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Pa a a a i THE WEATHER Continued Cold THE BIS THIRTY-NINTH YEAR \ BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA. MONDAY, NOV. 1b. 1920. SEBASTOPOL FAL | HARD DAYS, CITIZENS OF | FOR THE TITLED CITY URGED TO ANTEND MEETING t | i i Petitions Urging Arbitration Expected to Be Presented to Commission OPINIONS DIVIDED: One Group Feels That Continu- ed Litigation Will Bring About Plant Purchase Water consumers interested in thé! future policy to be followed in regard; to securing for Bismarck lower rates, | efficient service and a city owned! water plant ure being urged. to at-/ tend the meeting of the City Commis- | sion tonight when petitions will be presented from taxpayers urging, arbi-! tration of all points at controversy | and the immediate purchase of the water plant by that means. To Name Arbitrators t arbitration agreement of the present f ise calls for the naming of three arbitrators. One by city, one by water company and the two thus The named to select a third. In case the)‘ [! - is vara two cannot agree upon a third, then the judge of the United States dis-, 440Y/WLLICEVT HAWES trict court to designate the third. LONDON—"“I never saw such Petitions Circulated times vs these,” remarked Lady During the last few days petitions Millicent’ Hawes, formerly the have been circulated with a view to Puchess of Suther invoking the arbitration feature of the: jyjzed as one of England's most water franchise. Those citizens be- i women, afier her sale hind the move to accept the offer of f valuable pictures and house- arbitration believe that litigation is’ joid treasures at St. Serts House, an expensive and uncertain route to- Pochampton. Surr “DL had ward city ownership of the plait. joped for a good s she con- that it may take years for the city tinged, “that would keep me in jand and recog- to secure possession of the plant if predd and butter for the t condemnation proceedings are r rted! | weeks And with a. sigh e to. It pointed out that practically he thought rybody i a year been’ consumed now with- terribly broke these out definite steps toward relief of Lady Millicent is going to Bismarck’s water problem, one of the nce soon where her husband, most vital issues that confronts the! city, Lieut. Col. George Hawes, is in business. Refusb Offer On the other hand those who favor litigation have refused the offer of | arbitration. C.,L. Young, and H. F. O'Hare, attorneys for the city, in_a letter have advised the commission to continue the litigation. They take> the attitude that the Bismarck Water! Supply company has not acted in good! faith and that its offer of arbitration! comes too late and that the people of Bismarck should proceed through the; courts rather than through arbitra- tion. £4 It is hoped on all sides that the! meeting this evening will show just what the taxpayers desire. The neces- sity of ending the’ prolonged and ex. pensive controversy is evident to all. Water consumers are interested prim arily in results and are W ling to se aside all past differences if the result will be a municipally owned plant. It is hoped by many taxpayers t FEDERAL COURT GETS WATER CO. CASE; ONE LEFT Rate Still in Court By City’s Petition The case of the city against the Bis- Aware Water Supply company, involv- nat {tng “condemnation proceedings, has, this evening’s meeting will draw a! been transfer eg Lo the United States sufficient number of citizens, both) district. There are no cases left in men and women, so that a definite ex-| the district court, except the case in pression can be had that will guide} which the city asks injunction against the city commission in its future pol- | the Hughes Electric company, to pre- iey toward the water problem. Ms vent it from turning off electric pow- Sentiment Unanimous ver for the water company booster Sentiment is unanimous for a muni-; pump over a difference as to the prop- cipal owned plant and needed im- tas rate, f provements are being held in abe: The case comes up again November ance awaiting a final termination of, 26, the water company being made a the present controversy which has} defeidant because the city asked that been agitated more or less for years.| the court orders the city to pay the The city needs bigger mains to in- Hughes Electric company bill while crease water pressure. Extensions the two companies settle their differ are necessary to take care of Bis-' ence, the petition of the city saying: marck’s growth and many taxpayers “plaintiff further demands judgment have expressed themselves during the that the said piaintiit be ofdered to last few weeks that they are for any deposit the monthly cost for furnish- plan that will bring these results im- ing of electric power at the, boos! mediately ,but of course no fair mind- pump into this court for the Hughe ed citizen expects to pay one cent Electric company, there to abide the moré por, ong cent less than the plant final determination ofany action that is worth; 744 may be brought” by the compani For the most-part there is a 8 The first case of the city against eral disposition to treat the wa the water company asking cancella- plaut issue upon a strictly business tion of the franchis2 was removed to basis. the federal court sometime ago and Just how keenly Bismarck feels the condemnation proceeding a few should be demonstrated by the repre- days ago. sentation ‘attending the commission meeting this evening. It has even heen suggested that if the issue cane not be threshed out this evening that sometime Ke set to find out the con- census of opinion of the people of Bismarek who in the final analysis are the ones who must put up the money to 6) MILLS CLOSING AS BUYING OF FLOUR SLOWS 15. Noy. flour h Minneapol purchase the water plant and they are’ buying, nationally, being ¢ out interested only in results and the most'on a hand-to-mouth ba whil economical manner in which to obtain wheat prices are dropping, steadily then the milling industry in Minneapol: normally well booked with orders this ‘A feeling of complete confidence, it is urged, must be established between time of year, is running about one- alt all parties. to the controversy hefore | capac milling officials said today any real progress can be made The Out of 26 mills, of which are usually ° k have it within'in operation at this season, only 16 people of Bismar their power to put the y on that level} it Is nd flour. Big Loss to Northwest ater contro- id by those wert ta favor arbitration. Personalities “The drop in the prices of farm and reprisals, it is pointed out, CaN! products means a big loss to the get the water consumer nowhére | Northwest,” said C. T. Jaffray, i. a ay pile up the costs dent of the First National eee ya aes ee SSES “When one considered that there hi N. ADDRESSES been a depreciation in val of HINDENBURG J Northwest farm products to the ex- j tent of $100,000,000, one can see that STUDENTS UPON HIS 73rd tent 00, one a x BIRTHDAY CELEBRATION |yeeuiow ES CLOSE FOR AIR RACE Hanover, Nov. 15.— Fielt’ Marshal yon Hindenburg, speaking at a dem- onstration of students on the occasion of his 73d birthday, said: “The times are hard. We cannot New York, Nov. Applications get away from that. But it is a man’s! for entries in the Pulitzer trophy air- business to look danger in the eye€/plane race at Mineola, N. Y., on will not be consid- t was announced by thé contest committee’ of the Aero Thanksgiting da and discount it. God has not yet for ered after today, saken the German people. Much he peen taken from us, but God will give | jt back to us again. One thing is left; Cjyb of America. Bighteen planes us—our fatherland. To that father-| from the Army and Navy air service jand we shall cling without respect{ pave been entered, as well as all par- for party divisions. I make this ap-' ticipants in the recent Gorden Ben- peal to the German youths.” nett race in France. ‘TRIBUTE PAID WAR'S VICTIMS | SUNDAY NIGHT, a | Memorial Sunday Observed at! Special Service in First Pres- | byterian Church | BEAUTIFUL PROGRAM | Musi ic and Address by Rev. Postlethwaite and Major Russ on Program A tribute to the ‘who li jat the Fy | night by E in the obsery; merican soldiers Flanders fields" was. paid | Presbyterian chu th last | narck people who joined | ance of Memorial “Sun- aud the ending of the war two years ago, on Noy. 11, hy the signing jot the Armistice. { Major Ver Am tleth H. Russ Jr., past command-| 1 Legion, and Rey. H. C.| addressed the assem-! A strong appeal for the pre-/ tion of the id for which the} van nation went to war was | made by Rey. Postlethwaite. | Members of the American Legion, | Amer jordinatice would be SIX CHILDREN ARE TRAMPLED Shouts of Fire Lead to Riot in New York East Side Movie House |TO ENFORCE GRDINANCE; | After Accident Police Say They | | Will Keep Unaccompanied Children Away New York, Noy. 15.—A crusade for stricter enforcement of the ordinance forbidding motion picture proprietors to sell tickets to minors unless a companied by their parents or guard ans was started by the police today the result of a panic on the lower | Hast Side last night when six chil! dren were trampled to-death in a mad rush following a false fire alarm. The police department sent warn- ings tg all movie hou that the rictly enforced. ‘The proprietors of the theatre and the janitor were arrested after the tragedy last night, charged with crim- inal negligence. \ Adults Trample Kiddies Most of the 12 other youngsters seriously injured when older children, ;men and women bowled them over in their scramble toward the exits were War Mothers and other patriotic or-| jSanizations, were among the audi-| jance. The musical program harmonized [admirably with the sentiment of the asion, Wilson's arrangement of ‘ust for To was rendered by nine | voices Mesdames Scheffer, French. | Morris and Miss Jones: Messrs. Hal- [Kipling’s most inspiring of mode j hymns, the Recessional, by deKoven, L acKae's ders Field” arranged | was beautiful as sung by | Scheffer and Morris and Messrs. Hal- iverson and Humphreys. | Major Russ said: “Two years ago the Armistice was signed, yet, technically we are still at var. True, our magnificient ‘army j has been demobilized but no Treaty of Peace has been signed by the United |States. Two, years! It seems but j yesterday that the news came down ithe line to us that temporarily at least the war had ended, that Ger many acknowledged herself whipped land was going to save what she could from the wreck. We had just come out of the trenches having been~in ‘the first and second lines since Oct. 15th and it was with more, of a feel- ing of regret than of elation, that we {yealized that we were not to put the j¥inal smash on the other side of the Rhine. For nearly a month we had ybeen awaiting the word which was iko send us against the hills we had been watching along its banks yet ts I looked at the tired, worn fe pf the relieving French artillery af. ter their four years of that sort of | thing, I knew that we didn’t, couldn’t {realize what it meant to them. And (now that we know how really crushed | Germany was; now that the complete | ness of their defeat is known through- out their land perhaps it is just as well, yes, far better to have ceased that day rather than to have on. But that morning as we lay in set to musi ’s “In Flan Klickmat ‘ican divisions, all veteran troops, with ,not over four German divisions to oppose them, it did seem a mistake not to" commence that march to Be lin, that had been so well advertised by the popular songs of the war. | And what do we find after two years tof what amounts to peace? To the ‘gervice man it sometimes looks dis- | couraging, having given all, | without question, is it unnatural to | expect something in return? Just be- | fore we received orders to prepare to return to the United S ith r was full of rumors as to when ‘we would go, our battalion was hold- jing parade at retreat and as the boy marched by platoons every man | head filled with'the thoughts of hom: ‘coming, the welcomes expected, ! ouldn’t help a lump coming in m for | knew how they we ithroat, ‘going to he disappointed. Instead of a grateful country, they were going | | back to a country burdened by cl hatred, to a country which now t ithey had done their duty was going ‘to forget them and push them a fa country which by their efforts had; | made safe twenty thousand new mil- lionaires yet couldn't see’ its lear to even partly make up 1 loss, a country which re’s your discharge and si jlars, go set yourself up in bus jwe're through with you now.” [here in Bismarck don't rea condition. In the larger cities, | pecially the* coast cities, where the | slackers rushed to the ship yards and other manufacturing plants to avoid ‘the draft, receiving unheard of wages for a small di work, do you wonder that Bill Jones, who had enlisted in ‘17 at thirty dollars a month cam2 lback in ‘19, was handed his sixty dollars without even the proverbial | (blessing and found his former chum { Jim Smith, who could have gone Just | as well, perhaps easier than he, mar- | ried, owning his home, driving a Jit-| ney and drawing eight or ten dollars | la day, now asks that the government} (Continued on Page Hight) vid, dol- Mesdames | arriedd | wait, eighteen French and six Amer- | freely | ates, While, ite. | day j today. The panic oceurred when some of he patrons noticing the curling sha- lows cast on the screen and catching lana’ unio _ Boynton. Grad¥ | the odor of smoke yelled “Fire” dash- | verson's beautiful Feu Off of d simultaneously for libel The [The Ninety and Nine” made a/Smoke was caused by the janitor, in “Lvery special appeal in Edward Cam-/ Starting a five in, the furnuce, {pion’s musical arrangement of Eliza~, 1! the confusion that followed | beth Clephane's grand old hymn. Mrs.{5¢2res of little tots were hurled to li. P. Scheffer rendered effectively {he toor and made a wailing, writh- yin arpet over which the others es- Rescuers said the children were so intertwined that four or five lung together when an attempt was made to pull one out. | The little theater ‘capacity. Children filled most of the 1300 seats, for the ‘hero of the picture ‘was an Italian lad who rose from ‘humble surroundings like theirs to riehes.and fame. The’ youngsters were | absorbed in the progress of the sqreen 'hero, Pietro who’ was protecting his | father from thieves, when smoke be- {gan to seep through the cracks of the theater floor. | “My God! ame from an elderly woman, who gathered a little one under her arm and ran for the nearest exit. Imme- {gan to They jumped from their scats, jammed the aisles and fought jfor passage. The lights flickered out | Youthful cries attracted many resi- | dents of the Italian neighborhood. Ca- !millo Brullio, who sells bananas from ’o the scene. He darted into the {[theater, attempted to shout down the |cries. Failing he saved those he coulc. amillo carried more than fifteen tots to safety, then collapsed, overcome iby smoke. | “Some one sounded a fire {Many,-then, were carried from | theater, overcome by smoke. {were soon revived Wo Frantie | Firemen carried the dead to nearby drug stores. The injured were sent |to hospitals. Frantic women and men learning of ithe disaster, crowded before the little | theater. \ A police station nearby was crowd- ed with those seeking information of loved ones. The bodies of the vic- {tims soon were identified, but the e: tement attending the panic kept chil dren from returning to their homes, and many women fought for admit- tance to the theater, believing their alarm the They | missi ‘TWO ACTRESSES FOUND DEAD IN CHICAGC PARK }« Chicago, Noy. 15.—Two young and pretty ac s lay dead today in the morgue while the police searched for clues to their deaths yesterday in \Grant Park within a few hundred feet; iof the. sk :pers along Michigan avenue. The girls died under circumstances ‘that indicate murder. A mysterious telephone call yester: notified the police where the s were. The call was traced to ‘ance office on the 14th floor bod tan ineu of an of building six blocks from the lake front. FARMER FOUND DEAD IN DITCH; Noy. 15.—The body of Fe: dinand Kimpell, 68, ired farr ng from Fargo s Nov. 5. the bottom of a ditch nea It was believed thai mud in Dillworth, Minn. Kimpell had succumbed to exhaustion. ! KILLS SELF WITH ACID Washburn, N. D., Nov. 15.--Michael Heinz, 54, was found unconscious in his room with a bottle of carbolic acid near him. He died in a few hours. The ¢oroner’s jury believed the car- bolic acid had been taken by mistake. Seven children survive. Mr, Heinz was a resident of the Turtle Lake neighborhood. | i | i | storms in the history of this see- i i i i said to be in a critical condition early ," was, crowded to | It’s a fire!” . This shout a push cart on the Bowery, rushed! “GROWER CLAIMS ng children still might be there. | (yesterday, frozen into the j CK TRIBUNE | LAST EDITION | PRESIDENT-ELECT HARDING MAROONED AT POINT ISABEL BY TERRIFIC STORM Point Isabel, ‘Tex., Nov. 15.— a dismal four hours on the wind- His vacation broken up and road- swept prairie, he returned here last night, but his train was held for another tr: bout noon today. Th offered his only avenue of ture, for the wagon roads were impassa In Brown: to meet Senator Fall, of New Mex- ico, known an authority on Mexican questions, and a strong Ways to the outside world tempor- arily blocked by one of the worst tion, President-elect Harding ! | planned to make another attempt today to get into Brownsville to | | i | nding is spend in comfort two days of -his He already has s the remaining t to Texas. id good-bye to the frail sea-side cottage that has advocate of protection of Amer- housed him through three days of icans in Mexico, wind and cold, but his efforts to During the morning Senator get away came to brief when his Harding did some more work on special train, narrov gauged and the speech he is to deliver Thurs- at New Orlea s for Panama. broke down s just before he Isabel. oline-propel Point t outside After “RED cross work” ]OQK TQ EARLY ___You weve | SETTLEMENT OF !paizn which enables 5 Amerte membe legiance in the atest, humanitari ever embraced the | 4 jong to a lodge or aj willagly pay your du hesitation-—know indiyidu Mandan Bridge Pending Agreement on Finances TO NEW the cu MANAGER Work Suspended on Bismarck- | YORK PRICE FIVE CENTS LS BEFORE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIKI WRANGEL FLEBS BEFORE ADVANCE OF RUSS HORDE ‘Staff Taken Aboard French Warship Bound for Constantinople | THOUSANDS OF REFUGEES |American Destroyer Takes | Aboard Red Cross Workers Behind Wrangel Lines s, Nov. 15,.—Sebastopol has fall- en, the Russian Bolsheviki having oc- cupied the city last night, according to unofficial information received, by the French foreign office. The Bol- sheviki are orted to be masters Gi the whole Crimean peninsula. General Wrangel, member: }stutf, and French high commi! Martel at Sebastopol were taken aboard a French warship and are ex- pected to arrive in Constantinople late ; today, | ALL CRIMEA LOST not Did it ever occur to; wane nS The foreign office's information re- ;You that American Red Cro. N A ‘ H garding Sebastopol came through the : No prolonged interr fi ents (Cannot continue—unless you individs! l eed uterruption of the !unasual unofficial diplomatic chan- wally assume the responsibility and work on the Bi Mandan bridge |els. It was conceded that all of the ‘our Hnaneial and moral sup- | over, the Missouri river’ is expecte your dues—during the Roll! according to those in touch with th wher IL to November 25, [sitnation. ‘been suspended by the jcompany, bridge contractors, pendin LEAGUE OPENS finances. conferring with offi NATIONS FLYING ' «tion, . | At a conference held betwee Parade Preceded First Conven- Ba eh Rankin and) members of tion of the League of thighway commission, at Nations ‘ernor Fra: ‘was discussed and it was after th t {meeting that Mr. Rankin left. | Geneva, Nov. 1 ul Hy mans, of Belglum, was elected president | missioners of Burleigh and Morte ‘sert that the company, which is pa the assemblage of the league. imonthly on estimates, has been pa: Geneva, Nov. 15.— Opening of the; to date. first assembly of the league of nations |is an allowance of 30 days in whic diately loud waits arose, children be-|was announced at 11 o'clock this/'® Pay an estimate before it becomes idue, and that therefore the counties eee open of all the | or ‘state are not compelled to pa Just before that hour a procession | #?Y more money before Dec. 31. : of Swiss alg marched from the; he company has two years fro city hall to the Hall of the Reforma-| A certain amount of curt tion, where the delegates were as-{f the work is held a necessity du sembling. The paraders marched through streets hedecked with flags of virtually all nations, except Ger- jmany, Austria and Turkey. Never before in history it is believed had the flags of so many nations flown together, : quantities of concrete and other mat Only a few American flag were} rials are on hand. | noted among the colors displayed.! [t jg stated that while the work derstood tha finish the concrete work on which has been engaged. in the purchase of matérials. on the job. $3 WHEAT CAN BE OBTAINED, pay until the werk is in place. Fe ‘this reason a heavier share of finan Both Morton and Burleigh counti pay their part of the work. ‘HALF OF CREW Organizer in North Dakota from," * aT Oklahqma Sets Forth | IS TAKEN OFF Contentions Half of th 5. Superior, Wis., Nov. ,crew of the steamer | | on j Fargo, Noy. If every farmer i wheat belt would hold his whee 20 days the price would go to) Which is wrecked on Pancake 3.00 a bushel and would re-| on the north shore of Lake Super Abe Slaughter, national | just outside of White Fish bay, a for the Wheat Growers’ As- | cording to word rec rica, said here today. | the boat her e at the head of | crew will be taken off soon, s mes: t \for ‘nearly ; main hig! organize: {sociation of A Mr. Siaughter a delegation of seven Oklahoma farm- these men will the various county seats throughout the statd to fo ganizations for co- i part of all fe COLD WEATHER in North Dakota. dy | Bankers in by the wheat growe €| Washington, Novy. There farmers full co-operation in the plan! freezing temperature today as ‘to hold wheat, the representatiyes of! south as central Texas and ‘the association say. ; Weather in parts of Wyoming ar "WEATHER RE Dickinson, Nov, 15.—C. J. Ranney. Extension of the work has Foundation jan agreement over the question of i ) J.J. Rankin, assistant western man- lager of the Foundation comp » Whe thas been in Bisma % lays to have gone to New York to confer with the highest officials of the Foun- | dation company regarding the situa- Mr the state which Goy- er presided, the situation In a letter addressed to the com- {counties Mr. Rankin said that he had They say further that there curtailment | jing the winter months, but it is un- the company plans to The heaviest ex- penses thus far, it is said, have been Huge The federal government, which pays | {half the cost of the bridge, does not ing falls on the state and counties are said to have sufficient funds to WRECKED SHIP Francis J. Wid-| jlar has been taken off the vesse hoal | ived by agents for | The other half of the| ys the | e. Widlar left the Allouez docks, HITS THE SOUTH zero A disturbance over PORT | ‘make the action nece: Crimea must be given up as lost to General Wrange ad, he 13,000 REFU Constantinople, Sunday, Noy. 14- | Thirteen thousand refugees arrive: here from Sebastopol but because o7 the lack of accommodations in the icity they are still aboard ships jthe Bosphorus. It is understood 30, 000 have been permitted to take pas: lage from the Crimean city. It wa found impossible to provide ships for j the entire population of 80,000. Two ‘Nhousand wounded men also have ar- ‘rived and have been distributed among the French and Russian hospitals. General Baron Wrangel is declared to be without hope but he is remain- ling calm and directing the work of moving civilians from Sebastopol. rhe United States destroyer Fox ar- jtived here today with a party of 50 American Red Cross’ workers who have have been engaged behind Gen- 1s ig on of the league of nations, here to- | been informed that the state highway z day. He received 35 out of 41 }comnission did not have sufficient | € eranael meee Hope is ee ‘ nin utd .. {funds to pay future estimates on the | Pressed that a ed Cross personne: suet we Ce net for. | york. Officials of the state highway jWvill have been removed from danger eign miniifer of Belginm and jcommission assert that there is. no by night. | hend of the Belgian delegation in’ | timanclal embarrassment. ‘They as: aoe Constantinople, Sunday, Nov. 14. ;The army of General Wrangel, the |anti-Bolsheviki leader in South Rus- jsia, has been wiped out, and a num- ber of his generals have committed suicide. A mob in Sebastopol pillaged the American Red Cross stocks. The American torpedo boat destroy er at Sebastopol are evacuating officers and their families. The American destroyer Humphreys has gone te Yalta to take off the Redy it | Cross supplies. | id id ch ay ny rr BRITAIN ONLOOKER London, Nov. 15—As Great Britain has never recognized the Wrange! government in South Russia and is proceeding with negotiations aimed A= 1 e- | is} Pe ARRICA Ks at opennig of trade negotiations with a Sula nations ond cantonal en-| suspended it will not be abandoned. | Soviet Russia, the British navy will tiene mat od in the “eecora-" jf the work were entirely abandoned | continue to observe strict: neutrality ni meen Ctr ee, ja considerable portion would be wash-jon the Black Sea. The admirality ed out. There still are some employes | denied reports from Constantinople that the British navy would assist in the blockade of Black Sea ports. ‘British ships have not been called on to assist in transporting refugees {from the Crimea and the admirality ‘said it had not been decided if they would assist. KANSAS COURT'S ‘POWER DEBATED - BY THE MILLERS seven Millers Are Cited Before Court to Show Cause for Curtailment oY ne | 1, ers to organize wheat growers af e c st : : North Dakota, ‘Superior, Thursday at 3 a.m, with # oe et Le: Whether After a conference this afternoon! cargo of iron ore for Astabpla, 0. t e state court of industrial relations | {has a right to prevent flour mills ‘from ceasing or cutting down produc: tion under certain conditions is ex- pected to be determined as a result of a court begun here today when seven Topeka millers appeared to show cause Why they should not be held in violation of the court’s act because have curtailed production of nd = a eastern Montana. 0 FIGHT FOR | the t Gulf of Mexico was ex rs generally admit they have iT |to advance northeastward. curtailed production, some having POSTOFFICE JOB) : : shut down their mills entirely, but -——-—-_— | they hold “sound business reasons” a publisher of the Killdeer Tribune and one of the contenders for the post of- rong (oe fice at that point, will make a + Monday, November 16) fight to have his appointment con-jmomperature at 7 a. m. rmed before the Democratic party | pighest. yesterday \ rs from the political horizon: |Towest yesterday according to word received here. Lowest last night 5 The present postmistress is Mrs. | precipitation : Tra M. N. MeNiell, who asks appoint- | Highest wind velocity. 4. ment as does I. L. Doherty, publisher Forecast i of the Killdeer Herald, Howard Ells- For North Dakota: Fair tonig! rising temperature. worth and Ray Cuskelly. | Asbestos is immune to heat as high as 1500 degrees Fahrenheit. and Tuesda center is in Upper Burma, India. For twenty-four hours ending at noon, | The world’s largest ruby mining | gious * JAPANESE MOBS HALT SERVICES >) Tokio, Nov. 15.—Auth-Christian a mobs twice broke up Salvation 9| Army jubilee -celebrations here co, yesterday. Salvation Army offi- -s! ¢ials declare the disturbances were tomented by Buddhists. The English church has formed a motion picture company for reli- instruction by the | movie ht {route