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Evening star. [volume] (Washington, D.C.) 1854-1972, July 21, 1930, Image 6

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Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83045462/1930-07-21/ed-1/seq-6/

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DR. LEHMAN, DENTIST
Plate Specialist
rUI« Th»t Fit Gn»r«nteed. *l*
Any rial* Rrpairrd While V Walt. *I.OO
406 Seventh St. N.W.
Over WiMilwarth'n 5 and 10c Slnre
orr.v si ndavs and kvfnings
pimples, hlarkheads, etc., cleared
away easily and at little cost by
JlesinoL
gltllinUllinniinHM^lllHUlHilllMtllllHtJllNHtltt'flHlltl^
| j There’s |
1 S I Comfort |
r —in tlic thought s
lhat everything »
ahont the halt- 2
H 11 filing of vour 5
£ household cfleets 2
yw "ill he OK., and 2
you have i uch a«- 5
siiraiH'C when we =
3 A do Packing. Ship- =
ping. Moving and =
S y-. Storing. i
| 1 *’ M. T. A. S. strv- =
; 2 xJ ice gives ltH) =
satisfaction. 5
rs Phone National s
" l/XX) for estimates. £
| Merchants Transfer |
& Storage Co.
| MOVING—PACK IV G—SHIPPING |
920-922 E Street N.W.
ffiiiiiiHiiiniiHiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiic
SUNBURN RASHES. BITES
eased by cool, antiseptic Zemo
Depend on cooling, soothing Zemo to
draw the heat and sting out of sun
burn and bring comfort to Summer
skin itch. Known and praised for JO
years. Millions know how quickly
and safely : t clears away skin trou
bles, including stubborn dandruff and
ugly pimples. Try this safe, reliable
antiseptic after shaving; it eases
razor-smart. Always have Zemo
handv. Am- druggist. 35c. W)c. ?I.(JU.
zemo
SKIN IRRITATIONS
Doctors know the value of gij
absolute cleanliness as a jj*j>
preventative of ills as well :;}|-
as a curative agent. . #:,B
Everything leaving tlie
Home Laundry must Hi
receive our “clean bill
of health” before it is
restored to you, spot
less and fresh! Jfg
MAY WE SERVE 1
YOU THIS WEEK? RJ|
E I
F POPULAR EXCURSION
Vis
Southern Railway
Washington, D. C.,
and Alexandria, Va.
Charlottesville? Va. * 3 7^ und
Culpeper, Va **‘ # ? r £ und
Danville, Va.... * n# ? r r nd
Lynchburg, Va. .. * 4 ' M ,’ r f” und
Orange, Va * ? ' s ? r £ ,,nd
SATURDAY
August 2nd, 1930
Tirket* will h<* honored on Train
No. SI. or section thcMßof. leaving
f Washington Union Station; 6:40
P.M., Alexandria. Va.. 6:51 P.M ,
Auacst 2nd.
. Returninr. tickets rood on all rexu
i\ r ....JJS. ins except crescent
MMITF.n, up to Train No. 36. Icav
lnx above points Sunda'. Auxust 3rd.
Similar excursions will be operated
Aurust :«»th, September 20th and
October llth.
Last Back Home Excursion
October 4th, 1930
f Tirket* and information at City
Tirket Office. Southern Railway, Mc-
Pherson Square, t nion Station; also
! * mon Station. Alexandria. Va.
Keeping Summer Home
Floors in Condition
—is light work when you have
Du Pont ho help of up-to-date Waxers
/ p a ; n *. and Polishing Brushes, such as
1 . ’ our stocks offer.
Varnishes
and “DUCO” IJCall and let us demonstrate the
UlOSt iUI prOVed tVpCS of hand
and electric waxers and weight
ed polishing brushes. No
obligation will result.
-
Specially Low Prices
—on all dependable Paints,
Stains, Enamels, Lacquers,
Floor Wax, Wall Tints, etc.
HUGH REILLY CO.
PAINTS 8c GLASS
1334 New York Avc.—Phone Nat’l 1703
135 MORE VERSES!
OP RUBAIYAT FOUND
Volume at Oxford Alone Is
Older Than One in Cal
cutta Bookshop.
Another book of verses to be read
[ underneath the bough with a loaf of
! bread and a thermos bottle of—well.
; lemonade—may be the product of the
; discovery in a Calcutta book shop of
; an early volume of Omar Khayyam's
j Rubßlyat containing 135 more quatrains
• i than Fitzgerald translated.
Only the volume in the Bodleian
| Library at Oxford is older than the
! newly found illustrated manuscript
; which, according to news from India,
• bears the date 1505.
‘ Omar, the tentmaker, fast in his
I grave on which the peach petals blow at
; I Nlshapur, continues to be, despite the
: gap of 900 vears, Persia's best ambassa
; dor to English-speaking countries,” say
i a bulletin of the National Geographic
I Society from it headquarters here.
; "Yet hfe who sang:
i j ‘I sometimes think that never blows
so red
The Rose as where some buried
; f Caesar bled';
i! is -little known as a poet in his own
;; country Abu-’l-fat 'h Omar, son of
I i Ibrahim the Tentmaker of Nishapur,
; I for suen was his name, holds in Persia
i i some modest fame as a mathematician,
;i an ancient wise man. who. about
j the time Wiiliam the Conqueror was
: conquering England, assisted in re vis
: ; ing the Persian calendar. But Omar, a
I i poet! We have far better poets than
I he. the Persians say. The Western
, World will never believe it.
Mysticism Dominate*) Persians.
“If Omar Khayyam is a poet without
honor in his own country there are cer
tain geographic reasons for the neglect
as well as for his acceptance by mod
erns Persians were in Omar’s day and
are to this day dominated by Moham
medan mysticism which Omar, who
was as much a doubter and a realist
!as most twentieth century scientists,
! flouted with verses. Perhaps it is no
accident that Omar, himself a scientist
and mathematician, has been found at
: the side of the modern scientist, throw
ing doubts and question marks at cher
ished beliefs as skillfully as laboratory
research workers toss test tubes, equa
tions and graphs at the same targets.
“Religious teachers in Omar’s Persia
held out promises of a practical and
delightful paiadlse which they did not
hesitate to describe minutely. Doubt- 1
lng, Omar wrote; . I
‘Ah, make the most of what we yet
may spend.
Before we. too, into the dust descend.
“The teachers insisted on obedience
to the Koran's order against the use of
i intoxicating liquor. Omar, living in
Persia, the original home of the grape,
and loving w-ine, wrote;
I ‘Ah, my beloved, fill the cup that
j clears
Today of past regret and future
fears.'
“Omar Khayyam’s verses ran against
the tide of opinion in Persia of his day
and still run against the tide. He was a
: heretic; his verses are still heretical.
So Persia continues to think that Omar
as a poet was a good mathematician.
“Much of the geography, the climate,
the flowers, the products and customs
of Persia can be found inlaid in Omar's
verses which have become ao familiar
to English readers. His most famous
quatrain:
‘A book of verses underneath the bough.
A jug of wine, a loaf of bread—and thou
Beside me singing in the wilderness—
Oh, wilderness were paradise enow!’
supplies a thumbnail picture of what
passes for a picnic and the last word in
holiday enjoyment throughout Moslem
North Africa, the Near East and Persia
—excepting the wine which is still for
bidden.
“From Tripoli to Cairo to Bagdad to
Teheran and Tashkent, 3,500 miles, a
bough and the shade it gives are lux
uries in a land of eternal sun. Grass
is even rarer than trees; no such thing
as an American or English lawn exists.
So. when a holiday comes the people
leave the seclusion of their towns, wan
der down to the bank of a stream where
there may be a few trees and there
'star scattered on the grass' as Omar
writes, they rest and gossip.
Women Picnic in Cemeteries.
“Often the greenest spots are the
cemeteries. To visit the graves women
i of the harem are sometimes permitted
to go out once a week, an opportunity
! they seldom pass by. not so much to pay
tribute to the dead as for an outing
under the trees. Graveyards are the
favorite picnic grounds of the Near
East.
“Omar sings of roses, tulips and the
I hyacinths of the garden; the peach
and the pear trees In bloom. The
brushes of artists have added some very
definite Ideas for us about Persian gar
| dens. Yet a traveler to Persia reports
I that although he searched high and
j low, he has yet to find a Persian gar
den On that dry plateau there is no
; such thing as a garden in the American
j or English sense.
“A garden to a Persian is a grove of
i trees kept alive by irrigation ditches
I that receive precious water from some
creek fed by mountain snows. It may
contain a fountain much the worse for
wear, with broken tiles scattered about.
A mud wall usually runs around the
green oasis, but, unless it is a town
house garden, the wall does not exclude
the world. Indeed, in Persia, a garden
outside the gates Is practically a public
j park open alike to the traveler, the mer
' chant and the shepherd halting his
| flock.
“Persia is like a saucer. High moun
i tains rim it. Close to the rim rise the
principal cities hugging the mountains
because of their dependence on the |
THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON. D. C.. MONDAY, JTLY 21. 1930.
j highlands for water. The center Is an
1 upland desert; 'the dead heart of Per- j
I sla.’ Crossing Persia requires crossing
!the desert, so to a parched and sun
beaten traveler any bit of green he I
comes upon toward the end of his Jour- j
ner seems a vision of paradise, a garden !
of unparalleled beauty to be praised ,
and exalted in poetry.”
NEW MA F ra ES ;
“As though a cloud of eiderdown, The cost is only $4 to $9. A mat
held you aloft far from the ground.” tress old at sunrise is new before ;
* rt , .. £ , . - . sunset. Phone National 9411. Box
1 hats how it tcels to sleep on mat- . , A
. , , ' , springs made to order, SZS.U(J.
tresses whose youth we have restored.
Beds and Bedding sold direct to
you at low factory prices. Mat-
L harming new ticking of your se- tresses, box springs and pillows
lection is used. The inside is steril- renovated or made to order at factory
ized —cleaned—made buoyant. prices.
Zahan Mattress & Box Spring Co.
WoODAVAJRD &LOTHROP
tO ™ U*" F and G Streets
Down Stairs Store
Summer Silk ®
Frocks, S B- 75 I
' Featuring Many jA====. - /\-
I Shantungs
The fashion-first shantung i "yK?
- i frocks for daytime and sports ~ _ —l^
j —_Jj\ wear are outstanding in this _ jn
j I- \\ smart group .. . Smart, too. are L_ .
I V—U the silk piques, printed and r~ _4
rayon crepes. Cape and polo —4
Hi HI sleeves add fashion interest. mMd
H Summer pastels, prints and Wm
® white. Sizes for women and M M
V THE DOWN BTAIRB STORE Ff L
Children’s Women’s
Summer Oxfords Woven Sandals
$1- 35 $ 2- 95
Street and Play Styles J
The sturdy soles, rubber Two Attractive Stytes
heels and fine quality
leather found in these Finish out the Summer
litt c oxfords combine to season with a pair of
malcc them exceptional —these cool woven san
'ca uc ' at. v 1.3.. dais. Center strap styles •
Street shoe* of buck \ in plain white, tan-and
lea her with black reptile V brown. black-and-white
light elk with' dark elk \ ,1 ' kT’
. • , e . ~ ... L_J stvle in tan-and-brown.
trim and of tan elk with ,-r* . -» . r. .
lighter elk trim. Sizes 5 " Sizes 3to 8. Widths AA
to 2. to C
THE DOWN STAIRS STORE THE DOWN STAIRS STORE
Rayon Underthings New Costume Slips
Esc, 50c ft r\
V\ *l-95 JLfej*
\ \ Comfortable
I |\ Summer
This cool, new Pastels and
underwear is made White \
of the rayon that jjh
// / j ('\ collection includes
j/ / \ \ bloomers, shorts, Choose them in silhouette or
/ j \ \ panties and step- straight line styles to wear under
,ns ’ Man y with your sheer Summer frocks. Lace
contrasting bands trimmed or tailored of crepe de
of color. Flesh chine, flat crepe and rayon flat
and pastels. crepe. Sizes 34 to 44.
THE DOWN STAIRS STORE THE DOWN STAIRS STORE
11
Chinese to Fight Opium.
NANKING UP). —The Chinese Opi
um Suppression League intends to erect
: a special hospital In this city and
make the capital an example to all
; of China by cleaning out the opium ;
dens here.
Fever Sweeps Swine.
VILARANDELO. Portugal (*V—
Swine breeders hereabouts are alarmed
by an epidemic of fever among their
enimals. Vaccines are practically tin- J
known, but the government is trying
to educate the peasantry to their use.
1 1
self Quality, Service, 5
in and Certainty— 5
r Table Needs in your Neighborhood 4500 Store—
mays Receive the Most of the Best for the Least!
*ayt to Trade Where Quality Count*! C
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2101 Pennsylvania Ave. N.W. Ul
2008 Rhode Island Ave. N.E.
r . 213 Upshur St. N.W.
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iV. 4905 Wisconsin Ave. N.W. N
1910 First St. N.W.
501 Eighth St. S.E.
3509 Twelfth St. N.E. E
7. 1937 Fourteenth St. N.W. M
2508 Fourteenth St. N.W.
» 2744 Fourteenth St. N.W.
4628-30 Fourteenth St. N.W. 3
Seventeenth and R Sts. N.W. H
2473 Eighteenth St. N.W.
jibu mi. rieasam or. iv.W. 3423 Eighteenth St. N.E.
12218 Nichols Ave. S.E. 1429 Twentieth St. (Dupont Circle) N.W.
Connecticut and Northampton St. N.W. 8217-19 Georgia Ave., Silver Spring, Md.
1438 Park Road N.W. 3708 Thirty-fourth St., Mount Rainier, Md.
Addresses of Our Stores in Washington, D. C. M
J Reg. 39c HIGH GRADE S E
PARLOR BROOMS h “" /Uc 2
Strongly made. Four sewed. You save ten cents. Rj
- Reg. 25c 4SCO I Specially Priced!
' Extra Strength I U[
Deliciou. AMMONIA OXOL bot. 17c 5
a Qt. Cleanser—Sterilizer— M
CALIFORNIA I It. 19c 1 Disinfectant g
APRICOTS b*~ Need Any? “»* 5
TAI.Ij I I Extension Window Screens *» ch 39c ?
CAN X W Thin Crystal Drinking Glasses 3 for 10c L
Green Tinted Drinking Glasses 6 for 29c I
- —— ■— ‘ l "” r 4SCO Home-Style Noodles 2 b, B P k & s - 15 c 9
|| " Princess Assorted Jellies 3 tumblers 25c n|
— — ’ l ASCO Tomato Puree can j c I
. Bt an<l Hom-de-Lite Mayonnaise V 2 Pt- J ar 19c 9
ASCO Sandwich Spread ••• 1 /2 P l - J» r 19c 5
ASCO Pure Grape Juice bot. 17c isl
nine fw s Fancy Large California Prunes 2 iba. 27c 9
Farmdale Tender Peas can 14 C £
ASCO Fancy Sweet Peas .. . . ......... ran 17c 5
IV yL* ASCO Medium June Peas 3 cans en c P
ASCO Tiny June Peas , # . . can 23c □
Del Monte Sugar Peas can 17 C E
Red Ripe Tomatoes. . . . ; 3 med. cans 25c E
y\sO- J
1 I I Lifebuey Reg. Sc Babbitt’e Q
■"—r: UL I Soap Cleanser E
...... 3 17c 3 10c 2 ..... 9c 5
PICKLES ASCO Pure I | ASCO 5
Ipt. OCss Preserves Beans with Pork 0
bot. znc 9
j ar 23c 3 cans 23c g
Onlv the most carefully selected and full-bodied beans are ti«ed in 6SCO blend! And to further
guarantee you complete satisfaction we roast it in our own roasters, delivering it direct to our stores,
a matter of hours from the oven.
4SCO COFFEE ■ 29c g
39c-29c~10c Saved
Victor Coffee lb 25c | Acme Coffee .. . ... lb. tin 35c 0
Suggestion* From Our Meat Department!
Round or Sirloin Porterhouse
‘ Roundß°”*T STEAK STEAK g
CHOPS " 41c 47c |
nQ ft Shoulder Lamb Chops lb 35c E
Lean Stewing Lamb , b 15c 8
—jjj Nice Lamb Patties 3 r«r 25c 5
Shoulder Lamb Freshly Ground Beef 25c (
ROAST Lean Stewin * Beef 2 ib. 25c s
tb 9Q/. Center-Cut Pork Chops , 6 38 c 3
Meaty-End Pork Chops 28c rj
Finest Quality Fresh Fruits and Vegetables at Reasonable Prices I jn
CALIFORNIA’S BEST nr ADC O OC
BARTLETT iLAKO 1 HS
STRINGLESS BEANS 3 LBS 25c |
HOME-GROWN TOMATOES 3 .»* 23c jg
YELLOW ONIONS 4_ LBS. 22c la
FIRM HEADS CABBAGE 4 LBS. 19c g
TASTE The Finest Butter 4
IT! in America
BTBriH-wpHnVlv-xra Irtiene™ orteei fltwllM In i>«' ?."!l nnmgggggrgul
tel »»**♦» }a zisiUssas. *"* rlrlwlt> | LjMQCaCliiDCliuMuMEjMu

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