4 PAGE TEN THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1949 GIRLS! For the holiday occasions, have MR. E. C. BARNES, hair stylist, give you a startling new hairdo. (Here every Tuesday) Ruth's Beauty Shoppe I Rug Takes Prize An honorable mention for prize rug weaving was awarded to Mrs. Gertrude Conover, Architecture College Assistant, by the Interna- tional Rug Weaving Exhibit hold at Greensboro, N.C. The hand woven rug, which took a first prize last April at the Na- tional Crafts and Decorative Art Show, at Wichita, Kansas, is done in five shade values of white to black, in a modern abstract design. ih. .i1 (Fifth Avenue Shop) 215 S. Fifth Avenue P Open Evenings and Saturday Afternoons Phone 7249 i (7 , -"l ii ' l .'- CHRI STMAS S. . at . . COUSINS t t 1 f 4 , Z LS - i . T ," 1 " ' Y." . .' { ,:? . + 4":> . 4. :i: . ,Y'4i.. J {. i Vv { ', ' '''': 3 .: t" ..t j. ti w { SLIPS Lacy Nylon or Rayon slips to please the feminine fancy. NYLON in White or Blue....... From $5.95 RAYON in White ..... ...........From $2.95 HALF SLIPS in White or Blue..... From $1.95 .; -- 1 --; 1 , r _.. - i ' . ; % 'y. G a .Y 'y S ' t . ' \ <::: , .; : ? % i.. 1z;y k .; ,,M1 h . . .., ' { :k". } % .; v { S,, ,.{.; $' ",, E, yr. ' 4 , S "J 11 4 -- CHECK YOUR ARGYLES? - Girls at Stockwell may be so eager to knit that they don't want to stop even while they're eating, but dorm rules say they can't. Here ohe knitter, putting up a brave front, checks hers as she goes in to dinner. ** * * Mysteries Behind Argyles Unravelled by Sock Expert DON'T LET - U CATCH UP WITH Y' Every lady on your Christmas list will love a cuddly-warm robe or a dress-up peignoir. * Satin Quilted Robe Study coat-$10.95 Full length-$16.95 * 100% Wool Flannel Robe Full length-$16.95 * Terry Cloth Robe Full length-$10.95 * Satin Peignoir-x$16.95 * Lovely Gift Lingerie Gowns and slips Sizes: 32-38, 7-15 LAY AWAY...A GIFT A DA from the store that sparkles with Christmas ideas. Come in with your gift list and take advantage of our convenient lay-away plan. rine OU! 'A ) By DAVIS CRIPPEN The great Argyle question was blasted wide open last week. This question, for those of you who may not have heard, is really two-fold. First, Why do girls knit argyle socks? anut second, Where do they ever get the ideas for the designs they knit in them?. DOING THE blasting was Mrs. Helena Van Akkeren (or just Mrs. Van to her friends) who, as pro- prietor of a N. University knit shop, has sent numberless coeds downhthe sock knitting path. The answer to the first ques- tion is fairly obvious, and then again it isn't. Mrs. Van declar- ed. The girls maize them for things like Christmas presents, of course, she said. But there are also, she added slyly, "a lot of them being made when girls are fishing around for J-Hop dates." BUT THIS works the other way around, with the boys doing the deep planning. "Lots of times," Mrs. Van recalled, "boys have come in and picked out the colors they liked and then started dis- cussing what girls they could get to make the socks." As for the different designs immortalized in the socks, they just seem to evolve, Mrs. Van indicated. The maize and blue numbers sporting an "M" on the instep, which are fairly common on cam- pus, started "a couple of years" ago in Mrs. Van's shop. Then a coed came in last year and ordered a pair for her father with his class year on the back. JUST LAST WEEK, another girl came in and wanted to know how to make a pair with the "M" and the year, and in addition her boy friend's fraternity letters on the foot. Mrs. Van herself invented another sock style, the Cana- dian or inverted "V" pattern, by mistake. One time, she said, she had been trying to knit ac- cording to a difficult pattern new to her. "I GOT MIXED up in it," she said simply, "and that style's what came out." But what of the future? Whither Argyles? The newest rage, Mrs. Van says is to make argyle ties to match the socks. Mrs. Agnes Hoseney, co-worker of Mrs. Van, added that there were also a lot of baby argyles be- ing knitted too. "Yes," Mrs. Van interjected quickly, "yes, but the girls don't make them so much." :. .r 4 WoY0 0 d a TOWN AND COLLEGE SHOPPE 302 South State Street / li' 'II J. H. COUSINS 307 South State :zz:::s.s::: Af . - NI A. - .-- U I b Santa Claus Headquarters for TOYS LAND 0' TOYS Biggest Selection of Toys in Ann Arbor YEAR 'ROUND TOYLAND er TOYS AS LOW AS la Here are two autos from our big selection. (108 different motor cars i3 1, ' ? i ® 1.... I .. ° ... by actual count). SIREN CAR A bright red police car with a friction motor. Loud wailing siren as car speeds across floor. Has immense appeal to youngsters. $1.00 BANG-A-BALL Little tots love to bang and hammer. The be curious and so will you, to see what happe to the ball. $1.50 DUMP TRUCK Wind it up, stand back and marvel. The truck backs up, driver turns his head, truck dumps and returns, driver looks ahead and drives away to repeat action. $2.98 The Hit of the Nursery! The Life of the Party! y'll ens ? yhar:;: ~'~"-~DIFF ERENT FACES&'. Here's a new toy so simple the smallest tyke can enjoy it, so fascinating adults never tire of it. Ideal for shut-ins. Perfect for traveling. HERSHEY BAR / ' , /, ::.:. *, ti;. b. root e Scatter Christmas Cheer . . . Give Accessories ! a. Ever-important gloves . . . both c. Handbags for evening and day- leather and wool knits. time. . . of velvet, leather and corde. from 3.95 from 2.95 b. Lovely hankies . . . embroidered, d. Imported Eisenberg jewelry .. . printed and lace trimmed. beautiful rhinestone earrings, necklaces and bracelets. 0- c. . dk. / 1%: fr C. / 1' . GAMES MAGNETIC DARTS A new, safe dart game. Magnetized darts adhere firmly to the two-sided metal target. A different game on each side. Only $1.00 Put in a pei Out pops a Bar. WE BANK nny! Push the button! Hershey Milk Chocolate .9 8 e carry refills. A I