PAGE FOUR THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN MONDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1924 New Football Coach for Washington U. May Be Bill Roper Princeton University Mentor Offered Position After Conference It is reported as a possibility that W. W. "Bill" Roper, head football coach at Princeton University for the past five years, will accept the position of head football mentor at Washington University, St. Louis, Mr. McNeil, and Chancellor Herbert Hadley, and the Washington athletic board. It has been known that Washing- ton has been prepared to pay from $10,000 to $12,000 a year for a good coach of football. A Missouri Valley conference rule providing that coaches have no other business except coaching athletics or training to reports, Roper, while at Princeton spent about eight months of the year tending to outside business interests and the remaining four was given to coaching the Princeton team. Speaking this morning of the pool bility of Roper coming to Washing ton, Coach "Patsy" Clark said, "I would be a fine thing for Washing ton, if they could obtain the service." He also told a coed team at Washington. Unofficial reports placed the sclary offered Roger at as high as $20,000 for coaching and teaching the school of law at the University. Washington University has finished at the bottom of the Valley football standing for the past several years and during the past season was unable to score a single point against Valley opponents. War Supplies Confiscated --students themselves organized a committee to try to look out for re-education students. They had no money no resources except hearts that even they could get. One day they heard that an office had been opened, and with fear and trembling this girl went to find out what it was like and if there really was a chance for help for students. She said that it was all that she could do, especially to go "if, partly because she should English and partly because she was ashamed to ask a foreign man for help for Hungarian students, but she decided that the suffering of the students put on her the obligation. She said, "It is not easy to give help and I knew that it might make it possible for us we saw the fact that it came from students and we knew that if it came from students it was just like having it endured on our brethers and sisters." She ended up by saying, "I can never expi-sate what the student friendship food has to offer me," and then I met to speak in this country I am ready to do so." Government Institutes Severa Libel Proceedings Arms and munitions of war have been seized by the federal authorities on several occasions during the past year and lied proceedings instituted for their forfeiture, according to Attorney General of the United States. The Department of Justice has made every effort to prevent violations of the espionage act and the proclamations of the president place on hold all cases in which arms and munitions were战于 China, Mexico, Honduras and Cuba. Several airplanes, believed to be intended for use in Cuba and Honduras were seized in Florida and are now issued by officers of this department. An attempt was made to export a number of hydroplanes to Canada for purposes of forest patrol, contrary to a provision inserted in the sale contract to the effect that such places may be used for foreign government or citizen of a foreign government. A restraining order was secured from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, enjoining the purchasers of the planes from selling them to a foreign government, a citing a foreign government, or exporting them out of the United States. Eastern Colleges Liberal in Friendship Fund Gift "Last year 209 schools in the Eastern area contributed $79,247 to the student friendship fund. Of those 209 schools we have had answers from 106 that they will go on this year. From 25 others we have had answers from 31, 18, and 13 who did not contribute last year and said that they will this. Nearly eighty thousand dollars were contributed by colleges of New England and Atlantic states last year for the student friendship fund. The following is a report made by the director of the Eastern area: Seven college have said that they will not contribute. Of these seven there are two important contributors, Barnard College and Massachusetts College, who have made only small contributions in other years. Barnard has decided to shift its efforts to the raising of an international fellowship of their own but they do not expect to forsake it or be for more than this one year." Dr. Sherbon to Attend Meeting Dr. Florence Sherborn, of the home economics department will leave Dec 26, for New York City to attend a health conference of the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company to be held Dec. 29. Dr. Sherbon will art as a member of an advisory group on the work is being carried on and hope to bring home some new ideas," and Dr. Sherbon. Send the Daily Kansan Home. Chemistry Has Contributed to Medicine in Fighting Diseases: Trying to Solve Life Secrecy A shabbily dressed medical student lunching in a cafeteria awn across his table a man suddenly become rigid in his chair, pale, and his forehead bead with perspiration. His heart rate is racing, his gagged mouth a heart" when the student strained away to a nearby drug-store, retrained with a "penet"; amyl nitrate whose glass he crushed in his hand-kneelched and held to the suffice: to breathe. Rebel was instantaneous and too brave to be wealthy and the student rewarded. D1 Angina pectoris, with which the man was suffering an acute attack, claimed its toll of torture for centuries before chemistry gave us its specific, xenyl nitrites. According to the writings of John Hopkins, twenty-three more years of needless agony were undergone simply because chemist, pharmacologist and physician had not learned to work together; the medicinal properties of the propaesthetic agents saved after chemists found the formula. In the case of ether, the misfortune of lack of co-operation was greater still. This anesthetics was discovered in the thirteenth century; in 1650 it failed to ferreed six hundred years, and untold suffering was the consequence. Chemists knew magnesium sulphate in 1694. Two hundred years later physicians learned that it gave great pain, convulsion, poisoning, lock-in and harm. In its infancy, however, chemistry was closely allied to medicine. The very name refers to the land of Chemi, or Egypt where priests experimented with chemicals for use as medicines. Paracelsus, immortal in chemistry and medicine said in his treatise *Aureolus* (the pose of chemistry is to make medicines rather than gold). The science drifted far from this first indicated task of助着 the doctor, and indeed made gold—much gold—not by the conversion of taser metals as it attempted, but by furnishing praises for used, stored, iron, and dyes along with a host of other aids to industrialism. More recently we have seen the sister science again united. Pasteur world-renowned for his invention of vaccines, and first of all a master chemist signalized the return of chemistry to medicine. Hungarian Student Tells of Friendship A Hungarian woman student, brought to America in the interest of the Student Friendship movement, discussed the situation of the students of her country before a group of Bryn Mawr students recently. She told them about the refugees and how they had poured down from upper Hungary to Budapest. To make it vivid, she said that her own ex-servicer had taken her home where they had thirteen room; to live for three years in a room with three other people, one of whom was her grownup brother. She said "I love my family, but you cannot imagine what it is to live in such close contact with other people, and, while I was living like that, to do the studying for my doctor's degree." When they got to Budapest, the students themselves organized a committee, to try to look out for refugees. They had no money and no resources except hearts that were filled with a desire to help. TONIGHT YOU WILL RADETEC Made in USA your car, on your GPS, or a complete set of album cards. No more hurting for an audiophile. A RADIO TECH is always ready to receive. DOUGLAS RADIO CO. TONER WORKER MFG.CO. 324 Bryant Bldg., K. C. Mo. Besides the special medication for specific diseases mentioned above, many others are the result of reseasures in chemistry. Salvarian, or acid-base reshuffle, imitate syphilis than four centuries of education and hygiene accomplished This was the accidental discovery of the chemist, seeking a new dye for reshuffle. Chemistry has improved on nucral drugs by segregating the pure principle from its toxic compound, as the local anoxic性 derived from amino acids in the potent acids from the nauseating chaumnoarugil oil for use in leprosy; codeine, obtained from morphine without the latter's curse of habit forming; and verbal and luminal apoptosis, from the harmful chloral. The second great field of chemistry is the preparation of pure principles from the secretary organs. The ductless glands are of paramount importance as their regulators regulate the secretion of saliva created by the suprarenal glands above the kidneys, which constricts blood vessels, can now be artificially made. Its possibilities are many—quick arrest of capillary hemorrhage, relief from spasms in bronchial asthma, and use with anesthetics. The Mayo Clinic has developed a principle of the thyroid glad, which regulates cell activity. These are only a few of the highpoints in chemistry's contribution to the health of humanity. The science promises great blessings in store. It is the dream of chemists to solve the problem of the cell, whose activating protein is crucial to be chemical in nature. Most of restoring these rigor organisms of the entire body to normal functioning will result in health of body, health of mind, and ideal conditions for all the suffering, weary race Samuel Johnson, whose spirit was able to rise above a disease-rackened one that his hungness was mimicked once that his hangerness just freedom from physical pain. Future generations may find their bodies so perfectly in time that they will forget they possess them! To gain empire over the cell presents a tremendous problem; yet scientists assure us that this key stores of health and happiness will sometime be found. Richard R. Price, 'c97, Ph.D. Harvard, '23, has an article appearing in the School of Society magazine on *The Impact of Problems of Educational Finance*. Madeline Aaron, e22, has prepared a poster for the Audubon Society of Kansas, for which she is secretary, to promote the state to vote for the state bird. SERVICE TO YOU MEANS BUSINESS TO US You will find the materials we use and the work we do are the best. BUSINESS TO US Whether it's a leaky closet tank or an entire plumbing system, call upon us. Ride in a Guffin Taxicab-a load for the price of one. No charge for extra passengers. Our reputation brings us customers. Our service keeps them. We give advice and estimates free. LOOK! Pettit the Plumber PHONE 1081 THIS IS THE LAST WEEK All seven-passenger Sedan Cars. Regular Meals Every Day Special Sunday Evening Dinner Mrs. Eva Guffin 643 R. I. St. Phone 987 in which to have your clothes pressed before Christmas. Phone now! The Old Reliable Taxi Service Phone 987 SCHULZ alterr, repairs, cleans and presses your clothes right up to now. Suiting you--that's my business. DRAIN YOUR PLUMBING before going home for the Holidays. SCHULZ THE TAILOR 817 Mass. St. Kennedy Plumbing Co. RENT-A-FORD Drive it Yourself 916 Mass, - - Phone 6 Princess Patt Beauty Shoppe Tuesday is Dollar Day $1.50 worth of work for $1.00 If you are busy during the day, phone for an after-dinner appointment. Hess Drug Store PHONE 537 742 MASS Our Hours Are Yours Let Us Mail That Box of Candy Now —or we will be glad to put it away and send it any time you wish. We have a complete line of WHITMAN'S and BUNTE'S CANDIES in all size boxes, Boxes wrapped and mailed free of charge. WIEDEMANN'S GLO-CO "Educates" the Hair A few drops before school keeps the hair combed all day. Refreshing, pleasing. Cold Shoulders? Are You Mailing moulders? Is your handshake like your Christmas greeting? Or do you broadside your friends with freezingly formal cards? We offer a congenial and collegiate card, penned by the same artist who conceived the famous Jayhawk, in five groups done in pen and wash, plus three colors, hand-colored! Jayhawk Posters Sold by Gustafson, Wolf, Dean Boggs Rowland, University Book Store For the Holiday Dances Party Frocks That are new, fresh, and to the moment in mode in a sale at-23.75 Georgette, Chiffon, Lace Touches of Ostrich, Beads, Laces or Ribbon— Only one of a model— The Shades are Coral, Orchid, Maize, Turquoise, Jade, or black— The sizes range from 16 to 38- BULLENE'S New Suede Jackets and Blazer Coats $.6.50 to $18 New styles and patterns in Pull-over Sweaters just received direct from New York. "Naught can compare with gifts to wear." NEW SWEATERS $6 to $10 Dr. Allen's "My Basket ball Bible" on sale here A Neat Christmas Gift for Year Around Wear Slipover Sweaters in plain and fancy color combinations- Special at $3.65 Special at $3.65 Silk and Wool Slipovers--$6 Heavy V-Neck Sweaters - - - - - - - - $9 and $10 Heavy Button Sweaters - - - - - - - $10 and $12 — a real useful gift that spells quality and service Neckwear—100 dozen fine silk Neck- ties for your choosing - $1 to $2 Glad to show you—