Yesterday while at the grocery store I found a set of car keys in, of all places, the tomato bin. The key ring had one of those Lock and Unlock gizmos on it, was a Toyota car, real nice car with leather seats, etc. So I took the key chain out to the parking lot and tested every Toyota car until I found the one the keys belonged to. Then I copied down the tag number and had the store page the owner of the car. He was an Oriental young man who burst into tears when I handed him the key ring. He didn't even know yet that he had lost them. I gave him a good sermon about being careful with the keys to such a valuable investment, about how someone honest had found the keys when someone dishonest could just as well have found them, then I told him I was an ex-convict and he should learn from this incident that just because a person is an ex-convict doesn't mean they are currently dishonest. I had a great deal of difficulty in getting away from him. He was so thankful someone had returned his keys instead of stealing the car. He cried, hugged me, shook my hand a dozen times, clung to my arm asking if there was anything he could do for me in appreciation, offered to mow my lawn, give me a reward, have his wife clean my house, WOW !!! I finally managed to drive out of the parking lot with him walking along the side of my car all the way expressing his thankfulness. I myself would have been devastated if I had of lost a car of that quality. It was really a nice car. Wasn't a limo, but it was sure a nice car. Jack Childers in OKC International Society of BlackSheep Genealogists http://www.gbnf.com/genealogy/childers/html/surnames.htm "I've traveled a long way and some of the roads were not paved" Jaxone1234@msn.com