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The Salina Journal from Salina, Kansas • Page 11

Location:
Salina, Kansas
Issue Date:
Page:
11
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Latest market report Stock market loses ground Weather Deaths and funerals NEW YORK (UPI) The stock market, failing to respond to any news, lost ground Friday in slow trading on the New York Stock Exchange. The-Dow Jones industrial average, a 5.35-point loser Thursday, was off 6.38 points to 987.72 shortly before 1:15 p.m. EST. Standard Poor's 500-stock index was down 0.33 to 101.91, the NYSE common stock index was off 0.18 to 54.36 and the average, price of an NYSE common share was down 12 cents. Declines led advances, 798 to 476, CHJCAGO LIV6 BEEF CATTLE SUPPLIED BYMAYERGELBORT INC.

PREV. OPEN HIGH LOW CLOSE CLOSE Apr 40.35 40.7S 40.25 40.55 40.55 June 44.07 44.70 44.07 Ajg 44.55 44.87 44.47 Oct 44.H 44.15 44.57 LIVE HOGS Apr 44,35 47.00 44.27 June 47.70 47.47 July 47.07 47.45 46.15 Aus 44.25 44.60 44.12 PORK BELLIES May July 72.40 W.10 Feb 58.15 EGGS May 43.15 Sept 50.55 73.45 73.00 69.50 43.25 51.00 72.40 71.50 61.20 57.20 42.75 50.50 44.40 44.62 44.72 44,87 41.02 47.30 44.45 73.40 72.50 61.92 42.90 51.00 44.25 44.55 44.75 46.47 47.72 47.07 44.25 72.92 72.17 43.05 50.50 among the 1,720 issues crossing the tape. 446 issues remained un- changedi indicating many investor were uncertain about the course of the market. The three-hour turnover amounted to about 9,960,000 'shares, compared with 10,200,000 traded during the same period Thursday. Western Airlines led the Big Board actives, off to 9 5 on.270,100 shares, including a block of 221,000 shares at Marcor followed, off Vk to 35Vi on 194,700 shares, including a block of 103,000 shares at 35 Grain put in mixed session CHICAGO (UPI) Wheat and oats were mixed, corn was fractionally higher and soybeans irregularly lower at the close today on the Chicago Board of Trade.

Wheat was off Vi to up corn up Vi to oats up beans off to to off and soy- Livestock OMAHA (UPI) butchers 25 to mostly 50 lower; No 1-3 200-240 Ib 44.25-46.SO; 240-250 Ib 45.50-4i.00, Kime 46.25; No 2-3- 250-260 Ib 45.15-45.75, some 46.00; No 2-3 260370 Ib 44.75-45.00; few loll No 2-4 270-300 Ib 43.25-44.25; few tots 300-3(0 Ib 42.25-42.75; sows 25-50 lower. Instance! 75 lower; 350600 Io41.00-41.50, few 41.75. Cattle and calves 1.800; supply mainly feeder cattle for auction; 2 loads heifers 75 higher than feedlot mates Thursday; limited trade on cows steady; 2 leads choice 1025 Ib hellers utility and commercial cows 27.5030.00; canner and cutter 22.00- Sheep none. Monday's estimates: Cattle and calves 6,500, hogs' 5,000, ihetpMO. MIdwttt Carlo! Mot Trade Beef trade slow, demand light, limited trading on steer heifer beef not well established no sales cow beef reported.

Steer beet: Choice yield grade 3 600-100 Ib couple 60.25. Heifer beef: Yield grade 3 500700 Ib 5t.75-59.50; a part load 59.75; good yield grade 3 500-700 Ib 57.00; heifer hinds 120-170 Ib yield grade 3 70.0070.75. Beef trimmings 50 per cant chem lean fresh at 35.00. 'DODGE CITY, Kan. UPI) Trade slow late Thursday, few scattered sales firm to SO higher than early Thursday; demand fairly good Inquiry moderate late but buyers are not pushing hard for numbers; sales confirmed on 600 slaughter steers 700 slaughter belters.

Slaughter steers choice 2-4 1050-1200 Ib 40.00-40.50; two pens at latter price; slaughter heifers choice 2-4 9JO-950 Ib 37.50-38.50. New York Stock Exchange 11:30 am quotations Provided by A. G. Edwards Co. Archer Daniel Midland Beech Air Dillons Hesston 2214 Santa Ft Ind Ramada United Telecom 16 OVER THE COUNTER BID ASK Graves Truck Id 1 11 Duchwalls 11 IIV.

Coleman Am 4V. Butler Mlg 29 WW El Dorado t'fi i Investments Cash grain Affiliated Fund Anchor Fund Inv Bullock Fund Concord Fund Delaware Mutual Eaton Howard Bal Fidelity Fund Hamilton HDA Investors Mutual 'Investors Stocks Invest Select Inv'Var Pay Lite Ins Inv Mass tnv Growth Prudential Sys Inv United Accumulated United Income Vanguard Wellington Vanguard Ivest Wisconsin Fund 7.89 8.51 7.13 7.81 12.77 13.96 10.58 10. 10.62 11.61 8.61 9.28 15.52 16.96 4.37 4.77 I.U 9.66 18.93 20.54 9.07 9.75 6.63 7.26 6.17 6.74 9.66 10.42 9.97 10.89 6.31 6.99 10.69 11.7? 10.79 J.O* 8. 81 5.28 5.77 KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) Wheat futures closed cents higher Friday, on the board of trade.

The prices: May 3.63, up Vi; July 3.61, up Vi: Sept. 3.73, up Dec. 3.S2, up March 3.90, up 2. Cash grain: Wheat cars; hard and soft higher; No 1 hard 3.63 nominal; Nol soft 3.41 nominal. Corn 62 cars; white 4 lower, yellow 2 higher; No 3 white 2.90; No 1 yellow 2.72'A; No 2 yellow 2.71 W.

Sorghum 24 cars; yellow unchanged; No 2 yellow 4.55 nominal; No 3 yellow 4.9J (suit); No 4 yellow4.92 (gulf). Soybeans 4 cars; yellow lower; No 1 yellow 4.45'A nominal. EXTENDED FORECAST KANSAS: Chance of showers southwest Sunday, across the state Monday and continuing southeast Tuesday. Lows' Sunday low 30s to low 40s. Warmer Monday and Tuesday lows upper 30s to upper 40s.

Highs low 60s to low 70s through the period. ZONE FORECASTS ZONES 1, 2 and 4 Partly cloudy and cooler tonight with lows in the mid to upper 30s. Northwesterly winds 10 to 15 miles an hour tonight. Partly cloudy and cooler Saturday with highs in the upper 50s to lower 60s. ZONES 5, 7 and 8 Partly cloudy and cooler tonight and Saturday.

Lows tonight upper 30s to lower 40s with northerly winds 10 to 20 miles an hour. Highs Saturday in the 60s. ZONES 10 and 11 Partly cloudy and cooler tonight and Saturday. Lows tonight upper 30s to lower 40s. North- winds 10 to 20 miles an hour.

Highs Saturday in the 60s. ZONE 1 Cheyenne, Rawlins, Sherman, Thomas. ZONE 2 Wallace, Logan, Greeley, Wlchila, ScoK. ZONE 4 Decatur, Norton, Sheridan, Graham. ZONE 5 Gove, Trego.

Lane, Ness ZONE 7 Phillips, Smith. Rooks, Osborne. ZONE 8 Ellis, Russell, Rush, Barton. ZONE 10 Jewell, Republic. Washington.

Mitchell. Cloud, Clay. ZONE II Lincoln, Ottawa, Ellsworth, Saline, Dickinson, Rice, Marion, McPherson. SALINA WEATHER City Airport: Temp, at 1 pm 80; Min. Friday 51; Max.

Thursday 72. FAA Reported at 11 am: Barometer 29.82 steady; Wind SW 23 gusting to 27 MPH; Relative Humidity Lowest this date 15 in 1936; highest 92 in 1928. Saturday Sunrise 6:12 am; Sunset 6:55 pm. Airport By FAA: Metals grain prices Friday: Hard up 1C up unchanged NEW YORK (UPI) Foreign and domestic gold prices Friday: London Morning fixing 129.25 up 0,05. Afternoon fixing 129.10 down 0.10.

Paris (free market) 131.72 down 0.21. Frankfurt 129.0* down 1.04. Zurich 129.12 Unchanged. New York Handy and Harman, 129.25 up 0.05. Engelhard, base price far refining settling and unfabricated gold 129.60 up 0.10 per troy ounce.

Selling price, fabricated gold 132.W up 0.10 per troy ounce. Thursday 2 pm 3 5 7 1 1 10 Friday 12 Midnight 70 72 ...71 69 57 57 57 57 56 1 am 2 3 4 5 4 7 8 9 10 11 1 pm 55 53 52 51 51 52 51 55 62 73 77 MRS. WILLIAM R. HOLT ELLSWORTH The funeral for Mrs. Frankie J.

Holt, 81, Ellsworth, will be at 10:30 am Saturday at the First Presbyterian Ellsworth, the Rev. Donald Ray officiating. Mrs. Holt died Wednesday at her Ellsworth home. She was born April 21, 1894, at Wilson, and spent her life in Ellsworth county.

She was the widow of William R. Holt, who died in 1971. Mrs. Holt was a member of the First Presbyterian a'past matron and 50-year member of the Order of Eastern Star, a 50-year member of the American Legion auxiliary and a member of the World War 1 Barracks auxiliary. Surviving are a son, Joe; Sioux City, 2 grandchildren and a great- grandson.

Friends may call at the Grubb-Parsons funeral home, Ellsworth, until 9 pm Friday and at the church after 8 am Saturday. The family suggests memorials to the First Presbyterian Church, Ellsworth. Bruial will be in the Ellsworth cemetery. GUMISENDO CASTILLO SR. KANOPOLIS The funeral for Gumisendo Castillo 94, Kanopolis, will be at 9 am Monday at St.

Ignatius Roman Catholic Church, Kanopolis, the Rev. Roger Hough officiating. Mr. Castillo, a retired salt miner, died Tuesday at his home in Kanopolis. He was born Jan.

13, 1882, in Mexico and had lived at Kanopolis since 1917. He was a member of St. Ig-- natius Church. Surviving are 2 sons, Gumisendo Chicago, and Louis, St. Joseph, 2 daughters, Mrs.

Guadalupe Frohreich, Mrs. Frances Lara, Topeka; 6 grandchildren and 15 great-, grandchildren. A Rosary 'will be recited at 7 pm Sunday at the Grubb-Parsons funeral home, Ellsworth. The family suggests memorials to St. Ignatius Church.

Burial will be in the Kanopolis cemetery. kakee, 111. He lived at Concordia and then Aurora before returning to Concordia in 1970. He was a retired farmer and a member of Our Lady of Perpetual Help Church. Surviving are a son, Melvin, Placerville, a daughter, Mrs.

Lillian Mosher, Long Beach, a sister, Mrs. Nora Manlove, Kansas City, 14 grandchildren and 16 great- grandchildren. A rosary will be at 7 pm Friday at the Chaput-Buoy funeral home, Concordia. Burial will be in Mt. Calvary cemetery, Clyde.

MRS, IRA O. SCOTT HAYS A memorial service for Mrs. Ira 0. Scott, 85, Seattle, will be at 10 am Monday at the First United Methodist Church, Hays. Mrs.

Scott died Thursday at Seattle. She was the widow of the late Dr. Ira O. Scott, former professor of education at Fort Hays State college. Surviving are 3 sons, Chester, 858 S.

llth, Salina; Ira Long Island, N.Y., and Robert Haney, Seattle, and 10 grandchildren. Toddy's records It V'- Produce KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) -Eggs consumer Grade A large 47-61, medium 39-54, imall 2042, large Hens Ice-packed broilers and fryers 31.75-40.5 for next week's delivery. Probe reveals Pike sale pressure complaints valid, not company-condoned TOPEKA, Kan. (UPI) Attorney General Curt Schneider said Thursday his investigation found consumer com-' plaints against Standard Oil Co.

service station employes on the Kansas Turnpike were valid, but company officials were not aware of the abuses and did not condone them. Schneider said, in a joint investigation with the Kansas Turnpike Authority, his agents found some employes tried to sell unneeded products through high pressure and scare sales tactics, threatened arrests by law enforcement officers if purchases were not made, overcharged or rates on wrecker services and stole property from wrecked or disabled vehicles. The attorney general said, however, the investigation showed no indication of abuses by the Kansas Highway Patrol or the Kansas Turnpike Authority employes on the turnpike. Missing $1000 is found Police were on the right trail, sure enough. But the suspect proved too durned honest.

So the case of the missing $1000 was about to be marked "closed" Friday morning by Salina lawmen and bank officials. Authorities were summoned Thursday afternoon after bank tellers ered a $1000 shortage in the books. The prime suspect was an area man who had been in the bank Wednesday afternoon to buy cahsier's checks for and The customer paid for the checks with a roll of 20's; while she was preparing the checks, the teller said, she left the money untended for a few moments on a counter beneath her window. The man could have reached into the cage and removed the $.1000 from the pile, police said. The case was still under investigation Friday morning, when bank officials received a phone call from the area said he had counted his cash on hand and discovered he had $1000 too much.

The man said he would be in later Friday or Monday to turn over the money. Bank officials breathed a sigh of relief, and police said they would consider the incident closed once the money was back. GEORGE SAVOIE CONCORDIA The funeral for George Savoie, 97, Concordia, will be at 10 am Saturday at Our Lady of Perpetual" Help Roman Catholic Church here, the Rev. Loren Werth and Msgr. Armand Girard officiating.

Mr. Savoie died Wednesday at St. Joseph's hospital, Concordia. He was born July 8, 1878, at Kan- JOSEPH SCHWARTZMAN TAMPA The funeral for Joseph Schwartzman, 64, Ventura, will be at 11 am Monday at the Holy Redeemer Roman Catholic Church, Tampa, Msgr. Arthur Tonne officiating.

Mr. Schwartzman, a former Tampa- area farmer, died Thursday at a hospital in Ventura, where he had lived the past 19 years. He was born Sept. 26, 1911, near Tampa and raised on a farm in the Tampa area. He spent part i youth at St.

Joseph's orphanage, Abilene. He was a member of the Holy Redeemer Church and the Knights of Columbus, both at Tampa, and had been employed by the Ventura, school system. Surviving are the widow, Helen, of the home; 3 daughters, Mrs. Eileen Janzen, Abilene; Mrs. Janet Klatt, Ventura, and Mrs.

Carole Finan, 647 E. Republic, Salina; a brother, David, Kansas City, and 10 grandchildren. Burial will be in St. Mary's cemetery, Tampa. The parish rosary will be at 7 pm Sunday at the Martin funeral home, Abilene, where friends may call.

The family suggests memorials to the charity of the donor's choice. Coffee prices perking upward Hospital Admissions St. John's Mrs. Robert Baumgardner, 1179 E. Woodland; Mrs.

Duane Crooks, 761 Smoky Hill; Marvin Feller, 438 S. 9th; Mrs. Fred Lawrence, 909 Johnstown; Har- old Lohf, 1209 Talley; Mrs. Daniel Pesti- nger, 1411 N. 5th; Mrs.

Eleanor Smart, 825 jjp S. 5th; Mrs. Joe Beckenhauer, Abilene; Teddy Bridges, Junction City; Mrs. How- ard Brown, Lincoln; Goodhardt Giersch, Junction City; Mrs. Max Hoesli, Min- neapolis; Mrs.

Bradford Rauch, Min- a neapolis; Mrs. Harry Rediker, Hope; Mrs. 5 Edwin Sorenspn, Abilene. Asbury Mrs. Clarence Phillips, 129 S.

Connecticut; Altis Johnson, Salina RFD Mrs. Mary Meister, 669 Starlight; Mrs. Thomas McGavran, 2645 Robin; Mrs. Judy Walker, 411 W. South; Mrs.

Charles Arnold, 430 S. College; Mrs. Carr Nemechek, Salina RFD Mrs. Edwin Roseberry, 213 S. 2nd; Reuben Knowles, 908 Mancr; Paul Gaiser, 741 Hancock; Arthur Busche, 508 Sunset; Gary Searle, Seattle, James Wineteer, Smolan; Melanie'Mit- chem, Hill City; Albert Henke, Ellsworth; Harold Hosman, Holyrood; Mrs.

Joe Robins, Delphos; Walter Leipersberger, Clay Center; Mrs. Merna Daetwiler, Abilene; Joel Isaacson, Assaria; Mrs. Richard Rundquist, Assaria. Hospital Dismissals St. John's Sandra Claussen, 1800 S.

Broadway; Josha Gilmore, 1121 Gypsum; Mrs. Anna Goetz, Kenwood nursing home; John Morris, 408 Woodlawn; Lennis Muel- ler, 126 S. 5th; Mrs. Dou Paik and baby girl, 414 E. Kirwin; Dillard Stephens, S.

8th; Mrs. Gerald Grout, Minneapolis; Steven Hajny, Belleville; Robert Hatfield, Hope; Mrs. Gladys Marshall, Scandiar' Rauch baby boy, Minneapolis; Jimmy Robinson, Beloit; Rand Scott, Lincoln; Mrs. Harold Standley, Kensington; Mrs. Rosie M.

Teasley, Glasco. Asbury Mrs. Mary Ash, 110 N. Phillips; Mrs. Noah Morton, 610 Garden; Mrs.

Judy Walker, 411 W. South; Andrew Stierwalt, 1112Vi W. Ash; Mrs. Terry Jones and baby boy, 234 S. 12th; Russell Snyder, Great Bend; John Jarmer, Great Bend; Mrs.

Jack Burt, Tescott; Joseph Laudick, Hoisington; George Harrison, Abilene; Mrs. Mary Danner, Ellsworth; Harry Fairchild, Lamed; Eugene Baird, Hunter; Kelly Hammel, Idana. Births Girls; Mr. and Mrs. Thomas McGavran, 2645 Robin 7 15 April 1 at Asbury.

Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Rodriquez, Lindsborg, 7 6Vz April 1 at Asbury. Boys: Mr. and Mrs.

James Bell, Minneapolis, 5 5 April 1 at St. John's. Mr. and Mrs. Bradford Rauch, Min- neapolis, 5 4 April 1 at St.

Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Sorenson, Abilene, 7 1 April 1 at St. John's. NEW YORK (UPI) General Foods the nation's largest cof-.

fee wholesaler, has boosted regular coffee prices 15 cents a pound and this was expected to be reflected in supermarket prices shortly. The latest General Foods price hikes, effective Thursday, pushed the wholesale price of Maxwell House, the nation's biggest seller, from $1.74 a pound to $1.89. In addition to the hike in the price of regular ground coffee, General Foods also increased its freeze dried and instant brands from one cent to 2 A cents an ounce, and Max-Pax went up 10 cents a can. In a similar pricing action, The Fol- ger's Coffee the second largest coffee wholesaler, Tuesday raised the price of vacuum-packed ground coffee by 15 cents a pound and 2 cents an ounce for instant. A General Foods spokesman attributed the increases to a hike in the price of green coffee beans which have soared roughly 75 per cent since last July when a severe frost damaged 70 per cent of Brazil's 1976 coffee crop.

Brazil, the world's largest producer of coffee, supplies about 60 per cent of all U.S. coffee imports. General Foods also cited rains and floods in Colombia, the second largest coffee producer, which destroyed an estimated 20 per cent of that crop. NEW YORK. (UPI) -Selected stocks on the New York Stock Exchange.

Sates Net (hds) LestChg. A A Addrsgrph Vt AetnaLt 1.08 73 Vl AlrPrd HI 7' Alcan Al .40 226 AllgLud l.M 24 39 AllldCn 1.60 90 41 AlllsCha .40 71 17 'A Alcoa 1.34 46 -2 AMAX 1.75 63 54 IVt AmHeil .30 262 Vt Am Airlines 164 IV, ABrand 2.H 41 4W AmBrcit 12 A Can 2.20a 15 AmCyan IVi 231 26Vi- Vt AmElcPw 2 275 2 Am Home 1 574 Am Motors 508 Vt AmNaG 2.64 23 Am Stand 1 15 26 AmTT 3.80 56'A AMFln 20'A- Vt Anacnda .60 374 25 Armco 1.60a 65 32 ArmsCk .80 9 32 AtlRichf 2'A 112 'A BabWHcox 1 60 Vt Bangor Pn 34 7Vt Vt BeHFdl .76 114 Vt Bcckmn .28 42 Bell .14 17 Bendlx 2.28 31 58 'A BethSteel 2a 115 41 ft BlacklO .40 137 23'A- Vi Boeing Co 1 151 Vt BolieCas .65 Borden 1.30 47 Borg 1.35 146 28'A Vt BoitEd 2.44 Wfi BrlggsS 1.60 13 54 47 74 BrltPet 52 ll'A-- Vt Brunjwk .44 12 145t Bucyrus .54 190 Budd Co .80 30 14Vi- Bunk Ramo 25 BurlN 34 'A Burrghs 160101H- Camps 1.36 29 33ft CanPac 27 CarrlerC .52 45 I7H- Vi CaterpllTr 2 149 83 1.66 72 Celanw 61 52 CertnTi .65 17 CcssnaAIr 1 177 Champlnll 1 23'A-- OirnpSP .44 408 12ft ChaseM 2.20 169 W4- V' ChmNY 2.11 74 Vt Chetsle 2.10 117 3SV4- Vb Chrysler Cp 327 Vt ClnOat 1.64 116 18H Citicorp .94 457 35 Vt CltServ 2.40 26 'A City Inv .66 55 Clev El 2.S6 10 29 Vt CocaCol 2.65 144 Vi Colgate .76 107 27'A Col Gas 2.14 68 24Vt-- Vt CmwEd So 'A CommSat 1 54 29 Congolm .50 25 Vi ConEd 1.60 338 Vt CcnsmPw 1 Vi CntlCan 1.80 44 29 ContlntlOII 2 96 Contrl Data 74 Vt CornG 1.12a 137 CPClnt 2.30 52 43'A- Crane 2.40g 65Vi- ft CrownZ l.M 99 CurtlssW .40 94 13'A 0 Dart In 21 DayPLt 1.66 45 'A Deere 1.90 190 DetEdls 1.45 84 Dlebold .44 17 13 'ft DillonCo .96 39 34H- Disney 143 60 DrPeppr .34 157 16 'A OowCh 1.60 2201MW- Dresser 78H- Vi DukPwr 140 DuPonl Id DuqneL 1.72 50 Vt Air 154 7'A- Vt EastK 1 54a 416117t-- IV EatnCp 1.80 42 34 Vl ElPasC 1.10 178 13H- Vt Ensrch 1.60 .63 Vt Elhyl 1.40 S3 42H- Exxon 1.25d 379 Vi FalrCam .80 42 39Vi- Vi FerroC 1.10 15 Flrilne 1.10 333 2JH- Fllntkol 1.16 14 19H- FlaPCp 2.10 28 26'Ar Vi FordMo 2.40 260 Vt ForMck .92 65 15W- FreptM 1.60 47 Fruehuf 41 23H- 'A 6 GamSk 1.40 5 29Vt Gannelt .72 88 3tVt- Gen Dynam 177 52ft- V- GnElec 1.60 262 SI'A- GnFood 1.50 210 Vt GenMllls ..48 149 29 'A GenMot K4 841 69H-f Vi GPubU 1,68 102 17'A- Vl l.M 757 GTIre l.lOg 32 22 Ga Pac 312 52W- 'A Gerter l.M It V4 GetlyOI Gillette 1.50 71 GOOOrlC 52 Vt C-ooOyr 1.10 344 21H- GraceW 1.70 Grand .80 14 14H- Great AP GrnGIa 1.08 15 Vt Gryhml 1.04 121 Grumn Grumn Vt GuMOll 1.70 409 24'A- 'A Gltws 340 HamPa 1.20 489 'A HarrlsC 1.40 24 45 'A HelniH 1.34 52 Vt Hercules .80 49 33ft- HershyFd 1 14 22H- Vi HewlttP .30 110113H-1 Hilton Hotel 44 'A Hoerner .80 27 16W- 'A Hoi Inns .40 229 16H Homstak la 45 39 'A Honywl 1.40 400 Vl Hoover 1.34 21 31 HousLP 1.56 40 21Yi HowardJ .24 194 14H- 'A 1C Ind 1.30 42 Vt Idaho? 2.04 21 Vl 111 Pwr 2.M 17 'A INA Cp 2.10 31 'A IngRnd 2.6« 105 InldStl 2.40a 197 50'A- Vt Intp Copper 10 27 Vt IBM Corp 7 InlHarv 1.70 88 25ft- IntNck 1.40a 26 Vt IntlPaper 2 480 InlfiT 1.40 202 V4 IteX Corprtn 16 13Vi- Vt Jantien .80 19 21 Vi JeffPllot .72 525 26ft- Vi JoHnMv t.JO 126 Vt JohnlJ 75 JoyMig 1.10 45 40 H. KalirAI 1.20 69 32'A-1W KanCSo 7 Vt KanGE l.M 51 KanPLt 1.60 16 18ft Kencolt 442 Vt KerrMcG 1 144 70 HimbCI 1.80 290 42 Alrl 1 43V. KnlghtR .62 39 Kopprs 1.40 54 HVi- 'A Kraftco 57 43 Kresge .24 348 Kroger 1.34 449 20 UearSleg .32 54 Vt LehlPIC .80 21 Lehrr.n 95 1.20 81 30ft- Llgg My 2Vi 14 Lltlon 2'Ak 231 IS 'A Lockheed 92 10 Vt LoewCp 1.20 139 3fl'A LTV Corp 140 13rt- 'A LuckySt .68 237 15 'A LuknStl 1.60 2 26'A- Vk Macy 1.20 200 ManHn 1.80 87 34'A Marcorlnc 1 19M 'A MarMldl .80 65 'A MarshF 1.24 55 22'A- MarlM 1.30 57 20 MayDS l.M 356 52'A- V4 Maytg 1.30a 25 34 McDonO .44 78 18 Vt McLean. .80 96 ft MeadC 1.20 Merck 1.40 106 7344-- Vt MMM 1.45 VI MobllOl 3.40 223 SSft-lVt Mohasco .90 13 2Mt-- 'A Monsan 2.40 670 MorgJP 1.80 247 "A Motorola .70 244 Vt MtSITel I.U 40 Vt MurpCo 1.20 11 Vt Nabisco 2.40 74 Vt NatAlrln .50 67 15ft-- Vt NIIDIstl 1.40 147 NtlGyp 1.05 68 Vt Nat "11 50 45 NCRCp .72 76 Vt NevPw 1.40 11 NlagMo 1.24 It NLllXtusf 1 113 Vl NorfOlkWs 5 Vl NoNtGs 1.76 21 NwBan 1.70 33 48'A NortnSI 185 0 0 OccldnPet 1 404 Vt OhloEd 1.66 147 OklaGE 1.44 7 20 Vt OtisEI 2.20 153 Vt OutbdM 1.20 61 OwenCF 12 54W- 'A Owenlll 1.88 Vt PacGas l.M Vt PacLtg 1.68 639 'A PC TT 1.20 89 15Vt- 'A Pan Am Air 204 Pantind 2.10 21 33Vi- Vt Penn Cehtr 244 1 Vt Penney 1.28 76 Vt pennPL l.M 20 Pennzol 1.20 493 PeopleGai 3 35 34'A- Vt PepsiCo 1.60 34 Vi pruerln .84 494 V.

PhelpD 2.20 341 PhllaEI 1.64 129 16 PhlllpMor 1 492 55'A- PhllPel 1.60 82 PillsburyC 1 219 37ft Polaroid .32 1652 3414-1H PPGInd 1.10 61 44'A- Vt ProcliGa 2 171 91 PuSCol 1.30 40 16 PSE8.G 1.7J 103 19 Vt PurexCp .96 45 Vt Purlatr 1.04 30 'A 0 0 Ralston I 343 48 Rapid Amer 23 RCA Corp 1 442 'A Rep Stl 1.60 140 34 -1 RevlOT) l.M 154 Reylnd 3.0* 221 Tt ReyndMet 1 582 RochG l.TSo, 46 15'A- V. Rotkwllln 2 33 Wi RohmH l.M 102 'A RoyatCC .72 20 22 Vi RoylD I.S4d 42 4 Roy ID 1.84d 42 'A SatewaySl 2 60 42W- 'A SrRegli 1J2 150 Vt Scnerlng .88 14S SCM Cp .70 40 16'A SCOttPap 74 23 Vi Seagram 'to 9 Vt Sears 347 74ft-1Vt SnellOil 2.80 43 Vt SIgnalC .19 16Vt- 'A SlmnsC 77 23 "A Singer CO 2M Vt Smithkllne 2 22 Vi SCalEd 1.48 119 19'A- Vt SouthCo 1.40 442 15 Vt SoPacIf 2.24 103 So Rail 2.12 42 S5'A Sp Rand .76 242 43 'A- Vi SquarD 1.10 1 6 2 6 SIBrnd 1.14 191 'A SWOIICal 2 427 32'A- V. StOllnd 2.30 316 'A StOIIOh 1.34 SterlDrg .70 261 19 V. StewWn 1.96 7 29ft- 'A StudeW 1.32 9 44'A Sun OH 1.48 41 Vt SupOill.aO 63159 SupOIl 1.80 63159 -2 Teledyne 31 54 Vi Teneco 1.76 127 28vt- 'A Texaco 2 743 25W- 'A TexETr I.U 492 30 Vi Tex instr 1 TexUtil 1.32 "214 Textron 1.10 125 Timkn 2.20a 21 Vt TraneCo .96 78 25Vi Transam .62 181 1U4- Vt TransW Air 72 TrICon 70 'A TRWIn 1.20 193 'A UALIlK 533 23'A- 11 UnCarb 7.50 161 71 UnOCal 2.10 33 Un Pac 2.80 70 84ii- A Unlroyal .50 54 UnCorp 72 V. US Gyp 1.60 121 USSteel 2.80 308 Vt USTobaco 1 18 UldTec 2.30 76 'A Upiohn .96 108 UfahPL 2.40 38 Vt Varlan .20 Vt VaElec 1.18 223 I3V4 Walgreen 1 15 15Vt- 'A WarLam .92 97 Vi WaWeS 1.56 3 21 V.

WsBanc 1.40 7 'A VWJnion 1.40 154 Vt WeilhEl .97 504 Vi WnlfiPllt Sll 11 Vt Wnrlpool 133 I9J4- Vi WhlreCsl .90 83 'A WWte Motor 80 Vt Wlckes 2W 63 HVi- 'A WlnnDx 1.44 97 39'A- Vt WOOlwh 1.20 124 'A XYZ Xerox Cp 1 2084 Vt ZaleCorp 37 7ayre Corp' 100 Vt ZenlfhRad 1 102 35V4- 'A Lee Ent .44 2 Midwest Originals plans first art exhibit, sale Members of Midwest Originals, a new art club in Salina, will have their first exhibit and sale Sunday at Roselawn Mortuary, 1920 E. Crawford. Show hours are 1-6 pm. There is no admission charge and the public is welcome. The art club was organized in January and meetings are held at 7:30 pm the last Thursday of the month at Roselawn Mortuary.

Mrs. Ruth DeLegge, President, said the club was formed to make people more aware of art and to give people a chance to display and sell their art works. Midwest Originals now has 22 members, but new members are wel- come. "Anyone who has a love of art, is enthusiastic, and likes to exchange artistic ideas is welcome to said Mrs. DeLegge.

For more information, persons can call Mrs. DeLegge, 823-6937, or Kathy Hollis, 823-3973. Sunday's show will feature over 100 exhibits including water color and oil paintings, acrylics, charcoal and pencil drawings. All of the art works are for sale. Club officers, besides, Mrs.

De- Legge, are Barbara vice-president; Laura Cowherd, secretary; Jana Becker, treasurer, and Kathy Hollis and Dean Groves, publicity. Charges dismissed in road terrorists case Felony charges were dismissed Friday against the 3rd man charged in the alleged highway terrorism case arising from a Feb. 22 incident on I- 70. Jerry L. Miles, 36, Hutchinson, driver of the car which rammed the rear of one driven by Mrs.

Mary Carleton, Clay Center, pleaded guilty in magistrate court to a misdemeanor charge of reckless driving. He was fined $100. Miles, along with Ronald L. Gay, 23, and John E. Raymond, 23, both of Ft.

Riley, had been charged originally with criminal damage to property and aggravated assault. After the ramming episode both cars pulled off near the Niles interchange. Mrs. Carleton, who was traveling with her 4 children, got out to check damage when she heard a shotgun blast, hurried back to her car and raced onto the highway. She stopped at the Solomon rest area to have another motorist call police.

Subsequent investigation has shown to Assistant County Attorney Dan Boyer's satisfaction that there was no intent by the defendants to terrorize Mrs. Carleton and her children. The case, rather, was one of 3 men who had been drinking, driving, and toying with a shotgun. Mrs. Carleton just happened to be in the same vicinity.

The felony charges have been dis- missed'against all 3 men. Also dismissed against Miles was another traffic charge of following too closely. Raymond has pleaded guilty to being drunk on a public roadway. He was finec! $25 and jailed for 2 weeks. Gay still awaits court action on a disorderly conduct charge.

Courts Magistrate -Arraigned Richard Fosbinder, 451 S. 8th, charge of grand theft. Found guilty Edwin M. Nelson, As- s'aria, reckless driving, $50; failing to stop for'red light and siren, $100; driving unsafe, vehicle, using unsafe tires, Randal Carl Blocklinger, 308Vi S. 4th, battery, 6 months.

Jesse Rodger Mercurio, 336 N. 13th, driving while intoxicated, $200 and 1 year. Jerry L. Miles, Hutchinson, reckless driving, $100. Bound over to district court Lawrence Ellis, 21, 801 N.

4th, charge of attempted burglary. Dismissed Jerry L. Miles, Hutchinson, charges of criminal damage to property, and aggravated assault. Bound over to district court Claudette Amelita Mason, 809 N. 12th, charge of forgery.

Mary Emma Neeley, 304 N. llth, .1 charge of forgery. Divorces Filed Joyce Ellen vs. Galen L. Harris; I' Darrell W.

vs. Mary Nell Mong. Filed Lori A. vs. James V.

Hamilton; Sondra vs. David Mann. Dismissed Betty J. vs. Dayle G.

Math- ews. Shirley M. vs. Loren A. Williams.

Bar- bara Jean vs. Harry James Woodruff. Marriage Licenses Terry Shubert, 29, and Pat Dutton, 28, both of Salina. Thomas Milton Deuth, 29, and Judy Kay Wilcox, 22, both of Salina; Jerry Wayne Griggs, 20, and Sylvia Anne Grubb, 18, both of Salina: Ronald Charles Bowen, 18, and Loretta June Freeman, 16, both of Salina. Messiah Festival art show to open LINDS.BORG The 77th annual Messiah Festival Art exhibition, old- I est annual art show in Kansas, will open Sunday in the Birger Sandzen Me- morial gallery on the Bethany college campus.

The exhibition will continue I through April. In addition to the gallery's per- I manent display of oil paintings by Birger Sandzen, the exhibition will feature oil paintings by Robert N.M.; watercolors by Kaplinski, Denver, and Hamil, Kansas City; paintings and drawings by Ned Jacobs, Denver;" weaving by Sara Mattsson- Anliot, Cleveland; ceramics by Garry Ball, Wichita, and Lindsborg's Lester Ray-' mer will be exhibit oil paintings. Ford to retire? DETROIT (UPI) Henry Ford II; 58, chairman of the nation's No. 2 automotive firm, is thinking of quitting before he reaches 65 because of health reasons. Send your news tip to The Salina Journal.

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