Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, September 15, 1913, Image 2

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TITE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS PRIEST TELLS OF SHERMAN’S MEN AGAIN INVADE CITY; GREETED THIS TIME BY HANDCLASPS 111 * P i" HI mu nr p ■(< ( id Confession of Dismemberment of ( Body and Attempts to Hide Crime Stir New York. Continued from Page 1. worth of furniture and established tin j eirl there. His Story of Slaying. Schmidt's confession, in concrete follows “I met Anns Aumuller two year? ( go at the pariah house of St. Boni face Church. She ww employed as a ijervant there. 1 was attracted to her by her beauty. I became infatuated with her. I loved her. 'I killed her because I loved her so much. She was so beautiful. I could not let her live -without me. “1 made up my mind that she and 1 ould not live together. I was a priest and must remain with my church. So I opened the door of the lint. She was tsleep in the room. I awakened her and told her I had tome to fulfill my threat. Then I slew her with a knlf*-. “St. Elizabeth, of Hungary. my patron saint, had come to me one night and told me that a sacrifice had o be made and that It must be done n blood. Just the same aw Abraham < as ordered to ?*lay Isaac. So I killed Anna. Then I threw er into the water because the aacri- li< e called for blood and water. I cut the body Into six pieces. 1 made trips to the Fort Hoe ferry each time with part of her body in the bundles. When the ferry boat reached he middle of the stream I would throw a piece into the water. When the boat reached the other .side of the water 1 would return, go back to the Mat and get another piece of her >odv l think 1 made about live or six such trips. Tried to Burn Mattress. After I had disposed of the body I s anted to destroy all evidence of the rime. I took the mattress on which I had slain her and carried it to a va - ant lot. There 1 burned It. I am guilty and that is all I can *,tv. [ must pay toe penalty. There s nothing else for ine to do. But I .ived Anna Aumuller. She wanted me to marry her because she was vnon to become; the mother of my bid. So I procured a marriage li- • ense. She trusted me. 1 am i priest and ordained to per- orm the marriage ceremony, so when 'die insisted upon the ceremony I married myself to her. There was no Man Shot by Wife Is Near Death Fears No “Railroading” Now. With Bullet Against Spine. \ New York Lawyers Try to Delay Self-Defense Her Plea. Habeas Corpus Hearing. SAVANNAH. Sept. 15.—With her husband'!, lift* in t'ap balance n> lh.', result of a h'lllet wound indicted b> j her two months arm. pretty Mrs. hva j Dare obtained a. preliminary hearing I this mu mi a a on her plea to be re- j j leased on bond until the wounded man i recovers or dies and die charge upon | which site is to be tried In the higher | •mined. I molt veterans in Atlanta on their way to 1 lie <i. A. It. encampment at < hattanooga. On right, M. A.Ward, of Turners Falls. Mass., who was vvilh Sherman s army when Atlanta was cap tured. On the left is John J. Curran, of Bridgeport, Conn., and his niece. Miss Florence Wend ling. Mr. Ward was the man who pulled down 1ho Confederate ‘lag and hoisted the Stars and d of any other priest doing it. it stripes on the Atlanta Courthouse. ae just as absolute as if I had called 1 another person with authority to perform the marriage ceremony. She was my wife.” After the murder Schmidt con tinued to officiate as assistant priest at St. Joseph's Church and even bap tized a baby. Schmidt, when asked to-day con cerning hi« past, gave somewhat in coherent answers. At first he declared that he was ordained by a European bishop named Kiersteln. Later he de- < hired that St. Elizabeth, whom he ills his patron saint, had ordained him. 0 Asked for letters such as are given by different bishops when one priest ;s transferred from one diocese to another. Schmidt declared he had none bearing such signatures, but that he had a number of letters which St. Elizabeth had given him. Clergyman 9ays He Is Crazy. Schmidt had a number of letters hearing the seals of different church es in the United States and Europe, but none of them, it Is declared, fully established his Identity or were couched in the form of credentials. The Rev. Luke J. Evers. Catholic • haplain in the Tombs, secured to day from Schmidt the admission that n Munich Schmidt had been arrested as an imposter. “To most all of my questions re lating to his past. Schmidt answered that everything he has done has been dictated by St. Elizabeth.” declared Father Evers, “lie told me that St. MOTHER'S FRIEND IN EVERT HOME Comfort and Safety Assured j Before the Arrival of the Stork TB« nld «tytng what t« home wlLhsul toother- should add "Mother'• Friend." In th(TOMBdm mi Anaerlnan homes there to a J ’ hotUm of this splendid and fsivous remedy that < t urn sided many a woman through the Tying <»r ‘ dr a . saved her from a:i(Taring and pain. kept her 1 ' in health nt mind and body In advance mf baby's < , roniiug aud had a mw wonderful lnflneroe In | devtmplng a healthy, lorelj oImposition lo the •, There U ne other remedy truly a help to j nature as Mothers friend It reUere* the pain t • d discomfort cauaed by the strain on the It** \ mettle, make* p’Jent '/v>*• Alievs aud tiriSv.es whlrh ; ature U expanding and soothes the Ka- flannie l<«n breast f tanas Mother’s Friend ts ar ext err a.: remedy, ar s ^ quickly and not enljr banist.ee all dletre-ee In ad ■ vanre. but aiumrea a spaed* and complete reeoe- «rj for the mother Thus ah# becomes a healthy won.an vrltb all her strength pr*SMvr*eu to thor ough^y er iujr the tearing of her child Mother e Krirnd can be had at any drug stove at 91 04 a 1 bottle, and Is really one of ’he gr«vatest birealnge / , ev<r dieciwe-ed fur expectant mothers Write to i r 1 fcradfl* U1 Regulator Co.. 129 Lamar Bldg At - ' lanta. Oa for their free book. Write to-day It t • to most Uotrurtlva i —v— — —« You are invited to the Atlanta Theater, Tuesday Elizabeth enabled him to Recur© an assistant pastorate at Louisville, Ky., and Trenton, N. J.. before he came to New York. When 1 asked him If he had secured dismissal paper from those two cities he said he had not received any from the bishops but that St. Elizabeth hud given them to him. Schmidt told me he came to New’ York and secured an introduction to Father Braun, of St. Boniface Par ish He presented some letters w hich secured him the assistant pastorate there. He later had some disagree merit with Father Braun and left that church to connect himself with St, Joseph’s Parish." It is believed to-day that ters which Schmidt presented ther Braun were clever forgeries. Pillow Slip Trapped Him. “Mr. Schmidt is insane,” declared | Father Evers. “He does not seem to j realize the enormity of bis crime and » about the only answers 1 can get to questions as to why he killed the girl is that St. Elizabeth told him lie had to make a blood sacrifice." With a pillow slip us a clew, the detectives solved the mystery of the murder. They discovered that the pillow slip found around one section of the torso was purchased in the neighborhood of Seventh avenue and Fourteenth street. Then they sought a man who purchased the pillow slip at a second-hand store In the neigh borhood. Finally they located the flat at Bradhurst avenue. For two days anti nights a detective lingered outside the place. Saturday night In spector Joseph Faurat decided to break into the fiat. “I felt we were on the right trail, and I took a chance," said Faurot. “1 guess the results warranted it.” The fiat was found blood stained. A knife and saw were found. The bed minus its mattress, but with blood spots on the posts, showed the de tectives where the murder had been committed. The officers found a picture of the murdered girl and some papers. A note signed by "Sehmiddy” gave the police their final clew, j I The detectives then went to St. J i Boniface’s Church and asked for ] j Schmidt. They w'ere told that he had resigned and had become asso ciated with St. Joseph’s Parish. They got a description of Schmidt, which tallied with that of “John Schmidt." who had rented the flat. Then fol- j lowed the arrest and confession. Slayer Now Defiant. Schmidt in his cell to-day was calm and defiant. He refused to see re porters. and when one of them sent a note to him requesting an interview. Schmidt sent back the following writ ten reply; “l do not think you will understand me. There b no use talking about It " An examination of Schmidt’s men tal condition was made to-day by the Tombs physician. Other examina tions will follow, as it is believed that Schmidt is mentally unbalanced. Acting District Attorney Nott to day said that any effort to prove that Schmidt was insane when he killed the girl will he combated vigorously. Nott declared that the man was sane, and that the motive for IDs act can be shown without a doubt. Alfonse J. Koelble, who has known Schmidt fur two years, \ isited him In his cell to-day. Declares He Is Not Crazy. "He seemed unconcerned,” Koelble his visit with Schmidt. "He seems to have great contempt for any penalty that may be meted out to him. When I asked him if 1 •ould do anything for him he replied. No: God and Abraham alone are abl M’KEE'SP. 0. JOB BULLET CHECKS TURNED OVER ITTEHFT TO TO JONES rt* Fa-i Stir Marks Transfer of Atlanta Boyd Perry Drives Motor Robber to the re Postmastership—Doubt About From Garage—Believed Mem- court In many respects ; bles the Grace episod eye w itnesses, no one no one suspected the happy until the young the police she had •• ami asked them to lance to take him to "I shot in ^’D'-de COLEBROO K. X. H., Sept. 15.—Fjr the first time in his stormy care-r Harry K. Thaw to-day found himself in the custody uf the United States Government. United Slates Marshal E. P. Nu.o arrived here with an order from Cnited States Distrivt Judge Edgar Alririeli directing that he he given , us'.od y uf Thaw jointly with Sheri If Holman Drew, of Uous t’vitnty, as til * result of'the Federal writ of habeas eorpus obtained by Thaw's lawyers Saturday. Thaw was delighted at the new turn of affairs. ••William T. Jerome nor anyone else . in railroad me while Uncle Sa.n is about." said Thaw, cheerfully. The fugitive spent several hours writing a long "question and answer ’ ini, i view with himself, giving the. details of his flight and deportation from Canada It is expected that Marshal Nina wiil take Thau to Littleton, N. H„ as the writ is returnable there in United Stales Court Tuesday morning at 11 o’clock. It was reported that Lawyer Mos- a H. Crossman, of New Fork, would ask judge Aldrich for an adjournment of the habeas corptu pending the hear ing bv Governor Felker on Wedne.,- dav of the extradition proceedings. : Ex-Atlantan, Thaw Aide, threatened and abused me and '' hen | I became convinced he wouh out his threats unless 1 protet : self. I shot, and 1 phot to.kill. 1 don’t care whether he lives nr dies—ji get him away from here” Since that time her attitude h changed. She wants to be with h^r h un’oand. The bullet pierced Dare’s left lung and lodged against the backbone. (Several operations have failed to re-J j lieve him. He may live several years i ■ j or onlv a few weeks, his physicians say, but he never iScores Canadian Law. That the deportation of Harry Qfnfp flfficerq rHrV i Thaw , ' PVCal, ' d the weakness of the kJuQiuU UlllvL'i O JJCIUA , (Canadian immigration laws was the Pvnm "Rn H U| PSS Trino j declaration i.t samson Selig, a formet X 1 Jill JJUOlJLlOuO J-i Ij./O j \ Hainan and now member of the law ’ firm of House, Grossman & Vorhaus, Game Warden Mercer State Entu- ! of New Vurk, upon his return from ..... . _ j Coaticook, according to reports read otologist \\ orsham and < ommt'stoner | w . th inten . sl by his unc i e , Sigmund of Agriculture Price returned to the sei*g. Capitol Monday, after a week's ab- ' Selig, who was a member of Thaw's ‘ | legal army in Canada, is well known j in Atlanta, having been in school Mr. Worsham and CommissionerN }tere up until 1911. in his discussion Price spent the week in Mississippi ; .>f the* Thaw case. Selig wrote: and Louisiana investigating the boll “Concerning the strategic Position .. *: Thaw in New Hampshire as com- I weevil situation, and Warden Me • ■ . ( ..... with Canada. 1 think the had been in Boston, attending t,ie | chances for ultimately winning are national meeting of Game Wardens i better in the United States than in land Fish Commissioners. I the Dominion. If Thaw is insane h^e | All three visited the Conservation j , an not be extradited from New : Exposition ifi Knoxville. j Hampshire, because, if insane, he can 1 | not be guilty of an extraditable of- fense in New York. vears ago Sherman's devastating! "They will try to get him back, Veterans, lie.. .. vVay to Of. A. R. Meet, Reeall Thrilling Battle Scenes. I army swept. | In the afternoon a reception was ; given the visitors at the headquarters I of Mitchell Post, G. A. It., in the Gould Building, at which Colonel W. i M. Scott, of the local G. A. R. post, i presided. He was assisted in enter- i taining the visitors by prominent At lantans and Confederate veterans. I expect, on the ground that he has committed a crime here, but in that ease they must abandon the assump tion that he is insane. The only /trou ble and danger is that the courts might uphold writs of extradition on the ground that one State owes that : courtesy to another. "The precipitous deportation of New Appointees. ber of Daring Band. The operations of* the gang tomobile thieves that has l j testing Atlanta for the past t" i were checked early Monday m< >!* au- ii in- weeks ning Pottoftlce Inspectors Monday morn ing were busily engaged effecting the transfer of the post mastership of the local postofflee. Bolling H. Jones, , v , __ ,, , ,, I when Bovd Peri v. No. X. Loule- newly appointed postmaster under the . present administration, gave Hugh ! . Jvurd. genera! agent ot the National McKee, Taft appointee, who has ai! i Surety Company, opened fire with a but completed his four-year term, tv j r ,. vo | ve| . a burglar who was try- ceipts certifying the presence of fun Is . . . . ,,, , and stock. | »ng to run his automobile out of the Mr. McKee, in his shirt sleeves, w - h%rd at work, assisted by his oflh «• help, in vacating the premises, wide Bolling H. Jones, also in Ills shirt sleeves, was moving in. Mr. Jones hung his commission on the wall al most In the same identical spot where the former postmaster proudly hung hts commission when he entered upon the duties as pstmaster of Atlanta four years ago. As yet Mr. Jones has not announced any contemplative echanges In tii<* office force. It Is. however, under stood that Mr. Jones will for the most part act on merit. If a man is thor oughly efficient, as in the case of I. «' Hart, superintendent of mails, he will rem&in in office. It has been stated authoritatively that no changes will be made for several months, or until such time when Mr. .Tones has h°- come thoroughly familiar with th^» duties of ich and ever> man in :d° office. out of the ordinary are considered insane. There is no suggestion of in sanity about me. I understand the predicament I am now in. but I do not need an attorney, anyway 1 do not need one just n.*w." Anna Aumuller. the slain girl, from Austria several years ago. She first kept house for her foster brother, l^ater she worked as a housemaid in a New Jersey home. Her next posi tion was in the St. Boniface parish house, where she met Schmidt. garage. The bullet missed the In truder, and. put a hole in the gasoline tank of the automobile, out it Jid the work. The attempt made to steal Mr. Per ry’s car was one of the boldest the gang has made. Mr. Perry wa.*- awakened shortly after midnight by a noise in his garage, and looking out | ul °J,, of a. window saw a man trying w force open the door. Failing in tha; the buigl i> - went to a window at ttu shie of the garage, raised the sasi ami climbed in. Mr. Perry secured his revolver and went outside. As he approached the garage, lie heard the burglar trying to open the door from the inside. Mr Perry fired a shot through the door of th« garage, and then opened tIn door and rushed in. As lie entered, tin* man scrambled through the win dow and escaped. (’all officers Anderson and Watson made an investigation, but failed to find any trace of the burglar. The police think the man is a member of the gang that has been stealing auU - and from ir Recalling the stirring scenes of half a century ago when Sherman de scended upon Atlanta, more than -»00 grizzled veterans of the Grand Army of the Republic passed through tiiis Monday in special cars en route union of the* G. A. R. at lattanooga. Despite their age. the old men. I many of them gray and bearing the .mars of battle, carried themselves with marked agility. At the Union Station, where they laid over for an hour, they •were met by members of the U. O. V. and those among them who were present at the battle of Atlanta retold the story of Sherman’* devastation here. "Yes,” said M. A. Ward, of Turners Falls, Mass., a Union veteran who fought with the Sixtieth New York of the Twentieth Corps, “it was just such a morning as this, dark and damp, when, after storming Atlanta with shot and shell for over two weeks. General Sherman decided that it wae the opportune tim-a t*> descend ity. Hard Fight at Peachtree Creek entered the city, a number of houses were already burning, ignited from the slip]Is. General Sherman at that time gave orders to the men to ex tinguish the flames. I do not know how many men were killed on both sides, but there were a comparatively j small number, taking into consider.i- I saohusetts'* branch uf the Women's tlon the heavy losses sustained in I Relief Co r ps, read a poem on the other quarters when the same numbe" united country'. A jovial discussion of the incidents J Thaw simply show ed that the Canacl- of the war. their trials and hardships. 5 ian authorities were afraid to bring filled the afternoon. Several of the j him into court and put the lmmigra- visitors spoke, calling to mind inci- 1 tion law’s to a test, dents of the great struggle that ' showed the heroic qualities of both j the- blue and the gray. Colonel A. J. McBride, of Atlanta, a Confederate veteran, told of the fight on Little Round Top, and others en tertained rjpe audience with reminis cences of great battles of the war. Miss Lou Wadsworth, of the M ts- PANAMA CANAL EXHIBIT CAR. COLUMBUS, Sept. 15.— Hundreds of Columbus people visited the Pan ama Canal exhibit car, which was placed "n exhibition in Columbus Saturday and Sunday. of men were engaged. “The march to the sea was full of hardships and at times we were sore ly pressed by the Confederate forces along the route. After we had taken Savannah 1 was one of the few to continue the march on foot to Wash ington.” The majority of the Union veterans who left Atlanta Monday morning were from Connecticut, Massachu At the clos«e of the speaking the veterans sang the old songs they sang at their camp fires 5 f > years ago, and the meeting closed with Northerner and Southerner joining hands and singing "America.” Rain Mars G-. A. R. Reunion Opening. CASCARETS" FIX CHATTANt )OGA, Sept. We were met N by a wing of the Confederate Army several miles dis tant from Atlanta and at Peachtree Creek, 1 believe they call it, a most bloody battle took place. The men on both sides fought bravely; especially did the Confederates, w ho alw ays dis played more grit and daring than our army. "We outnumbered the Confederate forces, and after several hours’ fight ing the Confederates fell back and we charged the city of Atlanta. "I was a sharpshooter and was do ing lookout duty at the time, and con sequently was near the front of the ranks. \ Confederate flag flaunted, in the breeze from the top of the old courthouse then standing. 1 made Priest in Louisville as Alma Kelner Was Slain. LOUISVILLE, KY. Sept. 15.—Hans Schmidt, confesses slayer of Anna Aumuller in New York, was here at the time of the mysterious Alma Kel ner murder. He was studying Eng lish. He was very active in aiding in the search for the eight-year-old girl when she disappeared while on her way to mass. Father Schmidt spent considerable time in St. John's Catholic Church, under which the girl's body was found, although he was associated with the mobiles from garage , front of office buildings for several for it. snatching « Union flag from weeks j one of the color bearers as I ran. "1 climbed to the old tower and cut the Confederate flag from Its ! fastening and with my sheath knife I drove tHe Stars and Stripes to the , — - /1.1 LCJ1 DL'.U VV KJGU/OV/Xi. Glad It's AH Over. "A cry of victory went up from our The opening of th oyster and | men and tt "after theater” season will be cele brated at the Piedmont Hotel Mon day night. The main dining room of the hotel will be thrown open to l 1 ' '' l ’ l ' Piedmont Opens Its After Show' Season setts. Rhode Island and Maine. Among j steady drizzling rain and low hanging R the most prominent of these are i oh*, j 0 ] 0U( j s which hid Lookout Mountain jj nel AY. M. Scott, past eommancier-in- hief, G. A. R.: William L. Ross, and the surrounding country from . Sluggish Bowels Cause Gases, ’ Indigestion and Food Fermentation. sistant adjutant general and assistant quartermaster general of the Depart ment of Maine; John E. Edgar, Jr., of L. A. Tifft Camp No. 15, S. of V : Fred R. Gibb, Rhode Island; C. A. Arnold. Rhode Island; John J. Cur ran. Massachusetts; C. P. Degn<*n. Rhode Island; Luther Wait, Connec ticut: John E. Edgar, Massachusetts; William Hart. Massachusetts, speed delegate to the staff of Commander- in-Chief Fpeer; E. Wason, Massachu setts: Allan B. Clark. Massachusetts: G. L. Smith, Massachusett, and H. E. Newman, Massachusetts. A number of the Union veterans had member? of their families w ith them. Most oi the veterans had been with the Army of the Potomac and fought with Grant. Fred Houser, of the Atlanta Con vention Bureau, was at the station to see the men safely on their way. He expects to go to Chattanooga t >- morrow. Eluo and Gray to Join. The Union veterans will return to Atlanta Saturday en route home Here they will be entertained for sev eral days. view greeted the Union veterans to-* day upon the real opening of the: Forty-seventh Annual Encampment! of the Grand Army of the Republic. I To-day was known officially as j Lookout Mountain day. hundreds ot citizens being impressed as guides ' The inclement weather changed the i plans of many veterans, however. | Committee meetings alone were 1 scheduled for to-day, with the ex- ( ception of a meeting of the Army of the Cumberland. The Woman’s Re- j lief Corps held an informal welcome j at headquarters. A meeting of the survivors of the United States Signal Corps was also held. A breakfast was tendered Com- mander-in-Chief Beers and staff this morning on board tiie steamer John A. Trigg President Wilson took official cogn!- 1 zance of the encampment last night when he wired Colonel G. M. Salt- gaber, Commissioner of Pensions, as follows: "Please give my warm greet ings to the old soldiers and express ‘ } to them my sincere interest in their A special program ha» i , f „ been arranged and automobiles will carry them on sightseeing trips. Polities in relat.on tc * - - - i rtf the* next commander-in-chief to hotel will be thrown guests at 10 o’clock, and an elaborate muesical program will be given. Sou venirs will be distributed to the pa trons. The dining room has been elabo rately decorated for the occasion. A special menu w ill be served. Empire Chemical Co. p -i tin searni in cum. cigvin «itf n A Tin I IPS TOT ( hfl.rrer " uk ‘ ' Oimm surrounding Sto: 1UI v/Ilu/I uC/ ; Mountain, and there was always a rector of St. Mary’s Church. Joseph Wendling. janitor of St. Application for charter for the Lm- John's Church arrested in California p t! ,. I’lu'inu'.i! t nipany was filed In and sentenced for life on clrcumstan-I c , ( , mir . Mnml.iv hv S J l then asked tial evidence, has consistently pro- * ^ 1 ‘ * ' ' ' , vas insane, or j tested his innocence of killing the lit- Elders, George l . F ollard and J. -i liant music and interesting whether there has been insanity in | tie girl night, September 16. Bril-1 IDA BROOKE HUNT “O. BERNARD REINHOLD GO. MME. BESSON CO. BIG CITY FOUR. METROPOLITAN DANCERS Novelty Grahams— Mahoney and Tremont. Hun: The capital stock of the company is $5,000 with the provision that it mav be increased to $1,000,01*0. A in the Frankfort Wendling. who is sain koeihle. ram il\ Admission tree exercises State Penitential*'-, was asked to-da\ if he knew Schmidt. Never heard of him.” he answered .!. W*. I am not insane and been no insanity in my C! grta nen who do ai :* Southern College of Pharmacy. I 'ears C requested, occurred after 1 had left, 5\ lien .vj ity of Atlanta was ours. I was proud of the victory then, but now -well, thank God, it is a thing of the past. "While climbing to the old court house tower I was hit in the eye by a piece of scattering shell. You see my left eye is gone. "During the period spent .in the bombardment of Atlanta, some two weeks, our army was encamped tw> miles or more from the city. At this time l was impressed into the forag ing party. Twice a week our entire wagon train, over a mile and a half long in procession, would set out for •Egypt.’ ns we called it in those days, in search of corn. Egypt was th? \e an I abundance of corn to be had by mere ly going after it. The corn was nec essary for our horses and mules. We did not need it to keep from starvL.g, for we had plenty of good rations. Iij fact, we fared better at this time than at any other period during th? war. "I did not see Atlanta burned. The burning of the city, if it were done, the election of th succeed General Alfred H. Beers, of Hartford, Conn., already has made an appearance. Six candidates are in the field. These are Private Orlando Somers, of Kokomo. Ind.; Washing ton Gardner, of Kalamazoo, 51 ich.; Colonel G. E. Adams, of the Depart ment of Nebraska; General J. N. Har rison, of the Department of Kansas; A. S. Fowler, of Arkansas, and Frank E. Cole, of New Jersey. Banquets also will be tendered, and the blue and the gray veterans will join in social festivities. The first delegation of the hundreds of Northern soldiers who are expected to visit the battlefields of Atlanta during the reunion came to Atlanta Sunday and spent the day visiting the scenes of the desperate battles be tween Sherman and Hood. They were TOO veterans and their wives from Boston, en route to Chattanooga. The 100 Boston veterans were met at the Union Station Sunday morning by local Grand Army and Confederate veterans, and were lavishly enter tained during their stay in the city. City officials joined the veterans* in extending the hospitality of Atlanta to the visitors. Taken on Tour of City. The Northern veterans were taken on an automobile tour of the city during the morning, with their local comrades and the Confederate vet erans acting as guides and escorts. They were shown all the old battle fields, near Atlanta, where many of them had fought and bled, the Gordon monument, the Confederate Soldiers* Home and other points of interest. Several hours were spent at the bat tlefields. and many of the men from thf North walked, for the Orel time | , nr; C-p A T*n A T>T>" since tiie war, in the piacea where ^0 l wviiiucx . Get a 10-cent box now. That f awful sourness, belching of ; acid and.foul gases; that pain In the pit of the stomach, the heart- ! burn, nervousness, nausea, bloat- 1 ing after eating, dizziness and sick I headache, means a disordered stomach, which can not be regu lated until you remove the cause. It isn’t your stomach’s fault. Your stomach is as good as any. Try Cascarets; they immediately cleanse the stomach, remove the sour, undigested and fermenting food and foul gases; take the ex cess bile from the liver and carry off the constipated waste matter and poison from the bowels. Then your stomach trouble Is ended. A Cascaret to-nighl will straighten you out by morning—a 10-cent box lYom any drug store will keep your stomach sweet, liver and bowels regular for months. Don’t forget the children—their little insides need a good, gentle cleansing, too. Funeral Designs and Flowers FOR ALL OCCASIONS. Atlanta Floral Companv 455 EAST FAIR STREET. $2.50 TO BIRMINGHAM And Return, September 22. Special train leaves Old Depot 8:30 a. m., arrive Birmingham 1:30 p. m. Tickets good returning on regular trains until Sep- AtSanta Theater Tuesday Night. Sept. 16 Commencement Exercises of Southern College ot Pharmacy BRILLIANT MUSIC AND INTERESTING PROGRAM Admisson Free. Public Invited Thl * I YS7ir MATINEES Wsek B- ■ El 3 ^ Tubs., Thurs. A Sat. ARTHUR C. ASSTON Prsents ESTHA WILLIAMS In Owen Davis’ Startling Play "A MAN S GAME” FGRSYT H MIT. TO-DAT 2:30 TO-NIGHT AT 8 30