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\YOUR FATHEfil — ^ ~ l| hfai tlithw] I anJ- living' with - raotbmr. on Om.wAr . .n p we r i y -ka «w tlw-WKwwia wo \A s hr, t nipkctl b a^k p ror ~th^ yr nrg. “ he p™Sa “ nimseBf polpSer3n5~tE? “ pt>n- I f,-tJ*jo mrvt<ttAr'4 lift* 4n. -the ,.. b&ob ; rtr»r, P.earihun.Wr — ihs jWftr .'twaw %• hitr^-lnarn# fMrn . lw! pan 'it the »tdry ml h«r «ad Kfe Xfm tadtal' If Intfjrtfiraed , 6? a trnriai ft of couithim* anVl he hur- H w M ticV w to w i . H t ^.>ap*- th .»t *£- ’ tarrSm He- nfeets' ' a yannK jBrl Whom he 'mentally' chrttrtfM the -Wild Rooe.' She eludes: him be* fore he c ‘ aA make her ■fcijoaint 1 *' aoee. ' A Vacant ccrbln on t|he shore has- Wi^raeted the ' attention of the alUfK woman, and they mown Into rt. Their first meal I* Interrupted by a atramrer who tesenf* ..thatr preaenre. ’Th s ^ j-outh dri ves th e man from their home. Hts pres.- enew I has erranKeTy affected the ' mother. That night tne yotith finds wtthtn'a taussel .the Jjargest pearl - -ttot - haa b e a n foun d oa. the, rty^pr,. the Bluet Moon. ’ trndftrtlOTW nt his tnoHiet!3 Hfhyin the.. ' ugtit \ «f 1 siliie- * toi'i- jus\ .Jutilrteard 1 ttfcit; memorahio nYrernbon — *tTie refinement In , the midst of; mean s«rro«ndIn(p»v the- stern pride that' had held her “ ^ipg^' CT Tr e T >^>q a fe , : 'af . 'y '' had. mayhap, been long repbntetl. The mack and stiine ,bf the .river had never smudged her,- Through it '^li slid had kept as pure, as whfte, as A: flake -of snow- — and an cold. ‘ What air.y*n caf^atin't* do with them wild roses here In th r tumbler in the w in de r ke ep ' etn —’ r -ehnrir-'em- out? I ray n't find but pne more tumbler. ” - . ' - ' ' .The 'voice of -the old Boss half, - bittidf.r: fffvul't ;tn\ ntfseh the ttd-'-ai ’ rtrht tofnjtdt- fff the thsti. So far. the trunk had .priVen up nothfnr. -He was stHl nameless. * \Yhat If 'this, too, 'shoald /KI ts L- *?*- r TTTTrTTtC jf At st ,the PejtrThpnter ro (wyt , the lid — rsbme hnlrrj clothew, jilean and neatly j folded ; a plain (gold ting wrap per I In a handkerchief of the finest cambric; and, under alh a plc- ture — -what the Imn-Orny-Womnn must have been In. her girlhood, -lie - s n a te h e d.lt nt». . car r tel -it- to the- light of the door and looked long upon It. • Aftep n tjme he came hack to the trunk. The satihwmoif ' h ox - ; was ther ♦= .CHAPTER 11-^Contlnued. “ That .pearl's Int.it'ely- too valuable to take, chances on.'' liejnuttered, lay ing VaCcoat ih the bow. with tfse shot- (faa aerma it. giving-the final shave to the boat .-and leaping In. “ I reckon Tl! .fist 'stick around till y ’ u git It to — til ’ bank Trrrorprr. — That; hel!-boun^r Red Ma^k. stuck up th* ■Milled th' stifFRVT the mhh' ofii'fhe TTborsfep, '1'b.e . Thst XrtlcTe ’ .InTt,. .and jt\had'tnld him j picture In it. n- I. fJr:nt ' ’ gruff old fellow bad never left him, night, or day. , • ' The Pearlhtjntcr had forg&ttcn him. thn Tumplei}. house, the dishes, every thing. . Her -lifted hitt — face from- hands, rose, and entered the cabin. nothing, lie laid the jolctui placed the baby, clothes , and rinjr. etnagd the box am! put It back. He. even fook a sorf.of melancholy srttis- f ee tlon — In — repiaoiug,- wide . etmijed; neatness, the- glove. - the dress and 'The Boss ‘ was'^intlng to'fnree ’ WTIVT' 'ofhlr artfclcs, after ‘ which- he ’ closed roses — a red, a pink.«-a White- — in, a tumbler of water in the window. the lid, locked It. {iockete«i the key; mid turning to the w indow, stood.'star-' ...itageaUi5mJJi::Tiv-er.'Jnstjwe.f;kv_Ypur Tn air ypeym wbtCd B«* huts. V hla'i ; an' .we. did make A right smart -fdss .^ben J > ’ u found It.\ . ' ' - ' j ■He» shifted the “ six-shooter In his' i pocket from between the edge of the r •cut and .hly hip, picked up th'e shot- j . gnh and Ks&znlned the caps on the tubes. m ' ^3^X^r v alkli!Ua.-. : .-abditfc. thege-neut--j The vlsioii'the Pearlhtmter had.seen Ipg out over the river, ' . on the rock at the .pool came again, j : He was still a m an wl th ont a name. A vision — It had been Just that, only J- . T] h » Boss' stepp^d-.back from' the | tiiAt; atl exquisite picture' flashed.be-'I 'door. ' A fagd.and;InsIanUy . 3tiiHclied. p.; In'this avaTlcimvi woridl He delib# ately picked; IH iyp and tbrust lt.ln^p ly's pocket- • , | It v was a distinct affront. Blood ha»l run In the Flatwoods for less. The .man facing hini started.; flushedT^bla right hgnd dipped toward his hip. ...■.l'lic_Ht-axiluinte£'a liody heaime 111 iron efectfified; his eyes'Tikp flecks of steel in the.- fircglow. His hand, had closed upon the pistol,bai(tt,w r hlle the :hrrmt “ was atill ond f s wayv ' he kissed. \Draw 1.' Td give the Blue Moon If you would There ’ s n twenty-year-old score to set tle between;your blood and mine ! ” • A dead, hu»!j fell.. The more sober men of the crowd jammed- -door* arid,' Windows,- others huddled 1 g gft l ti s t . the walls.; some had dived under the ta- ’ bres. It was a moment of ;kpen ten sion. -Not a man hreathed. . - Ttieline between life .an'Xdeatlii is a. hair ilne when two gumuen stand face to face. The chances are split almighty fine, • 'Tlta'~'Mnn-1n--the-F an c r »Ye««t-rHwl-t- Even - the children at play tmye trouble with their automobiles. . The pho tograph shows Jack, the drlvert and his two p(aymates^trying to solve the dla- grrnrrgcmgnt of mftcbl n e r y nnrie rt i e a t h -hi s car. — ? — — r — ' ■ ---------- Many Small Adjustments -Are Needed to Remove Play an d fnsure Smoothness. AtfTOMOBttE-B UM P E ft BSEFtfe .Ingeniously Made ■ to Act as Lifting ..... Jack amh Lock— rru'ustration. . . ^-. Shows Plan. 1 An ‘ nutomohile bumper which , do**-* not differ greatly from the usual forms Is ingeniously made to.act, on octa* sion. as a lifting jack and a lock, by t MieW gw*-Inventor. Tlte bwfn p« r -ka to two irarts, whjch overlap In the-center 'and are normally held by a holt Sep- 41 II JERKING HARMFUl TG AUTO away — a picture he would never see Cammed Jlx-guns that wan' t ’ , but thay ] -eayn ’ J ndtbiid'eofnerup .with a good al ’ I nca>tfir-lock when things git tight. ” | ^fhe-young man at the oars made no ; reply to th'cse remarks. He- was think- ; -ing of that bit of flaming cloth behind the chihk~n't the rabin. For a moment j - the i mn a l se e««ie on hi -m t o . tel l ~ t hr 0^ n 'S' .. Boss, but he deffidefi to keep -his own ' counsel. • - The moon had poked her rofind face. _ np aver the hills by the time tbes» landM at Fallen Bock.. The Pearl- kunter picked up the big bass ‘ and led j 1. the way to the cabin up under .the cliff. . .The* candle was stHT shining, out through the one small south .window ’ . Wifl-Coy *b«» ' moonlight n little J square of luminous yellow set in the gffas.and ragged logsr. Full of the big iews he..bore. tlVe .young man hurried op the- slope. .The pearl almost “ Beenfed to become' a creature Of sense and sympathy; to feel warm against - him.;' the luster of it tb shine through • his pocket. . ; ' . : VVhen within a few- feet of the' door ■ he hpqnl his- mother'cdugh — hissing; whistling; choky. He dropped the. fish .and darted-in at the door. -ffiw Stqod stooped In frontv of her ' chglr. clutching the table. r Her hand mAv a d o ver -tba- ciath as .if tryjag-tto. wvite.. Bipod\was _ ponrirrgrfrom her -cooutli ' and' falling to the floor. He eprang at her. She; clutched-his arm ; - hung to Mm. He would not have be lieved impossible she had such force j -.i.to- fcgr-fi'ngT'rr:.- ■ tihg-strugg'leii p3.tnfai- 1 j orta he putt away safe. ” . * As If • fhir... .statement recalled 'j [. thoughts that-.had ' strayed far?, the i i yeung'mafl reached; in his pocket and i | drew forth the, pearl, still rolled ia the J [ bit of cloth. ■ .. 1 ' The two days, of ripening and. -tb'e ; hanced its brillianee. Quietly rolling the pearl lip iq ihe cloth a gain, he left r,he cabin and, followed by the Bess,- strode - down the slop*? through . the trees to fhe^boar. and together they rpwed away toward the village. den fly decided they were yplit a little too tine. He slowly relaxed , the pose to. which the dangerous - Instant had strung him ; lifted his hand f 'Tolded his arms; turned ; leant against the bar; 'and stood coolly looking ' the other over. ^ - \ ’ ' The I ’ earlhU nter had heep FT Misfiring Reduces Power of Engine to - Such an Extent That Car Must Naturally Run ^Vith Most Uncomfortable Motion. During the last few, weeks the writer has ceceived -n great nufliher of half •[ Inrinirles fn-'.which «>waers coreptwln k(nugfilcTnal -ail'd fSDR'T''i h at\TTCe 11 caFTtlfr-Ti' TrrTr c r ks ’ -'n t - f t wr - his hand away from his hip. .. I sp eeds. 'tpoil lttott 'Ik not. only mi- \iYhen. I get ready to- leave Flat-.j comfortable for the passengers loir it woods I ’ m cxpectin' .to ask, you somoj is detriinental fo fHe car. says a writer questions — ; an;l I'm rexpectin ’ to *l>e an- in Chicago Tribune.; . The ordinary 1 mean, the,\gyp ” sweVed.\ • / j •<, His voice crisp as the snap of-sleet pree-etle*! itifrr.-- As- he ■ -up-fretS . , , p*-dH det ’ peV Tido lifs pdckel,Tfi ‘ a;iiian- the wharf into' the tpwn, the Mud ! ner - that' somehow had the effect of \ ' ' ‘ ' - • q[ s . I j upn > the one saloon of the' pkrod/u.s-j -empl, ; i S i,ing-tfie affl-.mr. , gorged a swaggering, swearing pppn- K j iation'that gathered round hint. The j • 'Boss ’ - cre.lv, camped half a mile below | Fallen Rocky and theverew of. Bull '. Slhstereoh, camped three miles above, were both there. Besides', these, • the i Obenchain, a sipall Steamer paying be- : tween flie ports of . the Wabafth. had The other shrugged his shoulders, barely perceptibly ; , Iris • lip curled in u bard smile that, curried ;!SI the force of a sneer.; but he made no answer. -With the air of a man pored nnapeak-. ahly . he' sauntered ‘ across the room to •the door, by which he had entered ; pause* 1 an instant s g lanced hack-over bin . con- gqrage mechanic sort— umiany cannot make : dia gnosis, an d - he ’ cures t l.e prpper trouble; come in that moriung, Bringing utlier y j,,- s sl!oui,der; tossed up hi 'river men. ': - j temptnouily ; passed our, and closed ' Caught in the swirl of the crowd. ! the door • ' th onTy ’ afttdv he' lias r.ukeii' rife oilr half apart. If ’ your car bucks, and, yott cannot determine the cause aftm* read- l ing this article, have a competent | service man, drive the car. { A car*ln perfect ' mechanical condl-. I. tloti-throughout 'will 'throttid down to j five or four or even three: miles ah | hour and pull-evenly, but let there be j misfiring ’ and- Immediately the whole ca rstarts th' j er k:~' Tlie : n itgfirL n g; s d i re s duces the- power of ,-t hv engine- and ’ pro dudes such lapses ' In the ' power im- Pearl&uhter. and his companion .. . .- . _ . . i Bur,-for ail his easy . acting;- tt did j with a jerkv..motion. This appltes fd ,yre swept .into the Mud Hen. A hun-j not escape'the.dVarlhr.nter; that the m ne w or. o|«i- -When- fsm T 10 h t0 ‘ ' ‘ ^7 nlf I b,De ln hLs eyes waA brack * '.' > ever\the engine cannot develop enough laid upon the-imr where nil c.ouhi-file j _____ ■ . , . .. e . ■ r L ■ by. and. see. It., There, fell a few min- - -------- - — ■ — ■ — : — • — -------- - — > — c -Frequ'entl-y it is necessary for the car own e r* who- < Joes-.-M y; o wn- - ret?atr wock- t'o file a piece of cast Iron that has: been subjected to friction and s<> has pulsis thaF the car must hnturallyxun f.acquired a. glaze or skin.. The best' '■i \The A, htd mb hit h , -HumcT r Ham'TflT^ Which Is.Shown at the Left, Is Seen at the Right; Used. a s k'JScJtl \ “ ‘ arated and swung to -a vertical posi tion, they become Jacks, actuated, by a [ handle carried in the tool'box. When, the car is jacked up ft nmy be-locke*l -HtT-HhHr-p ’ erd hin . — ■I '*opu lar Mocli.i nu ;?,- - Alagazine. - v * JF: FILING. INTO SKIN SURFACE if New File Is Used It As Liable.to 9e Ruined- — 'Old One. Apsyye.rs • ' the Purpose. Herjfland.- Mo ved -OVer-the Cloth as if , Trying to\ Write. . ly to, choke back the 'blood; tlKW. ■trove pitifully-to speak, No word Caine- — only that awful whistling hiss- log gasp; / He, saw -the , luster die in, per eyes? — the eyes- that In their day had been 30^ w onde rful. They were . trying hard to tell him soraethlnf — words her lips wore not able.; td .frame. He strove to read their mes sage. ■ In vain! There .came a. last gasp ; her . body suddenly stiffened, quivered, relaxed — -and he ea.di ’ d her back into the chair. The' IronASray- Tfoman was dead. • The Pearlhunter. raise*! hep hands to T-rcr*<* thefti on her tap. Some ol)- .ject fell from the lax fingers to the floor. - It was a soldier ’ s glove, stiff and mildewed with; age* . -> Turning to day It upon the table, he atood slartled and staring. His cry , brought' the old Boss to .his side. Two. words, scrawled in blood on the cloth, glared up at them : - ’ .. “ Your father — ” . There had been a, fm-tiier attempt ye write, but the. effort had. only re sulted in a scrawL hBpos ; slble td de cipher. . . V , 1 ' CHAPTER III. A Man Without a Name. The Pearlhunter sat on the ,door- >tep of the cabin,-his face bowed in “ his hands. It\ was June upim the slope under the trees; June In Wolf Ban chuckling and chirking, Along on Its way from. Spring and waterfall to the'river ; June In the heart of a car dinal v rocking upon the top twig of a tall hickory; December in thee heart' -jsf the Pearlhunter. ~ -•taniried underbrush and .in the edge ” of the grasG-cdvered open atrip that bordered the driver 1 shore, the ; „ .jjroenwa* brhkenbY-a mot^l^fftr^h' .... '-sartU. file had r I rained Ti roatrarwlfn 4 • ' Aiiellh firuught up /row the-river-; B gair t . - dt s ee med nareel - a e- h e look e d - back upon it In the tight of another day. But no, there were the roses. He beat .his face down and caught the aroma of their breath. ' “ Let them be, ” 1 Be said. ’ “ They will ^aST\a'n«rf!ifef dayi rt r ... “ 1 ! ’ ... rites of. comparative quiet while the [ hungry eyes, of the river meu wete^dqr-l vourlng it. Then followed drjnks ' all j round —at- the expense of tli'e finder; ; and — -what f^lfiuwed Is not a pidusant » task to describe. . ■ •'. • .The.Pearihnnfer. remembering-that , mound'.of - fresh earth at. Fallen ■ Rock, kept ids -head and drank but little. Thq-Boss, bn\thd .other, hand, \cut th* dog loose. ” ps .the river men say. Hv noou he was singing snatches of hajf- PeariHunter rescues .Wild ’ -Rose — — and acquainted. tTO BE CONTINUED.) The Boss-made no reply. To him j f ln 7*™ *}\ over again Coming np * to ’ where his. young friend l<*an ’ *tl they were merely faded* ro^e^L He wh . s l v ’ Z ’ ^ ^ sitting orT the\dOorstep~about toTicht* f !^ :the ' b,Sr ' ln easy ^ch of-thm K i_ . nn-,i pearl, still lying upon its bit of ckitit,' his pipe wnep the younger man called- r: , ' , . . • . , - 1 he threw an arm about his neck and him. With the, freshly filled pipe In. one hand, the -»tilighte*i match in the other, he rose and stepped ’ hack into the cabin-; ; The Pearlhunter . was standing before a small -hair-covered trunk, scarcely bigger than an ordi- ,nary suitcase of tire present day. It Stood opeh, with the lid thrown back, exactly-as If had stood two nights be fore when he came, up from the river, and found hJs mother dying. Its con- iapia “ 5eeme*i''foTpiticfl't.e~tfini: they bad\ j power to pul! its load if falters: just , ns [ a horse will tighten and; then permit ['Slack in the traces. Vo if would do the t sannr thing if you were dragging-a j heavy load. A' carbonized engine enn- j not -develop full power with a given — - ------ ’ r*-z . -- .. rSthlrottle setting. .Poor ignition, poor TIRE KNOWN BY MANY NAMEG j; carbnretian. Improper valve timing, or -* — ---- - \ - y -i -*- — ? - — .. ---------------- — r rm r-'-n hnn r ma 1 -e n r i nc - * -bm-- id- Uke-- Not In eluding What it Is Called by fbt to, reduce the p*>wer and make the '' Impatient Autoist When It ' j engine falter. It might even stall. Punctures., ' , Common Cause of Trouble. Biit apart from the' engine there are fti r g w trew w w i ra arid ' fi g hH ng : ~ t to i . A . t hing . iwhlcb tHM Iw a tire — ■■ B ay | nr . t.ELit. dtunmnn tyoghfe ‘ ' ’ TSffkefx.of the aictipAary; The first ' purpose bf the tlre was' to tie or-bOnd the Irhtel together. Ait time paared, the original meaning of*the word has been lost sight of and now the . tire been rummaged through, by some one whose haste, had been great — doubt less by- his mother: ,11 hurt him to re call the' cause of that haste. ■ The' bloodstained glove she had held In her hand lay uppermost, probably tossed there, by Ofie ’ bf the river 'men. -It's time to know whet ’ s in ..this trunk, ’ ’ . .- ■ A certain tenseness In his voice es caped the Boss. , . ■ ; \Don ’ t y'u T ” “Tve fiever seen Inside ofi lt before. ” . The Boss was fn tbe act of scraping, hie . matcb» He stopped ; -looked aro'dnd opt of the tall of his eye, but whatever his thoughts,.he made no comment, - 1 ' * .' \First of all, here ’ s this glove, ” the young man went on, lifting the glove from the trunk, . \You know where we-rrsaw 'It first. ” ' - The Boas threw, away the stub of hbi match and felt the tiroe*atained and mildewed article. \West Potat,\ he muttered. \Hit** The otheri stood conslHeriig U p laid _ -------------------------- It aside; and\ Iffteii\tHe 7 'next article from- the trunk. It proved to he a \ woman's'dress of rich brocade. Llttle tS ’ the two men#retv or imch friatrars. lea nt ha rd upon ' h i m, so t n e ihlng — he- couldn't have been, hired, to do when sober. • , “ Come ’ ere, yon fellers,. Tiiis ’ n ’ s on me, an' it's to th' Pearihuhter^ th ’ whitest man aiong th ’ Wabash — an ’ be d .. — d t' th* man what says ’ e ain ’ t P* * ' , , ’ . . ' The rabble swarmed hhouk the bar - — ail that were able. Bottle necks* gu rgte4j- glassea.eiuaked ; -red whUky. sizzled dowji hnt ‘ khn.uits ; t**w shouted; Some swore; others merely' laughed foolishly. •That . last drink was the Boss' fin ish. 'Hr wilted down-Into thy nearest chair; lurched heavily over upon a ta ble and lay. there mumbling, or laugh ing In high .\shrill key ;. occoafonalty shouting ont a mote or two of a boat ing song that had been old on. the.riv er for a quarter of a century. It was early afternoon before the Pearlhunter dared to think seriously of depositing the pearl — before river etiquette permitted him to remove It from the bar. He trleti to rally the Boss. ;A11 he got was, a further in stallment. of the Indlah ways. Half disgusted with lt«&U, he. turned back to the bar and stood leanteg his chin upon his hand. A dodr opened from another pstiri of the- building. — the Mud Heq [feeing an Inn, the only one In the place. A man entered. Crossing the floor with as little atten-[ tion td'.the crowd a* if the place had thf kind thenLubrigh wears — offleer ’ a, been deserted, he%waggi?red opto the bar -TCrhana he.aacrctly wjshed that sa&ebody w5»ia~»i£ :Th'fiTs' wayf “He bad just t'liftt aTr aBouf 'hlrh. .' cept Canada, spells ' the word “ tyre,- ” No less an authority than England's own Encyclopedia Brltannlcn Is on rec ord with theflipihlon that “ this .spetl- ing Is not now accepted, pj the best English authorities, ” yet' “ tyre ” ' peri sists. _* : ' ' • •* . \ ’ : * . [ '■ ^ . ’ r —-In — go m e : A t', the .. Spanlnh 'S p eak i ng .The .commonest' li ' dn** - to T oo - much play between the. driving pinion and t-he ’ large bevel ge ar or riog gehr h* the axle. It may, however, he due to excessive jiljiy anywhere in the driv- way 'to get through this skin is to use-* the, edge-of an old-file* K a new file is use*I dn .this sort of 'surface it is likely to he rtihred.' ' ■ ! • ' AUTOMOBILE .3 — of a .leaking water-pipe may be made- by' bfnding jxround the seat'of trouble\ several layers of .' string welMspaketi in thick oil. - ' iiJbeJ^rtj)f_tf e^hesl.whichAanrifcea.^ -tag-j ^ s t e re - fro n* the cta t eh to th e r eatr. the road and stands the' wear and tear of travel. England and her possessions. countries, such' as Chile and the Ar gentine. tires are known as “ neutnatl- civs. ’ ’ In Mexico .they are \Uanlas. ” In'other places where Spanish is the language, notably Cuba, the correct Word Is “ goma-s. ” In Brazil, WherW Portuguese Is gpoken, tjie name 1* “ pneumatieos. ” , Tire French have the short name' ‘ Xpneyis ” for. tires. ” This is a contrac tion of pneurnatiqiies. In practically all the Scandinavian ebuntrief' the -Danish word “ gummriglhger ”— rubber ring — IS used. Names. Most men of high destinies have high sounding names. Pyrp and Haba- knlt may be pretty well, but they must not (htnk to cope with the. Cromwells and Isatahk, And you could not find* better case in point than that of th* .English .admirals,. Drake and Rooke and Hawke are picked names florr men at ex ecution. Frobisher, Rodnqy, Bo*-, cawem TouT-Wather, Jack Byron are .all gooxl , to catch the eye inf a page of a nava l hlatory, Ckmdealey Shove? TE a > mg wheels. When the engine-/Is under load and pniling, all the pahs that move ale tight. This Includes engine parts — dutch, transmission', axle. They tijxiit- en like the traces tighten when a .horS*.. starts to pull and continue* to pull. So long as this pu1 1 ing continues there, will [ be no horse, because the n n rts a re tight aga Mst.-coch ,«t her. I f ' ’ ' \ '' ’ la they were-not they could ’ net pull, a car that bucks due to excessive play hi the driving system the same effect practically, may he had by slowing down .and suddenly, accelerating, Thl* may be done by 'closing the throttle suddenly at 20 , mites an hour and then suddenly opening It again.. At iow speeds, htnvever. It does n.ot require'a groat amount of extra play to cause a knock urnd the-ohject'rontthle hacking: A clutch that has a worn plate and -weak '.springs will slap against, the tlyWheel and give the buck ing effecr. A wdrn clntch shaft or worn .clutch hearing would cause It. - Shaft Mu*t Not Move. In the transmission .the .main ..shaft must not move-back and forth, .for tf It doek It will ‘ cause a knock, -though ft may nbt cause bucking.*dhe to the fact that this movement is not trans mitted to -the othei; parts' ' Universal joints with worfi [slldltlg ^ ~ trfl TiThr-vmr : vtso • rmrr srmre ?tre- last?' If It's been a long time, take ic ' off tli'e hack end of your car and give, it some service. Too much rest 1* harmful to it. ‘ : Where castellated . nut* aqd cotter pins, are riot \iippU-*>d in automobile construction,'well-tempered spjit wash ers may be placed under the beads of the bolts to keep them ’ from, rattling loose ' • ' * ’ - Tbe-car owner who intends to do any repainting work will do well to. see' t hat ail exposed oil-holes are [ stuffed wttir their being painted oyer choked. . and so l A good way to prevent oil leaking out of the crank case through the bolt boles Is to back off the studs a quar ter of an inch or So, arid then wind ■Several turns of cotton twine around tire bolts. - . • / Don ’ t use gasoline to clean leather unless, you want to crack It Plain wa ter with a few drop* Of ammonia will remove the dirt, after which the Uphol stery should, bevlubbed briskly with a soft cloth. ' 7 ?' the - ♦- .members or woiji . baiblngs, v or _ , apldera .wrtr catuwi bucking.' If <be sliding shaft l b not wo rn play else- ’ and not noticed cxnem ns ati occilsiori- Sedlment In time will collect in the bow of the carburetor, and from -time to time the drain cock in the bottom *hould.be opened to rid the Instrument of, any foreign , particles which may have accumulatetl. , ..■: A good many motorists hold tliat' » few lemtpobnftjia.of ^anatured alcohol suuTrtifd Into .tBSTartrodero when tiiey ’ The'' fast' for T a co6|jle. of. roinu'teg', 1!* beat carbon remover .fib be bad. • -The hitcb-doiro ’ *e v * n i erg e ivc y-Wito — - lever* are eal.itfd opop . tor . pretty, sireiiu.oua service oo dccasiop nod tiipy ’ i The Peerthnnter heard the doer open; [ felt the bush that Ten — -the hush that always fall* upon the rob- 1 *yiraTiTviir''B wmnw i»af ytmriffiriipnraF tty that salts the man ’ * character, and -e nrchiihi, the Iddy ’ s-slipper of the it Impresaed even' them _ as being of r ble at the comba* of'a Masterful jpireri the . very finest material* and of fln- lahed ' w oritmansbip. tJniier At lay eoce. He turned. Ms eyes slowly tor ward tbe newcomer. HM! nerve * 11 w«e as steady as the woods make .them) '. T / Vlatwoods t»iey-weroi like, her, ’ the , other - art ides' of w omen ’ s wear, Ml- as steady a* the woodi w B ts'wst A iMt a ' ’ «•\ .,1.'.. -; T r . ~ : y- '\[' ' ..... • j--.- ... - ;'i ‘ *»' - ■ — ’ w w .pt x . .i »e»e «« w w w»i w * '• . It takes ns hack to those English arcb- erxiwto Were htt tm coranntes for plainness, tenacity atod pludk. • Ba- ieigh is spirited arid martial, and tig- Tmaa an an uf ibu i d i - uudubt rrm field. ... .. — c ’ VIrglailbiu Puertwia*/ ’ pvvOf-'agaiast-i ay.. 1-pnlA Utavonaae-.-... • , 'U sl knoak. Yn the ca^e fit ^Ire wheel* It often^ happen* tinn th e ,wh eel driving mem bers iiorenie 'voni, giving tile sain€f df- ' feet as ’ though, there were play, fn the differentlnb 1/ a »wir?? [wheel la not tight In place Tt-will slap stihv^ays ana this briockifig often-is [mistaken. ’ /or s buc Kt iiyrTOr^ ff ; ' t*> have a spare latch ring in the tool -