SEEK SIGNERS’ WILLS NEW CAR NEEDS CAREFUL NURSING Society Plans Collection of His­ toric Old Testaments. Descendants of the Signers of the Declaration of Independence Need Four More Documents to Com­ plete Collection. Philadelphia.—The Society of the Descendants of the Signers of the Declaration of Independence is en­ deavoring to collect copies of the wills of the 56 signers. According to a re­ port made to John Calvert, secretary and registrar of the society, the wills of Samuel Chase. M aryland; George Wythe, V irginia; William Hooper, North Carolina; William Lynch, Jr., South Carolina, and George Walton, Georgia, are still missing from the so­ ciety’s collection. Wills in possession of the descend­ ants include those of Josiah Bartlett, New Hampshire; John Adams, Sam­ uel Adams, Robert Treat Paine, Mas­ sachusetts; Stephen Hopkins and William Ellery. Rhode Island; Wil­ liam Williams, Samuel Huntington. Oliver Wolcott and Roger Sherman, Connecticut; Francis Lewis, William Floyd, Lewis Morris and Philip Living- gton. New York; Abraham Clark, John H art, John Witherspoon, Francis Hop- kinson and Richard Stockton, New Jerse y ; Robert Morris, Benjamin Rush, Benjamin Franklin, John Mor­ ton, James Smith, George Taylor and George Ross, Pennsylvania; Caesar Rodney and Thomas McKean, Dela­ ware ; Charles Carroll and Thomas Stone, M aryland; Thomas Jefferson, Francis Lightfoot Lee, Richard Henry Lee and Benjamin Harrison, Virginia; Joseph Hewes and John Penn, North C arolina; Edward Rutledge, South C arolina; Button Gwinnett, Georgia. The following signer^ffied intestate, according to the report^w llliam Whip­ ple and Matthew Thornton, New Hampshire; Elbridge Gerry and John Hancock. Massachusetts; George Cly­ mer and James Wilson, Pennsylvania; George Read, D elaw are; William Paca, M aryland; Arthur Middleton, South Carolina. The records of Thomas Nelson, Jr., Virginia, were Alice presents even a b etter show- ls stiff and bearings must be worn in jng than the Boswell, as the vein is slowly; otherwise a noisy engine will a contact vein, in place, between thei result. Watch oil and gasoline gauges carefully for any defect in systems; salte and porphry. The Gold Coin Quartz and Placer check up on valve, timer and carbure- tor adjustments frequently, always association owns five properties in keeping the leanest possible carburetor this district, and has crews of men mixture; jack up wheels and test for w orjI on |jje Gold Coin Alice, the looseness by shaking and if there is Go,d Coin Mohawk and the , Gold any play readjust the bearings; use The last good o il; keep tire9 fully Inflated; don’t Coin Pearce properties. race the engine when the car is Stand- two nam ed workings are situated on ing; keep cooling system filled with the west side of Forest creek, water and see if water is circulating; The firm of E im er an(j Hogg, con- lf not, examine pump and hose con- gulting engineers of P o rtia nd, are nections to radiator, and when clean- ’ 1 the consulting engineers of the or­ ing the car, which should not be done frequently until the varnish has hard­ ganization. ened, do not use a strong stream of water and do not rub away dust with a cloth. Washing with a slow stream of water is the best. HOME-MADE LIFTING The life one sary JACK Better go cheerfully through life, not bor­ rowing trouble, hut keeping a snug little balance a t the F irst N ational, just in case But when it means absence of any provision for the contingencies of age, sickness, loss of position, etc., it may result in troublesom e com­ plications. F IR S T N A T IO N A L BANK fr-* * ENJOYED BY'LARGE May Be Easily Made From Discarded Automobile Parts for Use in Garage. I-should-worry attitu d e tow ard is very common nowadays. In sense it is all right— unneces­ worry is very foolish. A Charming Tam. Nothing so enhances the charm of youth as the tarn, but does it wish to avoid the commonplace, it must be elaborated distinctively and worn “with an air.” Stitched with silver thread and bearing an ostrich plume, the black tam is decidedly chic. Valuable for garage use is an oper­ ating lifting jack. The accompanying illustration shows a type of jack that may be built from discarded automo­ The missionary program a t -the bile parts. 1 Presbyterian church last evening Two brackets such as are employed on the fan support are sweated to a was viewed and heard with much in- To Remove a Ring. i terest by the large congregation To remove a ring from a finger The tableaux features were beauti­ swollen by its tightness, dip the finger ful and instructive, showing the in cold soapsuds. . work of m issionaries in foreign I = = • lands, and how the girls and women of heathen countries suffer persé­ cution and hardship. In contrats, happy little children, high school pu­ pils and a C hristian m other, crossed the platform in front of the foreign scenes, I November The Victrola music adde I much to J the entertainm ent, especially the A Lifting Jack of This Description Is a Qfeat Help Around the Home i Prison scene from 11 Trovatore, as Garósi" i did the other music and the reading , by Miss Loeta Rogers. ^rectangular steel plate. A shaft pass' I The “ Missionary Clinic” was m ost: ket§ as shown, k - . , . , .. es through these bracket^ _ i _____ i n f side move- am usm g’ showing M rs’ Leslie as while a pin prevents a n f side move- ,, ,, , .. Is nrovlded provided r’ Nozit, Nozit ” and- ment. A 3-lnch hole is In , ' i “D Dr, and Mrsi Mrs. Riley as - rid£d in — the shaft, through which tLe lifting "N urse T r y l t t ” The fdllOW’hg la- bar Is inserted when the jack is itj , dies W6rd treated as patients suf- J ^ se’- ~ r ° t >x " ; fering from various disorder»: • dames Hitchcock, Dochcry, Tcen- hower. Paige, PlWiujfter, Koehler. and Miss All the ailm ent com- plftitied possessed one peculiarity, Our nncestOVs held their meetings ! yiz; fyhile they prevented the suf- >ut in the woods with the sky for a canopy. Even fioW We have evangel- i £ . ho Vu '.--.i ferers from attending “ church serv- oversizq ., tires *.« ate bh used . letic Services in tents, hhd who knows the When car owner should be Certain that lces an ‘ doinS other C hristian work, where cdniHgations have not wor- there Is enough clearance between all they did not in any way interfere ihiped; but not many people would with home duties and social pleas­ Imagine this old landmark, a windmill the tires and the nearest parts of the ures. The treatm ents consisted in on Reigate Heath. Surry Hill. Eng­ car. • • * the main of good advice and the pre-j land, was being used for a place of Hold your hand over the breathing scriptions fiven were verses of scrip-, worship. It has a beautiful little al­ tube occasionally while the engine Is ture. The versatile and efficient doc­ ta r and is lighted by a candelabrum running to see if air is passing out. If fitted on the oaken beams. Photo shows the breathing tube gets clogged It puts to r scored against careless, indiffer­ the exterior of the little mill church. a back pressure on the pistons that re­ ent and selfish people. duces the power of the motor. • * • JAPS ARE CRUEL TO ANIMALS The engine of a car that has been Tokyo Police Official Declares 1,944 on the road for two or three years will Men Were Punished Last Year he apt to give better service and more in That City. efficient delivery of power if an oil is used that is heavier than the quality Tokyo.—The Japanese are the most which was originally indicated for it. Cruel people in the world In their MICHAEL KALENIN treatm ent of animals, according to a metropolitan police officiai, quoted in th e Jlji. The Tokyo police last year admon­ ished several thousand drivers for cruelly treating their animals and 1,- 944 men were punished. Officials and private societies are endeavoring to inculcate the idea of kind treatment of animals. 1 - - - December Subscription I Bargain Oifer Tyre Nik:* Free Tube with every Mason-Cord at Leedom’s Tire Hospital Mule Lived on Water in Wei, Four Weeks Four* weeks ago, H. T. Stew­ art of Pelser, S. C., placed a mule in a pasture. The mule disappeared. An advertisement was place«! In the papers, after a vain search had been made, but to uo avail. A few days ago the mule was found in an old well in the pas­ ture where he had been four weeks and fout- days. A block and tackle was brought into play and the mule was brought to the surface, still alive hut a little thin on Its diet of water. .« Michael Katenin, President of the Russian soviet republic, delivered an address to peasants and soldiers dur­ ing one of his many tours of the provinces. Kalenin was a farmer and tool maker before the revolution. He has long been associated with the radical movement in Russia. « $1.00 Profit Christmas Sale atl Orres Tailor Shop| now on. Don’t Miss It. " T h e V P est's G re a t N a t i o n a l M a g a z in e T h e West s G re e t N a t io n a l M a g a i» » A ugust it in T hfB flfcase a Story Wùey F p SBE c Blame m A H fx Smut HoJ t É Los A ate’eaO j S f e t W ay? SUNSET, as its slogan im­ plies, is the representative m onth­ ly magazine of the W est—n a-‘ tional in its circulation, W estern in its point of view. Clever short stories; serials that hold your interest from one month to the next, form a part . of every issue. 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