The fellow that sold me the bolts was willing to look the torque value up in the information supplied by the manufacturer, and he gave me a photocopy. :-)
At the cost of destroying a bolt, the torque at yield can be determined experimentally. Get a short piece of pipe, at least two hard flat washers, and a nut; all to fit the bolt. Make the ends of the pipe parallel to each other, and at least close to perpendicular to the centerline of the pipe. Make the ends of the bolt parallel to each other, and perpendicular to the centerline of the bolt. Put engine oil under the head of the bolt, on the washers, the bolt threads, and the nut. Put one washer on the bolt, put on the pipe, put on the other washer, and put on the nut. Hopefully, the nut will be mid-range of the threads on the bolt; if not, add washers or shorten the pipe.
Using calipers or a micrometer, measure and record the original length of the bolt. Then, torque the bolt to some reasonably low value, then untighten it, and measure and record the length again. Re-oil the bolt and repeat with a torque that is 5 ftlb higher. Repeat... At low values of torque it will be noticed that the relaxed lengths are all essentially the same. As the torque is increased in stages, eventually it will be noticed that the relaxed length is longer than it used to be; that torque is just over the yield point of that particular bolt.
You may wish to repeat with another bolt or two, in order to see what the repeatability is. :-)
When you are done making measurements with those bolts be sure to mark them as scrap, because they have been tightened beyond yielding. (For instance, grind a flat on the threads to mark it, and put the bolt in your toolbox to later use as a drift punch, or something.)
Note! The torque value you will have determined is for oiled bolts. When you install the bolts into the engine, the bolt head and threads MUST have oil on them. Otherwise, you will not achieve the gasket clamping load that you are expecting. Of course, do not put too much oil in the bolt hole in the block; if in doubt, use compressed air or suction to remove the excess oil. Use ordinary engine oil; do not use any lubricant that has an 'extreme pressure additive' in it.
[Tightening a dry bolt to a high torque usually galls the threads (in addition to not delivering the expected clamping load). Personally, I would not want to risk galling the threads of my block nor of my bolts.]