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STRIKERS WILL RATIFY TERMS settlement British Believe Referendum Vote Will End Coal Miners’ Coritroversy. MAY RESUME NEXT WEEK LONDON, Oct. 29.— Although the Welsh coal miners are still hostile, belief was expressed in responsible quarters today that the strikers throughout the British coal fields will ratify the dfereement reached by the Government and the Federation of Miners. The referendum vote will be held Tuesday and the result "will be known about twenty-four hours later^ If the terms are ratified the 1.200,00<> strikers may return to work Thursday or Friday. The compromise calls for an imme diate watte increase of 2 shillings per shift for miners and 1 shilling for boys until Jan. 3. when the whole question will be reviewed. At that time the output for the last weeks of November and the first two weeks of December will be com pared with thUoutput of September In order to see if production has increased tinder advanced wages. The government reserved the right to cut the miners’ advance to l shilling per shift on the basis of a sliding scale which would enable the miners to in crease their wage advance if production were increased. In the meantime the wage board will continue its investigation until the end of March. The government applauded the settle ment agreement, especially the recogni tion by owners and miners of the ne cessity for a greater output. The terms make it an object to both to increase production. By slow process of balloting it was believed work cannot be resumed be fore Nov. 8. MEXICAN STEVEDORES THREATEN TO STRIKE VKKA CRUZ, Oct. 29—A strike of •tevedores throughout Mexico was threat ened today and a serious labor situa tion confronts the country. The stevedores announced they would strike this afternoon, unless two gangs of dock workers, discharged last week for complicity in thefts, were immedi ately reinstated. The stevedores declared they would kill breakers. Tr Provisional -President De La Huerta has taken notice of the serious menace by ordering the Governors of all maritime States to be ready for any eventuality. Troops are luting held in readiness for outbreaks. Practically all business has been sus pended at this port. bloohinutox man BLOOMINGTON, lnd.. Oct. 29.—Wil liam Denton. 71, was killed Thursday when he fell from a bidder and broke bis neck. He was trimming a tree when he lost h:s balance and fell ten feet. VI /fT> f, . I. ''lou.r j Extra. Trousers. | j so match. that, Odd Coat j l|/ Should "be choserr wfEdThe same h /4\ select a, Hew Suit, I, w Our" Store forfeit j\ j| ‘ offers'VbnderFul -Assortmen.ls & I SiripecL Fartcy ! Worsteds, Cash.rn.eres. Kerseys*, Serdes., I Flaitrusls, Cor<iu,roys. jj f- M^>foxissoGo. f ' ! , _ Sirups f&53 _ 33 gll H fe 1 Jf | Ls@idi | 1 Plan Campaign for Shelter Home Fund • \ Daily meetings are being held by groups organized to conduct the inten sive campaign of the Indiannpolis Hu mane Society next week to raise S2S,(XX) with which to build u shelter home for animals. Pastors of churches have been asked to designate Oct. 31 as Humane Sunday. An appeal for the drive, written by Meredith Nicholson, will be read at church services. R. O. Jackson, secretary-treasurer of Shellhouse Warehouse Company, in send ing a check, said: “We are sincerely pleased to buy for the good of the shelter home for animals, 100 bricks. “We believe In the cause and trust that you may have no difficulty in raising funds.” Beveridge to Close Indiana G. Q. P. Drive Albert J. Beveridge will speak In Tomlinson Hall tonight at the last big meeting of the Republican campaign in Indiana. * Mrs. Caleb S. Denny will act aswetn porary chairman, introducing Joseph A. Minturn as permanent chairman. Off Front Porch ani Onto Rear Platform AKRON, Ohio, Oct. 29.—A series of impromptu rear platform speeches were made today by Senator Warren G. Hard ing, Republican ’presidential candidate, en route to Cincinnati, where tonight he will make his Inst, except one, prepared address before election. He planned to review In Cincinnati what he declares to be the “fundamental incapacity” of the Democratic admin istration and to outline the Republican plans for retrenchment and reconstruc tion, along both national and interna tional lines. , INDIGESTION GOES, GONE! "Pape’s Diapepsin" at once fixes Your Sour, Gassy, Acid Stomach Stomach acidity causes Indigestion! Food souring, gas, distress! Wonder what upset your stomach? Well, don't bother! The moment you eat a tablet or two of Pape's Diapepsin all the lumps of Indigestion pain, the sourness, heart burn and belching of gases, due to acid ity, vanish—truly wonderful! Millions of people know that it is need less to be bothered with Indigestion, dys pepsia or a disordered stomach. A few tablets of * Pape’s Diapepsin* neutralize acidity and give relief at once—no wait ing! Buy a box of Pape's Diapepßln now'. Don't stay miserable! Try to reg ulate your somacb so you can eat fav orite foods without causing distress. The cost is so little. The beneflt*ao great. Advertisement. WILSON IN PACT FIGHT FOR LIFE Such Is Consensus of Interpre tation Put on Secretary Tumulty’s Address. WASHINGTON, Oct. 29. President Woodrow Wilson has enlisted for life. So long as he draws breath, he never will cease to battle for a League of Na tions to fight for consummation of his plan to make secure the peace of the world. Political leaders, officeholders and pri vate citizens agreed today that Joseph P. Tumulty, secretary to the President, had made that plain in his speech at Bethesda. All were agreed equally that Mr. Tu multy's address was that of the man most intimately acquainted with the President for the last ten years, who is counted on to become his biographer, to lift briefly the veil that has shrouded the lonely and tragic figure in the White House. It was the secretary's efTort to let his countrymen see through his eyes the leader he has followed for ten years - the man who once said to him: “I wish people to love me but they never will.” Secretary Tumulty indicated that the President, after he has stepped from the political stage, will make his play for the league through his books. QUIT MEAT WHEN KIDNEYS BOTHER Take a glass of Salts if your Back hurts or Bladder troubles you. No man or woman who eata meat reg n’.atlf can make a mistake by flushing the kidneys occasionally, says a well known authority. Meat forms uric acid, which excites the kidneys, they become overworted from the strain, get slug gish and fall to filter the waste and poisons from the blood, then we get sick. Nearly all rheumatism, headache*. llTer trouble, nervousness, dizziness, sleeplessness and urinary disorders come from sluggish kidneys. The -moment you feel a dull ache in the kidneys or your back hurts, or If the urine Is cloudy, offensive, full of sedi ment, lrregulsr of passage or attended by a sensatlith of seal ling, stop eating meat and get about four ounces of Jad Salts from any pharmacy ; take a tablespoonful in a glasa of water before breakfast and in a few days your kidney* will act flna. Th‘a famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon Juice, combined with llthia, and has been used for generations to flush and stimulate the kidneys, also to neutralize the acids in urine ao It no longer causes Irritation, thus ending bladder weakness. Jad Salts is Inexpensive and can not Injure: makes a delightful effervescent ’lthlJ -water drink which every one hould take now and then to keep the ddneya clean and active and the blood •ure, thereby avoiding serious kidney amplications.—Advertisement. INDIANA DAILY TIMES, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1920. ‘‘He has insisted on article 10 as the heart of the covenant,” Tumulty said, “but he knew that only by combined action could the territorial integrity and political independence of nations be pre served from aggressive attack by ambi tious nations. "He wished to stop the next war be fore it shonid begin.” Secretary Tumulty described the scene nt the capitol April ti, 1917, /When the President, amid wild cheers, read his war message. “On that fateful day, - ’ lie continued, “I rode back with him from the Capitol to the White House, the echo of ap plause still ringing in my, ears. For A while' he sat silent and pale in the cabinet room. At last he said: “ ‘Thipk what that was they were ap plauding. It means death for our young men. How strange ft seems to applaud that.’ "That simple remark Is one key to an understanding of Woodrow Wilson. “When the bodies of the American* killed at Vera Cruz were brought to New York for burial,” said the secretary, “rumors reached the secret service that there rnljht be an attack on the Presi dent’s life if he went to New York. Mayor Mitchell begged that he would not ride in the procession and others urged that ‘the country cannot afford to lose its President.’ “This was his reply,” said Tumulty. " ‘The country cannot afford to have a coward for President.’ ” Norwalk Cord Tires GUARANTEED 10,000 MILES 8. Tire expense is the largest single item in connection with a Motor Car. \ Tires should be purchased, however, on the basis of jjLVV \ M intrinsic value alone. \\ v '. \ pi Value is a matter of expert knowledge. I Iff hi I YV\ i Price is a matter of integrity. I f few ■*] The Name CITIZENS AUTO SUPPLY CO. is a com- ft , 1 : dwi plete assurance of both. ■ 1 il: fly There are careful buyers who make a study of get- j < ting the maximum value in all their purchases. •j| i I|r yjjj Even though you may be satisfied with the Tires you I U /Ip j J arc now using, we believe you will find it interesting Ul| \ /If I to/ as well as profitable to use NORWALK CORD TIRES. \Y\ V . ff I *7 The materials used are the pick of the market and made \\ \ W \ /MM j 7 by skilled and interesfed tire builders. Modestly priced. \\\\ , - / ' Let us show you NORWALK tires. _ m CHANGING AND MOUNTING OF TIRES FREE. DISTRIBUTORS NORWALK TIRES “Quality Considered, We Sell It for Le£s” OPEN SATURDAY EVENING TILL 9 O’CLOCK CITIZENS AUTO SUPPLY WHOLESALE CO RETAIL Peart C. Barnes, Mgr. • Homer E. Enlow, Asst. Mgr. Mass. Ave. at Delaware and New York Sts. MAIN 4168 BOTH PHONES AUTO. 27-564 “fnal Rairjrc “Trade your old stove .A*!!?.I , on anew Peninsular” $30.00 Up BUY THE $37.00 Value peninsular\ JSj^ BAKE B This A1; Cast Ipon HEAT g Cook Stove with the *ame fuel. MB % No ’ ® ®' ze Ajf $29.75 "V “USE “EXTRA DISCOUNT YOUR On All Cash Purchases” CREDIT” DON’T WORRY ABOUT GAS “SAVE SHORTAGE CTI7PQ ,, INSTALL THE dILIJ Nu-Way CARLOAD f^fngn Peninsular Ms LOT JL7|_ y? _ •II -.1 .1 mu MM. porcelain door, large oven. Your old range or gas &/i f\ *7 l*" stove taken a# part pay- / r\ Easy Terms. * Red Star Oil Stoves, Cheney Phonographs, Perfection Oil Heaters, Simmons Bods and Springs, Hirschman Mattresses, Bee-Boe Electric Sweepers. £r£r. if £? 443-445 East Washington St. DR. BRYAN HEADS XMAS SEAL SALE Issues Appeal for Support in Tuberculosis Fight. Dr. AVilliam Lowe Bryan, president of Indiana University, has agreed to act as chairman of the State campaign com mittee that will head the Christmas Seal Sale Organization for the Indiana Tuber culosis Association. He Is now engaged with Secretary M. A. Auerbach in appointing members of his committee. Dr. Bryan headed the campaign com mittee last year, and is not only thor oughly familiar with the anti-tuberculo sis work, but enthusiastic in his sup port of it. In accepting appointment ns chairman of the committee for the seal sale, Dr. Bryan said: “I wish to appeal for the cooperation not merely of the State committee and the county organizations, but of all the people of Indiana. “If tuberculosis is to be checked, vigi lance on the part of the entire popula tion will be required. “The reason Is to be found in the pecu liar nature of the disease. “Persons In the early stages of tuber culosis are In many cases unaware of the fact. “An odd sense of reticence prevents many of them from going honestly and frnnkly to doctors for advice and treat ment. “For these reasons many eases are not found until they have reached the ad vanced stages, where cure is often dif ficult and sometimes impossible. “We know 'the disease can be cured at home in Indiana when it is found in time “It is not necessary that most of our sufferers should go, lonely and forlorn, to the Southwest to drag out their sick ness. "Indiana has made a good start in providing sanltoria clinics and visiting nurses to handle active cases. “The big problem now is to develop a more efficient system for finding these cases so that early attention may pro vide cures that might -later fail. “It is estimated that there are SO,OX) open cases of tuberculosis in Indiana. “We must have better cooperation and a more widespread sale of the little Christmas seals to provide the funds with which machinery to find Jhese eae may be built. “We ask cooperation, not only In the distribution of the seals, which will be sold In December, but in the educa? tlonal work necessary to check the apread of the disease.” Off to Big Stock Show HARTFORD CITY, lnd., Oct. 29.—The Blackford County boys’ stock Judging team, winners of the first prize In the contest at the Indiana State fair, will -—r : —i m 1 • 1 •• 1 / • , fHP I- TT* E SQUARE DEAL JEWELER 43 SOUTH ILLINOIS ST. DIAMONDS, : WATCHES, J EWEJLRV L N m. .mm 1 rwm I T ’ ■ 'PUHI RMESi JI WELRV t GIFT SHOP 43 S:ILLINOIS ST. . OPEN saturpav evening- . t Over and Over Again \ FRY fish or onions in Mazola; strain it and it is as fresh as when purchased, Mazola absorbs absolutely no flavors and carries no odors from one food to another. You use the same lot of oil for stying many different kinds of foods. This is real economy. Mazola is a 100% pure vege table fat—and once you try it you will never go back to lard and compounds. Selling Representative* G. H. GAMMAN. M.nr 0 STaRCH COMPANY 712 duk Bldg., Indianapolis MAZOLA FREE Write for handsomely illus- trated 64-page Com Products Cook Book. Com Products Refining Company,P.O.Box 161, New York City. leave Nov. 25 to represent the State 1n the national contest at the International Stock Show at Chicago. The members are Vaughn Johnson, 'Varies Clamme, Jr., and Mark Lang don. 15