Banner Graphic, Volume 15, Number 210, Greencastle, Putnam County, 3 May 1985 — Page 9

Tyler gives Pistons lift DETROIT (AP) The Detroit Pistons, who had been all but given up for dead, find themselves with new hope after getting the kiss of life from Terry Tyler. Tyler, who specializes in fourth-quarter heroics, came through again Thursday night, scoring 16 of his 18 points in the final period to lift Detroit to a 125-117 National Basketball Association victory over the turnover-prone Boston Celtics. The victory left the Celtics with a 2-1 edge in the best-of-seven Eastern Conference semifinal series with Game 4 scheduled for Sunday in Joe Louis Arena. In the only other game, Denver beat Utah 131-123 in overtime to take a 2-0 edge in their Western Conference series. “It’s one game, but it’s one that we had to get,” Detroit Coach Chuck Daly said. “I thought that the guys played hard. We just keep working to get the game at hand. ” Detroit won the game with a strong second half. The game was tied 62-62 at intermission and the Celtics held a commanding 31-19 rebounding edge. It was another story in the final two quarters, however, as the Pistons took control of the boards, 27-19. The Celtics also hurt themselves with an uncharacteristic 23 turnovers which resulted in 20 Detroit points. “We dug our own grave,” Boston Coach K.C. Jones moaned. Dennis Johnson was high for Boston with 27 points and Larry Bird added 25. Nuggets 131, Jazz 123 Guard Lafayette Lever scored six of his 22 points in overtime and center Wayne Cooper hit a pair of long range jump shots early in the extra session to lead Denver.

f d s'por'tcoats'and

Phone 653-5151

s^^jj

WE GAMBLED AND BOUGHT A LARGE INVENTORY. NOW WE’RE BETTING YOU WON’T PASS A DEAL LIKE THIS! HERE’S HOW IT WORKS:

16-ftp Hydrostatic Yard Tractor

YT-16H with 42" YT-16with42" SIDE DISCHARGE DECK SIDE DISCHARGE DECK I First Customer to Purchose I First Customer to Purchase Above Unit Above Unit $ 1 000 00 OFF REG. RETAIL $ 1000 00 OFF REG. RETAIL tn,Y on,y \ The next two customers to buy either of above units will save S BOO, the next 3 will save *7OO, the next 4 will save $ 600 and the next 5 will save $ 500. JJ THE GAMBLER IS HOW MUCH YOU WILL SAVE!! IJpW THE EARLIER YOU BUY - THE MORE YOU SAVE!!

BETTING WINDOWS OPEN 8 a.m. FRIDAY, MAY 3rd through SAT., MAY 4 ONLY

DAYS SAME AS< CASH r

HILL'S PIT STOP MOWER SERVICE 1133 N. Jackson St., Greencastle, 653-8354

*S£&Et- ftawM ■HRS*'VMw 1 * WT Timm, •-* •*. '• ' . *•» {JBLjvmL ■—'*j||

BILLY MARTIN: Not worried about fan reaction

It's not Martin vs. Berra

NEW YORK (AP) Billy Martin, who usually gets a rousing Yankee Stadium reception every time he returns as manager of the New York Yankees, finds out tonight what the man in the seat thinks

to place vour ad

The right time. The right price. The right products.

about George Steinbrenner’s latest managerial move. In his three previous stints, Martin replaced Bill Virdon, Bob Lemon and Clyde King, none of whom ever played for the Yankees. This time, he follows the popular Yogi Berra he also preceded Berra one of the team’s authentic folk heroes. “I’m more concerned about our ballclub (than the fans’ reaction),” Martin said Thursday shortly after rain forced him to cancel an off-day workout for the 7-12 Yankees, who begin a three-game series tonight against Kansas City. “I don’t like everybody trying to pit Yogi against me. We’re friends. I just hope we start drawing some fans and start winning some ballgames.” The Yankees are 1-2 under Martin, having beaten Texas 5-1 Wednesday night. “It’s a good feeling to come back with a win,” he said. “It was a good ballgame and we played well.” Asked if he thought he had to do a selling job on New York fans in view of the sudden popularity of the crosstown Mets, Martin said: “No, the players will do the selling. Once you win, that’s your ticket.”

Y9O DAYS 7 INTEREST^ Zy FREE A NO TRADES

Brewers are shattered by A's two-out rally in ninth inning

By KEN RAPPOPORT AP Sports Writer It was a tough loss, and therefore an easy one for Milwaukee Brewers Manager George Bamberger to second-guess. “There couldn’t be a worse way to lose,” he said after the Oakland A’s put together four consecutive two-out hits in the bottom of the ninth off Rollie Fingers and Ray Searage for a dramatic 5-4 victory Thursday that snapped a seven-game losing streak. Bamberger admitted he might have made a mistake when he lifted Fingers, the major league’s all-time save leader, after the relief ace had given up a two-out single to Bruce Bochte. Left-hander Ray Searage came in to face left-handed hitter Mike Davis, but the strategy backfired when Davis singled. Donnie Hill followed with the game-tying single and Alfredo Griffin knocked in the winning run. “In the middle of the year, I might not have taken Rollie out,” Bamberger said. “Right now, I wish I’d have left him in.” In other American League games, the Boston Red Sox defeated the Seattle Mariners 2-1, and the California Angels beat the Toronto Blue Jays 3-2. There were no National League games scheduled Thursday. The Brewers had taken a 3-0 lead in the top of the first inning on an RBI double by Cecil Cooper and run-scoring groundouts by Robin Yount and Ted Simmons. But the A’s came back in the bottom of the first on a two-run homer by Dave Kingman, his fifth. The Brewers made it 4-2 in the fourth on an RBI single by Jim Gantner. The A’s got that run back in the fifth on Griffin’s runscoring grounder. “There was a lot of excitement out there,” Hill said. “It was like a World Series game. We needed something like this after losing so much. ” Bamberger, of course, couldn’t feel anything but sick. “A game like that,” he said, “could put a man in his grave.” Red Sox 2, Mariners 1 A 1 Nipper nd two relievers combined on

Worry Clinic

By George W. Crane, Ph.D., M.D.

Martha can get the best laxative right at the water faucet! Water beats irritating drugs & oil laxatives. Old dogs & cats also have constipation so give them plenty of liquids! CASE L-959: Martha D., age 63, speaks for millions of Americans, especially those past 50 years of age. “Dr. Crane,” she asked, “why are so many of us older folks constantly troubled by constipation? “I read that we spend over a billion dollars a year just for laxatives, so what is the best way to avoid this sluggishness of our colon?” CONSTIPATION FACTS The best laxative is water, so why spend a billion dollars for expensive drugstore laxatives when you can get the same effect with a few extra glasses of water daily? One of the reasons for the stress on eating fibrous vegetables is partly the bowel irritation by the fiber therein, but more importantly, the fact that vegetables are chiefly water! And the water from vegetables costs you much more than tap water from the kitchen faucet. At night we lose 3 or 4 glasses of water via moisture exhaled with each breath, plus imperceptible perspiration that evaporates from our skin, and urine. Thus, by morning, our lower bowel is relatively dry, so it has less lubrication to help in pushing its contents toward the rectum. The small intestine just below the stomach removes much of the water from the

CLASSIFIEDS

ter sr \ \ttr Tt~ lEsMOMifti ? teSr

It's a paradise marketplace of buying and selling locally. Where else can you find - or sell an, item, a business, a car or a house from the comfort of your own home? Phone 653-5151

a five-hitter and Rich Gedman cracked a solo homer to lead Boston over Seattle. Nipper, 1-1, held the Mariners scoreless until they punched across a run on Phil Bradley’s sacrifice fly in the eighth inning. Bob Ojeda and Bob Stanley finished up, with Stanley recording his fourth save as the Red Sox snapped a five-game losing streak. Gedman, the Boston catcher, lined a homer off Seattle starter Mike Moore, 2-3, in the second inning for his second homer of the season. The Red Sox scored their eventual winning run in the fourth inning on an RBI single by Jackie Gutierrez. “Everybody knows this team isn’t hitting up to its potential,” said Red Sox Manager John McNamara. “But we got a two-run lead and made it stand up. And that’s a start.” The Red Sox came into Seattle hitting only .195 on the road. They had seven hits off Moore in the first 31-3 innings.

By The Associated Press It wasn’t a good day for hometown fans of the Denver Zephyrs and the Oklahoma 89ers in American Association baseball action. Omaha drummed Oklahoma City 74 and lowa humiliated Denver 10-5 Thursday, the defeats hurting all the more since the losers were on home turf. In the only other game, Buffalo downed its parent club, the Chicago White Sox, 9-1, in an exhibition game. Pat Putnam had two hits and walked twice in five at-bats to lead the Royals to the victory over Oklahoma City. Putnam, who started the game batting .321, also scored three times and added an RBI to his team-leading 12 as the Royals defeated the first-place

food, coffee, tea or milk, that we swallow, for it requires water to help the food calories get into the blood vessels that surround the intestines. So the small intestine leaves very little water for the colon. If you drink 3 glasses of water as soon as you get up in the morning, the small intestine will not absorb much of it, so the remainder rushes onward into the colon. Thus, the drier, almost impacted contents of the colon then become lubricated and constipation is prevented. Oil lubricates the colon but slows down the absorption of vitamins and such drugs as cascara irritate the colon, while tap water merely lubricates the colon without irritating it. Pregnant women and men with enlarged prostates find that such pressure against the colon adds to constipation. And many people who consume much chocolate or cocoa, will complain of constipation but tap water relieves their problem, too. Old dogs and cats also suffer impaction of the rectum, due to their lack of water intake, for their dry foods and protein have less water than vegetables so see they have access to ample water at all times! You may not feel thirsty before breakfast but drink the 3 glasses as medicine, for they will lessen the straining. (Always write to Dr. Crane. Hopkins Bldg., Mellott, Indiana 47958, enclosing a long stamped, addressed envelope and 50f to cover typing and printing coats when you send for one of his booklets.)

May 3,1985, The Putnam County Banner-Graphic

Zephyrs and 89ers have big night on home fields

Legal Notice

THE PUTNAM COUNTY BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS WILL MEET IN REGULAR SESSION, MAY 6. 1985 AT 7:00 P.M. LEGAL TIME AT THE COURTHOUSE IN GREENCASTLE. INDIANA. TO CONSIDER THE FOLLOWING CLAIMS: COUNTY HIGHWAY: Typewriter Rebuilder Services & Sales Inc. 125.49: Books Plus 13.81; General Telephone Company 334.04; Joe Ellis Heating 443.80; Limedale Ditching Inc. 162.50; Bob Webster Sales 152.30: Midwest Brake & Electric 86.39; Power Train Service 1,250.00; D & B Machine Shop 475.00; Midwest Brake 218.40; Greencastle Tractor Sales 8.89; Vans Carb. & Electric 145.00; Dan Young Chevrolet 27.56; Wabash Ford Truck Sales 66.34; Service Glass 70.60; C.ark Truck Equipment Company 408.19; M& R Auto Parts 176.40; Morrison Tire Company 828.79; 3-D Auto Parts 1,161.69; Ace Hardware 26.38: Greencastle Automotive 167.45; Kenny's Radiator Service 18.00; Shaffer & Company 73.18: A&B Hydraulic Inc. 499.00; Putnam County Stone 1,340.52; Sunset France 7,463.44; A & C Enterprises 443.88; Dalton Asphalt Corporation 1,825.00; Harris Stone Company 5,820.01; Ladoga Culvert 1,293.60; Dalton Asphalt Corporation 2,420.96; Associated Sign & Post 138.30; Harris Stone Company 5.500.00; Putnam County Treasurer 3,024.54: R & M Oil Company 5.155.23; Greencastle Farm Supply 40.00; Indiana Gas Company 365.50; Safety Kleen Corporation 42.50; Correlated Products 99.50; Lawson Products 35.06: Kitchen Machinery 739.20; Communication Maintenance 330.00; Department of Water Works 15.08; Public Service of Indiana 149.38; HBG Insurance 3,983.00. R & S FUNDS: Butler, Fairman & 4,043.00. COUNTY GENERAL FUND: Doris M Smith 18.72; General Telephone Company 42.54; Western Indiana Private Industry Council, Inc. 150.00; Typewriter Rebuilder Services & Sales Inc. 68.04; 3M SCLB9B6 187.84; Ace Hardware .89; Horizon Business Center 42.56; Copyrite 79.08, Viquesney's 86.55; Typewriter Rebuilder Services and Sales Inc. 186.89; Woodburn Graphics Inc. 2,397.50; Copyrite 72.00; Typewriter Rebuilder Services & Sales Inc. 66.36; Greencastle Offset 17.00; Horizon Business Center 41.47; Typewriter Rebuilder Services & Sales Inc. 11.88; Schultz Brothers Company 41.48; Viquesney s 29.30; Woodburn Graphics 710.00; Progressive Printing Company 62.10; Xerox Corporation 293.57; Michael J. Biggs 54.00; Central National Bank 11,740.15; Books Plus 46.44; Radio Shack 30.07; Progressive Printing 36.99; R & M Oil Company 914.44; Amoco Oil Company 29.20;

Shell Oil Company 87.04; Morrisons Tire Company 96.33; Bumgardners Auto 19.45; Greencastle Automotive Supply 3.84; Morrison's Tire Company 416.00; Cloverdale Shell Service 4.00; Bill's Auto Service 476.40; M-R Auto Parts 3.58; Putnam County Automotive 3.78; Uniform House 190.40; U S. Postmaster 44.00; Home Laundry 58.59; Ray O'Herron 171.57; Horizon Business Center 10.68; Hickerson Instrument Co., Inc. 305.00; Purdue University 2,945.76; Progressive Printing Company 68.20; Horizon Business Center 9.50; Books Plus 12.24; Hoosier Copy Supply 258 92; General Telephone Company 466.92; lUPUI 251.00; M.V.S. Raju. MD 500.00; Sheri Duncan 3.96; Woodburn Graphics 1.840.00; Progressive Printing 34.00; U S. Postmaster 88.00; Delbert H. Brewer 1,150.63: L. V. Poynter 13.66; Terry R. Mason 18.38; Gary J. Gram 17.94; Leslie E. Wooden 12.34; Cynthia C. Barger 11.02, Robert Weiss 7.94; Mable A. Horton 24.98; Carol A. Gilham 24.10; Rebecca J. Brothers 11.90; Milford R. Harney 17.94; Bruce W Barlett 11.90; Donna L. Fidler 23.22; Marlene A. Manion 12.34; Larry D. Bastin 7.50; Ellen Joan Cash 9.70; Lisa Duncan 7.94; Net tie O. Leonard 8.38; Judith A Neeley 11.46; John L. Johnson 11.90: Phillip Plessinger 9.70; Rex H. Strough 11.90; Howard M Tippin 11.90; John R. Zeiner 25.00; Word Systems. Inc. 39.24; Progressive Printing Co.. Inc 13.50; Terry R. Mason 3.84; Gary J. Gram 4.00 Milford R. Harney 3.79: Mable Horton 3.78; Carol A Gilham 3.91; West Publishing Co. 75.00. Sally H Gray 9.00; Gary G. Eubank 20 00: Mickie Patterson 20.00; Reva Miller 20.00; Elizabeth Wright 20.00; Michael Sutherlin 20.00; Lloyd Biubaum 20.00; Lula Ellen Renihan 46.96; Delores M. Hinkle 35.46; David Wesley Young 44.20; Jean Weaver 44.20; Robert T Wilson 7.96; Charlotte Jean Hubbard 42.36. Lana Beck 15.78; Randall Lantrip 42.36; John William Moy. Sr. 15.32; Rebec ca Earlene Sprinkle 10.95; Jerry L Miller 11 64 Barbara J. Poole 14.40; Betty J McGill 8.65. John A Fulwider 13.02: Patricia Ann Cowan 12.10; Mary I. Huter 7.96. Ralph A Thornburg 14.40; Alva F. Shillings 8 42; Robert Morris Nelson 12.10; David D Clinger 22.56; Bernice H. Clearwater 10.72; Jack W Hamm 7.50; Betty L. Redding 7.73; Gerald G. Siddons 7.73; Darlene Jackson Fordice 24 86 Walda Jane Annen 18.42; Dorothy D. Vaughan 8.88; Terry Sue Stewart 17.73; Robert M Vanlandmgham 18.88. Judith F Parker 11.64. Larry W. Gibbs 17.73: Ricky L. Williams 20.72. Dennis C Lents 23 48; F. Nunzio Cancilla

Angels 3, Blue Jays 2 Juan Beniquez’ pinch single with two outs in the bottom of the ninth inning capped a two-run rally that boosted California over Toronto. With the Blue Jays leading 2-1, Ruppert Jones led off with a single and took second on a sacrifice by Doug DeCinces. Reggie Jackson then walked, and Rob Wilfong singled to score Jones with the tying run. Reliever Jim Acker took over for Dave Stieb, 1-3, and retired Jerry Narron on a fly ball before Beniquez singled sharply to center to score Jackson with the winning run. Left-hander Pat Clements pitched the final 11-3 innings for the victory. “I tried to just hit the ball up the middle, toward the pitcher,” Beniquez said. “It’s only the second time I’ve ever faced him (Acker) and I could tell he was trying to make me pull the ball.”

89ers for the second time in three nights. Royals starter Mike Griffin, 1-3, got relief help from Renie Martin and Mike Kinnunen, who picked up his first save. Oklahoma City’s Oddibe McDowell narrowed the count to 7-4 with his tworun homer in the sixth. Starter Mitch Zwolensky, 1-1, took the loss for the 89ers, 14-4. Bryan Dayett connected for a tworun double and later tapped a gamewinning two-run single to lead lowa to the lop-sided decision over Denver. The victory also gave lowa a 2-1 edge in the teams’ three-game series. Dayett’s two-run single came in the fifth inning with the score tied 5-5. The Cubs padded the 7-5 lead with insurance runs in the eighth and ninth innings.

7.73; Charles D. Frazee 23.25; Summer Walter 7 96; Kathleen L. Simmons 22.56; Wilbur Siebrase 17.73; David G. Sutherlin 8.42; Wanetta Zaring 8.19; Ronald Youngblood 12.10; Glen Horn 9.80; Debra Gannon 14.40; James A. Rodgers 12.10; Bonnie S. Miller 8.65: Teresa L. Vibbert 14.40; James D. Spencer 19.00; Clark Adamson 46.96; Gian D. Horn 12.10; Randy J. Ragsdale 7.96; Mary Huter 7.96: Max L. Evans 38.68; Dorothy D. Vaughan 8.88: Robert S. Train 35.92; Teresa Vibbert 48.80; Janet Hroch 35.92; Wanetta Zaring 8.42; Rex Martin Steele 12.10; Debra Phillips 36.38; William P. Ausman 14.40; Karen Jean Jones 9.57; Harl O. Peters 8.65; Marsha S. Carrington 16.70; Freda Mae Hutcheson 11.64: Rodney A. Nodley 8.42; Martha Grace Reese 91.00; Stephen S. Pierson 234.50; David J. Houck 1,102.50; Darrell E. Felling 677.50; Robert J. Bremer 25.00; John R. Zeiner 75.00: Ace Hardware 10.89: Progressive Printing 78.10: Van Ausdall and Farrar 38.73; Sony Word Systems 115.20; National Library 75.25; Charlotte Hubbard 5.90; Randy Lantrip 11.56; Jean Weaver 8.56; Debby Phillips 3.77; Terry Vibbert 4.40; Janet Hroch 6.97; Clark Adamson 7.00: Max Evans 5.23; Rickie Williams 3.97; Ralph Robinson 2.82; Bob Vanlandingham 3.05; Dennis Lents 3.63; Wilbur Siebrase 2.78; Darlene Fordice 3.20; Kathleen Simmons 1.94; Terry Stewart 2.35; Walda Annen 2.52; David Clinger 2.73; Charles Frazee 2.70; Hoosier Copy Supply 172.00; Michie Company 110.39: West Publishing Company 306.00; Ellen Renihea 6.70; Ralph K. Robinson 19.80; B & E Service 209.69; Sears 27.07; Ottawa Park Instant Homes 10.45; A.A. Huber & Sons 291.88; Howard Harmless 4.35; Baker's Remove-All 50.00; Ace Hardware 5.08; Correlated Products 69.02; Clearwater Garden Center 14.91; The Butcher Block 93.38; Phillips Electric Supply 11.48; Pitney Bowes Inc. 109.50; General Telephone Company 1,211.79; Department of Water Works and Sewage 382.78; Indiana Gas Company 965.60; Public Service of Indiana 691.08; H.H. Taylor Company 90.00; Ace Hardware 35.51; The Butcher Block 115.80; Correlated Products 14.28; Atlas Linen Supply 10.65; Reliable Exterminators 25.00; Gerry Hoffa 36.92; General Telephone Company 350.63; Coan's Pharmacy 266.81: Perry Wainman 162.00; Putnam County Operation Life 25.00; Putnam County Hospital 225.76; Putnam County Radiology 29.40: Public Service of Indiana 236.41; Indiana Gas Company 1.574.15; S & H Trash Disposal 45.00: Department of Water Works & Sewage 360.66; Gerry Hoffa 1,909.70; B & E Service 40.00; Black Lumber Company 143.33: Pools 39.76; Margaret Broussard 35.00; Maurice Jones 35.00: R & M Oil Company 411.25; Butlers Skelgas 840.00; Indiana Department of Education 39.00; Handy s Dairy 373.60; Franklin Street Food Center 1,167.96; Hudson s Market 292.80; Gould's Market 385.73: Diamond Institutional Distributors 3.30; Williamson s Home Improvements 128.00; Clearwaters Garden Center 42.45; Putnam County Landfill 16.50; J.L. Poor & Company 214.95: Williamsons Remodeling 100.00; Larr Equipment 175.55; Paul V Black 5.00: Shuee & Sons 46.01; Greencastle Decorating 14.74; Pool s 9.17; Chuck s Rental Inc. 24.00; Williamson Roofing 30.00: Aqua Systems 93.29; The Butcher Block 55.88; Arab Pest Control 24.00; Correlated Products, Inc. 39.80; Headley Hardware 185.22; Schultz Brothers 50.61; General Telephone Company 91.26: HBG Insurance 411.00; Public Service of Indiana 358.77; Jerry Monnett 10.00; Jim Keeton 85.50; Carpet Kingdom 279.47; Ban-ner-Graphic 2.38; Joan Strange 75.00: Bruce Albright 219.42; Books Plus 2.20: Putnam County Treasurer 2.763.90; Manatron Inc. 16.810.77; Bayard L. Allen 3.975.00; Dalton Asphalt Corporation 45.00; Banner-Graphic 825.92. HBG Insurance 2.835.00: Walter L. Poymer 400.00; Putnam County Operation Life 7.000.00; The Metropolitan School District of Wabash County 240 00; Hopkins-Rector Funeral Home 600.00; Miller Memorial Chapel 100.00; Bittles & Hurt Funeral Home 100.00. Treasurer of Clay County 37.00; Harvey M Sage 8.82. UNAPPROPRIATED: Coca Cola Bottling Company 354.75; Betty Sendmeyer 19.00. AVIATION FUND William LaFoe 1.075.00: HBG Insurance 78.00. BOARD OF HEALTH FUND HBG Insurance 138 00; Putnam County Treasurer 311.30; Horizon Business Center 40.23; Lafayette Business Machines 102.14; Physicians Desk Reference 27.95; Evelyn Spencer 14.42; Rosalie Graham 24 69; Verme Zeiner 173.18 General Telephone Company 182 37: Health Magazine 13.97 ALCOHOL & DRUG FUND Putnam County Treasurer 216.02; Horizon Business Center 12 96; Progressive Printing Company 24 00 Ace Hardware 18 46; General Telephone Com pany 222.49 U S. Postmaster 33 00 PUTNAM COUNTY COURT PROBATION USERS FEE FUND Sally H Gray. 45.50. CUM BUILDING COURTHOUSE Maintenance ; Contracting Company 8.814 10: Light Impressions 104 17. 1 May 3/1T

A9