Not photoshopped, 6 door Chevy... custom limo for a resort maybe?


Found on https://www.facebook.com/groups/127229436840/

Dick's was on Maui... a set of cups on Ebay has the business sticker on the bottom
http://www.ebay.com/itm/Dicks-Hawaiian-Crafts-Two-Wood-Stemmed-Wines-Glasses-Plus-Another-Wood-Piece-/400385867010


Steve came through with the complete info set...  it's made by Stageway/Armbruster as I mentioned on Facebook


Though founded before the days of the internal combustion engine, Armbruster & Co. slid easily and naturally into automobile repair. But its entry into the conversion business was a chance thing. Sometime in the early 1920s a local bus company, Jordan Bus Lines, asked if it was possible to stretch a car into a small bus, one they could drive profitably on short runs to nearby towns. Armbruster gave it a shot and by the best guess available finished the first stretch coach in 1923. They kept up the customizing business for the next quarter-century, building about 20 cars a year.

Soon after the War, Tom Armbruster had decided to retire and when Charles Kaiser, the other remaining partner, suffered a fatal heart attack in 1949, Armbruster offered the business to Robben.

Robben took over Armbruster on May 1, 1950, accompanied by his son-in-law, Milt Earnhart who was appointed vice-president. At the time Armbruster had only six employees and a small 10,000 sq. ft. plant on North Ninth St. Under Robben and Earnhart's leadership the firm grew, and eventually purchased seven adjacent properties, incorporating the firm in 1956 as Armbruster & Co., Inc.

The All American Red Heads women's basketball team (a Harlem-Globetrotters-like exhibition squad) used an Armbruster coach in the mid-1950s and Willy Nelson toured in his own 1959 Armbruster 8-door Chevrolet during the early 1960s.

http://my.net-link.net/~dcline/l_s_6165.htm
http://www.coachbuilt.com/bui/a/armbruster/armbruster.htm