | pegont and eho epenkers wore J. HL 9 directors, There was a dance there! tended a party anywhere since the |{t would cost §76. People complain Case, D y Governor of the Fodera! every Thursday night. A lot of ola| war where the women were as de-|of rents, but they ere far more @x-| 2 Oe va seem eg VIE FOLK THERE women from the Hast sat on the|centiy dressed and behaved as well orbitant elsewhere. fie! Hd Presidenk OF the Hew Cork verandah all day and gossiped, ‘There |as these girls, It i9 most Interest-| “when all is said,” concluded the |gtate Bankers’ Association, and Larry was a good deal to gossip about, but |ing!'" |author of ‘Peroh of the Devil,’ Holly-| Sharkey. Robert A. Patteson, Presidgnt lees soandal than one would tmagine, wood Is unique and most interesting, Jot the association, presided © a judging from the virtuous outbursts| “There bas been some talk of do-|not the pesthole Ignorant reformers) A resolution was past e Famous Author Heard No More Scandal Than} over sist unfortunate colony of Iate.|ing away with Hollywood,” { ven-|are trying to muke 1t out # ener orang lig heorilpean eta hr rg % One heard of ‘wild parties’ of couree. | tured. | ————._——- |not discriminated against the agricul- in Other Places, She Avers, and General | co ans aces of other eceetion whare| crust may be. Colonies are al-| BLOC OPPOSED BY tunel interests, but during the recent . co! 1 ists Is Exem la moving picture folk are not admitted.| ways a mistake, They are too sett. | FARM period of depression has granted credit Conduct of Picture Colon PlATY | jsut dissipation in Hollywood te con-| centred. tt would be Car better tf all /BANKERS OF WESTCHESTER, | to the asricuitural ecctions tar exceed- . fined to small groupe. The majorit: cts tak i it citi ing that of other eections; that the ==Actore, Directors and Authors Have No) r'siron actors and actresses one the | here the people conncotes with them association (s opposed to the ensctment of Senate Bill No. 2,263, which will not Unusual Values Predominate in the February Sale of Fine’ Furs. \Russian Pony Sport Coat at $125 (Formerly $225) Muskrat Sport Coat at $175 Urge That Federal Reserve System ee too busy, too hard working, ve other interests and diver- : ; Time for Dissipation. th artord dissipation. Just consider | ions. “There 1s but one everlasting] Be Non-artian and Nom~ | rout n any betterment of the tarmors! (Hudson Seal trimmed; | : ‘Thev must be on the lot at 8 o'clock | topic in Hollywood—moving pictures. Polttical, {a in favor of the Congressional bill to (Formerly $295 1{ a the morning in order to make up| That {s unhealthy and stunting to any he Federal Reserve Bye: | fesilitate longer time credits to agri- r | By Ruth Snyder. ind be on the stage at 9 o'clock, They | mind. port. OF th : : ‘Y* | cultural {nterests by authorized Federal “€ did not hear any more andal rarely leave before 6 In the evening, sition to the egricultural! tand banks. By that time thelr one idea is to rest ‘But Hollywood posses: many Short Nutria Coat at $225 , W@uring tho nine months J spent in Hollywood than T have heard in other Blades—not as much, In fact.” The speaker rose restiessly and ereased tho room, her tall, graceful figare, Decomingly enhanced by a dia- | phanous tea gown of Azores blue, | werving to conjure a mental picture of ihe motion picture colony. But Ger- trude Atherton, far from being @ cinema actress in real life, is—as every ohe knows—an author of note and an ertist of distinction in real life. We had been sitting tete-a-tete in hier cozily furnished sitting room in | the Madison Square Hotel. We de cided to talk (at least I had decided to talk) on come marital question, hav- | ing, from some peculiar source, de- fived the notion that this was ono of Mm. Atherton’s favorite topics. But with a decided and determined down- ward movement of her arms Mrs. Atherton ‘‘hashed’’ this topic as too) banal. | Then our conversation drifted to| the theme of Mrs. Atherton’s Intest novel, “Sleeping Fires,” Just out, birs. ‘Atherton went on to explain t thesis of hen story had been tarpreted by certain reviewers, W GERTRODE ATHERTON jample, partly because she has y the breaking point, partly because le migh ‘ nat her eet in iting the beak was to (She knows that she has been the ruin bec hi t two people crented for|°f ® man endowed for a beilliant eeere thai ep apa career, and persuades herself it is eagh other would defy tim to gocomplish union, neverthel main purpose was to show the tr ible disabilities of the women of the sixties and seventies as compared unjust that she should continue to be espected member of society while he is an outcast "| fact L don't think she pretended to. and be ready for another Lard day's work next morning. Moreover, a se- quence is not always finished in one day, The actors of that sequence must come back looking exactly as thoy Jid the day before. If @ girl, for in- tance, indulged in a wild party and 4 with swollen eyes and haggard , she would be handed her con- ; or, if the pleture were too far advanced for that and the director were obliged to hold up production for several days—while overhead ex- penses went on—untll rest and Turk- | ish baths restored ber youthful | beauty, she would be retained until the pleture was finished, but no longer. She knows that and if she has any inclination for dissipation sho waits until the picture is finished, But as a matter of fact the actresses in Hollywood are as decent a lot as can be found anywhere. Several of the more famous actresses have thor-! oughly bad reputattons—I saw two in| @ highly illuminated condition myself ~-but the rank and file behave them- | selves far better than many of the| young people In fashionable society. Mrs. Atherton had mentioned the fact that Elinor Glyn had been at the Hollywood Hotel while she was there. | 1 wminded of the different im- pression of the American girl which Mra. Glyn had brought back with her and which had been incorporated in her article “Wat ls the matter with the American girl?” “Mrs, Glyn hardly could have got her impressions from Hollywood—in Smoked Elk Sport Oxford. Has dark Brown al tip and saddle . . . cAhead-of-Time A few Spring styles are now ready for the many women who will read this. Same quality as always — original, different designs —and rightly priced. FOR YOU? Ip Patent Leather, Black Satin or Gun Metal. Petite $8.00 ‘alfskin 95 a7 French heel . . . AMMEYER Unusually handsome effects for all (Formerly $395) ‘Rouge Chat Sport Coat at $350 (Also Hat to match) (Formerly $550) Leopard and Beaver Sport Coat at (Formerly $750) Black Caracul Day Coat at $495 (Formerly $950) Important Values Today Tailored and Fur-trimmed Suits at $35 (Values to $150) Fur-trimmed Evening Wraps at $95 (Values to $195) Velvet Afternoon Dresses at $65-$85 (Values to $195) manner of daytime wear. : enjoyed by | st en ae ier tei ph LT intereupte ef Mogical.” | She was writing of the American girl 41-51 W 34"St. NewYork i slave to convention, Now ~ “That is just the point,” Mrs./in general, 1 think she was far more ‘ Newark Store - 649 Brogd St i \” Bracticalty the mistress o° ier own Atherton agreed. “The woman of| favorably Impressed with Hollywood " } Me ial (iat day was Mogical, She could not| than she expected to be. I remember | eke that time, when a woman oiy-|b* otherwise. But you would under-|we wero sitting together looking on covered that her marriage was a mis- (Stand her character better {f you had (read the book.” \ H. Altman & Cn. t{teular interest we might discuss?" I eer ee NEW SPRING MERCHANDISE at invitingly low prices | take, she was without hope, wag intensely Genventional—t of eourse, if she was convention: Races Gat ace. “Suppose you interview yourself i fy Fires’ went cn Iiving with ber | OM Spme subject of interest.” husband although thoroughly dis-| Mysfoned. When she finally fell| Mrs. Atherton thought for a. tow | in love with the man who could|minutes. ‘How about Hollywood?" i hhaye given her everything she de-| 1 nodded approval. The “Sleeping manded, she submitted to the| Fires’? of hope rekindled. inevitable separation. When she| ‘Hollywood has beet very much hears that he is drinking himself to| maligned,’ death she decides to follow his ex- explain. Mrs. Atherton went on to T can speak at first hand, With Next Sunday’s World Women’s and Misses’ Trimmed Hats inthe youthful effects demanded by the younger Misses’ Tweed Suits im the approved shades fer the approaching season, will be offered to-morrow (Saturday) at the very attractive price of set, will be on special sale to-morrow (Saturday) cE | $25.00 ih a at $9.50 He A Fine Photograph of ia (Second Fleor) FY Ke The models portray the latest ideas in shapes Et ba and trimmings, and im addition there are a limited number ef Hats ef a more conserva= tive type A Player-Piano with a very Fine Phonograph Misses’ and Children’s (First Floor) ie, adie | Pope Pius XI ke) Both contained in the same case, A player-piano of unusual beauty of tone—it re- (Size 10x16 Inches) proepae exactly the hand Playing of great pianists, jut it is more than a player-p i’ plano case, completely concealed, is machine, which opens up the entire field of phono- graph music to you. at unusually low prices, will provide another special offering om the Second Floor, for to-morrow (Saturday) When you consider the possibilities of its use as a Tan Calfskin Shoes eombination—with your own accompaniment on Sa mayer lano and the voice of nome rent Hage Sizes6to8 . . » » «© perpair $4.00 ing machine—then you Fealize that nothing in the world of music Is im- Sizes 8, toll .« . » o perpalr 4.50 Sizes INW2to2 ,» 1 « «& perpalr 5.00 Girls’ Outerwear The Spring assortments, featuring the mosf fashionable styles and materials, are mow ready for selection. ‘ Of special interest, Im the regular stock, are Practical and Dress Coats, $13.50 to 58.00 Tailored Suite ,. , , , 23.00 to 65.00 Tweed Frocks . . , » 12.50 to 21.00 Silk Frocks ¢ 6 «6 « 19.75 to 55.00 Washable Frocks . , . 4.25 to 23.50 Separate Sheet on Good Paper Ready to Frame possible to the owner of an Apollo-phone, Cell at our store and witness a demonstration of thie newest instrement Your Phonograph or Piano Taken in Exchange OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL 10 P. M. TheRudolphWurlitzerCo. Victrolas—Pianos—Musica! Instruments 120 West 42d Street Between Broadway and 6th Ave- Phone Bryant 8140 Hf Unable to Call Personally, Mall Coupon Today, All of these Shoes have been made on lasts designed to give comfort and correct lines to the growing foot. The leather and werke manship leave nothing to be desired. (Second Fieor) (Second Ficor) To Insure Getting t—Order From Your Newsdealer in Advance - Madison Avenue. Fifth Avenue, New Pork Thirty-fourth Street Thirtp-titth Street LOLOL OT OI OAT Bis