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THE SUNDAY STAR; WASHINGTON;, D. O, SEPTEMBER 25/ 1921=PART 1. ; 3 lwedde«l life. Between them they md]ut need.'It one is looking for-a schemye | Tralle, H. E. Story-Telling Lessons. WOMAN CL I jVG S TO $750 . e - > ground him to powder—Martha, under | by which his brand-new house may be | IPS-T68ss. 000 YARD __DAUNTLESS DEPARTS. ! : e SO CAT CAN HAVE PLACE TO PLAY perament. Up to forty, love had been | nest of greenery behind his .house, trict of Columbia. XIU859-Un30p. brought home for bu 1 the bodi his' yoke and his hire. And the out- | Where at present a hand's breadth of |U. 8. Education Bureau. Salaries in u"x': fifme: ,:mfi;lc:l‘l:“\'ifllm.\' of 28 ; : come of the matter, according to Owen | cement is adorned by an ash can and Universities and Colleges in 1920. ZR-2. ailed fo doo. MY BROTHER, THEODORE ROOSE- | greater distance that his position and { Gawne, was that “the wages of love.|a garbage pil, here is more than one| . IQT-Unis. ¥ 2 i o |ZB:2 has siled for Tondon VELT. By Corinne Roosevelt Rob- | many-sided service imposed. From|is death” Olive Salter's story is an!way of securing this. And, in between | U. S, Education Bureau. A School W YORK, September 24.—A who owned a building on | inson. Illustrated. New York:|any standpoint, Mr. Roosevelt Is a|astonishingly, an unblushingly frank|these two extremes of gardem project Building Program for Gloucester, |, Woman who owns a yard facing way just below Timcs square ‘ y g L 7 Gt il ted c ipulations that [{{a * € abise Seribut s Sona: Bgeat American. This book empha- | revelation- of — the husbangsnip . of | there is & wide range of suggestion Mass. TUSA-Un30. Ae(y Haot on Sihl avetue atiastl, | an ol o . Tyt HIS b wTheodore Roose- | X2 Alo that he Is a great famlly|Owen Gawne, first to Martha, whojand Instruction. A list of seasonal!U. S, Education Bureau. Statistics of : i mone 0L Hie UroRDentIN S e l oon . eodore - | man—his wife and children, his broth- | divorced him, and then to Mary, who |Shrubs and other piants helps definite- i Normal Schools. 1 v. 1Q-Undzs | SLTe€t, In the center of the city's | Would 1ease It to Cettil Outs ~alt's Letters to His Cidldren” | ers and sisters, his father and mother |left him to go away with another man, | 1y. “The book Is Informal in manner, & | U. S. Education Bureau. A Survey of | Mout fashionable shopping dis- e I s b v 3 b Scand - * ~lass By themselves. | —these form the institution from|And through these years Owen Gawne | readable book, as well as one that is Education In Hawaii. 1U161-Un30. | trict, refuses to sell it because her ST = & 29 . whose least loyalty and obligation he phabet to zylophone dealers, skip: Bouethas it RSy yalty and o dled, a little, every day. Martha ,designed as a text book on: the sub- |U. S. Education Bureau. Survey of thei ca¢ % 1ay g &y ? business that ogether they ceveal cerlaim|never stepped aside. That Is fine. 8o quietly did away with the artist in|ject fn hdnd. Sahools: lof. Rranawick. and jof] CAL s fofhavers place ol PIAYC |l BIE B0 ToN L Res L I e er deep-down traits that'a man's public | much is said in public of the sanctity | him and evoked a business man whose = Glynn County, Ga. IU867-Un30. in* The property is worth about none would take the place. Jita Is 1ikely to overlay and conceal | Of the family as an institution. Mr. | success was who! : THE LIGHT OF A BABY'S SMILE:|y g 1 s Gas o are0io0n il llentate Just above the Times square | i s ¥ to overlay and co wholly her own.. Mary U. 8. Education Bureau, Statistical Di $750,000, according to real estat . i iR B O he | Rooseveltexemblified the Teality of | brought back the artist and then| ABd Other Rhymes. By William ™ “yigion' Statistical Survey of Edu- | section of Broadway an aged c ogether they complete bete.* the| his theory. Then, Theodore Roose- | tore it to. pieces. with the ferocity | Tibton Talbott. Wachington: Ter-i cation, 1917-18. 1K83-Unds men. ! property owner had a vacant five- 1 rid Mr. Roosevelt in his own.true | velt stands here &lso as the grea:!of her moods The unflinehing story| _Minal Press Company. U, aslon, 1917-18. 1K83-Unds, |1 The dollars paid on it cach year | story building that an automobile character. On the other hand, they | frlerd—unquestioning, staunch. invi- | deals, chlefly. with that inner man-{ This is a book of homegrown Vinion. Statistios of Public High| I taxes would. if stecked doltur | sales house wanted to leass. Tho Absolutely Firsis terve to inspire and ensich the com. | SU.Pl ‘0 fricndship. A beautiful book | and-woman relation to which even in- | Verses-just literally that. The author Schools, 1917-18. 1US3-Un3s. on ddzry, make a hurdico nal fto.s | pancre were dLAWE BB 3 o that is nound to take its’ place sub-!thnate family self r & 3 be sneercd at by anything short the interested parties had gath- F¥e ta : ! i mate family manifestations stand as | himself proudly admits that he is @ Veblen, T.E. The Higher Learning in d L : ol tomobil patriots of this big, #1l-American man. | stantialiy "2 the full story of Mr.!a remote and intangibia clreumfer-|"dy e d-in-the-wool Weehingtonia America, 1918. IX83-V495h ofle col whish anped secr the | efed 1o sign M Ehe Qe The book in hand is a storehouse of | Rooseveit's iife, and certainly a book | ence. A corner of Sussex, inti and many of the poems arz purely lo- | Wells, M. E. A project Curricylum. o o e e s put o mios e Tnerdent anid episode. of whien Mr, |12 ehdear him nore and more to his | projected. surrounds this famity cal in sourde and inspiration. There IP-W166p. 2 e O T e [ e e a0t The i A e S A countrymen, and to the worid. i family itse!f is the common pattern|is a sonnet to Washington, and one to |Wilsom, G. M., and Hoke, K. J. HOW to| o take a prize at a cat show. G er laid” down his pen and GEO v GREEN s v MARTHA_AND MARY. By Olive Mary | 0f that Institution. Out of it emerges Jefferson and one to the ciiy itself. | Measure. IKI-W696h. Other — weaithy people have | said no electric slgns were go- | . V. man—is .he center. And, intoresting- Slren New York: E. P, Putnamy| the woman—predatory, devouring. |Irs at e talv it e Woody, Thomas. Fuerstenschulen in{ civen strange reasons for refus- | ing on top of his building. The The Tire Man ] 1y, thes; are merely more simply and | Son. it B i}:‘lng::]_v To:oponul 2. fo:‘m Xl:& hc‘l;fll’o shed v R :)ermany After the Reformation. ing to sell business district prop- ! deal was not closed fl‘pd the buiid- m lm s N w % more intimately that which the 2 ) th and M —the a | insd roper instinct, since The stas of Washington ' K47-W878. X erty which was eagerly sought by ing remained empt or six years, treet W, s A T i i the upner andlis for her to carry om. That i8 her |sireets arc causht here in more than Wray. W.J. and Ferguson, R. W., Eds.| many buyers. Some time ago 2 | when the owner dfed. man himself looked to be from the nether millstone of Owen Gawne's. [b and this Is her kit of tools. ere in more than D . Land Beranaon, B ——{iha or Mcry, it matters not which. | pa D racyn ot Work. 10-W$26. —— { The man is, by comparison, a shadowy | qung. Meunt Pleant .,‘;L'i:“e‘,‘i.‘:;:'{.‘f; 7evERYTHINGY ol MOTORISZ i thing—a coward, a compromiser, held - .o ! : Sweet Auburn® There is a group 3 jon sufferance, a part of the kit of of children’s poems. Among them, this tools. This s Owen Gawne, Who, al;tender choones -Jack —just n. dear forty, for the first time saw Dromise'rhyme about a little girl and | since’ he was for the first time, since | “nicest dog—we call him Jack. new version of “man and.superman.” | many sad ones—and a considerable| Commissions were presented last| ¢ O" l"“‘ his early youth, free. A plain, Stronz | These are wad verses—htppily. ot i+ [ | CONQUEST. By Gerald 0'Donovan, au. | Pumber that have, upon one occasion | Tuesday L - - ! 4 ,, T B D noyam, Ay | and another, found piace in the Wash- m:’m’:m"t'e:"'f 4 four °";°,": IM . ! p was J“ft the York: G. P. Putnam's Sons. ington papers. One enjoys the friend- ct National Guard by Brig.| i 7 site of i 4 |15 spirit of these poems, and their | Gen. Anton Stephan, commanding the | . opposite The Irish novel. in its recerft free | iranquil outlook upon a world that| - by | cutput, is stiffening into formula. The | ; aE e corid. |Buard. The men who received com- - 1 t is, after all, a very beautiful world. . an j20vel in hand x 2 cage In DoInt. Froin | Fo verse Ts Wit verse lkes v be, |Missions are: Maj. John W. Ochmann | i T“E AllON : various starting points and throughione is sure. It keeps step with an |and First Licuts. William F. Jorgen- | NON_ various lines of development. the¥|inner tune, it falls into the rhymes | | oPRIGHT Bv € C GIMBELL { join. finally. upon a common objective. I; T diwhlch imoAt Varas asteionL 1y |aor Clarence/S-Bhieldstand Robert G ‘And this objeciive is the unrightzous- i gy 5 ¢ o | MacCartee. J 3 t E d 2 i makes charming little pictures and} - SKID : pemio ngland itowirdiTreland and : j; touches the kindly and Lentle cor-| Maj. Oehmann has been in command g the Irish ‘people. ‘Thoe: most favorad |rers/of the Neart. of the 1st Battalion of the Engineer { plan Is to take the Irish hero when he | "¢ iis young, to furnish him with an in- {fHE HEART OF A WOMAN; 4 --.linrglmen\ of the guard, and Lieut. % “ ks s, ‘Lred iking for and, to educatc| Other Poems. By tivocgia Douglas | 5 5 Just What the Name Signifies s ! Tatroduction by William o reensen wes assigned to Company . him at English schools, to launch hiin ! Johnson. 31 Discount on 3 /0 FORD Sizes n_the English service. That service Strnley Braithwaite. Boston: The|C. Lieuts. MacCartee and Shields 3 0 Discount on . © Other Sizes is then used to convert the hero, tc Cornhill Company. havé not yet been dssigned to any face him resolutely toward the un | This poet has journeyed far enough | specific organization. happy and victimized and crucified is- {552 the way to realize that dreams In presenting the commissions Gen. land where. thereafter, he devotes g, not come true, that there is no pot' Stephan spoke particularly of the himseM, in heroit fishion, to the re-lof gold at the end of the rainbow.long service of Maj. Oehmann, who demption of the land. This, in sum, iS: And this is the common tune she sings | has served in the guard since 1599, the story in hand. Along with 8|5 sne rests, midway, looking around {und of the faithful and efficient serv- main Issue is a deal of Irish charac-, ang backwaerd, upon the wide flelds of ice of all the officers in organizing ter and Irish scenery and Ir eneral disillusionment. Bach little |and maintaining the present engineer tom. Along with it, too. is a summary, | S50 o Uishment, the giving | units. finaily, of the political situation, that | y"& 5 L Y0 RSl T e buoyancy | !is, of the situation as it looks 10 this |0y’ courage with which one sets out| Company S, Engineer i Trish writer. This is an interesting | ¢ OURES Tg 0 fure of being alive. | commanded by Capt. Harry E. jnovel. Its characters have the ¥ich'my.re js no struggle here. no resist-|man. which has staged an intensive Irish flavor. They talk well. They -, nce to the inevitable—just an open- | recruiting campaign during the pasi make love enjoyably. They eat and 5., 0f the hand to let go of the shin-{few weeks, has practically a ed - . {talk and talk and eat, almost envia- in. peads of promise that life drngles | its goal of ninety men. Seven men uarantee 8 000 M[Ies bly. Fine as a novel, Showing anijp.fore the young. There are fifly of | were enlisted last Tuesday, bringing > £ imaginative and waywise handling . ¢joe 1jtile songs, each a fine bit of | the total strength of the company up AT ? : i that interests one. As a political doc anship-all biping plaintive | to elghty-seven. Members of Company .5 Absolutely first quality, massively over- jjmment. into ;\;l;’!:ch 1t more tHan ence e's futilities and unfulflll- |C are now to assist in recruiting - A = e s likely to . it is. of course, ) | Company B to full strength. A i~ size, hand-built. You get 8,000 miles or a [onc-sidea afrair. Hapgils nuwe\-e:‘.]“‘*"‘” \E sromigs, | beT Of men who seived 1 the District} f i Ao o+ lthere is enough of good story and ! THE MARY CATHERINE § otipany B The @ e e National Electric Supply Company adjust- | ripe char:eterization to make one| By Frank Carlos Grifith. Ny G ;'i,,:,',“zdfi,','.fn,"ngf,'H ment | torget, or forgive, the inset of politi-| This handful of sketches revives an [have entered Company ¢ | | eal propaganda. {old acquaintance—that between Mary Twice List e — . i g uar- Size 5 THE OFFENUER; And His Relations Li}*flf!nrfi Scownion, a:‘:a‘:‘-fi:" ‘;;:lk et Do Gnur‘rlrrg:u: o Price to Law and Society. By Burdette | €Tine at three and four ant Ave SE00 ine 110th Field Artillery during the | anteed. C. Lewis. A. B. Introduction by |&cross a bridge, sixty years lo! e | I [ e 3 22 e o |woman goes to meet the little giri who | War, has again taken up the matter 9 | George W. Wickersham. New York: goe: 3 i B X By the 30x314 S 3 “utands as real and vivid as If no years | of Feorganizing the lst Battalion of makers oo SR +ac all stood in between. The playtime | the 110th from among former mem- £ 31x4 \ At one time commissioner of cor-'gf 411 children the world over, with | bers of his organization. Col. Herron; and our- | A supersize i rections for the eity of New York. and inis one small girl curiously distinct |€xbects to have witn him in_the re-* 4 1 30 "s ; 1 $29.90 | $19.93 \later state commissioner of Institu- ‘i the midst of it, is rehearsed in these ofganized units the former officers of selves. 8% L itions for New Jersey, Mr. Lewis aD-!epiodes. The dozen sketches came |the District’s units in the 110th. Clincher ~ Only ‘yrcadches thin " discussion” from the | 0 RrSL ag stories 1010 10 3 BToUD OF | 1 toiiouing Tren enlisted in the | 314, QI standpoint of the practical administra- ; 5 o) v en enlisted in the Ask to 32x31% S8 39.09 | 27.36 | [Tor0r departments devoted to. the |jmiaren. THUR they found place In 2 | District Guard during the past week: 32x4 SS 4812 | 33068 | !stuay and treatment of offenders:ieaton up in Maine. Now they make |Albert L. Sinclair, Martin H. White, Seea 38x4 sS 59 jagainst law and society. The book iS.{yp this little book -that has been is- ,fiugy A S:’eeny, Jack R. Coff. John | 49.5 34.71 in sum. the embodiment of this practi- * gijed as a memorial to Mary Catherine, | Beck. Albert J. Kunbeldzis, Joseph 4/ Cross 84x4 SS 50.88 | 35.61 | |cal experience. It ix. moreover, &i\hose comprehension of her own M. Owens and Ernest L. Graves. i . 32x41% SS 1 7 i comprehensive wreatment” These tWO | childhood has made her so endeared a Ve Section X4 o 54.42 | 38.09 points fit it for immsdiate widespread | ¢he0d % other children. lse. A thread of history shows thel | changes of attitude in both liw and | e R 33x415 SS 55.66 —Can be bought through 34x415 5 S8 57.09 society toward e delinquent ciass | Wrlces. 33x5 SS 73.42 nd mekods of handling the delin- AN 4| S — | Quent, a characteristic that places the SUPERIOR CORD 35x5 75.90 | etudy’ into the hands of those agen-|{ The following list. arrznged by sub- DEALERS Cies that are charged with the care of | jects, inciudes some of the latest ad- i Under the heading “The | ditions to the Public Library. . of Crime” the author WL B EREX 1724 14th St. N. W., Washington, D. €.* i makes an interesting and an fllumi- { Books on Education. NORTHEAST BA STERLING GARAGE ....... NAVY YARD AUTO SUPPLY CO. NATIONAL TIRE WORKS CURRY AUTO SUPPLY CO. MODEL TIRE SHOP. PURDY & HERBERT. R. H. PALMER GARAGE. e UNION STATION AUTO SUPPLY CO. BIEVON NASH MOTOR CO F. M. SHREVE .. HYMAN BROWN VIRGINIA AUTO SUPFLY CO... % ‘COME INTO THE GARDEN. ByiClark, T. A, Discipline and the Dere- LYNN MeDOWELL ......... : Gracs Tabor, author of “Thé Gar-| et 1X-C17d ROEAT ; y1.ETC ‘ 5 den Primer,” ete. Illustrai rom A chool Boy an FLETCH7: BROS. GARAGE. ........201 Tennesses Ave N. E.. Wacalngton, D. C. e e i e Mae £ 3 oot | e DISTRIBUTORS millan Company. College Entrance Examination Boord. . 1000 12th St. N. E.. Washington, D. €. ! nating study of certain fundamental 1741 Johmsen Ave. N. W.. Washingtes, D, €. |social forces—the church, the home, | Averill, L. A. P kc‘“’“’“y for Nor- L P mai Schoois. “IKI-Av3ip. 1015 §th S¢. S. E.. Washington, D, 0, | the school. the community eenter, rec- | o B SCR00s: JRAITIR,, 0 reation, health and sanitation, togeth- r | a3 ik Bt & E. Waaingten. D. 0. | [T5 (i the eftect upon. the organized [ of High Schools, IQT B3z | : ‘ : Sordihdge it ngton. D. C. | 0)ice supervision of the city or com- | Berkowitz. 4. H. 3 p £ Goed Hope Road, Washiagton D. C. |\ monwealth. For special lines of ef-| . Schod Children. 1R’ ! --..9th & M Ste. 8. E., Washington, D. ¢ | fort. concretely worked out, the ap- ’lllfrl s \.e ‘1’(‘)‘[1’5-:' = § - 950 Barry Place N. W.. Washingten, . C. | pendix to this volume is of high value. | = slon Movement. JOBMITL (o o 1 5 ) H ~ ® J 16 Maes. Ave. N. W., Washington, . C. | The whole is a sane and conservative e 1 t 5t | document drawn off from a large body Curriculum. 1PC-B64ge. : - ssive help. | Burgess, M. A. The Measurement of £ fact.,in a spirit of progre: D B Chiaiting. . 16-Boiom W. R ; Burgess, . “Trends of School {ackislineed. Costs. 1KS83-B913L. i fulness to an important individual and | A text book for the gardener—and, Annual Report, 1901-20. 3 v. IX83-; | nowadays, pretty much everybody is! = C687. i i | emulating ~the " day when "Adaml“"’k“-“ . K. M. C.. and Deffenbaugh, - ~ { [ delve in his own garden patch. ibility of Consolidat- | As a garden .book that is bent upon ing hools of Mount Joy = helpfulness should do, this one keeps: S .’\dflms‘ County, Pa. 3 close to the ground with simple work- | _ L A § able plans, with definite instructions, | Cope. H. F. Education for'Democracy. and with advice that is drawn off K=C793e. from personal experience. More than | Craddock, E. A. TS The LIGHT-SIX is built complete in conditions and because of its enormous- this, the book meets a ide variety | public. IPD-C843. i 4 = % % o > » e e Ciki1 om0 OF B the most modern automobile plant in production and standardized methods st Ezaucation. - TK11.Co0Br-. the world, designed especially for the of manufacture, Studebaker is-able to {Deftenbaugh, W. S., and Muerman, J.C. . > e Ftant . i A ‘ .‘A;:lilrlr:‘l;ésé;%ggr’anldpglf%grs\élslon of \ productlon of this car. make i1mportan .sawmgs—t lese sav- DeteinaEn W B | Stgle Tl e DL " wel o ings are reflected in the price of the car \ lachian Mountains. TUS3-DIs4s. Studebaker manufactures in this plant ¢ you 5 L 0 you. e and Conventions ot Mechan- its own drop forgings; its own castings : Ci . S. E A i s % ’ S b. , 5 . i e . SIS LS stampings, . motors, -axles, transmis- The LIGHT-SIX is a real step forward n ampings, ; : : : e e ¥ . L . . . : in automobile engineering. No other : ; L e sions; its own steering gears, springs g1 B e e Ao Chis ek 7 3 d S% light, six-cylinder automobile yet pro- L s Dl s bodies, tops and other vital parts. ght, six-cy ile yet p Flnn‘se[;f;‘R], 1" The American Public : duced has a motor so free from vibra- Foster. H. H. Principies of Teaching Under these favorable manufacturing tion, nor so flexible and powerful. Froonan oL Kivern Eroaentary [ ol Practice. IP-F873m. 5 L cwnil L, Beorions il e What you should know . 5 i e Hollln‘{kw;:rlsh.yrfl» Lals‘cnmie?y?i?_ . about the LIGHT-SIX W i o . ogy of Subnorm: A - 'Contnb‘}t}ng ma large measure to t.he " [Hudson . W. The College and New FPower— 40 H. P, in a detachable-head motor of parts or four parts and find that each secuion unique position of Cadillac today is its America. IXsIHGL great flexibility, remarkably free from vibration, would weigh the same. ' Such perfect balance eight-cylinder enginé, the only multi- ‘:"::,’;“::‘.igk, gg%figfi?fié"fifgiu :f‘:a?t ‘::ith the exclusive Studebaker inclined valve g:_ei::esfiagdy road-holding—there is no side sway > B . Kalbach, L. A. Or; . : a & cylinder power plant now produced in Depariments of Bducaion. 1F0- o AR e o e m’oft_Eq“al Gahse ol large quantity and matured by many : lm“g;{;g e B oots, CTsh to 18,000 miles on tires. . A ridi?}% antd £ ha: dlliqg' 2‘9 t(:ufh c : pit 2 on eerl 3 8 { o o at t conc:entx:ated e K'rk}:’;?:;:k' e e o Balance— You could cut the LIGHT-SIX in two oznthe road? e R BT etk ' In type 61 this engine is even more fully 1tz Pidee in’ Education. ] : g developed and matured. The improve- g N L o R R C":’:T;:';r See this car—drive it—test it. You will be won by it. You will understand p ments give more efficient starting in cold K‘“'E’nfi;eigltfi‘d;’%‘f_,:‘%'.‘,.fiiaém].‘%ds; | . why it is the Studebaker ideal of what a light, six-cylinder car should be. 1 1 7 or ilson, . B. i weather, greater responsiveness in traffic “““,'!eufi‘u’:;;:',sg?'high Sehool Instruction. . TERMS and more power for stiff grades. ; MacCracien: 1. B._College and Com- (S : i3 T Tes sicg Reichors tor COMMERCIAL AUTO SUPPLY CO. 274t THE WASHINGTON CADILLAC COMPANY' M'“g&?s:’é? ffi:}&%;?zwrhe Liberal | ' ¢ Joseph : McReynolds, President A 2 1138-40 Connecticut Avenne 819 14th Street NW. -~ Phone Franklin 3705 Mills, L. S. Selections for reading by the Direct Method:; a Manual for s 3 chers. IP-M627s. Telephones Franklin 3900 and 3901 e L esnos on Edu. | e en sEmVICE .. .STUDEBAKER SERVICE . cation, Washington,/ D. C. 1920. Mount. Vernon Auto Co. 3 n i e . The National Crisis In Education. 112 Nerth Sf. -Asaph St. arage IK-N216. Alexandria, Va. Rockville, Md. tis, A. S~ Otis Group Intelligence 2 s‘St:!.le. IKI-Ot47. Pearson, ¥. B. The Teacher. IQT- HELE NEW-PRICFS OF- STUDEBAKER CARS i3 AR S Pettit, W. W Selt-Supporting Btusy - 3 £. 0. b. Factorles, effective September 8th, 1931 : : St dohoots. - TRV-PAS. T Touring Cars and. Roadsteérs Cm‘u and Sedans 1 j Repgert L. W, The Consolidatea Rural LIGHT-SIX 3.PAGS. ROADSTER . ........$1125 LIGHT-SIX 2-PASS. COUPE-ROADSTER .$1550 e rns O a1 2.PASS. ROADSTER. . ... D T INI% £PasS COUPE. ... . 2450 Jooralten N Rt e SPECIAL-SIX TOURING CAR. ... .......1635 - SPECIAL-SIX 5-PASS. SEDAN.. : : et D S etives ta Banea: SPECIALSIX tPASS, ROADSTER....... 165 BIGSIX 4PASS. COUPE - . 2R Snsts. ‘ GSI 1986 E , 3 ) o L s ek L B Work i ! ALL STUDEBAKER . CARS ARE EQUIPPED WITH CORD TIRES T e Cotieges of Cimbridec. ; This.Is a Studebaker Year 2 : : versity and Colleges of Cambridge., : i Y071, 1X46C-68 : - 2 =. ¢ 20. 65t E Riodig LR Thompson, F. V. -Schooiing of the Tm- . ; t = migrant. 1ZW-T377 N ___________._—-———————————'—'——'—‘_ = . - Vg &