‘Adarnless Eden’ Is Tliis Hotel for Federal \\ orkers Washington’s "Girls’ Town" is an "Adamless Euen,” a city within a city! This manless community is a gi gantic housing project for girls, sprawled over 109 acres in the very shadow of the mammoth Pentagon building in the nation's capital. Offi cially it is known as Arlington Farms. Unofficially it is called Girls’ Town, the first "hotel" ever run ex clusively by civil service employees. Arlington Farms is a project of the Public Buildings administration of the Federal Works agency, and. though only opened in March, 1943, today has more than 11,000 “citi ■zens," including 4,000 WAVES. The general manager is William J. Bis sell, of the PBA, and he is the only man who lives in Girls’ Town! He and his wife reside in the town’s only “penthouse," atop the towering three-story city hall, overlooking the rest of the development. Because of projects like Girls Town, the acute housing conditions in Washington were drastically re duced. The citizens of this com munity come from every state and territory. Most of them work in the Pentagon building, a few minutes walk from home. Only requirements to live in Arlington Farms are that |One must be a government employ ee; must earn a maximum of $1,800 a year; and be between the ages of 16 and 72. The average age is 20. Has Own Mayor. Girls’ Town can truthfully claim to be a complete civic entity. Its ten huge dormitories, named after states, each elect one member to the ‘‘city council,” which in turn elects one of its members as “may or.” The present “mayor” is 22-year old Lucy Alston, of Jackson, Miss., a clerk in the department of labor. Actually, these girls constitute the Arlington Farms’ recreation council, which checks and double-checks all activities on the premises, and is final authority on the grounds. The • ! WUak la da i • i By PHYLLIS BELMONT I l Question: I have some rare old dessert spoons but never see these Used in other homes. How may I Use mine correctly? Answer: By all means use your dessert spoons. They may be used for cereals at breakfast, for soup at luncheon, except when you use bouil lon cups, when you must use bouil lon spoons. Use your dessert spoons for vari ous desserts such as chocolate pud ding, rice pudding or tapioca, but not for ice cream. Above all don’t let the spoons lie idle. Fine silver is a heritage to be proud of, and should be used constantly to retain its rare beauty Use and polishing will keep it lovely always—it will not wear out. Ledger Syndicate.—WNU Features. Scattered about the 109-acre “campus” of Girls’ Town are numerous “refreshment tables,” where the young: women can eat ice cream and chat. Pictured are Tat McCloud, Lohrville, Iowa; Dorothy Hannah, Lincoln, Neb.; Jean Belchrad, Ames, Iowa; and Rosalie Bell, Bedford, Ind. Notice the comfortable-looking two-story buildings in the back ground, where the girls live. last “Court of Appeal” is Mr. Bis- 1 sell himself, who is contacted daily by the council for official opinion. The system has worked admirably. All buildings in Girls’ Town are built of an asbestos composition in cluding ground corn husks, which is fire-resistant. Nevertheless, Girls’ Town has its own fire department, with one completely' equipped fire truck! The ten dormitories, or resi dence halls, more like sorority houses, are resplendent with bright chintzes, modern, light-colored fur niture, and 3,000 paintings and sculp tured works donated by the fine arts section of the defunct WPA. Bot tom rent for a dormitory is $16.50 per month, but 97 per cent of the girls pay $24.50 monthly for the “de luxe suite.” A Dollar a Day to Eat. Food at Arlington Farms is an im portant item, and is carefully super vised by Mr. Bissell and his “gov erning body.” In a cafeteria seat A peek into a “dc luxe suite.” Phyllis Nord, Buhl, Minn., is powder ing her nose before going on a shopping tour, while Rosalie Bell tunes in a swing band. About 97 per cent of the girls live in the tastefully fur nished dc luxe suites, but there are dormitory accommodations at a lower rental. The Rambling Rhymster •O. By LES PLETTNER ICE AND COAL Hans Johnson was a businessman lie dealt in iee and coal. It seemed that when the snow began. He started then to roll. All through the frigid winter days. He filled each vacant bin; Enveloped in a sooty haze— He shoveled it down in. He was as busy as a bee— As active as a cat. From dawn till late in evening he. . . . Had neither stopped nor sat. But then with coming of the spring— With weather warm and nice— His business dropped like anything— He took to hauling ice. All through the sultry summer days He hauled it here and there. Beneath the sunshine's burning rays . . . lie climbed each step and stair. Said Hans, “In winter I haul coal. To keep the people warm— To do that is my aim and goal, In time of snow and storm. But when the summer days appear, ’ I show I’m no darn fool. I switch to ice that’s cold and clear, j And thus 1 keep things cool. So be the weather cold or hot . . . Coming or going by . . . I get ’em . . . to my profit. . . What a businessman am I!” ing 2,000 a girl can eat three whole some, nutritious meals a day for only one dollar! Further, food preparation and servings are along modern, sanitary lines. Paper eating and drinking utensils, for example, are almost exclusively used in the many snack bars that dot the expansive commu nity, as well as in the huge cafe teria. Miss Norma L. Edwards of Al bany, N. Y., the dietitian in charge of feeding at Arlington Farms, main tains that “Thousands of sanitary paper cups, paper plates and paper souffle cups for salads and pud dings are used each week, and that the annual total reaches astronomi cal proportions." Has Civic Center. Girls’ Town has its own civic cen ter, built around the administration building, or “city hall,” as the girls prefer to call it. A Washington de partment store has opened an im pressive branch in Arlington Farms, and its first job was querying all the residents via a questionnaire. Prices were gauged this way, and now the girls can purchase almost anything within their budgets. There are six laundry rooms and a drug store in each of the ten dor mitories. Navy chaplains preside at the only church, an inter-denomi national one. The local movie the ater is housed in the huge auditori um seating 1,200. Plays, too, are occasionally presented by the local theater group, and dances are fre quently held. Girls’ Town has, in fact, an all-girl band which almost invariably provides the dance rhythms at such affairs. There are beauty parlors and shops of every type, specially priced, appealing to girls. The City is especially proud of its modern infirmary, with 60 beds and complete medical and nursing facilities. Except for major ill nesses, the "hospital” staff can care for almost any contingency. There is no charge for hospital service. Believe it or not, there is even a “college” in this no-man’s land, and regular college credits are awarded to girls passing the night-school courses. The classes are held in the recreational building. As for sports, Girls’ Town has just about everything. There are bowling alleys, tennis courts, minia ture golf courses, two basketball courts, soft ball diamonds, and grounds for badminton, shuffleboard, quoits and similar games. Aiinuta Ataka-llfaj i ByGABRIELLE It takes an extra minute to do a pretty powder job—but girls, it's worth that minute! Pat on your pow der from the base of the throat up ward. Soft, gentle but firm pats. A powder brush will give a smooth finish. And to keep powder freshly fragrant, stir it up from the bot tom. Use a bone spatula or a spoon And keep the lid fastened to keep the fragrance in and the dust out! i Ledger Syndicate. — WNU Features. I Heroes of Bataan Fight Will Get Special Ribbon LEYTE. PHILIPPINES. - The Philippine government announced it •would issue two sets of service rib bons to the defenders of Corregidor and Bataan, and to the military per sonnel who fought for liberation of the islands. The ribbons for the heroes of Cor regidor and Bataan will have a red background with two small vertical blue stripes at each end and three white stars in the center. TEiEFACT TOBACCO PRODUCTION GOING UP 1,399 MILLION LBS. ^ , 1,616 MILLION LBS. 1944 "GAY GADGETS" Associated Newspapers—WNU Features By NANCY PEPPER THREE CHEERS FOR THE BOYS We’re happy to report that the soda fountain crowd is doing its bit toward entertaining the boys both here and abroad. Here are three popular teen projects that deserve special commendation in these col umns, if only to prove that teen tricks aren't all stuff and nonsense. Join the TAGS—You know wha* “stags” are and you know what “bags" are, but how about TAGS? The letters stand for Teen-Age Group and the idea is to have a spe cial weekly party for servicemen under 20 years of age at the local USO with the Teen-Age Group act ing as hostesses and dancing part ners. Our first report of the TAGS comes from Newport, R. I. Why don't you suggest a TAG evening to the directors of your local USO? News From Home—Lots of high schools are printing special news papers for the boys who have left school to join the armed forces. Usu ally the editorial staff of the regular school paper handles the job. Local gossip about the Soda Fountain Crowd and plenty of gags fill the columns. The paper is mailed out to the boys, whether they are in American training camps or already overseas. Just imagine how they enjoy hearing about the kids they left behind them! Get In The Scrap—And you can, too, by making scrap books for the servicemen in hospitals, the way lots of teen-age girls are doing. Give them plenty of pin-up photos, car toons and complete magazine seri als. Here’s something for your club or sorority to do the next time you get together. HEADS AND TAILS If you’re planning to make some novel lapel gadgets, consider these new ideas in animals and birds with long tails. They’re much newer than the funny faces you’ve been making in cork, powder puffs, walnuts and what have you. Our Feathered Friends — Cut pieces of felt or fabric in the shape of a parrot. Stuff well and sew neat ly together. Finish with long narrow strips of multi-color felt in fantail effect or make a realistic looking tail out of little multi-color feathers. Use se quins for eyes that really sparkle! I'ur run — r ur tails make wonderful trimmings for lapel animals, especially little dogs of leather or oilcloth scraps. For real glamour, try white leather gadgets (the white leather from old kid or suede gloves) with ermine tails. For sports wear, black patent leather or oilcloth with brown fur tails. You will find fur taik at any trimming counter. Ransack the family scrap bags for pieces of fur If the scraps are big enough, cut in shapes of animals and sew together to a piece of fabric of the same shape, with slight padding between. Scotties are particularly doggy. Use beads or buttons for eyes and nose, and out-of-this-world dog collars made of leather embroidered in beads. BOY CRAZIES We’re always talking about girls’ fad-shions. How’s for giving with the goo on boys’ drapes? We don’t sa. that any boy in his right mind and GI haircut would adopt all | these fads, but we do guarantee that each one is an authentic teen trick for which the wolves howl. Coming: or Going?—What copy cats those boys are! Just because the girls wear their cardigan sweat ers buttoned down the backs, the boys are wearing their loafer or foot ball jackets backside-front. Scarf Snatchers — The boys are still snatching hair bows from the girls and wearing them in their beanies or in their hair, but it's even newer for a boy to wear girls’ babushkas as a scarf around his neck. Hot Feet—We’re referring to the socks the boys are wearing. Wow. what colors! And. it’s considered extra sharp to wear two different socks, one brighter than the other. BAG WITH A SAG A teen-age gal has strange ideas On fashions smooth and sporty, Her dresses may be size 14, Her sweaters are size 40! She calls a coke a “little Joe,” A ear is a "Jalopy.” She calls her beau her “O.A.O.”— WE CALL HER SWEATERS “S LOPP V”! Son of a Borrower Pays Up Old Debt HOLYOKE, MASS. — Thirty three years ago Joseph Skinner loaned a mill hand $100 to pay his son’s college expenses. When the borrower died, Skinner thought no more about the money. Recently he received a letter from his for mer employe’s son containing a thank you note—and a check for $100. STAGED SCREEN RADIO Released by Western Newspaper Union. By VIRGINIA VALE IT’S the real Deanna Durbin whom you’ll see in "Can’t Help Singing"; the picture’s in technicolor, so Deanna’s hair is golden, not the darker shade created for her black and white films. But the star will have to vie with the landscape, for this super-Western was made against the spectacularly beautiful scenery of Utah. The turquoise blue Navajo lake could offer competition to any actress. Deanna rated the best in music, too; her songs were written by Jerome Kern, author of the music for “Show Boat” and DEANNA DURBIN many other hits, and the lyrics are by E. Y. Harburg, who turned out the verses for the songs in “Bloom er Girl,” New York's newest mu sical hit. -* During the first eight weeks of “To Have and Have Not,” at a New York theater, 350,000 persons paid to see the Humphrey Bogart-Louren Bacall opus. The Bogart admirers swarmed in by thousands, many others came to see the new starlet. -* Johnny Coy and Miriam Franklin rehearsed for three and a half months for the dance they da In "Duffy's Tavern”—two weeks long er than it took Fred Astaire and Marjorie Reynolds to prepare their routines for “Holiday Inn." Inci dentally Johnny, recently signed by Paramount, is being hailed as a combination of Astaire and Gene Kelly, because of his performance in “Out of This World.” -* John Cromwell has a reputation as a director who brings out hidden talent and develops stars; he’s the man who made Bette Davis a star in "Of Human Bondage.” In "Since You Went Away” several newcom ers give outstanding performances. Now along comes “The Enchanted Cottage"—see it and keep an eye on Eden Nicholas. Martha Holliday. Virginia Belmont, Nancy Marlow, Robert Clarke, Bill Williams and Carl Kent. Maybe you’ll be in on the development of a new star. -* Wally Cassell, playing a light hearted G I. whom the girls go for in “G.I. Joe,” the Ernie Pyle pic ture, ovy<»s his screen career to Mickey Rooney. Rooney saw him in a Los Angeles cafe, got him a screen test and a contract with Metro. If you attend a broadcast of “Mr. District Attorney” you see Ethel Browning toting a box about three inches high; she stands on It when ever it’s time for her to say her lines. The voice of a tough gun moll comes from a tiny gal who can’t reach the mike! "Brother Al" Heifer, former Mu tual Broadcasting System sports an nouncer and honorably discharged lieutenant commander of the navy, has the latest Cinderella story to tell. While strolling through the cor ridor of New York’s 20th Century Fox office to audition as a commen tator, he was spotted by a talent scout. Result, a technicolor screen test and a long-term contract for the handsome, six-foot five Al. But don’t look for him on the screen under that name—it’ll probably be changed before he faces the cameras. Larry Stevens, the 21-year-old lad who replaced Dennis Day as singer on the Jack Benny program, is ex tra pleased about that contract be cause now he can marry his high school sweetheart, Barbara Wil liams, Universal contract player. You’d think Dick Haymes would be content, what with his “Every thing for the Boys” air show over NBC and his starring role opposite Betty Grable in 20th Century-Fox's “Diamond Horseshoe.” But now he's studying short-story writing! ODDS AND ENDS—Danny Kaye is now starring on his own air show on CBS. . . . We're told that Cornelia Otis Skinner and Roland Young may come hack in a radio series like their “Wil liam and Mary.” . . . Archduke Felix of Austria told Jean Fontaine that the best movie he'd seen was “Going My Way.” . . . Judy Canova is now appearing on a new series over NIIC. . . . There’s still popular demand for another Bhil Baker show with Beetle and Bottle; Beetle is Ward (Stage Door Canteen) Wilson, and Bottle is llarry (It Bays to Be Ignorant) McNaughton. ... No need to identify Bhil (Take It or Leave It) Baker. Corduroy and Velveteen Make Cunning Frocks for Little Girls Ry CIIERIE NICHOLAS CHILDREN play a delightful role in the fashion picture. They are dressed so cunningly these days it would seem as if they had stepped right out from the colorfully illus trated pages of a story book. De signers who create such adorable clothes surely have a talent all their own. It is interesting to note the mate rials these designers favor most in fitting out little folks with pretty and practical clothes. If a vote were taken there is every reason to be lieve that corduroy would score first in favor with velveteen a close sec ond. Corduroy has a way of being sturdy and utilitarian with prac tically “no wear out about it" at the same time that it makes up beautifully in dressy little frocks and coats. When it comes to hard wear, corduroy meets every test unfailingly, and when it comes to fashioning pretty-pretty dresses this winter, it is proving a fabric ideal. The prestige of this practical as well as most attractive material^ has been greatly enhanced during the last several seasons with the introduction of an especially fine pin wale corduory called cordurella, which is voguish both for chil dren and grownups. You can see, centered above in the illustration, how prettily cordurella makes up into a cunning bolero suit with hat to match. It was a clever move on the part of the designer who took mother's and big sister’s favorite fashion, the bolero suit, and copied it in miniature for little daughter. The tiny jacket ties at the neck and has a beanie to match. The ensemble is trimmed in gay peasant flowers to the delight of the youngster that wears it. Another type of dress that should be in every little girl’s wardrobe is the jumper. Youngsters love to wear their pretty jumper frocks of bright cordurella, and mothers like this fabric because it can be easily washed over and over again, com ing out as smart-looking as ever. With a change of blouse each day it gives variety, to the delight of the little wearer. Then too, it solves the what-to-wear to school and at-play problem so easily and simply. Ice cream makes a party for most every little Miss, and so does a cun ning red velveteen dress, as pic tured to the left. Especially does it look “partyfled” when trimmed with dainty Irish-type lace, as you see here. The nice thing about cotton velveteen is that while it is practi cal and comparatively inexpensive, it tunes perfectly to Sunday-best wear and to all sorts of important occasions in a child's life. Soft string bows, sweetheart neckline and puffed sleeves such as prettify this dress, are gay little details wee young ladies like. A cotton oxford cloth jumper dress is shown to the right. It is gaily trimmed in narrow bright embroi dered banding which outlines the bib effect and gives an extra fillip to the graceful simulated pinafore that is sewed in as a part of the*dress. Cotton oxford cloth is attractive in any color, but in navy or wine, trimmed with gay embroidery it looks more than an ordinary wash dress. You can easily get inch-wide Mexican - embroidered band trim ming which adds just the right dash of color to the dress pictured, at lace or dress-trim counters. Since peasant fashions are so popular, this type of trim is appearing on both dresses and sheer Mexican - type blouses for youngsters. The young fry just love the new checked taffeta that is being made up into sprightly little dresses. They also like the gay plaid taffetas, for the rustle of taffeta is music to the ears of a little girl who likes to feel dressed up. Released by Western Newspaper Union. Whimsies for Tots Made of Bright Felt Of course you can buy these little whimsies in way of bonnets and bo leros and cunning suspenders and bags done in the quaint Tyrolean way that make little children look like fairy-tale characters, but it’s fun making them, too. Material needed for these pictur esque items are a remnant or so of felt in the basic colors, red, brown, green, navy or French blue. Felt by the yard can usually be found in any upholstery department Then lay in a supply of cutout felt flowers and amusing motifs which are easily available in various sections, either among the dress trimmings or some times at the pattern counter. You will also need a skein or so of wool yarn to finish off the edges of the little garments with crochet or buttonholing. There are patterns to be had of wee sleeveless boleros, suspenders to attach to little skirts, for bonnets of every type and bags tiny or large to carry to kindergar ten or school. Older little girls like these bright fancies as well as tots. Jumper Dresses Now Made in Larger Sizes For a long time the jumper dress worn with different blouses was re garded as a fashion for the slim and youthful figure. The dress is so practical with the change of blouses it affords, designers decided to turn it out in colors and cuts that would flatter the larger-sized woman A deftly designed jumper in dark green, navy or brown gabardine with well built-up under-arm treat ment and a slenderizing deep V neckline is available in the better stores in the larger sizes. Bustle-Back Drape The rustle of taffeta is in the air. This sprightly rayon taffeta that is making such a splurge in the fabric realm is as fashionable in plaids and stripes as can be. and it is just as smart in plain colors. The bustle evening gown pictured is of taffeta in a lovely cerise shade. The eve ning formals made up with the huge bustle bows with corresponding bows at the shoulder give a new sil houette which is growing in favor right along. It’s part of the revival of Victorian modes.