FRIDAY, MAY 3, 1940 - UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE Home Interest Conference Held Here Today The Home Interest Conference opened at 10 o'clock this morning with registration in Spooner-Thayer museum. The meetings which deal with exterior and interior decoration of the home are being sponsored by the departments of home economics and design and the extension division. Chancellor Deane W. Malott gave the address of welcome at 10:30 a.m., followed by a discussion of "Making Your Standards of Living Correspond to Your Income" presented by John Ise, professor of economics. This was a lecture on family finance dealing with the arrangement of the budget. Viola Anderson and Olga Hoesley of the home economics department and Mrs. Fred Ellsworth supplemented the talk with a panel discussion. Elizabeth Meguiar, dean of women, gave a lecture on "Accessories of the Home." Following this an illustrated lecture on "Old Glass as a Profitable Hobby," was presented by Mrs. W. D. Beven, chairman of the committee on American homes of the Kansas Federation of Women's Clubs. A tour of Spooner-Thayer museum was held from 2:30 to 4 p.m. Guests viewed displays of glass, rugs, coverlets, quilts, furniture, and clocks. Student demonstrations of clay modeling, pottery making, p印刷, and sculpturing were featured in the visit to the design department at 4:30 p.m. Dinner for the visitors will be held at 6:15 p.m. in the Union building." Landscaping the Home Grounds." an illustrated talk by Donald Durell, professor of botany, will be featured at the dinner, which will close today's activities. No Expeditions to Claim $1,000,000 Hitler Reward New York, May 3—(UP)—The $1,000,000 reward offered by Samuel Harden Church, president of the Carnegie Institute, for the capture of Adolf Hitler, caused complaint and ridicule today but as yet, no kidnaping expeditions were reported under way The New York Times, through which Church made the offer, reported it had received a telegram from a professional strong man in Houston, Texas, offering to "bring Hitler back," but he wanted a $100,000 advance. The Times also reported a telephone call from Victor Frederick Himmelwright, a senior at Rennsauer Polytechnic Institute at Troy, N.Y., counter-offering a $10,000 reward for the capture "dead or alive" of British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain and French Premier Paul Reynaud. The youth said he was arranging to post the money in a South Orange, N. J., bank and that he was making the offer as an Allied sympathizer, believing that Britain and France should dispose of their present leaders. Church's offer, backed by 50 men and women of Pittsburgh, provided that Hitler must be taken "alive and unwounded" before the League of Nations for trial for "crimes against the peace and dignity of the world." Society— (Continued from page two) Claire Mecker, c'41. Sarilou Smart, c'41, Betty Lou Hancock, c'43, Mrs. Wesley Songer, Lawrence, Mrs. Kenneth Shook, Lawrence, Lt. James Hail, '38, Mitchell Field, Long Island, New York., Bruce Cottier, '38, St. Joseph, Mo. Chaperones were Mrs. F. E. Kester, Mrs. C. H. Ashton, Mrs. Henry Werner, and Mrs. Clark Mandigo all of Lawrence. 1 1 1 Mrs. C. E. Esterly, house director of Watkins hall, left Thursday for Youngstown, Ohio, where she will visit relatives for a few days. Dinner guests at the Delta Tau With Those Cotton Flocks "Campus Wedgies" $2.45 Haynes and Keene Phone 924 819 Mass. Delta fraternity house last night were Miss Helen Rhoda Hoopes, Miss Florence Black, Miss Maude Elliott Dinner guests at the Delta 'Upsilon fraternity house Thursday night were Anna Jane Hoffman, c'43, and Dorothy Westfall, c'43. and her mother Mrs. Sam S. Elliott of Lawrence, and Dick Gertz. Members of the University Dramatics Club and the faculty of the department of speech will be guests at a buffet supper tonight in the Sunflower room of the Memorial Union building at 6 o'clock. Following the dinner the club members will attend a dance in the Kansas room. Mrs. Deane W. Malott was elected president of the University Women's Club in the Men's lounge of the Memorial Union building yesterday. The club voted to give a $100 scholarship to a University woman during the coming year. Mrs. Frank Brown was general chairman of the tea, and Mrs. Earl Hay and Mrs. Eugene Stephenson poured. Notice Baseball: Kansas vs. Nebraska, today; 3:00. Kansas vs. Nebraska, tomorrow; 2:00. Kansas vs. Kansas State, foror- row; 3:30. Sold by University Men There's fun ahead for feet that can take it . . . for fitted feet! Are yours? And there's a smart Bostonian correctly styled for your summer activities . . . Get to go places this summer comfortably at ease and fitted for action. Enjoy the "fit and feel" that well-groomed men have found only in Bostonians . . $7.85 BOSTONIANS FIT RIGHT...FEEL RIGHT...they're Walk-Fitted Mansfield Shoes - - - $5.00 up For Mother's Day Sunday, May 12 We suggest: Llewelly—How Green Was M. Yellow. $2.75 My Valley, $2.75 Tulipa, Susie Single's Tucker—Miss Susie Slagle's. $2.50 Sinclair Lewis —Bethel Merri- day $2.50 Pearl Buck—Other Gods $2.50 Priestley—Let the People Sing. $2.50 Lin Yutong—Moment in Peking $3.00 $3.00 Steinbeck—Grapes of Wrath. $3.75 Morley—Kitty Foyle. $2.50 Morrow—Where the Blue Begins. $1.00 Oxford Book of English Verse, Andre—Murois—Art of Living. 63-50 House—Wild Flowers. $3.95 Moore—Old Glass. $1.89 Brass candle sticks, bookends, cloissonne boxes and trays. Aplets. Mother's Day Greeting Cards THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. St. Tel. 666 HIS GIRL FRIDAY GETS TOLD OFF! Cary Grant and Rosalind Russell in one of their "Romantic" scenes in the wild, witty comedy "His Girl Friday" which opens a 4-day engagement, starting Sunday at the Granada.