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Beautiful Homes
Two - story Colonial frame
in Morningside — two
baths, five bedrooms—
steam heat—nice lot.
In Decatur — beautiful six-
room frame, hardwood
floors, furnace heat, tile
bath.
Close-in — in a good dis
trict of East Atlanta—six-
room brick, with tile bath,
hardwood floors, large lot.
All of these homes ore in per
fect condition — better than
new. Investigate the terms on
which you can own one of these
properties, which includes in
terest, taxes, insurance and
monthly payments in one pay
ment.
Report of Conference on
The Atlanta Section of the National
Council of Jewish Women was repre
sented by Mrs. Harry M. Gershon at the
eighth Conference on the Cause and Cure
of War held in Washington, I). C.,
recently. Mrs. Gershon had attended a
meeting of the Hoard of Directors of
the National Council of Jewish Women
and, at the request of the Atlanta sec
tion, remained for the Conference, being
one of forty-four delegates representing
Council sections out of a total attendance
of 422.
The National Committee on the Cause
and Cure of War is composed of eleven
national women's organizations of the
type of the National Council of Jewish
Women, General Federation of Women’s
Clubs, American Association of Univer
sity Women, National League of Women
Voters.
In her report of this Conference to the
Atlanta Council meeting, March 20th,
Mrs. Gershon called attention that Mrs.
Oscar Marx, of St. Louis, former Chair
man of Peace of the National Council of
Jewish Women, had served as one of the
twelve women on this jury which re
viewed the work of the Conference on
Cause and Cure of War. Other promir
ent Council members who were similarly
Cause and Cure of War
honored were Mrs. Arthur Brin, of Min
neapolis, President of the National Coun
cil of Jewish Women, who served on the
Committee on Resolutions, as well as
Mrs. Francis D. Poliak, of New York,
and Mrs. William Dick Sporborg, of Port
Chester, N. Y., who had leading roles in
a play, “Mars 'Fakes a Sabbatical,"
which was written by Mrs. Catt and pre
sented for the delegates. Mrs. Sporborg,
a former president of the National Coun
cil of Jewish Women, was elected record
ing secretary of the Cause and Cure of
War for the ensuing year.
Among the prominent speakers address
ing the Conference were: Bruce Bliven,
editor, The New Republic; Jacob H. Hol
lander, Professor of Political Economy,
Johns Hopkins University; Frederick J.
Libby, Executive Secretary, National
Council for the Prevention of War;
James G. McDonald, Chairman, Foreign
Policy Association; William Allan Neil-
son, President, Smith College; Nathaniel
Petfer, Guggenheim, Fellow in China, and
journalist; James T. Shotwell, Carnegie
Endowment for International Peace;
Mary Wooley, President, Mount Holyoke
College and United States delegate to
the Disarmament Conference at Geneva.
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(Conti nurd
dull thudding noises, as of falling beams
and doors smashed open. For a single,
hellish instant the horror of it beat up
into his face; then, suddenly the inspector
pulled the son backward and thundered
with him down the steps; instead of turn
ing toward the door of the house, he went
into the dark courtyard, and holding his
stick in his teeth, square across his face,
he climbed over the low wall into the
neighboring house. Eli threw his cudgel
over, leapt up, held on with his fingers,
drew himself upward, lifted his legs over
the obstacle, just as they did in the gym
nasium, and landed on the other side al
most on all fours. They stood still for
a moment, their beating hearts breathless;
then they went some seventy steps slowly,
easily, down to the Metchnikoffstrasse,
their Brownings in their hands. There
they turned the corner—and something
happened.
A woman came running toward them,
in her underskirt; on the upper part of
her body she wore a brown piece of cloth
which covered her shoulders. She was
out of breath, unable to utter a sound, her
Heshly face distorted with the terror of
death; she held her young daughter by
the hand; the child had not even a cloth
to cover her, her hair hung loose around
her face, and the bare feet, scarcely able
to keep the pace up, seemed only to be
falling forwards. The woman’s mouth
was wide open, showing all the teeth,
and her free hand was pressed against
her left breast. Three young ones fol
lowed her—with just a short stretch of
pavement between her and them; and on
that short stretch a young boy, perhaps
nine years old, stumbled horribly along,
untble to catch up with his mother . . .
Eli thought he recognized Gabriel’s
younger brother; but at once he might be
mistaken. The child reeled and fell,
picked itself up, fell again, and as he
rose to his feet for a second time, the
first of the hooligans ran by; the second
one, also running bv thrust a knife into
r ^ ^
J. C. DUGGAN
Optometrist and Optician
aai MITCHELL ST., S. W.
riiunr YA Inut OOH.% ATLANTA, CA.
from page 6)
the child’s back, "Maa-" it cried—the
sound beginning high and shrill, then
sinking downward and breaking. l*he
mother, hearing that piercing cry, turned
her head, stiffened, sank on her knee,
without loosening her hold on the girl.
Then suddenly Eli was aware that his
father, who had just been at his side,
had leapt ten paces forward—and, a
fiery tumult bursting out within him, he
sprang after him. For a single, violent
moment he was glad that his mother had
long been dead, and then he saw how
his father's horrible stick had whirled
sideways at the skull of the first hooli
gan, smashing it as if it had been a
clay pot, so that the man fell sideways
on the stony ground; and at the same
instant he saw two others put themselves
on the defensive. And then the fury
broke loose. He heard one shot, two
shots, and he shifted his Browning to his
right hand. His father leapt to the at
tack of the man who was shooting, but
the second man was behind him, his
knife uplifted. Eli felt something cold
at his heart; then he stood still, shot,
shot again, again; and the knife rang on
the hard pavement. A terrific excitement
cried out of him: “He’s hit!” He heard
the piercing cry of the women behind
him, the sound of heavy foot-steps, a shot
thundered darkly behind him, another—
no Browning this time, he knew—and
then saw the face of his father turned
toward him, a vivid white, with far-off
eyes blazing in terrific anger: and then
nothing more. He fell forward. “Father
..." he thought, and at the same time
something hammering down upon him
flung him to the ground as with a light
ning stroke.
The police lieutenant wiped his sabre
and gave command: “Forward!” And
as the policemen retreated swiftly the
two women, dumb with horror, fixed a
blank dead gaze on the figures lying on
the ground: on the man, the youths, the
boy and the child.
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