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REPAIRMEN MAY GYP YOU-1951

"For six months," says The Neiv York Herald Tribune, "the two authors of this perturbing little volume made a nationwide investigation of the higher nature, if any, of the American repairman. Buying a used car of distinguished make, they engaged the assistance of a lady who looked more helpless than she was, and traveled 19,000 miles, with 1,700 calls on repair shops." "And no one," adds the Boston Post, "could ever pass this book with indifference Whatever your experience with repairmen may have been, you'll find its counterpart here. You will point it out with great satisfaction, and you'll say: 'There! That's exactly what happened to me once.' And you're lucky if it has happened only once. The Post can't think of any subject for research that touches more people. Buy this book, and you will get your money back, over and over, in amounts saved through your wisdom." "There are some amusing stories in it," says the Baltimore Sun, and the Washington Post thinks that the funniest were "the authors' experiences with the Rube Goldberg testing machines used by some shops to impress customers." "The articles in The Reader's Digest were interesting," remarks the Springfield Republican, "but they left room for doubt. The book, however, with details of the almost laboratory caution used by the authors in making their tests, is alarmingly convincing."

"For six months," says The Neiv York Herald Tribune,
"the two authors of this perturbing little volume made a
nationwide investigation of the higher nature, if any, of the
American repairman. Buying a used car of distinguished
make, they engaged the assistance of a lady who looked
more helpless than she was, and traveled 19,000 miles, with
1,700 calls on repair shops."
"And no one," adds the Boston Post, "could ever pass
this book with indifference Whatever your experience with
repairmen may have been, you'll find its counterpart here.
You will point it out with great satisfaction, and you'll say:
'There! That's exactly what happened to me once.' And
you're lucky if it has happened only once. The Post can't
think of any subject for research that touches more people.
Buy this book, and you will get your money back, over and
over, in amounts saved through your wisdom."
"There are some amusing stories in it," says the Baltimore
Sun, and the Washington Post thinks that the funniest were
"the authors' experiences with the Rube Goldberg testing
machines used by some shops to impress customers."
"The articles in The Reader's Digest were interesting,"
remarks the Springfield Republican, "but they left room
for doubt. The book, however, with details of the almost
laboratory caution used by the authors in making their tests,
is alarmingly convincing."

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74 <strong>REPAIRMEN</strong> WILL GET <strong>YOU</strong><br />

do I owe you?" "You don't owe me nuthin'. I<br />

don't b'lieve in charging a man a quarter every<br />

time I lift his hood, like some o' these fellahs do.<br />

Up in Georgia I built up a good business by not<br />

doin' that, an' I've been figurin' I'd do the same<br />

here. Just been here two weeks." "Well," I told<br />

him, "you ought to have some cigars, anyway."<br />

I fished out a quarter and handed it to him. "No,<br />

I don't want your money I thought maybe you<br />

just had a couple o' cigars." "Get them with this<br />

quarter, but please give me a little memo of it,"<br />

I said, "partly because I keep an account of what<br />

because I want to remember<br />

I spend, partly<br />

you." "M'wife'll give y'one f'm th'other garage<br />

I had. Mama, give this man a receipt for a<br />

quarter!"<br />

Thus, quickly and honestly, did many repairmen<br />

solve the simple problem which we placed<br />

before them. Eighty-one of them made no charge<br />

at all. Others made trifling charges, probably on<br />

the basis this honest repairman in Portland, Oregon,<br />

used: "Well, it costs something<br />

to lift a<br />

hood<br />

;<br />

the electric current on our trouble light<br />

is<br />

worth something; wear and tear on a screw-

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