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Show Amoyiniees Pirke 3 Combined Services - ' General MoDETROIT tors today announced price increases on its 1970 cars averaging $125 per car, including $38 for new equipment. Last year, GM announced price increases averaging $49 per ear The worlds largest manufacturing concern made a profit of $1.73 billion in the 1968 fiscal year. Both Ford Motor Co. and Chrysler Corp. said their prices will be announced shortly before their new models are Introduced to the pub- l i 4'v f s ?. I- E351ses 4 r- I U &mjy M lic in the next two weeks. A said the Ford spokesman company would have to study GM's before saying anything more. At Chrysler, a spokesman said the company had no immediate comment. ic. u I ? '? & t ft j n -- Thursday, September 11, 1969 JOg American Motors Corp., the smallest of the nations big four auto makers, already has announed it will raise prices, but did not ay by bow much. fif, - P: c , - ! . , ' f . Douglas C. O'Donnell, better known as Captain Scotty on KCPX Channel named executive vice president of the House Sugar Chamber of Commerce. Making the Last year, the industry raised prices by an average of $50 per car. At that time, Chrysler and Ford announced their prices first, then rolled back after GM announced its prices. announcement wi s J. Mi- - James M. Roche! board chairman, cited creased costs in labor and materials and taxes as the reasons for principal n( iI i cj I O'Donndl Is New Officer Of Chamber :hael ituiii.4coiii ,6i; sasrr owe-weeimn- The increases ranged from $58 increase on the Oldsmo-bil- e 98 four-dohardtop to a $199 increase on GMs highest priced car. a Cadillac 75 Fleetwood limousine. a sum ly Joins Brokerage John W. 2(Jack) Airsman, foimer director of the Utah General motors will provide the same new car warranty it had in its 1969 cars, thus breaking with Ford, which cut its 1970 warranty sharply. - Roche said GM would cover the entire car for 12 months or 12,000 miles, whichever comes first The power train engine, transmiswarranty would sion and axle drive be continued at five years or Securities Commission, joined Parker-Mawoo- d All things being equal for fat men, they aren't k when it comes to employment. , . REG. REALISTIC 159.95 music ... S lavar will iY modest cost woko It standard! Includes free cabinet. 7intoU.d Larry Decker, vice president of marketing, noted that routes involving Salt Lake City were among those leading in the traffic increase. $1$H Savings Like This Again! A He also said that substantial have continued increases since the strikes conclusion. Among the routes leading in the traffic increase are Los Angeles to Salt Lake City, Salt Lake City to Las Vegas, and those routes connecting and the Pacific Arizona Northwest via Salt Lake City. Hurry! Price Good This Week! PRICESLASH! AliV PORTABLE FM RADIO 3095 up !a AM, FM, Marino and 2 Exciting listening ot homo ptrformtr pulls shortwevo bondi or on the go. ' 63 ). - DENVER Lowell F. Wingert, president of Mountain Bell, will retire at the first of the year and be replaced by Robert K. Timothy, per cent. 94,779,000. Airsman, a native re- of Illi- nois, retired from the U.S. Army as a lieutenant colonel He served as advisor to the Utah National Guard during part of that time. Sandwick Motors Lowell B. (Sandy) Sandwick, sales manager at Ken Garff Oldsmobile since JaRU-ar- today announced the ope ning of Sandwick Motors at 5545 South State. The new orSandwick ganization will sell used cars, trucks and campers, and also will lease Mr. Sandwick new cars and trucks. Sandwick, winner of seve-a- l national and regional sacs awards, was general sales manager at Larson Ford before taking his recent position with Garffs, He has had 17 years of automobile sales experience in the Salt Lale valley. . - if' the phone company announced The airline recorded the most passengers carried in 318,100 any one month and the most revenue passenger miles flown in a month will help develop underwritings on a gional basis. A New Bing At Beil today. Timothy was named executive vice president of the company by tiie board of directors and will succeed Wingert as when Wingert posted in the Los Angeles-La- s Francisco-La- s San Vegas, Vegas Vegas, San Diego-La- s and Tucson-Lo- s Angeles routes. TELESCOPIC ANTENNA. This incrodiblt one-thir- Other leading gains were e 12 TRANSISTORS Compart Mis look:, features, ths low, low prieo ond you'll sm why wo coll this c "to, boy". Bottory oynrct4 Dr. Hany Johnson, chairman of the medical hoard of the Life Extension Institute iq New York, estimates a full d of the 50,000. middle an dtop management executives they exanune each year are overweight Norman V. Hansen, district sales manager in Salt Lake City, said passenger boardings were up 129 per cent in August (to 17,004 travelers). At Cedar City, manager Jerry Indgjer said boardings were Pie. 49.95 , $5,000 less. Lake The new Spokane-Sal- t City route also has been a strong producer, he said. SLOEETESIER PORTABLE top-doll- d all-tim- walnut You May ISever See ltorry . . . per pent of the executives earning $25,000 to $50,000 a year were more than 10 pounds overweight. -T- hirty-five per cent of those in the range of $10,000 to $20,000 were more than 10 pounds overweight when measured by life insurance actuarial tables. man That is, the difference between the trim and his oyerstuffed, lower-paicolleagues may be measured at so much per pound. Say a penalty of $1,000 a pound, said Bernard Willcns, vice president of the company. It has to do with image, Willens said. Checking with companies that refused otherwise qualified applicants, we found many had been rejected because of overweight A typical example, Willens said, is the financial manager of his late 30s who was recently refused a $45,000 job as top man in charge of corporate holdings for a conglomerate. Willens said, education, Everything else clicked, . . everything, but he was $ pounds overbackground weight He finally took a position with another empany for West benefited greatly the Western Air Lines in August, which helped the regional airlines traffic to an e high. ,fca by any - 10 Only r s m an sentatives and try revealed: Air from strike send rr.rs.a'."! A i will supervise brokerthe ages repre- d, Of Air West 5 ' and as sales of manager the over-- t h c o u r.ter Co. brokerage. NEW YORK (AP) Being overweight can cost an executive $10,000 a year in salary, Recording to one study, as more and more companies prefer a lean and hungry look in middle and1 top management. The traditional pudgy-jowle-d caricature of financial managers is a thing of the past, says the Robert Half Personnel Agencies, Inc. A study of 6ome 50,000 executive posts filled by ths company in financial and data processing fields across the coun- WAL Strike Boosts Use SOLID STATE RECEIVER STA-4- V has e-- Extra Pounds Can Be; Costly Ford announced earlier ii? wbuld trim its 1970 new car warranty to one year with unlimited mileage. Chrysler has not announced its plans. STA-4- . - 50,000 miles. 4 Ata Salt Lake in 1949. He attended East High School and the University of Utah. The sticker price Includes the federal excise tax of 7 per cent and dealer handling charges but does not include state and local taxes. HURRY TO THE RADIO SHACK AND SNAP UP THESE BARGAINSUl . I chamber, Mr. ODonnell who explained that ODonnell will continue with his television work while working with the chamber. ODonnell was bom in Glasgow, Scotland and came to boost. c rmary AoiaiaifraltoKi f Holt, resident of the Pi ti president retires Jan. 1, years with 1970, the after -- 35 ' industry. , During his three years as Mountain Bells president, g Wingert directed a expansion program costing more than $600 mil- - f NfiX' telephone record-breakin- Lowell F. Robert K. Timothy , . '. successor named Wingert . . . will retire s lion. Nearly 590,000 telephones were added to the companys that time, system during bringing the total now served to 3.8 million. Timothy, who will continue to be responsible for opera-- i tions until the end of the year, is a native of Gilcrest, Colo., 147-17- 4 MHi RIO. AM RADIO original high hood Potrolmonltts Tho THIS SALE yoo tunc io oo local and state poliet, omtrgtncy itrvicti, civil defimt and AM. ONin tone nnd volume controls, balance control 7 LIKE 17? CHARGE IT! PORTABLE STEREO RECORD KEO. 09.05 89 PAIR A trvly iuerb all trvnuster p steree that fils mte any nook er cer. d reem Drop-li- e wn cabi-lo- nr Dooblo your driving pltoiuru with u FM itorao. Dual channel stntic-fru- 4m U 1U1 SAVE 23.05 Livestock 1 SPEAKER REG. $160 Poir DOCTORS speaker boasts lispower enough lor tening, yet sensitive to soft "lows," too. 40-- 980 u FLAWLESS QUALITY AT ROCK BOTTOM PRICES! f( . i - H WT" F? and W DENTISTS STOP! Stop yearning for extra cash. Cath maybt to invest in the market while it's stili down. Call the nice man at Universal leasing and let them buy your equipment from you, then lease it back to you. You will benefit two ways: 1. You will have a big bundle of immediate cash. 2. You will have a nice tax write-of- f an the lease pay- 0 1 WfflsiUMi NORTH SALT LAKK Product Llvt stock AAtrktt (Wednesday Auction) Hoot lb bar l5 iftady, row and gilt 25&2S50, sows 17 50 20 00; 200; good and choict tlaunft lambs 26 40? lb lamb 2 00, sloughttr awes .50-- CO Metier; mostly 0 25 cwt; ftw shall kind down to 5 00; yearling to SQuart-mout-h ewes 25 5 00 head. Cattit sso, cow steady with Monday but 50 lower than last Wednesday bulla steady; few cattle steady; ttocker and feeder cattle strong. Cows ctnnert and cutters m o s 9 iTto-oiO- , utility and commerrlal 18 to 22 50, o few kind with 22 90; Slaughter bulls 24 good I choice veal cal van 29 50 Fed cattle Good to choice steer 26 3V 27 80; standard to good 24 2525 35; choice 26 50, good to low choice hp tr 0 y i THIS SALE ONLY! SPEAKER SPECIAL! MC-100- and a graduate of Colorado ,J State College. He joined the , phone company in 1946 as coin telephone collector af. J Greeley. He has held a vane-t-y of assignments with the Idaho company, Including vice president and vice president of public relations. 'ffiS - J .1 heifers 24 80 Feeder cattle Choice 00, choice 30 good V j j lb steers lb lb 25 sera ; chotre choice 00. 7 ments. lb heifers 25 lb steer calves 33 lb 28 5 ; choke calves 30 - We lease almost everything: Autos, office furni ture and equipment, heavy equipment, special tools, fixtures, medical equipment, computer equipment, etc., etc. Give us a call. 6 5001 Cattle (AP USDA9 none; mostly 25 lower, hftjfwi lower; cows steady; bulls iftedv; slaughter steers high choice and prim 1,104 lb 30 00, choice with end pr me 1,050-- 1 lb 29 0 50; choice 975-- 250 lb 28 00 29 00, flood and choice 27 25 heifers prime 1,025 lb 2B75f n por-- ' chc S3 7 9 9 5 lb 26 02 7 5 crisvonsAL 1279 South Main Street 457-173- 7 4 50 good 375-- o lb heifer OMAHA calves jr & , f I5 mm LEASING CORP. , fttdt 25 50 m eood standard eni and 24 00 26 00; good 22 50 24 00, co. nerctel cows utility 2fl 0 21 50 canner cutter r0ws and 1150 2 0 50 bulls utility, commercial flO" 24 00 25 5'' 7 000 Hog barrows Qllts 25 2 4 If" 5 J 13 85, to 2S tb 25 5 75; sows et ,, - - li. aid 525 steady lowrr, 1 3 330 400 lb 33 50 24 50 500, slaughter lambs steady td Sheep 25 higher; slaughter ewes fully steady, choice seme Ictc spring slaughter 215 end e Ine 85 K8 lb 37 00 27 7shor -slaughter f wes cull to good 7 50 9 S ' |