OCR Text |
Show SPEED AND DESIGN NATIONAL FEATURES "There is a wide gap between good taste and extravagance," said Sales Manager Olson of the Randall-Dodd Auto company, local National distributors. distribu-tors. "It is but natural that the individual in-dividual should wish his motor car to reflect in some measure the price of his success. At the same time he is conscious of the economy effected in the purchase of a car of permanent worth. Nothing bespeaks more plainly the temperament of a man than his motor. ' 'Seventeen years ago the first National Na-tional car was'built with one thought behind it, for the man who is not satisfied sat-isfied with the commonplace. You have but to turn back the pages of motor history to see how closely we have held to that course. "While the National has never been extravagantly prised, yet with it cost has never been secondary. With the name on the radiator has always been associated a legend of speed, great power and the finest bodies of the carriage-builders' craft. The difference between a good and ordinary car has ever been a fixed equation the difference differ-ence between the trained athlete and the raw, material force. "As a performer the good has been almost insolent in its road dominance. Jts driver holds the reins over all speed he desires to release, with always al-ways an unsounded reserve under the throttle." |