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Idaho State Journal from Pocatello, Idaho • Page 9

Location:
Pocatello, Idaho
Issue Date:
Page:
9
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

POCATELLO, IDAHO, FRIDAY, IANUARY 23, IDAHO STATE JOURNAL-SECTIQfJ A PACE 9 AlcanAI AlldCh AlldSt AlisCh Alcoa Amax ABrnds AmBdc ACan ACyan AmElP Am Mot AmStnJ AmTT Ampex Anacon Armco AtlRch Atlas AvonPd BestFds BeechA BellH Bendix Boeing BoiseC BristM Brit Pet Brunswk Budd Burlln Bur IN Burghs CastIC CatTr Celanse Cerro Crt-td Cessna Chmpln Chryslr CitSv CocaC ColgPal ColGas Comsat Con Ed ConFds ContAir ConCan ConOil ConDat Cowles CrwZI CurtW Dart In Deere DelAAon Dillon Disney DowCh Dressr duPont EastAir EasKd Eaton ElPaso Esmark EvansP Exxon FairC Firestn FMC FdFair FdrdM ForMcK FreepM Close Chg 'e 40 -i- Is )i a 3, 42V2 52 '5 1,2 32 VB 221s-- 1.4 20 6 1.4 -f IB 29? 4 4 1 2 VB 16 VB 28 1,4 2,6 35Va-- Va 102 Vt Va 18V4 VB 7 23 14 Va 26 Va Va Va VB 7 VB 40V8-- 11 32 Va 32V2-- Va 58V2 1V2 106 VB Us Vi V4 Va 3 91 -3 241'e-- Va 24 3 Va VB 1578-- a Selected New York Stock Exchange Prices By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS New York Stocks hroeht GamSk Ganet GenDyn Gen El GnFood GenMI GnMot GPubU GTelEI GTire GaPac Gilete Goodrh Goodyr Grace GrGiant Greyhd GulfO Hecla HewltP HollyS Homestk Honywll IdahoP IdealB IBM IntHar InNick IntPap IntTT Jewel Ka.sAI Ken cot Krafco Kresge LibMcN Litton Lockhd LonStl Macke Macy MadFd MaraO MarMa McDnld McDnD Merck MMM Mobil Monsan MonDU MonPw MtFuel MtStTel Nat Dis NatGyp Natlnd NatStl NCR NiaMP NwtAir NwtBnc OcciPt OlinCp OMARK OotMar Owen III PacGas PacPw PacTT PanAm PanEP Pasco PenCnt PenDix Penney 22V2- 371.2 S3' 4 -323-4-- 26i 4 21 51i a- 24 -241 a- 273.B 10912-34'- a i 143-4-- 4 4 3 a 8 8 4 8 4 8 4 4 6 2 a 2 250.2V2 245 68 3 25i a 22i 3 a 8 -2 2834--11 34 32V4--1 7Va 8 17 5 30 62 18V 2 65V 2 50'A- -19 7 20 7V4 27 28V2 22V2 15Va 31V2 ,2 5 53V2-- 8 ''a .8 ,8 VB Va 2 VB Va Vs Va V'8 VB VB VB Pepsi Pfi'er PhelpD PhilMor PhilPt Polroid ProcGm PSvCol PugSd Pulmn RCA RepStl Reylnti ReyMet Rockwl RoylD Safewy StJoMin StReg SCM Scott Sears ShellO SoCalE SouthC SooPac SouRy SperryR StdBnd StdOCal StdOInd StdOOh StaufC SterDg StuWor Tektrnx Teledyn Tennco Texaco Texglf Texlns Textrn Thiokl Timkn TodShp TWA Transarr, TriCon TRW TwenCt UAL UMC UnCarb UnElec UnOCal UPac Uniryl UnitBds UnitCp USGyp USInd USStl UOP Utah In Varian Warnr WnAir WnBnc WUnion WestEl Wehr White Wolwth Xerox Zenith Sales 731 38 1-8 35' 94 --1 WB- IB 28V2-- Vs 24 Va 3.5 31 Ve 25' Vi 42 46V2-- VB 38 8 38 13V4-- 183,8 3,8 2034- V'2 153.4-- VB 32 1V2 44 38V4 3, 42V2-- VB 100V4 3,8 V2 50', 2-- Va 26V8 31Vs VB 44 9Va- lOVs-- Va 203,4 12 28V2-- 12 79 V2 VB 4Va Va V2 V4 Vs 43 8V'8-- Va VB 27,420,000 uay, si ing pr pushin previo The age of 11. 10 a a wide New -i Trat live. The observ spite First cided 1 'for the The Louis Thurs been follow seeme the OA rates Sign ness i tion's gave i Feder take credit Fed VolUIT 150,00 5V 4 The Amer marks 33.94 PHI tradin of Tra Mar May Jul Sep Dec Mar May Jul Sep Dec Mar Action Centers on Pay, ERA Keynote GOP Lincoln Dinner NEW YORK (AP) The stock market jumped ahead today, shaking off the profit taking pressures that had been pushing it downward in the two sessions. The 2 p.m. Dow Jones average of 30 industrials was up 11.10 at 954.58, and gainers held a wide lead over losers on the New York Stock Exchange.

WAYNE K1DWELL Trading remained very ac- Here February 11 ve. The upsurge surprised some I 11 4 observers because it came de- i 6 i spite the fact that New York's nal City Bank decided against cutting its prime it at per cent ing week. The First National Bank of St. jone to per cent Thursday, and Wall Street had been expecting Citibank to follow suit this morning. said investors seemed to have concluded that the over-all trend in interest rates was still downward.

Signs of persistent sluggishness in the growth of the nation's money supply evidently gave rise to the belief that the Reserve might soon take some further steps to ease Fedders was the Big Board volume leader, up Vt at 6. A block traded at The NYSE's composite index .63 to 52.60, and the Stock Exchange market value index was up 1.05 PRICES SUPPLIED BY PIPER, JAFFRAY HQPWOOD, INC. Reported to the Journal at 12 Noon Daily Albertsns Cons Fr Apache Desert Ph 16 ASA Ltd FMC Bekerl 16V4 Heublein Boeing 28 Holiday Inn 7 Boise CC 26V4 -ID A Power 277e Bucyrus 22Vs Imperial Cp 13 City Inv Int'l Mining 8 3 CompSci AM STOCK EXCHANGE "Bfascan Grand Cen 7Vi Husky Oil 20 Imperial Oil Int Resources Kaiser i N. Can Oils Sambo's 17V4 Terra Chem OVER THE COUNTER Am Micro Farmers Grp 55 3 Farmers Wld Life 37V2-39V2 Fst Sec Cp Garret 18 -20 Ida FN Bank 34 -36 -Intnt Gas JB Big Boy 2Vi Pay-N-Save 28 Source Cap -10 May (Contracts) Maine Potatoes OPEN HIGH LOW CLOSE 16.50 17.00 16.39 16.90 May (Contracts) Idaho Potatoes i 6PEN HIGH LOW CLOSE 1 .12.35 12.98 12.30 12.98 Potatoes L. Strauss 40 7 Sunsnine 1 IVa LevtzFurn Trans Am lost McDonalds 63 Transwey 20 McDonDg 20th Cen Fox Mar Monsanto 90 Union Pac 77 3 a Ralston Utah 8, 29V4 Sears 69 Warner Com Jm Skaggs 34 Zales Aug Sep 1 M.

1 Livestock Jan LIVESTOCK BURLEY-- Sale prices OC reported Jan. 15 at the Burley grair Commission Yards Wh CATTLE-- Baby calves 15-30; No. 1 light Holstein steers calves 35- Prot light Holstein heifer Prot calves 60-75; light whiteface Prot steer calves light Prot whiteface heifer calves 26-29; 3.12, common feeder steers 28-31; 4.84. common feeder heifers Wh whiteface feeder steers 35- cwt. whiteface feeder heifers Ca 29-32; Holstein feeder steers 27- 3, to 30 Holstein milk cows and heifers 350-450; canner and cutter 19-23; utility and commercial cows 24-26; whiteface CK heiferettes 24 feeder bulls com killer bulls 27-28 1 of th HOGS-- Weaner pigs 3214-45; toda fat hogs sows close SHEEP-- Feeder lambs 44-47; and fat lambs killer ewes vane 6.50-8.

bush Grain GO (AP) Futures trading on the Chicago Board iday: High Low Close WHEAT (5,000 bn) 3.52 3.48 3.50 3.58 3.541/2 3.57 3.611/2 3.58 3.59Va 3.6?/2 3.64 3.66 3.75 3.731/2 3.741/2 CORN (5,000 bu) 2.71% 2.67% 2.71V 4 2.77 3 2.73% 2.77% 2.81% 2.771/4 2.81 2.77% 2.74 2.77% 2.69% 2.66V4 2.68% 2.74% 2.72 2.741/2 OATS (5,000 bu) Mar 1.57% 1.56% 1.57% May 1.52% 1.51% 1.52 1 4 Jul 1.49% 1.48% 1.49% 1.49 1.48 1.49 SOYBEANS (5,000 bu) Attorney General Wayne KidweU will be the keynote speaker at the Bannock County Republican Lincoln Day Dinner Feb. 11 at 7:30 p.m. at the El Cielito Reception Center, 5147 Whitaker. Jim Johnston, county GOP chairman, said Idaho Republican chairman Vern Ravenscroft will be the master of ceremonies for the dinner. Second District Congressman George Hansen will also be in attendance.

Tickets for the dinner are $10 and are available from members of the Bannock County GOP Central Committee and the Idaho State University College Republicans. A social hour at 6:30 p.m. will precede the dinner. Kidwell was a Boise attorney before being elected attorney general in 1974. Prior to that, he served two terms in the Idaho Senate, was Ada County prosecuting attorney, and made an unsuccessful bid for Congress in 1972.

He served as Idaho Young Republican chairman for Goldwater in 1964 and is acting this year as chairman of the Ronald Reagan presidential campaign in Idaho. BOISE. Idaho (AP)-The only real action in the Idaho Legislature is centered on state employe pay raises and rescinding the Equal Rights Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. The Joint Finance-Appropriation Committee says it is stalled until something is done about the employe salaries.

The committee completed hearings Thursday on Gov. Cecil D. Andrus' $250.2 million budget for the next fiscal year and approved 10 supplemental appropriations bills for introduction. Sen. Richard High.

R-Twin Falls, and Rep. William Roberts, R-Buhl, the cochairmen, said that until legislative leaders decide on a state salary scale or lax relief proposals, they can't begin drafting other appropriation bills. There wasn't much else happening Thursday, with a bill to study brucellosis being introduced in the Senate and a House committee introducing a bill to require a course in economics in ali public schools. Roberts said the finance committee is more than a week ahead of schedule. High said that if a decision is reached on the salary scale the committee can introduce all its bills long before the 45th day of the session, the statutory deadline.

The chairmen said the committee would consider performance audits of several state agencies today and Monday would begin sorting out dedicated funds. "We can't begin writing bills until we know definitely what salary adjustment figure to include," High said. Andrus asked for a cost-of- living increase of $6 million for state employes. An interim committee studied the salary schedule and recommended use of a plan from Hay and Associates of Chicago. It recommended paying state em- ployes for productivity and che importance of their jobs, rather than on longevity.

Both parties have been cau- cussing over the pay scale, but no one has reached a decision. The Hay plan would use all the S6 million Andrus recommended for salary raises. Some employes would get pay raises under the Hay plan, some would have their pay reduced. The Idaho State Employes Association says it opposes the plan. A second resolution to rescind Idaho's ratification of the Equal Rights Amendment was introduced Thursday and a fight developed over the validity of the first one introduced Wednesday.

The second came from the Senate Agricultural Affairs Committee and was worded the same as the one from the State Affairs Committee. The difference is in the fonn. The first is a joint resolution requiring a two-thirds majority for passage The stx'ond is concurrent resolution requiring only a simply majority. Sen. Jame Yost, R-Wendell, challenged the validity of the second resolution, saying a joint resolution is used only for an amendment to the sU.te constitution.

The Senate Judiciary and Rules Committee was asked to study the question and report today. The Senate Agriculture Committee introduced a bill to start a Legislative Council study of the serious outbreak of brucel- losis among Idaho cattle. The action was started by Sen. John Peavey, R-Rupert, a rancher. He said all Idaho counties were certified free of the disease in 1971.

but 145 herds are now infected. The bill would have the council investigate (he extent of Hie outbreak and recommend steps to control the disease. "This disease is a big problem in Idaho." said Sen. Larry Craig. "If a rancher gets a bangs disease quarantine, everything conies to a halt.

You can sell only if you take the cattle to slaughter." The House Education Committee introduced the bill requiring economics courses. Dale Blickenstaff of the Council on Economic Education told the committee most schools do not teach economics. He said students should be exposed to the theories behind free enterprise. "The bill is general enough to allow freedom of thought when teaching," said. "We shouldn't teach communism or socialism, bui should leach about them.

We should teach free enterprise to show it's better." He said there was a shortage of teachers qualified to teach the course. Andrus signed the first bill to come out of the legislature Thursday. The law clarifies a bill passed last year to plug a possible tax loophole. It was intended last year to permanently increase the income tax credit to $15 and provide that a person would be entitled to a refund on any unused portion of the credit. It came out different.

The State Tax Commission said it could have provided everyone with a $15 refund. Chilberg Strongly Critical Of Hay Plan for State Pay 4.79 4.74 4.87% 4.81 4.95 4.89 4.99 4.94 5.01 4.98 4.77 4.85'/i 4.931/2 4.96 5.01 5.07V-. 5.03 1 5.06 5.13V 2 5.10 5.12',2 OC-DEN (API-Utah-Idaho grain exchange: Wheat delivered, truck bids: No. 1 Red Ord. 3.20, No.

1 Red 10 3.20, No. 1 Red 11 3.20, No. 1 Red 12 3.35, No. .1 Red 13 Protein 3.70, No. 1 White wheat 3.12, No.

2 White barley, 46 or 84. Wheat per bushel, barley per vt. barley BY DWIGHT JENSEN Special to the Journal BOISE--The strongest attack yet mounted on the Hay proposal for payment of state employes is contained in a letter sent today from Director of Administration D. E. "Skip" Chilberg to Senate Minority Leader Cy Chase, D-St.

Maries. Chase had described himself as undecided on the question after hearing the State Personnel Commission speak in its favor at a joint caucus earlier this week. Chilberg said the proposal would cost 56 million to implement, would overpay some state employees and underpay others, and would encourage favoritism and mediocrity in state government administration. The 6 ra illion Chilberg said, IdatoRepub'li'ca'n'par't'y'saction would go just into adjusting committee says it is backing a existing salaries to conform proposal to remove religious with the plan. Under the governor's budget there would be no money left over for general pay adjustments.

He has recommended that million go into increases in state employe pay and fringe benefits. Chilberg said the legislature GOP Wants Bigotry Out BOISE, Idaho (APi--The discrimination and bigotry from the Idaho Constitution. Republican State Chairman Vernon Ravenscroft of Tuttle said the GOP favors an amendment to remove an old section of the constitution which dis- qualifies persons who believe in nas a rea( jy adopted a policy of celestial marriage from voting, Beeping state pay competitive serving as a juror or holding tn pay or similar jobs in civil office. private industry. He said the Members of the Church of success of this policy is made Jesus Christ of Latter-dav evident by a waiting list of 1900 persons waiting to get state jobs.

The Hay proposal, he said, would call for a reduction in the pay of radio technicians. Although no one's pay would be cut immediately--that is one of and keeping radio technicians. Moreover, he said, tile proposal calls for increasing the pay for senior secretaries to a point above that of radio technicians. He said that fails to take into account the effort and education needed by the technicians to become licensed, and said it is not a good policy because it would throw state government salaries out of kilter with those in private industry. Another point on which Chilberg attacked the plan was what it calls "mid-point budgeting." The idea, he said, is that employes who perform superiorly well should receive extra pay.

The amount of pay some employees might get under this plan is to be con- sidered, and so is the amount of pay employees would get on a base pay rate without extra "pay for performance." The budget is then to be set at a midpoint between these two levels. The result, Chilberg says, would be to require state agencies to keep mediocre people on the payroll in order to balance out the cost of those receiving extra pay for good performance. He called it "budgeting for mediocrity." Furthermore, Chilberg said, persons in a position to decide who gets the extra pay could direct it to their personal favorites among employes, thus turning it into "pay for personality" instead of "pay for performance." House Considers Local Option Saints (Mormon) believe in celestial marriage. IDAHO FALLS, Idaho (AP)-- FMNS f.o.b. shipping point.

Potatoes: Demand for non- 'S'ize As good, market steady; demand for count cartons light, market slightly lower. Russets washed 2 in or 4 oz min U.S. No. 1 50 Ib cartons 80-lOOs 12.0013.00, mostly 12.25-12.50; 10 Ib mesh sacks per cwt nonsize A 7.00-7.50; 100 Ib sacks size A few 7.50-8.00; nonsize A few sales 6.00-6.25; 10 oz min 8.50-8.75: U.S. No.

2 3.75-4.00. Onions: Western Idaho and Malheur Valley, Ore. Demand light, market about steady; 50 sack's yellow sweet Spanish 3 In and larger mostly 6.50, 2i.i-3 -in mostly 3.50-3.75. CHICAGO (AP) (USDA)'Maior potato markets points U.S. 1A in 100 Ib sacks: Wisconsin "russets 6.00-6.50; North Dakota 'round reds 6.50-7.00; Colorado 7.00-7.25; Colorado red 'McClurgs IDAHO FALLS--Sale prices reported Jan.

19-21 at the Idaho Livestock Auction: CATTLE--Commercial cows 23-24; utility cows cutter cows 19-21; canners 1216; bulls 21-27; good feeder steers seVi-ST'i; medium feeder steers 34-35; Holstein steers 2329; good feeding heifers 30-31; medium feeding heifers 28-29; feeding cows 18-20: stock steer calves stock heifer calves 28-32; dairy type calves 15-20; SHEEP--Good to choice fat lambs 47 a-48; feeder lambs 4748; ligM feeder lambs 44-47; odd ruff feeder lambs 44 down; light fat ewes 11-12; canner ewes and bucks 9-11; HOGS--Extreme top 51.20; bulk 240-260, 5050 2 260-280, 49-50; 280-300, 4749- sows under 300 40; 300330, 38i HO; 330-400, over 450, 35-36; stags 35-44; boars 22-30. Grain PORTLAND, Ore. (AP)-Portland Grain Exchange close WneatNo 1 bulk bid to arrive market delivered coast (1-30 or 30-60days): White (1-30) 3.79, (30-60) 3.79. Soft Whits -30 3.79, (30-60! 3.80. Montana Dark Hard Winter Ordinary (1-30) 3 'Barley 6 bid arrive market delivered coast (1-30 or 30-60 days No 2, 45 Ibs Western (1-30) 105.00, (30-60) 1 5.50 Coarse griin wholesale, prompt delivery bulk on fob track PortLd Corn, No 2, yellow Eastern 1 13.00.

Oats, No 2, SSlbs Western 117.00. Barley, No 2, 45 Ibs Western I07.u0. Grain snrghum, free market 109.00. Board of Trade CHICAGO (AP) Farm commodity futures traded most of the Chicago Board of Trade today on the minus side, but closed in a flurry of new buying short covering that advanced prices from Ho 3 cents a jshel. Oats were up around wheat 2, corn 2 3 and soybeans 3.

Soybean oil was down some 60 points, or more than Va cent a pound. Soybean meal advanced about SI a ton. At the close, soybeans were to 3 cents a bushel higher, March 4.77; corn was 1 to 29j higher, March 2.71V4; wheat was to 2. higher, March 3.50 and oats were to higher, March 1.57', 2 Metals NEW YORK (AP) -Spot nonferrous metal prices Friday; copper cents a pound, U.S. destinations; lead 19 cents a pound; zinc 37 cents a pound, delivered; tin $3.1288 a pound, New York; gold $126.25 per troy ounce, New York; silver $3.940 per troy ounce, New York; quicksilver $120.00 nominal per flask, New York.

Livestock A A A A Livestock quotations Friday: Hogs: barrows and gilts active, higher; U.S. 1-3, 200-240 Ib 50.50-51.00; SOWS 425 Ib and heavier fully steady, lighter weights in small supply, 425-600 Ib 39.75-40.00. Cattle and calves: slaughter steers and heifers absent, supply mainly feeder cattle for Friday auction sale; cows fully steady; utility and commercial cows 22.00-24.50, a few 24.75-25.00; canner and cutter 18.00-22.00. "For decades we have made no attempt to enforce these restrictions," said Ravenscroft, "but the words remain in our constition and removed. "There should be no place in such a contract for language which enunciates the prejudice and persecution of a bygone age." the provisions of the plan--it would mean less pay for new employees in that field, and a slowdown in pay increases for those already hired.

The result, Chilberg predicted, would be increased difficulty in getting Auditor Suggests Changes in Mine Safety Program BOISE, Idaho (AP)-Legislative Auditor Clyde Koontz suggested today that Idaho change its mine safety inspection program to avoid obvious duplications with federal programs. Koontz said discontinuing of the state mine inspection program "was not considered the best alternative" but proposed adoption of an agreement under which the federal Mining Enforcement and Safety Administration assumes the responsibility or establishes a plan under which the two agencies would work cooperatively. Al Teske, executive secretary of the Idaho Mining Association, told the Legislature's Joint Finance-Appropriations Committee the mining industry would prefer to continue the mine inspections "at the closest levei of government." Koontz said the Department of Labor and Industrial Services had hired more administrative employes in the past year than were authorized by the budget. He said the administrator of the safety inspection division had been hired last May without ever being authorized by the legislature. "We take exception to the creation of this new position," Koontz said.

"New positions should be approved through the budget approval process." He also said nine other positions will be established in the department to implement the Idaho Building Code Advisory act without direct approval by the budget process. Koontz said if the position of director of the safety inspection division is necessary for the department's operation "justification should not be is the establishment of positions without legislative approval that makes it almost impossible tn control the number of positions." Koontz also said the department had purchased a four- wheel vehicle in fiscal 1975 without legislative authority. He recommended the department's appropriation from the general fund for the current fiscal year be revised to eliminate the authority for such a vehicle, unless the department can justify the need for a new one. Labor Director Bartlelt Brown said his agency had been able to effect considerable savings by purchasing the vehicle at the time he did. BOISE, Idaho (AP)--Two wide sweeping changes were proposed today to a bill being considered by a House Revenue and Taxation subcommittee to give cities the power to levy taxes other than property taxes.

The bill, drafted by the Association of Idaho Cities, would permit cities, upon a vote of the people, to levy 13 specified local taxes, including income, sales, liquor-by-the-drink, hotel-motel occupancy and utility franchise taxes. At the request of committee members, Floyd Decker, executive director of the municipalities group, came up with a proposed amendment which would create a special fund into which would be deposited all revenue raised by the non-property taxes beyond that anticipated. The fund would be Andrus Signs Firsf Bill in '76 BOISE, Idaho. (AP)--Gov. Cecil D.

Andrus has signed the first bill passed by the 1976 Idaho Legislature. It clarifies a law enacted last year, plugging a possible tax loophole. It was intended last year to increase the income tax credit to $15 on a permanent basis and provide that a person would be entitled to a refund on any unused portion of the credit. But it came out differently-and the State Tax Commission said it could have provided all taxpayers with a $15 refund. Site Hearing Set BOISE, Idaho (AP)-The House Revenue and Taxation Committee will hold a public hearing Feb.

3 on. a bill to change to site valuation assessment if approved by voters in the county. used to make rebates to property taxpayers. Also suggested were changes to require a simple majority for adoption of broad-based sales or income taxes, but a two-thirds majority to impose taxes which affected primarily one industry or group of industries, such as an amusement tax or liquor tax. Rep.

Perry Swisher, D-Pocatello, said the nature of the economy of Ketchum and Sun Valley would permit establishment of a liquor-by-the-drink tax or hotel-motel tax by a two-thirds vole, whereas it would be unlikely that it could be adopted in Boise or other The subcommittee chairman, Rep. Ralph Olmstead, R-Twin Falls, said he was interested in seeing that the list of 13 authorized taxes be cut down. WATCH FOR OUR AD IN FAMILY WEEKLY SUNDAY, JAN. 25th Magnavox Magi 138N.orlh Main'St, HOME ENTERTAINMENT CENTER COWBOY FAMILY STEAK HOUSE PARK BY THE HITCHIN' POST BEHIND THE POCATELLO MALL ENTER THRU OUR OUTSIDE ENTRANCE--OPEN AFTER THE MALL IS CLOSED WHY ARE WE BETTER? BECAUSE WE OFFER 2 Top Sirloin Steaks With BAKED POTATO TEXAS TOAST $199 3 HOURS 11 A.M. TO 10 P.M.

MOM-SAT. 11 A.M. TO 9P.M. SUNDAY.

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About Idaho State Journal Archive

Pages Available:
178,548
Years Available:
1949-1977