THE GATE POST Vol. VII STATE TEACHERS COLLEGE, FRAMINGHAM, MASS., OCTOBER 29, 1937 No. 2 ATTENTION ALL! Student Government Dance Here was everyone wishing for a dance, and along comes the news that there is going to be one on Friday night, October 29! Everyone is bound to have a grand time, and of course the more people who come, the better time we’ll have. Let’s see everyone there. We want all classes represented—and this means You, Freshmen. It will give you a chance to shine, and to show the college your spirit in upholding its functions. Harvard-Yale Mass Meeting Seniors—Juniors—'Sophomores—and Freshmen, too, congregated on the hockey field, after classes, on the fifth of October! What for? It was the annual mass meeting held preparatory to Harvard-Yale week-end I The "Blues” assembled in one group; the "Crimsons” in another, to vocalize enthusiastically the most spirited of their rousing lyrics and the heartiest of their cheers. These zestful preliminaries over, the two groups organized and with thoughtful consideration elected the following committee chairmen for Harvard-Yale week-end: Mock Man Dance Banquet Costumes Decorations Theatre Party Toastmistresses Cheerleaders H—Betty Foster Y—Sid Horton H—Claire Rodowsky Y—Dot Hillner H—Jean White Y—Kay Whitney H—Pauline D’Elia Y—Sally Clark H—Linnea Anderson Y—Harriet Cashner H—To be elected Y—Meave Sullivan H—Ricky Ellis, Virginia Kerrigan, Roddy Walsh Y—Betty Newton, Elvie Pease, Midge Millane And that wasn’t all 1 But then—it would be unnecessary repetition for me to tel! you about the picnic supper on the hockey field—EVERYONE WAS THERE! As for Harvard-Yale week-end—EVERYONE BE THERE! —Myrtle Scholl. Subscribe to the Gate Post. Challenge In an address given during assembly Monday, October 11, Charles Herlihy, President of the Fitchburg State Teachers College, declared that thinking was an adventure which had become somewhat out of fashion. Nevertheless, he said, exercises in thinking were necessary to develop a trained mind, and he quoted Charles Beard, the noted historian: "For the training of minds, a trained mind is required; for the dissemination of knowledge, the mastery of knowledge. The union of knowledge and a trained mind makes scholarship.” President Herlihy listed four great obstacles to thinking and gave examples of each. The first obstacle was the use of high pressure advertising methods. In advertisements concerning foods, he said, housewives were too willing to accept the statements of manufacturing concerns whose doctrine was: “Let experts decide what is good for you, and forget about it yourself.” Instead of this passive acceptance of low advertising standards, the individual should let sense dictate what and how much he should cat. In purchasing clothing this same condition was found; buyers of dry goods just accepted all labels, though the data was neither honest nor helpful. Second in his list of obstacles to thinking President Herlihy placed the welter of fiction and trashy reading on the market. He again spoke of advertising, claiming that ads in these cheap magazines, to be successful, had to be written in a child's vocabulary, and so provided no opportunity for the reader to think. The speaker felt that the fear of being labeled "highbrow” was a great obstacle to the development of reasoning powers and common sense. Yet, with so very much American money invested in schools "highbrows” should be looked upon with respect rather than regarded as queer people to be shunned. Because of this fear of the "highbrow”, advertisements appeal to physical rather than intellectual charm, and help develop the "herd mind” where each person is afraid of being different from his companions. President Herlihy's fourth obstacle was the prevalent willingness to give passive attention. He believes there is no learning with passive attention, and he stressed the fact that merely sitting and watching a movie or listening to the radio is very apt to breed a habit of passive attention. He told the student body of a theater which had a sign at the door—“Check brains outside.” (Continued on fagc four, column two) The Gate Post Runs a Contest! The Gate Post is counting on you to make its contest a magnificent success. Here’s how to do it. Make use of your talent (whether heretofore hidden or not) to write in one of the following classes: 1. Essay, including editorials and familiar essays. 2. Poetry. We expect some outstanding creations here. 3. Fiction. Not more than 1,000 words, please. Prizes, to be announced later, will be awarded to the authors of these entries considered best by the judges. Important I Entries must be placed in one of the Gate Post collection boxes not later than November 15. We want to announce winners in the November issue. It's your chance to win fame, so don’t forget to place your entries. We’ll be looking for them I —Ruth Hemingway. Mrs. Elliott On October 19, the Y. W. C. A. brought Mrs. Grace Loucks Elliott, a lecturer and psychologist from Union Theological Seminary, Columbia University, to our campus for the day. At chapel she spoke on personality. Do you recall her three questions? 1. Do you know enough about anything to ask an intelligent question? 2. What would you do with a thousand dollars? 3. What do you do when you have nothing to do? * During the day she gave personal interviews with students who had special problems they wished to discuss with her. The afternoon meeting, planned for Archibald Hall, was transferred to May Hall because so many wished to hear Mrs. Elliott on Men and Women Relations. After a truly grand Crocker dinner Mrs. Elliott ended a busy day in Horace Mann Living Room with a question box discussion. The “Y” is organizing discussion groups to follow up Mrs. Elliott’s talks on personality development. Mrs. Jackson, the Boston secretary, will supervise these groups. This is open to all paid "Y” members. Join the “Y” and avail yourself of this opportunity! THE GATE POST Published every month during the school year by the State Teachers College, Framingham, Mass. STAFF FOR 1937-38 Managing Editor—Jane Homer, '38 Assistant Editor—Linnea Anderson, ’38 Board of Reporters Literary—Myrtle Schneider, ’38 News—Helene Carroll, ’39 Sports—Barbara Carle, ’39 Social—Margaret Lovett, '39 Exchange—Harriet Cashner, '38 Personals—Grace O'Donnell, ’38 Jeanne Arbuckle, '40 Faculty—Virginia Kerrigan, '39 Alumnae—Lucy Valentine, '38 Training School—Catherine Ellis, '39 Special Reporters— Ruth Byrnes, '39 Gladys Clark, '38, Esther Stensby, '38 Beatrice Frankel, '38 Levona Lamb, '39 Marjorie Pattison, '40 Dorothy Scully, '40 Anne Newell, '40 Business Manager—Marie Russo, '39 Assistant Manager—Ruth Hemingway, '39 Circulation—Helen Walker, '38 Ruth Clampitt, '40 Paula Ahtio, ’39 Advertising—Carolyn Luce, '39 Christine Hacket, '40 Finance—Edith Yuill, ’38 Distribution—Elizabeth Foster, ’38 Ruth Wilde, '39 Laura Pellissier, '40 Anne Tower, '41 Literary Advisors Miss Gerritson Miss Sparrow EDITORIAL One night as I lay in bed, tired and weary, I glanced toward my open window. All I could see was a small patch of dark sky, the black silhouette of a graceful elm branch, and a single glorious, bright star. That bit of evening sky became for me a symbol of our student life at Framingham. The drabness of the night represented the common things, the everyday life on the hill. The grace of that gently swaying elm branch might have been the touch of beauty in our lives, perhaps not so much as one might wish, and perhaps, as the black silhouette against a dark sky, not always easily distinguishable, but beauty which was there always, if we cared to search. That scintillant star became our goal, that ideal high above us toward which we were always struggling. And if, occasionally, that star vanished behind part of the branch, leaving a darker, drearier sky, it always reappeared to shine more brightly and steadfastly by contrast. Our lives at school, like the small rectangle of sky, may at times seem narrow and confining, but one has only to approach the window to see the rectangle widen into a broad sweep of sky, and the elm branch grow into a tall, ■ slim, beautiful tree that blots out the dingy house next door. Instead of our single, remote star, a brilliant spread of diamonds fills the heavens; instead of our own petty concerns, our lives grow full of the truth and purpose and idealism which is as enduring as those same ageless stars. ON COMING TO COLLEGE "Do you remember?”—familiar words in the sentimental springtime, when Seniors become wistful and pensive, at the moment when time stops, and the beginning of life is still far away. And can you remember when you were graduating from high school how yo,u thought everything would begin for you in September; you were rather adult and world-weary, and you knew that now your kid days were over, and you were going to College? College—the world itself spelt glamour. It meant to you ivied walls, campus romance, the clang of chapel bells; you would be tall, lovely, alluring—and intelligent, though you intended to keep that a secret attribute. All this would magically happen, though you were a bit hazy as to how the transition from a pug nose, buck teeth, and that “D” in Math, would take place. You dreamed of leadership, honor grades, hosts of admiring friends, though you didn’t at any cost admit it, and college was to be your Open Sesame to life. Then came that day when your trunk was packed, and there was that little-girl lump in your throat when your mother left you, and college was just a big, frightening place where everyone looked hostile, the Seniors were worlds apart, and you didn’t dare to speak lest you betray your home town accent. But you gradually grew accustomed, your lonely eyes stopped unconsciously looking for a familiar face, and you began to be a college woman, though you had ceased to think of yourself in those terms. It always happens that way. The college life of the musical comedy is found to be an illusion and a ridiculous dream, and life to be a product of'one’s ability and attitude toward it, just as it has always been. The idea of the two past decades that everyone expected to go to college, regardless, is changing. Today, it is felt that many youngsters are not the college type, that their potentialities lie in other fields. To my way of thinking, this has been proved too often. Those with no definite purpose, no fixed aim have come to college with the idea of making the musical comedy precedent a reality. Bad habits, picked up from emulation or from desire to seem sophisticated, become the devastation of many a young hopeful. Taking color from glamorous and useless upperclassmen, the impressionable youngster learns to slide by with the real meaning of college a mystery unsolved and uninteresting. College as it should be is primarily a place for growth. I think no period of life is so much a time for formation of ideals and habits. Just at the point where one has unaccustomed liberty and a variety of paths, any beckoning byway may be the route of a lifetime. One should learn enough from books to know the best that has been accomplished before, and yet to be able to sort out and keep only what is of real importance. One should follow the leadership of instructors, being in sympathy with them, yet not unthinkingly accepting all of personal prejudice and cynicism. One should emulate the people whom one likes and admires, being able to recognize real worth, yet not slavishly imitating to the destruction of one’s own personality. AS AN ELEMENTARY JUNIOR SEES IT Let me introduce to you The Elementary point of view Of Junior life here on the hill It’s grand so far, but—come what will 1 The outstanding impression which each Elementary Junior girl received upon returning to Framingham this fall was one which prevailed throughout the entire student body and faculty —the grandeur and convenience of our new building. Monday morning classes began as did the customary comments. “Say, Levona, don’t you wish we were back in Harwichport instead of studying this Assyrian and Egyptian art?” The only art that bothered Levona Lamb and Anna Gage this summer was that of carrying a tray. Meave's opinion on the history of education— "It certainly makes one think,” is easily explained. After a summer at Green Harbor where Meave had only to think of which way to sit in order to get the most direct rays of the sun to improve her tan, it is rather hard for her to settle down to serious thinking. Louise McManus has decided that psychology is much too deep a subject to catch one with on the rebound of a glorious vacation. Economics 1 Where money itself isn’t considered wealth. But glance at the expressions on the faces of Emma Nelson and Anna Gunn and a few others. “Oh—no? Well I wouldn't mind having a few dollars in my pocket right now.” But slowly the dim realization that we are Juniors rises before us. We become thoughtful. Are we going to uphold the duties and dignities of the Junior rank as did our predecessors? This means of course, an added sense of our responsibilities, the continued application of our college motto—“Live To The Truth”, as well as the upholding of ideals of sportsmanship and courtesy in all our activities. Thoughts jump forward—teaching next half, shall we carry these ideals with us? I know we will I College is the place to become a person in one’s own right, and most definitely not for those who are too easily impressed and who follow without reason. College is the place to learn, assimilate, select. To realize all people are too much alike for one to judge harshly, or to admire slavishly. To choose from all lives a life true to one’s own potentialities and ideals. To learn one’s self and admit only the best, to become a balanced personality and to learn to give one’s self fully or not at all. * * * And so the disillusioned freshman has come through the years to emerge an understanding senior. The mellow bells and ivied walls are forever a beloved memory. The college life is left behind as were the rainbow illusions. She departs clear-headed, sure, with most of life still to learn, but with a firm rock to build upon. Where a child came in a woman goes out. —Jane Homer. BATES STATIONERY CO. Irving Square Framingham Pens Stationery School Supplies Faculty Notes Miss Corinne E. Hall went to New York Friday, October eighth, met her sister Charlotte, Mrs. Stanley Kleinheksel, and went on to Hulmeville, Pennsylvania, Saturday morning, October ninth, to attend the wedding of her brother, Robert Winchester Hall, and Miss Peace Canby at noon that day. The wedding was a Quaker wedding, as Miss Canby has been Secretary for The Friends Society in Philadelphia for fourteen years. Some may be interested in this special Quaker ceremony, which took place in front of the fireplace in the living room of an old house which was built about 1720. Above the fireplace was a large oil painting of the great grandfather. Before the fireplace, which was banked with pink dahlias and hemlock, four chairs were placed. As the wedding march was played at noon, Miss Canby's fourteen-year-old niece, Cecily Ann Canby, came into the living room followed by Robert Hall, the groom, and his brother Stephen, who was best man. The parties sat in the four chairs. The immediate members of the family were on one side of the big living room and other guests on the opposite side. There was silence and bowed heads; then the four stood up. As Robert Hall and Peace Canby faced each other, Robert repeated the wedding vow from memory, taking Miss Canby’s hand. Miss Canby did the same. Then the best man handed Robert the wedding ring, which he slipped on Peace’s finger. They kissed each other and sat down. More silence followed, until the best man stood up and placed a table in front of Robert, on which was the wedding certificate, which looked from a distance like a copy of the constitution of the United States. Robert signed, and then Peace signed the document. More silence and bowed heads. Then a person on the left rose, took the certificate from the table and read it. He sat down—more silence. Then, Miss Marion Longshore, a friend of Peace’s, rose and gave a very pleasing little lecture on the joy and satisfaction of establishing a new home. More silence, and then Mrs. Joseph Paxton Canby, the bride’s mother, stepped over and kissed both the bride and the groom, said to the guests, “The certificate will be taken to the secretary in the living room across the hall; will all guests sign the certificate before the luncheon is served.” The wedding certificate was a weighty looking document all of 24 inches long and 14 inches wide. Below the printed wedding ceremony the space was divided into four columns; the bride’s family signed in the first column, the groom’s in the second, and the guests in the other two columns. Reception for Freshmen On Thursday, October 21, the Faculty gave a reception for the Freshmen in May Hall. In the receiving line were President and Mrs. O'Connor, Dean Savage, and Marion Jones, president of the Student Cooperative Association. The freshmen were given a good opportunity to talk with all their present teachers and to meet those whom they will have in the future. Both faculty and freshmen went home knowing each other a great deal better. Attention, Alumnae! How about some news? We, here at college, are anxious to know what you arc doing, and, of course, your classmates and friends are, too. Whether you are a member of last year’s graduating class and arc just starting in with a brand new position or whether you are an older "grad”, perhaps with a family, let us hear from you telling us all about it. But don’t feel that this information necessarily has to be just about yourselves. If you know anything about other Alumnae send that in, too. We welcome any and all news. Miss Larned extends an invitation to the members of the Class of 1936 returning for Harvard-Yale week-end to use her apartment as a rendezvous. Any of the girls in town Friday afternoon will be welcome for waffles between five and seven. On Saturday an informal lunch will be served after the morning games. Appointments Astrid Larson, 1935, Relief Officer, Reformatory for Women, Framingham. Blanid Quceney, 1937, Institutional manager, State Teachers College, North Adams. Caroline Auld, 1937, Ingleside School, Revere. Eleanor Lacouture, 1936, Uxbridge. Annie Davis, 1936, permanent substitute Belmont St. School, Worcester. Wanda Haznar, 1935, New Bedford. Ruth Goddard, 1934, High School, Norwood. Doris Claflin, 1934, Teaching Southbridge, Mass. Mrs. Helen Weeks Harris 1925, Demonstrator, Lever Brothers, Cambridge. Florence D. Gorman, 1932, High School, Grafton, Mass. Helen Russo, 1933, Newton, Mass. Ruth Ernst, 1935, 2 days West Bridgewater, 1 day Bedford. Dorothy Schuerch, 1936, Assistant dietitian, Beverly Hospital, Beverly. Hildegard Osterlund, 1936, Assistant dietitian, Burbank Hospital, Fitchburg. Hermaline Gage, 1936, Dietitian, Littleton Hospital, Littleton, N. H. Rebecca Parkhurst, 1935, Assistant dietitian, Norwich Hospital, Norwich, Conn. Alberta Booth, 1929, Mission worker, Calloway, Virginia. Stacy Krasnecki, 1930, from High School, Amherst to Ossining, N. Y. Vivian Watt, 1935, teaching Plainville, Conn. Elizabeth White, 1935, teaching Webster, Mass. Mamie Valentine, 1935, teaching St. Johnsbury, Vermont. Marriages October 9, Charlotte Wonson to William Lowery, Framingham. October 12, Dorothy Tribe, ex-1939, to Sidney Chase. October 16, Carolyn Jones, 1933, to Louis Adrian Woodland. October 16, Mildred Maynard, 1936, to Hermann Pratt, Granville. October 20, Marian Graves, 1922, to Stephen Mugar, Watertown. October 23, Barbara Knapp, 1937, to William H. Freeman. At home 21 Waverly Street, Fitchburg, Mass. A. A. Conference Coming November 4, 5, and 6 The month of November holds much in store as far as activities “on the hill” are concerned. One of the big events is the annual meeting of the Women’s Athletic Conference of Massachusetts State Teachers Colleges to be held here on November 4, 5 and 6. The F. S. T. C. Athletic Association with the help of all the student body will be hostesses to delegates and faculty members from seven other teachers colleges : North Adams, Salem, Fitchburg, Bridgewater, Lowell, Westfield, and Hyannis. The W. A. C. itself is a well established organization entering now its eleventh year. Its purpose is primarily to promote closer cooperation between the Athletic Associations of the various colleges through discussions of mutual problems and interests. The problem which has been chosen this year as the general theme for the conference pertains to the creating of international friendship through recreational activities. Informal discussion groups will consider such phases of the problem as scouting, folk dancing, organized competitive sports, festivals and youth movements. The conference, whom the entire school will have the opportunity of hearing, is Miss Edith Sennett, New England Regional Director of the Camp Committee for the Girl Scouts. Miss Sennett will speak and show movies on Friday morning at special chapel. The Conference does not consist entirely of discussions as one might think. On the other hand, plenty of room is left on the program for recreation and good times. Thursday evening will be given over to general get-acquainted activities but on Friday night there will be an entertainment open to the whole school, A. A. membership not being required. Committee chairmen who, with their committees, are busy at present on the final arrangements are Iggie Aiken, Kay Barrett, Betty Foster, Sid Horton, and Chris. Parker. —Barbara Carle. Want a Weenie Roast? Harken I my dear college mates, especially those Freshmen who have longed for an out-of-door fire, but who have been too bashful to inquire as to the location and operation of the fireplace. To satisfy the many curious, the fireplace happens to be on the back hill behind Dwight Hall. It has been used extensively in past years for open camp fires, weenie roasts, picnic suppers and any other activity which requires special warmth I A fire warden has been appointed by A. A. and persons wishing to use the fireplace or make any fire, must get in touch with the warden for a permit. It is necessary that you observe this rule. Let's have some grand camp fires on the hill this year. —Olive Stacey, Warden, Peirce Hall. Remember the Gate Post Contest I Home Economics Club The Massachusetts Home Economics Association held its first meeting of the year on October 2, 1937, at the Hotel Vendome in Boston. Miss Shirley Fishtr of Simmons College, who is advisor for the students of the association, welcomed the student groups before the general mass meeting. Miss Dorothy Morley, the student representative from Massachusetts at the National Home Economics Convention in Kansas City this summer, spoke briefly of her experiences there. There were student representatives from Regis, Simmons, Essex, Massachusetts State, Farmington Maine, and Framingham. We were quite proud to have the largest delegation of seventeen students present in addition to members of the faculty. . —Jean White. A’Kempis News The Thomas A’Kempis Club held its annual Fall Communion Breakfast at the Hotel Kendall, Sunday, October 17, 1937. Before the Breakfast, the Club attended 9.30 Mass in a body at St. Bridget’s Church. Judge James E. Luby of Framingham was guest speaker for the Breakfast, his topic being Courts in Massachusetts, Their Differences and Functions. Molly Higgins, chairman of the Breakfast, and her committee deserve to be congratulated on the very successful breakfast they arranged. This committee consisted- of the following: flower arrangements, Anna Lemek; invitations, Eleanor Fitzgerald and Rita Gilboy; Marguerite Kirby, toastmistress, and Miriam Walsh. Everyone enjoyed the breakfast and is anticipating the next and last one to be held at the closing of this school year. CUppings The King’s English Listening, I told her, Is woman's finest art. Let a man talk all he likes, If you’d win his heart. Some telling word or two, I said, Occasionally use. So once—just once—I listened in, To see what she would choose. Four years of college English, And college board as well I Yet all the words I heard her speak Were "Yah” and "Wow” and “Swell” I —G. B. Northrop. We meet and lunch at Travis Drug Store Training School Tid-Bits Once again, folks, it is time you tuned in to listen to the Training School news. The pupils of Grades I and II arc trying to be good citizens by learning and putting into practise the traffic laws. Grades II, III, VII, and VIII send word that they are plodding along and doing nothing that howls for publicity. We find the children in Grade V and in one of the sixth grades searching newspapers and magazines to find pictures to illustrate poems they are learning. Also, they are using pictures to illustrate on a map the industries of New England. The other Grade VI sends word that they are “shrinking violets.” Last, but far from least, Grades I, II, and HI had their first Assembly, at which Mrs. Goode, from the Audubon Society, spoke. Later in the day she spoke to Grades IV, V, VI, VII and VIII. That’s all, Folks 1 —Catherine Ellis. The Musical Clubs At a recent meeting of the Glee Club, officers were elected to fill the vacancies left by Betty Proctor and Betty Bullard. The officers now stand as follows : president, Helen Walker; vice president, Thelma Jarisch; secretary, Emma Nelson; treasurer, Rita Cavanaugh; librarian, Carolyn Luce. The membership of the Glee Club has increased considerably, with many upperclassmen and freshmen joining this year. Once again the college has the pleasure of hearing the choir at Tuesday morning chapel. Due to the limited number of Seniors, membership was extended to the Juniors. The organization of an orchestra is now under way. CHALLENGE (Continued from page one) Then Mr. Herlihy suggested ways of developing one’s stagnating thinking powers. He mentioned the international scene, and gave as subtopics to provide thought, "War—to what avail?”, “Will the United States go to war in 1938?”, and "How can the hopes and demands of Japan be met without war?” A second topic for study was national problems: “How to build cosmopolitan America into one united group”, “Work and that thirty-hour law”, “Taxes and the cost of government.” President Herlihy urged students to develop their own philosophy of life that they might understand the answers to the age-old questions "Why are we here?”, “Where are we going?”, and “What’s it all about?” Flowers are a necessity To fulfill your desires. Phone 3533 BUTTERWORTH’S Concord and Clinton Streets Framingham Sleuthings Attendance at football games seems to be increasing lately: Kay Barrett was seen at the B. C. vs. Temple game; Meg Lovett attended the Holy Cross-Georgetown game at Worcester; Louise Osborne, Jean White, and Ruth Teahan certainly did some "rootin’ ” at the Harvard-Dartmouth game; Bea Frankel had a most exicting time following the Brown-Dartmouth game and dancing at all the house parties later. Margie Kcylor has started taking up horseback riding. Guess she won’t need a seat on the bus for a while 1 Sylvia Birch and Jeanne Arbuckle spent a very enjoyable week-end in North Adams with Margaret Geddes. We hear that a certain individual became conscientious over at Crocker and started to peel grapes I Guess “Dodo” Chaoush is going to the dance with “Tucky”. We wonder if she’ll be held for “harsony” 1 Seems as if some of the El. Soph II commuters will be just wasting away if their banana • diet works out the way they expect it to. Meg Lovett, Constance Lewis, and Shirley Thompson ex ’39 were bridesmaids at the fall wedding of Dorothy Tribe in Hyannis. "Dot” looked beautiful in her gown in which she was crowned May Queen last May. Many of her Junior friends drove down for the wedding. Margie Pattison has a terrible time getting dressed—she just can’t decide between the green and the green. October 13th found the officers of the Class of '40 at a very delightful tea at Miss Larned’s apartment. Janet Ford was maid of honor at her sister's wedding, October 12. Framingham was well represented at the Worcester Music Festival recently. Many of the faculty drove up to the mid-week performances. Edith Yuill heard one of the outstanding concerts. Grace O’Donnell was fortunate enough to hear Rosa Ponselle, and also attend “Glirrick” on Saturday night. Pay your Budget Fee Early I Compliments of Boston, Worcester and New York St. Ry. Co. MOTOR COACHES SERVING Springfield Marlboro Fr,amingham Hartford New York City Hudson Worcester Wellesley Boston Travel by B. & W. Line. Motor Coaches