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About Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 21, 1928)
SATURDAY, JANUARY 21. 1928 THE CAPITAL JOURNAL, SALEM. OREGON PAGE SEVEN CfflJgpES , CHRISTIAN SCIENCE First Church lornor of Liberty and ChemckeL iLreets. fundajr uiornlm services 4 11. SuniU tvtmat service at a. Subject of lesson wrnton "Truth." Wednesday evening test imonial meetlnc at 6.00 o'clock. Sunday school sessions convene at 9.45 and 11 m. Reading Room 404 Masonic Temple. pen dsiir from it to i.30 except Sun' days and holidays. FREE METHODIST CHURCH Corner Market and N. Winter streets. Quarterly nee tint services will be held commenc es Friday evrnlns and holdlna over Bun- flay. District Elder B, L Ilarnnttton will have chartte of all the services. The Sac rament of the Lord's Supper wlU be ob served following the preachlnc service Bunday inonilnsc. Sunday school at 9:49 a, di. W. w. Collce, pastor. CHURCH OP OOD 134 N. Church St J. J. CilHespie. pastor. Bunday school 10 a. m., James Davis superintendent. Lvle Knox, ass't superintendent. Junior serv ice at 11 a. m . by Mrs. Leslie Davis. Youiu People's service 0:30. Pre&chlni lervn 7:30. ilev. J. A. Morrison, principal f the Bible school at Anderson. Ind.. will fee with us Tuesday evening, Jan. 34. 1:30 a. in. Prayer service and Bible study on Wedueaday ovenluc. 7:30. IMMANTJEL BAPTIST-Servlces will be held ou Sunday as usual at 1738 South HUh street. D. S. Turner will have charue of tlie momltis service at 11 a. m., and O. D Saucy at 7:30 p. m. Bible school at 10 o'clock. Mld-werk prayer meeting on ThursUky evening at 7:30. CLAD TIDINOS MISSION-343'i Court Street. C. S. Johnson, pastor. Sunday school at 2 p. m. Services at 3 and 7:30 p. m. Meet 1 mis Tuesday. Thursday and Saturday evenings. CABTLR CHAPEL UNITED BRETHREN CHURCH-Corner N. lVlh and Nebraska Ave. Morning service at 11. Evening serv ice at 7:30. Morning subject: "The In spiration of Faith." Evening subject: "At Thy Word Z Will." Y. P. 3 C E. Union at 8 30. Floyd Ballcy. president. Topic: ' What Difference Does It Make What We Do on Sunday." Oertrude Chamberlln. leader. Sundny school at 10. Ed. Welgla. supt. Prayer meetlnc Thursday evening at 7:30. Ladles' Aid Wednesday. W. N. Bixluett, pastor. CHEMEKETA STREET EVANGELICAL CHURCH Corner of Cltemeketa and N. i;th. O. E. Erik tne, pastor. Services: 11:00 a. in. and 7:30 p. m. Sermon topics: Morning. "Doing Business In Great Wa-tr.-a." Evening. 'Proving the Will of Goo " Sunday school 100 a. m. Superin tendent: C. R. Strausbaugh. Christian En deavor: Senior and Intermediate socie ties meet simultaneously at 6:30. List of loaders not posted. Choir practice Wednes day evening at 730. Mtd-week prayer serv ice at 7:30. Leader, V. Kurz. INTERNATIONAL BIBLE STUDENTS' A33CX3IATION Mict every Sunday, for Bible study. Meet In i are being held temporarily at 11 GO Br on da ay street. No. Junior B. 8. C. meet during first lesson hour. Hours 2:30 to 5:00 p. m. ST. PAUL'S CHURCH ( EPISCOPAL) Church street at Chcmekcta. Rev. H. Duncan Chambers. Rector. The usual serv Ives at the usual hours. Holy Eucharist at 7:30 a. m.. in the chapel. Church srhool at 9.45 a. m. In the parish house. Morn.ng prayer with sermon and music at 11 a. m. The Young People s Fellow ship met-tf at 7 p. m.. in the parish house at 7 p. m. KNTC.HT MEMORIAL CONGREGATION AL CHURCH 18th and Ferry Streets. H. C. Stover, minister. Morninss service at 11. Illustrated sermon "The Value of the Burdrn." Music by the male quartet, sing ing, "The Foundation of God Standeth Sure" (CreswelM. In the evening service at 7 30, Dr. Fred Clark of Eugene will lec ture on "Companionate marriage versus Christian marrlcae." Three musical num bers wilt preceed the lecture Anthem. "Lift IP Ycur Heads" (Monestel): Duet. "Closer Still W:th Thee." (Rolf) Mrs. Dale Taylor and Myra Gleeson and a vlolm so!o by CKurile Gerth, accompan ied by licit y Bedford. The church school meets at 10 a. m. C. C. Harris, superin tendent. Th Christian Endeavor socie ties mert at 8:45 p. m. SEVENTH DAT? ADVENTIST CHURCH 'Corner of North Fifth and Oafnes streets. Sabbath school 10:15 a. m. Sermon at 11:30 a. m. and Young People's meeting at 4:00 p. m. Prayer meeting 7:30 Wednes day night. Sermon Sunday night 7:43. Subject: "Is The Beast of Rev. 13 In Any Way Related to the Qrcat Red Draaon of Rev. 13?" Joseph T. Jacobs pastor. EMMANUEL FULL GOSPEL MISSION 430 State street Ralph D. Bullock, pas tor. Services 2.Z& anJ 7:45 p. m. Sunday school 2:30 p. in. Young People's meet ings 6:00 P. m. Weeh-day services: Wed- i.esday, Thursday an J. Saturday at 7:45. nights THE FIRST SPIRITUALIST CHURCH OF SALEM will hold services In the hall Fraternal Temple. 447 Center street Sun day evening at 7:30 o'clock. Rev. Louella M. LaValle of Portland will be speaker and mcssasa bearer. Topic of address: "PsychonetrLVng." FIRST EVANGELICAL CHURCH Center t-nd Liberty streets. F. B. Culver, pastor. Sunday school at 9:15. L. U Thornton, superintendent, Treadling at 11 a. m. Dr. C. C. Poling will have charge of both morning and evening services. Evangel ical League of Christian Endeavor meets at 6 30. Sivlla Phelps, president. New ton Schmalle, leader. Preaching at 7:30. The Lord's supper will be observed in connection with the morning service. Pray er meeting Thursday at 7:45, followed by the class in ' Personal Evangelism." hour. Training for at young people. 7:30 p. m. observance oi tna gth anniversary of the 18th amendment, members of the W. O. T. U. will take part. Patriotic sermon. "What Shall We Do with the 18th Amend ment?" Special music. Male quartet. "Take uurin to Men." Lorens, Fred Haynes, Vic tor Wolfe, Stephen Wolfe. Choir. "Amer ica the Beautiful." Mixed quartet. "Mi Lord Abides." Mid-week service, prayer ana inspirational study Wednesday 7:30 p. RICKREALL CHURCH Services at the Rlckreall Community Church Sunday at Ham. Rev. W. O. Kantner will preach the sermon. Sunday school at 10 a. m. Mrs. S. J. Lowry. superintendent. FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH Center and Liberty streets. 9:43 Sunday school. Mark UcCa Ulster, Supt, 11:00 "The Compassion of Christ." 7:30. "Love and the Home," Illustrated by the moving pic ture, "It Must Be Love." Tuesday 7:30, Fortnightly Club. Thursday 7 : 15. Bible study and prayer meeting. Charles E. Ward, minister. EVANGELISTIC FULL GOSPEL TABER NACLE 13th and Ferry streets. H. Han sen, pastor. The series of special meet ings, now being held in the Tabernacle by Evangelist Russell P. Rothgeb. form erly secretary to Dr. Charles S. Price, will continue throughout the coming week. Meetings every evening at 7:30. Special music and good sinning will be a part of each evening's program. Devotloo-1 sen-Ice Sunday morning at 10 30. Sun day school, 1:45 p. m. Evangelistic serv ice, Sunday afternoon and evening, at 3:00 and 7:30 o'clock. CENTER STREET METHODIST CHURCH 13th and Center street. Rev. E. J. A:;chenbreiiner, pastor. Services: 11 a. m. Sermon by pastor. 7:45 p. m. A study of foreign missions In Africa. The male quartet will alii, for the morning serv ice. Sunday school at 10:00 a. m. Sup erintendent Mr. Martin Schreiber. Ep worth League devotional service at 7:00 p. m. Topic: "Christian Conquest o the Comco." Mid-week prayer meeting wtU be held in the home of Mr. and Mrs. C. O. Schramm. 1355 Marion Street. The morn ing services are in ' German, and the evening services in English. CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE One block south of Center on 19th. L. D Smith, pastor. Sunday school 9:45 a. m. Supt. P. M. Lltwlller will have charge euch week. Morning worship 11 i u Serman subject "The Devil's Gunpowder." There will be special sinning and good music at each service. Young People's meeting at 6:30 p. m. Mr. Fred Hannon. leader at that service. Be sure and come. Evening Evangelistic preaching service at 7:30. Sermon subject "And Satan Came Also." Prayer meeting Wednesday at 7:30 p. m. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Corner ot Liberty and Marlon streets. Robert L. Payne, minister. Fred Broer. Sunday school superintendent. Miss Minnette Masers. di rector of music Mrs. W. F. Foster, or ganist. Sunday school 9:45. Classes for everybody. Preaching service at 11 a. m. Topic, "A Cripple at the King s Table." Young people's meeting 6:30 p. m. Evening preaching service 7:30. Toptc "Excuses." Special music by the choir at both morn ing and evening services. Prayer meeting each Thursday evening in the main auditorium. JASON LEE MEMORIAL M. K. CHURCH Corner North Winter and Jefferson ave nue. Public worship at 11 a. m. Theme: ' The Normalcy of Jesus." 7:30 p. m. Theme: "With Christ In a Crisis." Pastor In charge of both services. 9:45 a. m. Church school. Seven separate depart ments organized, manned by eager teach ers. Provision for all ages. Junior church service Wesley Hall, 11 a. m. Robert Wit ty in cirge. Three chapters of the Ep worth League Junior high, high school, young people's, meet In separate rooms for devotional and praise services. Services 8:90 p. m. Open forum for adults In church school annex at 6:30 p. m. Theme: "Second Coming of Christ." Joseph Bar ber In charge. Special music by the choir. T. Acheson. pastor. Robert Witty. Mrs. Gentry, helpers. FORD MEMORIAL METHODIST EPIS COPAL CHURCH West Salem. F. L. Can nel, pastor. Sunday schooL 9:45. Classes for all ages. D. C. Sebern, supt. The reg ular morning service will be held at 11. Sermon by Rev. A. 8. Mulligan of Sa lem. Junior league at the game hour In the basement of the church. Epworth and Intermediate league 6:30. Preaching 7:30. Sermon by Rev. D. H. Leech, district sup erintendent of the Salem district. Bible study Thursday evening at 7:30, FIRST METHODIST EPISCOPAL Cor ner State and Church streets, F. O. Taylor, pastor. Director of Religious Education. Margaret K. Sutherland. Services 11 a. m. and 7:30 p. m. Sermon topics: a. m.. Women's foreign missionary thank offer ing service, with a message by Miss Laura Heist, furloughed missionary from Baroda, India: p. m., "The Re-dlscovered Christ." by the pastor. Special music anthem. "The King's Highway," O. Shaffer. Offer tory anthem, "The Lord's Prayer," Oatnes. which was written especially for the West minster chorus of Dayton. Ohio. Sunday school 9:45 ft. m. begins enrollment and attendance week, H. F. Shanks, Supt. Young people's meetings 6:10 p. m. Univer sity chapter will have as special guests a group from the Jason Lee Epwortb League who will take charge of the service, Harold SheUhart leading. First atmreh ahaptar. sopta, "The Oaspel of Oraaa, . HL" Leader, Morgan OaUaher. aad Miss South erland. Junior high chapter. Miss Roberta Vannlsa. advisor. Mid-week prayer and praise service oo Thursday night, led by the pastor. The lesson will be tlie 4th of the "Things Pertaining to the King dom" aeries. "Thlnga Which Sound Doctrine." LESLIE MEMORIAL CHURCH-(Methodist Episcopal) South Commercial at My ers. & Darlow Johnson, pastor. Morning worship 11 a. m.. sermon by the pastor. Anthem by senior choir. "The Lord Is My Rook," Woodman. Happy evening hour 7:30, song service led by Junior choir. Ivan Corner, Supt. Francis Asbury Epworth League 6:30 In Leslie hall continuing study of 'Christ of the Indian Road." Inter mediate League in church parlor at 6:30, Miss Ruth Haselton In charge. Junior Leacue, Mtss Pearl Scott. Supt. 11 a. m. In Leslie halL Choir rehearsals Thursday evening, junior choir 6:30, senior choir 8:80, JL William Belch tf Fort land, di rector. Mid-week meeting. Thursday aves las 7:3a, continuing tbt study C The Meaning; 4 Prayer." COURT STRUT CHURCH OF CHRIST Norrls J. Rs as oner, minister. The ap proaching Lord's day narks the closing of the revival campaign. Service tonight (Saturday) and upon the morrow. Tha Junior chorus will sing this evening, and some of th Juniors are ta preach little sermons. Lord's day morning th Bible school meets at t:4l followed by mt tng worship at 11. We have m many themea ot Import anoe under contempla tion that it is ft matter of selection as to which should be given. Christian Endeavor at 6:16 and evening worship at 7:10. Church board meeting Monday evening. Thursday evening will be occupied wtth the regular mid-week program. Tne volun teer band will meet from T to 7:48. Pray er meeting and study of revelation from 7:46 to 6:10. Training class from 6:38 to 9. Mencken Mentions Souls Marching On (By H. L. Mencken) On. of the amusing and Instruc tive phenomena of the great age In which we live Is the apparent con viction of the Best Minds of Boston that the Sacco-Vanzettl case has been disposed of, and will be heard of no more. The conviction oozes smugly from all the town newspa-. pers, and not infrequently it is re inforced by belches of official sat isfaction. Nevertheless, it remains unwarranted and injudicious, and of a piece with the general belief late in 1918 that the Germans would be heard of no more. The plain fact is that the Sacco-Vanzettl uproar. in its sweetest and worst forms, has yet to begin, and that no man can say, with only the current symptoms to guide him, how far It will go be fore It ends. What deceives the Boston Bab bitts, I dare say, is that American labor took the trial and execution of the two men lying down that In so far as it bad any hand in the business at all It rather favored butchering them, guilty or not guil ty. But all that that fact teaches the prudent is that American work ing men in times ot great prosperity are scarcely working men at all. but Babbitts that they like to think for themselves, not as oppres sed, but as riding the world, and that they are thus Impatient with those of their number who cry out warnings and see blood upon the moon. But that complacency lasts only as long as the full dinner pall and the brimming gas tank. The min ute they cease to work they become" working men again and full ot a sensattve class consciousness. And the minute that class consciousness beelns to devour them they seek vil lains to denounce and martyrs to venerate. There was a day when Terence V. Bowderly served them in the latter office, and there was a time when Eugene V. Debs was the Incumbent The next time, I predict. they will have "real martyrs, glor iously done to death. That time will come when the present wave of prosperity makes its first great, sloshing, devastating tbb. Here I attempt no pronouncement upon the guilt or innocence -.-f the departed gentlemen. I coniess that I have never been able to make up my mind about It, tho-r.h ". am in clined to think that tne burden 01 the known evidence Is in their favor. But whether they were guilty or innocent makes little difference: The point is that they were tried for their lives In a way tnai vioiaieo ever rational concept of decorum and decency, and that their prose cution as men accused of felony was grossly corrupted by their persecu tion as men, suspected of foment ing a proletarian revolution. No body is in favor of such men so long as there is no conscious pro letariat. But the moment a prole tariat begins to clap its hand to its head and discover that it exists they become heroes. The question of their guilt, in tne strictly legal sense. Is irrelevant. The fact that John Brown was guil ty is admitted today even by Os wald Oarrlson Villard, and no one argues any longer that he was hang ed unjustly. Nor Is it disputed, save by a few specialists In idealistic cre dulity, that ha was, In general, a bad egg, with a record not unlike that of a hi-Jacker or prohibition agent. But less than two yaers after his death he wat the unseen leader of the mightiest host of men ever loosed on this continent, and for four long years his marching soul. or ectoplasm, or ghost, or essence. or whatever you choose to call it, bathed the land in blood. No doubt It will take longer to resurrect Sacco and VanzetU,' but that they will march again, soon or late, is almost certain. For the rev olution of the splnres Is bound to bring about a situation in which their hlghfalutln brand of salvation will sound immensely more plaus ible and poignant than It did while they were alive and the Boston Brahmins, by burning them with such evident relish and animus. H impossible forever to In. quire soberly Into the question w newer tney deserved to be burn, ed at all. As martyrs th.y were al most models. They were poor. They ware a bit strange and exotic They had the gift of mellifluous and elo quent utterance. Bo 1 predict that tier are fated to leap from the tomb, and that there will be a great deal or pother in the republic be fore they are shoved back and dee- orated with appropriate monuments. My conviction of their resurrec tion Is born of a belief that the next great uproar In the United States will be directed, not against eon (tress or wall street as In the past, but against the courts, and that Sacco and VanzetU will serve It ad mirably as horrible examples of Ju dicial folly and oppression. For the courts during ths last decade or two have been dojng more to the free American than any other agency has been doing to him, and It must be obvious to every one that sus picion of them and enmity to them are rolling up. There was a time when their curiously stupid pedan tries bore harshly only upon small classes of men, or upon larger class es only at rare Intervals, but today, with prohibition and other such Im becilities to encourage them, they Invade the common rights of man in a wholesale or beserker fashion, and so they become a nuisance to almost every one. The primary blame for all this, to be sure, does not rest upon the learned Judges, but upon the legis latorsmainly obvious rogues who set them to enforcing unwise and unpopular laws, and upon the bur eaucrats who bring them their grist of victims. But I think the public hostility to them Is Justified none the less, for It must be plain that they might have pulled all the teeth out of the new legislation if they had only had courage enough. They showed no such courage. Instead they accepted every legislative aber ration gravely and essayed to give It lgal reality, and pretty soon, de- MTI.L STREET MKTHODIST 15lh tnd IliU .ireeta. Patrlk D.hlln. PMtor. Sun CUr school k m. Miss Esth.r Erlclc kwi. Supt. Mornjni worship 11 . m. Tople. Liberty." Epworth Le.gu. 6:30 p. m. Evening service 7:30 p. m. Topic, "Humsn rslue." Fraycr meeting Thursdsr .( CHRIST LUTHERAN CHORCH te snd Mth street, Rev. A. U Heln.. p.itor Oermin service B: a. m. Ensllsh serv ices .t II a. m. Pleas, nolle, that this I. . chance from the old order oi serv ice. Sunday school at t 40 a. m. Martha Satterman, superlntenacni. nwimuui, Bslurdsr at 0 00 a. ra. Luther Leasus De votional meeting Sunday evening at :30 p. m. Leader, Arthur Blebens. Topic. -What Dlfrerrnce Does It Mas:. As To What I Do On Sunday?" Choir meets Friday .venlnc at 7 00 o'clock. AMERICAN LUTHERAN CHURCH Holds reculsr services Sunday afternoon In the Presbyterian church which it ha. pur. chased. 9 o'clock. Cathechetleal elatsi 1:15 o'clock arsded Blbl. school. At th. 4:00 0 clock worship hour, Rev. P. W. Erlck aen wlU preach on "Tb. Determined Man " Th. choir under th. leadenhlp- 01 Mrs. Alvln Lessrd will sing -Beautiful Saviour." Ladles Aid Mmion Society meet Friday afternoon and Luther leagu. Frl Say night In tM church parlors. tTNTTARIAN CHURCH-Cottag. and Chemeketa streets. Rer. Martin F. Fer rey, minister. Church school at 10:00 a m Oraded Instruction. Clas. lor those I huh school age and adults. Devotional services at II M a. m. Th. subject oi the sermon WlU b. - Noah and th. Ark." The first ol a series on Or.at Legends 01 the Bibl.. Mrs. U. Ferrey wlU offet as contralto Mlo, Pfleugel's "How Long Wilt Thou Forget Mel'' olra. W. A. Dsn ton at tM organ. FIRST PREBBYTrRIAH '01101108 Churcfc strset. between Chwk and Center. Rev. M. K. Tully, D. D . Pastor Sunday school at 10 JO a. m. with classes lor all ages, lollowed b publl. worahlp t 11 . a. m Sermon, "Jewl"? " selves in th. Lor. ol Ood" Mertlngg of th. Young People s Societies at 1 . m t renins worship at 7:10 o'clock. rrwn. Th. worth ol the SouL" Th. Pastor will preach at both service Pram meet Ins Thursday at 1:10 p. m. BETHANY REFORMED CHURCH -Cor-a ol CWtol and Marlon streets. Sun Say school at 10 a. m and Insnsn asrv les at 11 a. sa. M. Denny, aualster. FTRST CHRISTIAN CHimCH-D J Bow., minuter. U a m Bible school O J Hull. Surt. II a. m. worship, sermon oy the pj.lor. "Fulfilling the Oreat Commis sion ' So ' Teach Me U Pr.v." Victor Vfo;:c. - !W P"1 Is the Beast of Rev. 13 who has Seven Heads and Ten Horns in any way re lated to the Great Red Dragon of Rev. 12 who also has Seven Heads and Ten Horns? Hear what these symbols mean Sun day night, January 22 at the Seventh Day Adventist Church, corner of N. Fifth and" Gaines streets. Close-Out Prices We are offering the following sets of Glass Enclosures at cost. Here is your chance to have the Com fort of a Closed Car at prices you will never get again. 1 get for IKi-n Ford Roadster 1 192 Chevrolet lUadsteT 1 1M Ford Touring 1 in Dodge T oaring 1 lWi Star Toortnf 1 IK! Chevrolet Touring 1 19M Jewett Totrring TERMS TO RELIABLE PARTIES Wood's Auto Service Co. J 13 ChemekeU Street Salua, Orsgon w ' gr-TaaTfirsvTJcmaawwi--l Eyes Examined and Glasses Fitted Ten Years' Practice in Salem Phone 625 DR. LR. BURDETTE Optometrist 401 First National Bank Bldg. bauched by their own casuistry, they began going even further. That is to say, they began making the new laws, by Judicial Interpretation, even worse than they found them. This, I think, U fair statement ot the general trend of Judge made law In the United States today. The solemn guarantee a! the Bill of Rights, whittled down by a long series of tortured and preposterous decisions, are now worth next to nothing. No sensible lawyer pleads then! any more If he can help It. They become as archalo as the In stitutes of Justinian. To mention them before a court of the higher sort of dignity becomes an indecor um. There are. as yet, no open out breaks against this gradual destruc tion of the Bill ot Rights by the arts of legal sophistry, but It Is certainly plain enough that there Is wide spread dissatisfaction. That dissat isfaction extends to all classes, for all classes are more or less affected, especial! by the prohibition decis ions. But It Is most marked, natur ally enough, in those classes that are least able to get around the law whether Judge made or legislature made. The relatively poor man be lieves that he la getting a dirty deal, and in that belief there is a great deal more reason than there ought to be. It Is the Judges, obviously, who will have to serve as shock troops the next time Industrial unrest becomes general In those areas where it has appeared they are already hard at work, steadily narrowing the Bill of Rights. Colorado is one such area. Its courts seem to recognize no lim its whatever upon their privilege of injunction. When the general circus begins their example will find plenty of imitation. The alarmed Babbitts will demand succor, and the learned Judges will try to give It to them. I believe that the ulti mate result will be a dreadful up roar, and that before It is over schemes win be discussed for ham stringing the court! that would make even a parlor radical roll his eyes today. This movement. It precedent counts for anything, will take the form of a holy crusade, with a full outfit of traveling evangelists, cheer leaders and other such professional rabble rousers. It will quickly de part from rationality and take on an orgiastic, semi-rellglous tinge. Just as all the proletarian uprisings ot the past have done. It will need slogans, promises of salvation, vil Uans, martyrs. Tiers will be a Mark Haruia in it, and there will be a John Brown. My guess Is that the John Brown will be twins, and that one-halt of him will be called Sacco and the other half VanzetU. For the first time In years and yws Boston will supply the nation with heroes. TO WIN ONE MUST START No one ever woa a race, or climbed a hill, or whipped a handicap without starting. And no one ever accumulated a reserve fund without starting a "thrift" program.' Let your start include a Savings Account here at the United States National. We will help your accumulations along with liberal In terest at periodic Intervals. United States i National Bank I Salem Oregon The Great Independent Now holds every official endurance and speed record for f nHy equipped stock cars, regardless of power or price The New President Straight Eight 100 Horsepower STUDEBAKER-S new 100 horsepower President Eight was dcrvwloped by Chief Engineer D. G. Roos, formerly chief engineer of Marmon, Locomobile, and Plerce-Arrow. Speeds up to 60-milea-A-hocrr. Well mannered easy to start easy to stop, due to new ADjplified-Acrlon, 4-wheel brakes which multiply pedal prcseure 3Va times. 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