Citations:Stutz Bearcat


 * 1959, American Council of Learned Societies, Dictionary of American Biography, page 637
 * An acquaintance recalled that in this period Smart had "a derby hat, a raccoon coat, a Stutz Bearcat, and a roll [of money] that would choke a horse.
 * 1975, Bill C. Malone, Judith McCulloh, Stars of Country Music: Uncle Dave Macon to Johnny Rodriguez, page 82
 * "The money was there. My father [Marion Try Slaughter III] got a Stutz Bearcat for a high school graduation present. It was good and then all of a sudden came this down thing. [....]"
 * 1977, Veteran Car Club of America, The Bulb Horn, page 9
 * The Stutz Bearcat was first built in 1912 with a four-cylinder Wisconsin-built T-head ... The term “Roaring Twenties” is synonymous with Stutz Bearcat.
 * 1998, D. Keith Mano, Take Five, page 286
 * He did arrange to get killed in a flashy guy manner. Found — June 6, 1921 — rubbed out in a Stutz Bearcat. Before even anyone knew the word 'rubbed out.'
 * 2002, Judith Ryan Hendricks, Bread Alone: A Novel,
 * Thriftway has all that, but they've got regular food, too, and everything doesn't cost more per pound than a vintage Stutz Bearcat.
 * 2005, Allen St. John, Clapton's Guitar: Watching Wayne Henderson Build the Perfect Instrument, page 21
 * The world was different — F. Scott Fitzgerald was the John Grisham of the day, Sigmund Freud was the Dr. Phil, a Stutz Bearcat was a status symbol — and about to change in ways that no one would believe.