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i PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE “Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class Matter. N E = GEORGE D. MAN Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO - : - . ie Marquette Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK - - : - Fifth Ave. Bldg. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The American Press is exclusively entitled to the use or republication of all news patches credited to it or not DETROIT Kresge Bldg. otherwise entitled in this paper and also the focal news pub- | lished herein. ‘ ‘ - All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. ‘MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANC aily by carrier, per y' Core saienieeGleoe by mail, per year in (in Bismarck) 6, é +6 20 by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck)... 5.00 by mail, outside of North Dakota ... 6.00 Daily Daily — THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Newspaper) 1 City, State and County NOT ALWAYS A CURE-ALL Some of the very estimable women here in behalf of the Child Labor amendment pin too much faith upon legislation asa cure-all or palliative forall human ills. Federal legi lation hus never been more beneficial than state legislation. Bederal lav hould public opinion be against them, have been indifferently enforced. fin the south for instance the Volstead act is not as rig- idly enforced as north of the Mason and Dixon line. ‘There public sentiment is more*keénly opposed to an invasion of he federal authorities in strictly local matters and affai uching upon the police funetions of the state. ‘The amendment, that conferred equal suffrage upon the “Witites and blacks ‘is active in the south only in so far public opinion in the various sections is behind the enfor ment. The negroes know when to yo to an election and when to y away and no arm of the federal law has made the operation of equal franchise there perfect. Those lobbyists for the ratification who pin their faith upon congress and see in the federal law makers some spe cial and mysterious force that will wipe out child labor in the south fail to read history accurately. If they believe that federal legislation will be any more efficacious than state enactments they are indulging in false hopes. The opposite has been true. Where the federal government has invaded states to regulate internal problems, state authori- ties have abated their activities. Local contact and control weakened and the long distance administration from a federal bureau at Washington usually has given slow and tardy justice. Here in this state the growers of wheat are not satisfied with the federal grain grading act. They believe that it favors the buyers against the growers and producers. In scme respects their complaints probably: are well founded, but the point in this connection is that the state’s hands are tied, its own grain grading act inoperative, and the farm- ers of this state are denied the right to fix what they feel are reasonable requirements in the grading of their prod- ucts. A similar situation could easily arise under the child labor legislation. Congre not being infallible, constituted are state legislatures, actuated by much the same may pass legislation unfavorable to the labor forces and to the good women who from humanitarian and laud- able motives are urging the ratification of this amendment by the legislature. Advocates of ratification should realize that the state then could pass no law that conflicted with the operation of the federal child labor law. This is power that never should be shifted to a political bureau in Washington, The south will have better child labor laws ag soon as public opinion is aroused and the moral fibre of people put teeth into regulatory measures. You cannot legislate con- science and zeal for public welfare into people. Education will help, but under state or federal lav the enforcement of child labor enactments will be just as effective as the people in the various states demand. A WILD SCHEME Any proposition to bond the state for ten million to pay off depositors in closed bank and to consolidate the functions of the receiver of closed banks and the guaranty fund com- mission should be promptly squelched. Better a repeal of the guaranty act which never did guaranty deposits and ways been a delusion and a sham. The fund is bein: st competently ‘handled now and as expeditiously as pos- sible in face of the imiany problems that confront the com- mission. Senator Baird as aeeeiver of closed banks has conducted the affairs of the defunct institutions fairly, economicaiiy and in a way that establishes a new record in this state for low costs of administration. If left alone, the affairs of these banks will be settled in a relatively short time and no good cause can be served by disturbing either the receiver or the guaranty fund commission at this time. Gov. Sorlie when interviewed decisively declared that he Was against any more bond issues for this purpose. In this position he should receive the heartiest support. Former Governor Hanna speaking before the Mandan Rotary pointed out the evils of bond issues. For a state or. an individual to pile up debt is easy but the process of ex- trication is most difficult and sometimes impossible. ECLIPSE MAKES US BIG AND LITTLE This month’s eclipse will have been seen by more people than ever witnessed a like spectacle before. Since the world began to be densely inhabited, no eclipse ever traversed so populous a region. And none of these people will be afraid or superstitious. So much for modern enlightenment! But if the eclipse does not frighten, it should not fail to impress us. There could be no more imposing reminder of the littleness and the greatness of man. _ It will make visible huge eruptions on the edge of the! sun, in whose blasts our earth would be but as a tossing pebble, and beyond them vast auroras, sweeping interplanetary space. Observers will feel their place as crawling animalculae on a speck of star dust. But also they may realize that in all the stupendous cosmic sweep, the only greater thing is the mind that apprehends it. From the very throne of the universe, man looks down on his: own insignificance, He knows himself small because he is great. Son of the mic- robe; brother of the archangel—this is man, and Thou art mindful of him! No matter how many. autos are sold there doesp’t seem to be any more room on the street cars, It must be awful to be a burglar and Publisher have to stay out SIAAS married a man with a One who |past tells us now she doesn’t expect jso much of the _ The hardest time for a man to get up in the world is every morning. | | | | What makes us mad is a man who thinks he is as wise as an owl be- cause always hooting —some- | thing. | Perhaps the funniest things on earth are middle names. New brooms sweep clean. New dresses don’t sweep at all, Keeping your credit good costs a| lot of money but is worth more. Maybe we could get Congress to h January and February. abo! | Not having any faults would be a very great fault. Trouble with flying to pieces is vetting yourself together correctly ain, | Mar perfect dream of a girl if wish, bat remember dreams usually go by contraries. you ess you hear soj{ has been fully | This road to su |much about never | mapped. | A man is not known so much by the company he keeps as he is by the ideas he keeps, If these big auto dealers keep on cutting their prices it will be cheap- to buy one than to steal one. Destructive criticism is nothing else but a terrible waste of time and energy. | It tickles us how a man will marry for a home and then stay away from it so much. When a man thinks all women are | fools he may have better luck next + |time. You can’t keep a good man or a} jgood year down. Be fair to the auto drivers. You seldom see a car go up on the side- | walk after a victim. Blessed are the poor in salary for they shall pay no income tax. Many a permanent wave looks like a crime wave. The most popular restaurant drink ; is soup. (Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, Inc.) ADVENTURE OF THE TWINS BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON “Do you know any more people who are wishing things?” asked the Fairy Queen. “Oh, yes! Lots!” said Nick. “The Snow Man was wishing that he could 'be inside where the children play and where the fire is. He says he gets lonesome outside in the yard. No one ever stays to keep him com- pany.” hat’s true,” said the Fairy Queen, “but then there is a place for everybody in the world, and I’m afraid that indoors is pot the place for Mr. Snow Man.” “He was so lonesome,” said Nancy, “that we promised to speak to you| about it.” “That w nodded the Quee nd I shall do what I can, But I’m afraid it’s just one more lesson to learn. Wishes usual- ly turn out that way.” They all’ got on Two Spot, the blue-velvet butterfly, who didn’t} mind winter weather, and flew away to the place where Mr. Snow Man was standing in a field. In spite of his loneliness he was smiling pleasantly. His little pebble eyes under his dish-pan hat seemed to say, “No matter what happens, we'll be meriy.” “Why I expected to find you in tears,” said the Fairy Queen. “Oh, no! I only cry when the sun comes out, Madam,” said the Snow Man. “Don’t you know,” said the Fairy Queen, “that you are not really ery- ing, but melting, my, dear sir. That you cannot stand heat at all! Yet the children say that you told them that you would like to live indoors and be like other people.” Mr. Snow Man’s eyes still looked merry but he answered sadly, “Well, I should rather die happy than live miserably. I want to be where there are people and children in the house. I don’t want to stay out here with nobody but the moon and stars at night and the sun by day, with only | the children coming to see me once in a long while. The Fairy Queen's heart was touched. -“All right,” ~said sl®. “I [shall arrange to have you taken in- doors. But remember, if anything happens, I have warned you.” i “Come, children,” said the Fairy Queen to the Twins. So they all flew away on ‘Two Spot toward the house where the children lived. And right ‘on the smooth snow on the lawn where everybody could see it, the Fairy Queen wrote a message. “Please, take me into the house, I am very lonesome out in the field. j “Mr. Snow Man. When the children saw the mes- sage they cried, “Oh, ho! If the Snow Man can get this far to write us a letter, why didn’t he come right in- to the house himself?” But | children get, accustomed to strange ‘things happening, and they asked no more questions. 1 They got their sled and coasted down the hill to the place where the Kled and twinkled, | (Té Be: Continued) §Copyright, 1925, NEA Service; I future, | THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE | EVERETT TRUE BY CONDO | ©1925 67 NEA SERVICE, INC Lay | LETTER FROM LESLIE PRESCOTT TO THE LITTLE MARQUISE, CARE OF THE SECRET DRAWER Sometimes I wonder if I am not very hard to get along with, dear little Marquise. Jack is so delightful to all his friends, they all seem to think he is wonderful and yet since dad died e been at cross-purposes with him all the time. I can’t, little Marquise, talk my troubles over with outside people but today I could stand it no longer. I determined to tell mother about it. She must have seen that some- thing was wrong but she ‘has Tiot a word to me about my husband since Alice’s death, After Ruth told me what Sally had written to her, I didn’t know what to do. I think I was, more humiliated that Ruth, who was so happily married, should know all my. troubles than I was with the trou- bles themselves, I didn’t care so much about Sally because Sally had great unhappiness in her married life and I have made up my mind to write to her and tell her that she need not be afraid to write me any news about my ‘hasband she thought I ought to know. After that terrible telephone con- versation with Jack’s drunken friend, I felt as though all was over. Jack's idea that I would see the humor of it seemed to me to put the finishing touches upon my hurt feelings. It didn’t seem to me as though I could) even see Jack ever again and yet I knew that something must be done as Sally Atherton has said, to keep the business from going on the rocks. Not having married your lover, STOPPING So frightened was Mrs. Jones of the king, little Marquise, you did not know all the terrible ogres that lie! in wait to murder love. I believe that if every woman would tell the truth she meets one of these ogres when sbe is going to have a baby. She gets all mis-shap- en and of course very Sensitive and! naturally when her husband — pays compliments to other and more shapely women it makes her heart ck, Of course it is thoughtlessness on his part but there always comes to! her the thought which Helen ‘Hunt put so beautifully: “When one loves much He can not forget.” I get so unhappy over Jack's open admiration of other women, while’ all the while Iam conscious of how| ugly, I am. 1 ‘said as much to him one day when he came home and told me how stunning Sally Atherton looked that day. “What do you mean, Leslie?” he asked. ‘Surely you are not jealous of Sally Atherton. I would not fall in love with her if she were the last woman in all the world, She knows altogether too) much and lets me know that she knows it. | “You know I ‘have been a pretty good husband to you, 1 have stayed at home with you and tried to put up with all your little temperamental idiosyncrasies because of your condi- tion, Don’t you think it foolish to be jealous of your old friend, Sally Atherton? “Why can’t you let me say a wo-! man is stugning withaut looking as though I had told you that I was going to elope with her?” «Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, ine.) J ee a ee FABLES ON HEALTH BLEEDING Twist the bandage until it is very Anytown when one of her youngsters cut a hand with a paring knife, that she could flow of all the she decided to read find about stopping blood. Blood from arteries is a bright red, and it comes in spurts, she learned. No effort should be spared to check the flow quickly. If the wound is on the arm or leg this éan usually be done with an application of a bandage between the wound and the heart. Elevate the limb, and place the knot in the bandage over the artery. INCORPORATIONS Articles of incorporation filed with the Secretary of State includ * Williston Fyrniture Co., Williston; capital stock $16,000; incorporations, George B, Everson, Bernard M. An- derson, Cora Everson, all of Willis- ton, ‘ Turtle Mountain Gas and Oil Co, Bottineau; capital stock $60,000; ij corporators, Geotge R. White, A. H. White, Kramer; A. J. Cameron, A. R. McKay, Bottinead; August Frykman, Knut Olson} Nels Magnuson, Souris, tight. ‘ Do not attempt to remove dirt from the wound until the bleedin has stopped. : 5 Then pick out the dirt or gravel, and wash the wound and adjoining parts. A small amount of carbolic acid should be placed in the water, one teaspong to the pint, or add two or three teaspoons of table salt. When the flesh is torn the parts |should be replaced as nearly as pos- sible before the edges are brought together. This will help to prevent an ugly are : | <A Thought | But if we walk in the light, as he is In the light, we have fellowship one with another—1 John 1:7. "God's ‘glory is his goodriess.— Henry Ward Beecher. - A purple: suit, worn by a fashion- ble Parisian hair-dresser, jis match- ed by the fur of his white Russian wolf-hound, which is sprinkled with mauve powder. ) of things that would surprise... , A Snetill some sympathy and open ‘¢f comfort to bis mind, But, in such the veled o'er the country, Dollar Bill. And you've seen a lot Litve tories you could tel! us would up our éyes, | PEOPLE'S FORUM | ‘—ar —<? GE tkcisuarion To the Bismarck Tribune: 1 see there is a tendency by some in the present legislature to try and return to the old or rather repealed legislation, relating to taxing farm lands 100 percent. And all this evi- dently arises from a few who be- lieve that the railroads, telephone lines, etc, have been relieved from their share of our state burden; true what lands they held had, shoutd be taxed as other lands of similar nature in the state. Do we wish to pass the buck? But:remember this, passing of the buck does not stop wher it is passed to the railroads ete. as they are entitled toa pnofit upon their investment as any other business, and in so maintaining this profit only pass it on in the way of freight rates ete. and the farmer is the very fellow who it virtually ré- turns to. So it just completes a cir- cle and returns to the very fellow that it was supposed to relieve, as all of these false theories invariably do. Just why any exemptions other than those held by government, state, charitable, or religious; why are some to seek relief from their support to the general support of our government, it only places a penalty upon the individual who has the ability to accomplish something and to relieve the more unfortunate or indolent from their share of our general “burden in the support of our government. It would not make much difference upon what percent property was taxed, if all property was so included as we have just so much to pay; and it must be receive ed from property listed under tax- able property; and in such, we can not discriminate even h some such lands may be held@™meéhe rail- roads. As an example of injustice, and too many such exist to cause the small amount of anxiety. For in- stance, say a family that made farm life their employment for sevepal years, built up a fine equipment of farm buildings, intending to spend their entire life upon said farm; and suppose the husband met a pre- mature death, leaving a wife with a family of children, to look to this same farm for their substance, but say the wife as too many are, un- able to manage the farm. I ask is it a just law that would penalize’ her bécause the farm she helped to build up has a costly set of buildings? True, these same buildings might have enhanced the value of some vacant lands adjacent for the pur- pose in the building of them was to better equip this farm for farm use; with: no thonght of the other fellow’s lands near it. I ask again is it a just law that will force her! to pay on extra tax upon these farm, buildings, hecause she has been re- fyuired by fate to move off? Enough vis enough of anything, looks like too much. Why not take a fal] out of the tax-free bonds by recommendation. For instance tax-free bonds are large | enough in volume to make it diffi-, cult to secure money for industrial } investments, and they abnormally in- crease rates for money for farms, for factories and business. . Being tax-free, they leave the burden of national state and community sup- port on operating industries, enfor- cing a double penalty. Therefore any tax-exempt property must pass the buck of government support to: that portion of property taxable, The theory and practice of both are wrong, but this J. E. SULLIVAN. THE BIRD DOG LAW Bismarck, N. Dak., January, 22, 1925. The Bismarck Tribune, Bismarck, No. Dak. Gentlemen: There has been a great. deal of; discussion of late, in the columns of your paper, on the existing “bird dog law,” so andther communication on the same subject would hardly be amiss. The common objection to the law, is the wholesale waste of our upland game, through the great num- ber of wounded birds whieh are nev- er recovered. I do not hesitate to say, that the facts of the case have not been exaggerated in the least. I have shot grouse all the way from the Turtle Mountains to the Can- nonball River, and have found con- ditions the same everywhere. The birds that are not killed dbtright, will escape in cover ,where it is seemingly impéssible for ‘a mouse to hide. There is but one exception to this rule,—that of a winged bird, which will sometimes betray itself by attempting to fly. But the worst phase of the whole matter has not been touched upon. It has been my experience, when hunting in comparatively heavy cov- er, that it i8 sometimes impossible to find even the dead birds. I have hunted for them by the hour, in tall grass or in the brush, only to be compelled to leave the birds there SATURDAY, JANUARY 24, 1925 “We Inherit T wife of Richard Wagner. There is a son, Siegfried of genius on both sides. had been born to them. And cian. ing to the rules of the game. in any other deck. other cards are. never is. Another Point For Suffrage Score one more for. woman suf- rage! The first of this year’s legisla- tures to act on the child labor amendment was that of California, which ratified it as its first act, by nearly 10 to 1, on the fourth day of its session. And some of the leg- islators frankly avowed that their precipitancy and unanimity were due to fear of the women voters. If these women did not vote, and were not organized, their lobby might ‘have been treated at best with condesceriding politeness. As it was, they scarcely needed even to argue the matter. Legislators fell over each other, in the rush for the band wagon. This is ‘quite as it should be, in a democracy. The band-wagon legis- lator is, to be sure, not the highest type, and the California legislature contains many of the better sort who do right from conviction. * But if any representatives are to take orders from anybody—let it be from the people. And no better ex- pression of the real will of the peo- ple could be found than the voice of fine, organized women, who know how to persuade gently, but are, not afraid ‘to hint at the big stick. Golden Rule Is the Test Nicholas Murray Butler, in his newest book, defines ‘himself as a “Liberal.” Which, by his own de- finition, he doubtless is. Nobody is a “reactionary” except to his: ene- alent—Not Genius ' : By Chester H. Rowell He has talent; not genius. ‘ The death of Frau Cosima Wagner, widow of the great composer, may have been announced before this is read. the fullness of time, it was inevitable. interest is the problem of heredity it suggests. Frau Cosima was the daughter of Franz Liszt and the There are no two greater figures in the short roll of supreme musical genius. In Of more permanent Wagner, who is thus the heir It is almost as if John Milton had married the daughter of William Shakespeare, and a son the son—is a competent musi ‘This, you may be interésted to know, is strictly accord. Scientists have reduced here- dity to a mathematical formula. By this formula, talent is usually, and genius almost never, inherited. 1 The figures of it are high-brow and the names are Greek —‘genes,” “chromosomes,” and the like—but there is a way of translating it into American. Genius is scarce for the same reason that a royal flush is. It is a unique combination, which is no more likely to turn up a second time in a deck where it has been dealt once than But talent is any combination of, mostly high cards. Stack two decks, one with nearly all high cards and few low ones, and the other with many low and few high ones, and you have a fair picture of good and bad inheritance. Nearly all the hands you can deal out of the one deck will be high-card ones, with an occasional exception, like the black sheep in a good family, while most of the hands out of the other deck will be the exact reverse. But a royal flush will scarcely come twice out of a deck before.the cards are worn out—and it may come once out of any deck with the nec€ssary cards in it, no matter what the assed 6 This, reduced from chromosomes to aces and deuces, is the exact scientific reason why both talent and stupidity are usually, but not always, inherited, while genius almost mies: And “progressive” and “con- servative” are both germs of praise, if you mean them that way. § After ull, the important ‘things are the Golden Rule, to keep us fair, and the Truth, which shall ‘make us free. Whoever is willing to: grant to others the rights which he claims for himself, and to be denied guim- self the privileges of which he fould deprive others; who seeks truth in facts and not in phrases, and acts on the truth, rather than‘on inter- est or prejudice—he is the citizen we need and the leader we can tie to, whether we call him by one name or another. Well Worth the Price It turns out that the Loeb-Leo- pold defense attorneys got a fee of $130,000. It was worth it, to the families, of course, to keep the stain of hanging off their escutcheon, It was worth it more, for the op- portunity in a conspicuous case, to educate the public in the modern knowledge of crime as a fact to be studied as wel¥ as a wrong to be avenged. The culprits in this case are, of course, properly segregated for life. But the people also know, better than they could have learned in a generation of learned psychological lectures, that there are crippled souls, legally sane but medically ab- normal, whose existence is a prob- lem as well as a wickedness. drew breath, by classing them with mongrels and ,“sheep-killers.” But, in my hunible opinion, the majority of our law-makers had in mind the conservation of our upland game when they enacted the “bird dog law.” The very existance of the law proclaims that fact. I be- lieve that they hoped, by enacting such a law, to curb the activities of the “game hogs” who, shoot right and left with utter disregard for bag limits or game laws; who kill merely for the ‘sport of killing, without thought that the coming generations have the right to inherit the wealth of wild life that grace our broad acres today. But have the means. accomplished the desired results? I believe not. Granted ‘that the “bird dog law” is an effective way of curbing the a ities of the “game hog”—which —to some extent. Granted al that there #s a little less grou: hunting, when the.use of dogs prohibited. believe, that the number of bir, saved in this manner will exceed, even equal, the:number which today are left to die and: rot in the field? Does anyone really believe, that there are so many “game hogs” among the sportsmen of North Da- kota, that they. must be restricted in this crude manner? I venture to it is, there has ion of that same than any we have. I venture to:say, that the vast ma- jority of the men who go. afield: are to rot, Nature has endowed the grouse with a plumage that’ is the last word in the art of camouflage, and it is possible, in heavy cover, to walk directly over a dead bird with- out ever seeing it. On a number of occasions, I thave discovered them merely by chancing to step on them, after having searched every square foot of the area in which they fell. Several: years, ago, I chanced #o be a temporary spectator at sion of. The House of Representatives, when a bill repealing the “bird dog law” was being discussed. The chief objection of those who opposed the bill, seemed to be the contention that the bird digs oul entée pastures, chasing and* killing stock’ right and left. If that contention were not so unjust, it would be laughable. To begin with, groase' rarely frequent lands that are grazed by stock, and consequently there would be no traction fora bird dog in a. pasture. ; An @ poor man’s pocket you've been tucked awey.- Just @ dollar’s worth for you travel on end leave the man’ , Mother's held you in her purse for just end with, the true bird dog. has no more interest in stock, and. de- rives no more pleasure from chas- ing horses, cattle, or sheep, thin fish would in attempting to swim on dry land. It is entirely outside of their element and their interests in life. There ig no truer friend, there is no more conscientious or intelli- gent member of the canine family, aE a | om honest, conscientious, and law-abid- ing citizens, who have the conserva- tion of our wild more at heart than the men who make our laws. -I: sincerely hope that: the members of The Ninteenth Legislative Assembly. will . look at this matter in the right light, and useless: waste of the finest by whole-heart- eee zi |. LITTLE JOE | ena. : 4 NANOLDHATIS TRIMMED OVER. IT SAVES FROM GETTING TRIMMED FoR A NEW . 8 ONE... But, does anyone really|-L. ed support of House Bill forty-nine, or some sure. number similar Pea- Sincerely yours, M., O. Steen. SUPREME COURT | T From Dickey County In the Matter of the Estate of Ed- win Hafey, Deceased, Ellendale National Bank, a corpor- ation, etal, Petitioners and Appell- anita, vs. Robert Hafey, as Adminis- trator of the Estate of Edwin Hafey, ‘deceased, Appellaht and Respondent. Syllabus: 1. Following Reichert vs, Reichert, N. D. 170 N,.W. 621, it is held,:that the power of a county court to grant a rehearing is limited to, the causes enumerated in, and must be, exercised within the time prescribed by, Sections 8595-8597, C. 4m,.the instant case certain syediters abjected to the allowance of. an. administrator's report. The objections were overruled and the report approved. Thereupon, the ob- Jecting creditors’ - petitioned the county court for a rehearing. After notice and hearing the county, court made an order refusing to vacate or modify its order spproving the ad- ministrator’s report. The objecting ereditors:‘appealed to the district court. “The ‘district court affirmed the order of the county court. For reasons stated in the opinion, it is Jelycerin to thoroughly moisten the held that :the district: court’s deter- mination is correct and should be affirme aS Appeal from the ‘District Court of ey County, ‘Wolfe, J. Certain creditors appeal from a judgment -of the district court of Dickey county affirming an order of the county court of that county, en- tered upon’an application for a re- hearing of an order approving an administrator’s report. Affirmed. : Opinion ‘of son, Ch. J,--- F. J. Graham, Ellendale, N. D., and L, T, Van Slyke, Aberdeen, S, D., Attorneys for Appellants. . L. Brouillard‘and E; E. Cassels, both of Ellendale, N. D., Attorneys for Respondent. * i A hammerhead tan be kept on the handle. snugly, -and’ permanently by dipping the end of the handle in the Court by Christian- surfaces where the head touches.