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Idaho State Journal from Pocatello, Idaho • Page 7

Location:
Pocatello, Idaho
Issue Date:
Page:
7
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

POCATELLO, IDAHO, TUESDAY JULY V. Idoho Stole Journol Section A 7 Selected New York Stock Exchange Prices By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS AlcanAI AlldCh AlldSI AllsCh Alcoa AHss AmAL ABds AbC AmCn ACyn AmEP AmMo ASmt AmStd ATT Ampx Ancn Armco Arco Atls Avon BeatF BchA BIIHw Boing SsCs BrisM BriP Brnsw BudCo Brlln BrINr Brghs CstIC CtT Clnse CerCp Crt-td Csna Cmpln Chsie Chrslr CitS CocCI ClgPI CiGas CmIS Cmst ConEd ConFd CntAL CntCn CntOil CtID Cwls CrnZ CrtW Drtln Deer DIMnt Dilon Disny DwCh Drssr duPnt EasAL EasKo Eatn EIPNG Esmrk EvnsP Exon FrCam Frstn FMC FdFr ClOSe Chq 29 36 -1U 23'-0- 8 4 43' 2 Hi 17V- 35'' 2-1- 24li 26'o-- 1,8 18 a 19', J- 46 5,, 21 4- '-a 213.J+ i B9'a 1 Va 47' 4-- li Til 16', 3 17V7- 'B 14 2 ''B 10 33 5 ii 1114-- 58 3 -4 30V4- 3 -3 '8 '-2 15'-; 5 VB VB 20 VB V4 6 23 VB IBVsJ- 31 2 3 6 3 VB 11 3 -3 6VB 381-4-- 16' '2-- a FrMK FrpM Frohf GmSk Ganet GnDyn GE GnFd GnMil GnMo GPU GTE Gtir GaPac Gilet Gdrch C-dyr Grace GrnGnt Gryh GlfO HclM HwPk HlyS Hmst Hnywl IdaP IcIIBs IMCnt IBM IntHr IntN IntPa ITT Jewel JonLa KaisA Kencot Kraft Kresge Libby Litton Lockhd LoneSG l.VO Macke Macy MadFd Magnvx Marat Martin Me Don Merck MMM Mobil Monsn MonDU MonPw MtFuel MtStTel NalDis NatGyp Natlnd NalStl NCR NiaMP NwtAir NwtBnc Occid Olin Omark OutMr Owenlll PacGs PacPw PacTT PanAm PacEP Pasco M'B- 26' 2- 34'. 2 49' 8 2 3 4 50 1.4 48' 4- 1 8 11' 2- a 22' 4 29 8 19 2 163 8 '-8 22 19 2 14 21 3 4 3 57 4 24' 4 15' o- 14 7 2121.1 233 3 5 a 20 2 li 8 4 163,4 a0 3 i 333-i-- 5' 2 4 21 6 3 4 4 a '-B 8 3 -4-- 43.4- 8 33 a 791-44- 3 723-B-- 1'8 39 VB 25V2 2'-B 18'8 13 s-a 1 4 4. 3Va-- VB 331-d- 9 V2 22V VB V4 17 3Va 27 1,4 113-8- 5.,, PenCen PenDx Penney Pepsi Pfizer Phelp PhlMo PhlPt Polard Proct PSvCol PugSP Pulmr RCA RepStl Reylnd ReyMt Rockwl RoylD Safwy StJoe StReg SCM Scott Sears Shell SouCal Sou Co SouPac SouRy Sperry StBrn StOilCI StOMIn StOilOh Stauff StrDr StuWr Tektrnx Teldyn Tenco Texaco TexGlf Tex Ins Textrn Thiokl Timkn TodShp TWA Tranm TriCon TRW TwenCen UAL UMC UnCarb UnElec UnOcal UnPac Uniryl UniAir UNiBrn UniCp UnMM USGyp USInd USStl UnivOil WarL WnAir WnBnc WnUnion WesEI Wyrhsr WhiM Wolwth Xerox Zenith Sales la 2 5 7 2 3 4 1 4 55' 2 1 49 1 121-4 22'B- 425-8 18'B 26 2834-- I I 371,8 3-. 24 10' B- V.

''B 441.0-- VB 37 SB-- SB 54V2 27 1,8 2 6 a 24 1934-- 8 25 253-8-- 1,4 17'2 15'2 5 8 Vs '-8 VB 151-2-- V4 10 3 VB 40 VB 26 5'-B-- V4 6 5 a-- VB 18 Vs 15 Va 16V4 Va VB 37 3,4 VB 21 10,270,000 Livestock A A A i I'SDAi- Livestock quotations Tuesday: Hogs: o.tlOO; barrows and gilts steady to 50 lower: 1-3 2'M- 23(1 Ibs 39.uti-3ii.5u; 230-KDli Ibs sows generally steady; 35U-CW Ibs 28.00-29.25. Cattle: 7.000, steers steady: heifers fully steady, some instances of eows steady to weak; high choice and prime 1.125-1.250 Ib steers 43.504-1.00: choice 1.000-1.200 Ibs 42.00-43.50: choice 1.200-1.SCO ibs 41.75-12 50; load high choice and prime 1,000 Ib heifers 42.75; others same grade Ibs 42.00-42.50; choice Ibs 41.00-42.00; i i and comm i a cows 27.50-29.50; moderate number utility 20.7530.00. Sheep: 150: spring slaughter iambs 25-50 lower; choice and prime 44.00-45.00. Estimated livestock receipts for Wednesday: a and calves hogs (i.OOO; sheep 200. Grain A Ore.

A I Portland Grain Exchange close Monday. Wheat No. 1 bulk bid to arrive market delivered coast (1-30 or 30-60 days): Whits 11-30) 4.60. (30-60) 4.60. Soft White (1-30) 4.63.

(30-60) 4.60Any origin Dark Northern Spring (30-60) 5.00. Any origin Dark Hard Winter Ordinary (1-30) 4.65. Barley bid arrive market delivered coast (1-30 or 30-60 days): No. 2, 45 Ibs Western (130! 108.00, (30-60) 107.50. Coarse grain wholesale, AS OTHERS SEE IT Too Much of One Party i e.u-epiions.

legislative ami local election campaigns offer i changes in philosophy of outlook in Kast Idaho. That is why Richard Howard a 'Kicks College instructor. was moved to make (Ins comment in filing lor the stale repivsentative race MI District 31: "It disturbs me ihr.t we have a virtual one party system in this section ut Idaho. 1 believe more could be accomplished in the legislature if we had a strong two party system." Stallings went on to point that the Republican Party has also been divided by an invasion of right wingers years ago which some in the Republican party feel is really a third pariy. And so it is--really part and parcel of the budding American party a i i more Democrat philosophy and act i could a i a i a i i element in Idaho politics in decision making There is i doubt that the Idaho Legislature has been "running scared" of the right wing group as a result of the recall election in Bonneville County and threats of the same elsewhere.

It has shown up in failing to enact some legislation and even being influenced to a i i i i i thai on the women's rights amendment. Mr. Stallings has a cogen! point. It is all too much of a one party system- actually a split one oartv system, and not YOUR MONEY'S WORTH Myths of Recycled Pcrpei prompt delivery, bulk ton. fob enough vo'ters'can see the split.

By Sylvic Porter MY I'll ML Products made from recycled materials are inferior in quality to those made with virgin materials FACT: A a recycled fibers can have superior quality charactcrisiics to'some types of virgin fiber uses. Recycled are processed and sold lo manufacturers with' the same or equivalent qualitative standards as standards for virgin materials. MYTH NO. TWO: Products made from recycled materials arc more costly than those made from the primary stuff. FACT: ICquivalent products, whether made from virgin or recycled materials, are competitive in cost in the markei'placc.

Studies made by the federal government's CciuM-al Services Administration as well as by the Paperboard Research Development conclude that if products of quality are compared from the standpoint of cost, recycled libers come out as good as, if not better than, the virgin materials. MYTH NO. THREE: It's hard to find and therefore to buy products inaJe from recycled materials. KMT- Kvery printer, paper merchant and stationery store has the products or can obtain them. But in this case, (here is no denying lhal if you and I demanded more recycled paper products, we would draw them lo the marketplace (and their prices then also would become even more competitive wiMi those made from virgin Kverv lime you write a letter or a check, send a greeting card or wrap a present, you could be using recycled paper -and thereby contributing too, to the conservation of our precious resources and saving of energy.

The kitchen and sanitary items you use such as napkins, paper towels, toilet tissues could contain recycled libers; so could the cartons of cereal, soap and other dry groceries you buy and the shoe boxes and the boxes you take home from the department store; and so could construction products--ranging from heavy insulation paper to rooting paper and wallboard material. These products could, but they don't or if they do contain some recycled fiber, it's not as much as they easily could. Only 2(1 pc'r cent of the total paper consumed each year in the U.S. is recycled. Most of the balance of 40 million tons is lost to our rapidly disappearing landfills and to incinerators.

On top ol this, the national bill for disposal of our monumental waste pile, of which paper makes up half, is more than S6 billion a year and climbing. We are being dangerously profligate with our precious forestlands and wood pulp sources. We are saddling ourselves with utterly unnecessary expenses for disposal of solid wastes. By discriminatory taxes and freight rates, by utterly obsolete anti-recycling policies, our government itself 'is holding back recycling. In a recent report to the Environmental Protection Agency, the prestigious research firm of Arthur D.

Little, pointed up the feasibility of utilizing secondary fibers in a wide variety of paper needs and products. Among the findings: --Only 12 per cent of all newsprint is now made from recycled 'fibers but a 100 per cent level is "technically feasible." --Printing and wrting paper of high quality as wel! as tissues of high quality are even now being made with 100 per cent of recycled by some companies and many others could join them. --Boxboard, i paper and corrugated materials now made largely of recycled fibers easily could be made with 100 per cent of the secondary fibers. Although the GSA a full two years ago expanded the federal government's recycled materials requirements after a thorough "test program." and although this was a step in the right direction, it didn't go far enough and even this modesl program hasn't been picked up by the many thousands of companies, other government agencies, manufacturers and suppliers across the U.S. Some Congressmen, in fact, had lo buy their own recycled paper from private sources before they could get the regular Capitol Hill supply room to stock it.

What can you do, as an individual? Urge the supplier or manufacturer you deal with to use and identify recycled paper. (And don't be confused by terminology. "Recyclable" on a carton means only that it can be recycled; "recycled" means that it already has been). Demand recycled fibers in the products you buy. Write to the National Assn.

of Recycling Industries, 300 Madison New York, N.Y. 10017, for practical guides on how you can help create a more viable market for recycled paper. track Portland: Corn, No. 2. yellow Eastern 120.00.

Oats. No. 2,38 Ibs Western Barley, No. 2. 45 Ibs Western 106.00.

Grain sorghum, free market 105.00. PRICES SUPPLIED BY PIPER, JAFFRAY HOPWOOD, INC. Reported to the Journal at 12 Noon Daily And that is not healthy for the legislature or any other decision making government body or office. It appears a qualified people for office are staying away--because of the sacrifice which must be made in pay. because of the time drain away from the basic livelihood shipping points U.S.

1A Monday and a i and because- of the in 100 Ib sacks: California long tarnished image of politics, whites 5.00-5.30; few preferred At least in the legislature, label 6.00-6.50; California round Idahoans will awake some day reds 5.00-5.50; mostly 5.50; few to i that their failure to best 6.00; North Carolina round compensate i legislators whites 7.00, occasionally lower; adequately is one of the big Alabama round reds and round factors in the largely "one Trial by jury Senator Questions Watergate Set in Boise Potatoes CHICAGO (AP) (USDAl Major potato markets FOB A jury trial has been set July 24 in Boise for John Elia Porter. 27. Salt Lake City, who pleaded innocent in U.S. District Court WASHINGTON, D.C.-U.S. Senator James A.

McClure, R- Idaho, has expressed "grave doubts about the real value of the Senate Watergate Com- here Monday to charges of millers final report." interstate transportation of a stolen motorcycle. "The American public can expect a involvement of Porter is accused of driving a whites 7.01 Albtsns B-Erie Am Hst Drk 10 City Inv Apache Apeco ASA Ltd Bangor-P BekerI Boeing B-Cascade CompSci Consort 79V4 Deseret FMC Heublein m-B Holi. Inn 14 I Power 253-8 Imp Corp 63i Transam IntMine KWi Transway 23.4 Strauss 16 20lh Cen Fox LevtzFrn 3 UP Corp McDonDgl UPL 27 Ralston War. Com 10 42V-4 Rel Gp Inc Wyly Corp Skaggs Zasle Sunshine 13 AM STOCK EXCHANGE Am. Kit.

Food Atlas Cons Brascan Flavorland Husky Oil Imperial Oil 28 int Res I 3 a Kaiser Can. Oils 3 5 Am Micro 9 3 Frm Gp I 43-45 Fst Sec Cp 32V2-33 1 2 Garrett 22-24 Genvse Drg Grand Cen Ida FN Bank 38-40 IntmtGas JB Big Boy KOA Schieldahl Source Cap 3 ,4 May Position Maine Poatoes i 6 9 5 7 0 6 6 8 9 6 9 2 Cash Grain CHICAGO (AP) Wheat No 2 soft red 4.12n Tuesday; No 2 hard 4.12n. Corn No 2 yellow 3.06'i.n. Oats No 2 extra heavy- white 1.58n. Soybeans No 1 yellow 5.78' 2 n.

No 2 yellow corn Monday sold jn a range of 3.09' 2 Rollover Victim Listed 'Critical' A Pocatello man is in "extremely critical" condition at A i Hospital today following an early morning accident. a sheriff's officers said Dennis Schweitzer. 2u'. Pocatello. was found unconscious at the scene of a Jeep rollover which occurred on South Second one-half mile south of Ross Park.

Officers said Schweitzer was a passenger in Ihe vehicle driven by Spencer Howard, II), also of Pocatello. Howard and a i Passenger. a i Fredrickson. 17. were admitted to the hospital for treatment of injuries.

They are reported in good condition today. Officers said Howard told them the accidenl occurred he swerved to miss an a i a in another accident. William Patrick Knm, 20. 525 Alpine, was a at Bannock Memorial Hospital Saturday for a of abrasions on his face, arms, and legs a he losl control of his motorcycle while making a kirn at llth and liiimboldl. Metals NEW YORK A -Spot nonferrous metal prices Tuesday: copper 85 3a -87 cents a pound, Connecticut Valley; lead 24' 2 cents a pound; zinc 34' -36 cents a pound, delivered; tin a pound.

New York; gold $143.30 per troy ounce, New York; silver $4.600 per troy- ounce. New York; quicksilver $345.00 nominal per flask, New York. DIVORCES GRANTED Divorces granted in the Sixth District Court: Mary E. Amason from Leslie A. Amason; Evelyn J.

Boren from Bruce R. Boren; Michael W. from Ellen Chandler, she is retored to her former name of Carson; Arlene J. Elieson, from Robert philosophy" makeup of the Legislature and its retreat from i a i a I a Falls Post-Register. Video Special Features SLC Mormon Choir A television special featuring the famed Salt Lake Mormon Tabernacle Choir will be aired Elieson- Grace Haight from Wednesday evening al 6:30 on Harlo E.

Haight; Eileen Channel 3. Latimer from Barry Latimer; Rangers Plan Holiday, Rodeo PARIS--Anyone interested in an "01 Fashioned" 4th of July celebration won't want to miss the day-long a i i i scheduled here. The half-hour special was filmed by Lutz Wellnitz of a and i i a telecast over a German network. In keeping with the Independence Day theme, the choir sings such numbers as "America the Beautiful," "This Is My Country," "Battle Hvmn of the Republic." and others. The 375 singers of the choir are shown singing in such diverse locations as the Bon neville Salt Fiats in western rodeo grounds for a full evening Utah, Arches National Park in of entertainment.

southern Utah; King Ludwig's One hundred dollars prize castle at Linderhof. money has been set for each the Grand Canyon; and Temple main category plus the addition Square in Salt'Lake City, of entrance fees. Corey D. Miller from Alan C. Miller; Ida C.

McLaughlin from John T. McLaughlin; Debbie Nicholson from D.J. Nicholson; Karen L. Nash from Garland E. Nash; Lynda J.

Rust from Keith H. Rust; Monte B. Ward from Barbara L. Ward; and Florence Young from Floyd Young. i in Democrat Party stolen vehicle from Murray, a a i have not been a lo Idaho Falls on Aug.

19, PTMbed the way they should," 1972 McClure said, warning that the An attorney was appointed public should be concerned over a to represent i what he called "A Watergate Meanwhile, a burglary charge Committee coverup." is pending against Porter in the McClure, who raised a series Salt Lake City area. Ihe al- of questions on the Senate floor torney told the judge. into the breadth of the com. njkiiuik VAUiu i investigation, said AROUNP TWflPI later, "We must all keep in COMPLETE DEGREES mind that the purpose of this Two Pocatello natives. James body was to investigate all S.

Spalding and Richard P. possible illegal campaign Howard, have completed practices and to make master's degree programs at legislative proposals to reform Utah State University, Logan, the system where it needed Spalding, employed by the change. That's not possible if Mineral Development Dept. of the investigation was one-sided. FMC, received his degree in It's difficult to see how the final geology; Howard received a report could pin down abuses by degree in wildlife science.

He is a or union in- the son of Dr. and Mrs. R.P. volvement in Democrat cam- Howard, 544 S. 7th; Spalding is paigns when witnesses who the son of Mr.

and Mrs. D. Ross should have come before the Spalding, Circleville. Ohio, and committee were never called. is married lo the former Donna "There is adequate evidence million in the last several that lack of investigation, the Democrat campaigns, but no public should be greatly con- real effort has been made to cerned about what might be investigate the extent of that termed the Water gate Corn- kind of pressure," McClure miltee's Watergate coverup," charged.

"I think the American public is entitled to know what little evidence the Senate Watergate Committee has brought forward concerning involvement and influence of big labor in Democrat politics. And because McClure said. Journal Classifieds Bring Results Dursteler of Preston. that unions have spent $100 S5000 CASH REWARD $5000 cash reward to party or parties who find, recover and deliver the Skycycle X-l in the Snake River Canyon in Twin Falls Oreo which was fired on November 4, 1973, by Evel Knievel and crew. This vehicle must be discovered for valuable recording instruments before August 1, 1974.

This vehicle should be delivered to Evel Knievel's representative at 516 Second Street East, Twin Falls, Idaho. Further information may be obtained by colling 733-7180 or writing P.O. Box 105, Twin Falls, Idaho. Photo Courtesy Dr. Veryl farsen Starting at 6 a.m.

with their Seven categories arc slated famous chuckwagon breakfast, with bareback i i cow the Bear Lake Rangers have a riding, calf roping, and cow fun-packed celebration slated milking for the men and goat that includes their traditional tying and barrel racing for the pioneer parade down Paris ladies. The ladies will vie for $25 Main Street, and then on to the prizes. a Classifieds Bring Results TODAY'S MUTTON A I A I By The Half brtLlALi Wrapped MILLWARDS BEEF 77 A1EAT Tho Hrtlf I MEAT By The Half PORK By the Half. BEEF Front Wrapped RODEO I I I JULY 4tH Bannock County; Fairgrounds BEEF Hind Cut Wrapped ib i WILL SHE BE Pretty, Appoi i i i MEAT BY THE HALF OR QUARTER RETAIL CUTS AVAILABLE AVAILABLE CUSTOM CUTTING WRAPPING i i i WHATEVER WILL BE WILL BE BETTER your earn HARRISON JONES wKen you add regularly to Guaranty Federal Savings account. You highest rates with insured solely.

An R.5.V.P.* account spells confidence and security for your family. She may not grow up rich, but we'll bet she grows up to be a prettv ladv SAVINGS ARE VERY PROFIT ABIE.) "Park free ol our drive-up window.".

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About Idaho State Journal Archive

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