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Show G. M. C. FACTORY NOT STINTED FOR MONEY "Under the government's policy of taking only a certain part of the output of the various motor car factories," said Truck Manager J. W. Cox of the Randall-Dodd Randall-Dodd Auto company, local G. M. C. distributors, dis-tributors, "the purchaser of a motor truck manufactured by a reliable concern is aseured that any emergency that requires re-quires factory assistance for his truck will receive prompt attention. "Only those factories with sufficient capital behind them will be able to continue con-tinue the manufacture of trucks for private pri-vate use after the government begins to take its quota for war service. 'The G. M. C. truck," continued Cox, "is backed by the wealthiest motor car ' concern In America and not one single i dollar is left unspent that will tend to i make the G. M. C. a better truck. I "We hear claims of million-dollar mo-j mo-j tors, six hundred thousand-dollar experi-; experi-; ments, etc, in the development of nio- tor cars, but these figures are lnsig-! lnsig-! nificant compared with the vast amounts ; spent each year by the General Motors I company in the experiments that tend j to make its product better year after I year." |