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PAGE EIGHT CELEBRATION OF MAY DAY IS RATHER QUIET Frouble Occurs in European Capitals—Demorstrations Harmless Elsewhere European capitals but el parades and demons' had ‘passed off quie afternoon. Three were killed in Wars prevent their pa Commun fruitless where Be communist, i ers were In Sofi vened and dis- | persed sor 1 communis! who atte to hold forbidde outdoor Eighty-four Paris of pers terfering with not join the called in “the red be ut no im-| portant disturbance took place. In Brussels, communists _ posted appeals to the soldiers to Join the Russian revolution. The Be ‘ian po- lice were part nothing untow: Celebrations in B German cities were peaceful as were also those in London. Moscow, the seat of communism, staged a great military show, the biggest since the revolution. Violation of Traffic Laws to Bring Arrests lists tried to 3 from joining | rrests were ma leged to be in- on who did Violations of city traffic ordin- ances will, in the future, result in arrests—no fooling. At least this was the edict is- sued by re commission at la: nigh’ . Numerous com- plaints have been made of motor- ists failing to stop before entering or crossing the two arterial high- ways—Sixth street and Main avenue—and of parking cars in front of fire hydrants. Violators of these and other traf- fic laws will be placed under arrest without fear or favoritism, begin- ning today, J. P. French, commis- sioner of police, announced, and those who do violate the laws must expect to pay a visit to the police court. First offenders will be fined $1, it was determined, with a $2 ticket due on the second offense and a $5 charge for a third offense. Watch your step! Nugent Relates How He Wrote ‘Poor Nut’ Elliott Nugent, co-author of the gay comedy, “The Poor Nut” which “comes, tothe city auditorium Wed- nesday night, had a definite idea in mind when he set out, with his fath- er J. C. Nugent, to write this play; and it was not an idea of the usual, and so-called “plot” variety. “I wanted,” he says, when ques- tioned regarding the beginnings of “The Poor Nut,” from the play- wright’s point of view—“I wanted to try out a theory of mine about building a stage-character, ning with a rather emotional indi- vidual who found himself hemmed in by inhibitions instead of the more customary and tangible, mics who can ‘fight ba harsh words as well as blows. I ‘wanted to make my principal char- acter, John Miller’s fight a duel Jaid almost wholly within himself. “My idea was that he should, of course, be taken seriously, yet that his incongrous groupings with the more worldly things of which he so ambitiously dreamed, would also be detailed for the possible audiences’ entertainment. I suppose my idea —the main idea, that is, with which my father and I began our job of mapping out, and writing, “The Poor Nut’”—was that I wanted to write a story of a really pathetic character, in terms of comedy. “A sort of futile, though obvious, battling for supremacy can be un- believably funny, sad as it may be to the poor fellow who, spurring @ battle in which he has somehow ‘kidded’ himself he might emerge a victor. It’s like tilting at the wind- mill. Misplaced, or misdirected earnestness, quickly becomes ridicu- lous; so John Miller’s fervour, com- ing from an obviously timid soul, could lead him, it seemed to my father and me, into situations both tragic and ludicrous. We wanted people to laugh at this wildly hope- ful boy—the boy whose part I now act in the play—but to sympathize with him, fully, beneath and behind their laughter. “Most of the characters, and the incidents of the play,” the boyish Mr. Nugent will add reminiscently, my part of the work, while father would keep pulling and tug- ging at the so-called ‘sieuation’ phase of the construction, building a plot out of the material I had at hand. I had known many of these young himself on from within, whirls into ; ly up to early | y. and 12 injured|" Ringlead-| |, d begin-|~ house life, we have shaped the and several worked, s building out our ori ‘The Poor Nut,’ until we had what we now like to believe people look | formed them. Both | Bo ‘Health Office Officers Over a half hund and public nurses are expected here tonight and Wednesday for the an- nual convention of the North Dakota Health Officers’ association to be nos officer, will explain the work being Sinclair Says He had given Wii! H. Hays a net total} of $160,000 to help wipe out the Re- publican deficit after the 1920 elec- | c tions but insisted that no induce- ment was offered to him. Hays had lost some money in the} stock market and loaned him $100,000 which he lieved Hays sent to his broker as| 8.00. margin. house agreed today to close general debate on the McNary-Haugen farm relief bill after discussion, the m It failed, however, other weaving plays—that I! uations and; nal theme of hers, Albert and William Ricth, a and 19 years o: ined a fractured 1} ses about his left e also was cu __ also driv side. iby the coincide Meeting in Farge | \ Dd: 1.—(AP). N. ay vd health officers Fargo, Kilbourne, Fargo city health done by the city health department. Gave Hays $160,000 , Washington, May 1.—()—Harry *, Sinclair, testifying today before fhe senate oil committee, said he Sinclair also said that he thought | 2 that he had|9: be-| Washington, May 1.~—(AP)—The| i, permitting amend- to decide whether it would go ahead with the bill tomorrow or postpone such ac- tion until Thursday. Representative Vestal of Indiana, the "epublican whip, urged that business previo scheduled for tomorrow be set aside so that con- sideration of the farm measure would not be interrupted. He said that he hoped for a final vote late | Thursday as the Indiana members | See our California tub frocks as worn by your favorite movie ‘BANKS PROMOTE 3 “DAKOTANS” Three more graduates of Da- kota Business College, Fargo, were recently promoted to assistant cash- iers. They are: Ruth Roy, Ist State Bank, Hague; I. B. Leverson, Farmers & Merchants Bank, Haw- ley; Geo. Wischer, Security State Bank, Lawton. Nearly 700 banks employ Dakotans, thanks to their ACTUAL BUSINESS training (copyrighted—unobtainable else- where). Some 230 officers began their careers at D. B. C. Results talk. _‘*Follow the Suc- ce$$ful,’” May 1-7, Summer stu- dents save money. Write F. L. Wat- kins, Pres. 806 Front St., Fargo. Feel Miserable This Spring? collegians while I was a student at the very Ohio State University about whose campus and fraternity- Good Ad Advice! La Crosse, Wis" “I was rundown in health and badly in need of a tonic but I did not know what to take, as everything I knew of did not help me. _ Finally the wife of a drug- gist advised me to take Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescrip- tion, so I took her advice and soon To Be Well Your Kidneys Must Fi ion Properly. Sing find you tired, >? Are you iff and ved achy, subject to tei A Are Dean's Pills, a stimulant diuretic, increase the secretion of the kidneys and thus aid in the elimination of 50,000 UsersEndorse Doan’s: Ww. H. Golts, 506 Second Ave. learned oe it was the pro; for me. Pit hel 5 me me regain my strength and I am pleased rt it"—Mre. Jeanette ve was obliged feral times at night to ey secretions dull ache across th f could't litt anythin helped me continued Sanden, 3. used them and corrected the trouble,” Bismarck to Have Good steers 12.00 to 13.00; medium steers 11.00 to heavy lambs lambs 12.00 to 13.00; light ewes league. ipod of lay.| were anxious to get the measure out | Yet, while many af the ‘Poor Nut'|of the way so ‘they. could sat Congressman Sweet characters had stalked, so obvious-| ho 2 prim 3 next Tues- ly, in my own per: 1 life, it was| day. Vestal, HUMeveE: made no mo- of New York Killed | with my father-—with whom I had/tion and the debate beran with thir in Forced Landing | already collaborated on ‘Kempy’| point remaining up in the air. alas | N Y j Cortland, Irn + New Meat Market | on as an innately funny pl Another me is home ‘made a forced Two Brothers Are in |2) stunt i Bismare i Pee eee Identical Accidents AP a Ohio a ie sil Ne ington, ‘ut, | ‘ Rochester, Pa. May 1,—(A». two| ng plant at Cincinnati and Have 4 ian ro ine a yhitney Pate of retail stores throughout | ms along th humm The aviator w an, Mes age Says) ~The | ion at! unhurt. Minneapolis, kidnaped and r head- | 900 worth of jewels, 1 prematurely announced twas d , the American,! moved to pro- ised them| stock, the . Most i trio prisoner, being released. (AP)—Cattle: .00; fair steers $10 held Wednesday and Thursday. to 11.00; plain steers 8.09 to 10.00; | One of the important talks of the] good heifers 10.00 to 11.00; medium to Meet at Sterling convention will be made by Howard | heifers ie heifers : : Estes, of New York city, milk ex-| 8.00 to 9.00; plain he aie 7.00 ig Pei cdicles cof, the Burleigh county. for the American child. Dr. 8.00; good cows 2: pool hold a meeting at} Sterling tonight to dec this year’s wool crop wi or_sold outright. 7.50 to 8.003 plain cows 3} good bulls m bulls 7.00 to! med common bulls 6.50 to 7.00; | fang, Sterling; se , ig; Lawrence Madland calves, top veal 11.09 to 12.00; cull and ‘Erwin Anderson, both of Me- | veal 7.00 to 8.00; light heavy calves) Kenzie; and A. R. Miesen, county calves 6.00 tol aori oie aos aban 00 to 6.00. agricultural Bismarck. ep—Top lambs 16.00 to 14.00 to 15.00; cull La Washington, May 00 to 6. 00; bueks 150-180 | Theodore Ro velt, Jr. Denver, May 1 Western Sugar com Goes ‘to Mississippi Team Farm Aid Bill Vote John (¢ r big league! nounced the deadlock with growers . : player w aged Rochester in! over the 1928 sugar beet crop had Is Nearing in House |the Int league last year, been broken and that contracts with He's manag- Cotton States | mediately. Strength for spring full-size biscuits l Winter — the “North Coast Limited” Every employee makes you feel he is glad you are riding on his train—— Northern Pacific Ry. “First of the Northern Transcontinentals” TP. Allen, Asent, N. D. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE May of Phoenix, N. of congress, was ii en an airplane ying from Washing- | landing necessary. § € 5 < & ER 2 Fe 5 ~ 8 ay 07 ty fair grounds and, as it rolled | Tough earth, it struck ai nd ‘turned. crushed to death. | , wired " Teobbed SalesmanIs_ | | Robbed Near Mendota he holdup took place while he! long Highway No. 19,| h of Mendota. king the most valuable part of his} discarded worth of less expensive jewelry. The jewelry salesman was blindfolded and with a gun, for several hours before | Wool Pool Members The committee in charge of the; meeting is composed of H. E. Wild- | NTRIBUTE 1,.---(AP)—Mar- | ry F. Sinclair told ‘the senate Teapot | 3|Dome committee here this afternoon | he could not recall that he made any contribution to the campaigns of Governor Smith of New York in| 1923 and 1924. He was quite sure he had not contributed to the fund of | DEADLOCK IS BROKEN | (?)—The Great iy today an- is Car-] members of cooperative marketing associations in Colorado, Nebraska, and Montana would be accepted im- it. You need it after the heavy | € crisp, crunchy thoroughly baked shreds of whole wheat TRISCUIT - a crisp, crunchy wafer Made by The Shredded Wheat Siemans 1—— | DID YOU HEAR ??!! , at. 3. ae - - OH! YES !!! IT’S TRUE! ! WILLYS-KNIGHT and WHIPPET sales in North Dakota during March 1928 GAINED 19.8% over sales in March, 1927, while the industry (allother makes combined) in North Dakota LOST 34.8%. | The e The Willys-Overland factories are working three eight hour shifts and one Sunday shift, while at the same time they are making extensive addi- tions to the Toledo factories in order to meet the tremendous demand for WHIPPETS and WILLY-KNIGHTS. . After | f March was our BIGGEST month (regardless of the season) in our nine- $20,000 | teen years in the automobile business—and April was even bigger. kept | covered | We could go on and tell you some more FACTS that should convince you that WHIPPET and WILLYS-KNIGHT popularity is growing by leaps and bounds, and that we are growing with it—but, maybe we're brag- ging—anyway, THESE are facts. .. Why not let us show you why the WHIPPET and WILLYS-KNIGHT excel in their price field? Lahr Motor Sales Co. e whether | be pooled NOT IN ACCIDENT It was erroneously reported’ in Monday’s Tribune that Steve Platzer had been in an automobile accident. The man actually in the accident has been unidentified. y as Dr. Geo. F. McEriain Osteopathic Physician Electrotherapy Solar-Ray Chromte Diseases @ Specialty 114 Fourth Street Phone 200 _Wamnnwton, ‘Bey ph gation into campaign expenditures| mont, and McMaster, South Dakota, Hed aumitnes: oie of presidential candidates. Those| Republicans, and Bratton, New named by Vice President Dawes to-|named to the committee were Sen-|Mexico, and Barkley, Kentucky, day to conduct the senate’s investi-| ators Steiwer, Oregon; Dale, Ver-| Democrats. H. Gordon Selfridge, gg yn ge most merchants, says in “The Romance of Commerce.” Biemarck, N. D. Solemn <pprecia- tion of the great responsibilities en- trusted to us in- spires us to give the most efficient and sympa thetic service at all times. Webb Bros. Funeral Directors Phone 246 Night Phone 246 i 887 nan otcetion~ ‘onde epof 710 hua a) women ave nt cor you never see, eid our ‘Service to Efficiency. Equipment! ue ue W. E. Perry Funeral Parlors 210 Fifth St. Phone 687 Bismarck