Hammond Times, Volume 14, Number 67, Hammond, Lake County, 5 September 1919 — Page 9

Friday. September o. 1919.

1 ANNOUNCEMENT

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Annex Grand Central Piano Co. 584 Oakley Ave. Hammond, Ind. Commences a Series of

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next Saturday Evening, September 6th at 7 p, m.

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HOBART

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Mi. I... Tracget returneJ to In.- liom in Kvanfton Tuesday after a two v'fl.'s vacation. The Whist Club will mt?et at t.h.i .Home of Mrs. Wfhnfr tonipht.

Mrs. Art Melen an.l on Junicr.

after

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llli;irt week's

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Miss Constance Elliott SOPRANO Miss Gertrude Ray VIOLIN Paramount Talent

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Hear the World's Latest Player Hits Come and Bring Your Friends

tin nod home yesterday

weeks visit in Chioago. .Miss Snow Hopper of the lri!i; loinnany after a three

:cation is bck on duly. .Miffs "Ritchie !.s visiting at the home

of rr C. C. Brink. N . Il.ilimcn, who work at American Bruise fompanv. is tnj 11 two week's vacation. Mrs. Joh nKilliarew returned teiday after a two week s visit

relative? in Cleveland. Ohio. Mrs. H. Halsteaii was a Chicago

visitor yesterday. Mis Tressa Chester, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. has. Chester and Mr. Robert Shaw were united in niiiriaae yesterday at the Cathedral. N. State and Suprrial streets. Chicago. The bride wore a white crepe de ihne Kown and was attended by Miss Jennie Chester.

THE TIMES. . . " j i.i

rffffers in Hammond Tuesday night. Rev. Plinth and family have returned from Michigan and will occupy the hoi'-,? formerly owned by Dick Klootwyk. Mr. H. , .Kaske 1? spending Thursday tn Crown Point, the Riiest of J. Kopelln . The Public and Tarochial Schools op. r.ed last T-.ics'lay. There are two teachers in the public schools and four in the parochial.

Past 'Vine.

TERRIFYING DISCOMFORTS

FROM SKIN DISEASES

Advertise in The Times and adrertise again. Results come with constant effort..

Itching and Earning: Eruptions

Torture Victim. If your skin seemi ablaze with tbe fiery, burning and itching- of Eczema, real and Lasting relief can only come from treatment that goes below the surface that reaches down to the very source of the trouble. Skin-diseases come from a disordered condition of the blood, and search far and near,

you cannot find a -blood remedy that approaches S. S. S. for real efficiency. S. S. S. has been on the market for fifty years, ilurinaj which time it has -been giving uniform satisfaction for all disorders for which it is recommended. If you want prompt relief, you can rely upon S. S. S. Tor expert advice as to the treafrr.eiu of your own individual cait, write to-day to Chief Medical Adviser, Swift Specific Co., Dept. 44, Atlanta, Ga.

DE LUXE THEATER KAMUCNO NEXT WEEK Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday Mary Pickford in

The Hoodlums

j We think it' tho -rreatest chr. .-a . tr i .-study la Kiry Plckforti's esMrt ca'er

yes- I w ith )

j HIGHLAND ------ - i

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The Definition of

C MART

ANYTHING AND EVERYTHING IN MUSIC AND NOTHING BUT MUSIC. 151 States St., Hammond. Phone 3350.

Miss Margaret Jamieson of Massachusetts visited her mother and brother. James Jamieson and family the forepart of the week. Mr. C. E. Hollett of Hammond, was the suest of Mrs. A. I.. Reiner, last Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Hall, spent Labor Day with relative? In Lake Village. Several Highland boys atteni"1 the motorcycle races at Marion, lnd., on Monday . Mrs. H. C. I.yditk and son Glenn and John visited in Indianapolis over Sunday.

MUNSTER

Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Kraay of Montioello are vlsitinjr Will Kraay. Mr. and Mr. P. O. Schonn and daughter Iradell spent IaHor Day at Momenff . Mi.s Helen Kake was In Crown point Saturday. Mrs. Teter Tanis is entertaining her aunt from Chicago for a week. Elmer Kaske g;ited with Helen

NICK PORTER Farm Sale Auctioneer

Highlands, Ind. Call or write for dates. reasonable.

Terms

xperts or theorists

icia

The packing industry is intricate, complexfar more so than the railroads or the telegraph. Every day multiplying needs of society increase its problems and multiplying responsibilities demand more of it. Highly trained experts, specialists of years' experience, thinkers and creative men, devote their lives, their energies, their activities, to solving the problems of the packing industry and meeting its videning duties. Swift & Company is not a few dozen packing plants, a few hundred branch houses, a few thousand refrigerator cars, and a few million dollars of capital, but an organization of such men. It is the experience, intelligence, initiative and activity which operates this physical equipment. Can this intelligence, this experience; this initiative and creative effort which handles this business at a profit of only a fraction of a cent per pound from all sources, be fostered through the intervention of political theorists, however pure their purposes? Or be replaced by legislation? Does Congress really think that it can?

Let us send you a Swift "Dollar". It will interest you. Address Swift & Company, Union Stock Yards, Chicago, 111.

Swift & Company, U. S. A.

12.96 e o f ToShdPjmrJ

THIS SHOWS

WHAT BECOMES Of

THE AVERAGE DOLL AO RECEIVED BY

r SWIFT & COMPANY

r SCt THE SALT Or MEAT ANO BY POOD'JCTS J CENTS IS PAIO FOB THt LIVE ANIMAL

12.9 CENTS FOB LABOR tICINUI AND FBC6MT J O CtNTS KCMAIHS

WITH

von BAR

TRPITZ

WAR SECRETS Herald and Examiner to Print Confessions of U-Boat Admiral.

I peel ml Cable DLpatoh. LONDON. Aug. 30. The suppressed confession of Admiral Von Tirpitz, to whom the Kaiser delegated the direction of the U-Bcat campaign that brought America into the war. has been obtained by The Chicago Herald and Examiner. Publication of the entire text will begin next Sunday. This is the greatest newspaper "scoop" of the year. As soon as the hook was suppressed by the German government, in July, because of the. important war secrets it revealed, publishers en both sides cf the Atlantic entered a heated race to obtain the American rights. The Herald and Examiner, through its European connections, wis successful. But the rights were not ob tained until the highest advance payment ever made for a manuscript was offered and accepted. WILL BARE WH0L2 WAR. It is these memoirs of the one man in Germany who is in a position to tell what happened ""vh'r.d the veil" in Berlin, from the bjfinir.g tc the end of the war, tiat The Herald and Examiner vill present to its readers beginning with next Sunday. Von Tirpitz, wily counterpart in life of mythical Neptune, set out to fulfill his role of ruler of the seas

amid acclaim from all Germany and her allies as "Father of Uboat warfare." When the tower of militaristic strength began tumbling about the Kaiser's ears the first of the columns to fall was that erected by Von Tirpitz. Failure of the U-bcat campaign, followed by the collapse of the entire German naval program, swiftly changed his title to "Grave-digger of the German navy." In resentment at the ingratitude of his people, Von Tirpitz fled to Switzerland, where, leading tht life of a hcrrnt. he penred his mernoirs TELLS INSIDE TRUTHS. He was not in a state of miad to deal with his subject with gloved hands. He hit straight at the mark with the avowed purpose of telling the inside truths of the war, as seen from his point of vantage while he occupied a 'seat in the Kaiser's council as member of tfa Imperial General Staff. In his book he incorporated letters which he had written to his

wife during the progress of thev

wa. These letters were frank and full of confidential information, for he depended much upon her, counsel. When the memoirs appeared in July, the chief of the censor's office in Berlin was among the first to get a copy. A glimpse at these letters from the admiral to his wife, and orders promptly were issued for the suppression of the book. TRY TO GET ALL COPIES. But already a number of copies were in circulation. Frantic efforts were made to retrieve every copy, but without complete success. One volume was obtained in Berlin. To frustrate the censor's attempt at its recovery, the volume was sent to London by messenger, there to be guarded in the London News Bureau until rights for its American publication could be purchased. Negotiations were started with Admiral Von Tirpitz and his publishers. These, of necessity, were fecretly conducted and consequent

ly slow to culminate in a sitisfac-j

n rrantrement. Rights finally were obtained and translation cf the book begun. The English text, fully checked by expert translators, is now being called to America from London. This is the second time in history that a whole book has been fcrwarded by cable. The St. James version of the Bible was cabled to America many years ago. The first installment will be printed next Sunday. Succeeding chapters will appear on Monday d every day throughout the wek, with another large installment on the following Sunday. It will run for ten weeks in the columns of The Herald and Examiner. No other newspaper in this territory is privileged to publish it. Readers will do well to order their paper in advance, as the press capacity is, limited and newsdealers will gauge their orders by the de-nund

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Revelations of Germany' s Master -Mind of Cunning the Man Who Forced America Into the War Will Appear Exclusively

In the Daily and Sunday Editions of the i

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Chicago

STARTING NEXT SUNDAY

SEPTEMBER SEVENTH

It was Admiral Von Tirpitz who unleashed the German U-Boats, set them scouring the seas, searching for and sinking American vessels. It was Admiral Von Tirpitz who forced America into the greatest conflict the world has ever known. Now Admiral Von Tirpitz has written a full and complete confession of the failure of his plans. It makes startling disclosures that will form the future history of the war. Every man, woman and child will want to read these remarkable revelations. These articles will appear exclusively in The Chicago Herald and Examiner. Donot miss a single issue. Phone to-day to our local distributor whece name appears below and tell him to deliver the pper you every day starting Sunday WITTER & FITZGERALD 567 Bulletin Street. Hammond, Ind. Phone 401.

If you live on a rural route tear off thU coupon, mailtodny willi your check or money otcfer an'S paper will be mailed you starting with Sunday's issue. ' Datf 19.... THE fHICAGO HERALD AND EXAMINER. 326 West Madison Street "Chicago. Illinois. I want to g-A the VON TRIPITZ' CONFESSION complete. Please enter my subscription for The Chicago Herald and Examiner daily and Sundav for THREE MONTHS for which I enclose $3.00.

Name

P. O. Address. City

SWIFT & COMPANY

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