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¥ i WEATHER FORECAST Unsettled tonight and Wednes- day with probably showers. ESTABLISHED 1873 BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, TUESDAY, JUNE 2, 1925 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE [mann PRICE FIVE CENTS | CHINESE RIOTERS FIRE ON YANKS CITIZENS OWE DEBT TO CITY, SPEAKER SAYS Bismarck Needs Men Who Will Make Sacrifice, Dr. Roy Smith Declares PLEADS FOR SERVICE Noted Author, Lecturer and Minister Gives Address at Forum Meeting “This community is giving to every man in it more than he will ever be able to return to it, no matter how energetic he may be in the discharge of his civic duties,” said Dr. Roy L. Smith of Minneapolis in an address given last night at the Asscciation of Commerce Forum banquet in the Grand Pacific hotel, “We need men who will serve the needs of the com- munity forgetful of what the inilu- ence on business will be. We need men who will sacrifice their time and personal convenience for the sake of the common good,” the speaker de- clared. Dr. Smith, who is pastor of Simp- son Methodist church in Minneapo- lis, author of “Sentence Sermons”, a newspaper feature that has a daily circulation of five million a day; writer for trade magazines and bus- iness journals; author of ten books, and for 15 years a lyceum and chau- tauque lecturer and humorist, held the careful attention of his audience of about 250 persons. “Wells Beside The Way” “Wells Beside the Way,” was the subject of Dr. Smith's address. “There can be no civilization with- out water,” the speaker said. “There can be no life, culture, progress, ed- ucation, religion, government or prosperity except where an adequate water supply is assured, Some of} the greatest wari of history have’ been fought for the possession of waterways, harbors and outlets to the seas. “The man who makes provision for S an adequate water supply is laying states, the foundations for the civilization!” “phe heat wave ded from that is to follow him. It is not al-t alaska into Ohio le a record ways a spectaular task. It is usual-'5, June 1 at Chicago with 92 de- ly humdrum routine. But he wh grees, Cleveland was 91, Detroit 92. digs the nation’s wells is father to|® Thunder storms broke the heat the nation’s life. David wrote his} waye in Nebraska, Iowa and other psalms, Solomon built the old Jew- sh temple, but Jacob went through the land, a migrant, digging wells. Each became. immortal. The people! sang David’s psalms in the temple as they were worshipping, but they drank from Jacob's wells as they went about their daily work, “Have you ever stopped to real- ize the fact that we are forever drinking from wells that we did not dig. Very little of this present gen- eration'’s convenience has been pur- chased by it’s own efforts, Every generation inherits the accumulated benefits of the labors of all the’ gen- erations past. Well Of Privilege “We have been drinking deép from the well of political privilege here in America, Our fathers brought forth upon this continent a new nation with a new ideal dedicated to the proposition that there is something kingly in every man and that every man ought to have the right to be a king if he was good enough and wise enough. The American experiment in government is one of the most daring conceptions that ever sprang into being by the will of man. “When the Constitutional Conven- tion met in Philadelphia in 1789 to draft the constitution which was to/ y, supplant the old Articles of Con- federation the members of that im- mortal body little dreamed that they were digging a well of political pri- vilege from which millions of the world’s highest thinking and farth- est seeing peoples ‘should drink for hundreds of years to come. But that little group of students, than whom no other group has ever studied more extensively nor more carefully the science of government, toiling through almost insuperable difficul- ties in absolute secrecy created a system of government that has en- dured for a hundred’and forty years with increasing prosperity and liber- ties for it’s peoples. In this period of time the struggling and impover- ished thirteen colonies have grown from a weak confederation’ of war- ring states into a great, unified na- tipn—the richest in the world. “I do not pelieve that the govern- ment of the United States is per- fect, In fact there ara elements of weakness that have justly called for criticism for years, But until some- one can show me a nation of 120,000,- 000 people under another scheme of government who have lived for one hundred and forty years in greater prosperity, enjoying greater liber- ties, privileges and opportunities than the people of the United States I am quite content to leave the Con- stitution intact and pass the new fangled scheme of frénsy and fanci- work on the other side. Welcome To Immigrants “I will bid a weleome to any man from any country whe wants to come to America and become an American citizen. All. I ask of him’is that he shall undertake to become what we are and not try to make us, what he wai “The government under whose flag we live has been bought by the (Continued on page 7) tative musical journal. tion shé starfed about 25 years ago. French, besides being a business woman, is a deyoted mo-| thea STORMS, HEAT, | HER DISTINCTION 1 i Mrs is the only woman in the world who manages, edits und owns a represen-| Florence French of Chicago, Her publica- is The Musical Leader, which Mrs, successful | KILL MANY IN. MIDDLE WEST Score of Perscns_ Lese Lives} and Many Injured; High Temperatures in South (By The Associated Press) Chicago, June 2. core of per- sons were dead and as many more injured in the middle west today as a result of the heat wave and en-j suing storms which broke over most. of the Northern portions of the Cen- tral Valley. High temperatures re- mained in the eastern and Southern states from the Lake Region and Mississippi river Westward, reliev- ing Minnesota, South Dakota “and Ne- braska from & drought that had con- tinued throughout May, Storm damages were greatest in lowa where four deaths occurred, three from lightening with a pro- perty damage estimated at $200,000.- 00. Sioux City was the center of a violent storm and six homes wera! wrecked by wind and fourteen per- sons were injured. Two men were reported killed at Wayland, Mo., when their automobile wae swept from the roadway and an- other windstorm swept southeast Kansas and Southwest Missouri, re- sulting in injury to several persons and much property damage. Four deaths, one a drowning, were charged to the heat in Chicago. Cleveland had one heat death and 8 lost their lives in Wisconsin by drowning on Sunday and Monday. WESTHOPE IS" DESIGNATED AS POINT OF ENTRY elo ‘ ‘An order designating Westhope, D., as a point of entry into the United States was made yesterday by} President Coolidge, according to @ message received by Congressman Thomas Hall. The order was effec- tive yesterday. I Weather Report 3 » 52 Temperate at 7 a. m. . Highest yesterday ..... Lowest last night . Precipitation to 7 a, m, Highest wind velocity . WEATHER FORECASTS For Bismarck and vicinity: Un- settled tonight and Wednesday with probably showers. Not much change in temperature. For North Dakota: . Unsettled to- | night and Wednesday with probably showers.’ Not much change in tem- perature. GENERAL ‘WEATHER CONDITIONS ‘A’barometric depression, with cen- ters over Manitoba and Nebraska, ex- tends from the Mississippi Valley westward to the Rocky Mountain re- gion. Showers occurred at most! places from the Mi ppi Valley westward to the Pacific coast. The precipitation is. heaviest in the mid- dle and upper Mississippi Valley and over the extreme northern Great Plains region. Very little precipi tation “ occurred in the southern Plains States. Cooler weather pre- vails over the West. ORRIS W. ROBERTS, Official in charge. 47| 09! 20 Le An CITIES | PREPARE TO GREET NORSE Great Centennial Celebra- tion to Open Saturday at Minneapolis PROGRAM IS PREPARED 1 en Building of “Northwest Be Told in Pagentry, Songs and Speeches to Minneapolis, June 2.—(AP)—Pag- entry and song will vie with speeches jand exhibits in depicting the part played by Norwegians in the devel- opment of the northwest at the Norse-American Centennial celebra- tion here, June 6 to 9. Much of the romance in the build- ing of the northwestern section of the United States are chapters from the history of the Norse-Americans in this country, for it is in this, sec: tion a majority of the “hardy Norse | settled. Coolidge to Speak Interest will be added to the cele- bration by the presence of Presiden} and Mrs. Coolidge, and June 8 has been set aside as President's Day, when he will speak at 2 p. m. at the ‘state fair grounds, where the cele- |bration will be held. ant dirigible Los Angeles for part of the celebration has provided an- other point of attraction for those who have never seen a dirigible. But to the thousands of Norse- Americans born in Norway, or mem- bers of the early Norwegian colonies in the northwest, the celebration has its main attraction in the promise of a gigantic reunion, particularly in the conventions of “Bygdelags” on June 6. Thirty “Bygdelags” will hold their reunions on that day, each constitu- ting descendents of a Norwegian ‘community or clan, distinguished by a distinct dialect. These conventions are annual affairs in this country, Pioneers’ Descendents In this group will be many des- cendents of the original 53 immi- grants who arrived in this country October 9, 1825, on the Norwegian sloop Restaurantionen, the first or- ganized group of Norwegians to emigrate to America. It is in commemoration of the ar- rival of this now historie sloop that the celebration will be held, spon- sored by Norse-American churches, colleges, associations and individa- als, to enable a composite picture of what the Norseman has done in the settlement and growth of the north- west. In the original group that boarded the sloop at Stavanger were 52 men, women and children, but before the voyage had been completed, the ros- ter had been increased by the birth of a girl, Margaret Allen Lursen At- water. Participating in the celebration here will be Mrs. Atwater’s son, Rev. John Larsen Atwater of Chicago, a retired Baptist clergyman, now 73 years old, and Mrs. Atwater’s sister, Jane S. ‘Atwater, for 60 years a teacher in the public schools of Chicago. Exhibits of Arts Exhibits of the arts and the pro- fessions, contributed by Norse-Amer- icans, will make an important part of the celebration, and on the closing night a pageant including 1,000 per- sons will picture the Americanization of the Norwegian. This pageant will center around Colonel Hans Heg of the Fifteenth Wisconsin Infantry, the all-Norse regiment of the Civil War, which participated in 29 engagements be- fore Colonel Heg was killed in the battle of Chickamauga. GRAND FORKS . POPULATION NOW 15,168 Grand Forks, N. D., June 2.—Grand Forks has a population of 15,168 now, as compared with 14,010 given by the 1920 federal census, according to findl returns in the state census enumeration completed by Robert Green, Jr., city assessor. The popu- lation includes bona fide residents only who were living here on April 1, Mr. Green states, 'Mr. Green’s tabulations show: that. fe considerably _ outnumber males in, all classes except among people over 60 years old, and among the 11 negroes of the city. Grand Forks has 411 aliens and 2,350 foreign born citizens, the latter divided into 1,163 males and 1,197 fe- males, There are 5,998 native white males and 6,809 native white females in the city, a total of 12,807 native whites. | Of the 11 colored people and five are Grand Forks has 3,044 dwellings and 4,874 families, The census shows that there are 660 more females dn Grand Forks than mal RADIO PIRATE Lendon June 2—A “super-radio” pirate has been discovered hi He has been making talking machine re- cords from the voices of famous singers as they came oer the radio and selling them. RUM SMUGGLING FAILS London, June 2—Sir Brodrick Hartwell, British baron, who organ- ized a company to sell liquor to rum runners off. the American coast, ad- mits that his project has failed, and are expected to attract 25,000) j persons this year. i Promise of the presence of the gi-|Hiram Johnson, fire-eating senator from California, had some time when he and his gon, Hiram J ionduran rebels The Florida to San Krancisco. let them go shortly afterward. REBELS CAN’T HOLD HIRAM adventure- acht from uised in the: senator lost 15,pounds. ACTION TAKEN 10 COLLECT BACK TAXES McCurdy Asks Court to Force County Board to Proceed Against Delinquents to force the collection in Burleigh county will be taken tomorrow unless the Board of County Commissione in session today, passes a resolution authoriz ing the county auditor to collect the back t: according to F, E, MeCur dy, sta attorney. Members of the Board of County Commissioners were served with subpoenas today ordering them to appear in Burleigh county district court at 10 a, m, Wednesday when State’s Attorney McCurdy will move the court for a writ of mandamus to compel the Board to pass tion that will order the state’ ney, sheriff and county auditor to in stitute proceedings for the collection; of taxes and the disposition of real property sold for taxes; the resol tion to apply to all real property on which taxes remain unpaid for the year 1920 and for prior years. The Board of County Commi ers passed a resolution on Feb this year ordering the county auditor to collect back taxes, but the next day a resolution was passed pos poning the action for 90 days f March 1. On April 10 the Board rescinded the resolution for tax col- lection. State’s Attorney charges in petition for a writ of mandamus that prior to Feb. 3, 1925 no resolution relating to taxes on real property which has not been paid had been passed for’a period of more three years, the TERRIFIC HEAT KILLS MANY IN EASTERN STATES (By The Associated Press) New York, June 2.—Four were kill- ed and twenty injured in wind and rain storms near here. Seven heat, prostrations were reported in New York; three in Albany; and two deaths were directly attributed to heat in Pittsburg; one in Newark while the storm claimed a fourth life at Grainsfield, Mass. The temperature -broke all records for the first day of June but fell! several degrees below the record for this year registered May 23. It was 93 degrees in Philadelphia, 89 in Pittsburg and 88 in New York and Albany. Central New York and New Eng- land bore the brunt of the storm. Six towns were thrown into darkness in Massachusetts. phone services were disrupted. Fall- en trees blocked the highways. Hail! and rain caused more than $100,000 damage in Ontario. LIKE CHAIN LETTERS Charles City, Ia., June 2,—For 22 years chain letters have been mak- ing the rounds. of George Younker of Nashua, Ia., and his 11 brothers and sisters, Each member of the family writes a letter and then mails those of the others to another rel: tive. In this way, each writes to the others. at one time. Some of the finest “French” grapes are grown on-the south coast of, England , and shipped across the channel, ) Trolley and tele-| LEE RE-ELECTED PRESIDENT OF R. R. TRAINMEN Cleveland, June 1.—William G. Le president of the Brotherhood of Rail- way Trainmen, was re-elected for: three years at the Triennial conven- tion of the organization today. Lee held 531 votes against 408 for A. F. Whitney, Oak Park, IIL, fifth vice president, the only opponent. WOMAN AIDS IN DARING BANK HOLDUP Couple Secure $20,000 in Day- light Raid on Minneap- olis Institution , (By The Associated Press) Minneapolis, June 2.—Scooping up $8,700 in currency and walking out of the front door of the bank, while a teller answered a state telephone Jeall a man and a woman robbed the Mercantile State Bank in one of the quietest bank robberies on record n-| here yesterday, Sores of customers crowded the bank as the robber walked out the front door carrying @ box containing the currency and fled before the theft was discovered, The woman teller was called from the cage by a telephone call from a man giving the name of Mr. Loomis who said he left a purse containing valuable domu- ments in the bank. The teller left the cage to find the documents and returning. after five minutes found the parties thin'had left the line and a tin box strapped and ready for the vault was gone. Approximately $20,000 in securities were untouched, A man} and a woman were seated in the rest room when she left the cage, the teller said. Police today branded the robbery one of the “cleverest games ever worked in the Cities.” ; POLAND AND CZECHOSLOVAKIA AGREE ON ARBITRATION PACT Geneva, Ju (AP)—Polish cir- cles at the League of Nations empha- | size the fact that the arbitration convention signed last month at} Warsaw between Poland and Czecho- slovakia is based on the arbitration principles contained in the Geneva peace protocol. ‘The convention in question arrang- es for the pacific settlement of prac- tically all conflicts which might rise between the two countries. Any dis- pute can be sent before a commission of conciliation numbering five men, and if there be inability to agree upon the president, the selection will be made by the President of Switzer- land. ” The decisions of the commission are not obligatory upon the partie who, however, must resort to obli tory arbitration if either of them rejectssthe decisions. COW A HOTEL GUEST stock, Seattle, Wash. June 2.—Because Nancy Lee, champion butter produc: ing cow, recently was exhibited in the Italian room of a big hotel here, the State Bee Keepers’ club now is demanding that it be allowed to put ihives of classy bees on display in the fame room. The Shriners also want to bring in a camel and other live- ip took seven weeks and the | Twin | | France, NORSE PLAN RELIEF PARTY "FOR AMUNDSEN vvernment to Send Planes To Arctic to Search For Explorers |MAY START FRIDAY Is Received From North Pole Expedition | (By The Associated Prese) | Osw, Norway, June 2.—The Nor- | wegian government has decided to, | send two seaplanes to the arctic | preparatory to a search for the Amundsen-Elsworth expedition to the North pole which started from | Spitsbergen, May 21, . | It was announced today that the | government has selected the ship, | Ingertre, to transport the two sea planes toward the arctic whence they | will undertake a search for the ex- | plorers. | In Ingertre, a 4,700 ton ship, fitted | with wireless, is expected to arrive at Horten, south of Oslo today. She probably will sail for Spitsbergen | Friday. i RUMORS DENIED \ (By Phe Associated Presa) , June 2—The Nor- acronautic association last | night issued a denial of rumors that Captain Amundsen had returned to Spitzbergen from his polar expedi- tion. The association announced that a message had been received from the supply ship Hobby that the situa- tion was unchanged. Rumors of Amundsen’s return have | been current since early Sunday, but bulletins were posted in'the windows of the newspaper offices declaring {they were untrue, In honor of the spring festival, the | city gave itself up to a holiday cele- | It was the first fine day | for weeks and not one néwspaper | was published; therefore by evening |the rumors regarding Amundsen had grown prodigiously, necessitating an official denial. The government offices, including the admiralty, which controls the re- ‘lief plans, were deserted. Recently efforts were made to reach Amund- sen’s old ship Maud, which is frozen { bration. in somewhere in the new Siberian ‘archipelago. Official notification was received by the Associated Press yesterday that a wireless mes- sage sent to the Maud on May 29 could not be delivered, as there was “no communication,” PLAN TO BLAST N. Y. ELEVATED TRAINS HALTED (By The Associated Prensa) New York, June 1.—A plan to blow up elevated trains apparently was frustrated early today with the find- jing of two boxes believed to contain |bombs projecting over the tracks at two stations. Police threw the boxes into east river. FIVE MEN ROB | DETROIT STATE | SAVINGS BANK Detroit, Mich., June 2.—Five men today held up the Brightmoor State Saving’s Bank and escaped with more than $2,000. Three employees and ten patrons of the bank were com- welled to lie on the floor while the robber scooped up all the money in |the Tellers case | SLAYERS 0 OF | SIR LEE STACK | FOUND GUILTY (By The Associat: Tyro, Egypt, June fendants in the trial growing out of j the assassination last November of Sir Lee Stack, Sirdar of the Egyptian | Army, were found guilty today of murder and sentence will be passed j ext Sunday. LOPEZ-FRAZIER BACK IN COURT FROM HOSPITAL ! (By The Agsociated Press) Minneapolis, June 2.—Arthur Lo- pez-Fraziér, returned to the scene of his hotly contested trial in feder- al court here today in time to hear his counsel blocked time and time in in attempts to contradict the mass of evidence offered by the Gov- ernment. It was the first time in 10 days he able to leave the Tubercular in a Minneapolis hospital and he showed the benefit of his en- forced rest, appearing brighter and stepping btiskly to a seat beside Mrs. Hannah Frazier, mother of Arthur Frazier, Sioux Indian sol- dier. Mrs Fizier believes Arthur to be her son but the government, defend- ant in the court action, is striving to prove Lopez-Frazier a Mexic: impostor, in support of its contes- tion that the real Frazier died in wi i | | | Alarm Grows as No Message RULES LES EGYPT Sir George Lloyd,, unionist member of the British Parliament, is the new high commissioner for Egypt. He succeeds Field Marshall Viscount Allenby, who had held that post since 1919. NATION PAYS TRIBUTE T0 DEAD LEADER High Government Officials Attend Funeral Services For Thomas Marshall (By The Associated Press) Washington, June 2. ocked by the sudden death of his passing Washington took full advantage to- day of its brief opportunity to non- or the memory of Thomas R. Mar-| n "sabers and rifles was on duty with shall, wartime vice president, who died ‘here yesterday. Only a short funeral service will be held ‘here late today before the body is taken back to Mr. Marshall's native Indiana, but the nation’s tri- bute will’ be payed in that _ brief space, surrounded by high officials of the government in which the kindly man occupied such an import- ant role during eight historic years. President Coolidge will attend, in behalf of the people, the services at the New Willard Hotel where the death occurred Funeral services reflecting the plain life of the man will be held at the hotel. They will be conducted by the Rev. Dr. Charles Wood of the Church of the Covenant, where the Marshalls’ attended during their Washington residence. The journey to the Marshall home in Indianapolis then will be taken up, the train leaving here at 6:30 o'clock. It is expected Indianapolis will be reached shortly before noon tomorrow. Funeral services will be held at the Marshall home Thursday morning by the Scottish Rite Ma- sons with whom Mr. Marshall held high office. Later in the day exer- cises will be conducted by the Mason- ic Blue lodge after which the body will be placed in a vault at Crown Hill Cemetery in Indianapolis. Se- lection of the final burying place will be made by Mrs, Marshall, it having been decided to not place the body beside those of the former vice president’s parents and foster son ina Marion, Indiana cemetery as was first planned. 2 APPOINTMENTS ARE MADE BY CITY COMMISSION J. B, Andrews, custodian of the Bismarck tourist camp, was appoint- ed sp comm The commis- sion voted to pay $60 per month to- ward the salary of the camp custo- dian, A. W. Ecklund was appointed dep- uty health officer by the commission at the meeting last night. York Farmer Ends Life By Running Motor in Garage York, N. D., June 2.—William Oft- ner, farmer near here, committed suicide by allowing the engine of his auto in which he was sitting to run while the car was parked in his closed garage. He was dead when found, still in a sitting posture in the seat of his car. The coroner's jury returned a verdict of suicide, after noting that the door and win- dow of the garage were tightly closed, OLDEST COPPER CENT Marblehead, Mass., June 2.—One of the oldest American copper cents was dug.up here recently by William N. Davis. It was coined by the state) in 1787. On one side is an Indian with a bow and arrow and on the other the words, “One Cent.” ATTACK UNITS OF AMERICAN ORDER SQUADS U. S. Citizens Shot in Back as Rioting Students Shoot From Housetops FIRE Is RETURNED Foreigners Mount Machine Guns in Streets; Sailors Guard Waterworks (By The Associated Press) Shanghai, June 2.—Chinese stu- dent riot participants fired from house tops in three directions today into the city streets upon units of American volunteer corps, shooting T. G. McMartin, an American den- tist, in the back and killing the horse upon which he was riding. Return Fire American and other foreign units returned the fire of the Chinese with rifles and pistols. Machine guns were mounted quickly in the streets and then shot in the direction of the structures from which the Chinese started firing. The number of cas- ualties was not estimated. The shooting of the American den- tist, who is a corporal in the volun- teer organization attempting to re- store order, marked the first use of rifles by the Chinese since the de- monstration started last Saturday as a protest against the conviction of 17 strikers who left Japanese owned spinning mills near Shanghai, Shoot At Americans The Chinese directed their shots against the American units when the patrol turned a corner into the Thibet road in the vicinity of the famous Chinese amusement resort, the “New World.” While the student® were attack- ing the patrol unit shots were also fired in the Louza police station from adjoining houses. American blue jackets are guarding the wa- ter works. Several lesser ~ affrays were developing tonight in other sec- tions of the city, In another section of the city surrounding the town hall a troop of American cavalry carrying drawn members of the American foot vol- unteer corps and mounted police with revolvers. Italian, American and British ma- rine forces landed in Shanghai this afternoon and will be quartered ashore tonight, the Italians being stationed at the Japanese Club. TWO GIVEN PRISON TERMS FOR ARSON Lisbon, N. D., June 2—Anton Kriz of near Lidgerwood and Arthur Gil- lespie of Lidgerwod, upon pleading guilty in district court here to ar- son, were each sentenced to serve one year in the state penitentiary. Gillespie declared he was hired by Kriz for $100 to fire the barn, locat- ed north of Milnor in Ransom coun- ty. It was declared by insurance companies that the barn was over- insured. An old line insurance com- pany paid the insurance claim, but the Farmers Mutual Insurance com- pany of Gwinner launched an inves- tigation. MORGAN FIRM MAKES LOAN TO ITALIAN BANKS (By The Associated Press) Rome, June 2.—Finance minister DeStefani announced to the Cham- ber of Deputies today that the bank- ing firm of J. P. Morgan had granted a credit of $50,000,000 to a consort- ium of Italian banks to be used to stabilize exchange. New York, a sharp raise in cotton prices rang- ing from $1.50 to $2.50 a bale today followed the issuance of the govern- ment crop reports which placed the conditions on May 25 at 76.6 percent ee normal, the best showing since 1918, Contracts Let For Roads In McHenry County Towner, N. D., June 2.—Contract for grading and culverts on 11 miles of federal highway from Riga to the Mouse river west of Towner was awarded to Stevens brothers of St. Paul at a bid of $47,329.49, Contract for grading of about seven miles between Velva and Vol- taire, along the North Star trail, has been awarded to Druhl & Kemper of Minot for $15,170.88, and the concrete structural work was ded. to F. M. Haas Co., of Minot at $3,992.93. The route follows along the south side of the Soo railway and avoids railroad crossings. Bids for gravelling on the North Star trail in Renville county between Carpio and Donnybrook are to be ered at Mohall on June 5 COMPULSORY MUSIC. San Francisco, June 2.—Children here in the seventh and eighth grades must attend two sym- phony concerts a ‘according to @ resolution. recently passed by the Board of Edtication,