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Shelton Mason County Journal
Shelton, Washington
July 29, 1999     Shelton Mason County Journal
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July 29, 1999
 
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CHARACTERISTICALLY CHESHIRE-CAT-LIKE, Shelton's Cathy Cole- Dew buzzes the photographer as she gallops past on the track during a recent workout in Highclimber Stadium. gouf Alderbrook Ahhrbrook's ladies yielded the t')]lowing the past week: July 20&22, "Most Pars" 18-holers Div. A -. gross: Gerry Lou Geist 80, Asue [?;ames 81, Jean Kremer 82; net: Jolene Johnson 60, Nancy Young and Jayne Burns tied at 62, Patricia Smith and Pat Noble tied at 67 Div. B --gross: Wilrna Sheldon 88, Jean Fields and Gayle Freitas tied at 92; net: Judy Graves 63, Betty Olson 64, Karen Au- mend 65. Div. C - gross: Virginia Hendricks 96, Barb O'Halloran 98, Anita Nickerson 100; net: Jean Scott 61, Sandy Stoffel 64 and Fran Sutton 66. Nina-holers Gross- Bev Wilson 56. Net- Opal Christenson and Fran Huber- ty tied at 34. Bayshore Bayshore's ladies went at it h)w-net thshion Tuesday, to these ends: Coed bats,,, battling Action continued in the Shel.- ton Parks & Rec's summer soil- ball league wars the past week. Here's rec director Mark Zie- ghr's account of the action as of Tuesday: Cascade League Himlie Homers Fuddpuckers The Flyers AALL Phase Construction Olympic Heating & Cooling Kim's Hair Designs [.)&D Manke Tug & Barge Olympic A League Hoodsport Winery Brady's Nursery Fichert's Photo Center Castle & Coleman Our Gang !. umbermen's Hood Canal Communications Pyres Olympic B League 1st Street Pub Lisa's Hair First Endeavor Resources Wheels Who Miles Sand & Gravel K&K Logging PCFCU Barnes Machine McDonald's PUI II 7-1 6-1 6-2 5-2 2-1 3-4 3-4 3-5 2-4 0-6 0-7 8-1 6.3 4-4 4-4 3-4 3.5 Men's League 3-6 Alderbrook Golf 2-6 Bob's Tavern TPS/Olympic Motors 6-2 SaHarco 6-3 Huston Excavating 5-3 Money Express 5-3 Kamin Construction 3-4 Little Creek Casino 2-5 Jimmy G's Casino 2-5 McComb 1-5 Roadside Restaurant & Lounge 6-0 6-1 4-2 3-1 3-3 3-3 3-3 2-2 1-4 0-5 0-6 First division - Gert Batstone first, Toni Stevens second. Second division - Lola Norton first, Barb Rogerson second. Third division - Harlene Robbins first, Anita Kimbel second. Fourth division - Lois Poe first, Arlene VanWey and Betty Nell tied for second. Nine-hole players - Chloe Scoles first and Pat Kieburtz second. Birdie - Fran Buik. Chip-in - BIIlie Elms. Cushman Lake Cushman's lady 18-holers played their 1999 Club Classic July 21, to these ends: Putting contest - Rita Lilinski, Jerene Smart and Bobbie Maker wound up in a three-way tie for first. Accuracy on #3 - Betty Guisness 10.5 inches to lead all guests and Judy Burke 24 inches to lead club members. Closest to the hole on #4 - Linda Holbert four feet five and a half inches to lead the guests and Judy Burke 11 feet and one inch to lead club members. Gross best-ball Div. I - Dabble Everley and Dorrie Pan- nette 76, Barbara Johnson and Kathy Pes- sein 83, Nancy Young and Mary Lou Geist 84. Div. II - Sharon Cammarano and Linda Hulbert 85, Ruth Beck and Corinne Adams 91, Mickey Morgan and Janice Deiglmeier 92. Div. III -Bobbie Maker and Evelyn San- born 96, Molly Frazier and Diane Muller 98, Jean Bearden and Marie Kaare 103. Net best-broil Dtv. I - Evie Campbell and Jerene Smart 60, irene Wog.and Dixie Killian tied with Donna Taylor and Jean Fields at 62. Div. II - Evelyn Dahlman and Janice Elliott 60, Maxine Johnston and Helen Nico- laisen 62, Vi Sibley and Rosetta Jones 67. Div. III - Marilyn Schmid and Janet Chapman 59, Dodie Jacobsen and Barbara Hamlin 63, Carolyn Steele and Betty Ben- son 69. Best-of-field team (gross) Judy Burke and Kathy Johnson 76 (tiebreaker). Limerick Lake Limerick's ladies waged "Better Nine" competition to these ends July 21: First division - Joyce Karch 32.5, Marie Bierward 34, Anne Wooten 35. Second division - Connie Newell 32, Delores King 33, Gwen Ball 45. Low net of the day - Delores King's 68. Bowling's Lloyd Memorial nears The Shelton Timber Bowl will host bowling's third annual Lloyd Clark Memorial Tournament August 28-29. Featuring a unique adult-child doubles format, the donnybrook is tentatively set for either 10 a.m. or 1 p.m. both days. For more informaton call Mary Reller at 426-4771 or the Timber Bowl. CLIMBERS PRESENT & FUTURE do their thing in Highclimber Sta- dium last week as Shelton High football coach Matt Hinkle and staff conduct the city's annual football camp. Page 24 - Shelton-Mason County Journal - Thursday, July 29, 1999 Not Shelton's incomparable Cathy Cole-Dow ! ° _ I uoaaer00ng tn00o middle age eh will d when she hits the track th : days - and she tries to do sp.! senta _ " i er sun: the a By STEVE PATCH First the bad news: She's no longer American recordholder. The good news is headline- making all the same, though, and it's that Shelton's Cathy Cole- Dow has upped the ante by a full 12 inches since she broke the U.S. age-group record last summer in her very first season as a pole- vaulter. Now, thanks to a breakthrough leap on a beach in Seattle last month, the 38-year-old mom and SHS biology and P.E. teacher is up to 11 feet even - or just a quarter of an inch off the current American record for women 35-39 years old. "And, actually," says the late- Seventies' Climber grad, "the world record in my age group is only 12-5/2. So I'm real close to that mark also... "And I feel like I'm getting stronger." TRAINING UNDER another notable Climber of yore - track & football collegian Charlie Shu- gart, now a pole-vault coach in Bellevue - Cole-Dow followed up her then-record 10-0 clearance last summer by seeing out her rookie season with a gold-medal flourish (9-4) in the prestigious World Masters Games in Eugene last summer. "It always seems like I do bet- ter when he's there," says Cathy, referring to Shugart. "He knows so much about vaulting. He can give you the little hints that you need to make it over. Cuz each day you run a little differently, your muscles feel different - and just depending on how you're jumping that day, little tricks here and there really make a difference." ANOTHER FACTOR is the pole, says the ex-Climber star. And such was never more appar- ent than when she made her ll- footer the other day in the so- called Alki Beach Vault, spon- sored by the Willamette Pole Vaulting Club out of Portland. "I'd just gone from a 12-foot pole to a 13-6 pole," says Cathy, "- which is kind of a big jump... But I seem to be doing a little bet- ter with it." The woman's all-ages record is a ways away - 15-1. Characteris- tically, though, Cole-Dow isn't conceding anything, and certainly not to age. "No, the sky's the limit," she CATHY GETS AIR at the high school recently. 'My head ended up in the plant box.' blusters, laughing at herself. "But, seriously, I still consider myself a real beginner at this, so I expect to get better." WEIGHING IN right around the same 135-ish mark she main- tained as a four-time Black Hills League basketball scoring champ at Shelton High, the 5-8 former collegiate all-league guard says she's come back sufficiently from the physical reality of new moth- erhood - son Derek just having turned 5 - that she actually feels as though she's fitter than she was as a teenager. "But, still," she says, "at my age I think you definitely have breakdowns. And it's not the vaulting itself but what it takes to become physically fit to be able to vault." Consequently, adds Cathy, thing strenuous, axy i] There, "Because an injury at rny. i really sets you back timeWl' Persor she says. ",,And time is the  enactPUpPe you know- She pauses, aa$ lariou shflmg a laugh. And ttrne, • The says, "is NOT my frtend..." : the p simple OWn. throu IN Canal *T Club ing o the ga Golfc A s be fol; dinnel and a] Ilanas ration head ended up in the plan  Per p, She laughs again "Yeah, and  Will t • od ! 9489. pole slaps you pretty go i gives you a pretty good b¢::i DeliraThe bruise. "But, you know, it's just Pai-- Partn tions the deal..." : and ( PSYCHOLOGICAL challei:., Welc0tlssues es remain paramount to this di lags. by the way. There's simply: . °T avoiding them, says the Cli$  ng e grad. "When they put the bar West,, she says, "sometimes it looks West you know, you're jumpin' Uled_t overpass." She laughs. "I areq:_: mentally, especially when cial-"e0 reaching a PR in competition, Public a real challenge, teach "It doesn't seem like it a big deal, but when you're ing back looking at it from ginning of your run you're 'Wow. How am I gonna get THAT?.!'" A MULTI.SPORT star Highclimber who went earn all-conference in major-college basketball national laurels in fastpitc ball, Cole-Dow was year as one of the top ten athletes in the 25-year the now-defunct Black League. Subsequently she become first woman ever inducted the Shelton-Mason County Hall of Fame. Omsnadwiya? You SAID (Continued from page 23.) around." Blame in part the nature of the sport, adds Beck. "You can be a great indoor player and be a mar- ginal outdoor player," he says. "The games are really different - mentally and physically." THE DIFFERENCE may very well account for the ul- timately disappointing perfor- mance, too, of the aforementioned Clyde Reise team, which boasted a trio of Hawaiian lads fresh from a third-place showing in the top division of the recent U-18 age- group nationals in New Orleans. "They're some really fine vol- leyball players, those boys," says Beck. "But they got knocked out by Leo's Team. And I was a little surprised, because they come at you with lots of angles." Rounding out Saturday's field were S&J Espresso of Olympia, Gumby's Return of Olympia, The Semis of Olympia, The Outsiders of local Samoan fame, The Mon- keys of Beck's youngest kids' in- vention, the Sparrows in a Hurri- cane contingent featuring locals Chuck Carroll, David Coughlin and Steve Morgan and the "Willow" squad showcasing cur- rent Climber varsity volleyball players Willow Shanahan and Saori Hattori. GUMBY'S RETURN?! Beck laughs. "That's kinds funny," he says. "One of their guys last year cramped up. His legs hurt; he could hardly stand up. So they called him Gumby. And that's where they got Gum- by's Return." And "Sparrows in a Hurri- cane?" "That was Chuck's idea," says the director, laughing anew. "He always has a way of coming up with some name that fits his emo- tion for the moment, ya know? "He figured that they were in a heap o' trouble, but they were gonna go try and have fun..." , WHICH BRINGS US back to our repeat champs - and fittingly enough, to hear Beck tell it. 'They're all really friendlY,: people," says the veteran "And they're very gracious playing, too. Ya know, whine about things." He "Their only complainl says, "was that Shelton have a homemade, kinds spun pizza place, ya know after the game..." (By Order of Secured Creditor & Mason County Treasurer's Office) Western Parts & Machine 128 E Railroad • Shelton, WA (Downtown On Corner of S Front & Railroad) 10 AM - WEDNESDAY - AUG. 4TH PREVIEW: 9 AM til Auction ALL TOOLS, ENGINE MACHINE SHOP EQUIPMENT, INVENTORY, RETAIL FIXTURES, OFFICE FURNITURE & EQUIPMENT, & MORE Sunnen CKIOD cylinder resizing machine; Sunnen LB grinder w/AG300 sion gage; Sunnen HD CRS750 cap & rod grinder; Sunnen HS30K honing st w/pneumatic & electric grinders; Sunnen CRH50 rod heater; Sunnen Quick-Check rod aligner; VanNorman "Per-Fect-O" 777S boring bar Sioux 2001 valve reface grinder; DCM head grinder; DCM flywheel Charles Hockey PT38; Peterson TCM25 8 speed drill press; AMMCO 410 br lathe w/disc brake & twin facing tools; Peterson P48 sandblast cabinet; io rotary parts cleaner; Better Engineering power parts washer; ZEP parts dip tank; Kansas Instruments BK17 2 burner gas fired oven; OTC 17-1 "H" press w/air-hydraulics; 8" double pedestal grinder; 1T chain fall; DaytOr hp 2 stage air compressor; Rimac 5" spring tester; Alternator/Starter & battery testers; Starrett & Others precision measuring & shop tools; Tool nets; Oxy/Acet Outfit; 250 amp welder; Office Furn; Computers; Racking; Telephone Sys; NEW AUTO & TRUCK PARTS INVENTORY + M TERMS: 5% Buyer's Premium In Effect - Cash, Cashiers Checks & VISA/MC ONI CHARACTERISTICALLY CHESHIRE-CAT-LIKE, Shelton's Cathy Cole- Dew buzzes the photographer as she gallops past on the track during a recent workout in Highclimber Stadium. gouf Alderbrook Ahhrbrook's ladies yielded the t')]lowing the past week: July 20&22, "Most Pars" 18-holers Div. A -. gross: Gerry Lou Geist 80, Asue [?;ames 81, Jean Kremer 82; net: Jolene Johnson 60, Nancy Young and Jayne Burns tied at 62, Patricia Smith and Pat Noble tied at 67 Div. B --gross: Wilrna Sheldon 88, Jean Fields and Gayle Freitas tied at 92; net: Judy Graves 63, Betty Olson 64, Karen Au- mend 65. Div. C - gross: Virginia Hendricks 96, Barb O'Halloran 98, Anita Nickerson 100; net: Jean Scott 61, Sandy Stoffel 64 and Fran Sutton 66. Nina-holers Gross- Bev Wilson 56. Net- Opal Christenson and Fran Huber- ty tied at 34. Bayshore Bayshore's ladies went at it h)w-net thshion Tuesday, to these ends: Coed bats,,, battling Action continued in the Shel.- ton Parks & Rec's summer soil- ball league wars the past week. Here's rec director Mark Zie- ghr's account of the action as of Tuesday: Cascade League Himlie Homers Fuddpuckers The Flyers AALL Phase Construction Olympic Heating & Cooling Kim's Hair Designs [.)&D Manke Tug & Barge Olympic A League Hoodsport Winery Brady's Nursery Fichert's Photo Center Castle & Coleman Our Gang !. umbermen's Hood Canal Communications Pyres Olympic B League 1st Street Pub Lisa's Hair First Endeavor Resources Wheels Who Miles Sand & Gravel K&K Logging PCFCU Barnes Machine McDonald's PUI II 7-1 6-1 6-2 5-2 2-1 3-4 3-4 3-5 2-4 0-6 0-7 8-1 6.3 4-4 4-4 3-4 3.5 Men's League 3-6 Alderbrook Golf 2-6 Bob's Tavern TPS/Olympic Motors 6-2 SaHarco 6-3 Huston Excavating 5-3 Money Express 5-3 Kamin Construction 3-4 Little Creek Casino 2-5 Jimmy G's Casino 2-5 McComb 1-5 Roadside Restaurant & Lounge 6-0 6-1 4-2 3-1 3-3 3-3 3-3 2-2 1-4 0-5 0-6 First division - Gert Batstone first, Toni Stevens second. Second division - Lola Norton first, Barb Rogerson second. Third division - Harlene Robbins first, Anita Kimbel second. Fourth division - Lois Poe first, Arlene VanWey and Betty Nell tied for second. Nine-hole players - Chloe Scoles first and Pat Kieburtz second. Birdie - Fran Buik. Chip-in - BIIlie Elms. Cushman Lake Cushman's lady 18-holers played their 1999 Club Classic July 21, to these ends: Putting contest - Rita Lilinski, Jerene Smart and Bobbie Maker wound up in a three-way tie for first. Accuracy on #3 - Betty Guisness 10.5 inches to lead all guests and Judy Burke 24 inches to lead club members. Closest to the hole on #4 - Linda Holbert four feet five and a half inches to lead the guests and Judy Burke 11 feet and one inch to lead club members. Gross best-ball Div. I - Dabble Everley and Dorrie Pan- nette 76, Barbara Johnson and Kathy Pes- sein 83, Nancy Young and Mary Lou Geist 84. Div. II - Sharon Cammarano and Linda Hulbert 85, Ruth Beck and Corinne Adams 91, Mickey Morgan and Janice Deiglmeier 92. Div. III -Bobbie Maker and Evelyn San- born 96, Molly Frazier and Diane Muller 98, Jean Bearden and Marie Kaare 103. Net best-broil Dtv. I - Evie Campbell and Jerene Smart 60, irene Wog.and Dixie Killian tied with Donna Taylor and Jean Fields at 62. Div. II - Evelyn Dahlman and Janice Elliott 60, Maxine Johnston and Helen Nico- laisen 62, Vi Sibley and Rosetta Jones 67. Div. III - Marilyn Schmid and Janet Chapman 59, Dodie Jacobsen and Barbara Hamlin 63, Carolyn Steele and Betty Ben- son 69. Best-of-field team (gross) Judy Burke and Kathy Johnson 76 (tiebreaker). Limerick Lake Limerick's ladies waged "Better Nine" competition to these ends July 21: First division - Joyce Karch 32.5, Marie Bierward 34, Anne Wooten 35. Second division - Connie Newell 32, Delores King 33, Gwen Ball 45. Low net of the day - Delores King's 68. Bowling's Lloyd Memorial nears The Shelton Timber Bowl will host bowling's third annual Lloyd Clark Memorial Tournament August 28-29. Featuring a unique adult-child doubles format, the donnybrook is tentatively set for either 10 a.m. or 1 p.m. both days. For more informaton call Mary Reller at 426-4771 or the Timber Bowl. CLIMBERS PRESENT & FUTURE do their thing in Highclimber Sta- dium last week as Shelton High football coach Matt Hinkle and staff conduct the city's annual football camp. Page 24 - Shelton-Mason County Journal - Thursday, July 29, 1999 Not Shelton's incomparable Cathy Cole-Dow ! ° _ I uoaaer00ng tn00o middle age eh will d when she hits the track th : days - and she tries to do sp.! senta _ " i er sun: the a By STEVE PATCH First the bad news: She's no longer American recordholder. The good news is headline- making all the same, though, and it's that Shelton's Cathy Cole- Dow has upped the ante by a full 12 inches since she broke the U.S. age-group record last summer in her very first season as a pole- vaulter. Now, thanks to a breakthrough leap on a beach in Seattle last month, the 38-year-old mom and SHS biology and P.E. teacher is up to 11 feet even - or just a quarter of an inch off the current American record for women 35-39 years old. "And, actually," says the late- Seventies' Climber grad, "the world record in my age group is only 12-5/2. So I'm real close to that mark also... "And I feel like I'm getting stronger." TRAINING UNDER another notable Climber of yore - track & football collegian Charlie Shu- gart, now a pole-vault coach in Bellevue - Cole-Dow followed up her then-record 10-0 clearance last summer by seeing out her rookie season with a gold-medal flourish (9-4) in the prestigious World Masters Games in Eugene last summer. "It always seems like I do bet- ter when he's there," says Cathy, referring to Shugart. "He knows so much about vaulting. He can give you the little hints that you need to make it over. Cuz each day you run a little differently, your muscles feel different - and just depending on how you're jumping that day, little tricks here and there really make a difference." ANOTHER FACTOR is the pole, says the ex-Climber star. And such was never more appar- ent than when she made her ll- footer the other day in the so- called Alki Beach Vault, spon- sored by the Willamette Pole Vaulting Club out of Portland. "I'd just gone from a 12-foot pole to a 13-6 pole," says Cathy, "- which is kind of a big jump... But I seem to be doing a little bet- ter with it." The woman's all-ages record is a ways away - 15-1. Characteris- tically, though, Cole-Dow isn't conceding anything, and certainly not to age. "No, the sky's the limit," she CATHY GETS AIR at the high school recently. 'My head ended up in the plant box.' blusters, laughing at herself. "But, seriously, I still consider myself a real beginner at this, so I expect to get better." WEIGHING IN right around the same 135-ish mark she main- tained as a four-time Black Hills League basketball scoring champ at Shelton High, the 5-8 former collegiate all-league guard says she's come back sufficiently from the physical reality of new moth- erhood - son Derek just having turned 5 - that she actually feels as though she's fitter than she was as a teenager. "But, still," she says, "at my age I think you definitely have breakdowns. And it's not the vaulting itself but what it takes to become physically fit to be able to vault." Consequently, adds Cathy, thing strenuous, axy i] There, "Because an injury at rny. i really sets you back timeWl' Persor she says. ",,And time is the  enactPUpPe you know- She pauses, aa$ lariou shflmg a laugh. And ttrne, • The says, "is NOT my frtend..." : the p simple OWn. throu IN Canal *T Club ing o the ga Golfc A s be fol; dinnel and a] Ilanas ration head ended up in the plan  Per p, She laughs again "Yeah, and  Will t • od ! 9489. pole slaps you pretty go i gives you a pretty good b¢::i DeliraThe bruise. "But, you know, it's just Pai-- Partn tions the deal..." : and ( PSYCHOLOGICAL challei:., Welc0tlssues es remain paramount to this di lags. by the way. There's simply: . °T avoiding them, says the Cli$  ng e grad. "When they put the bar West,, she says, "sometimes it looks West you know, you're jumpin' Uled_t overpass." She laughs. "I areq:_: mentally, especially when cial-"e0 reaching a PR in competition, Public a real challenge, teach "It doesn't seem like it a big deal, but when you're ing back looking at it from ginning of your run you're 'Wow. How am I gonna get THAT?.!'" A MULTI.SPORT star Highclimber who went earn all-conference in major-college basketball national laurels in fastpitc ball, Cole-Dow was year as one of the top ten athletes in the 25-year the now-defunct Black League. Subsequently she become first woman ever inducted the Shelton-Mason County Hall of Fame. Omsnadwiya? You SAID (Continued from page 23.) around." Blame in part the nature of the sport, adds Beck. "You can be a great indoor player and be a mar- ginal outdoor player," he says. "The games are really different - mentally and physically." THE DIFFERENCE may very well account for the ul- timately disappointing perfor- mance, too, of the aforementioned Clyde Reise team, which boasted a trio of Hawaiian lads fresh from a third-place showing in the top division of the recent U-18 age- group nationals in New Orleans. "They're some really fine vol- leyball players, those boys," says Beck. "But they got knocked out by Leo's Team. And I was a little surprised, because they come at you with lots of angles." Rounding out Saturday's field were S&J Espresso of Olympia, Gumby's Return of Olympia, The Semis of Olympia, The Outsiders of local Samoan fame, The Mon- keys of Beck's youngest kids' in- vention, the Sparrows in a Hurri- cane contingent featuring locals Chuck Carroll, David Coughlin and Steve Morgan and the "Willow" squad showcasing cur- rent Climber varsity volleyball players Willow Shanahan and Saori Hattori. GUMBY'S RETURN?! Beck laughs. "That's kinds funny," he says. "One of their guys last year cramped up. His legs hurt; he could hardly stand up. So they called him Gumby. And that's where they got Gum- by's Return." And "Sparrows in a Hurri- cane?" "That was Chuck's idea," says the director, laughing anew. "He always has a way of coming up with some name that fits his emo- tion for the moment, ya know? "He figured that they were in a heap o' trouble, but they were gonna go try and have fun..." , WHICH BRINGS US back to our repeat champs - and fittingly enough, to hear Beck tell it. 'They're all really friendlY,: people," says the veteran "And they're very gracious playing, too. Ya know, whine about things." He "Their only complainl says, "was that Shelton have a homemade, kinds spun pizza place, ya know after the game..." (By Order of Secured Creditor & Mason County Treasurer's Office) Western Parts & Machine 128 E Railroad • Shelton, WA (Downtown On Corner of S Front & Railroad) 10 AM - WEDNESDAY - AUG. 4TH PREVIEW: 9 AM til Auction ALL TOOLS, ENGINE MACHINE SHOP EQUIPMENT, INVENTORY, RETAIL FIXTURES, OFFICE FURNITURE & EQUIPMENT, & MORE Sunnen CKIOD cylinder resizing machine; Sunnen LB grinder w/AG300 sion gage; Sunnen HD CRS750 cap & rod grinder; Sunnen HS30K honing st w/pneumatic & electric grinders; Sunnen CRH50 rod heater; Sunnen Quick-Check rod aligner; VanNorman "Per-Fect-O" 777S boring bar Sioux 2001 valve reface grinder; DCM head grinder; DCM flywheel Charles Hockey PT38; Peterson TCM25 8 speed drill press; AMMCO 410 br lathe w/disc brake & twin facing tools; Peterson P48 sandblast cabinet; io rotary parts cleaner; Better Engineering power parts washer; ZEP parts dip tank; Kansas Instruments BK17 2 burner gas fired oven; OTC 17-1 "H" press w/air-hydraulics; 8" double pedestal grinder; 1T chain fall; DaytOr hp 2 stage air compressor; Rimac 5" spring tester; Alternator/Starter & battery testers; Starrett & Others precision measuring & shop tools; Tool nets; Oxy/Acet Outfit; 250 amp welder; Office Furn; Computers; Racking; Telephone Sys; NEW AUTO & TRUCK PARTS INVENTORY + M TERMS: 5% Buyer's Premium In Effect - Cash, Cashiers Checks & VISA/MC ONI