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Show TAX1CAB MAN ACQUIRES A CHANDLER SIX f After driving all maimer and ina&es oi cars m tub taxi oasme, 0. j&. x . &ciixuou nuas tnat cue onandicr car is uie one Best suited to ms perfuse. per-fuse. . . ' You can usually tell a man by the kind of auto, he buys. If he wants to please his family and e-verybody else, he usually selects a big, rangy car, with plenty of pep, sureness of acceleration, acceler-ation, strongly built but not over weight and subject to the "draft" at a moment 's .notice. Thus it is safe to assume that a man who buys a Chandler Chan-dler car does so from no ulterior motives. mo-tives. It is safe to bet he has con: suited with many wise ones always including the members of his own firesideand fire-sideand that he has a chosen 'a Chandler Chan-dler car from the C. A. Quigley stock, because he wants all that the ownership owner-ship ofi real motor car implies After, having spent years m the auto game as an owner and pilot of public cars, C. M. F. Schmoll, shown standing stand-ing by his car, bought a Chandler. He has had a rare opportunity to get acquainted ac-quainted with many kinds of autos, big and little; he has had a first-class chance to judge of their worth, stamina and endurance; als he has had every opportunity to judge of their ruling comfort and hill-climbing ability. And he has chosen a Chandler. This fact should be sufficient evidence evi-dence to all motorists of the great faith he places in Chandler dependability depend-ability and all-round" worthiness. |