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12 .THE E HARLAND OPPOSES Fewer Space Reservations Urged to Solve 13th Street Problem. The plea of the Thirteenth street merchants that angle parking be re- stored between E and I streets. was answered yesterday afternoon by Traffic | Director Willilam H. Harland with a| counter recommendation to the District Commissioners :hat parallel parking be | continued and that spaces allotted for motor bus stops and several “shipping entrances” be abolished entirely and that the size of other “shipping en- | trances” be reduced one-half to provide | sdditional parking space. Removal of | the taxi stand at Thirteenth and F streets also was suggested Mr. Harland explained to the Com- missioners that parallel parking reduces congestion, and that the complaint of the business men that it decreased the parking space on the street can be remedied by adopting his recommenda- SAYS SHELLY'S CHILD TRAINING CAUSED REVOLT AS ADULT EHANGE |N PARKINGIRev T.V. fi;onx':_—Ana]yzc;poet‘s Ear]y Life in Describing Faults of Parents With Youth. Rebels and atheists usually are made in childhood, Rev. Thomas V. Moore, professor of psychology at Catholic Un- v, said in_a lecture on character is at the National Press Club au- ditorium yesterday. Dr. Moore pointed out that unintel- ligent exercise of authority in home and school turns certain types of children into haters of ail authority. They hate parents and teachers and from this it is a short step to hating everything as- sociated with control—religion, govern- ment and social custom Almost _invariably, Dr. Moore said, the man who has abandoned all religion is found by the psychoanalyist to have been beaten or tormented in childhood to the a hateful thing. He pictured as a typical example the English poet Shelly whose atheism and political and_economic radicalism he traced back directly to a dull and un- tion for abolition of the bus stop reser- | comprehending father and to tyrannical vations and _several others. The change from angle to| parallel parking eliminated space for 43 cars, according to Mr. Harland. and | space for all but six of them will be | restored under his plan | The traffic director said motor busses have sufficient space for loading and unloading passengers in the 20-foot “no | parking” areas at each corner, and that | _“shipping _en- | public school trances” besides reducing the size of |Shelly's character, both from the events | found expressior masters. He analyzed EX-REPRESENTATIVE DIES. William Xent, California, cumbs to Pneumonia. int where all authority become | jof his life and the expressions of his thoughts through his poetry. At school, he said, Shelly was not only persecuted by the older boys, but was treated unsympathetically masters Extraordinary ability Dr. Moore said. often originates in inability. He gave as an example an incident {when Shelly, who was poor in Latin, went to an older boy for help. The other as a joke wrote for the future | poet some verses from Ovid which were | passed in as a_Latin composition. The master not only did not recognize the source, but said that the lines were bad Latin and boxed the bov's ears. Such incidents, Dr. Moore pointed out, may have had much to do with Shelly’s de- velopment into a great poet In such characters, he said, it is often possible to trace the subconsclous thoughts through the veiled expression of them. Thus he concluded that sub- consciously Shelly wanted to kill his father, although the conscious thought probably never entered his mind. It through the imag- inative characters of his work. Suc- PLAN “SUNBATHS” FORY. M.C. A. HERE Electric Rays Shortly Will Give Benefits of Winter Resort to Shut-in Business Man. “Canned sunshine,” fresh from the Benning power plant, and guaranteed to be just as healthful and refreshing, but not so expensive as a trip to some Winter resort, will be available to | members of the Washington Y. M. C. | A. shortly. A room on the first floor of the build- ing at 1736 G street is being trans- formed into a modern solarium; where {on the pale countenances and forms of local business and professional men and | students, All the benefits of natural sunshine [thus will be provided artificially through | complicated ~ electrical paraphernalia for those who find it inconvenient to close their desks in° Winter and slip away for a cruise in the tropics. Sun ray baths, reputed to be inim- ical to colds, anemia and other afic- tions often prevalent among those who do not get sufficient sunshine, will be afforded members of the association, under the supervision of C. Edward Beckett, director of physical education of the “Y.” It is the expectation of of- ficials that the ultra-violet rays gen- erated for these “baths” will greatly improve the health of those taking them | sclentific sunlight will be turned loose | o there is no need for spex ros@r\'nnnns; SAN RAFAEL, Calif.. March 14 (#) frances Be Broposes 1o abolieh sre’ n | —Former Representative William Kent, front of Dyer Brothers and the C. G. |63, millionaire landowner and donor Sloan Co. Both of these establishments, [of Muir Woods, & noted scenic spot | he said, have “excellent” shipping en-|in Marin County, Calif. to the Gov-| trances in the rear. The other recom- | ernment, died of pneumonia at his mendations are for a reduction of one- | home, at Kentfield, near here, today. half in the size of the “no parking” [ Mr. Kent was born in Chicago and area in front of the Earle Theater and (until his death maintained financial the “shipping entrance” in front of the | and other interests in that city. He Pranklin Laundry. owned land in Mexico estimated at 1.000,000 acres, and large tracts in — VETERAN MISSIONARY | SRent was clected to Congress from Walter Scott and increase their resistance against sickness. Similar solarfums have been install- ed in many Y. M. C. A’s and other clubs throughout the country, accord- ing to Mr. tt. Mine Families Get Relief. PITTSBURGH, Pa., March 14 (#).— A carload of food, clothing and shoes, weighing 44,000 pounds, was shipped to families of idle union miners in the Hocking Valley section of Ohio yester- day from the American Federation of Labor miners' relief headquarters here, according to a statement by J. M. Thornton, in charge of the work. On Monday 36,000 pounds of similar sup- plies were sent to thessame district. ————— Roof-drying rooms for use on wash- ing day is a lntu;e of a new apartment being bullt by th® London City Council. Furnished & Unfurnished APARTMENTS Special Rates. 1 Room and Bath, $45 up 2 Rooms and Bath 4 Rooms and Bath 6 Rooms and Bath With Electric Cooker, Current Included Partial or Full Hotel Serviee Burlington Hotel 1120 Vermont Ave. When You Catch Cold Rub On Musterole Musterole is easy to appl. works right away. It may pre om turning into “Alu” or pneu- | It d work of Musterole is a clean, wh ment, made of oil of mustard and It is recom- | Beige and Gray Suedes *D Moving out very fast—prompt action advisable Special offf;ring of a Group of Sprightly Styles, worth a lot more, at only . . . . Honey Beige Kid, Honey Beige Suede, gold silk, kid trim one-eylet Ribbon Tie e the first California district in 1911 and | bI’ other home simples. RETURNS FOR JUBILEE | torved three terms. He became noted |as an insurgent. Miss Lockie Rankin, 78, rirstf | New York Changes Bank Law. ‘Woman of M. E. South in For- fish diet. A% many as five varieties of | ]EXT()LS at length on the advantages of a fish were served at one meal when he was eign Field, Still Active. Br the Associated Press. NASHVILLE, March 14.—The first| woman to offer herself as a missionary ALBANY, N. Y. March 14 (®.—A | bill to permit savings banks to invest in the securities of certain municipalities | outside of the State was passed by the | Senate yesterday. The measure was | sought especially by various cities in | a guest at dinner. have been one can hardly imagine toda; the freshness of fish must ever be considered, eating five different varieties at one meal. As delicious as they may when The for the Methodist Episcopal Church | Texas and the City of Detroit, Mich. South was among the hundreds gathered here today for the golden jubilee sessions of the Women's Missionary Council and the dedication of three buildings of Scarritt College. | Miss Lockie Rankin, 78, bent and wrinkled. but still active on her return from China especially. for the event, declared she does not wish to retire on & pension, but hopes to be appointed a deaconess and continue active service tel the mission service in 1878, 4 3 b when convention still opposed women mq’.‘r!‘.‘tio-'ukrc:léinx.' EHRy el S in the denomination's foreign service, | 1 rm.. Murphy bed, kitchen, lnm! Ranktnm mé’s“ spent half a century | porch. Practically all of today's sessions were given over to the dedication of | the new Scarritt College buildings, | which were erected as a memorial to| Belle Harris Bennett, founder of the institution, the only school for mis- missionary workers in the South. i YOUR INSPECTION IS INVITED TO THE NEW FIREPROOF APARTMENT LE BOURGET 2127 California St. N.W. 24-hour elevator service. Reside) Apt. Kitchen, 3 baths, porch (3 expostures). Rentals range from $35.00 to $130 per_month. Desiruble Suites for Professional Men Oven Evenings See Resident Manager Floyd E. Davis Company 733 12th St. N.W. | and Buenos i Main 352-353 question of freshness of food merits our atten- tion more and more. We find that it's when food substances are fresh they have their great. est nourishing value. Milk must always be fresh and is when you buy Simpson's Milk at your grocer's. They bottle daily just enough to meet their customers’ demand in order to main- tain their product absolutely fresh. ’ : Inner—Spring Mattress Decorated Fibre < Ferneries 52,95 ; price goes A strong fibre fernery in oblong shape. fin- eeveral at- Com- plete with metal flower " i on one of these tractive colors. container, No Phone or Mail Orders (Fourth Floor.) cial price enables Special Anniversary Price 32 A/ter this r‘ntrzuluctory sale the You'll never know the full mcanind of a night.n luxurious rest until you ve slcpt tresses with hundreds of tiny, concealed springs, rcady to adjust the mattress to any position of the body. This very spe- imum unmforl at minimum pricc. $3.95 Windsor Chair 52. 49 A nurdy chair of ma- }mck to $39.5() hogany-finished gum- wm)d. in lhe Iundmme Colonial Windsor atyle. Not more than 4 chairs new Ostermoor mat- to a customer, No Phone or Mail Orders (Fourth Flaor.) you to purc]\ase maxs- (Sixth ¥loor) THE HECHT CO.---32nd Anniversary mended by y doctors and nurses. | e for sore throat, cold | rheumatism, lumb or sore m brui chilblains, | frosted feet—colds of all sorts. | To Mothers: Musterole is also made in milder form for babies and all children. Ask for Children’s Musterole. Jars & Tubes u “Furniture of Merit"§} Plaza Gray Suede, Plaza ‘Gray Suede, silver silk kid trim silver silk kid trim INCLUDED at same price, 15 other “live ones” in patent and satin. Blonde and Gray kids and suedes. Opera pumps, straps, step-ins—won- derful shoes—for Five Dol- lars! At our 7th St. and “Ar- cade” stores only. 7th& K 3212 14th Charge Accounts Opened Upon Request House & Herrmann Seventh and Eye Streets Better Than the Price! Two examples of our "special” selling—in which we are giving you the benefit of exceptional value at remarkably small prices—but we stand sponsor for the qualities. Ten-Piece Dinir{g Suite Very attractive design, with decoratve paneling, Walnut Veneer on Gum“’ood. Conltruclion is very flofld. flnd 'hc scats ITQ 'l\c slde Chllfs lnd Armcl’\lir are Covered \\'l'h Vell’\lf. Specially priced at. . .. ... . 1602 Three-Piece meg Room Suite A new ;d!l ;l\ Overnuficd S\lilcfl ;n \\'}Ii\‘ll a t\lt 0" Il\“ ‘h\l\\el il t\pn!!d| lddil\“ a plflll;n !O\Icl’l (\‘ difierencc| A‘rfll!il\g a uennihle mwehv\n The emires 00 S\Ii!t. ront, I‘Ilck. -ide-. llld hl“}\ lidcs nf’ the cu:l\iuns. cnvrrcd \'\'ith 150'_____ attractive pattern of | ncqnlrd Velour, Sprm;{ \|plmlmert¢|