JRSDAY, DECEMBER 2; 1948 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FIVE ig Out Grandma's Gaiters Meet Paris Style Orders paris—(UP) Here's the word on Paris shoe styles for next year. It's button shoes. If course, not all the shoes are buttoned, but the idea is the same, hed heels, pointed toes, and that gaiter look. he shoes were displayed in a "shoe showing" which included amethyst garnet-studded gold kid "chaus-* ed "interieur," a bed-room slipper ed at a mere $250. actually, few people walk around these creations. They are made at the designs can be sold to img shoe manufactures all over world. are's what's new for next year; daytime year; thick crepe-soled liking Oxford type shoes with flat sides, made in gay, colorful, shiny others. Red and kelly green pre- ried for wear with gray tweeds, even (first time seen in a fash- show anywhere) with dressy k dresses. For afternoon wear and cocktail ties, the spat shoe (or high but ultrate type) came into its own. atching plaid spats over black ent leather, pointed-toe pumps, example, were shown with a navy black ensemble. Gray elastic sheaths built up over a regular shoe line and closely engaging the ankles also were shown thick stock and brown patent leather shoe-bases. For dancing in the afternoon and ening, there were soft baby-pink, ghheed bootees. Baby blue and ink also were featured in furred "after ski" boots. Dodging from the Victorian look鞋wear was one pair with theap-button business, a sandalwith rounded last made in black paint leather which was strictly 1920. Straps of all kinds and the roan-sandal effect of lattice-workes up the ankles were shown foroth cocktail and evening wear,although there were no flat heelsceils in the collection, by Paris'ing shoe designers, went aslittle over three inches. Colors, bright ones, were shown with dark ensembles, and other ones were mouse gray, bottle green, blueaby blue and pink, beige, dead leaf, chocolate brown (to wear with lack), hounds to tooth black and white check, and red plaids for the upperstructure or gaiter. as a kind of Slits, punctures and pleats, especially cut-outs in leaflike formations over the toes, were shown on most all models. One model was complicated it took the shoeer a week to make. Those shoes are all handmade. Petrowsky-Kraft Wedding Myra Ann Petrowsky, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Arnid Petrowsky of Weston, was married to George Lee Kraft, son of Mr. and Mrs. James Kraft of Holyrood, at 3 p.m. Sunday in St. Paul's Lutheran church at atroma. After a week's wedding trip the couple will be at home on a farm hear Hollyrood. Both Mr. and Mrs.Kraft attended the University last year.Mr Kraft is a member of Acacia fraternity. ☆ ☆ Roady-Grimes Engagement The engagement of M. Frances Roady, Hoisington, to Albert L. Grimes, Marion, was announced by Margaret Roady at a birthday party for Miss Frances Roady at the Mannoth Cave hotel in Bowling Green, Ky. Monday. Both Miss Roady and Mr. Grimes are former students of the University and are now enrolled at West- ern Kentucky State Teachers col- lege. Both will graduate in January. The wedding will take place in the early summer. ___ The typical American goes to bed at 10 o'clock on week nights and gets up at 6:30 a.m., according to the National Association of Bedding Manufacturers. Phi Kappa Sigma Pledges Phi Kappa Sigma fraternity announces the pledging of Frank Lance Shogrin, Fowler, and George E. Prochaska, Ellsworth. Harmon Co-op Hour Dance Harmon Co-op will entertain with an hour dance Friday, from 8 to 9 pm. Harmon Onen House \* \* \* Harmon Co-op entertained with an open house Nov. 19. Guests present were: Robert Kent, Don Holmberg, Normell Ess, Joe Natty, H. H.Hobrock, J. R.Majors, Max Wilbur, Charles Arnold, Robert Capen, Carroll Sprague, John Hedger, Richard Pfister, Hollis Hands. Fred McCracken, Max Morrison, Fred Cooper, Warren G. Smith, Saul Zabar, Eddy Wollner, Arnold Freed, Tibor Sabe, Jim Glass, William Monday, Paul Sokoloff, George Upham, Hershel Dannemann, Jack Clevenger, Leigh Wellborn, Dewey Churchill, Gavian Beuthien. Arthur Snyder, Eleanor Anderson, Beverly Wilbur, Norma Hunsinger and Shirley Spector. Chaperons were Mr. and Mrs. Max Dresden and Miss Portteus Latimer. Egg production per bird in the United States increased from about 83 in 1909 to 127 in 1947. Perhaps you noticed the scrambling around the table outside the Jayhawk office in the student Union Tuesday night but couldn't get close enough to see what was going on. Photos Returned By Jayhawker The cause of the commotion was a pile of more than a hundred photographs and a sign which read: Your picture might be here. Help yourself. help yourself. The photographs were placed there by the Jayhawker staff after a house-cleaning spree. The pictures had appeared in previous issues of the Jayhawker. Although the group doing the rummaging was entirely of men, it was noticed that pictures of women's organizations were the first to be taken. Gamma Alpha Chi Pledges 11 Members Gamma Alpha Chi, professional women's advertising fraternity, held a pledging service for 11 new members followed with a dinner in the Palm room. Wednesday night. the pledges are Mary Jean McCartney, Carol Buhler, Nancy Smith, Betty McCune, Shirley Garst, Betty Webb, Nancy Jackson, Mildred Gulnik, Virginia Daniels, Jane Belt, and Joan Deeds. Mrs. R. Dean Johnson and Mrs. Jack King, national officers of Gama Alpha Chi from Kansas City Mo., were guests of the local chapter Six Members Attend Convention Of KHK Six members from the Kansas chapter of Kappa Eta Kappa, professional electrical engineering fraternity, attended a national convention of the organization in Minneapolis on Nov. 26 and 27. They visited the physics department and student union on the University of Minnesota campus. Those attending were Jack Cejka Charles Grimmett, Jack Hollingsworth, Chesley Looney, Elton Noble, and David Thomson. We Believe in Service We'll - Air Your Tires Water Your Battery Wash Your Windshield Cash Your Checks Mail Your Letters Why not "Join up" and be a regular customer—You'll Like It! FRITZ CO. Phone 4----8th and N.H. GIVE RECORDS FOR CHRISTMAS ALBUMS BY Robert Shaw - - - - $6.00 Perry Como - - - - 4.00 Bing Crosby - - - - 3.94 Frank Sinatra - - - - 3.95 St. Luke's Choir - - - 3.29 BELL MUSIC CO. 925-27 Mass. 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