Evening Star Newspaper, September 22, 1929, Page 52

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

12 : SUNDAY - STAR,. VWASHINGTON, D. C, SEPTEMBER 22, .1929—PART HARVARD T0 OPEN } NEW I-Aw BU".D'NG We Invite You w © We Invite You ' to Open . B zs & 5 °ns to Open” Program Wednesday Will ‘A Charge Account o » 3 zzos 7 ' A Charge Account Mark Dedication of Addi- e SINCE 1861—SIXTY-EIGHT YEARS OF PUBLIC CONFIDENCE ‘ jonal Campus Unit. " __p__ 9 AM. to 6 P.M. : F Street at Eleventh ‘ National 3770 @vecini Dispateh to The Star. | CAMBRIDGE, Mass., September 21.— | Harvard will mark the consummation of a campaign for a larger, better equip- ped law school, begun in March, 1926, with the dedication of Langdell Hall. At 11 o'clock on Wednesday the cere- monies will begin in the courtroom of that building. Proceedings will be conducted by the | Harvard Law School Association, whose | resident is Willlam Thomas of San | ;Tlnc!sto. Outstanding representatives | of the legal profession, both here and abroad, will be among those present. Joseph P. Cotton, Undersecretary of State, and Roscoe Pound, dean of Har- vard Law School, will address the 500 or more guests who are expected to attend. Following the addresses, a portrait of Dean Pound, painted by Charles Hop- kinson of Boston, will be presented to the school by the Harvard Law School Association. The keys of the building wil. be delivered by the architect, Charles A. "Coolidge of Boston, to the president of the university, and hon- Qary degrees will be conferred upon aistinguished foreign scholars. A buffet Juncheon will be served in the reading yoom, and an inspection of the building ‘will follow. On the evening before the dedication there will be a dinner of past and pres- ent editors of the Harvard Law Review and also other private dinners. DAKOTA STRIP COAL PORTENDS RICH ERA| Experts Estimate New Fields Hold Enough Fuel for U. 8. for Ten Centuries. e Teags T R CRIE W RO YN e LR gramand 7 R MINOT, N. Dak. () —Experts esti- mate that 516,000,000 tons of coal, enough to last the United States 10 centuries, lie ur ler North Dakota’s roll- ing wheat flelds and ranch land. Already steam shovels are scooping it from the surface, where a few years ago sod-house pioneers tolled with pick and shovel. Electric generating plants built at the mines are converting the fuel into power for transmission over high-volt- age lines to industrial plants in North Dakota and neighboring States. The start was made by Elmer Truax at Columbus, in the northwest part of the State. He found the strip mining so profitable that he opened another mine at Velva. Eastern investors were attracted and amalgamated his hold- ings. Now power companies are rapidly buying up the choice properties. Estimated cost of the lignite for plants at the mines is 90 cents a ton. With rapid extension of power lines business men see an industrial era loom- ing for the farm country. WELL PRODUCES ICE IN HOTTEST WEATHER| MG ML < A Bioairs "> ALY mrae Wi VT - [ ot eyt PR g LT Scientists Ponder Freak of Nature] Believed of Glacial Origin. SPOKANE, Wash. (#)—While sci- entists ponder one of nature’s freaks Edward L. Peterson chips ice from his well here during the hottest Summer day and uses it to chill fruits and vege- tables. Peterson’s father homesteaded the site in 1890 and used the well as a storage refrigerator for meat. It is known that this well had a part in the early history of the Pacific! Nonhw:sta for u“tl rung:er back there was & trading post of the Hudson Bay 2 Co. here. During the struggle between : ’,..M-—mmw——fl——mao—-ww - fur companies the Hudson agents stored < pelts in the ice well to preserve them . e A o T A during the Summer. The history of the well goes even fur- i N ther—to the prehistoric days, probably, “ - when a tremendous glacier slowly : e ROl g il crunched its way across the site that is now Spokane. Glacier rock forma- tions can be seen all about this region now. [ ] The theory has been advanced flut‘ & portion of the ice glacier stayed here. | buried miles deep in the ground, and that the well just taps the top of it. Other theorists have said that the ice - i i Rugs at Prices a Fraction of Their Cost MEXICO CITY (Special).—A race to the summit of the steep and crevice- Jaden volcano Ixtaccihuatl, which has & S e g The Most Important Rug Event We Have Ever Held Mexican college students November 3. Ixtaceihuatl is an Aztec word mean- R e Shrowen 1 Teste g SO Tl igh” Rempratnts of 2 2 WOMEN who have long cherished the desire to possess the beauty of a- . $ neartof Merich Sy fine Oriental Rug, but have found the price prohibitive, will now il oty i amons ous- realize their dreams. For now the most amazing innovation in years in Amer- ain-climbing circles here. e coantiaea,of. the Nabional Dalvérs ican rug weaving brings, in Bundhar Imperial Lustra Rugs, the rich, lus- v Room Size- 9x12 representatives of the National Univer- sitys the School of Medicine, the School S Behant oF Dentioty. it of Mexico trous sheen, the gorgeous colorings, the magnificent, original master de- signs of Oriental rugs—at a mere fraction of the cost of Orientals. Aben age S City, are expected to_compete. EXP}'?RTS are dccewe.d by these amazing rugs. At a private showing, an i i e Oriental rug connoisseur was invited to select from the many rugs a true S e Oriental. “That’s easy,” he said. Yet the rug he selected was a Bundhar 4Yx7Y; size 11% x12 size, §252.75 i i ne, old Ispahan design. 6x9 size $117.50 11%x18size. ... $404 Imperial Lustra in a fine, 0 p g e Rich, Glowing Colors Can You Tell? } Extra Salespeople The myriads of beautiful hues—the Persian treatment of design—the gorgeous colorings—all See the display of these amazing rugs, now Extl.‘a Floor Space are Oriental—except the price! hung on the fourth floor. Among them is a gen- : uine Oriental rug. See if you can tell it from the e Bundhar Imperial Lustra rugs. The Lustre Lasts : : LA\ 8 5 4 ! So great is the demand for these rugs, so rela- D f d P 4 T}"? week we a}:‘: d‘SPlaY"“)g. ;eg‘li‘:ld}:;; ;[nn111_l tively slow is this new process of weaving, that eierre ayments o ; 1 e et (ot e ; ‘ W AGE f:nt?lc rqs\?l’:alre‘:fi tcofattl'jv::es ;‘;a{'s of wear, then production is necessarily limited. For these reac L. If D . . waING . ASHER | French dry cleaned. See this rug; note how the sons, we urge you to see them at once. We promise eSll‘ed wfi'm'sfi,.,w luster lasts. x you a revelation in modern rug weaving. z . o These rugs may be purchased on our de- . c‘:{"‘:;":’g’ g In Washington These‘W-bnderfuL' %‘!j&h Found Only Here tf)eer:hegdpfaoyrn;;r:;rl:lzr:fivgyt'iesifed, they will . . nar oy . z 3 Dupont Circle Building 1336 Comnecticut Ave. N.W. i Decstur 2821

Other pages from this issue: