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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 26

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Brooklyn, New York
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26
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BROOKLYN DAILY EAGLE, NEW YORK, SUNDAY, MAY 17, 1936 12 This Week Roman Empire Allenby Lauded Vanishing Africa Preserved in Museum Group Opens TakesNewForm km. 'ism yr- slSiBB AKeiey nan WML A Tuesday Ml Under II Duee Ethiopia's Annexation Sets Italy Off on Road the Caesars Followed Boro Woman Palestine Book Mrs. J. Miller's Work Portrays Near East in a Modem Light By MAXWELL HAMILTON fTHHE great Crusader of Peace. Field Marshal Viscount Allenby of Meglddo.

is dead, but Pales- tine, the enduring chapel to his! work, is on the threshold of its By GERTRUDE EMERICK USSOLINI, a ousinessmau "im pulsing sym career The Holy City, besieged 1 pathies of his people by keeping the thoughts of a Roman Empire dangling before their eyes, has begun the building of another empire. The Chamber of Deputies, brilliant and excited, has approved II Duce bill annexing Ethiopia and proclaiming King Victor Emmanuel Emperor. Marshal Pietro Badoglio has been recognized as Viceroy of Ethiopia. The only one to speak officially i centuries and Christianity for period by the now in the proc-; Palestine." the Mrs. Miller, wife of held during tha hated Turk, is evei 'Footprints In latest work of Medeleine 8 ween: Mil er.

the Rev, Central MePuv.bt Kpivpa! Church, is a book reproductive of that change In the Near East and one that tells in complete and graphic manner the transition from the old to the new. With a commendation by Viscount Ailenby. Mrs Millers book iummmg ISk CermansRush at the time of the proclamations, Thursday, was Carlo del Croix, blind and crippled war hero. "Mussolini has learned from the founders of empires that the best way to untie knots is to cut them. Rome is again on the march along the straight road, which is the shortest and safest.

Europe needs Rome more than Rome need Europe." March of Confusion Rome's "march along the road" has been one of curious confusion. In the early days, before the birth of Christ, the Roman emperors acquired their power by assuming the II lhlr LaLaLaLBBH LLm ifli bbVb9BbHE Bfoir: Transatlantic Airplane Lane carries the torch for travel and iTvim. Sne if iff" fOMPLETED after 25 years of cv. anrt it lias beer, during most planning and construction, Ake- of the seven centuries of the ley Hall of African Mammals of the Crusades True, electric lights have American Museum of Natural His- WjJS'S be formally dedicated at Bethlehem is reached by a macadam private ceremonies Tuesday, the 73d road Mrs Miller notes these anniversary of Carl Akeley birth, changes with mingled feelings. Tne hall will be open to the public A New Era Begins 0n Wednesday.

She senses the fart that the Holy immediately you enter the hall 1 unctions that went witn tne oi-Charleston, S. to Be Bee- Within the early republic there was a struggle for power, and Terminal for Trial 'only through a series of wars did Rome finally dominate Italy. Flights This Summer One of the first leaders, a mem- Land is mucn as was ioionKi Liners Discard nation are only the beginning. Africa" Jungle. Lights are cun- They can be ignored now; the ningly concealed, making every Imaginative can still hear the tin- group of animals stand out in a kfP Jerantan blaze of vearsder11 present growth, the A dominant central group of eight spell of "where the East begins" African elephants hits your eye will fade into motion picture pal- first.

Four of them were collected Mail Planes Bremen, Germany () With i an eye to coming transatlantic airmail services, the North i German Lloyd has decided to dismount the catapults on the Bremen and Europa by which peasant and soldier, who fought the aristocrats every step of the way. He was "Perpetual Dictator" for three years, during which time the monarchy's roots began to grow. In Days of Augustas Rome's real greatness came during the reigns of Augustus and his successors to the year 180 A. D. The spending of great sums of money resulted in beautiful buildings, the ruins of which color the city of Rome and parts of Spain, France, Germany and England today.

In 324 A. D. Constantine became the sole ruler and the first emper- gc- -'pu; hotels, and commerce by Col. Theodore Roosevelt, his mails were speeaea to port on threw off the ft-rrmu ann MI- AKrlc -3 Pale: for gen- Mr HIlf1 Mrf TTUbee Davison ob- thus gained will be turned into garage.s accommodating about two dozen automobiles. Tfl BL.

aatM SES 9 i erations and. in 15 years, lifted it tained the others more recently, from the morass of antiquity into a modern city that, withal, maintained Its heritage. He didn't want One of the largest groups shows a to go to Palestine; the fortunes of famliv of mountain gorillas from the war sent him there, and I WM this ex fate that made him the "deliverer of the Holv Citv That he came to hlblt ls a waterhole group, repre-love the Near East is indicated in senting a scene along the great his foreword to Mrs, Miller's writ- northern Guaso Nyno River, show- or io recognize unristianity. Alter BERLIN, May 16 ls his death due to barbarious attackSi moving fast to make the first the empire faced bankruptcy. The bid for a regular North Atlantic great empire fell in the years 429 airplane service.

to 439 when the Germans on the Trial flights to Charleston, S. north threw over the imperial hold, via the Azores and Bermuda are The Roman Empire receded again scheduled for late Summer. The int0 Italy and was ruled by kings, airplane service will parallel that i since that time the Roman Em-of the luxury airliner Hindenburg, 1 nirpiivmr in m.r ion New Brooklyn Central Library Will Be Model for Country ig a mother giraffe bending down drink, her calf looking on while TMt Is the second in a aeries of less waste space than any library be able to reach all exhibitions and books on engineering, finance, art, which brings the old and new and tne artshas been dead. weekly articles on the Brooklyn Li- building in the country." said Mr. collections.

architecture, economics, philosophy, worlds within two and a half days Dnce Fanned Embers brary System. Githens. "Dr. Ferguson and my- Fan-Shaped Building religion, education, sociology, docu- 0 cach other. The Italian people love nomn and self amririno ovor the nlam for the From the PYterior th.

new hnilri- merit, local history. On this floor' two air lines officials 1 i t. tC. iJTZiZ m. Becrsheba to Dan we made our way; foreground are Grant gazelles.

Oryx onward, then, through Syria to Cil- antelope and Grevy zebras. icia and the Taurus Mountains until Another group shows Grant ze- BROOKLYN'S Central Library las, yrar have adjusted architec- ing would be fan-shaped, thus fit- also would be the print room, map sayj are not to be run as competi-! year as dictator, has found it easy knew the bitter cold of Wi bras. Thompson gazelles, wildebeest. kongoni. topi and eland grazing on the Judean Hills, we sate the glory an w.rrty stundird for library etiicient ideas on future library ed for the central library building the music, collection with several buildings, Alfred Morton Githens, layout as developed bv the fori about 30 years ago.

The front ele- small soundproof rooms, where Manhattan architect, who origi- librarians of the country. Thus vation of the building, facing the scores might be tried on a piano, natcd the Plant Which have been when Brooklyn's hnilrtintr la rnm-: nlnsa Is to he concave fit.tine in "As the buildine would not have trass or resting the tors, but are to supplement each t0 Ieed these flames. He Is a per-other. son of great strength and many Both the airship and airplatje promises, services will be merely extensions In 1922, when he marched on of German lines now in operation Rome with 100,000 Black Shirts, he between Germany and South I subdued King Emmanuel, who, 0 the Palcimcr. telt the hurnmti heat nl th shade.

Summrr cm the plains; and. looking Animals All Sorts approved by the PWA but for which pieted it should serve as a model with the character of the adjoining courts, all reading rooms would face A representative of Africa which funds have not yet been granted, for the entire country. Brooklyn buildings, i cither the reservoir park or the ad- America. 1 through fear, refused to declare a almost extinct is the giant eland, told several hundred librarians mav have suffered from so manv "The main entrance of the library iacent streets and have constant no other. largest of all antelopes Other sped- gathered convention yesterday at years of delav In the construction would be reached from a terrace, daylight.

The third floor is planned The Rev. Lane Miller and Mrs mens in the exhibits include the Richmond. Va under auspices of Uf her Central Library Buildine. eievated a few stens above the level to house the administration depart- tween the Azores and Bermuda. Miller, who have traveled widely in greater koodoo, which have the the American Library Association, but the borough will have the sat- of Flatbush Ave.

on one side and of ments, the librarians' and trustees' That will make three stops between Palestine. Trans-Jordan and Syria, longest horns of any antelope; two Dr. Milton J. Ferguson, chief li- Lsfaction, when it Ls completed, of Eastern Parkway on the other, rooms, a treasure room for rare Frankfort-on-Main and Charleston. have completed now their second bongo, handsomest of all antelopes; branan of the Brooklyn Public Li- benefiting by the tremendous archi- Landscaping would provide a suit-, books and manuscripts and a cata- At some of these halts cargo will cook travel in inese countries.

the gerer.uk. vultunne guinea- oraiy. wno ioiioweo. Mr. unneus as tectural development of the last able setting.

The granite pavement loguing room. An open terrace be trans-shipped to tresh planes. Speaker, Presented the plana for several decades In llbrarv construe, at the main entrance would be in- overlookine the Dark would serve in Vrom Charleston to noints within I book fo King Emmanuel, since that time, has been the puppet. Mussolini, historians write, has made a punch and judy show out of the League of Nations. Wiping Away Disgrace Mussolini seized upon the Ethiopian situation as a means to rebuild the Roman Empire.

He nourished the feeling of hatred that had been implanted back in 1896 when the Italian army was defeated at Aduwa. The "disgrace" has been wiped the proposed building in detail and tion. We have reversed the old or-. cised to represent a map of Brook- Summer as an outdoor reading the United States cargo will be expressed the hope that as a result der in the Brooklyn plans bv start-' Ivn on which would be designated room. handled bv American air lines.

of the movement being carried on ing with the needs of the 1936 U- the location of the Brooklyn branch 1 $5,000,000 Needed bv former Federal Judee Edwin L. hrarv and maklno Hranrin. iihro American Alliance Formed cans and British alike. All will rejoice at the progress which Palestine has made under te mandate and Witt wish her Peace and Pros poison weci killed numerous farm animals In Sonoma County. Cal.

perity" ALLESBY. F. M. They Know Palestine Garvin, president of the Board of cover these needs." I "A visitor standing In the ft all kitchen The German Luft-Hansa has Trustees. Federal funds would be Will Follow 'Open Plan' trance door of the central hall Ubrary slaI'' WlUl 8 jKlurner made agreements with the Pan-made available and work started "The proposed building will fol- would see a room 50 feet high so a printing room and bindery ana American Airways for co-operation on the building before the 1937 con- low the 'ODen Dr Ferguson laid out that the operation of the the library school, would take up in any services which may be or- Mrs Miller and her husband have toured all comers of the Holy Land, job as a soldier and did it well ention of the American Library told the librarians.

"The main fea-; entire library could be observed the available space on the fourtn ganized by either company between i held in which inc. nave r. came, oae 1 Association, open nl: from that point. The reading rooms floor." uermaiiy miu tne wiuim ow housing the books would radiate About $5,000,000 would be needed German experts say that flying from the central hall. Above the to complete the library building, conditions are best between the e-trance to each of these rooms an According to present plans, about 20th and 40th latitude parallels.

used to build libraries at Springfield, Mass Wilmington, and prayed In Gethsemane. They know the taken by her litis-. 'Eve-vt'hing points toward 8UC-Christian and Jew alike. Protestant band, there ls a definite capturing rrs-s Jud campftlgn Mussolini's plans for another empire are embodied in the bronze tablet which soon will be affixed to one of the walls in the Chamber of Deputies. It reads: "On the ninth day of the 14th is that the main floor.

I Catholic, above all. Palestine 01 me ancient city as 11 Dienns in- Dr pergUSOn told the librarians. lth desk, catalogue reariimr rooms illuminated sien would Indicate the half of this would come from a That is why they favor the Azores- Palesin Footprints 1 temnt )( 1 of the Bible lands. drpds ai and rwtitiong to This' room 'li Hir.ti tv it hoiipvprt would would he a PWA loan which the 1 Thev also believe that the year of the Fascist era, Benito 01 from the street, eliminating the nc- reduce inconvenience and delay to city would repay, inirty years ago passage is posuuu wujr uv uwug oun(jed the empire.1 minimum land assessed at $1,095,000 was set catapult station snips. Long non- e.

A. n.n,.- interior Irke to secure funds vi.unn piimhtna air The motion to erect the plaque hurry to visit the trate what is being done there to- for lhe completion of the Central "The books tack is built beneath Holv Land It WI tne same nav as romparro wnai was. We an much Ptieouraged the ..1 1 own room Every nart of Second Floor Layout aside for the library site and more stop flights, they say, are not yet "On the second floor, reached bv than $2,000,000 was spent on one safe enough for regular commercial escalator, are more reading wing and all of the foundations of routes. and no one made effort to change Ar.c Its sacred picture With Allenby's great it will further prove the bv lhe interest being shown by the building open to the public is oik of iscount Al.er.hy both the Presides and Mrs. Roase- so laid out that it is accessible identical in arrangement the proposed structure oince iira station Ships Made Ready The oatamilt ship Schwabenland, Will Irmmi All tlie Children Parental Education which has been along the African coast in the service of the South Atlantic route, is being overhauled and will be sent, to position between the Azores and Bermuda.

A new 2.000-ton catapult ship, the Ost-mark, has been sent to the African coast to replace the Schwabenland. By Harold G. Campbell Superintendent of Schools was roundly applauded by those in the chamber. Italy Sees Cost Of Ethiopian War In Compensation Rome, May 16 OPj Italy's military success In Ethiopia has brought her to the second phase of the African venture, making it pay. Published appropriations for the war to date total 10,000,000,000 lire, equivalent to about a billion physical, emotional, volitional, social programs be adopted to meet operative assistance is essential for.

The German flying boats are 1 and spiritual maturity and the needs of children with superior the proper diagnosis and treatment much smaller than those operated nalitv with the children whom intelligence. of certain children referred to our by the Pan-American Airways. The ervice which was these services, and secondly. 1. ois was the ac- formulate practical plans for seen of inquiry re- them.

It is hoped that the schools outside plans can be made through the understood and ve co-operative eu. she child according to his 9 trnm.ri "i of 14. That the recommendations The catapult ships cannot handle re council facilities ical and reference ies. coaching teacher to do intensive children presenting early psychotic submitted in previous reports of the boats bigger than that and they line be given remedial work be appointed or severe neurotic manifestations be Bureau of Child Guidance rereive get along better when the planes 5 That sufficient nd nmmand Manhattan Ap- 1 and information 1 of specific prob- Many such in- 1 rom schools alone. 1 private schools.

1 llfied to serve in Wherever possibli to to Mud" the n.uvi'-ial to each unit of the organized in the citv. burn clul- carelul consideration. aie no neavier man ten tons. nm'i'iiv of e-irh ehllrt in her Bureau of Child Guidance. dren frequently require hospitahza-; 15.

That the unanimous recom- Looking at the French. British personam; 01 earn criuci ner That more arijustmenl classes lion for continuous observation and mendations made by school prlncl- and Americans, all of whom arc class, so that she may apply her be organized In our junior high intensive treatment. pals and by all leading social contemplating sea lines, the Ger- riecper knowledge of child nature schools ar.rl in our elementary 13. That free laboratory facilities agencies in our city for the exten- mans say that such travel must be and her artistic skill in developing 'chools io meet the special needs of be provided in our public hospitals slon of the services of the Bureau regulated by common accord among the qualities eani child and who present, problems of for X-rays, basal metabolism, blood of Child Guidance to various school these countries so as to eliminate Child guida: quiries rarr.e 11 but from par the clergy, pi id it of i estimable help liana, recreational with ally deadly competition. the potential; 1 and, other bio-chemical tests.

Such co- able consideration. 1 higher and more wholesome lev 'DonH Talk' Woman Politician Advises Others els of growth and development, necommendations 6 That definite attempts be made 1. That the quantity and variety to establish everywhere, wholesome, of educational material to be taught stimulating, constructive, spiritual in any school grade be constantly tone and atmosphere. We should and carefully re-examlned and emphasize at all tunes the lmpor- "ai nu 1 na'neg "liSS O11I vWoinan Stale Treas. ra-:" in'elligera ,1.

grade, can reasonably be expected friendly, co-operative, under; to learn, to absorb, to apply, and to ing. sympathetic, patient, 1 urcr In Country Thinks OPERATION SAVES DOG Tampla. May 16 tA Two Tampa surgeons are credited with saving the life of a pedigreed English setter by performing a successful operation to remove from the dog's stomach a spoon it had swallowed while being fed. The spoon, the surgeons said, had lodged crosswise. CONDEMN DANGEROUS BOG Compton.

May 16 (P)--A city ordinance paving the way for of a peat bog at the north edge of the city has been passed. The bog has trapped numerous pedestrians, it Is said, an average of one, life a year being lost there. Woman President Re-; mole dollars. The war costs were raised In four ways: by taxes, by conversion of Italy's 5' 2 percent bonds, by requisitioning of foreign credits and securities held by Italians, and by gifts of gold and jewelry. Raw Materials Figured For this price, leaving aside "upkeep," Italy expects to have obtained not only 350,000 square miles of territory but a life-giving supply of raw materials upon which to base her future fight for economic independence.

Ethiopia can provide many, if not all, the raw materials that Italy lacks coal, cereals, vegetables, cotton, wool, rubber, iron and other metals, sugar, timber and, perhaps, oil. All these products have been found in Ethiopia, even though in small quantities in some Instances. Mussolini expects to develop them. He reasons that Ethiopia's potential wealth should not be measured by what the Ethiopians have made of it. Alaska Purchase Cited Whether Italy can raise the capital to develop that wealth remains to be seen.

To Fascist economists comparing the conquered country with the United States' acquisitions and their subsequent yields, it seems a reasonable investment. When the United States bought Alaska from Russia, for example, it appeared less valuable than does Ethiopia, but It has brought tho United Stales annual products ranging recently from 150,000,000 to 100,000,000. Spent 21 Years in Public Office Now She Seeks 3d Consecutive Term way out ahead because more men than women like politics," she said. Mrs. Enking was born "sometime since the Civil War" at Avon, 111., and came to Idaho in 1909 to take a bookkeeping job in a store at Gooding.

She married William L. Enking, a Chicago lumberman, in 1911 but was left a widow two years later. A son, Harrod, is a high school teacher. She lives with her aged mother, Mrs. Margaret Powell.

She was the first woman elected POT STEALERS CONVICTED Sparlanburg. S. May 16 (Pi Police appeased angered housewives in various sections of the city by lairnn i'lal maladjustnii 3. That 11 eehnical mental hy- ful experie in cannot function the school uthout the aid ol become iDlishcd services motivated lent it It is, there- lated to cx that guidance com- quiring ant eek our services can edge, rievi lake an evaluation of I tormina tion of two defendants on charges of ''taand Spiritual inheritances of life lhe gray -haired but vivacious1 Jftjr flKl i- the ages. More attention to the little official declared "And I In-1 MPflw J' ashpot theft, and later to county office in Idaho.

I. lids liinnamentai ann inatunni: -im 1 111 im rmiiimian HjHH m- i. 1 ai eeris for security, for growth and for third consecutive term. HK1 velonmenl will produce the best "I'm not much of a campaigner BPlHs. 1 present position ls one of eight high inK tnc Pl8' State elective posts.

She is a Dem-1 ocrat OLD STUFF TO INDIANS Seattle, May 16 tP Sea- 1 Integrated icallonal results. hut" I make lols of personal con- HM mM That leiu hers take every pos- tacts and llvv are essential In lTSMsVII M'iM ASK CURB ON CROWING planes were called out to hunt for en: a la Ma II' I In a i lit ee repoi led lost at pelition to the city council, small boat. Later these Indians said that their sleep had been dia- came ashore, thinking nothing of turned by crowing fowls at a curb having made a 15-mile circuit of pontic" Mrs Knking believes the chance Mr, Mvrllr Kllkln)! of a woman being elected President of the United States Ls remote years of background and contact Warning the Presidency takes with political powers, and men are lie opportunity to achieve healihv. chers to enable them phsi'-al. mental, moral and spir- and more about the itunl growth and development so jl 1 1 1 ind present that each teacher may be able to mi share these valuable qualities of her market.

Cap Flattery in a canoe..

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About The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Archive

Pages Available:
1,426,564
Years Available:
1841-1963