Times Leader 09-22-2011

46
“It doesn’t do enough to fund mitigation efforts so this type of flooding doesn’t happen again. It doesn’t do enough to help local businesses reopen and protect American jobs.” Lou Barle tta R-Hazleton Area reps split as aid bill defeated Tom Marino voted for the measure while Lou Barletta favors a Senate version. SPE CIAL TEAMS NOT SO SPECIAL Despite returning the opening kickoff of the season for a touchdown, Penn State has had a terrible showing on spe- cial teams, highlighted by an unsightly 1-for-6 m ark on field goals. The sit- uation not only has fans scratch- ing their heads, it has Penn State coach Joe Paterno wondering what he can do to make the Nittany Lions special teams ... well, special. Sports , 1B SPORTS SHOWCASE AMERICAN LEAGUE (GAME 1) YANKEES 4 RAYS 2 (GAME 2) YANKEES 4 RAYS 2 TIGERS 6 ROYALS 3 NATIONAL LEAGUE NATIONALS 7 PHILLIES 5 CARDINALS 6 METS 5 C M Y K WILKES-BARRE, PA THURSDA Y, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 50¢ timesleader.com The Times Leader         7         0         9         1         0         2 $ 20 VOUCHER FOR ONLY $ 10 State is sixth worst for air quality in the U.S., study says NEWS, 3A Pa. gets failing pollution mark Philadelphia’s quarterback recovering from concussion SPORT S, 1B  Vick may play, but may not INSIDE A NEWS: Local 3A Nation & World 5A Obituari es 2A, 6A Editorial 11A B SPORTS: Scoreboard 2B MLB 4B Business 9B C LIFE: Birthdays 3C Movies/TV 6C Crossword 7C Funnies 8C  WILKES-BARRE – Engineers say recent flood waters damaged the formerHotel Ster ling beyo nd repair and the historic structure must be razed before it collapses, and no local official s have dis- agreed.  What remains a point of con- tention is who should pay for the  job. Cit yV est , the own er of the bui ldi ng,has lit tleto nomoneyin its cof fer s, ac- cording to county officia ls  who have seen the non -pr ofi t corporation’s fi- nancials. And the city of Wilke s-Barre,  which paid for engin eer s to in- spect the 113-year-old building a  week ago, doesn’t have funds to cove r the estimated $1 million demolition cost available either. Butch Frati, the city’s director of operations, has said the city is looking into whether any portion of the demolition costs might be cove red by feder al disas ter funds, given that the already deteriorat- ing structur e was further dam- aged by flooding.  That applica tionwould haveto be made by CityVest, he said. Alex Rogers, director of CityV- est , cou ldnot bereach edfor com- HOTEL STERLING The landmark must be demolished, but no one want s to pick up $1 millio n pricetag Demolition tab has few interested By STEV E MOCAR SKY  [email protected] CLARK VAN ORDEN/THE TIMES LEADER Engineer s say the Sterlin g Hotel at the corner of North Rive r Str eet and West Market Str eet in Wilk es- Barre has to be demolished . Area offici als, howe v- er, disagreeon who should pay for it. Urban See STER LING,Page 12A  A GOOD TIME, AND THAT’S NO BULL AIMEE DILGER/THE TIMES LEADER F ood, fun, and freebies attracted area college students Wednesday to the eighth annual Party on the Square in downtown Wilkes-Barre. John Giustino tried to grab the me- chanical bull by the horns during the party that ran from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. on Public Square. Vendors had plenty to give away. Live bands and a DJ provided the music at the event to promote the downtown to students from Wilkes University, King’s College, Miser- icordia University , Luzerne County Community College and Penn State Wilkes-Barre. Represen tatives of the Luzerne Count y Conv entio n and Vis itor s Bure au came into count y budg et heari ngs W ednes day aftern oon seeking an $80,000 county alloca- tio n for201 2, the same amo untre- ceive d this year .  They left with ins tru cti ons to co un t on ha lf th at amou nt. Commissioners als o tol d the m to forg et aboutadd- ing another em- ployee to handle onl ine mar ke t- in g an d so ci al media.  The bure au’ s requ est for 3-per- ce nt ma na ge - ment raises was al so ve t oed, though commis- si on ers sa id the y’r e hop ingto fin d a wa y tofund pay inc re ase s for all non -un ion  workers because most haven’t had onein yea rs .  The same message was repeat- edl y de liv er ed to oth er dep art- “It was a tough day for the depart- ments. We cut bare bones, and we’ve still got more cuts to make.” Maryanne Petrilla commissioner COUNTY BUDGET A steady stream of denials delivered Commissioners refuse requests for funding as they try to close $23.6 million budget gap. By JENNI FER LEARN- ANDES  [email protected]

Transcript of Times Leader 09-22-2011

8/4/2019 Times Leader 09-22-2011

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/times-leader-09-22-2011 1/45

keeps the government running through Nov. 18, past the Oct. 1

startof the2012 fiscalyear, whileCongress tries to finish work ona number of still-pending 2012

House bill included $1 billion inrelief funds that would go out to

communitiesbefore theSept. 30endof the2011federal fiscalyear.

  The disaster relief funding  was partof an overarching short-term spending measure that

“It doesn’t do enough to fund mitigation efforts so this type offlooding doesn’t happen again. It doesn’t do enough to helplocal businesses reopen and protect American jobs.”

Lou Barletta

R-Hazleton

 WASHINGTON – RepublicanReps.Lou Barletta andTom Ma-

rinosplitWednesdayover a $3.7billion disaster relief bill, a mea-sure that was backed by HouseGOP leaders but went down todefeat195-230.

Barletta, of Hazleton, votedagainst the measure, saying he

favors a Senate bill that offersnearly$7 billionin disaster relief funding nationally.

Marino, of Lycoming Town-ship, voted in favor, saying the

Area reps split as aid bill defeatedTom Marino voted for the

measure while Lou Barletta

favors a Senate version.

By JONATHANRISKIND

Times Leader Washington Bureau

SeeBILL,Page12A

SPECIAL TEAMSNOT SO SPECIALDespite returning theopening kickoff of theseason for a touchdown,Penn State has had aterrible showing on spe-cial teams, highlighted byan unsightly 1-for-6 mark

on fieldgoals.The sit-uationnot onlyhas fansscratch-

ing their heads, it hasPenn State coach JoePaterno wondering whathe can do to make theNittany Lions special

teams ... well, special.Sports, 1B

SPORTS

SHOWCASE

AMERICAN LEAGUE

(GAME 1)

YANKEES 4

RAYS 2

(GAME 2)YANKEES 4

RAYS 2

TIGERS 6

ROYALS 3

NATIONAL LEAGUE

NATIONALS 7

PHILLIES 5

CARDINALS 6

METS 5

C M Y K

WILKES-BARRE, PA THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 50¢timesleader.com

The Times Leader

        7        0        9        1        0        2

$20 VOUCHERFOR ONLY

$10

State is sixth worst for airquality in the U.S., study says

NEWS, 3A

Pa. gets failing pollution mark 

Philadelphia’s quarterbackrecovering from concussion

SPORTS, 1B

 Vick may play,but may not

INSIDEA NEWS: Local 3A

Nation & World 5AObituaries 2A, 6AEditorial 11A

B SPORTS: Scoreboard 2BMLB 4BBusiness 9B

C LIFE: Birthdays 3CMovies/TV 6CCrossword 7CFunnies 8C

D CLASSIFIED

 WEATHERAbby Connors

Partly sunny, a shower.

High 72. Low 62.

Details, Page10B

  WILKES-BARRE – Engineerssay recent flood waters damagedthe formerHotel Sterling beyondrepair and the historic structuremust be razed before it collapses,and no local officials have dis-agreed.

 What remains a point of con-tention is who should pay for the job.

CityVest, the owner of thebuilding,has littleto nomoneyin

its coffers, ac-cording tocounty officials  who have seenthe non-profitcorporation’s fi-nancials.

And the cityof Wilkes-Barre,

  which paid for engineers to in-spect the 113-year-old building a week ago, doesn’t have funds tocover the estimated $1 milliondemolition cost available either.

Butch Frati, the city’s directorof operations, has said the city islooking into whether any portionof the demolition costs might becovered by federal disaster funds,given that the already deteriorat-ing structure was further dam-aged by flooding.

 That applicationwould havetobe made by CityVest, he said.

Alex Rogers, director of CityV-est, couldnot bereachedfor com-

H O T E L S T E R L I N G The landmark must be demolished, but no one wants to pick up $1 million pricetag

Demolition tab has few interestedBy STEVEMOCARSKY 

 [email protected]

CLARK VAN ORDEN/THE TIMES LEADER

Engineers saythe Sterling

Hotel at thecorner of North

River Street and

West MarketStreet in Wilkes-

Barre has to bedemolished. Area

officials, howev-er, disagreeon

who should payfor it.

Urban

See STERLING,Page 12A

 A GOOD TIME, AND THAT’S NO BULL

AIMEE DILGER/THE TIMES LEADER

Food, fun, and freebies attracted area college studentsWednesday to the eighth annual Party on the Square indowntown Wilkes-Barre. John Giustino tried to grab the me-chanical bull by the horns during the party that ran from 5

p.m. to 9 p.m. on Public Square. Vendors had plenty to give away. Livebands and a DJ provided the music at the event to promote the

downtown to students from Wilkes University, King’s College, Miser-icordia University, Luzerne County Community College and PennState Wilkes-Barre.

Representatives of the LuzerneCounty Convention and VisitorsBureau came into county budgethearings Wednesday afternoonseeking an $80,000 county alloca-tion for2012, thesame amountre-ceived this year.

 They left withinstructions tocount on half that amount.Commissionersalso told them toforget aboutadd-ing another em-

ployee to handleonline market-ing and socialmedia.

  The bureau’srequest for 3-per-cent manage-ment raises wasalso vetoed,though commis-sioners saidthey’re hopingto find a way tofundpay increases for all non-union workers because most haven’t hadonein years.

 The same message was repeat-edly delivered to other depart-ments for more than six hours Wednesday as commissionerstriedtowhittledowna $23.6milliongapbetween projected revenue and

spending requests for 2012.Commissioners started the bud-

get planning process Monday with

SeeBUDGET, Page12A

“It was atough dayfor thedepart-ments. Wecut barebones, and

we’ve stillgot morecuts tomake.”

Maryanne

Petrilla

commissioner

C O U N T Y B U D G E T

A steadystreamof denialsdeliveredCommissioners refuse requests

for funding as they try to close

$23.6 million budget gap.

By JENNIFERLEARN-ANDES 

 [email protected]

NEW YORK — Facebook is at

 The world’s largest online so-cial network is expected to an-nounce even more changes to-day, when it holds its annual f8conference in San Francisco fordeveloperswhocreate gamesandother applications for its site.

 Thegatheringfollows a trickleof changes to Facebook in the

 with approval — or at least si-lence, which in the age of social-media oversharing could well beconsidered an endorsement.

  Then came Wednesday, whenmany users woke up to find theirhome pages altered, with whatFacebook calls “top stories” onthetopof their pages,followedby

Facebook is getting a facelift, and many users just don’t ‘like’ itFacebook, the

online social

networkfounded by

Mark Zucker-berg, pic-

tured, istweaking the

home pagesofits 750

Some changes at the social

network already introduced

and more are promised.

ByBARBARAORTUTAY 

 AP Technology writer 

8/4/2019 Times Leader 09-22-2011

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/times-leader-09-22-2011 2/45

K

PAGE 2A THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com

Burns, RichardDavis, Margaret

Drake, AlmaGillow, JosephHigdon, James

Homnack, NancyJeffery, James Jr.Lakowski, Frances

Lopasky, JoeMeekes, Joseph

Muroski, MichaelNemetz, Joan

Oravec, JosephRichards, ElwoodRubinstein, LoisShotwell, LorenSuriano, JosephSzafran, LindaUsefara, John

Washinski, Jerry

OBITUARIES

Page 2A, 6A

AN INCORRECTPHOTO onPage 2A of Wednesday’seditions accompanied the

story abouta suspectchargedwith robbinga CitizensBank branchin Kingstonon Tuesday.The manpolice ar-rested, Jo-

seph Ostroski, 60, of LehmanTownship, is pictured.

BUILDING

TRUST

The Times Leader strives tocorrect errors, clarify storiesand update them promptly.

Corrections will appear in thisspot. If you have informationto help us correct an inaccu-racy or cover an issue morethoroughly, call the newsroomat 829-7242.

Ostroski

HARRISBURG – No player

matched all five winningnumbers drawn in Wednes-day’s “Pennsylvania Cash 5”game so the jackpot will beworth $500,000.

Lottery officials said 92players matched four num-bers and won $263 each and4,095 players matchedthree numbers and won $10each.

LOTTERY

MIDDAY DRAWINGDAILY NUMBER 3-3-7

BIG FOUR 2-9-3-0QUINTO 3-8-0-0-7

TREASURE HUNT

07-08-10-12-17

NIGHTLY DRAWINGDAILY NUMBER 2-2-9

BIG FOUR 7-2-7-3QUINTO 8-6-9-7-2

CASH FIVE

01-03-10-27-32POWERBALL

12-47-48-52-55POWERBALL 13POWER PLAY 4

DETAILS

➛ timesleader.com

MissedPaper ........................ 829-5000

Obituaries ............................... 970-7224

Advertising ............................... 970-7101

Advertising Billing............... 970-7328

Classified Ads......................... 970-7130

Newsroom............................... 970-7242

VicePresident/ExecutiveEditor

Joe Butkiewicz ...............................970-7249

Asst.ManagingEditor

Anne Woelfel...................................970-7232

WHO TO CONTACT

Newsroom829-7242

[email protected]

Circulation Jim McCabe – [email protected]

Published daily by:

Impressions Media15 N. Main St.

Wilkes-Barre, PA 18711

Periodicals postage paid atWilkes-Barre, PA and additional mailing offices

Postmaster: Send address changesto Times Leader 15 N Main St

+(ISSN No. 0896-4084)USPS 499-710

Issue No. 2011-265

John L. Usefara, 88, of Plymouth,passed away Wednesday, Sep-

tember 21, 2011. Born in Plymouth,hewasa sonofthelateJohnandLo-rettaKellyUsefara. He wasformerlyemployed formanyyearsas a unioncarpenter. He was a member of All

Saints Parish, Plymouth, andKnights of Columbus St. Vincent’sCouncil 984.

He was preceded in death by hissisters Anna Yachimovicz and MaryPitz; brothers, Frank and GeorgeUsefara; and children, John III andLoretta.

He was a loving husband, fatherand grandfather, and will be dearlymissed by his wife of 63 years, theformer Eleanor Kopicki. He will besadly missed by all who knew andloved him.

Surviving, besides his wife, Elea-nor, are sons, Leonard and his wife,Carol; Frank and his wife, Virginia;John IV and his wife, Lena; Kevinand his wife, Hannah; and Josephand his fiancée, Danielle; sister

Catherine Kulesavage; as well as 17grandchildren andmany nieces andnephews.

Funeral will beat 9a.m. Saturdayfrom the Kopicki Funeral Home,263 Zerbey Ave., Kingston, withMassofChristianBurialat9:30a.m.in All Saints Parish, 66 Willow St.,Plymouth. Interment will be in theSt. Vincent’s Cemetery, Plymouth.Friendsmaycallfrom5 to8 p.m.Fri-day.

John L. Usefara September 21, 2011

Loren Shotwell, 41, of Plymouth,passed away suddenly at his

home Sunday, September 18, 2011.Hewasa sonofCarl Sr.,andthelateZelma (Whiting) Shotwell.

He was a 1989 graduate of GARMemorialHigh School.Loren loved watchingthe NewYorkYankeesandDallas Cowboys.

Loren is a beloved son, brotherand uncle.

He was preceded in death by hismother, Zelma, in 2003; brother,  William; maternal grandmother,Zelma Whiting;and parental grand-parents, Asa and Irene Shotwell.

Surviving are his father, Carl Sr.;brothers, Carl Jr.,Wilkes-Barre, andKenneth, Luzerne; sisters, EdnaCasey and Shirley Bankes, both of 

  Wilkes-Barre; maternal grandfa-ther, WilliamWhiting;15nieces andnephews; as well as 12 great-niecesand nephews.

Relatives and friends may callfrom 6 to 7 p.m. today at the Yeo-sock Funeral Home, 40 S. Main St.,

Plains Township. Funeral servicefor Loren will be held at 7 p.m. to-day, with The Rev. Gerald Lewis of-ficiating.

Loren ShotwellSeptember 18, 2011

James J. Jef-fery Jr., 73, aresident of  Sweet ValleyRoad, HunlockCreek, passedawa y a t hishome Tuesday,September 20,

2011.He wasborn August16,1938,in Pittston, a son of the late Jamesand Bertha Duffy Jeffery.

He served in the U.S. Navy.James was a retired employee of the International Association of Heat& FrostInsulatorsand Allied Workers Local 38, Wilkes-Barre.

husband, John, White Plains, N.Y.,and Lynn Rosengrant and her hus-band,Wendell,Hamlin; son, ThomasJeffery, Falls; step-son, Frank Cum-mings, Dallas; seven grandchildren;as well as a brother, William Jeffery,and his wife, Betty, West Wyoming.

A FuneralMass willbe held at10 a.m. Friday at the Clarke

Piatt Funeral Home, 6 Sunset LakeRoad, Hunlock Creek, with the Rev.Joseph R. Kakareka officiating. Mili-tary serviceswillbe held at9:30a.m.Friday by the Shickshinny AmericanLegion Post 495 at the funeral homeand also by graveside. Friends maycall from 7 to 9 p.m. today at the fu-

James J. Jeffery Jr.September 20, 2011

Joseph Meekes, 86, of Kingston,passed away Monday, Septem-

ber 19, 2011, in the Regional Hospi-tal of Scranton. Born in Johnstown,he was a son of the late Joseph andAmelia Meekes.

He was a U.S. Army Veteran of   World War II. Prior to his retire-ment, he was employed at AutoPark Auto Top of East Orange, N.J.

Preceding him in death was astep-son, Norman Mitchell.

S i i g hi if f 50

dren, Renny Mitchell and his wife,JoEllen, The Villages, Florida, andCindy Lee McKenny and her hus-band, Ted, of White Haven; as wellas step-grandchildren, Norman andAmanda.

A Blessing Service will beheldat 11a.m. Saturday in the

Metcalfe and Shaver Funeral HomeInc., 504 Wyoming Ave., Wyoming, with the Rev. Leo J. McKernan, of St Monica’s Parish officiating En-

Joseph MeekesSeptember 19, 2011

BUTLER TWP. – State po-lice at Hazleton said they ar-rested Angel Ann Halchak, 35,of Nanticoke, on evidence of drunken driving after a trafficstop on Interstate 81 at 7:40p.m. Sunday.

Halchak showed signs of being under the influence aftershe was stopped when troopers

allegedly spotted her speeding and carelessly driving, statepolice said.

HANOVER TWP. – Town-ship police reported the follow-ing:

• John Blaker III, of Palmy-ra, N.J., reported Monday his work truck was struck by a golf ball while it was parked atNortheast Carthege Containeron Ferry Road.

POLICE BLOTTER

  WILKES-BARRE – JeremyPackard is a student of history –he holds undergraduate andgraduate degrees in the field –and believes political parties

have caused prob-lems that are going onat thelocal,stateand national levels.

He said an inde-pendent voice isneededto serveas a

checkand balanceon thetwoma- jorpartiesand hewantstobe that voiceon thenewLuzerneCountyCouncil in January.

So the retired president of   Wyoming Seminary formally an-nouncedon Wednesday hisinten-tion to run in November for thecouncil.Thereare 11seats,and 11Republicans,11Democrats,threeLibertarians, two Independentsand one American IndependentParty candidate have filed paper- workto appear onthe Nov. 8 gen-eral election ballot.

Packard, 73, of Kingston, saidthe decision to have 11 seats onthecouncilwas madeby theGov-ernment Study Commission thatdrafted the home rule charter togive a majority to one party overanother. He said if that were tohappen, the county’s residents

 would lose.“We need to have independent

 voices,” Packard told a crowd of nearly30 gathered in theFounda-tion Room at Genetti Hotel &Conference Center in downtown  Wilkes-Barre. He said the firstcouncil that is seated next year  will have a hand in making themost important decision thatanybody will make in its first year, and that is hiring the non-elected county manager.

If political parties get involvedand start pushing council mem-bers to support their choice, hesaid the county maybe in no bet-ter shape than it has been in re-cent yearsas dozensof electedof-ficials, including judges and a

county commissioner, have beenindicted on corruption-relatedcharges.

Many in the audience liked  what they heard, including An-drew Bigda of Forty Fort.

Bigda, a former county assist-ant districtattorney, is registeredas a Democrat but agreed withPackard that an independent voiceis neededon councilto helpturn the county around.

“I think highly of Jere Ri-

chard,” Bigda said. “I think thatthe dangers he brings up are ap-propriate. We’re in this mess be-cause of the old-school politicalmachine.”

Packard was a lifelong Repub-licanbut becamedisenfranchised

 with what’s been going on in re-cent years. He said he got in- volved with the crafting of theHome Rule Charter, including serving on the “Home Rule Yes”steering committee,because gov-ernment is an interest of his.

Packard said he knows moreabout the charter and “the wayit’s supposed to work than mostdo,” and he wants to bring thatknowledgeand hisindependenceto the council.

Ex-Sem boss eyes county councilJeremy Packard wants to be

the independent voice that

balances the political parties.

ByANDREWM. SEDER 

 [email protected]

AIMEE DILGER/THE TIMES LEADER

Retired Wyoming Seminary president Jeremy Packard announceshisrun forLuzerne CountyCouncil as an Independent.

Age: 73Resides: KingstonPolitical Party: IndependentFamily: Married to wife IngridCronin. The couple have threechildren. Packard also has twochildren from a previous marriage.Education: Graduated from theChoate School in Wallingford,Conn., in 1955; earned a bachelor’sdegree in history from WilliamsCollege in Williamstown, Mass., in

1959 and a master’s in historyfrom Columbia University in Man-hattan, N.Y., in 1964.Career: Served as president atWyoming Seminary from 1990-2007 before retiring. He’s current-ly an adjunct, part-time historyfaculty member at MisericordiaUniversity.Contact: www.packard-for-coun-cil.com

J E R E M Y P A C K A R D

NANTICOKE – The GreaterNanticoke Area Trojans footballteam and the players’ parents will be accepting donations forfloods victims at the Nanticoke vs. Meyers football game Fridaynight.

Items needed are flashlights,batteries, light bulbs, gardenhoses, Tylenol, Aleve, aspirin,

Neosporin, water, canned foodand buckets. Donations willbenefit flood victims in theNanticoke area.

RICE TWP. – The Sons of theAmerican Legion MountainPost 781are sponsoring a FloodRelief Drive.

Items or cash donations canbe dropped off at the AmericanLegion Mountain Post onChurch Road in Mountain Topbetween 1 and 9 p.m. today

through Friday and on Mondayand between noon and 9 p.m.Saturday and Sunday. Mondayis the last day of the collection.

Items include: surgical masks,latex gloves, large sponges,scrub brushes, bleach, cleaners,cleaners with bleach, disin-fectant, hand sanitizer/wipes,broom heads, small and largemop heads, large black garbagebags, broom sticks, gardengloves or anything cleaning-related.

Call 474-2161 or visit www.al-post781.org for more informa-

tion.

LUZERNE/WYOMINGCOUNTIES – First NationalBank of Pennsylvania banking offices are acting as collectionpoints for cleaning supplies that will support American RedCross flood relief efforts.

 Today through Friday, resi-dents are invited to join bankemployees in collecting thefollowing items most needed bythe Red Cross in affected areas:drinking water, bleach and rag mops.

Local branches are located at120 Highland Park Blvd., Wilkes-Barre Township; 46 S.Mountain Blvd., Mountain Top;35 E. Main St., Nanticoke; 1 S.Church St., Hazleton; Ritten-house Place, Route 309, Drums;2378 State Route118, HunlockCreek; and 74 E. Tioga St., Tunkhannock. Call 1-800-555-5455 or visit fnb-online.com forhours and other branches.

WEST PITTSTON – Woodfor-est National Bank is accepting donations for the West PittstonLibrary, which suffered a majorloss because of flooding.

 The bank is collecting dona-tions of fiction and non-fictionbooks, children’s books, officesupplies and notebooks. Booksmust be in readable condition.

Donations can be dropped off at Woodforest National Bank

FLOOD DONATIONS

DUPONT – The Dupont Lions will hold itsmonthly food distri-bution at4 p.m. todayat SacredHeart Church,Lackawanna Ave-nue.

LUZERNE – JohnLohman, taxcollector,said therebate periodfor the 2001Wyoming Valley WestSchool Districtproperty taxes willendMonday, after which taxes will be acceptedat facevalue.

 The wholetaxbillmustbe sentalong with thepayment. For a

receipt,enclose a self-addressed.stampedenvelope. Office hoursare 6 to8 p.m. onMondays and Thursdays, and1 to3 p.m. Sat-urdays.

Office hours after Mondaywillbe6 to7 p.m.Mondays,and1to 2p.m. Saturdays.

MUNICIPAL BRIEFS

PITTSTON -- The city in-tends to formally submit its of-ficial flood damage assessmentclaims to Luzerne County bythe end of the business day to-day.

City Manager Joe Moskovitzavoided mentioning any figuresassociated with cost but notedsome of the claims add up to“considerable amounts.”

He acknowledged the city’sdamage is far less than that of neighboring municipalities Du-ryea Borough and Jenkins  Township, but he said manybusinesses and homes were se- verely affected.

Pictures of the area aroundCooper’s Seafood Restauranton Kennedy Boulevard quicklybecame some of the mosthaunting images of the earlySeptember flooding.

  Today’s assessment will in-clude claims for emergency worker overtime hours, equip-

ment used and lent to otherflood-affected communitiesand damage to the city’s infras-tructure.

In other business, city fire-fighter Walter Knowles wasawarded a medal for locating and helping rescue Rusty Rootfrom a fire at the city’s SouthMain Street Apollo Apartmentcomplex.

After locating and treating Root, Knowles was aided byother firefighters in evacuating 

him from the building. Rootsurvived for two months afterthe fire but ultimately suc-cumbed to injuries sufferedduring the blaze.

Knowles, a nine-year veteran  with the fire department, re-called the incident as the mostintense he had experienced inhis career.

He was joined by fellow fire-fighters for a photograph be-fore the start of Wednesdaynight’s regular council meet-ing.

Mayor Jason Klush took theopportunity to acknowledgethe hard work of the city’semergency personnel as well asall who came together in re-sponse the flooding caused by Tropical Storm Lee.

Klush noted seeing the riverrise as quickly as it did andsaid he recalled with pride themanner in which the city’s  workers and volunteers wereable to react quickly and re-sponsibly to the natural disas-ter.

In other business, it was an-nounced that the Pittston CityLibrary will be applying for$500,000 in grants from theU.S. Department of Agriculture

and $30,000 in grant funding from the state Department of Education.

Although the city owns thelibrary building, it charges norent to the library and takes nocontrol over its operations. Thelibrary’s intentions to improveand expand do however fall inline with the city’s overall reno- vation and renewal plans.

 The next regular meeting of City Council is Oct. 18 at 7p.m.

Pittston flood

figures on wayCity will have ‘considerable’

tally of damage and costs for

Luzerne County officials.

ByB.GARRET ROGAN

Times Leader Correspondent

8/4/2019 Times Leader 09-22-2011

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/times-leader-09-22-2011 3/45

C M Y K

THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 PAGE 3A

LOCAL

➛ timesleader.com

SCRANTON

Pane’s nomination advancesMartin Pane, the acting U.S. marshal

in the Middle District of Pennsylvania,moved a step closer to confirmation Wednesday by the senate JudiciaryCommittee.

U.S. Sen. Pat Toomey, R-Zionsville,supported the confirmation and sentPane’s name to the committee.

Pane was nominated for the positionby President Barack Obama and alsohas the support of U.S. Sen. BobCasey, D-Scranton.

Pane has been chief deputy marshalsince 2010 and held supervisory andsenior posts since 1988.

PLAINS TWP.

Spotlight child for galaSharon Harry, executive director of 

 Wyoming Valley Children’s Associ-ation, announced that student CharlesSeiger, 4, will be the spotlight child atthe Harvest Moon Gala, which willtake place on Thursday, Oct. 6 at 6p.m. at the Woodlands Inn & Resort inPlains Township.

 This fall food and wine fundraising event will benefit the WVCA’s Early EqualsExcellence Program. Tickets for the eventare $100 per personand can be purchasedby calling Lori Kozel-

sky at 714-1246, ext.310.

 The Early EqualsExcellence program is designed forchildren who demonstrate develop-mental disabilities, and children whoare at risk for delays because of pover-ty, behavior issues or language bar-riers. All the proceeds for this event will ensure that young children, agesthree to five, receive quality earlyeducation to help them establish thefoundation for years of future learning.

Charles Seiger, the son of Charlesand Jennifer Seiger of Warrior Run, was suspected to have Down syn-drome the day after he was born and was officially diagnosed four dayslater.

Seiger first attended the WVCApreschool about 18 months ago and will continue there until he is at least5. He has utilized their speech therapyand occupational therapy services.

For more information log on to on Wyoming Valley Children’s Associationor the Harvest Moon Gala, please visit www.wvcakids.org/events or call 714-1246.

 WILKES-BARRE

La-Z-Boy donating furniture The owner of seven La-Z-Boy Furni-

ture Galleries in the northeast regionis donating truckloads of furnitureincluding La-Z-Boy sofas, chairs, reclin-ers, tables, lamps and accessories, toregional f lood victims

In conjunction with La-Z-Boy Inc.,F.J. Hager Inc. is donating approxi-

mately $200,000 of new furniture toarea flood victims through the Salva-tion Army. Transportation help isbeing provided by Penske Truck Rent-al.

Starting Friday La-Z-Boy trailers willship new furniture in trailer loads tolocal Salvation Army operationsthroughout affected flood areas.

 The Salvation Army will store anddistribute the furniture in the coming  weeks to those who need it most.

On Monday at 1 p.m., La-Z-BoyFurniture Galleries trailers will deliverthe donations earmarked for regionalflood victims to The Salvation Army warehouse located on Hanover Streetin Sugar Notch.

 WILKES-BARRE

Cleanup on River CommonRiverCommon.org will lead a clea-

nup of the River Common Park in Wilkes-Barre.

Debris, silt and trash remain in thepark from the recent high water willbe removed. Volunteers are neededtoday, 5:30p.m.- 7:30pm.; Saturday, 10a.m.– noon; Sunday, 1 p.m.-3 p.m.

Volunteers are asked to meet orga-nizers at the Market Street Bridgestairway to the River Common Park,located directly across the street fromthe Hotel Sterling (River Street).

Volunteers are encouraged to bring flat shovels, industrial brooms, masks,gloves, water-hose extensions andpower-washers.

As advised by public health officials,

I N B R I E F

Charles Seiger

 WASHINGTON – A Tunkhannock

pharmacy owner told a U.S. Housepanel the merger of two giant phar-macy benefit managers could forcecommunity stores like his out of business and result in higher pre-scription drug costs for consumers.

Joe Lech, who owns five independ-ent pharmacies in NortheasternPennsylvania, told House members  Tuesday a planned $29.1 billionmerger between Express Scripts andMedco Health Solutions would re-sult in a “mega” company in controlof more than 40 percent of all pre-

scription drug orders nationally.Also testifying Tuesday before the

House Judiciary Committee’s sub-committee on intellectual property,

competition and the Internet, werethetop executivesfrom thetwo com-panies that wish to merge.

  They say the deal will result incheaper prescription drugs becausethe combined company will be ableto squeeze discounts from pharma-ceutical companies because it willpurchase drugs – which it does onbe-half of employer drug benefit plans –at such a large volume.

Previous merger

  The previous largest pharmacybenefits company sprung from a

T H E B U S I N E S S O F H E A L T H C A R E

PETE G. WILCOX/THE TIMES LEADER

Pharmacyowner Joe Lechtold a U.S. House committee on Tuesday thata planned merger betweenExpress Scripts

and Medco Health Solutions could force community stores like his out of business.

Pharmacy merger criticizedOwner: Proposal would hurt small storesBy JONATHANRISKIND

Times Leader Washington Bureau

SeeMERGER, Page 7A

“I am very concerned thatthis merger could reduce

patient access while ulti-mately leading to higherdrugs costs due to the re-duction in competition.”

JoeLech

Pharmacy owner

 With all the rain that has fallen this year,the Wilkes-Barre/Scrantonareahasa wayto gobefore 2011becomes thewet-teston record.

Alightrainfallearlierthisweekpushed2011intoseventhplacewith45.22inchesofrainsinceJan.1,TomClark,chiefmete-orologist for WNEP-TV16, said Wednes-day.

 With100daysleftin2011,rainfallhisto-ry is likely to be re- written -- Clark esti-mates 2011 may fallinto secondor thirdplace among the wettest.

 The wettest yearon record, Clarksaid, occurred in1948 with 53.72inchesof rain.

“I’d say there is achance,butwe haveanother 8 inches togo,” Clark said.“That might bepushing it; it mightbea stretch.”

Another storm isintheforecastforto-

nightintoFridaywiththepotentialof1to

3inchesofrain,accordingtotheNational WeatherService in Binghamton, N.Y.

If the forecast stays true, the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton area may jump intofourthplace for rainfallin 2011.

Clark saidthere isa good chancemostoftherainwillstayfarthereastof Wilkes-Barre/Scranton.

“We’re going to get more rain later oninthe week,butit’snotgoingtobe anex-cessive rainfall,” Clark said. “A majorityof that rain will stay to the east of us. Itdoesn’t seem to be enough rain to raisesomeflooding concerns.”

  The Susquehanna River in Wilkes-Barre, which reached a record crest of 42.6 feet on Sept. 9, is expected to stay well within its natural flood stage of 22feet, according to the Middle AtlanticRiverForecastCenter.

“We’ve had some heavy rainfallevents,” Clark said about 2011. “Of course,we hadHurricaneIrenecomebyandwe recently hadTropicalStorm Leeopening up that tropical connection.  We’ve had a number of heavy rainfalleventsandwehadawetspringontopofitall.”

 Therehave been 44 days withperiodsof heavy rain since February, NWS re-cordssay.

Normal rainfall for this time of year is27.7 inches.

 TworainfallrecordswerebrokeninAu-gust.

Hurricane Irene dumped 3.23 inchesofrainonAug.28,breakingtheoldrecordof 2.1 inches set on that day in 1911. OnAug. 6, 2.83inches of rain wasrecorded,toppingthe 1945recordof 1.79inches.

 TropicalStormLee, which caused the

More rainwill fall,but record

may stand2011 is now the 7th wettest on

record, but it has a ways to go to

top the all-time mark set in 1948.

By EDWARDLEWIS 

[email protected]

Top10 wettestyears on record,according to TomClark, chief meteo-rologist for WNEP-TV16.1948: 53.72 inches2003: 49.451996: 491990: 46.092006: 45.561927: 45.332011: (Jan.1-Sept.21): 45.221972: 45.191902: 45.051938: 45.03

T H E TO P 1 0W E T T ES T

 WYOMING – Depending onwhat thestateDepartmentof Educationdoes,ar-easchooldistricts couldbeforcedto useseveral of their snow make-up days be-fore the temperature even dips belowfreezing.

ButWyomingAreahasthebiggest po-tential loss: A bad state ruling could wipeoutall built-insnowdays,plus one.

 The downpoursand widespreadevac-uations of lowlands prompted all Lu-zerne County school districts to closeforat leastthe two heaviestdaysof rain.

boundaries promptedthatdistrictto remainclosed forfivedaysaf-ter the storm subsid-ed and the Susque-hannaRiver receded.

Most districtsuper-intendents expect thestate Department of 

Educationto allowthemtowriteoffthetwo days of closure duringthe deluge –Gov. Tom Corbetthad already declareda stateof emergency beforethe closingsoccurred, and there is precedence forsuch exemptions to the legal mandatefor180 schooldaysin a year.

Essentially, districts could then runtheir calendars unaltered, having 178school daysinstead.

ButWyomingArealostthosefirsttwodaysplusfiveothersthefollowingweek.

days, butconceded thatmay beless like-ly than getting a waiver forthe firsttwodays.

Ifthe statedoesn’texempt thedistrictfor the five additional days, it would allbutwipeout sixsnowdaysbuilt intothecalendar, less than a month into theschool year.

Bernardi said the district has onesnowday builtintoApril10, a vacation/snowmake-upday. Otherwise, the plan was to make up potential snow days inJune.

 Thelastday ofclassesis setfor June1,but graduation is slated for June 8. If school is canceled because of snow, thedistrict would hold classes on the five weekdays fromJune 4 through 8.

As of Wednesdayafternoon, the statehad not made any decision on howmany, if any, dayswouldbe waivedfrom

Flooding may wash away all of Wyoming Area’s snow days

Unless state deems otherwise,the district could lose all its

built-in days, plus one more.

ByMARKGUYDISH

 [email protected] Bernardi

A new air quality study by aPennsylvania environmentaladvocacy group found thecom-monwealth has the sixth-mostsmog-ridden air in the nation.

 The air quality in the Scran-ton/Wilkes-Barre/Hazletonregion is not as bad as othermetropolitan areas around thestate and the country, but the

advent of natural gas drilling could contribute to a worsen-ing of air quality in the long run,a spokeswoman forthe en-  vironmental group said Wednesday.

 Thereport, titled “DangerintheAir:UnhealthyDays in2010and 2011,” was published byPhiladelphia-based citizens en- vironmental advocacy organi-zation PennEnvironment Re-

search and Policy Center.It ranked American metro-

politan areas by the number of days when the air quality ex-ceeded the national healthstandard for smogpollution setby the federal EnvironmentalProtection Agency in 2008.Overall, Pennsylvania citiesranked sixth on the list, with

Scranton/W-B ranked mid-pack in nation as warning is issued on impact of gas drilling 

Group: Pa.’s air quality 6th worst

SeeSMOG,Page7ATIMES LEADER PHOTO BY GO LACKAWANNA

State Rep. Ken

Smith, D-Dun-more, reacts

Wednesday to areport as Mere-

dith Meisen-heimer of Pen-

nEnvironment

ResearchandPolicy Center

looks on.

ByMATT HUGHES 

 [email protected]

8/4/2019 Times Leader 09-22-2011

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/times-leader-09-22-2011 4/45

C M Y K

PAGE 4A THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com

8/4/2019 Times Leader 09-22-2011

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/times-leader-09-22-2011 5/45

K

THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 PAGE 5A➛ N A T I O N & W O R L D

Look in THE TIMES LEADER for today’s valuable inserts from these advertisers:

RENO, NEV.

Experts: Pilot likely out

The veteran aviator whose planeslammed into a crowd of Nevada

air race spectators at 400 mph had nochance to save his ill-fated flight afterlikely losing consciousness from accel-eration more abrupt and extreme thaneven what most fighter pilots endure,flying experts said.

Jimmy Leeward’s aircraft shot sky- ward like a rocket Friday before plung-ing into spectators at what appeared tobe full throttle. Federal investigatorscontinue to look for a cause of thecrash at the National ChampionshipAir Races that killed11 people, in-cluding Leeward, and injured dozens.

“He’s not there. He’s unconscious,”said Ernie Christensen, a retired rearadmiral and former Vietnam fighterpilot who commanded the Navy’s TopGun fighter school for a time in the1980s.

LONDON

Libya air mission extendedLeaders of the North Atlantic Treaty

Organization authorized a 90-day ex-tension of the alliance’s aerial missionover Libya on Wednesday, raising theprospect that U.S. and allied troopscould be involved in the North Africannation until Christmas.

But NATO Secretary-General AndersFogh Rasmussen stressed the alliancecould call home its forces “at any time”if international authorities and the newLibyan government determine thatNATO’s help is no longer necessary.

NATO took over enforcement of ano-fly zone over Libya in March, withan initial deadline for the mission atthe end of June. A three-month exten-sion was set to expire next week.

NEW YORK

Islam site opens to public The developer of an Islamic cultural

center near ground zero says the “big-gest mistake” on the project was notinvolving the families of 9/11victimsfrom the start.

“We made incredible mistakes,”Sharif El-Gamal said.

 The Park51Islamic community cen-ter — at 51 Park Place, two blocks fromthe World Trade Center site — openedto the public Wednesday night with aphoto exhibit of New York childrenrepresenting 160 ethnicities.

 The project has drawn criticism fromopponents who say they don’t want aMuslim prayer space near the site of the Sept. 11terror attacks.

LOS ANGELES

Study: More dialysis neededA major study challenges the way

diabetics and others with failing kid-neys have been treated for half a centu-ry, finding that three-times-a-weekdialysis to cleanse the blood of toxinsmay not be enough.

Deaths, heart attacks and hospital-izations were much higher on the dayafter the two-day interval betweentreatments each week than at othertimes, the study found.

 The president of the National KidneyFoundation said she was “very trou-bled” by the results published today inthe New England Journal of Medicine.

“We could be doing a better job forour dialysis patients” and that might

I N B R I E F

AP PHOTO

It’s the end of the world for R.E.M.

Rock band R.E.M. with singer MichaelStipe, left, and guitarist Peter Buck,right, seen performing in Germany in

2008, on Wednesday announced ithas ‘decided to call it a day as a band.’The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame group,which also includes bassist Mike Mills,came out of the indie-rock scene inthe Athens, Ga., region. It’s creditedfor helping launch college radio. Later,the band became chart-topping rock-ers, selling millions of albums with hitslike “It’s the End of the World as WeKnow It (And I Feel Fine),” “Losing MyReligion” and “Everybody Hurts.”

UNITED NATIONS — Atop Palestinian official said  Wednesday that PresidentMahmoud Abbas had no plansto agree to a delayed vote onhis bid for membership in theUnited Nations, rejecting mounting pressure from theUnited States and France.

  The Palestinians plan tosubmit their letter of applica-tion on Friday when Abbas isto speak to the U.N. GeneralAssembly, but he faced a  withering lack of support asthe world body opened its an-nual meeting. President Ba-rack Obama said there couldbe no “shortcuts” in the questfor Middle East peace, a

message that was echoed byFrench President Nicolas Sar-kozy.

“We will not allow any po-litical maneuvering on this is-sue,” Asaid Saeb Erekat, a se-nior aide to Abbas and formerchief of negotiations.

Erekat said Abbas hadmade that plain in discussions with all parties involved overthe last three days of meet-ings in the lead-up to the an-nual UN global gathering of presidents, heads of state andruling royalty.

Sarkozy proposed a one- year timetable Wednesday forIsrael and the Palestinians toreach a peace accord, part of aconcerted push with the Unit-ed States to steer the Palesti-nians away from an applica-

tion for U.N. membership.Sarkozy spoke shortly after

Obama warned against actionon the Palestinian bid beforethere was a peace agreement.He said negotiations, not U.N.declarations, were essential toa lasting peace.

 While Obama stopped shortof calling directly for the Pal-estinians to drop their bid forfull membership — an effortthe U.S. has vowed to veto inthe Security Council — Sar-kozy sounded a more compro-mising tone.

“Let us cease our endlessdebates on the parametersand let us begin negotiationsand adopt a precise and ambi-tious timetable,” Sarkozy toldthe leaders and officials gath-ered at the U.N.

U . N . M I D E A S T C O N T R O V E R S Y U.S. has vowed to veto effort opposed by Israel

Palestinians to press statehood

AP PHOTO

President Barack Obama addresses the 66th session of theU.N. General Assembly on Wednesday. Obama said there couldbe no ‘shortcuts’ in the quest for Middle East peace.

By TAREKEL-TABLAWY 

andSTEVENR. HURST 

  Associated Press

PHILADELPHIA — Gov. TomCorbett released $15 million Wednesday to continue the con-troversial Delaware River dredg-ing project, which he contends will createjobs andeconomic de-  velopment but opponents say will damage the environment.

 The funds will allow the ArmyCorps of Engineers to begin dee-pening a second segment of theriver next month from 40 feet to45 feet, accord-ing to Philadel-phia port offi-cials. The extradepth will en-surethecitycancompeteglobal-ly by accommo-dating bigger,more modernships,they said.

Some envi-ronmentalgroups, along  with thestates of NewJerseyandDelaware, have opposed thedredging, arguing that it couldstir up toxic sediment, endangerdrinkingwater supplies and hurtfisheries.

Buta federaljudge inDelawareruled last year that the project

couldgo forward, andthe digging began in March 2010.

  When it’s finished, the five- year project will have cost about$305million anddeepeneda 103-mile stretch of the river. The fed-eral government is supposed tofund 65 percent of costs; so far,Pennsylvania has spent $45 mil-lion.

Delawaredredgingto continueGov. Corbett allocates $15

million to begin deepening asecond segment of the river.

By KATHYMATHESON

  Associated Press

Some envi-

ronmental

groups, along

with the

states of New

Jersey and

Delaware,

have opposed

the dredging.

  TOKYO — A powerful ty-phoon slammed into Japanon Wednesday, halting trainsand leaving13 people dead or

missing in south-central re-gions before grazing a crip-pled nuclear plant and heap-ing rain on the tsunami-rav-aged northeast.

Officials at the FukushimaDai-ichi plant, where engi-neers are still struggling withsmall radiation leaks due totsunami damage, expressed

relief that Typhoon Roke’sdrivingwindsand rain causedno immediate problems thereother than a broken securitycamera.

“The worst seems to beover,” said Takeo Iwamoto,spokesman for plant operator Tokyo Electric Power Co., af-ter thestorm passed justwestof the plant on its way north.

But the typhoon broughtnew misery to the northeast-ern region already slammedby the March 11 earthquakeand tsunami, dumping up to17 inches of rain in some ar-eas.

Authorities warned of ahigh risk of mudslides in thatregion.

 13 dead or missing after typhoon

AP PHOTO

Pedestrians make their way through strong winds and rainsfrom Typhoon Roke in Tokyo on Wednesday.

The storm dumps rain on

an area in Japan damaged

during the March tsunami.

The Associated Press

MUSCAT, Oman — After more thantwoyears inIranian custody, twoAmer-icans convicted as spies took their firststeps toward home Wednesday as theyboundeddownthesteps ofa privatejetand into the arms of family for a joyfulreunion in the Gulf State of Oman.

 The families called this “the best dayof our lives” and President Barack Oba-ma said their release was “wonderfulnews.”

In Washington, the release cappedcomplicated diplomatic maneuversover a week of confusing signals byIran’s leadershipon thefate of Josh Fat-taland ShaneBauer.Finally, a $1million

bail-for-freedom dealwas struckand thetwo were free.

Although the fate of the two grippedAmerica, it was on the periphery of thelarger showdowns between Washing-tonand Tehranthat includeIran’s nucle-ar program and its ambitions to widenmilitary and political influence in theMiddle East and beyond. But — for amoment at the United Nations at least— U.S. officials maybe addingwordsof thanks in addition to their calls foralarm over Iran.

For Tehran, it was a chance to courtsome goodwill after sending a messageof defiance with hard-line justice in theJuly 2009 arrests of the Americansalong the Iran-Iraq border.

American hikers freed from Iran prison begin their trek home

AP FILE PHOTO

U.S. hikers ShaneBauer, left, and JoshFattal attend theirtrial in February inIran. The lawyer for

two Americans jailed as spies saysa $1million bail-for-freedom deal wasapproved by thecourts, clearing theway for the releaseof the men aftermore than two yearsin custody.

By SAEEDAL-NAHDYand BRIANMURPHY 

  Associated Press

‘FRAUDULENT POURING’ CLAIMED AT OKTOBERFEST

AP PHOTO

 Young people drink beer during the recent opening ceremony of Oktoberfest in Munich, Germany. A Munich

consumer watchdog group says Oktoberfest revelers are being shorted on beer at the famous Bavarian

beer festival. In a test of 100 standard ‘Mass’ mugs conducted by the more-than century old Association

Against Fraudulent Pouring, not one was full, the organization said Wednesday, a news agency reported.

8/4/2019 Times Leader 09-22-2011

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/times-leader-09-22-2011 6/45

K

PAGE 6A THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com➛ O B I T U A R I E S

The Times Leader publishesfree obituaries,which have a27-line limit, and paidobituaries,which can runwith a photograph.A funeralhome representativecancall theobituarydesk at(570)829-7224, senda faxto (570)

829-5537 or e-mail to [email protected]. If you faxor e-mail, please callto confirm.Obituaries must be submitted by9 p.m. Sundaythrough Thursdayand 7:30 p.m.Friday andSat-urday. Obituaries must be sent bya funeralhome or crematory, ormustnamewho is handling ar-rangements, withaddress andphone number. We discouragehandwritten notices; theyincura$15 typing fee.

O B I T UA R Y P O L I CY

G enetti’s A fterFu nera lLu ncheons

  Starting a t$7.95 p erp erson 

H otelBereavem entRates

M .J. JUD G E PASQUALE’S1190 S S i Hi h (570) 823 5606

BARTNICKI – Helen, funeral10 a.m.today in the Kiesinger FuneralServices Inc., 255 McAlpine St.,Duryea. Mass of Christian Burialat 10:30 a.m. at Ss. Peter & PaulChurch, Avoca.

BAUR – Regina, Mass of ChristianBurial10:30 a.m. today in St.Ignatius Church.

BOLD – John, Mass of ChristianBurial 10 a.m. Saturday in the St.Lawrence O’Toole Church, 620 S.Main St., Old Forge.

BROODY – George, funeral 11a.m.Friday from St. Mary’s AntiochianOrthodox Church, 905 S. MainST., Wilkes-Barre. Calling hours 6to 9 p.m. today in the HellerFuneral Home, Nescopeck.

GLOFKA – Dorothy, funeral 9 a.m.today in the Bednarski & ThomasFuneral Home, 27 Park Ave.,Wilkes-Barre. Mass of ChristianBurial at 9:30 a.m. in Our Lady ofFatima Parish, St. Mary’s Churchof the Immaculate Conception,South Washington Street, Wilkes-Barre.

GUILFORD – Dora, funeral 11a.m.Friday in the Metcalfe and ShaverFuneral Home Inc., 504 WyomingAve., Wyoming. Friends may call 5to 8 p.m. today.

HABERSKI – Joseph, celebration oflife Memorial Mass 10 a.m. Sat-urday in Our Lady of HopeChurch, 40 Park Ave., Wilkes-Barre.

HILL – Barbara, Memorial Mass 7p.m. Monday in All Saints Church,66 Willow St., Plymouth.

KALE – Dorothy, funeral10 a.m.Friday from the Kopicki FuneralHome, 263 Zerbey Ave., Kingston.Mass of Christian Burial at 10:30a.m. in St. Ignatius Church.Friends may call 9 to 10 a.m.Friday at the funeral home.

KOVALIK – Bernard, funeral 9:30a.m. Friday from the WroblewskiFuneral Home Inc., 1442 WyomingAve., Forty Fort. Mass of ChristianBurial at 10 a.m. in Holy FamilyParish, 574 Bennett St., Luzerne.Family and friends may call 6 to 8

p.m. today at the funeral home,where the Knights of Columbus,Assumpta Council 3987, willrecite the rosary.

KUHAR – Michael, funeral 9:30 a.m.today in the Bednarski FuneralHome, 168 Wyoming Ave., Wyom-ing. Mass of Christian Burial at 10a.m. in Holy Trinity Church,Swoyersville.

LAZO – John Sr., funeral 9 a.m.Friday at the Simon S. RussinFuneral Home,136 Maffett St.,Plains Township. Requiem Ser-vices at 9:30 a.m. in Holy Resur-rection Orthodox Cathedral,Wilkes-Barre. Family and friendsmay call 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.today. Parastas at 7:30 p.m. Johnwas born August 31, 1928. He was83.

MARROW – Carolyn, gravesideservices 10 a.m. today in St.Mary’s Cemetery, Hanover Town-ship.

MRAS – Michael, funeral 10:30 a.m.Saturday from the Curtis L.Swanson Funeral Home Inc.,corner of routes 29 and 118, PikesCreek. Mass of Christian Burial at11a.m. from Our Lady of Mt.Carmel Church, Lake Silkworth.Friends may call 7 to 9 p.m.Friday at the funeral home.

PETRO – Dolores, funeral 9 a.m.Friday from the George A. StrishInc. Funeral Home,105 N. MainSt., Ashley. Mass of ChristianBurial at 9:30 a.m. from St.Nicholas Church, South Washing-ton Street, Wilkes-Barre. Friendsmay call 5 to 8 p.m. today.

RAMEY – Michael, funeral at 11a.m.Friday at the Harding-LitwinFuneral Home,123 W. Tioga St.,Tunkhannock. Friends may callfrom 6 to 8 p.m. today.

RUBENSTEIN – Lois, funeral 11a.m.Friday from the E. Blake CollinsFuneral Home, 159 George Ave.,Wilkes-Barre. Friends may call 5to 8 p.m. today.

STOLARICK – Susan, funeral 9:15a.m. Friday from The Richard H.Disque Funeral Home Inc., 672

Memorial Hwy., Dallas, and at10 a.m.at Our Lady of Mt. Carmel Church,Hunlock Creek. Friends may call 2 to4 and 7 to 9 p.m. today.

STURR – Roy, celebration of life 11a.m.Oct.1, in the Christ CommunityChurch, Kingston.

WALLACE – James, funeral1 p.m.Saturday in the Betz-JastremskiFuneral Home, 568 Bennett St.,Luzerne.

WALSH – Gerald, Memorial Mass 1:30p.m. Saturday in the Holy FamilyParish, 828 Main St., Sugar Notch.

ZAMBER – Daniel Sr., Mass of ChristianBurial 9 a.m. today in Ss. Peter & PaulCatholic Church, 13 Hudson Road,Plains Township.

ZIMOLZAK – Edward, funeral Mass9:30 a.m. today in the Holy SpiritParish, 150 Main St., Mocanaqua.

FUNERALS

RICHARD D. BURNS , 44, of   The Hideout, Lake Ariel, passedawayMonday, September19,2011,athome.Heis survivedbyhis wife,MicheleKovachBurns.Bornin Al-bany, Ga.,March30,1967, hewasason of Richard and step-motherColleen Burns of Madison Town-

ship, and Annmarie Buchholz of American Fork, Utah. An avidreaderof sciencefictionbooksandafishermanwhoenjoyedridinghismotorcycle, he will be dearly mis-sed. Heis also survivedby hisonlychild, Sarah Burns of Moosic; abrother, Kevin Burns of Madison Township; and two sisters, KellyBurns of Madison Township andCarrie Simpson and husband Rus-sell, of American Fork, Utah.

Relatives and friends maypaytheirrespectsfrom5 to7 p.m. Sat-urday at the Thomas P. KearneyFuneral Home Inc., Old Forge.Please visit www.KearneyFuneral-Home.com for directions or toleave a condolence.

NANCY BEKAMPIS HOM- 

NACK , 71, passed away Thursday,September 15, 2011, in Santa Ma-

ria, Calif. Born March 28,1940, in  Wilkes-Barre, a daughter of thelate Natalie Bekampis, she gradu-ated from GAR Memorial HighSchool, class of 1958. She is sur- vivedby herdearlybelovedson,Ja-son. Nancy had a small circle of friends in Wilkes-Barre who keptin touch over the years.

She will be missed. God granther Eternal Memory.

MICHAEL J. MUROSKI , 75, of Nanticoke, passed away suddenlyat hishome Tuesday evening, Sep-tember 20, 2011.

A full obituary will run in Sat-urday’s Times Leader. Funeral ar-rangements are pending from theS.J. Grontkowski Funeral Home,530 W. Main St., Plymouth.

JOAND. GARDNER NEMETZ ,77, of the Glendale section of Pitt-ston Township,died Tuesday, Sep-tember20, 2011,in Scranton. Bornin Wilkes-Barre January 20, 1934,she was a daughter of the lateNathan and Dorothy LandmesserGardner. Sisters,Kathleen, Shirleyand Beverly also preceded her indeath. Surviving are her husband,  The Rev. John Nemetz Jr.; chil-dren, William Gardner, DanielGardner and wife Diana, LaureenNaylor and husband Daniel, JohnNemetz III, and Kathleen Shep-herd and husband Randy; broth-ers, Roger Gardner, Michael Mar-kovich and Edward Markovich; 11grandchildren; five great-grand-children; andnieces andnephews.

Private funeral services willbe conducted Friday in the Tho-mas P. Kearney Funeral HomeInc., 517N. Main St.,Old Forge. In-

terment will follow in FairviewMemorial Park, Elmhurst.

ELWOOD M. RICHARDS , 47,of Pittston, passed away Wednes-day, September 21, 2011, at the  Wilkes-Barre General Hospital.

Funeral arrangements arepending Kiesinger Funeral Servic-es Inc., 255 McAlpine St., Duryea.

Margaret Jane Davis, 95, of Ed- wardsville, passed away peace-

fully at her home Tuesday, Septem-ber 20, 2011.

Margaret was born on July 6,1916, in Kingston, a daughter of thelate John and Mabel Simoson-Dy-mond Davis. Her siblings were Wil-liam, Cora, Elsie, David, fraternaltwin Mera, Jack, Inez and Naomi.

Margaret was a member of theLarksville United MethodistChurch and the Ephworth League.In 1934, she graduated from Larks- ville High School, and in 1936 metClarence “Squinty”Davis at a Larks-  ville United Methodist Churchevent. They were wed in Larksvilleon May 27, 1938. Over the next 70 years plus Margaret matured frommother of eight to a grandmotherand great-grandmother. Her life-time was filled with family, and herhomebecamean epicenter forthreegenerations.

Margaret enjoyed watchingPennState football, cheering on her chil-dren, grandchildren and great-grandchildren in sporting events,baking,and,mostof all,openingherhome to all her family and theirfriends.

Margaret was employed by the Wyoming Valley West School Dis-trict, fromwhichshe retired in1984.

Shewas preceded indeath byherhusband,ClarenceDavis; her broth-ers, William, David and Jack; hersisters Cora, Elsie, Mera and Nao-mi; and her son Gary Davis Sr.

Margaret is survived by her chil-dren, Douglas, Hunlock Creek; Ro-nald and wife Joann, Shickshinny;Richard and wife Nola, HunlockCreek; Margaret Krupinski andLou, Hunlock Creek; Robert and wife Ann,Larksville; DarleneKoon-

rad and husband Joe, Luzerne; andGlenn and wife Sharon, Larksville;her sister Inez Thorme; her sister-in-law Beatrice Powell; as well astwo generations of grandchildren,and several nieces and nephews.

The funeral service will be heldat 11 a.m. Saturday at the EdwardsandRussin Funeral Home,717MainSt., Edwardsville, with Pastor RonBaker, of Larksville United Metho-

dist Church, officiating. Interment will follow at the Denison Cemete-ry, Swoyersville. Family and friendsmaycall at thefuneral homefrom 9a.m. until the time of service at 11a.m. Saturday.

Herfamilywouldliketo givespe-cialthanks toErwines HomeHealthandHospicefor qualitycare andforcreating a warm, comfortable envi-ronment for Margaret and her fam-ily.

Memorial gifts may be sent inMargaret’s Honor to ErwinesHomeHealth and Hospice, 270 Pierce St.,Ste. 101, Kingston, PA 18704.

A special donation will be madeby her grandchildren in Margaret’smemory to the Larksville UnitedMethodist Church, Wilson Street,Larksville, PA18704.

Margaret Jane DavisSeptember 20, 2011

 A lma L. Drake, 88, of Forest Hill,Md., passed away Sunday, Sep-

tember 4, 2011. Mrs. Drake was bornApril 29, 1923, in Wilkes-Barre, adaughterofthe lateNelsonE. andLy-dia (nee Ayre) Nelson.

She was a 1941 graduate of DallasBorough High School and a formermember of Dallas United MethodistChurch until moving to Delta in2004. She was a current member of Churchville Presbyterian Church.

Mrs. Drake was preceded in deathby her husband, Frederick M. Drake,in 2005.

She is survived by her children,Virginia A. Cannon of Kingsville,Md.;FrederickDrake Jr.,of Tunkhan-nock; Gale Drake of Livonia, N.Y.;andGaryDrakeof ForestHill,Md.;as well as eight grandchildren and fourgreat-grandchildren.

Services will be private.Arrangements are by the family

owned Evans Funeral Chapel & Cre-mationServices– BelAir,3 NewportDrive, Forest Hill, Md.

Memory tributes may be sent tothe family at www.evansfuneralcha-pel.com.

Memorial contributions in Alma’sname may be made to Harford Hos-pice, 8003 Corporate Drive, No. G,Nottingham, MD 21236-4984.

 Alma L. DrakeSeptember 4, 2011

Lois C. Rubinstein, 78, of the Par-sons section of Wilkes-Barre,

passed away Monday, September19, 2011, at Riverstreet Manor,

 Wilkes-Barre.She wasborn January21, 1933, in Wilkes-Barre, a daugh-terof thelateHarleyandElsieRem-ley.

Agraduateof JuliaRichmanHighSchool, New York, and St. Joseph’sHospital School of Nursing, Patter-son,N.J., shewas a registerednurseat Bellevue Hospital from 1953 to1963. She later was employed by  Wilkes-Barre General Hospital,NPWHospital,and FirstHospital of   Wyoming Valley until her retire-ment in 1998.

Lois touched the lives of manypeople, and she will be greatly mis-sed by her family and friends.

In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by her hus-band, Norman Rubinstein.

Surviving areher daughter, AnneAmico, and her husband, David,Collegeville; son, DavidRubinstein,

and his wife, Pamela, Nanticoke;andgrandchildren,Elyse,Claire, Jil-lian and Benjamin.

Thefuneral willbeheldat11a.m.

Fridayfromthe E. Blake CollinsFu-neral Home, 159 George Ave., Wilkes-Barre. Services will be con-ductedby TheRev. K.Gene Carroll,Ph.D. Interment will be in OakLawn Cemetery, Hanover Town-ship. Friends may call from 5 to 8p.m. today.

In lieu of flowers, memorial con-tributions may be made to The Na-tional Kidney Foundation, 30 E.33rd St., New York, NY 10016; or to The SPCA of Luzerne County, 524E.Main St., Wilkes-Barre,PA18702.

Condolences can be sent to thefamily at: www.eblakecollins.com.

Lois C. RubinsteinSeptember 19, 2011

Jerry L. Washinski, of Wilkes-Barre, passed away Tuesday, Sep-

tember 20, 2011, at Geisinger Wyom-ing Valley Medical Center, Plains Township. Born July 23, 1939, in Al-

den, hewasa sonofthelateJohn andSophie Boyanowski Washinski.Jerry was a 1957 graduate of New-

port Township High School andservedin theU.S.AirForcefrom1957to1961.He wasemployedas an envi-ronmental control technician at Cer-tainteedCorporationfor 42years,re-tiring in 2001.

He was a member of St. AndrewParish, Wilkes-Barre, and the HighRidge HuntingClub, Bradford Coun-ty. Jerry was an avid hunter and fish-erman and enjoyed gardening andcooking.

He was preceded in death by abrother, John.

Surviving are his wife, the former Theresa Zaladonis, with whom he was married48 yearson June1,2011;sons, Leonard and his wife, Cathy,Brunswick,Ga.; Charlesandhis wife,Micah, Tampa, Fla.; and James, at

home; daughters, Marie Rebuck andher husband, William, Hegins, andJanet Washinski, Deltona, Fla.;granddaughters, Ashley Washinski,Hyattsville, Md.; Rebecca Rebuck,Hegins; and Olivia and Alexia Wash-inski, Tampa, Fla.; as well as a broth-er, Joseph Washinski, and his wife,Evelyn, Alden.

Funeral services will be heldat 10:30 a.m. Friday at the

Jendrzejewski Funeral Home, 21 N.MeadeSt., Wilkes-Barre,witha MassofChristianBurialat11a.m.in St.Pa-trick’s Church, Parrish Street, Wilkes-Barre,with TheRev.James E.McGahagan, pastor, St. Andrew Par-ish,to beCelebrant.Friends maycallfrom 6 to 9 p.m. this evening.

In lieu of flowers, donations maybe made to St. Andrew Parish, 316Parrish St., Wilkes-Barre, PA 18702;or a charity of the donor’s choice.

Jerry L. WashinskiSeptember 20, 2011

Joseph “Jo-Jo” Gillow, 78,of Avoca andformerlyofDu-ryea, passedaway Tuesday,September 20,2011, at theRiverstreet

Manor Nursing Facility after a dif-ficult battle with cancer. Born inDuryea,he was ason ofthelateJo-sephand MargaretGibbons Gillowand step-son of the late Rose CieriGillow.

He was a member of Nativity of Our Lord Parish, Duryea, and a1951 graduate of Duryea HighSchool.

JoJo held many jobs in his life-time including mechanic for Kohn Taxi, servicemanagerfor PennAu-to, owner of Gillow’s Garage in“theFlats”of Scranton, truck driv-er, machinist and salesman forCraftOil Corporation, and owner/operator of Meineke DiscountMuffler Shop in Wilkes-Barre.

Most of his life revolved aroundautomobiles, either fixing or rac-ing them, including racing stockcars on the local racing circuit. Hehas racedat Moc-A-Tek Speedway,Penn Can Speedway and 5-MilePoint Speedway. He was racecardriver of the year and served as apast president of the Moc-A-TekSpeedway.

ther to his three grandchildren andbeing a father to his two girls.

In retirement he kept busy by go-ing to the auction with his goodfriend,DanBoich,as well astraveling to Las Vegas, Florida and North Car-olina. Joecouldoften be found going outto lunch ordinnerespeciallywithhis “pumpkin.”

An infant daughter, several aunts,uncles and cousins preceded him indeath.

His wife, the former Romaine Sa-dowski, survives him. They weremarried for 54 years. Daughters, Ro-maine and husband Michael Astolfi,and Jodi Lukowich and companionLowell Stoss; and three grandchil-dren, SaraLukowich, andNoelleandZachary Astolfi, also survive.

Hisfamilywouldliketo thank Riv-erstreet Manor for its outstanding care and understanding, especiallyBarb,Cathy,Ann, LisaandAisha,andthe rest of the staff of station one. Thanksalso goto HospiceCommuni-ty Care.

Funeralservi ces willbeheldat 10a.m. Saturdayfromthe Kiesinger Fu-neralServices Inc.,255 McAlpineSt.,Duryea, with a Mass of ChristianBurialat10:30a.m. atSacred Heartof Jesus Church, Duryea, with Fr. An-drewSinnott officiating. Friendsmaycall from 5 to 8 p.m. Friday evening.Interment willbe heldat a later date.

Inlieu offlowers,memorial contri-butions can be made to Riverstreet

Joseph ‘JoJo’ Gillow September 20, 2011

James “Jim”Higdon, 64, of Pittston,passed awaypeacefully  Tuesday after-noon, Septem-ber 20, 2011, with his loving 

family by his side. He lived in thePittston area for most of his life.

He was born March 27, 1947,and was a son of the late Ernest B.“Tex” Higdon and the late RuthRuganis Higdon Pace.

Jim was preceded in death byhis wife, Donna Jennings Higdon;brother Francis Higdon; sisterRuth Selenski; and nephews, Da- vid and Patrick Williams.

He leaves behind his son, JamesHigdon, Wyoming; daughter, DonnaHigdon;brothers, Ernest “E.B.,”Pitt-ston;Pauland wifeJanet,Nanticoke;andRobert andwifeMaryEllen,Sha- vertown; sisters Patricia Mikoliczyk,  West Wyoming; Cathy Falzone, Pitt-ston; Barbara Niezgoda and husbandJohn, Lehman; Sally Wascavage andhusband, Joseph, Kingston; SheilaZambetti, Plymouth; Dolores “DiDi”Kirkwood and husband David, Loui-siana; and Mary K. Ash and husbandHarold,Exeter; as well as manyniec-es and nephews.

A memorial service will be heldat the convenience of the family.

Funeral arrangements are entrust-ed to the Ruane & Regan FuneralHome, 18 Kennedy St., Pittston.

James HigdonSeptember 20, 2011

Joe Lopas-ky, of Willis, Texas, lost hiscourageousbattle w ithcancer Tues-day, Septem-ber 20, 2011.He crossed the

goal line for the last time as Godrecruitedhim forHeaven’sfootballteam.

Joe was born on September 16,1941, in Cleveland, Ohio, a son toJohn andAnnaLopasky. Hewasanathletic standout at Lake-LehmanHigh School in Lehman, lettering fouryears in three sports, football,

basketball and baseball. He alsoachieved the All-Scholastic awardin several sports at Lake-Lehman.

Joe continued his athletic suc-cess at the University of Houston, where he played both football andbaseball. His athletic career washighlighted with scoring threetouchdowns during the first gameofhis sophomore year againstBay-lor, as well as scoring four touch-downs in the Tangerine BowlagainstMiamiof Ohioandwasvot-ed MVP of the game.

Joewentonto playsemi-proballfor the Scranton Miners and wasrecruited byseveralNFL teams be-fore his career ended with a kneeinjury. After graduating from theUniversity of Houston, he taughtandcoached football, baseballandgolf for Alief Hastings HighSchool. He ended his career as  Transportation Director for theAlief School District.

Joe had a zest for life. He en-

 joyedsingingand strumming hisgui-tar for everyone’s enjoyment. Afterretiring, his favorite pastime wastending to his ranch and his cattle.

He was preceded in death by hisparents, JohnandAnnaLopasky;andfather-in-law, O.L. “Bud” Neelen.

Joeis survivedbyhis lovingwifeof 36 years, Shirley Lopasky of Willis, Texas; sons, Casey Joseph LopaskyandwifeCari, ofKyle,Texas,andCo-dy Lawrence Lopasky and wifeJaime, of Katy, Texas; sister, PatriciaBrooks and husband, Ronald, of Leh-man; brothers, Richard Lopasky and wife, Bonny, of Spring Hill, Fla., andBill Lopasky of Lehman; mother-in-law, Ardell Neelen, of Willis, Texas;

as well as many nieces and nephews,and many wonderful friends.

Visitation will be heldfrom6 to8p.m. Friday at the Schmidt FuneralHome Chapel in Katy, Texas. Mass will be celebrated at 1:30 p.m. Satur-day at St. Bartholomew CatholicChurch in Katy, Texas, with the Rev.John Kha Tran, celebrant. Interment will be held in Katy Magnolia Ceme-tery.

Serving as pallbearers will beCasey Lopasky, Cody Lopasky, Ri-chard Lopasky, Mike Hoover, RonBrooks, and Phil Felton.

 Those wishing to make memorialgiftsmaydo soto theAmericanCan-cer Society, P.O. Box 570127, Hous-ton,TX 77257;or tothe Universityof Houston Alumni Association, P.O.Box 230345, Houston, TX 77223.

Funeral servicesheld under thedi-rection of the Schmidt FuneralHome, 1508 East Ave, Katy, Texas

77493. (281) 391-2424.

Joe Lopasky September 20, 2011

Joseph Ora-  vec, 87, of   Wilkes-Barre Township,passed away  Tuesday, Sep-tem ber 2 0,2011,at theLit-tle Flower Ma-nor in Wilkes-

Barre. He was born in Wilkes-Barre Township on October 31,1923, a sonof the lateAndrew andAnna Fedor Oravec.

He attended Wilkes-Barre Township High School. Mr. Ora- vecwasformerlyemployed byMo-tor Twins Ford and in the localshoeindustry,and hewaslaterem-ployed as a nurse’s aide at the Val-ley Crest Nursing Home prior tohis retirement. He was a memberof St. Mary’s Byzantine CatholicChurch, North Main Street in Wilkes-Barre.

Joseph loved working on cars,gardeningand ridesin thecountry,and he loved his dog, Angel.

He was preceded in death by hisbrothers, John and Andrew Oravec;and by his sister, Mary Oravec.

Surviving are his wife of 46 years,SusanHavrilosin Oravec; nieces,Car-ol Ann Oravec, Ohio, and Mary KayOravec, Ohio; nephew Michael Ora- vec and his wife, Sandy, Harrisburg;as well as brothers-in-law, John Hav-rilosin, Wilkes-Barre Township, andMichael Havrilosin and his wife, Ma-ry Margaret, Wilkes-Barre.

Funeral serviceswill be held at

9:15 a.m. Saturday morningfrom theNat& GawlasFuneralHome, 89ParkAve.,Wilkes-Barre,with DivineLitur-gy to follow at 10 a.m. in St. Mary’sByzantine Catholic Church, 695 N.MainSt., Wilkes-Barre.The VeryRev.James G. Hayer, pastor, willofficiate.Interment willbein theParish Ceme-tery, Dallas. Friends may call from 5to 7 p.m. Friday at the funeral home.Parastas Services will be held at 7p.m. Friday evening.

Onlinecondolencesmaybe sentto www.natandgawlasfuneralhome-.com.

Joseph OravecSeptember 20, 2011

LINDA JEAN SZAFRAN, 62, of Ashley, passedaway Tuesday,Sep-tember 20, 2011, at the Wilkes-Barre General Hospital. She wasborn December 3, 1948, in Wilkes-Barre, a daughterof Helen Stencikof Wilkes-Barre and the late Stan-ley Stencik. She was preceded indeathby herhusband, Edward Sza-fran. Surviving, in addition to hermother, are her companion, GlenHerbert; sons, Raymond Masi,

  Wilkes-Barre, and Paul Masi,  Wilkes-Barre; daughter, SusetteGeissler, and her husband, Keith,Dallas, Texas; grandchildren, Lor-ianne Masi, BearCreek, andMayaMasi, Hackettstown, N.J.; sister,Anna Sia, Marlton, N.J.

Relatives and friends maycallfrom 1 to 3 p.m. Friday at the Ma-pleHillCemeteryChapel, 68E. St.Mary’s Road, Hanover Township.Condolences can be sent to thefamily at www.eblakecollins.com.

MoreObituaries, Page2A

JOSEPH V. SURIANO, 51, of PineStreet, Pittston, diedSunday,September18,2011,at home.Bornin Wilkes-Barre, he was a son of Gerry Sudnick Suriano, Pittston,and the late Frank “Rocky” Suria-no. He was a life resident of Pitt-stonandwasa graduateof PittstonArea High School, class of 1978,

and Wilkes-BarreVo-Tech. Joe willbegreatlymissedby hisfamilyandall who knew him. Surviving, be-sides his mother, Gerry, are broth-ers,AnthonyBananasSuriano and  wife Denise, Springbrook, andFrank Suriano and wife Nancy,Pittston; sisters, Debra SurianoGildea, Florida, and Michele Sur-iano Kohowitz and husband Bud-dy, Old Forge; and nieces, neph-ews, aunts and uncles.

Funeral services will be pri- vate and at the convenience of thefamily from the Yeosock Funeralhome, 40S. MainSt.,PlainsTown-ship.

FRANCES M. LAKOWSKI , 89,formerlyof StantonStreet, Wilkes-Barre, a guest at Timber RidgeHealth Care Center, Plains Town-ship, diedTuesday, September 20,

8/4/2019 Times Leader 09-22-2011

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/times-leader-09-22-2011 7/45

C M Y K

THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 PAGE 7A➛ N E W S

Expires 10/31/2011

Expires 10/31/2011

Coupon valid if ordered by10/31/2011 INSTALLATIONINCLUDED WITH PRICE ANYWHERE IN NORTHEASTERN, PA

$21.7 billion merger in 2007

between CVS and Caremark.George Paz, chairman andCEO of Express Scripts, toldthe lawmakers that pharmacybenefit managers “are success-ful when our clients save mon-ey through loweremployer and em-ployee health premi-ums and/or reducedout-of-pocket costs  while at the sametime enhancing safe-ty and more positivemedical outcomes.”

Paz said a “com-bined ExpressScripts and Medco  will be well-posi-tioned to protectAmerican familiesfrom the rising costof prescription med-icines.” Paz main-tained the marketplace wouldremain highly competitivepost-merger and noted that it will be up to the Federal TradeCommission to review thecompetitive effects of themerger.

But Lech and other inde-pendent pharmacists – the Na-tional Community Pharma-cists Association is a major op-ponent of the merger – say themerger is not in the best inter-ests of consumers. Lech, amember of thenational associ-ation, operates five pharma-cies in Tunkhannock, Lacey-

 ville, Nicholson, Dushore andCanton.

During the recent flooding,Lech said, it took him twohours one morning to make itto one of his stores – a normalhalf hour drive – and he ar-rived to find a man who hadbeen evacuated standing out-

side, in need of filling the 16medications he took daily.

“Thankfully, I wasableto re-fill his medications. But what would happen in cases such asthis if pharmacies like minedisappeared from the commu-

nities that rely on them? Un-fortunately, pharmacy clos-ings are happening on a regu-lar basis,” he said.

“I am very concerned thatthis merger could reduce pa-

tient access whileultimately leading to higher drugscosts due to thereduction in com-petition.”

Marino weighs in

Also concerneda bo ut t he pro -posed merger isRep. Tom Marino,R-Lycoming  Township, a mem-ber of the judici-ary committee.Lech’s stores arein WyomingCoun-

ty.Marino is the author of a

bill, thePreserving OurHome-town Independent Pharma-ciesAct, thatseeks to allow in-dependent pharmacies toband together to form nego-tiating pools in order to them-selves negotiate with largepharmacy benefit managers.

“At a time when I am fight-ing to give our independentcommunity pharmacies thetools to better competeagainst large corporations,this merger raises a number of serious questions and con-

cerns,” Marino said in a state-ment. “Hometown pharma-cies are already at a substan-tial disadvantage when itcomes to negotiating with thePBMs.”

Other lawmakers also haveexpressed concerns about themerger.

MERGERContinued from Page 3A

Also testifying

Tuesday before the

House Judiciary

Committee’s sub-

committee on in-

tellectual property,

competition and

the Internet, were

the top executives

from the two com-

panies that wish to

merge.

metropolitan areas in the stateexperiencing unacceptablyhigh smog levels on 35 days.

It foundtwo Pennsylvaniaci-ties ranked in the top 20 largemetropolitan areas in terms of smog; Philadelphia at fifth  with 29 “smog days” Pitts-burgh at 19th with 13 smog days. Five other medium-sizedmetropolitanareas also rankedin the top 30 insmog days, butthis area was not among them.

  With three smog days in2010, Scranton/Wilkes-Barre/Hazleton ranked in 104thplace, about halfway down thelist of metropolitan areas thesurvey examined. The survey

also found the region has al-ready had three “smog days”this year.

“Actually, the environmentin Scranton isn’t as bad asmany cities in Pennsylvania,”PennEnvironment spokeswo-man Meredith Meisenheimersaid Wednesday. “But we needtomake surethat every day isasafe day to breathe.”

Meisenheimer said smog can exacerbate respiratoryproblems in children andadults, and contribute to ad- verse health in at-risk popula-tions. Therefore her group be-lieves pollution levels shouldnever exceed governmenthealth standards.

Also, her group is pressing 

fortheEPAto strengthen cleanair protections in the federalCleanAir Act,which wouldcutsmog emissionsby 25 percent.Earlier in September, Presi-dent Barack Obama rejectednewstandardsproposedby theEPA that would have reducedemissions of smog-causing chemicals, explaining it couldburden industry under trying economic conditions.

According to the PennEnvi-ronment study, smoglevels ex-ceeded the upgraded stan-dardson fiveadditional days in2010.

Meisenheimer said air qual-ity in Pennsylvania has im-proved gradually over the years, butthe impact ofnatural

gas drilling in the MarcellusShale could worsen air qualityin the state.

“Gas and oil drilling acrossthe country and our state alsocontribute to smog forma-tion,” Meisenheimer said. “Weknow that oil and gas drilling causes airpollution,so thelastthingwewanttodo isroll backair pollution standards and letit get worse.”

“We are now in the earlystages of the Marcellus Shaleera,” state Rep. Ken Smith, D-Dunmore, said Wednesday,“andI’mnot sayingthat’s a badthing, but we have these com-panies here extracting our re-sources, andwe in returnmustmake sure we have the proper

SMOGContinued from Page 3A

 WILKES-BARRE – City Coun-cil will vote tonight to approve acontract with Panzitta Enterpris-es to complete work on Phase IIof the nearly $15 million CoalStreet Park renovation project.

Councilwasto voteonthe mat-ter on Sept. 8, but the meeting   was canceled due to the recentflooding.

In a press conference on theproject on Sept. 6, Mayor TomLeighton said the work to bedoneincludes upgrading thesoft-ball fields, redoing the rear park-

ing and resurfacing of the multi-

purpose field to accommodatefootball, soccer, field hockey andlacrosse.

Panzitta wasthelow bidderforthe remaining work at $238,872.

New lighting and electrical in-frastructure will be installed as well as new fencing and netting encircling the field. The playing surface will be resurfaced andleveled out.

Phase I of the project is nearlycomplete and included new bas-ketball courts,a newplayground,pavilion and a splash pad. Bothphases of the project total nearly

$1 million in recreational im-provementsand werefundedby afederal appropriation.

Councilwill alsovotetoday ona change-order for the splashpad, which was scheduled toopen in the summer but was de-layed and the original sub-con-tractor replaced. The change or-der is for $6,500 and was neededto pay for additional drawing,

said Marie McCormick, city ad-

ministrator.Also, council will vote to ap-prove, on first reading, the 2012Action Plan for the CommunityDevelopment Block Grant Pro-gram budget at nearly $2.2 mil-lion.

McCormick said the city re-ceived about $2 million in 2011and could face losing as much as$157,000 heading into 2012 dueto federal cuts.

 The CDBG money that comestothecityis usedto pavestreets,get ridof blightand forother pub-lic services.

Coal St. Park contract on agendaBy BILLO’BOYLE 

[email protected] City Council meets today at 7 p.m.in council chambers, 4th floor, CityHall. Public comment is welcome.

W H AT ’S N E X T

DALLAS TWP. – Residentsinquired about ongoing worknear the Transco interstatepipeline off Hildebrandt Roadand pipeline right-of-way clear-

ings along SedlarLane at a meeting  Tuesday.

Resident ChuckBorlandwantedtoknow whether thestate Department

of Environmental Protection  was watching the work being completed by Williams FieldServices LLC.

Resident Kim Jacobs asked what permits Williams has re-ceived to do work and what thecompany is allowed to do in thetownship.

  The company is clearing right-of-ways for its 33½-mile

pipeline project, five miles of   which will be located in thetownship. The pipeline will endata site1,800 feet awayfromtheDallas School District campusand will be accessed through anentrance off Lower DemundsRoad.

Solicitor Thomas Brennan

said Williams is performing  work the company is entitled todo, as an agreement betweenthe township and Williams wasapproved by the board in Au-gust.That agreementcontainedstipulations Williams must fol-low for its pipeline project.

  The company also receivedland development approvalfrom the township’s planning 

commission, which requires  Williams to show proof of allfederal, state and local permitsfor the construction.

Supervisor Frank Wagnersaid he saw state DEP trucksdriving through the area, but he  wasn’t sure if they were as-signed to the Williams work.

  The board announced there will be a public hearing on Oct.13and a specialmeetingon Oct.24 at 7:30 p.m. in the municipalbuilding to discuss a proposedamendment to the zoning ordi-nance related to natural gas ac-tivities.

In other news, Brennan an-nounced Pear Tree Lane, whichconnects the Dallas School Dis-

trict campus with New GossManor, will be closed starting on Sept. 26.

 Township officials met withdistrict administrators to ob-serve the traffic pattern of thefour-way intersection near Pear Tree Lane and deemed the areato be dangerous to motorists.

Residents press for info on gas line workDallas Twp. is site of work

near the Transco interstate

natural gas pipeline.

By SARAHHITE 

 [email protected]

The board announced there will be a public hearing on Oct. 13 and

a special meeting on Oct. 24 at 7:30 p.m. in the municipal build-

ing to discuss a proposed amendment to the zoning ordinance

related to natural gas activities.

8/4/2019 Times Leader 09-22-2011

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/times-leader-09-22-2011 8/45

C M Y K

PAGE 8A THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com➛ N E W S

        7        1        2        5        1        7

ONLY OFFERED AT YOUR

locally owned & operated

Mundy StreetWilkes-Barre

823-6674 or 825-4671

“Our family was there for your parents in 1972, and now our family is there for YOU! 

We’ve put together an exclusive set of special offers to help flood victimsrebuild their quality of life.

So take advantage of one of these special offers today, and share the newswith your friends, family and neighbors that help is available at

KAPLAN’S in Wilkes-Barre!

• Storewide discounts up to 30%-70% OFF • Quick FREE delivery on in stock furniture and mattresses • Special arrangements depending on your needs • FREE storage and layaway for one year • Custom orders included 

*with purchase of $999 or more subject to credit approval

$300GIFT CARD + 6 MonthNO INTEREST* 

$250GIFT CARD + 

12 Month

NO INTEREST* 

36Month

NO 

INTEREST* 

EXETER -- Students and staff in the Montgomery Avenue Ele-mentary School are safe and allappropriate precautions are be-ing taken.

  That was the message fromschoolofficials to concerned par-ents at Tuesday’s meeting of the Wyoming Area School Board.

About a dozen parents raisedquestions about the safety of theschool,whichtookon a fewinch-esofwaterinthelowerlevelafterstorm drains backed up into thebuilding during theflooding ear-lier this month. The water de-stroyed the maple gym floor andthecarpeting in lower-level class-rooms.

  The carpeting was removed

but the work on the gym floor isawaiting completion of a bid

process, school officials said. Inthe meantime, the lower level isquarantined from the rest of theschoolwitha negative airsystemsimilar to the one used in activehospitals during mold and asbe-stos abatement, according to ex-perts from Quad 3 and occupa-tional environmental and safetyconsultants from J. Miller andSons Inc.

 Tempers flared and question-ing grew heated at times as par-ents demanded to know how of-ten the school is tested for moldand bacteria, whether it is safefor studentsto use a musicroomthat is in an area between theflooded lower level and the firstfloor, and whether air vented

from the negative air systemcould cause concerns for chil-

dren on the playground.Superintendent Ray BernardiandFacilities Director Dave Am-ico as well as representativesfrom Quad3 andJ. Millerrepeat-edly assured parents that all ap-propriate stepsare beingtakentoensurethe safety of students andstaff. In response to the contin-uedquestioning,boardmemberssuggested that air quality andmold testingbedoneon a weeklybasis.

“It costs $600 or $700 a test,but I’m not concerned about themoney, I’m concerned about thesafety of the students,” saidboard member Frank Casarella.

Amico said he would also takethe additional precaution of clos-

ingthemusicroomuntilair qual-ityand mold testing isdone.The

air vented from the negative airsystem was intentionally direct-ed away from theplayground, hesaid, and posed no risk.

Bernardi repeatedly said theschool is safe and every possibleprecaution is being taken to en-

sure student and staff safety. While it is early in the process,

Bernardi estimated it could costupto $300,000torepairdamage toMontgomery Avenue. He said hehas submitted an estimate toEmergency Management and ex-pectsto receive governmentdisas-ter relief to mitigate the costs.

Wyoming Area officials stand behind school’s safetyBy JANINE UNGVARSKY 

Times Leader Correspondent

YATESVILLE – An oldcon-troversy was the topic onceagain Tuesday night at a Pitt-ston Area School Districtcombined work session/board meeting.

After board member Rob-ert Linskey announced hehad resigned his position asthe board’s representative tothe Luzerne County TaxCommittee because of histime commitment as theboard’s Intermediate Unitrepresentative, board mem-ber Martin Quinn moved toreplaceLinskey as theIU rep-resentative.

SolicitorJoseph Sa-porito said it  was still hisposition thatan appoint-ment as IUrepresenta-tive is for aterm of  

three years,andthat any-one appoint-ed and then

replaced as the appointedrepresentative could chal-lenge the decision to name anew representative.

After Saporito’s explana-tion, the board voted 5-4 toreplace Linskey with boardmember Anthony Guariglia.

 The yes votes were cast byGuariglia, Bruce Knick, Dr.Ross Latona, Martin Quinnand Mark Singer. Opposed  were Richard Gorzkowski,Linskey, Marilyn Starna and  Terrance Best.

Immediately after the  vote, Guariglia resigned asthe board’s representative tothe Wilkes-Barre Area Careerand Technical Center.

He was then replaced byKnick with an 8-1 vote by theboard with Linskey opposed.

In other business, theboard heard a presentationby Environmental ControlSystems to act as the dis-trict’s environmental con-sultant and engineer.

Action on the proposedcontract was tabled subjectto board review.

Also, the AMVETS made apresentation to student Jo-seph Walsh for placing firstin the state in a citizen com-petition and to Catherine

Dietrick as Educator of theYear for the same project.

  The board’s next meeting is Oct. 18.

Pittston Areamoves to

replace IUrepresentativeBoard makes Anthony

Guariglia its new rep for

Intermediate Unit.

ByWILLIAM BELL 

Times Leader Correspondent

Guariglia

resigned as

representa-

tive to the

Wilkes-Barre

Area Career

and Technical

Center.

8/4/2019 Times Leader 09-22-2011

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/times-leader-09-22-2011 9/45

C M Y K

THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 PAGE 9A➛ N E W S

BEL L ES   C O N S T

R UC T

IO N C O .

PA012959

824-7220 

N ATIO N AL   

AW ARD W IN N IN G   

C O M PA N Y

S EL EC TS H IN G L E M A S TER  

ABO VE AL L THEB ES T R O O F!

Your Power Equipment Headquarters 

CubCadet • Stihl •AriensTroybilt • Gravely

Lawntractors • Mowers • Trimmers

Blowers and more

687 Memorial Hwy., Dallas570-675-3003

EQUIPMENT

  WILKES-BARRE – Sinceabout 2006, John Stoneand Cath-erine Tabit dated off and on.

 Their relationship began witha conversation at a local McDo-nald’s restaurant about fishing andshooting BB guns, Stone tes-tified Wednesday at his trial.

 The relation-shipended with Tabit’s death inOctober 2010,allegedly at thehands of Stoneusing a 13-inchhatchet.

Stone testi-fied in his own

defense after prosecutors com-pleted calling witnesses in theircase. Stone’s attorneys, Erik Din-gle and Joseph Albert, will con-tinue calling witnesses thismorning.

Stone said he and Tabit, 37, wereliving together untilAugust2010, when she left him. He saidit was because he would not con-tinue to buy her things.

Stone tried torekindlethe rela-tionship, he said, but those at-tempts were unsuccessful, untilOct. 22, when Tabit agreed tospend the weekend with Stone.

Stone,59, saidhe andTabitgotpizza in Wilkes-Barre and wentshopping, and she stayed thenight.

Stone brought Tabit, 37,to herKingston home the next day and

returned topickher uplater thatnight.

On their way back to Stone’sNorth Canal Street home inShickshinny, Tabit made a phonecall to purchase crack cocaine,Stone testified. They eachsmoked some cocaine, Stonesaid, and he went to watch themovie “The Rock” while Tabitplayed cards on the computer.

A conversation began, Stonesaid, with Tabitasking to borrow$2,000.

“I was shocked. She neverasked for that much before,”Stone said, adding that Tabit

 wanted to use the money for tat-

toos and marijuana.Stone said he ignored Tabit’srequest, and Tabit went to makedinner – shrimp and beans.

Stonesaid hetold Tabitto “askone of her other boyfriends” forthe money, and Tabit answered with a slap to Stone’s face.

“She said, ‘You wanna fight

me?’ ” Stone said. “I remember(her) standing there … and thenshe was down.”

  The details of what occurredafter Tabit slapped him, Stonesaid, are vague and he didn’t re-member exactly what happened,only that he must have hit Tabit.

“Tell me the next thing you re-

member,” Albert asked Stone.“Getting cold from the water,”Stone replied, stating he intend-ed to commit suicide by jumping into the Susquehanna River butthen changed his mind.

Stone said he vaguely remem-bers going to a neighbor’s house

and speaking to a 911 operator,

and that thenext thing he recallsis being at the state police bar-racks in Shickshinny.

“I remember bits and pieces,”he said.

Assistant DistrictAttorneyJar-rett Ferentinosaidwhathe didn’tunderstandis thatStone couldre-

member what movie he was

 watching,whatwasmadefor din-ner and how many puffs of co-caine he took, but that hecouldn’t remember the grisly de-tails to Tabit’s death.

“Youexpectusto believe (allof that) … but nothingafter you gotslapped?” Ferentino said.

Stone testifies in own defense in woman’s slayingBy SHEENADELAZIO

 [email protected]

Stone

8/4/2019 Times Leader 09-22-2011

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/times-leader-09-22-2011 10/45

C M Y K

PAGE 10A THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com

8/4/2019 Times Leader 09-22-2011

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/times-leader-09-22-2011 11/45

“I am committed to removing allof the barriers that would preventAmericans from serving theircountry …”LeonPanetta

The defense secretary commented this week at a Pentagon news

conference after the U.S. military passed a historic milestone with the

repeal of the ban on gays serving openly in uniform.

Replace property tax

with expanded sales levy

Budgeting for education is a recurring nightmare in which school officialsguess at dollar figures in advance of 

real data while also battling homeowners who envision gross increases in propertytaxation that most consider unfair andunconstitutional. The resulting tug-of-war wastes resources. But there is a solution;get rid of the school property tax!

 The Pennsylvania Coalition of TaxpayerAssociations (with 64 member groupsstatewide) has been working for eight years, supporting a plan to fully replace theschool property tax funding of education with an equitable tax – the current 6 per-cent sales tax imposed on an expanded listof goods and services, but not including life necessities.

 The PCTA’s plan calls for fully funding the schools and controlling costs. Thereplacement tax would be phased in over atwo-year period to quickly lessen the bur-den on homeowners and give school direc-tors a clear and definitive picture of theirexpected revenues.

 With a formidable coalition supporting the PCTA plan in the House, this year we

must demand that Harrisburg enact theplan that fully replaces the property taxand is fair to all consumers while provid-ing equal revenue to educate every studentin the state.

Details of the plan are at www.ptcc.us.

Grace GriffinShavertown

Our unsung heroesdeserve our gratitude

Most communities in Luzerne Countyare served by volunteer fire depart-ments. The volunteers do far more

than fight fires and coordinate fundraisersto maintain their departments. This was

evident during the two recent storms.In the Back Mountain alone, countless

homes were saved because of the many volunteers who worked around the clockto pump water from basements. Many of these same volunteers assisted in setting up the evacuation centers for our neigh-bors from the Wyoming Valley and thenassisted in cleanup operations.

 These men and women volunteer theirtime, and they do it with little recognition,no pay and even without reimbursementfor their gas and other expenses. Theycertainly deserve our appreciation.

And to all of the volunteers from theAmerican Red Cross, the Salvation Army,the area churches, to those people cooking meals for the flood victims, lending a handto their neighbors in cleanup and debrisremoval efforts, and simply pitching in andgoing about it because it is the right thing to do, thank you for restoring our faith inhuman nature!

As we read about heroism and offerthanks to some people who were morehighly visible during the two recent nat-ural disasters, let us not forget the realunsung, unrecognized and unpaid heroes who always are there to help – and for allof the right reasons.

Michelle T. BoiceHarveys Lake

MAIL BAG LETTERS FROM READERS

Letters to the editor must include thewriter’s name, address and daytimephone number for verification. Lettersshould be no more than 250 words. Wereserve the right to edit and limit writersto one published letter every 30 days.• E-mail:[email protected]• Fax: 570-829-5537• Mail:Mail Bag,The TimesLeader, 15N. MainSt., Wilkes-Barre, PA18711

SEND US YOUR OPINION

K

THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 PAGE 11A

LIVING THROUGH theAgnes Flood of1972 was andstill is, in a word, humbling.

Just 21years old and witha bright future ahead, I wasliving with my dad in anapartment on West Main

Street, Plymouth, when the SusquehannaRiver entered our home, as it did for an esti-mated 25,000 others.

Still reeling from the death of my mother,Elizabeth Kraszewski O’Boyle, in May 1968,my dad and I decided a couple of years laterto leave our home and all of its memories onReynolds Street – high on a hill the river would never reach – and move into an apart-ment.

It seemed like a good idea at the time.Life was good for a while. And then we

heard the sirens. Men on bullhorns wereimploring everyone to get to high ground. The river was rising. The levees were break-ing. Our lives were changing – forever.

 We went to my Aunt Betty’s house on EastShawnee Avenue. We often visited there, butnow it was home. The river eventually reced-ed, leaving behind mud, stink and devas-tation. Everything we had was lost – includ-ing many sentimental, invaluable items suchas photographs, diplomas, recipes, letters, my1960s record albums and baseball cards fromthe 1950s and ’60s.

It was fun at Aunt Betty’s house, but it wasn’t really home. Home was gone. My dad

spent much of his time with his companion, whose name ironically was Agnes, a lovely woman who cared for my dad for many years.

 We were given use of a mobile home andparked it behind Aunt Betty’s house. I stillremember them hauling it up HendersonStreet and resting it on cinder blocks. It wasquite the pad: a couple of bedrooms, a living room, a kitchen and a bathroom. It was thescene of several parties that we still talk abouttoday.

Here we were, my daddy and me, living ina trailer and faced with the task of putting ouralready broken lives back together. Never did we miss 210 Reynolds St. as much as we didin the aftermath of Hurricane Agnes.

If we had not moved off the hill, I’d stillhave all those pictures of my mom and ourfamily and all of those other things that were washed downstream when the river ragedthrough Wyoming Valley.

Since then, family members have given mesome pictures that I treasure. And as for theother stuff, well, my letterman’s jacket from1966 sure wouldn’t fit me today, anyway.

But what I will never get back is that feel-ing of security, the feeling of safety found in amother’s arms. The feeling that no matter

 what, everything will be okay. That’s what I lost in June 1972. That’s whatmany victims of Agnes lost. That’s what theflooded-out people of 2011 have lost, too.

No matter how high they build the levees,there can be no assurance that it won’t hap-pen again. We are forever at risk of losing ourhomes, our belongings, our keepsakes.

 We can cope with most of those losses. Wecan replace some things. We can remember.

But we, at least I, can’t feel like I did beforeAgnes.

 The experience of being a flood victimencompasses much more than the loss of material and sentimental items. More thanthe tireless effort to clean up, rebuild andremain to wait for the next river watch.

It’s the loss of that feeling – of being able togo to bed without the worry of hearing thosesirens and those men on bullhorns.

 The flood of 1972 humbled me, humbled usall. It stripped away the carefree attitude.

I’m older now. There are many more wor-ries in my life and the lives of all flood vic-tims.

But the summer of1972 took away all of my naïveté. The brown, muddy, smelly river water clearly showed me the reality of loss.

And it left an ever-present dread every timethat damn river rises.

BillO’Boyle is a reporter for The Times Leader. He

can be reached via email, at boboyle@timeslead-

er.com, or by calling 970-7218.

Memories remain, but security was washed awayBILL O’BOYLEC O M M E N T A R Y

PRESIDENT BARACKObama’s plan to use$1.5 trillion in new tax-es to help eliminate

$3.2 trillion in debt over thenext decade makes a lot of sense.

 The Republican response –

largely a pledge to block it inCongress– could make thepro-posal dead on arrival. This lat-est example of party-based gri-dlock also increases theheatonthe congressional super-com-mittee on debt to producesomething useful.

 The Republican idea that ba-lancing the budget and reduc-ingthe debtmust comeentirelyfromcuts– andnotalsofrom in-creasing revenue, closing taxloopholes and raising taxes ontherich– isirresponsible. Itcanbe based only on the fact thattheRepublicans’campaigncon-tributors are the rich, whomthey have pledged to protectfrom taxes. This approach plac-es the debt-cutting burden

squarely on the middle classand the poor.

 ThetrendsincePresidentGe-orge W. Bush’s tax cuts for therich and two unfunded wars inIraq and Afghanistan has beenformoreof America’s wealth tobe concentrated near the top 1percent of the populationwhilemore Americans are forced to

live below the poverty line.It is inconsistent with Amer-ican ideals of fairness and jus-tice that a Wall Street hedge-fund manager pay 15 percenttaxonwhatheextractsfromthesystem because his income iscapital gains, while other work-ingAmericans aretaxeda muchhigher percentage of their wag-es and salaries.

 The bipartisancommittee onreducingthe debtshould ignorethe partisan rhetoric and beopen to Obama’s proposals. If Republicans on or off thesuper-committeeare notwillingto beevenhanded in attackingthe na-tion’s red ink, voters will strikeback hardat the polls next year– as they should.

Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

OTHER OPINION: DEBT REDUCTION

Obama’s plan:Share the pain

FORMER Pennsylva-nia Speaker of theHouse John Perzelcould lose his

$85,000-a-year state pensionfor overseeing a scheme to di- vert tax money to computersdesigned to help Republicans win elections.

Disgraced former state po-lice trooper Douglas Sversko,of Lewisburg, mightkeep his $34,000-a-  year pension evenafter pleading guiltyMonday to chargesthat he exposedhimself on a web-cam to an undercov-er agent he thought was a 13-year-old girl. What’sthe difference?

Pennsylvania’s rules onstate pension forfeiture drawa distinction between thosepeople who misuse their pub-lic offices to commit crimesand those who happen to bepublic employees who com-mit crimes.

Sversko was suspended without pay the day of his ar-

rest on Feb. 16. Then, at theageof 43,Sversko wasallowedto retire from his state police job after his arrest.

Employed by the state po-lice for 18 years, Sversko wasapproved to receive a $2,901monthly pension.

  Those who forfeit theirrights to a pension still re-ceive the amount they con-tributed into the system. Those, like Sversko, who getto keep their entire pension,  will receive taxpayer-subsi-dized retirement payments.

Convicted criminals shouldnot be eligible for publiclysupported pensions. It makes

no sense that aperson convictedof a sex offense,particularly oneinvolving the po-tential exploita-tion of children, would be reward-ed with publicly

enhanced retirementbenefits.Sversko is the first state

trooper to be arrested by theAttorney General’s OfficeChild Predator Unit since it was created in 2005. We hopethis case spurs lawmakers toreform the employee pensionforfeiture rules in Pennsylva-nia.

 The pension system shouldgive Sversko the money he

paid into the fund. But undertheseobviously inappropriatecircumstances, taxpayersshould not have to subsidizehis early retirement.

TheDaily Item

Sunbury

OTHER OPINION: STATE PENSIONS

Equity lacking in forfeiture rules

Convictedcriminals should

not be eligible for

publicly supported

pensions.

QUOTE OF THE DAY

RICHARDL. CONNOREditor and PublisherJOSEPHBUTKIEWICZVicePresident/Executive Editor

MARK E. JONESEditorial Page EditorPRASHANT SHITUTPresident/Impressions Media

EDITORIAL BOARD

MALLARD FILLMORE DOONESBURY

➛ S E R V I N G T H E P U B L I C T R U S T S I N C E 1 8 8 1

Editorial

8/4/2019 Times Leader 09-22-2011

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/times-leader-09-22-2011 12/45

C M Y K

PAGE 12A THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com➛ N E W S

 Bu yingG oldJew elry

 D ia m onds,Pla tinu m , Pu re S ilver,S terling, Indu stria l & Coin S ilver

 A ntiqu e Jewelry (Brok en OK )Dental Gold,Gold Filled

Eyeglasses,Etc.

 K IN G T U T ’S G O L D R E P A IR H U T      

824-4150 322N . PENN A VE.W -B 

$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$

$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$

  $      $      $    

  $      $      $      $      $      $      $      $      $      $      $      $      $      $      $      $      $      $      $      $      $    

       7       0       5       4       1       4

Are you tired of the stock market roller coaster?Are you looking for a more secure retirement?

Baltimore Life’s Single Premium Immediate Annuity providesguaranteed income and competitive rates.

Call Agent Randy Rodkey today!570-431-6151 or 570-690-4999

for a no-obligation quote.

Form ad8412-0811

BILL H UES S ER 

GENERA LCO NTRA CTOR 

 A LL REM O DELING Q u a lity Is A fford a ble!35 Yea rs Exp erien ce.

Kitchen s • Ba throom s    A d d ition s •W in d ows   

Doors • Drywa ll • Porches  Deck s •S id in g •& Roofin g   

FR EE ESTIM A TES - INSU R ED C all403.5175 or 823.5524

MATTRESS GUYGateway Shopping Center • Edwardsville 570-288-1898

MATTRESS SALE

BEST SERTA PRICESBEST SERTA PRICES FREEFREEFINANCING!FINANCING!

Twin Sets......................99.00 Ea.Pc.

Full Sets......................139.00 Ea.Pc.

Queen Sets....................399.00 Set

AFFORDABLE MATTRESS SALETwin Sets........... .......................................... 159.00

Full Sets....................................................... 179.00

Queen Sets ..................................................199.00

ALL NEWALL NEWAMERICAN MADEAMERICAN MADE

www.mattressguydeals.com

EqualOpportunity

LENDER

M a in Office101 Ha zle S t.W ilke s -Ba rre

Pla in s Off iceW a te rfro n t C o m ple x672 N. Rive rS t., Pla in s

Ha zleto n Off ice983 N. S he rm a n C t.Ha zle to n

If yo u ha ve a n a u to lo a n s o m e whe re e ls e , yo u m a yb e e ligib le fo ra 1%       ra te re d u c tio n w ith C ho ic e On e , plu s yo u ’ll re c e ive a n a d d itio n a l .75% o ff yo u rra te fo r ta kin g a d va n ta ge o f the s e le c ts e rvic e s .

Con ta c tThe L oa n Cen ter

F orM ore In form a tion       

OPEN A N EW FREECHECK IN G A CCOUN T

W ITH A DEBIT CAR D AN D S ET UP DIRECT D EPOS ITAN D W E’L L DEPOS IT $25 IN YOUR ACCOUN T!

Get The Buying Power of aChoice One Visa Card Today…

TransferA Balance From AnotherFinancial Institution And Save Instantly!

No Balance Transfer Fees & Rate Is Until Paid Off

  Ra tes As Low As   

6 .99%   APR*

Ca rLoa n S p e c ia ls    Re d u c e You r Ca rLoa n Ra te   

Up To

1.75%   

Hom e Eq u ityLin e ofCre d itBo rro w u p to $75,000 w ith a  

repa ym en t term o f u p to 20 yea rs   Ad justa b le Ra te.Full Ap p ra isa l Req uired   

Fixe d Ra te Ho m e Eq uity Lo a n s 

Ra te As L o w As  2.9 9 %    APR**

58-month term

Choice One will also pay yourAppraisal Fee – a $200 value!

Pe rs o n a l Lo a n s   

A s L o w A s    2.74%   APR**

18-M onth Term M a xim um Loa n Am ount$3,500 

Apply a tw w w .cho iceo n e.o rg

Now You Can’t

See Any Reason

Not To Wear A

Hearing

Instrument!

LOWEST PRICES/FREE 30 DAY TRIALCall today for your FREE hearing test in YOUR HOME or OUR OFFICE

Most insurances accepted including Freedom Blue, Geisinger Gold, Federal Employee Program& PEBTF (PA Employees)

Open Fit offers these benefits:• Comfortable fit • One stop fitting and satisfaction • Reduced background noise • Enhanced speech understanding

• Improved natural sound clarity • Discrete cosmetic appeal and virtually invisible

Wearing a hearing aid has never been easier! This incredible hearinginstrument is so comfortable, inconspicuous and hassle free that youmay forget you’re wearing it! (completely in the canal).

• Virtually Unnoticeable!• Easy to insert and remove• Top-quality Sound Circuitry!• Use the Phone Comfortably

and Without Feedback!• Great for First-Time Users!

Experience the comfort and enhanced performance of

Open Fit Hearing instruments.

Open Fit hearing instruments aredesigned with miniature size components

and high precision tubing to deliver improvednatural sound clarity for those individuals withhigh-frequency or high-pitched hearing losses.

Open Fit instruments are extremely comfortable and barely visible.

meanwhile, there’s something called a “ticker,” a live feed of allthe ongoing activity that also ap-pears in users’ news feeds. It’s akind of Facebook inside Face-book,if youwill.

By mid-morning, the words“new Facebook” quickly becameone of the most discussed topicsonTwitter.Manycommentswere

negative, though some pointedout that Facebook makes manychanges to its site and peopleeventuallygetusedto it.

 Thentherewerethejokes.JohnKovalic from Madison, Wis.,poked funat Netflix’srecent pub-lic relations fiasco,tweeting: “Onthe plus side, at least the newFacebook isn’t calling itself ‘Qwikface.’ ” (Netflix, for those whomissedit,isfacingabigback-lashfrom itssubscribers becauseit raised prices and renamed itspopular DVD-by-mail service

“Qwikster.”) Another online crit-ic likened Facebook to a pop star who’s addicted to cosmetic sur-gery.

For itspart, Facebookhas long asserted thatit makeschanges tokeep users engaged, and thatthose alterations are often basedon user requests. Other tweaksderive from the company’s studyof activityon Facebookand whatit thinks people will enjoy using.Privacy advocates, meanwhile,have contended that Facebookchangesitssiteinordertogetpeo-

ple to share as much as possibleabout their habits, hobbies andlikes —all to give advertisers abetterpicture ofwho totarget.

Inreality,it’salittleofboth.The way Facebook sees it, the morepeople enjoy using the site, themoretime they’llspend there.

 Thelatestchangesare“tailoredat making sure this news feed is what youwant to see,” saidMikeSchroepfer,vicepresidentofengi-neering at Facebook.

And, sofar,that’s been good forbusiness —despite the grum-

blingsof a vocal minorityof Face-book users. The company is ex-pected to bring in $3.8 billion in worldwide advertising this yearand $5.8 million in 2012, accord-ing to researchfirm eMarketer.

Facebook is well-aware of per-haps the biggest downside of be-ing the world’s largest social net- work: With so many users, pleas-ing all of them is difficult.Schroepfer saidthetweaks tothenewsfeedaremeanttoappealtoabroad range of people, whetherthey have 15 friends and log in

onceaweekor800andspendfourhoursa dayon thesite.

“We want to make sure wepro- vide the right kind of basics tomake sure that the core of Face-book is sharing and (seeing) theright kind ofthings,”he said.

Facebook, though clearly king ofsocial networks,isalso compet-ingwithTwitterand GooglePlusforattention.As such, therace toaddnewfeatureshasthepotentialto confuse users, said Debra Aho Williamson, principal analyst ateMarketer.

FACEBOOKContinued from Page 1A

ment on Wednesday.But at least two Luzerne County offi-

cials don’t believe federal funds shouldbe used for the demolition.

“Because thebuildingwas reported asbeing in danger of collapse before theflood, it was a pre-existing condition,”said Commissioner Steve Urban.

Urban said the commissioners wouldbewilling tocontribute to thecostof thedemolition butwouldnot foot theentire

bill because the county is cash-strapped

and, ultimately, it’s the city’s responsib-ility.

“We hada meeting with Mayor (Tom)Leightonat theend of June to relate thatinformation to him and there’s been noresponse from him to the board of com-missioners,” Urban said.

“Heshouldhave lookedat thebuilding in April. … Leighton’s been dragging hisfeet in doing his job,” Urban said.

Andy Reilly,directorof thecountyOf-fice of Community Development, saidthe county has about $11 million in therevolving loan fund, anda portionof thatcould be used for demolition.

But county Controller Walter Griffith

doesn’t think federal disaster funds or

county money should be used to demol-ish a building that should have beenrazedmonths ago. Andhewrotetofeder-al officials to drive home his concerns.

Griffith wrote that many people areconcernedthat thereason for“the decla-ration of danger of the Hotel Sterling” isthat thebuildingis in a disaster area andthat funding would be made available toCityVest to allow for the demolition “attaxpayers’ expense.”

“The CityVestreport thatwas recentlycompleted and funded by the taxpayersclearly stated the building was unsafeand in need of demolition (and a) deter-mination by the insurance underwriters

 just as recent as a month ago has stated

the building should be demolished,”Griffith said.

Griffith said the city should have de-molished the building and filed a lienagainst CityVest. He said the county al-ready supplied CityVest with $6 millionto preserve and market the building.

State Rep. Eddie Day Pashinski, D- Wilkes-Barre, disagrees on federal fund-ing.

“We hada flood,and whether that con-tributed to moving more quickly on thesolution to that building or not, we stillhave to pursue some kind of a safe solu-tion to that structure. There’s time to goafter theownerslegallyif they can’tcom-

plywith what needs to bedone,” Pashin-

ski said.Hesaidhe participatedin a conference

callonMonday with Lt.Gov. JimCawleyand other officials to discuss local flood-related issues and the HotelSterling wasamong the issues he raised.

“Ithinkif wecan get anystateorfeder-al dollars to assist, it’s worthwhileto pur-sue,” he said.

City spokesman Drew McLaughlinsaid an Aug. 16 engineer’s report recom-mended that thebuilding be demolishedor rehabilitated “within a certain time-frame” and, since then, Leighton hasbeenworking withCityVest and commu-nicating with the Governor’s Office on

possible options.

STERLINGContinued from Page 1A

$134.5millionin spendingrequestsfor 2012 but only $110.9 million inexpected revenue.

An updated dollar estimate onthe budget gap will be availablenext week after managers entertheirrevised budget requestsin thecounty’s computerized financial

program, said county Budget/Fi-nance ChiefJoan Pusateri.

County Assessment DirectorTo-

ny Alu warned commissioners Wednesday that he will need morecertifiedevaluatorsto stayon topof new construction and property ad-ditions, particularly if the real es-tate market picks up.

Assessment standards recom-mendone certifiedevaluator forev-ery 10,000 properties.

Alusaidhe shouldhaveabout16evaluators to monitor the county’s168,000 properties, but he haseight. Commissioners said they

can’t provide any additional staff and lowered his spending requestsin several areas.

“I plan on reaching what you’resetting. I’m just saying, sooner orlater …,”Alu said.

“Thanks. Get us through thiscri-sis and we’ll be good,” said Com-missioner Chairwoman MaryannePetrilla.

Sheriff John Gilligan’s requestsfor more funding for overtime andpart-timedeputies were shotdown.

“You can’t have that,” Petrillasaid.

Sheriff workerJohn Chesko said

thedepartment needs a “littlecush-ion” incasethepriceof fuel increas-es next year.

“No cushion!” the commission-ers said in unison.

Commissioners Petrilla and Ste-phen A. Urban said they will comeup with a balanced budget thatdoesn’t increase taxes. Commis-sionerThomas Cooney saidit’spre-mature to say whether he wouldsupport a taxincrease ifhe thoughtit wasthe only option.

“It was a tough day for the de-partments. We cut bare bones,and we’ve still got more cuts to make.

It’s certainly not over,” Petrilla saidat the conclusion of the hearingsaround 4 p.m.

“We’re notgoingto raise taxes,sogovernment’s going to have to besmaller. That’s thebottomline,”Pe-trilla said, noting she won’t leavethe new home rule government with a budget that contains pad-ding.

Urban,a candidatefor thecountycouncil that will oversee the newhome rule government, com-plained the outgoing board musttry tofigureouthowto funda newgovernment structure that elimi-

nates many row officers but addssome new positions.

“We’re stuck with doing the

  work, and we’re going to do the work,” Urban said.

 Three other county council can-didates -- Rick Morelli, Sal Licataand James Bobeck -- attended por-tions of Wednesday’s budget hear-ings.

Commissioners may also meetagainwithdepartmentsthat stillre-quire significant budget revisions. Theproposedbudget willbe adopt-edinNovemberandfinalizedinDe-cember. The new county council

members will have the option toamend the budget after they takeoffice in January.

BUDGETContinued from Page 1A

spending bills.Many Democrats were upset because

the legislation offsets some of the addi-tional emergency funding for communi-ties in Northeast Pennsylvania and else-

 wherestruck byrecent stormsandflood-ingwithspendingcutsof $1.5billion toafederal loan program that aids car com-panies makingfuel-efficient vehicles.

A numberof conservativeRepublicansthought the legislation still was overly

costly.Barletta said in a statement Wednes-

day after the vote that he had joined 76Democrats who sent a letter to Houseleadership “saying that we support theSenate version of the bill because it in-cludes more fundingfor disaster relief.”

Barletta noted Democratic Sen. BobCaseyofScrantonandGOPSen.PatToo-meyof Zionsvillesupportthe Senatever-

sion, which garnered enough supportfrom Republican senators to pass a 60- vote procedural hurdle.

 TheHousebill,“doesnotdoenoughtorebuildthe livesof peoplewho lostevery-thingthey own,”Barletta said.“It doesn’t

do enough to fund mitigation efforts sothis type of flooding doesn’t happenagain. It doesn’t do enough to help localbusinessesreopenand protectAmerican jobs.”

Barletta wasone of 48 House Republi-cans who voted against the bill. Just sixHouse Democrats voted in favor.

But Marino said in a statement afterthe vote that he was “embarrassed that

the House chose form over substanceand let politics get in the way of helping the victims of these terrible disasters.Passage of this measure would havemeantimmediaterelieffor floodvictims. That help would have come as early as

theend of next week,” Marino said.He said the House bill provided $774

million by Sept. 30 to the Federal Emer-gency Management Agency and $226millionto theArmy Corps of Engineers.

“This measure would have providedtimelyhelp,andthatis whatis importantto me,getting resourcesto affectedfam-ilies, businesses and local governmentsimmediately,” Marino said. “This was a

good start.” The Senate disaster relief bill is $6.9

billion, including $804 million that  would go out before the end of themonth.

SenateMajorityLeader HarryReid, D-

Nev., has said he plans to wait for theHouse to pass its disaster relief bill, andthen tryto approvetheSenateversioninplace of the House-passed bill and sendthat backto theHouse.

 Thelossin theHouse ofthe GOPlead-ership-backed measure puts House Re-publicans in a more difficult negotiating position as the end of the fiscal year ap-proaches and congressional leaders try

topass botha disaster relief packageandavert a potential government shutdownthat looms if the overarching temporaryspending legislation is not approved.

 Informationfrom theAssociatedPress wasused in thisstory.

BILLContinued from Page 1A

HAZLETON -- Mayor JosephYannuzzi requested that CityCouncil allow proposed rentalordinance 2011-13 to fail in orderto provide opportunity for theHazleton Area Landlords Asso-ciation (HALO) and City Coun-cil to amend the original ordi-nance.

  The proposed ordinance haddirected that landlords pay a

registration fee of $100 for amultifamily dwelling and a $50fee for a one- or two-familydwelling. An annual occupancylicensing fee of $25 would alsobe levied on each owner after aninspection of each unit.

Yannuzzi said he had recentlymet with association officers

Justine Crego and Michael Gre-co in response to recently voiced

concerns of the organization.“Although we went throughthe document line by line,” Yan-nuzzi said, “we weren’t able tocomplete changes to the originalordinance in time for tonight’smeeting.”

He said an amended propertyrental ordinance would be pre-

sented to council at nextmonth’s meeting, after furtherdiscussion between associationand city officials.

Resident Sylvia Thomas asked

that City Administrator MaryEllen Lieb provide specific finan-

cial information about revenuethat would be raised by the pro-posed rental ordinance.

“We working on those num-bers,” said Lieb.

In another matter, resident  Thomas commended policechief Robert Ferdinand on an in-creased police presence on Alter

Street.Also, Yannuzzi said Hazleton

 was assisting residents of Shick-shinny by sponsoring a clothing collection to be delivered toflood victims from that area.

Yannuzzi said that he believedthat Hazleton would move for-  ward by retaining a spirit of cooperation and willingness tohelp others.

Hazleton mayor asks for time to amend proposed rental property regsByGERI GIBBONS 

Times Leader CorrespondentThe next meeting of City Councilwill be Oct. 19 at 5:30 pm.

W H A T ’ S N E X T

8/4/2019 Times Leader 09-22-2011

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/times-leader-09-22-2011 13/45

C M Y K

SPORTS S E C T I O N B

THE TIMES LEADER THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011timesleader.com

He could feel his self-certaintybuckle while his knees began toquiver, as if someone took that

baseball bat he was holding and used itto belt him in back of the legs.

He wondered why this strange feel-ing of anxiety started to overtake himlike a tidal wave, just as Russ Canzler was about to step into a big-leaguebatters box for the first time.

 Wasn’t this the moment he’d beenfantasizing about since he was a boy? The completion of the quest he beganas a baseball star for Hazleton AreaHigh School? The destination Canzleralways believed he would reach, even when his old organization kept telling him he was only halfway there?

Yet, when he entered a game for the

 Tampa Bay Rays as a pinch hitter inBoston last week, Canzler couldn’t helpfeeling frantic.

“My heart was racing,” Canzler said.He knew he had nothing to fear. The Tampa Bay organization gave

him the chance the Chicago Cubs wouldn’t, promoting Canzler to the Triple-A level, and he ran with it.

“My first year in Triple-A,” Canzlersaid, “I kind of set my sights on prov-ing I was worthy of all the at-bats they were giving me.”

He has nothing more to prove.Not after hitting .314, hammering 18

homers, leading the InternationalLeague with 40 doubles and driving in83 runs during his debut Triple-A sea-son. Not after a year that’s alreadyexceeded his wildest expectations, where Canzler left behind his Double-Adays with the Cubs and was selected

most valuable player of both the Tri-ple-A All-Star Game and the wholeInternational League while leading theDurham Bulls to the IL playoffs.

Now he has joined a Rays team fight-ing to make the American Leagueplayoffs.

“I would be lying to you to say I wasexpecting that,” Canzler, 25, said.

 Tampa Bay isn’t expecting muchfrom him right now.

His all-star game home run? Thatgrand slam he hit down in LehighValley with his first swing upon return-ing to Pennsylvania as a professionalplayer? They don’t mean much to ateam depending on veterans to reachthe major league postseason.

Canzler was a September call-up to ared-hot Rays team ready to make aplayoff push, after whittling a 10-gamedeficit to just two in the wildcard

standings during the past three weeks.So Canzler didn’t get on the field for Tuesday’s loss at Yankee Stadium, andspends most of his time talking to Rays veteran outfielder Johnny Damon and watching from the bench as Tampa Baystars Evan Longoria and B.J. Upton trycarry the team’s postseason hopes.

“It’s definitely tough,” Canzler said.“There’s that competitor within youthat wants to be out on the field. At thesame time, I understand what my roleis here. I’m extremely fortunate andblessed to be in this position right now.

“I’m just grateful for the opportuni-ty.”

His chance to bat came in FenwayPark, where Canzler overcame hissudden case of the jitters when hecame back from a two-strike count to work a walk.

“It was awesome,” Canzler said. “To

do it in a historic ballpark like Fenway,that was something I’ll remember forthe rest of my life.”

He’ll remember how the magic of themoment made his faith start to shake.And Russ Canzler will know how muchgetting through it made him feel likehe belongs.

PAUL SOKOLOSKIO P I N I O N

Major Leaguenerves even

strike MVPs

Paul Sokoloski is a Times Leader sports

columnist.

any of those things. From there, wehave to get back to what we do posi-tive.”

Berwick has been fairly successfulrunning the ball except for the Dallasgame.

But in the two games I’ve seen –against Crestwood and Dallas – there

 were two glaring weaknesses.First, the passing game is out of 

sync, as the quarterback and receiversdon’t seem to be on the same page allthe time. Plus, there are too manydropped passes to make it successfulon a consistent basis.

 Then there is Berwick’s overall

 There have been worse days in Ber- wick football history.

Not many, butthere have beentimes worse thanSaturday’s 53-30 lossat Dallas.

Heck, there’s a possibility one cancome this Friday night as Wyoming Valley West pays a visit to CrispinField. The Spartans are rolling andthe Dawgs have been reeling.

“The next two weeks are huge,”Berwick coach Gary Campbell said.“We have Valley West, our rival, com-ing into town and they’re riding high,3-0. They have arguably one of the

best players in eastern Pennsylvania(Eugene Lewis).

“We’ll regroup. I’m positive with

that. That’s something we’ve alwaysdone.”

 The recovery needs to be hastened.Valley West brings just as many weap-ons, just as strong of a line and evenmore overall speed than Dallas.

“Number one, you have to identifythe problem … whether it’s personnel, whether it’s schematic,” said Camp-bell, whose team is 1-2. “Whether it’s

Dawgs dealing with a tough road to recoveryJOHN ERZARH . S . F O O T B A L L N O T E S

SeeERZAR, Page 3B

ATLANTA — Just being among the 30 players at the Tour Cham-pionshipshouldbeenoughforGeoff Ogilvy.

Only 16 days ago, Ogilvy was onthe verge of being eliminated fromthe FedEx Cup playoffs. Needing apar-birdiefinish at theTPC Boston,histeeshotonthe17thholefinishedinacrevicebehindarockandhehad

totakea penalty drop. Whatfollowedis still hardto fath-

om.Ogilvyrolledina20-footerforpar,

thenholeda 6-footbirdieputttonar-rowly advance to the next playoff eventoutsideChicago.Then,he fin-ishedalonein thirdat CogHill— atwo-waytiefor third wouldnot havebeen enough — to book a trip toEastLake.

“Idefinitelywasn’tthinkingof be-

ing here when I was in that hole,”Ogilvy saidWednesday. “Sothe factthat I amis pretty nice.”

Heis No.24 amongthe30 players who reached the Tour Champion-ship,andwhilemathematicallytheyallhavea shotat the$10 million bo-nusfor winningthe FedEx Cup,thehigher seeds havethe greaterodds.

 WebbSimpsonisthetopseed,fol-lowed by Dustin Johnson, JustinRose, Luke Donald and Matt Ku-

char. Ifany ofthemwin,they areas-sured golf’srichestprize.

Ogilvy’s hopes require a littlemore math. It starts with him win-ning, and the odds got even longerthemorehestudiedtheotherscena-riosthat mustunfold.

“Webb Simpson must finish 17thor worse, which is probably not go-ing to happen, youwouldn’t think,”

Today1 p.m. to 6 p.m.

Golf ChannelFriday

1 p.m. to 6 p.m.Golf ChannelSaturday

1 p.m. to 2 p.m.Golf Channel

2 p.m. to 6 p.m.NBC

SundayNoon to 1:30 p.m.

Golf Channel1:30 p.m. to 6 p.m.

T VCO V E R AG E

G O L F

Underdog Ogilvy still in contentionByDOUGFERGUSON

 AP Golf Writer 

See OGILVY, Page3B

For thefirsttimeall season,JoePaterno walked into his weekly press conference withouta cane.

Anotheroption on fieldgoals, perhaps?Paterno’s kickingdaysendedin 2008af-

ter an onside kickdemonstration led tothe Penn State coachneeding hip replace-ment surgery. Soscratchthatoutas anoption to rescue theNittanyLions’ woefulspecialteams.

Despitereturningthe openingkickoffof 

theseasonforatouchdown,theLionshavehad a terrible showing on special teams,highlightedbyanunsightly1-for-6markonfieldgoals.

  That nearly cost Penn State this past week against Temple, as theLionsmissedallthreefieldgoalsattemptsinthegameasEvanLewissenta45-yarderwideandham-mereda36-yarderviolentlyofftherightup-

P E N N S TA T E F O OT BA L L

Lions dealingwith seriousspecial teamswoes in 2011Penn State has made just one field

goal so far this season and against

Temple had two kicks blocked.

ByDEREKLEVARSE 

[email protected]

SeePSU, Page 3B

UP NEXTEasternMichigan atPenn StateNoon, SaturdayTV: ESPN2

 WILKES-BARRE — It’s not necessar-ily good to have a champion on theropes. That’s a lesson that the DelawareValley girls volleyball team learned Wednesday against powerful Holy Re-

deemer. The Warriorscruised

past theRoyals in gametwo,and sprinted outtoa7-0 leadingamethree.At that point, Holy Re-deemer’s80-match win-ning streak against

  Wyoming Valley Con-ferenceopponentsappearedin jeopardy.

But as it turned out, it only served toinspire the four-time defending District2 Class 2A champions.

 With senior middle hitter Allie Gris- wold leading the way, Holy Redeemer(6-0) ralliedto post a hard-fought 3-1vic-

H . S . G I R L S VO L L E Y BA L L

Royals respond

to challengefrom Warriors

See VOLLEYBALL, Page6B

3REDEEMER

 1DELAWARE

VALLEY

ByVANROSE 

 For The Times Leader 

Lining up a putt and a victory 

AIMEE DILGER/THE TIMES LEADER

Holy Redeemer golfers Mariano Medico and Chase Makowski line up their putts during a match againstPittston Area Wednesday afternoon at Fox Hill Country Club. Redeemer defeated Pittston Area 190-191ina match that went down to the fifth golfer. Roundup, Page 6B.

8/4/2019 Times Leader 09-22-2011

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/times-leader-09-22-2011 14/45

K

PAGE 2B THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com➛ S P O R T S

Butler Drive. Players who areinterested in playing 12U travel ballbut are unable to attend the tryoutshould call coach Tony Zancofskyat 570-668-2299.

Wyoming Valley West Lady Spar-tans Jr. Basketball League will beholding registrations for girlsgrades 3-6 that reside in the WVW

School District on: Monday, Sep-tember 26 from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m.,Wednesday, September 28 from 6p.m. to 8 p.m., and Saturday,October1 from12 p.m. to 2 p.m. athe Wyoming Valley West MiddleSchool Gym on Chester Street inKingston. The cost is $45 plus afundraiser. Applications for coach-ing and team sponsors will beaccepted at these times. Pleasecontact Chris at 570-406-3181 orMike at 570-762-8038 for addition-al information.

UPCOMING EVENTS

GARSoccer Booster Club will behosting a Celebrity BartenderNight at McCarthy’s Tavern onNorthampton Street in the HeightsWB from 7 p.m. to11 p.m. on Sat-urday, September 24. Please comeout and support GAR Soccer. Wehave gift baskets 50/50, and many

other prizes to be given away.Come out and have some fun whilesupporting our soccer kids. If thereare any questions or concern,please contact Maggie Height at570-574-1329.

Northwest BoysBasketball14thAnnualGolf Tournament will beheld at Mill Race Golf Course inBenton Pa. on Saturday, Septem-ber 24. Registration begins at 7:30a.m. with tee of at 8:30 a.m. This isan 18 hole event, even though thecourse suffered damage due toflooding. Four man scramble, $75per golfer. Any questions pleasecall Lisa Mazonkey at 570-256-3414.

TheWyomingValley West GirlsfieldHockey Team will be “Playing forthe Cure” on October 17 at theWyoming Valley West stadium inKingston. The game will begin at4:15 against Lackawanna Trail. Thegirls will be sporting their pink in

support of breast cancer. Donationfrom basket raffles, 50-50 draw-ing, collections at the gate andproceeds from our concessionstand will all go to support thecause. Administration will partici-pate in a shout-out dressed ingoalie gear. Students, parents andplayers will pay $1 to take a shot attheir “favorite administrator”

MEETINGS

Wyoming Valley Chapters of ASAUmpires will hold their dinnerbanquet Monday, September 26 at6 p.m. at Konesfal’s Restaurant in

Edwardsville. Cost of this yearsbanquet is $10. Call Len Brussockat 570-817-4503 or Dave Miller at332-9105 if you plan to attend.

Wyoming Valley West High SchoolSoccer Booster Club will meet onTODAY, September 20, at 7 p.m. atHappy’s Pizza on Main Street inPlymouth. Parents of all junior andsenior high soccer players arewelcome and encouraged to at-tend.

REGISTRATIONS/TRYOUTS

18UCollege Showcase Team isseeking players for 2012 summerevents. We participate in highexposure events. Athletes seriousabout getting to the next level call570-235-4685.

DallasYouth Basketball Regis-tration for our winter basketballleagues will be held Friday Septem-ber 23 at Wycallis Elementary

Cafeteria from 6 p.m to 9 p.m. Allgirls and boys in grades 3rdthrough 8th that reside in theDallas School District are welcome.Any questions please call Scott at570-675-1324.

KrunchGold FastpitchSoftball isseeking a left handed slap hitterwith great speed for fall 2011 andsummer 2012. Prospective playershould be a 2012 or later highschool graduate with good aca-demic standings and strong out-field skills. If you are looking forcollege exposure, we are the teamto play for in Central, Pa. Very littlelocal play. Team travels to highlyattended events in Colorado,Florida, New Jersey, North Car-olina, and Philadelphia region. Weare also building a guest player listfor 2011-2012. If you would like toshowcase your skills to collegecoaches as a Krunch guest playerplease contact us. Our staff is

available for private tryouts byappointment. All inquires will bekept confidential. Contact coachSteve Mumma at [email protected] or call 717-542-6578.

PAfusion Girls Travel Softball Teamwill be holding tryouts for the 2012season this Sunday, September 25at 12 p.m. for12U, 14U, and 16U. Agegroups tryouts will be held at theNanticoke Little League field. Weoffer indoor winter training fromNovember to March included inteam registration. If you can’tmake this date or have any ques-tions call Mark at 570-902-5198.

The Valley Regional Warriors 12UTravel Team will hold a tryout thisSaturday at 3 p.m. at the FreedomPark softball complex in Drums.The tryout will be held on Field 3of the complex located at 413 W.

BulletinBoard items will not beaccepted over the telephone. Itemsmay be faxed to 831-7319, emailed [email protected] or droppedoff at the Times Leader or mailed toTimes Leader, c/o Sports, 15 N, MainSt., Wilkes-Barre, PA 18711-0250.

B U L L E T I N B O A R D

$2495includes green fees & cart 

Sat-Sun &

Holidays

Monday-Friday

Golf 18Holes

Golf 18Holes$3495

includes green fees & cart 

 Rated by Golf Digest 

18 Golf Course Road Sugarloaf PA

R & S BUILDERS

FromTop To Bottom…WE DO IT ALL

• Remodeling • Additions • Kitchens

• Plumbing, Electrical, MasonryEstablished 1978General Contractor

BASEBALL

Favorite Odds Underdog

American League

TWINS 8.5 Mariners

Rangers 8.5 A’S

Angels 8.5 BLUE JAYS

INDIANS 9.0 White Sox

TIGERS 9.0 Orioles

YANKEES 9.0 Rays

National League

CARDS 9.0 Mets

PHILLIES 8.0 Nationals

ASTROS 9.0 Rockies

DODGERS 6.5 Giants

NFL

Favorite Points Underdog

Sunday

BENGALS 1.5 49ers

Patriots 9 BILLS

SAINTS [4] Texans

EAGLES NL Giants

BROWNS 3 Dolphins

TITANS 7 Broncos

Lions 3.5 VIKINGS

PANTHERS 3 Jaguars

CHARGERS 14.5 Chiefs

Jets 3.5 RAIDERS

Ravens 3.5 RAMS

BUCS 1 Falcons

Cards 3 SEAHAWKS

Packers 3.5 BEARS

Steelers 10.5 COLTS

Monday

COWBOYS NL Redskins

College Football

Favorite Points Underdog

CINCINNATI 7 NC State

Friday

BYU 3 C Florida

Saturday

OHIO ST 15 Colorado

DUKE 10 Tulane

SYRACUSE 3 Toledo

E CAROLINA 13 Uab

S FLORIDA 28 Utep

ILLINOIS 13 W Michigan

RUTGERS 5 Ohio U

PENN ST 28.5 E Michigan

MIAMI -FL ORID A 1 3 Kan sas St

Smu 22 MEMPHIS

MARYLAND 9 Temple

MICHIGAN ST 22 C Michigan

Georgia 9.5 MISSISSIPPI

MIAMI -OH IO 6 Bo wli ng Gr ee n

Army 3 BALL ST

Virginia Tech 19 MARSHALL

ALABAMA 13 Arkansas

WASHINGTON 3 California

Lsu 5 W VIRGINIA

MICHIGAN 10 San Diego

St GEORGIA T EC H 5 N Car ol in a

Florida 16.5 KENTUCKY

Notr e Dame 5 .5 PITTSBUR GH

CLEMSON PK Florida St

SAN JO SE S T [ 10 ] N ew M exi co S t

Fresno St 6 IDAHO

Connecticut 10 BUFFALO

OREGON ST 3 Ucla

TEXAS TECH 20 Nevada

S CAROLINA 16 Vanderbilt

MISS ST 18 La Tech

BAYLOR 18 Rice

VIRGINIA 3 Southern Miss

TEXAS A&M 3 Oklahoma St

Nebraska 23 WYOMING

OKLAHOMA 20.5 Missouri

UTAH ST 6.5 Colorado

St BOISE ST 29.5 Tulsa

Oregon 14 ARIZONA

ARIZONA ST 2.5 Usc

AUBURN 32 Fla Atlantic

IOWA 18 UL-Monroe

TROY 12 Middle Tenn St

Indiana 7.5 NORTH TEXAS

F LO RI DA I NT ’L 1 7 U L- La fay et te

 A M E R I C A ’ S L I N E

 By Roxy Roxborough

CIRCULAR REPORT: On the NFL board, the Texans - Saints circle is for HoustonRB Arian Foster (questionable). On the college football board, the Florida State -Clemson circle is for Florida State QB E.J. Manuel (questionable); the New Mexico

State - San Jose State circle is for New Mexico State QB Andrew Manley (doubtful).For the latest odds & scores, check us out at www.americasline.com. NO LINEREPORT: On the NFL board, there is no line on the Eagles - Giants game due toPhiladelphia QB Michael Vick (probable/questionable); there is no line on theCowboys - Redskins game due to Dallas QB Tony Romo (probable/questionable),WR Dez Bryant (probable), WR Miles Austin (out), RB Felix Jones (probable).BOXING REPORT: In the WBO welterweight title fight on November 12 in LasVegas, Nevada, Manny Pacquiao is -$800 vs. Juan Manuel Marquez +$550

A specialThursdayafternoon live program takes place at TheMo-hegan Sun at Pocono Downs with a 1 p.m. post. If you are a fan of 

 young horses, then todayis a great day for you withmostof thecardsprinkled with two-year olds (ofall genders)in action.It’s thefirst leg a new late closer, The Equinox Series, should be an exciting day of horse racing action for sure.

BEST BET: Verdad (6th)VALUE PLAY: Mcturesque (12th)

POST TIME 1:00 p.m.

All Races One Mile

First-$15,000 The Equinox Series7 So Ea sy Bab y A.McC ar thy 1- 7- 3 L ives up to the n ame 2- 11 Mal inka M.Kaka ley 6- 5- 3 Dro ps fro m PASS comp an y 3- 12 Fire I n The N ight G.N apol it ano 4-5-2 D oes ret ai n N apol it ano 5-13 Mcnic kels Mcdimes J .P av ia 1-7-6 P av ia pic ks up Teague horses 7-25 Fast Talking Emma M.Simons 7-4-2 Slows down 6-16 Tw obl isstwo D.Ing raham 4- 3- 4 R ou gh spot for ma id en 12 -14 Slaying The Field T.Buter 7-3-5 Carved up 10-1Second-$9,700 Cond.Pace;maidens1 Mr Gov ianni Fra M.S imons 2-6-4 Got needed s tart , ready now 4-13 Release The Terror M.Kakaley 4-2-4 Takes all the money with Matt 5-22 Stirling Advocate T.Buter 4-4-2 Been close 3-14 Live On A.McCarthy 5-6-3 Tends to tire at the end 9-25 J ed i H an ov er J. Pa vi a 3 -8 -6 B ee n r ac in g a ll o ve r t he m ap 6 -18 Art’s Bad Boy G.Napolitano 6-4-6 N ot shown much 12-16 Chips Galore A.Napolitano 5-4-4 2nd time starter 10-17 J B’ s B each I sc ape T.Lancast er 3-3-4 Mis sed almos t a month 15-1Third-$15,000 The Equinox Series5 Mcsaun a A.McC ar thy 6- 1- 3 McCa rth y ha s li ve d rives 2- 12 Arodasi J.pavia 2-1-5 Pavia own-trains-reins 7-26 H eat he rs D el ig ht T .Bu te r 1 -6 -7 C on fi de nc e b oo st er i n w in 5 -24 All Th ese Thin gs G.Nap ol itano 1- 3- 3 C an ad ian i mpor t 5- 13 Campanile M.Kakaley 1-6-5 Stakes placed filly 10-11 M ag ic S ta rl ig ht E. Ne al 6 -3 -4 E ri c N ea l w it h r ar e P D st ee r 6 -1Fourth-$15,000 The Equinox Series4 Catalyst J.Pavia 7-5-2 No Stormin Normand here 2-11A Blockbuster Hanover G.Napolitano 5-3-3 Better half of the entry 7-22 On The P odium M.S imons 1-3-5 B roke mai den w it h S imons up 5-26 M us cl e S ou rc e D .I ng ra ha m 2 -2 -3 H it b oa rd 4 o ut o f 5 t im es 6 -13 Le ar n My Le sson T.Bu ter 5- 1- 6 C an tab H all you ng ste r 5- 11 Act Out Hanover M.Kakaley 4-3-6 Still winless 7-22A Donatello A.McCarthy 3-7-5 Bad habits 5-25 The Big Thea Thea F.Fladen 3-6-7 N ot so large 10-1Fifth-$15,000 The Equinox Series4 S un se t M ag ic M. Ka ka le y 5 -3 -1 C la ss o f t he f ie ld s co re s 2 -16 Playwear Hanover G.Napolitano 6-3-1 Fights them off for the place 5-23 Pilgrims Honey J.Pavia 6-1-3 Well bred lady 7-25 Idonette F.Fladen 1-7-5 Comes from sharp barn 6-12 Mar io n Mo n Ami A.McC ar thy 2- 6- 8 H as to stay on fe et 10 -11 Transgressive M.Simons 4-1-3 Lacks late rally 5-11A Enfilade T.Buter 4-5-2 Fills out the entry 5-1Sixth-$15,000 The Equinox Series4 Verdad M.Kakaley 3-1-1 Chalk parade rolls on 5-28 E Z Noah T.Buter 2-1-6 Has speed to overcome post 4-11 All sta r Blue s J.Pavi a 3- 3- 2 R ace is str on g for seco nd 3- 16 No Foreign XChange B.Connor 5-1-6 Grabs a share 6-17 Misty’s D eli gh t A.McC ar thy 4- 3- 2 Me ado ws i nvad er 12 -15 E th an H an ove r G .N ap ol it an o 6 -6 -5 D on e l it tl e si nc e Ju ly 9 -22 Powerful Pilot M.Simons 8-4-5 Out of boost 10-13 Nabber Again H.Parker 5-7-5 Fooling no one 15-1Seventh-$9,700 Cond.Pace;n/w $4,200 last 56 C heyenne Oxe M.K ak al ey 7-3-5 R obinson barn t he dif ferenc e 3-11 P an ta st ic G uy A. Na po li tan o 2 -7 -9 N ic e q ua li fi er f or t hi s 7 -23 Boi ler Bo b The QB A.McC ar thy 5- 4- 3 Ke eps ro ugh in g it 9- 29 M ou nt ai n R ock et M. Ro man o 4 -2 -6 M at t h avi ng a g oo d w ee k 8 -17 All Powerful G.Napolitano 3-1-4 N ew York shipper 15-14 On thew in gsofn an gel T.Bu ter 1- 7- 6 N ew on e fr om Fo rd 4- 1

2 P re dat or D VM M. Si gn or e 6 -8 -1 B est w or k d on e at t he f ai rs 6 -15 South Coast J.Pavia 5-5-5 Wrong part of town 10-18 A ri zo na L ia r D .I ng ra ha m 8 -6 -7 B eat en b y 3 8 l en gt hs l as t 3 2 0- 1Eighth-$15,000 The Equinox Series3 Motley Fool J.Pavia 5-3-x Breaks the ice 5-27 Bul let Bob T.Bu ter 8- 2- 3 D ro ps dow n fro m Bab ic Fi na l 9- 26 Li nd woo d Pl aye r A.McC ar thy 8- 2- 3 Ve rsatil e pa ce r 3- 12 F ash io n B oo ts G .N ap ol it an o 2 -6 -1 H as m iss ed s om e t im e 7 -21 T er ry an g F ra M. Ka ka le y 7 -3 -7 J ust l oo ki ng f or a f lat m il e 8 -14 C it y I ma ge D .I ng ra ha m 2 -1 -2 M ar ks 1 1t h s ta rt o f t he 2 01 1 6 -15 Who Dat Love B.Connor 5-3-8 N o kisses in sight 12-1Ninth-$9,700 Cond.Trot;n/w $4,000 last 51 B er nd t E ne rg y G .N ap ol it an o 3 -9 -6 J og ge r f ro m t he p ol e 3 -13 S to gi e H an ove r A. Mc Ca rt hy 7 -3 -9 C o mp le te s t he e xa ct a 7 -25 P er fe ct C han ce M. Si mo ns 1 -7 -9 D an ge ro us p laye r i f o n g ai t 4 -12 Lo ok Clo se r J.Par ker 6- 5- 2 Ja ck Pa rker in for the dr ive 8- 14 Mar io n Mati ld a G.Wasil uk 8- 3- 9 L ig htly ra ce d 5yr ol d 10 -16 S outh J ersey H oney S .R ei ns enweav er 7-3-6 C redi t Winner mare 6-17 Map le Poin t M.R oman o 7- 5- 3 F ina l q tr s ar e pe de str ian 9- 28 Wildfire Bo W.Mann 7-6-6 Back out of claimers 15-19 Detech Tn.Schadel 8-6-9 Well back 20-1Tenth-$15,000 The Equinox Series1 S li ppery S am G.N apol it ano 1-1-1 K nows w here w inner c ircl e i s 5-24 Wahine T.Buter 4-1-1 Has the talent 7-26 Back To The Wes t M.K ak al ey 3-3-1 B een burni ng s ome money 3-12 Gotta Go Hanover J.Pavia 3-5-3 S uperfecta player 9-23 Shady Breeze M.Simons 3-1-6 Homebred pacer 6-15 E as tw ood B lue C hi p A .N apol it ano 7-9-4 Wal loped l as t c oupl e 12-17 Fly Away D.Ingraham 2-1-5 Clipped 8-1Eleventh-$15,000 The Equinox Series4 De li ci ou s M.Kaka ley 1- 2- 2 Eats up the compe titi on 2- 12 K ey st one Tempo Tn. Sc hadel 1-2-4 D one w el l f or t eam S chadel 3-11 A re n’ t I H an ove r J. Pa vi a 1 -8 -2 W as s to ut i n C he st er s co re 7 -26 P il gr im s E lan M. Si mo ns 4 -3 -3 H as s ho wn s om e v er sat il it y 1 0- 1

3 Alegrion F.Fladen 3-6-4 Frode making a few drives 5-15 Ang evin e T.Bu ter 4- 4- 5 D on e b y th e h al f mil e ma rke r 6- 1Twelfth-$15,000 The Equinox Series2 Mctur esqu e H.Par ker 1- 8- 6 Pa rker gets nice mou nt 9- 23 Simon’s Artist T.Curtin 3-2-1 In the picture 7-25 Bid Quick J.Pavia 1-3-3 Another Teague trainee 3-17 P rudenc e J ol t G.N apol it ano 6-5-5 N ot w orthy of 5-2 on t he ml 5-26 I n Front C harl ie A .McC arthy 9-1-1 B es t w ork done at t he Ocean 8-14 Newspeak M.Simons 6-7-6 N o good news to report 12-11 Della Cruise M.Lancaster 4-2-7 Can’t keep up 6-1Thirteenth-$15,000 The Equinox Series2 I Am Passionate M.Kakaley 8-1-6 Dominates 2-16 Lotta Dream J.Pavia 1-2-2 Crushed lesser 7-24 Lo ve Yo u Bye A.Na pol itano 2- 6- 3 Q uick o ff th e win gs 5- 25 Li ttle N ative Gir l T.Bu ter 2- 4- 4 H ea vi ly r ace d 2 yr ol d 5- 13 A shlee’ s Weddi ng G.N apol it ano 4-3-3 Mai den has banked c as h 6-11 Q ui ke n M y P ul se A. Mc Ca rt hy 1 -5 -4 O ne mo re r ace t o g o 1 0- 1Fourteenth-$9,700 Cond.Trot;maidens7 S tr ut ti n C on way G .N ap ol it an o 2 -5 -3 C om pl et es l at e d ou bl e 3 -14 Lady Lov e H anov er A .N apol it ano 4-2-2 B rother A Nap t ak es over 4-12 Dreamnwillie M.Kakaley 2-4-3 Longtime maiden 7-25 Wisenheimer M.Simons 2-x-x Marks his debut 8-13 A le xan de rt he li nd y A. Mc Ca rt hy 3 -8 -4 S ho wi ng : 31 l as t q tr s 9 -21 M ax in e T he M ig ht y Z .Ka is er 2 -4 -5 I nv ad es f ro m C he st er 6 -18 Mr Orlando J.Groff 2-6-5 Groff’s lone steer 10-19 Rocket Master H.Parker 6-6-6 Never in it 15-16 Stay All Day R.Petitto 5-6-5 See you tomorrow 20-1

On the MarkBy Mark Dudek 

 For the Times Leader 

L O C A LC A L E N D A R

Today's GamesH.S. FIELD HOCKEYElk Lake at MontroseTunkhannock at Hanover AreaGAR at Pittston AreaNorthwest at BerwickH.S. BOYS SOCCERHanover Area at Berwick, 3:30 p.m.Wyoming Area at MMI PrepGAR at NanticokeMeyers at Wyoming SeminaryHazleton Area at LehightonH.S. GIRLS VOLLEYBALL(4:15 p.m. unless noted)Wyoming Area at MMILake-Lehman at NanticokeGAR at Hanover AreaCOLLEGE FIELD HOCKEYNeumann at King’s, 7 p.m.MEN'S GOLFFDU-Florham at King’s,1 p.m.MEN'S SOCCERKing’s at Penn State-Altoona, 7 p.m.WOMEN'S VOLLEYBALLWilkes at Marywood, 7 p.m.

W H A T ’ S O N T V

COLLEGE FOOTBALL8 p.m.

ESPN — N.C. State at CincinnatiGOLF9 a.m.

TGC — European PGA Tour, Austrian Open, first

round, at Atzenbrugg, Austria1p.m.TGC — PGA Tour, TOUR Championship, firstround, at Atlanta

2:30 a.m.TGC — LPGA, The Solheim Cup, first round, atDunsany, Ireland

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL1:30 p.m.

SNY — N.Y. Mets at St. Louis7:00 p.m.

CSN — Washington at PhiladelphiaYES --- Tampa Bay at N.Y. Yankees

NHL

7:00 p.m.NHL --- Preseason, Chicago at Pittsburgh

PREP FOOTBALL7 p.m.

FSN — Colerain (Ohio) at Middletown (Ohio)SOCCER11p.m.

ESPN2 — Women’s national teams, exhibition,U.S. vs. Canada, at Portland, Ore.

WNBA BASKETBALL7 p.m.

ESPN2 — Playoffs, conference finals, game1, At-lanta at Indiana

9 p.m.ESPN2 — Playoffs, conference finals, game 1,Phoenix at MinnesotaCopyright 2011World Features Syndicate, Inc.

T R A N S A C T I O N S

BASEBALLAmerican League

OAKLAND ATHLETICS—Agreed to terms withmanager Bob Melvin on a three-year contract.

National LeagueARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS—Fired minor leaguefieldcoordinatorChadKreuter. NamedJeffPico mi-norleague fieldcoordinatorandMel Stottlemyremi-nor league pitching coordinator.

FOOTBALLNational Football League

GREEN BAY PACKERS—Signed DL JohnnyJones to the practice squad.KANSASCITYCHIEFS—PlacedRB JamaalChar-les on season-ending injured reserve. Signed WRJeremy Horne from the practice squad. Signed OLLucas Patterson to the practice squad.

NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS—Placed C Dan Kop-pen and DL Myron Pryor on injured reserve. Re-signed DL Landon Cohen and DB Phillip Adams.NEW YORK JETS—Signed LB Matthias Berningand WR Scotty McKnight to the practice squad.

HOCKEYNational Hockey League

CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS—Assigned F PhillipDanault and F Mark McNeill to their junior clubs.COLUMBUSBLUE JACKETS—SignedF R.J.Um-bergerto afive-year contractextensionthroughthe2016-17season.Released FWade MacLeodandFMike Thomas. Assigned F Michael Chaput to Sha-winigan (QMJHL), F Boone Jenner to Oshawa

(OHL), F Dalton Smith to Ottawa (OHL), F LukasSedlak to Chicoutimi (QMJHL), D Brandon Archi-baldtoSaginaw(OHL),D AustinMadaiskyto Kam-loops (WHL) and G Mathieu Corbeil to Saint John(QMJHL).DETROIT RED WINGS—C Mike Modano an-nounced his retirement.

COLLEGEGEORGETOWN—Named Zach Samol men’s as-sociate head soccer coach.JOHN JAY—Named Chris Weeks women’s tenniscoach.RUTGERS—Named Keith Cromwell men’s assist-ant lacrosse coach.VIRGINIA—Named Eric Baumgartner associateathletics director for compliance.

H A R N E S S

R A C I N GPocono Downs Results

Tuesday Sep 20, 2011First - $15,000 Trot 1:56.14-Justherighttouch(Ma Kakaley) 12.205.40 3.802-Tameka Seelster (Jo Pavia Jr) 2.80 2.206-Casanova Lindy (An Napolitano) 3.20EXACTA (4-2) $55.60TRIFECTA (4-2-6) $291.60SUPERFECTA (4-2-6-7) $1,254.20Second - $9,700 Pace 1:53.11-Hanks Kid (Ge Napolitano Jr) 19.20 5.40 5.007-Goggles Paisano (Ty Buter) 5.00 3.602-Premier Flash (An Napolitano) 3.00EXACTA (1-7) $76.00TRIFECTA (1-7-2) $262.40SUPERFECTA (1-7-2-ALL) $332.20DAILY DOUBLE (4-1) $79.60Third - $9,800 Trot1:56.45-FoxyLadyDe Vie(GeNapolitanoJr) 3.202.102.103-Peace Bridge (To Schadel) 3.20 2.202-Twocarlane (Ji Taggart Jr) 3.00EXACTA (5-3) $10.00TRIFECTA (5-3-2) $34.60SUPERFECTA (5-3-2-1) $531.80Fourth - $10,000 Pace1:55.03-Bungleinthejungle (Ge Napolitano Jr) 6.204.40 2.201-Real Liberator (Ma Kakaley) 15.40 6.804-Steuben Jumpinjack (Mi Simons) 6.40EXACTA (3-1) $47.40TRIFECTA (3-1-4) $702.60SUPERFECTA (3-1-4-ALL) $298.00Fifth - $9,700 Trot1:58.0

8-Like A Lexis (Ji Taggart Jr) 29.20 9.40 8.801-Wingbat (Ma Kakaley) 6.40 4.605-Thors Hammer (Mi Simons) 6.40EXACTA (8-1) $195.20TRIFECTA (8-1-5) $1,898.00SUPERFECTA (8-1-ALL-ALL) $908.60PICK 3 (5-3-8) $146.80Sixth - $22,000 Pace1:53.25-All Heart Gal (Mi Simons) 34.8013.60 5.602-Ideal Nectarine (Ty Buter) 5.00 2.806-Phyleon (Ge Napolitano Jr) 2.10EXACTA (5-2) $160.20TRIFECTA (5-2-6) $1,084.80SUPERFECTA (5-2-ALL-ALL) $257.40Seventh - $12,000 Trot1:57.23-Thekeptman (Ma Kakaley) 4.60 3.60 2.807-Fortissimo (Ty Buter) 4.60 3.008-Lord Burghley (An Napolitano) 5.60EXACTA (3-7) $32.00TRIFECTA (3-7-8) $169.60SUPERFECTA (3-7-8-ALL) $206.60Eighth - $14,000 Pace1:53.43-Pandapocket (Mi Simons) 13.40 4.60 3.806-Expect Success (Ho Parker) 4.40 4.802-The Pan Flamingo (Ma Romano) 2.10 2.10EXACTA (3-2) $20.40EXACTA (3-6) $66.20TRIFECTA (3-2-6) $115.20TRIFECTA (3-6-2) $237.00SUPERFECTA (3-2-6-9) $1,355.40Ninth - $14,000 Pace 1:51.22-Drive All Night (An Napolitano) 4.40 3.00 2.205-Takeshigemichi (Ge Napolitano Jr) 2.60 2.601-Heart Of Rocknroll (Ho Parker) 3.40EXACTA (2-5) $12.00TRIFECTA (2-5-1) $60.20SUPERFECTA (2-5-1-4) $178.40PICK 4 (5-3-3-2 (3 Out of 4)) $12.20

Tenth - $24,000 Pace1:52.17-B Lo Zero (An Napolitano) 4.60 3.40 2.208-Triple Major (Ho Parker) 7.60 2.806-Sleek Hunter (Ge Napolitano Jr) 2.10EXACTA (7-8) $35.60

TRIFECTA (7-8-6) $59.40SUPERFECTA (7-8-6-2) $439.60Scratched: McsocksEleventh - $12,000 Trot1:58.31-Sabana Hanover (Ma Romano) 50.00 13.603.809-Cassini Hall (Jo Pavia Jr) 6.20 3.404-Marion Monaco (Ma Kakaley) 2.40EXACTA (1-9) $125.60TRIFECTA (1-9-4) $890.40SUPERFECTA (1-9-4-5) $3,370.80Twelfth - $4,800 Pace1:54.44-Universal Dream N (Ge Napolitano Jr) 6.603.80 3.208-Mr Socks (Jo Pavia Jr) 11.00 6.203-Cannae Rocky (To Schadel) 5.00EXACTA (4-8) $96.00TRIFECTA (4-8-3) $533.80SUPERFECTA (4-8-3-6) $2,339.40PICK 3 (7-1-4) $152.00Thirteenth - $9,700 Trot 1:57.12-Lost In The Fog (Ma Romano) 10.20 4.00 3.204-Smooth Muscles (Ge Napolitano Jr) 2.60 2.10

3-Mm’s A Player (Jo Pavia Jr) 2.80EXACTA (2-4) $42.60TRIFECTA (2-4-3) $121.80SUPERFECTA (2-4-3-6) $361.00Scratched: TechawayFourteenth - $9,700 Pace1:53.44-Quickpop (Ty Buter) 16.40 8.80 5.409-Out To Kill A (Ma Romano) 7.4010.606-Powered By Zeus (Ma Kakaley) 3.20EXACTA (4-9) $115.80TRIFECTA (4-9-6) $396.00SUPERFECTA (4-9-6-ALL) $449.40Fifteenth - $9,700 Pace1:56.22-Fox Valley Renoir (Jo Pavia Jr) 3.00 2.20 2.101-Jokin’ Man (Ty Buter) 3.60 2.606-Chester Hanover (Ma Romano) 2.80EXACTA (2-1) $8.40TRIFECTA (2-1-6) $34.60SUPERFECTA (2-1-6-4) $109.00Scratched: Upfront CountryboySixteenth - $10,000 Pace1:53.34-Martial Bliss (Ho Parker) 5.40 2.60 2.407-Saywhatuneedtosay (Mi Simons) 3.00 2.802-Patient Major (Jo Pavia Jr) 2.80EXACTA (4-7) $22.60TRIFECTA (4-7-2) $75.20SUPERFECTA (4-7-2-3) $547.80LATE DOUBLE (2-4) $7.80Scratched: Prince Sail OnTotal Handle-$352,774

F O O T B A L L

National Football LeagueAMERICAN CONFERENCE

EastW L T Pct

New England.................... 2 0 0 1.000Buffalo............................... 2 0 0 1.000N.Y. Jets........................... 2 0 0 1.000Miami................................. 0 2 0 .000

SouthW L T Pct

Houston ............................ 2 0 0 1.000Jacksonville...................... 1 1 0 .500Tennessee........................ 1 1 0 .500Indianapolis...................... 0 2 0 .000

NorthW L T Pct

Baltimore............................. 1 1 0 .500Cincinnati ............................ 1 1 0 .500Cleveland............................ 1 1 0 .500Pittsburgh............................ 1 1 0 .500

WestW L T Pct

Oakland............................... 1 1 0 .500San Diego........................... 1 1 0 .500Denver................................. 1 1 0 .500Kansas City......................... 0 2 0 .000

NATIONAL CONFERENCEEast

W L T PctWashington...................... 2 0 0 1.000Dallas................................ 1 1 0 .500

Philadelphia...................... 1 1 0 .500N.Y. Giants....................... 1 1 0 .500South

W L T PctNew Orleans....................... 1 1 0 .500

Atlanta................................. 1 1 0 .500Tampa Bay.......................... 1 1 0 .500Carolina............................... 0 2 0 .000

NorthW L T Pct

Green Bay......................... 2 0 0 1.000Detroit................................ 2 0 0 1.000Chicago............................. 1 1 0 .500Minnesota......................... 0 2 0 .000

WestW L T Pct

San Francisco..................... 1 1 0 .500Arizona................................ 1 1 0 .500St. Louis.............................. 0 2 0 .000Seattle.................................. 0 2 0 .000

Sunday's GamesHouston at New Orleans,1 p.m.Denver at Tennessee,1 p.m.Detroit at Minnesota,1 p.m.San Francisco at Cincinnati,1 p.m.New England at Buffalo,1 p.m.N.Y. Giants at Philadelphia,1 p.m.Miami at Cleveland,1 p.m.Jacksonville at Carolina,1 p.m.Kansas City at San Diego, 4:05 p.m.N.Y. Jets at Oakland, 4:05 p.m.Baltimore at St. Louis, 4:05 p.m.Arizona at Seattle, 4:15 p.m.Green Bay at Chicago, 4:15 p.m.Atlanta at Tampa Bay, 4:15 p.m.Pittsburgh at Indianapolis, 8:20 p.m.

Monday's GamesWashington at Dallas, 8:30 p.m.

Canadian Football League

EAST DIVISIONW L T Pts PF PA

Winnipeg ................................... 8 3 0 16 265 252Montreal .................................... 6 5 0 12 340 276Hamilton.................................... 5 6 0 10 296 308Toronto..................................... 2 9 0 4 226 320

WEST DIVISIONW L T Pts PF PA

Calgary..................................... 7 4 0 14 288 290Edmonton................................. 7 4 0 14 267 250B.C. ........................................... 5 6 0 10 292 244Saskatchewan.......................... 4 7 0 8 267 303

Friday's GamesMontreal at Edmonton, 9 p.m.

Saturday's GamesB.C. at Saskatchewan, 4 p.m.Winnipeg at Toronto, 7 p.m.

Sunday's GamesCalgary at Hamilton,1 p.m.

Friday, Sept. 30Montreal at Winnipeg, 7:30 p.m.Edmonton at B.C.,10:30 p.m.

Saturday, Oct. 1Saskatchewan at Calgary, 4 p.m.Hamilton at Toronto, 7 p.m.

B O X I N G

Fight ScheduleSept. 23

At Buenos Aires, Argentina, Marcos Maidana vs.Petr Petrov, 12, for Maidana’s interim WBA World

 junior welterweight title.At Fantasy Springs Resortcasino, Indio, Calif., Vi-cente Escobedo vs. Rocky Juarez,10, junior light-weights.

Sept. 24

AtClub Chicago,Burbank,Ill.,RomanKarmazinvs.Osumanu Adama, 12, IBF middleweight title elim-inator.

At Mexicali, Mexico, Jorge Arce vs. SimphiweNongqayi,12,for Arce’sWBO superbantamweighttitle;Raul Martinezvs. RodrigoGuerrero, 12,for thevacant IBF super featherweight title.AtMexico City,AdrianHernandezvs. GideonButh-elezi,12, for Hernandez’s WBC light flyweight title.AtHarrahs,Chester,Pa.TonyFerrantevs.TommyKarpency,10, light heavyweights.

Sept. 25At Krasnodar, Russia, Dmitry Pirog vs. GennadyMartirosyan, 12, for Pirog’s WBO middleweight ti-tle;Khabib Allakhverdiev vs. Nate Campbel, 10, ju-nior welterweights.

Sept. 30AtTheHangar,CostaMesa,Calif.,LuisRamosvs.David Rodela,10, junior welterweights.AtSantaYnez, Calif.(SHO),Ajose Olusegunvs.AliChebah,12, WBC junior welterweight eliminator.

Oct.1AtNeubrandenburg,Germany,Steve Cunninghamvs. Yoan Pablo Hernandez, 12, for Cunningham’sIBF cruiserweight title;Sebastian Sylvester vs.Grzegorz Proksa,12, for vacant European middle-weight title;Karo Murat vs. Gabriel Campillo, 12,light heavyweights.At Atlantic City, N.J. (HBO), Sergio Martinez vs.Darren Barker, 12, middleweights;Brian Vera vs.Andy Lee, 10, middleweights.At MGM Grand, Las Vegas, Toshiaki Nishioka vs.Rafael Marquez, 12, for Nishioka’s WBC juniorfeatherweighttitle;RomanGonzalezvs.Omar Soto,12, for Gonzalez’s WBA World light flyweight title-;JesusSotoKarassvs. YoshihiroKamegai,10,wel-terweights.

Oct. 6At Chicago, Roman Karmazin vs. Osumanu Ada-ma,12, IBF middleweight title eliminator.

Oct. 7At Texas Station Casino, Las Vegas (HBO), SharifBogere vs. Francisco Contreras, 10 for Bogere’sNABO lightweight title.

Oct. 8AtBacolodCity, Philippines,RamonGarcia Hiralesvs. Donnie Nietes, 12, for Hirales’ WBO junior fly-weight title.AtSheffield,England,Kell Brookvs. RafalJackiew-icz,12, WBA welterweight title eliminator.

Oct.14AtCagliari, Italy,MorutiMthalanevs. AndreaSarrit-zu,12, for Mthalane’s IBF flyweight title.At Buenos Aires, Argentina, Jonathan Barros vs.Celestino Caballero, 12, for Barros’ WBA Worldfeatherweight title.

Oct.15At Almaty, Kazakhstan, Gennady Golovkin vs. La- juan Simon,12, for Golovkin’s WBA World middle-weight title.At Liverpool, England, Nathan Cleverly vs. TonyBellew,12,for Cleverly’sWBOlight heavyweightti-tle;PiotrWilczewskivs.JamesDeGale,12, forWilc-zewski’s European super middleweight title.At Staples Center, Los Angeles (PPV), BernardHopkins vs. Chad Dawson, 12, for Hopkins’ WBClight heavyweight title;Antonio DeMarco vs. JorgeLinares, 12, for the vacant WBC lightweight title-;Kendall Holt vs. Danny Garcia, 12, for the vacantWBO-NABO junior welterweight title;Paulie Malig-naggi vs. Orlando Lora, 10, welterweights.

Oct.19At Newcastle, Australia, Anthony Mundine vs. Ri-gobertoAlvarez,12,fortheinterimWBAWorldlightmiddleweight title.

Oct. 22

At the Theater at Madison Square Garden, NewYork(HBO),NonitoDonairevs.OmarNarvaez,12,for Donaire’s WBC-WBO bantamweight titles.At the Theater at Madison Square Garden, NewYork(HBO),NonitoDonairevs.OmarNarvaez,12,for Donaire’s WBC-WBO bantamweight titles.

8/4/2019 Times Leader 09-22-2011

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/times-leader-09-22-2011 15/45

C M Y K

THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 PAGE 3B➛ S P O R T S

teamspeed, which is theworst

I’ve seen in a long time. There’snotone playerwho can matchup with anyof Valley West’sstartingskill players.

 Theredoesn’t appear to beenoughtime to fix theproblemsby thetime theSpartans arrive.Butthescheduleis a bit easierafter Friday, so theopportunityis there to make repairs andsavethe season.

Two-point confusion

Dallas’final points againstBerwickcame on a two-pointconversion with 38 secondsremaining that wasn’t supposedto beattempted.

Dallas coach Ted Jacksoninstructed his backupquarter-back totakethesnapandkneeldown.When the quarterbacktoldthe referee of hisintentions,somehow everything got jum-bled up andhe believed Dallashadto runa play.

Sothe backupcalleda run-ningplay thatresultedin thetwo points.

“Iapologize totheend ofthe world,” Jacksonsaid.“I wouldnever do anything like thatbe-cause I’ve been on theother sideof thefence.… Coach Campbellisa great guy. I would never dothat.”

Whyno touchdown

Crestwood runningback Rog-erLegghada nice9-yardrun fora touchdown in thethirdquarter

Friday against Pittston Area.Butinstead of gettingsix

points, theball was putback atthe9-yardlineand thescorewasdisallowed despiteno penalty.

 What happen wasa PittstonArea player, apparently shakenup on thepreviousplay, wentdown on thefieldon thesidelinefarthest from thehome bleach-ers. An officialblewthe playdeada split-second beforethesnap.

Been a long time

Nanticoke’s Pat Hempelre-turned a kickoff84 yards for atouchdown against Susquehan-na,marking thefirsttime in10seasons a Trojan accomplishedthefeat.

DonWalters wasthe last to dosowhenhe scoredon an80-yardkickreturnin a Week 8 losstoScrantonPrep in 2001. Waltersreturned twokicksfor TDsthatseasonand JasonMitkowski

returned one.

Curry sighting

No,not coachinglegend Ge-orge Curry buthis grandson C.J.Curry.

C.J., a Berwick sophomore,threwhis first varsitypass Sat-urdayagainst Dallas,completing a 10-yard tossto fellowsopho-moreJordan Stout.

Newkidson theblock

Somefreshmenhavebeen

getting varsity time recently.Pittston Area’s Kyle Gattuso

rushedfor a team-high 94 yardsin a 54-31 loss to Crestwood. Attimes,he lookedlikethe fastestguyon thefield.

 WyomingArea’sJeff Skurskyhasbeen seeingtime at running back and linebacker. Teammateandfellowrookie Marty Mi-chaels hadan interception onFriday against Lake-Lehmannearthe end ofthe game.

Downrightugly

 Whilescouring forscoresfrom District 11 Class 4A teams,two results involving the Allen-town cityschools were disturb-ing.

AllentownDieruff lost73-0 to Whitehall. Evenworse, Allen-town Allen lost 76-0to Bethle-hem Freedom.

KeithGroller of TheMorning Call of Allentowntakesa lookatthesituationon thenewspaper’s website – www.mcall.com. It’s worthchecking out.Both pro-grams arein dire situations withunder 40 playersdespite Allenbeing thebiggest Class 4Aschoolin District 11 with a maleenrollment of1,382and Dieruff  with 807boys,more thaneveryD2 school exceptfor HazletonArea.

ERZARContinued from Page1B

Teams are ranked based on performance and not how they would fare against each other. Number before each team

is last week’s ranking. NR means not ranked last week. District 4’s Williamsport is including in the rankings since it

plays in the WVC.

1. (1) Valley View (3-0) Shut out Coughlin for the second time in last three meetings.2. (2) Wyoming Valley West (3-0) Heads to Berwick to take on the struggling Dawgs.

3. (3) Dallas (3-0) Dominated Berwick at home, but is on the road the rest of the month.

4. (5) Delaware Valley (3-0) Has scored more and given up less points in all three games.5. (6) Dunmore (3-0) Will likely be undefeated heading into Oct. 14 showdown with Lakeland6. (7) Crestwood (3-0) Game with East Stroudsburg North could be tougher than envisioned.

7. (4) GAR (2-1) Was missing two key players in its 34-31 loss at Lakeland.

8. (NR) Lakeland (2-1) Defeating GAR could be big when it comes playoff time.

9. (8) West Scranton (1-1) After loss to Dunmore, runs into a hot Delaware Valley team.

10. (10) Abington Heights (2-1) Rebounded Saturday as expected after being smoked by Valley West.11. (11) Old Forge (2-1) Honesdale presents a bit of a trap with rival Riverside looming.

12. (13) Lackawanna Trail (3-0) Will learn a lot about the Lions over the next two games.

13. (9) Williamsport (1-2) Two hard-luck losses could mean sitting home after Week 10.

14. (NR) Western Wayne (2-1) Is just a two-point loss to Hanover Area away from perfection.15. (12) Coughlin (1-2) Losses have come against Valley View and Dallas.

Dropped out: Hanover Area (2-1); Pittston Area (2-1).

Given consideration: Hanover Area (2-1); Holy Cross (2-1); Pittston Area (2-1); Riverside (2-1); Scranton Prep (2-1);

Susquehanna (2-1); Wallenpaupack (3-0); Wyoming Area (1-1).

—John Erzar

T I M E S L E A D E R D I S T R I C T 2 T O P 1 5

Nick O’BrienQB/RB – Wyoming Area

O’Brien ran for a career-high 218 yards and fourtouchdowns as Wyoming Area returned to the fieldafter a two-week absence to defeat Lake-Lehman43-10. O’Brien carried the ball 21 times in the victoryas he increased his season rushing total to 354 yards.The junior has been the Warriors’ leading rushersince his freshman season. He also threw a 29-yardtouchdown pass that triggered a run of 33 consec-utive points.

Given considerationEugene Lewis, QB, Valley West

Corey Moore, QB, GARRyan Zapoticky, QB, Dallas

Past winnersWeek One

Jordan Houseman, WR, Pittston AreaWeek Two

Jim Roccograndi, RB, Dallas-- John Erzar

T I M E S L E A D E R P L A Y E R O F T H E W E E K

BERWICK(1-2)Sept. 2.................at Crestwood (3-0), L 19-6Sept.12..........North Pocono (0-3), W 38-28Sept.17....................at Dallas (3-0), L 53-20Friday................Wyoming Valley West (3-0)Sept. 30..............................Selinsgrove (0-3)

Oct. 7.......................... at Tunkhannock (0-3)Oct. 14............................at Williamsport (1-2)Oct. 21...............................Pittston Area (2-1)Oct. 28 .....................................Coughlin (1-2)Nov. 4 .........................at Hazleton Area (1-2)

COUGHLIN(1-2)Sept. 2...........................Dallas (3-0), L 28-14Sept.13 ...... at Tunkhannock (0-3), W 48-11Sept.17 .................Valley View (3-0), L 28-0Friday .................................Williamsport (1-2)Sept. 30 ........at Wyoming Valley West (3-0)Oct. 8.................................Stroudsburg (3-0)Oct. 14...........................at Pittston Area (2-1)Oct. 21............................Hazleton Area (1-2)Oct. 28 ...................................at Berwick (1-2)Nov. 5...................................Crestwood (3-0)

CRESTWOOD(3-0)Sept. 2.........................Berwick (1-2), W19-6Sept. 9. at Pocono Mtn. West (0-3), W 21-6Sept.16 ............Pittston Area (2-1), W 54-31Friday..........at East Stroudsburg North (1-2)Oct. 1................................Tunkhannock (0-3)Oct. 7 ..............................Hazleton Area (1-2)Oct. 15......................................at Dallas (3-0)Oct. 21...........at Wyoming Valley West (3-0)Oct. 28 ...............................Williamsport (1-2)Nov. 5...................................at Coughlin (1-2)

DALLAS(3-0)Sept. 2.................at Coughlin (1-2), W 28-14Sept.10 .........Scranton Prep (2-1), W 48-20Sept. 17 ....................Berwick (1-2), W 53-20Friday ............................at Pittston Area (2-1)Sept. 30..........................at Williamsport (1-2)Oct. 8 ................Wyoming Valley West (3-0)Oct. 15..................................Crestwood (3-0)Oct. 22.............Pocono Mountain East (1-2)Oct. 28 .........................at Tunkhannock (0-3)Nov. 4..........................at Lake-Lehman (0-3)

GAR (2-1)Sept. 2 ..............at Mid Valley (1-2), W 34-12Sept. 12.................Old Forge (2-1), W 29-14Sept. 16 ................at Lakeland (2-1), L 34-31Friday .................................at Northwest (2-1)Oct. 1............................Holy Redeemer (0-3)Oct. 7 ...........................at Hanover Area (2-1)Oct. 14.............................Lake-Lehman (0-3)Oct. 22 ...........................Wyoming Area (1-1)Oct. 28 ....................................Nanticoke (1-1)Nov., 4....................................at Meyers (0-3)

HANOVERAREA (2-1)Sept. 2.............Susquehanna (2-1), W15-12Sept.12 ..at Western Wayne (2-1), W 36-34Sept. 16..............at Mid Valley (1-2), L 35-27Friday .............................Wyoming Area (1-1)Sept. 30 .............................at Northwest (2-1)Oct. 7...............................................GAR (2-1)Oct. 14........................................Meyers (0-3)Oct. 22 .....................at Holy Redeemer (0-3)Oct. 28.........................at Lake-Lehman (0-3)Nov. 4 .....................................Nanticoke (1-1)

HAZLETONAREA (1-2)Sept. 3....at Abington Heights (2-1), L 28-14Sept. 10.............Williamspo rt (1-2), W 32-21Sept.16 .....at Delaware Valley (3-0), L 44-7Friday...............................Tunkhannock (0-3)Sept. 30 ............................Pittston Area (2-1)Oct. 7................................at Crestwood (3-0)Oct.14...........at Wyoming Valley West (3-0)Oct. 21..................................at Coughlin (1-2)Oct. 28 ..........East Stroudsburg South (0-3)Nov. 4 ........................................Berwick (1-2)

HOLY REDEEMER(0-3)Sept. 3....................Northwest (2-1), L 38-24Sept. 12........at Susquehanna (2-1), L 32-22Sept. 17 ................Holy Cross (2-1), L 49-24Friday...........................at Lake-Lehman (0-3)Oct. 1...........................................at GAR (2-1)Oct 8 Nanticoke (1 1)

Sept. 2.................at Old Forge (2-1), L 21-15Sept.10 .....Lackawanna Trail (3-0), L 48-28Sept. 16...........Wyoming Area (1-1), L 43-10Friday...........................Holy Redeemer (0-3)Sept. 30..................................at Meyers (0-3)Oct. 8 .....................................Northwest (2-1)

Oct. 14.........................................at GAR (2-1)Oct. 21................................at Nanticoke (1-2)Oct. 28.............................Hanover Area (2-1)Nov. 4...........................................Dallas (3-0)

MEYERS (0-2)Sept. 3...................Holy Cross (2-1), L 37-14Sept. 12 .................at Dunmore (3-0), L 45-0Sept.17 ...at Lackawanna Trail (3-0), L 55-7Friday..................................at Nantic oke (1-1)Sept. 30 ..........................Lake-Lehman (0-3)Oct. 7..............................Wyoming Area (1-1)Oct. 14 .........................at Hanover Area (2-1)Oct. 21................................at Northwest (2-1)Oct. 29.........................Holy Redeemer (0-3)Nov. 4..............................................GAR (2-1)

NANTICOKE(1-0)Sept. 2....................Montrose (0-3), W 48-14Sept. 9......Col-Montour Vo-Tech (1-1), can-celledSept. 17..........at Susquehanna (2-1), L 26-7Friday..........................................Meyers (0- 3)Sept. 30 .....................at Wyoming Area (1-1)Oct. 8 .......................at Holy Redeemer (0-3)Oct. 14 ...................................Northwest (2-1)Oct. 21.............................Lake-Lehman (0-3)Oct. 28.........................................at GAR (2-1)Nov. 4 ..........................at Hanover Area (2-1)

NORTHWEST(2-1)Sept. 3 ....at Holy Redeemer (0-3), W 38-24Sept. 12................at Montrose (0-3), W 30-8Sept. 16.................at Old Forge (2-1), L 35-8Friday ..............................................GAR (2-1)Sept. 30...........................Hanover Area (2-1)Oct. 8...........................at Lake-Lehman (0-3)Oct. 14................................at Nanticoke (1-2)Oct. 21........................................Meyers (0-3)Oct. 28 ...........................Wyoming Area (1-1)Nov. 4......Columbia-Montour Vo-Tech (1-1)

PITTSTONAREA (2-1)Sept. 2 ..........at Tunkhannock (0-3), W 45-6Sept. 12 ...................Scranton (1-2), W 21-14Sept. 16.............at Crestwood (3-0), L 54-31Friday............................................Dallas (3- 0)Sept. 30 ......................at Hazleton Area (1-2)Oct. 7..................................Williamsport (1-2)Oct. 14......................................Coughlin (1-2)Oct. 21....................................at Berwick (1-2)Oct. 28..............Wyoming Valley West (3-0)Nov. 4.........................at Wyoming Area (1-1)

TUNKHANNOCK (0-3)Sept. 2 .................Pittston Area (2-1), L 45-6Sept. 13.....................Coughlin (1-2), L 48-11Sept.17 ....at Abington Heights (2-1), L 35-6Friday..........................at Hazleton Area (1-2)Oct. 1 ................................at Crestwood (3-0)Oct. 7 .........................................Berwick (1-2)Oct.14 ............Pocono Mountain West (0-3)Oct. 21............................at Williamsport (1-2)Oct. 28..........................................Dallas (3-0)Nov. 5 ......................at Holy Redeemer (0-3)

WILLIAMSPORT(1-2)Sept. 2 ..at Central Mountain (1-2), W 23-13Sept.10 .......at Hazleton Area (1-2), L 32-21Sept.16..........Stroudsburg (3-0), L 14-7 OTFriday ...................................at Coughlin (1-2)Sept. 30........................................Dallas (3-0)Oct. 7.............................at Pittston Area (2-1)Oct. 14........................................Berwick (1-2)Oct. 21.............................Tunkhannock (0-3)Oct. 28..............................at Crestwood (3-0)Nov. 4 ...............Wyoming Valley West (3-0)

WYOMING AREA (1-1)Sept. 2..........Western Wayne (2-1), L 40-34Sept. 9 ......at West Scranton (1-1), canceledSept.16 ......at Lake-Lehman (0-3), W 43-10Friday...........................at Hanover Area (2-1)Sept. 30 ..................................Nanticoke (1-1)Oct 7 at Meyers (0 3)

WYOMINGVALLEYWEST(3-0)Sept. 2 ........................at Scranton (1-2), 21-7Sept. 12.......Abington Heights (2-1), W 51-0Sept.16 .......Pleasant Valley (2-1), W 47-28Friday .....................................at Berwic k (1-2)Sept. 30 ...................................Coughlin (1-2)Oct 8 at Dallas (3-0)

W V C F O O T B A L L S C H E D U L E S

D I S T R I C TS T A N D I N G S

Teams qualify based on state points-per-gameaverage listed in final column. Points totals forD11-4A were done by the Times Leader and areunofficial.

CLASS4ADistrict2/4.............................. W L P ts. Avg.Delaware Valley...................... 3 0 330 110.0Wyoming Valley West............ 3 0 320 106.7Wallenpaupack....................... 3 0 280 93.3Hazleton Area......................... 1 2 110 36.7Williamsport............................. 1 2 110 36.7Scranton ................................... 1 2 100 33.3

District 11 ............................... W L P ts. Avg.Nazareth.................................. 3 0 350 116.7Stroudsburg............................. 3 0 300 100.0Whitehall.................................. 3 0 300 100.0Bethlehem Freedom.............. 3 0 290 96.7Emmaus................................... 2 1 230 76.7Easton...................................... 2 1 220 73.3Parkland................................... 2 1 210 70.0Bethlehem Liberty.................. 2 1 200 66.7Pocono Mountain East .......... 1 2 110 36.7Pleasant Valley....................... 1 2 80 26.7Allentown Allen....................... 0 3 0 0Allentown Dieruff.................... 0 3 0 0East Stro ud sb ur g Sou th .... .. .. 0 3 0 0Northampton............................ 0 3 0 0Pocon o Mou ntai n W est..... .. .. 0 3 0 0

Playoff format: Five D11teams, two D2/4 teamsand the remaining team with the best points-per-game average qualify.Points format: Class 4A teams receive pointsbased on a defeated opponent’s classification: 4A,100 points; 3A, 80; 2A, 60; A, 40. Teams alsoreceive10 points per v ictory by a defeated

opponent.CLASS3A

District 2.................................. W L P ts. Avg.Crestwood............................... 3 0 350 116.7Dallas....................................... 3 0 340 113.3Valley View.............................. 3 0 300 100.0Pittston Area............................ 2 1 230 76.7Abington Heights.................... 2 1 230 76.6Scranton Prep......................... 2 1 180 60.0West Scranton......................... 1 1 80 40.0Berwick..................................... 1 2 100 33.3Coughlin................................... 1 2 100 33.3Tunkhannock........................... 0 3 0 0North Pocono.......................... 0 3 0 0Honesdale............................... 0 3 0 0Playoff format: Four teams qualify.Points format: Class 3A teams receive pointsbased on a defeated opponent’s classification: 4A,120 points; 3A,100; 2A, 80; A, 60. Teams alsoreceive10 points per victory by a defeatedopponent.

CLASS2ADistrict 2 ................................... W L Pts. Avg.Hanover Area............................ 2 1 240 80.0Lakeland.................................... 2 1 230 76.7GAR........................................... 2 1 210 70.0Western Wayne........................ 2 1 210 70.0Susquehanna............................ 2 1 210 70.0Wyoming Area.......................... 1 1 100 50.0Nanticoke .................................. 1 1 100 50.0Mid Valley.................................. 1 2 120 40.0Meyers....................................... 0 3 0 0Holy Redeemer........................ 0 3 0 0

Montrose................................... 0 3 0 0Lake-Lehman............................ 0 3 0 0Carbondale............................... 0 3 0 0Playoff format: Four teams qualify.Points format: Class 2A teams receive pointsbased on a defeated opponent’s classification: 4A,140 points; 3A,120; 2A, 100; A, 80. Teams alsoreceive10 points per victory by a defeatedopponent.

CLASSADistrict 2.................................. W L P ts. Avg.Dunmore.................................. 3 0 410 136.7Lackawanna Trail.................... 3 0 360 120.0Riverside.................................. 2 1 260 86.7Old Forge................................. 2 1 240 80.0Northwest................................. 2 1 240 80.0Holy Cross............................... 2 1 240 80.0Playoff format: Four teams qualify.Points format: Class 2A teams receive pointsbased on a defeated opponent’s classification: 4A,160 points; 3A,140; 2A, 120; A,100. Teams alsoreceive10 points per victory by a defeatedopponent.

L A C K A W A N N AC O N F E R E N C E

Division1 ............. Division Overall PF PAD elaw ar e V all ey .. . 0 0 3 0 96 34V al le y V ie w .. .. .. .. .. . 0 0 3 0 1 11 1 5W al len paup ac k.. .. . 0 0 3 0 88 32

A bi ng to n H ts .. .. .. .. . 0 0 2 1 63 71S cr an to n P re p ... .. . 0 0 2 1 80 80W es t S cr an to n. .. .. . 0 0 1 1 48 48S cr an to n. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . 0 0 1 2 6 9 5 6N or th P oc ono . ... .. . 0 0 0 3 76 1 21

Division2 ............. Division Overall PF PAD un mo re . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 0 0 3 0 11 2 3 4L ak el an d. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . 0 0 2 1 8 6 7 3R iver si de ..... .. .. .. .. .. 0 0 2 1 10 0 9 1W es ter n Way ne. .. . 0 0 2 1 12 8 76C ar bo nd al e .. .. .. .. .. . 0 0 0 3 3 0 1 26H on es da le . .. .. .. .. .. . 0 0 0 3 8 1 14 1

Division3 ............. Division Overall PF PAL ac kawan na T ra il . 0 0 3 0 146 47H ol y C ro ss . .. .. .. .. .. . 0 0 2 1 1 15 7 4O ld F or ge . .. .. .. .. .. .. . 0 0 2 1 7 0 4 4S us que hann a .. .. .. . 0 0 2 1 70 44M id V al le y .. .. .. .. .. .. . 0 0 1 2 6 2 9 3M on tr os e .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . 0 0 0 3 2 8 1 32

Friday, Sept.16(7 p.m.)

Delaware Valley 44, Hazleton Area 7East Stroudsburg North 54, Honesdale 42Lackawanna Trail 55, Meyers 7Lakeland 34, GAR 31Mid Valley 34, Hanover Area 27Old Forge 35, Northwest 8Riverside 42, North Pocono 27Scranton 48, East Stroudsburg South14Scranton Prep 34, Carbondale12Wallenpaupack 20, Pocono Mountain East10

Western Wayne 54, Montrose 6Saturday, Sept. 17

Abington Heights 35, Tunkhannock 6Dunmore 26, West Scranton13Holy Cross 49, Holy Redeemer 24Susquehanna 26, Nanticoke 7Valley View 28, Coughlin 0

Friday's Games(7 p.m.)

Abington Heights at WallenpaupackDunmore at MontroseOld Forge at HonesdaleRiverside at Lackawanna TrailScranton Prep at North PoconoValley View at ScrantonWest Scranton at Delaware ValleyWestern Wayne at Mid Valley

Saturday's GamesCarbondale at Holy Cross,1 p.m.Lakeland at Susquehanna,1 p.m.

S T A T ER A N K I N G S

From The Patriot-News of Harrisburg for the weekofTuesday,Sept.20, withschool’sdistrictinparen-theses, followed by the school’s record and lastweek’s ranking. NR means not ranked. Honorablemention teams listed alphabetically.

CLASS4ATeam (district )..........................................Rec Pvs1. Pittsburgh C.C. (7)...................................3-0 12. North Allegheny (7).................................3-0 2

3. LaSalle College HS (12).........................2-1 44. Upper St. Clair (7)....................................2-1 35. Neshaminy (1)..........................................3-0 76. North Penn (1)..........................................1-2 57. Council Rock South (1)...........................3-0 68. Woodland Hills (7)...................................3-0 89. Downingtown East (1).............................3-0 910. Cumberland Valley (3)..........................3-0 10Teamsto watch: Bethlehem Liberty (11) 2-1, Coa-tesville (1) 3-0, Father Judge (12) 2-1, Gateway (7)3-0,McDowell (10)3-0, Nazareth(11)3-0, Whitehall(11) 3-0, WyomingValley West (2) 3-0.

CLASS3ATeam (district )..........................................Rec Pvs1. Archbishop Wood (12).............................2-1 12. Central Valley (7) ....................................3-0 23. Grove City (10).........................................3-0 44. Hopewell (7).............................................3-0 55. Montour (7)...............................................2-1 66. Bishop McDevitt (3).................................1-2 37. Valley View (2) ........................................3-0 78. Thomas Jefferson (7)..............................2-1 89. Susquehanna Twp. (3)...........................3-0 910. Cathedral Prep (10)................................2-1 10Teamsto watch:AbingtonHeights (2) 2-1,Allen-townC.C.(11)1-2,CardinalO’Hara(12)2-1, Clear-field (9) 3-0, Franklin Regional (7) 3-0, GreaterJohnstown (6) 3-0, West Allegheny (7) 2-1.

CLASS2ATeam (district )..........................................Rec Pvs1. Aliquippa (7)..............................................3-0 12. Lancaster Catholic (3).............................3-0 33. West Catholic (12)...................................0-3 24. North Schuylkill (11) ................................3-0 45. Seton-LaSalle (7)....................................3-0 56. Mount Carmel (4) ....................................3-0 6

7. Trinity (3)...................................................2-1 78. Lewisburg (4) ...........................................2-1 89. Greensburg C.C. (7)...............................3-0 910. Beaver Falls (7)......................................2-1 10Teamstowatch: BeaverArea(7) 3-0,Bloomsburg(4) 2-0, Hickory (10) 3-0, Jeannette (7) 3-0, North-ern Lehigh (11) 3-0, Pen Argyl (11) 3-0, SouthFayette (7) 2-1, Wilmington (10) 3-0.

CLASS4ATeam (district )..........................................Rec Pvs1. Clairton (7)................................................3-0 12. Southern Columbia (4)...........................3-0 23. Rochester (7)...........................................3-0 34. Dunmore (2) ............................................3-0 45. Sto-Rox (7)...............................................3-0 56. Pius X (11) ................................................3-0 67. Bishop McCort (6)...................................3-0 78. Mercyhurst Prep (10)..............................3-0 89. Line Mountain (4).....................................2-1 NR10. Riverside (2) ..........................................2-1 NRTeams to watch: Bishop Canevin (7) 3-0, JuniataValley(6) 3-0,LackawannaTrail(2) 3-0,MahanoyArea (11) 3-0, Marian Catholic (11) 2-1, Monessen(7) 3-0, North Star (5) 3-0, Sharpsville (10) 2-0.

W Y O M I N GV A L L E Y

C O N F E R E N C E

Division4A ......................... W L PF PA C P

Wyoming Valley West........ 3 0 119 35 26Hazleton Area...................... 1 2 53 93 9Will iamsport......................... 1 2 51 54 9

Division3A.......................... W L PF PA C PCrestwood............................ 3 0 94 43 25Dallas.................................... 3 0 76 34 24Pittston Area........................ 2 1 97 74 17Berwick................................. 1 2 64 100 8Coughlin............................... 1 2 62 67 8Tunkhannock....................... 0 3 23 128 0

Division2A-A ..................... W L PF PA C PHanover Area....................... 2 1 78 80 14Northwest (A)....................... 2 1 76 67 14GAR....................................... 2 1 94 60 13Nanticoke.............................. 1 1 55 40 7Wyoming Area..................... 1 1 77 50 7Holy Redeemer.................... 0 3 70 119 0Lake-Lehman....................... 0 3 45 112 0Meyers.................................. 0 3 21 137 0

NOTE: CPis ChampionshipPointstowardthedivi-sional title.Teams get nine points for defeating a Class 4A op-ponent, eight for a Class 3A opponent, seven for aClass2Aopponentandsixfor a ClassA opponent.Theteamwiththe mostChampionshipPointsis thedivision winner.

Friday, Sept.16Crestwood 54, Pittston Area 31Delaware Valley 44, Hazleton Area 7

Lakeland 34, GAR 31Mid Valley 35, Hanover Area 27Old Forge 35, Northwest 8Stroudsburg14, Williamsport 7 OTWyoming Area 43, Lake-Lehman10Wyoming Valley West 47, Pleasant Valley 28

Saturday, Sept.17Abington Heights 35, Tunkhannock 6Dallas 53, Berwick 20Susquehanna 26, Nanticoke 7Holy Cross 49, Holy Redeemer 24Lackawanna Trail 55, Meyers 7Valley View 28, Coughlin 0

Friday's Games(7 p.m.)

Crestwood at East Stroudsburg NorthDallas at Pittston AreaGAR at NorthwestHoly Redeemer at Lake-LehmanMeyers at NanticokeTunkhannock at Hazleton AreaWilliamsport at CoughlinWyoming Valley West at BerwickWyoming Area at Hanover Area

Friday, Sept. 30(7 p.m.)

Coughlin at Wyoming Valley WestDallas at WilliamsportHanover Area at NorthwestLake-Lehman at MeyersNanticoke at Wyoming AreaPittston Area at Hazleton AreaSelinsgrove at Berwick

Saturday, Oct. 1Holy Redeemer at GAR, 7 p.m.Tunkhannock at Crestwood, 7 p.m.

F O O T B A L LB R O A D C A S T

S C H E D U L E

FRIDAYONTHE INTERNET

7 p.m. www.northeastpafootball.com – Dallas atPittston Area7 p.m. www.NanticokeFootball.com – Meyers atNanticoke7 p.m. www.wyomingareafootball.org – WyomingArea at Hanover Area7 p.m. www.WVWSpartanFootball.com – Wyom-ing Valley West at Berwick7 p.m. www.wrak.com – Williamsport at Coughlin

ONTHERADIO7 p.m. WILK (910, 980,1300 AM;103.1 FM ) –Tunkhannock at Hazleton Area7 p.m. WHLM (103.5 FM) – Wyoming Valley Westat Berwick

ON TELEVISION7 p.m. Service Electric Cable – Wyoming Area atHanover Area7 p.m. WYLN – Tunkhannock at Hazleton Area

SATURDAYONTHERADIO

1 p.m. FOX Sports THE GAME (1340, 1400 AM) –Carbondale at Holy Cross

ON TELEVISION

right.

 TruefreshmanSam Ficken trieda 49-yarder at the end of the firsthalf, only tohavehislow,line-driveattemptswatteddownat theline.

PennState’sonlymade fieldgoalof the season came from 43 yardsoutagainst Alabamaby Lewis.

“I’m very concerned about thekicking game, obviously,” Paternosaid.“And wearetryingto get bet-ter at it. A couple of those kids do verywellinpractice,andtheygetintheballgameandgetalittleuptightor I don’t know what. Sometimes yougotta expectsomeof that.”

Butit got worse on Saturday, astheOwlsevenmanagedtoblockanAnthonyFera punt.

“That wasjust absolutecareless-nesson the part ofoneperson who justhadnothadanyproblemspriorto that.

“Ithinkwejustgotalittlebitnon-chalant aboutit and that kid cameupand blockedit.I thoughtontheblocked field goal we might havebeen justa littlebit slow.”

Onethingthatdidn’thelpthe Li-ons in this first month was the de-layed introduction of Fera to thefield.

A full-time punter and kickoff man last season, Fera was also acandidate to take over on fieldgoals this season with the depar-tureof CollinWagner.

Ferawasoriginallyrecruitedas aplacekicker out of high school inHouston, Texas.But afterredshirt-ingin2009,hecouldn’tbeatouttheincumbent Wagnerin 2010.

Ferawas then held outof theopen-ing game and didn’t reclaim hisspotat punteruntilthe secondhalf againstAlabama.

Fera has averaged 44.6 yards oneight punts, a sizable bump from

backup Alex Butterworth’s 38.7- yard average.

 With Fera back in full capacityandtheLionsdesperatetoimproveon field goals, it’s not out of thequestion thesophomore could geta shot thereas well.

“Fera has got a chance to comebacknowand hopefully he’ll getinthegroove,”Paternosaid.“Feradidnotpracticewithusin preseasoninsome places because of some off-the-fieldantics.So he’s nowgetting backin thegroove.

“Hopefullyhe’llstarttoputsomeofthatstuffbehindhimandhe’llbemaybe more productive than he’sbeen. And maybe he can beat outthe kid that’s ahead of him rightnow(Lewis).I don’t know.”

 The situation isn’t as direin thereturn game, though coaches andplayers both acknowledge there isroomfor improvement.

 TheLionsrank53rdinthe coun-try in kick returns (22.55 ypr)thanks in large part to Chaz Po- well’s 95-yardscoreto open theIn-diana State game. In puntreturns,Penn State ranks 59th (7.69 ypr)  which is actually a bit improvedfromrecent years.

Powelland DevonSmith arethetopoptionsonkickoffswhileJustinBrown and Smith often both lineup for punt returns. Senior DerekMoye has alsoappeared there thisseason.

For now, however, the focus re-mains onfieldgoalsand punts.

“Our kickinggameneeds to get

PSUContinued from Page1B

he said, reading from a chart.

“Dustin Johnson has to finishsixth or worse. Justin and Lukehave to finish fourth or worse, which isn’t going to happen be-cause Luke doesn’t finish out of thetopthreeanymore,doeshe?”

 That’s when he shifted to aprize that might be just as mea-ningful.

“I’d love to win this golf tour-nament,” Ogilvy said. “That  would be nice because peopleare forgetting this one of thetour’s special golf tournaments— The Players Championship,the Tour Championship, the Tournament of Champions. It’sstill the Tour Championship,andit wouldbe prettyspecialtohave a Tour Championship on your mantle.

“I guess I’ll view it like thatand try to win,” he said. “And if the right things happen, that would be great.”

 TheFedExCup isfinishingupitsfifthyear,andwhilesomepro-motional bluster created moreskeptics than supporters in theearlygoing,it ishardto findfault withwhat theplayoffs have pro-duced — four straight tourna-ments with the strongest fields, withonlythe best walking away withthe $10 millionprize.Tiger Woodshas wontwice,with VijaySingh and Jim Furyk the othercup champions.

“I think the system has been  validated because it’s had thebiggest names in golf as its

champions,” Kucharsaid.  The leading five candidates

thisyearallareamongthetop20in the world, including top-ranked Donald.

 There is reason for others tohope, however, and all that re-quires is a chat with Nick Wat-ney.

A year ago, Watney narrowlygotinto the TourChampionshipat No. 28 and was 12 shots be-hindgoinginto theweekend. Inthe final hour, he was one shotofftheleadandhad a legitimatechancetowintheFedExCupun-tila bogeyon the16thhole.

“I was thinking I had nochance,” Watney said. “Kuchar wasleading theFedEx Cup,andhe was playing so consistently. They said I had to win and hehadto finishworsethan25thorsomething. Therewere so manymathematical scenarios. It waslike theBCS.”

His message for the guysrankedtowardthebottomof theFedEx Cup list was to thinkabout winning— notthe FedExCup, but a season-ending tour-nament that still packs someprestige.

OGILVYContinued from Page1B

8/4/2019 Times Leader 09-22-2011

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/times-leader-09-22-2011 16/45

C M Y K

PAGE 4B THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com➛ S P O R T S

LIVE High School Football

Tune into Service Electric’s Ch. 2

Friday Sept. 23rd

 Wyoming Area @ Hanover 7pm

For a complete schedule go to

NEW YORK — Jorge Posadacame off the bench and helpedthe Yankees to yet anotherfirst-place finish with a go-ahead single in the eighthinning, and New York sweptthe Tampa Bay Rays by identi-cal 4-2 scores in a day-nightdoubleheader Wednesday to win the AL East.

Accomplishing most of theirregular-season goals with a week to spare, the Yankeesearned their 16th playoff berth

in 17 seasons by winning theday game behind RobinsonCano’s tiebreaking, two-rundouble in the eighth.

 They didn’t bother cele-brating after that one — Yan-kees blase at its best — but vowed to let loose when theyensured the division crown. They made good on that prom-ise, donning goggles and spray-ing the bubbly in the club-house.

For the Rays, it was a damag-ing day as they missed achance to move up on Bostonin the AL wild-card race. TheRed Sox lost to Baltimore 6-4,but still extended their leadover Tampa Bay to 21 ⁄  2 games. The Los Angeles Angels alsoare 21 ⁄  2 games behind.

 The Yankees’ clincher fellinto place after a 62-minuterain delay. A month past his40th birthday and his rolereduced, Posada pinch-hit withthe bases loaded and two outs with the score 2-all. He hit ahard, two-run single to right off Brandon Gomes and pumped afist as he ran up the first-baseline.

Posada’s hit propelled NewYork to its 12th AL East title in16 years and came about 50minutes after the second-placeRed Sox blew a three-run leadand lost.

Orioles 6, Red Sox 4

BOSTON — The reeling Boston Red Sox blew anotherlate lead and lost for the 14thtime in 18 games, beaten whenVladimir Guerrero and theBaltimore Orioles rallied for a win .

Boston began the day with atwo-game edge over TampaBay for the AL wild-card spot. The Rays lost the opener of aday-night doubleheader to theNew York Yankees 4-2.

Angels7,BlueJays 2

 TORONTO — Dan Haren’souting ended after he was hitby a line drive on the final outof the eighth inning, PeterBourjos and Vernon Wellshomered, and the Los AngelesAngels beat the Toronto BlueJays 7-1 on Wednesday night.

White Sox 8, Indians4

CLEVELAND — MarkBuehrle bounced back from apoor outing and pitched sixeffective innings, leading theChicago White Sox past theCleveland Indians.

Mariners5, Twins 4

MINNEAPOLIS — Ichiro

Suzuki stopped Kevin Slowey’sno-hitter with a two-out infieldsingle in the sixth inning andadded an RBI double in theseventh, spurring the SeattleMariners to a victory in Minne-sota, the 11th straight defeatfor the Twins.

Tigers 6, Royals 3

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Ra-mon Santiago drove in thego-ahead run in the eighthinning, Don Kelly added atwo-run homer and the Detroit Tigers beat the Kansas CityRoyals.

A M E R I C A N L E A G U E R O U N D U P

Posada’s hit liftsYanks to crownThe Associated Press

PHILADELPHIA — DannyEspinosa and Wilson Ramoseach hit two-run home runs tohelp the Washington Nationalsbeat Philadelphia 7-5 on  Wednesday, sending the NLEast-champion Phillies to theirseason-worst fifth straightloss.

 The Phillies have been in afunk since they clinched their

fifth straight division title onSaturday. They’ve lost fivestraight games for the firsttime since May 22-27, 2010.All of the losses have come athome, where the Phillies aretied for the major league lead with 52 victories.

Diamondbacks 8, Pirates 5

PHOENIX — Miguel Mon-tero had a two-run homeramong his three hits and theArizona Diamondbacks jump-ed on the Pittsburgh Piratesearly in a win that cut theirmagic number for clinching the NL West to two.

Cubs 7, Brewers 1

CHICAGO — Matt Garzapitched a six-hitter, MarlonByrd hit a three-run homerand the Chicago Cubs pro-longed Milwaukee’s drive toclinch the NL Central, beating the Brewers in the final gameat Wrigley Field this season.

Reds 2, Astros 0

CINCINNATI — Bronson

Arroyo pitched a six-hitter andthe Cincinnati Reds wrappedup their home schedule with a win over the Houston Astros.

Padres 4, Rockies 0

DENVER — Rookie Antho-ny Bass pitched five solidinnings to help the San DiegoPadres complete a rare three-game sweep of the ColoradoRockies with a win in the last

game of the season at CoorsField.

Marlins 4, Braves 0

MIAMI — Struggling tosecure a postseason berth, theAtlanta Braves were thwartedby a playoff-caliber pitching performance.

Javier Vazquez allowed onlytwo hits in seven innings  Wednesday against his formerteam, and the Florida Marlinsplayed the spoiler’s role bybeating Atlanta 4-0.

Cardinals 6, Mets 5

ST. LOUIS — David Freesedrove in five runs with a tripleand a three-run homer, andthe surging St. Louis Cardi-nals beat the New York Mets.

 The Cardinals have wonfour straight and 12 of 14 tomove within 11 ⁄  2 games of Atlanta in the NationalLeague wild-card race. St.Louis, a season-high 17 over.500 (86-69), has seven gamesleft and will go for a sweep of the Mets on Thursday.

N AT I O N A L L E A G U E R O U N D U P

Nationals hand Philsfifth straight defeatThe Associated Press

STANDINGS/STATS

S T A N D I N G S

All Times EDTAMERICAN LEAGUE

East Division

W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Awayx-N ew Yor k.... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 9 5 6 0 .6 13 — — 7 -3 W -4 5 0- 27 4 5- 33Boston............................................ 88 68 .564 71 ⁄ 2 — 3-7 L-2 45-36 43-32Tampa Bay..................................... 85 70 .548 10 21 ⁄ 2 4 -6 L -3 4 2- 33 4 3- 37Toronto........................................... 78 77 .503 17 91 ⁄ 2 6 -4 L -2 4 1- 39 3 7- 38Baltimore........................................ 65 90 .419 30 221 ⁄ 2 7 -3 W -2 3 7- 41 2 8- 49

Central DivisionW L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Away

x-D etr oi t.. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 9 0 6 5 .58 1 — — 7 -3 W -1 4 5- 29 4 5- 36Cleveland.................................... 76 78 .494 131 ⁄ 2 11 4-6 L-2 40-36 36-42Chicago ...................................... 76 79 .490 14 111 ⁄ 2 3 -7 W -2 3 3- 42 4 3- 37Kansas City................................ 68 88 .436 221 ⁄ 2 20 8-2 L-1 40-41 28-47Minnesota................................... 59 95 .383 301 ⁄ 2 2 8 0 -1 0 L -1 1 3 0- 47 2 9- 48

West DivisionW L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Away

T exas..... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . 8 9 6 5 .57 8 — — 8 -2 W -3 4 9- 29 4 0- 36Los Angeles................................. 85 70 .548 41 ⁄ 2 21 ⁄ 2 5 -5 W -2 4 4- 31 4 1- 39O aklan d ..... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . 6 9 8 5 .44 8 2 0 1 8 4 -6 L -2 4 2- 37 2 7- 48Seattle........................................... 66 89 .426 231 ⁄ 2 211 ⁄ 2 5 -5 W -3 3 8- 43 2 8- 46

NATIONAL LEAGUEEast Division

W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Awayx-Phi la de lp hi a .... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 9 8 5 7 .6 3 2 — — 4 -6 L -5 5 2- 28 4 6- 29Atlanta........................................... 88 68 .564 101 ⁄ 2 — 4-6 L-1 47-31 41-37Washington.................................. 75 79 .487 221 ⁄ 2 12 8 -2 W- 4 42 -3 5 3 3- 44New York...................................... 73 82 .471 25 141 ⁄ 2 2 -8 L -2 3 1- 44 4 2- 38Florida........................................... 71 85 .455 271 ⁄ 2 17 4 -6 W- 1 30 -4 5 4 1- 40

Central DivisionW L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Away

Mil wa ukee ..... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . 9 1 6 5 .5 83 — — 6 -4 L -1 5 2- 23 3 9- 42St. Louis..................................... 86 69 .555 41 ⁄ 2 11 ⁄ 2 8 -2 W -4 4 3- 34 4 3- 35C in ci nn ati .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 7 6 8 0 .48 7 1 5 1 2 5 -5 W -2 4 2- 39 3 4- 41C hi ca go ..... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . 6 9 8 7 .44 2 2 2 1 9 5 -5 W -1 3 9- 42 3 0- 45Pittsb ur gh ..... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 6 9 8 7 .44 2 2 2 1 9 3 -7 L -1 3 4- 44 3 5- 43Houston...................................... 53 102 .342 371 ⁄ 2 341 ⁄ 2 4 -6 L -2 2 8- 46 2 5- 56

West DivisionW L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Away

Ari zo na ...... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . 9 0 6 6 .57 7 — — 5 -5 W -1 4 7- 28 4 3- 38San F ra ncisco ..... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . 8 3 7 1 .5 3 9 6 4 8 -2 L -1 4 4- 34 3 9- 37Los Angeles................................. 77 76 .503 111 ⁄ 2 91 ⁄ 2 6 -4 W -4 4 1- 38 3 6- 38Colorado....................................... 70 85 .452 191 ⁄ 2 171 ⁄ 2 2 -8 L -7 3 8- 43 3 2- 42San D ie go ...... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . 6 8 8 8 .43 6 2 2 2 0 6 -4 W -3 3 2- 43 3 6- 45

x-clinched division

AMERICAN LEAGUETuesday's Games

Cleveland 4, Chicago White Sox 3, 1st gameChicago White Sox 5, Cleveland 4, 2nd gameN.Y. Yankees 5, Tampa Bay 0L.A. Angels10, Toronto 6Baltimore 7, Boston 5Kansas City10, Detroit 2Seattle 5, Minnesota 4Texas 7, Oakland 2

Wednesday's GamesN.Y. Yankees 4, Tampa Bay 2,1st gameChicago White Sox 8, Cleveland 4N.Y. Yankees 4, Tampa Bay 2, 2nd gameL.A. Angels 7, Toronto 2Baltimore 6, Boston 4Detroit 6, Kansas City 3Seattle 5, Minnesota 4Texas at Oakland, (n)

Thursday's GamesSeattle (Beavan 5-5) at Minnesota (Swarzak 3-7),1:10 p.m.Texas (C.Lewis 13-10) at Oakland (Cahill 11-14),3:35 p.m.Baltimore (Britton 10-10) at Detroit (Ja.Turner 0-1),7:05 p.m.Chicago White Sox (Humber 9-8) at Cleveland(J.Gomez 4-2), 7:05 p.m.

TampaBay(Niemann11-7) atN.Y.Yankees(Colon8-9), 7:05 p.m.L.A. Angels (E.Santana 11-12) at Toronto (H.Alva-rez1-2), 7:07 p.m.

Friday's GamesBaltimore at Detroit, 7:05 p.m.Boston at N.Y. Yankees, 7:05 p.m.Minnesota at Cleveland, 7:05 p.m.Toronto at Tampa Bay, 7:10 p.m.Seattle at Texas, 8:05 p.m.Kansas City at Chicago White Sox, 8:10 p.m.Oakland at L.A. Angels, 10:05 p.m.

NATIONAL LEAGUETuesday's Games

Washington4, Philadelphia3, 10innings,1stgameWashington 3, Philadelphia 0, 2nd gameAtlanta 4, Florida 0Cincinnati 6, Houston 4Milwaukee 5, Chicago Cubs 1St. Louis 11, N.Y. Mets 6San Diego 2, Colorado1Pittsburgh 5, Arizona 3L.A. Dodgers 2, San Francisco1

Wednesday's GamesCincinnati 2, Houston 0Chicago Cubs 7, Milwaukee1San Diego 4, Colorado 0Arizona 8, Pittsburgh 5Washington 7, Philadelphia 5Florida 4, Atlanta 0St. Louis 6, N.Y. Mets 5San Francisco at L.A. Dodgers, (n)

Thursday's GamesN.Y.Mets(Capuano11-12)atSt. Louis(Westbrook12-9),1:45 p.m.Washington (Peacock1-0) at Philadelphia (Oswalt8-9), 7:05 p.m.Colorado (White 2-2) at Houston (Sosa 2-5), 8:05p.m.San Francisco (Bumgarner 12-12) at L.A. Dodgers(Kuroda12-16),10:10 p.m.

Friday's GamesAtlanta at Washington, 7:05 p.m.Cincinnati at Pittsburgh, 7:05 p.m.Philadelphia at N.Y. Mets, 7:10 p.m.Colorado at Houston, 8:05 p.m.Florida at Milwaukee, 8:10 p.m.Chicago Cubs at St. Louis, 8:15 p.m.San Francisco at Arizona, 9:40 p.m.L.A. Dodgers at San Diego,10:05 p.m.

N L B O X E S

Nationals 7, Phillies 5Washi ngton P hi ladelphi a

ab r h bi ab r h biDs mn d s s 5 0 1 0 R oll ins s s 5 0 0 0B er nd n r f 5 0 1 0 Vi ct or n c f 4 0 0 0Z mr mn 3b 4 0 0 0 P ol an c 3b 4 0 0 0Morse lf 4 1 2 0 Utley 2b 3 1 0 0B ix le r p r- lf 0 0 0 0 M ay rr y 1 b 4 3 3 2E sp in os 2 b 4 2 1 2 Ib an ez l f 4 1 2 1M ar re r 1b 4 2 2 0 BF rnc s r f 4 0 3 1Ankiel cf 4 1 0 0 Schndr c 4 0 1 0WRams c 3 1 3 4 Worley p 2 0 1 1Lannan p 1 0 0 0 Moss ph 1 0 0 0Cora ph 1 0 0 0 Blant on p 0 0 0 0Stmmn p 0 0 0 0 DeFrts p 0 0 0 0J Go ms p h 0 0 0 1 Ba st rd p 0 0 0 0S ev er in p 0 0 0 0 S ch wm p 0 0 0 0

Coff ey p 0 0 0 0 Gload ph 1 0 0 0HRdrgz p 0 0 0 0Tot als 3 5 71 0 7 To tal s 36 5 10 5Washington....................... 020 002 030 — 7Philadelphia....................... 021 000 020 — 5E—W.Ramos(5), Bastardo(1).DP—Washington1.L OB—W ashi ng to n 8 , Phi la de lp hi a 6 .2B—Bernadina (11), Marrero (5). HR—Espinosa(21), W.Ramos (14), Mayberry (15). SB—Mayberry(8). CS—Bixler (3). S—Lannan. SF—J.Gomes.

IP H R ER BB SOWashingtonLan nan W, 10 -1 3. .. .. . 5 8 3 3 1 3S tam men H, 1 ... .. .. .. . 2 1 0 0 0 1Severino................... 1 ⁄ 3 1 2 2 1 1Coffey H,10.............. 2 ⁄ 3 0 0 0 0 1H. Rodriguez S, 1-4 .. 1 0 0 0 0 1PhiladelphiaWo rle y L, 11 -3 ... .. .. .. . 6 6 4 4 3 6B lan to n .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . 1 1 0 0 0 1D e F rat us .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 0 0 2 1 1 0Ba st ar do .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . 1 2 1 1 0 1S ch wi me r .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . 1 1 0 0 0 0De Fratus pitched to 2 batters in the 8th.HBP—by De Fratus (Espinosa).

Marlins 4, Braves 0Atlanta Florida

ab r h bi ab r h biB ou rn c f 4 0 0 0 Bo nif ac s s 4 0 1 0P ra do 3 b- lf 4 0 1 0 In fan te 2 b 4 0 0 0McCnn c 1 0 0 0 Dobbs 3b 4 0 0 0Ug gl a 2b 4 0 0 0 D mn gz 3 b 0 0 0 0F re mn 1 b 3 0 0 0 St an to n r f 4 2 2 0He yw rd r f 4 0 1 0 M or rs n l f 4 1 2 1J aW ls n s s 3 0 0 0 GS nc hz 1 b 3 0 2 1C on st nz l f 2 0 0 0 P et er sn c f 2 0 0 1

Hi ns ke p h 1 0 0 0 Hay es c 2 1 1 1Varv ar p 0 0 0 0 Vazquz p 2 0 0 0D. Lo we p 2 0 0 0 Jo Ba kr p h 1 0 0 0Li ne rnk p 0 0 0 0 Mu jic a p 0 0 0 0C.Jonesph-3b 1 0 0 0 LNunez p 0 0 0 0Totals 29 0 2 0 Totals 30 4 8 4Atlanta................................ 000 000 000 — 0Florida................................ 010 011 01x — 4LOB—Atlanta 6, Florida 5. 2B—Heyward (18), Bo-nifacio (24), Stanton (28), G.Sanchez (33). HR—Morrison(22),Hayes(5).SB—Bonifacio(39).SF—Petersen.

IP H R ER BB SOAtlantaD.Lowe L,9-16......... 61 ⁄ 3 6 3 3 2 3Linebrink.................. 2 ⁄ 3 0 0 0 0 1V ar va ro .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . 1 2 1 1 0 1FloridaVaz quez W, 12-11 ... 7 2 0 0 1 6M uj ic a H ,1 7. .. .. .. .. .. .. . 1 0 0 0 0 2L .N un ez .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 1 0 0 0 2 0

Cubs 7, Brewers 1Milwaukee Chicago

ab r h bi ab r h biC .H ar t r f 4 0 1 0 SC as tr o s s 3 1 2 1M or gan c f 4 0 1 0 L eM ah i 3 b 5 1 2 2Braun lf 4 0 0 0 RJhnsn rf 4 0 1 0F ie ld er 1 b 3 0 0 0 J eBa kr 2 b 3 1 1 0R We ks 2 b 3 0 0 0 De Wi tt p h 1 0 0 0Fiers p 0 0 0 0 Barney 2b 0 0 0 0Counsll ph 1 0 0 0 Soto c 4 1 3 1Hrst nJr 3b 4 0 2 0 Byrd cf 4 1 1 3Y Bt nc r s s 4 1 1 0 A So rin lf 4 1 2 0K ot ta rs c 4 0 1 0 Cam pn l f 0 0 0 0Wolf p 1 0 0 0 LaHair 1b 3 1 1 0

Loe p 0 0 0 0 Garza p 3 0 0 0TGreenph-2b 1 0 0 0Tot als 3 3 1 6 0 To tal s 34 71 3 7Milwaukee.......................... 001 000 000 — 1Chicago.............................. 001 023 10x — 7E—S.Castro (28), LeMahieu (3). DP—Milwaukee1, Chicago 2. LOB—Milwaukee 7, Chicago 7.2B—HairstonJr. (18),S.Castro(35),LeMahieu(2),Soto(26),A.Soriano(27),LaHair(5).HR—Byrd(9).S—Garza.

IP H R ER BB SOMilwaukeeW ol f L ,1 3- 10 . .. .. .. .. .. . 6 1 0 6 6 1 5L oe ..... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . 1 3 1 1 0 1F ie rs..... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . 1 0 0 0 2 0ChicagoG ar za W ,9 -1 0. .. .. .. .. . 9 6 1 0 1 1 0HBP—by Garza (Wolf).

Diamondbacks 8, Pirates 5Pittsburgh Arizona

ab r h bi ab r h biP re sl ey l f 5 0 1 0 Blm qs t s s 5 1 1 0Ciriaco ss 3 0 0 0 Put z p 0 0 0 0DMcCt p 0 0 0 0 A.Hill 2b 3 1 2 2G Jo ne s p h 1 0 0 0 J .U pt on r f 3 1 1 1Meek p 0 0 0 0 MMntr c 4 2 3 2R es op p 0 0 0 0 CY ou ng c f 4 1 2 1P au l p h 1 0 0 0 Ov er ay 1 b 2 1 0 0AM cC t c f 4 1 1 0 RR or ts 3b 4 1 1 2D .L ee 1 b 4 1 3 2 GP ar ra l f 4 0 1 0Walker 2b 4 1 1 0 Miley p 1 0 0 0L udw ck r f 4 1 1 1 Br rgh s ph 1 0 0 0B rW od 3 b- ss 3 0 1 0 O wi ng s p 0 0 0 0P Al vr z p h- 3b 1 0 1 0 S haw p 0 0 0 0P ag nz z c 3 0 0 0 Zi eg ler p 0 0 0 0J ar ml l p h- c 1 0 1 1 Pat er sn p 0 0 0 0Ohlndrf p 1 0 0 0 Blum ph 1 0 0 0J Hu gh s p 0 0 0 0 J Mc Dn l s s 0 0 0 0Moskos p 0 0 0 0JHrrsn ph-3b 2 1 1 0D oum it p h 1 0 0 0d Ar nad s s 0 0 0 0Tot als 3 8 5 11 4 Tot als 3 2 8 11 8Pittsburgh .......................... 010 101 110 — 5Arizona............................... 305 000 00x — 8DP—Pittsburgh 1. LOB—Pittsburgh 7, Arizona 5.2B—A.McCutchen(33),Br.Wood(9),Jaramillo(1),J.Harrison (12), C.Young (37), R.Roberts (24).HR—D.Lee (7), Ludwick (13), M.Montero (18).SB—Bloomquist (19), A.Hill (3), C.Young (21),Overbay (2), G.Parra (14). CS—A.Hill (4). SF—J.Upton.

IP H R ER BB SOPittsburghO hl end or f L, 1- 3. .. .. .. 2 7 7 7 2 1J .H ug he s. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . 1 2 1 1 1 1M os ko s. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 1 1 0 0 0 0D .M cC ut ch en . ... .. .. .. 2 1 0 0 0 1M ee k. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 1 0 0 0 0 1R es op . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 1 0 0 0 0 0Arizona

M il ey W ,4 -2 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 5 5 2 2 1 3O wi ng s .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . 1 2 1 1 0 0S haw . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 1 1 1 1 0 1Ziegler ...................... 2 ⁄ 3 3 1 1 0 1Paterson H,10.......... 1 ⁄ 3 0 0 0 0 0P ut z S ,4 3- 47 .. .. .. .. .. .. 1 0 0 0 0 3Ohlendorf pitched to 4 batters in the 3rd.HBP—by Ohlendorf (A.Hill). WP—Shaw.Umpires—Home,Mike Muchlinski;First,Brian Gor-man;Second, Tony Randazzo;Third, Larry Vanov-er.T—3:03. A—25,296 (48,633).

Reds 2, Astros 0Houston Cincinnati

ab r h bi ab r h biJ Sc ha fr c f 4 0 0 0 BP hl lp s 2 b 4 1 3 0S hu ck r f 4 0 0 0 R ent er i s s 3 0 0 0J Mr tn z l f 4 0 1 0 Jan is h s s 0 0 0 0Ca .L ee 1 b 4 0 1 0 V ot to 1b 3 0 0 0M Dw ns 2 b 3 0 0 0 H eis ey c f 3 0 1 1CJ hn sn 3 b 3 0 2 0 B ru ce r f 3 0 0 0Ba rm es s s 3 0 0 0 Ca ir o 3 b 4 1 1 1T owl es c 3 0 2 0 S ap pe lt l f 3 0 0 0WRdrg p 2 0 0 0 Mesorc c 3 0 0 0B og sv c ph 1 0 0 0 A rr oy o p 2 0 0 0

DCrpnt p 0 0 0 0Totals 31 0 6 0 Totals 28 2 5 2Houston.............................. 000 000 000 — 0Cincinnati........................... 110 000 00x — 2E—C.Johnson (14), Renteria (13). DP—Cincinnati3. LOB—Houston 4, Cincinnati 7. 2B—C.Johnson(21), Towles (7). HR—Cairo (8). SB—B.Phillips(12). S—Renteria.

IP H R ER BB SOHoustonW.RodriguezL ,1 1- 11 . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 7 4 2 2 2 4D .C ar pe nt er .. .. .. .. .. .. . 1 1 0 0 2 1CincinnatiA rr oy o W, 9- 12 .. .. .. .. . 9 6 0 0 0 2Balk—D.Carpenter.Umpires—Home,Sam Holbrook;First,Paul Schrie-ber;Second, Chad Fairchild;Third, Angel Campos.T—2:12. A—20,875 (42,319).

Padres 4, Rockies 0San Diego Colorado

ab r h bi ab r h biM ay bi n c f 5 1 1 0 EY ong lf 4 0 2 0He rm id r f 4 1 0 0 M. El lis 2 b 4 0 0 0De nor fi l f 4 1 1 0 F ow le r c f 4 0 2 0He adl y 3b 2 0 0 1 Tl wt zk s s 2 0 0 0Grgrsn p 0 0 0 0 MtRynl p 0 0 0 0Cn ghm p h 1 0 0 0 Lnd st r p 0 0 0 0Qu al ls p 0 0 0 0 N el so n p h 1 0 1 0Thtchr p 0 0 0 0 Belisle p 0 0 0 0H. Bell p 0 0 0 0 GRynld p 0 0 0 0LM rt nz c 2 1 1 0 Wg gnt n p h 1 0 0 0AlGnzlzss-3b 3 0 1 1 S.Smith rf 4 0 0 0Ri zz o 1 b 4 0 2 1 Pa che c 1b 3 0 1 0P ar ri no 2 b 4 0 1 1 K zm nf f 3 b 3 0 0 0Bass p 2 0 0 0 Iannett c 2 0 0 0Frieri p 0 0 0 0 A. Cook p 1 0 0 0Ba rt le tt p h- ss 2 0 2 0 F ie ld s s 2 0 0 0

Totals 33 4 9 4 Totals 31 0 6 0San Diego.......................... 400 000 000 — 4Colorado............................ 000 000 000 — 0DP—SanDiego2, Colorado1.LOB—SanDiego7,Colorado 5. 2B—Maybin (22), Fowler (32). SB—E.Young(24), Iannetta(6). SF—Headley,Alb.Gon-zalez.

IP H R ER BB SOSanDiegoBa ss W, 2- 0 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 5 2 0 0 1 1F ri er i . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 1 1 0 0 0 1G re ge rs on .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 1 1 0 0 0 0Q ua ll s .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . 1 0 0 0 0 0Thatcher................... 1 ⁄ 3 2 0 0 0 0H.Bell S,41-46......... 2 ⁄ 3 0 0 0 0 2ColoradoA. Co ok L ,3 -10 . .. .. .. .. 5 6 4 4 2 8M at .R ey no ld s. .. .. .. .. .. 1 0 0 0 0 0L in ds tr om . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 1 1 0 0 0 1Bel is le ..... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 1 0 0 0 1 1G .R ey no ld s. .. .. .. .. .. .. . 1 2 0 0 0 1Bass pitched to1 batter in the 6th.

Cardinals 6, Mets 5New York St. Louis

ab r h bi ab r h biJ os Ry s s s 4 1 1 0 Fu rc al s s 3 0 0 0Pagan cf 4 1 0 0 Craig lf 4 0 1 1DW rgh t 3 b 4 1 1 0 Pu nt o 2 b 0 0 0 0Duda rf 0 0 0 0 Pujols 1b 4 2 2 0S at in p h- 1b 2 0 1 2 Br km n r f 3 2 1 0P rid ie p h 1 0 0 0 C Pt tr sn lf 0 0 0 0E van s 1 b- rf 4 0 0 0 F re es e 3 b 4 1 2 5Ha rr is l f 4 1 3 1 Des ca ls 3 b 0 0 0 0RPauln c 3 0 0 0 Jay cf 4 0 0 0Thole ph 1 0 0 0 Motte p 0 0 0 0J uT rnr 2 b 3 0 0 0 Y Mo li n c 3 1 2 0S ch wn d p 2 1 1 0 Sc hm kr 2 b 4 0 1 0P as cc c p h 1 0 0 0 SR on sn r f 0 0 0 0Bat is ta p 0 0 0 0 JGa rc i p 3 0 0 0

DH er rr p 0 0 0 0 C ham rs c f 1 0 0 0Beato p 0 0 0 0P ar ne ll p 0 0 0 0Totals 33 5 7 3 Totals 33 6 9 6New York........................... 004 000 001 — 5St. Louis............................. 210 000 30x — 6E—Furcal (13), Freese (11). DP—St. Louis 3.LOB—New York 2, St. Louis 6. 2B—Jos.Reyes(30), Satin (1), Pujols (27), Schumaker (17).3B—Freese (1). HR—Harris (2), Freese (10).

IP H R ER BB SONewYorkS ch wi nd en . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 6 6 3 3 2 5Batista H,7................ 2 ⁄ 3 1 1 1 0 1D. He rr er a L ,0 -1 ... .. .. 0 1 1 1 0 0Beato BS,1-1........... 1 ⁄ 3 1 1 1 0 0P ar ne ll . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . 1 0 0 0 0 1St. LouisJ.Garcia W,13-7...... 72 ⁄ 3 6 4 0 0 5Motte S,8-12............ 11 ⁄ 3 1 1 1 0 2

A L B O X E S

Yankees 4, Rays 2First Game

Tampa Bay New Yorkab r h bi ab r h bi

J nn ng s l f 5 1 1 2 G ar dn r c f- lf 4 1 1 0BUp to n c f 5 0 2 0 Jet er s s 3 2 2 0L on go ri 3 b 5 0 1 0 C an o d h- 2b 4 0 1 2J oy ce r f 3 0 2 0 AlR dr g 3 b 4 0 1 1

D am on d h 3 0 0 0Swisherrf-1b 4 0 0 0

K tc hm 1 b 3 0 1 0 MaR iv r p 0 0 0 0L oat on c 3 0 1 0 Pos ad a 1 b 2 0 0 0EJh nsn 2 b 2 1 1 0 D i ckr sn p r- rf 0 0 0 0SRdrgzph-2b 1 0 0 0 AnJons lf 2 0 0 0

Zobrist ph-2b 1 0 0 0Grndrsph-cf 1 0 0 0

B ri gn c s s 4 0 0 0 E Nu ne z 2 b 3 1 2 1T ei xe ir 1 b 0 0 0 0

Au Rm n c 2 0 0 0E rC hv z p h 1 0 0 0RM ar tn c 0 0 0 0

Totals 35 2 9 2 Totals 30 4 7 4Tampa Bay......................... 002 000 000 — 2New York........................... 100 000 03x — 4DP—TampaBay1. LOB—TampaBay10,New York4. 2B—Kotchman (24), E.Johnson (7), Cano (46),Al.Rodriguez (21). HR—Jennings (10), E.Nunez(5). SB—B.Upton (31), Gardner (46), E.Nunez 2(21).

IP H R ER BB SOTampa BayShields L,15-12....... 71 ⁄ 3 6 4 4 2 7H ow el l. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 0 1 0 0 0 0B.Gomes.................. 2 ⁄ 3 0 0 0 0 1New YorkNoesi ........................ 22 ⁄ 3 4 2 2 1 2Valdes ...................... 11 ⁄ 3 1 0 0 1 3Kontos...................... 2 ⁄ 3 1 0 0 0 0Laffey........................ 2 ⁄ 3 1 0 0 0 1Wade........................ 11 ⁄ 3 1 0 0 0 1Logan........................ 2 ⁄ 3 1 0 0 0 0Ayala W,2-2 ............. 2 ⁄ 3 0 0 0 0 2Ma. Rivera S,44-49 . 1 0 0 0 0 1Howell pitched to1 batter in the 8th.HBP—by Logan (Kotchman), by Laffey (Joyce).

Yankees 4, Rays 2SecondGame

Tampa Bay New Yorkab r h bi ab r h bi

J nn ng s l f 4 0 1 0 Ga rdn r l f 2 0 0 0BU pt on c f 4 0 2 0 Sw is he r p h 1 0 1 0L on go ri 3 b 2 0 0 0 G o lson p r- rf 0 1 0 0Z ob ri st 2 b 4 0 0 0 G rn dr s c f 4 1 1 0D am on d h 4 0 0 0 Te ix ei r 1 b 2 1 0 0S Rd rgz s s 3 1 2 1 Can o 2 b 2 1 1 1D Jh ns n p h 1 0 0 0 J Mo nt r d h 3 0 0 0

Ktc hm 1b 4 0 2 0Posadaph-dh 1 0 1 2

Gu ye r r f 3 0 0 0 Er Ch vz 3 b 3 0 0 0Joyce ph 1 0 0 0 RMartn c 3 0 0 0S hp pc h c 3 1 1 1 Di ck rs n r f- lf 3 0 0 0

ENu ne z ss 3 0 0 0Totals 33 2 8 2 Totals 27 4 4 3Tampa Bay......................... 000 010 100 — 2New York........................... 010 100 02x — 4E—Cano (10). DP—Tampa Bay 1, New York 3.LOB—Tampa Bay 6, New York 5. 2B—Swisher(28), Granderson (26). HR—S.Rodriguez (8),Shoppach (9), Cano (27).

IP H R ER BB SOTampa BayH el li ck so n .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 7 2 2 2 4 3McGee L,3-2............ 2 ⁄ 3 1 1 1 0 1J .C ru z .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . 0 0 1 1 1 0C .R am os . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . 0 0 0 0 1 0B.Gomes.................. 1 ⁄ 3 1 0 0 0 0NewYorkSabathia ................... 7 1 ⁄ 3 7 2 2 2 6Robertson W,4-0.... 2 ⁄ 3 0 0 0 0 0

R .S or ian o S ,2- 4 .. .. .. 1 1 0 0 0 1J.Cruz pitched to1 batter in the 8th.C.Ramos pitched to1 batter in the 8th.WP—Hellickson.Umpires—Home, Brian Knight;First, Fieldin Cul-breth;Second, John Hirschbeck;Third, Wally Bell.T—3:00. A—45,586 (50,291).

Angels 7, Blue Jays 2L os Ang el es Tor on to

ab r h bi ab r h biM Iz tu rs 2 b 5 0 3 2 Mc Co y s s 4 0 0 0Aybar ss 4 0 2 0 EThms lf 4 1 1 1BA re u d h 5 0 0 0 Bau ti st r f 4 0 1 0T rHn tr r f 5 1 1 0 Lo ewe n p r 0 1 0 0T rumo 1b 5 1 1 0 Lind 1b 3 0 1 0C al la sp 3 b 4 1 2 0 E nc rn c 3 b 4 0 1 0V .W el ls l f 5 1 2 4 KJ hn sn 2 b 3 0 2 1B ou rjo s c f 4 3 3 1 Ar en ci i c 4 0 0 0Mathis c 4 0 0 0 Rasms cf 3 0 0 0

C oo pe r d h 3 0 0 0Tot als 4 1 7 14 7 Tot als 3 2 2 6 2

Los Angeles....................... 001 012 030 — 7Toronto............................... 000 001 001 — 2E—Arencibia (6). DP—Los Angeles 1. LOB—LosAngeles 9, Toronto 5. 2B—Aybar (33), Tor.Hunter(22), Trumbo (31), K.Johnson 2 (3). 3B—Bourjos(10). HR—V.Wells (24), Bourjos (12), E.Thames(11). SB—M.Izturis (9), Bourjos (22).

IP H R ER BB SOLos AngelesH ar en W, 16 -9 .. .. .. .. .. 8 4 1 1 2 4T ak ah as hi . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . 1 2 1 1 0 1TorontoM cG ow an L ,0 -1 ... .. .. 5 5 2 2 0 8L it sc h .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 1 3 2 2 1 1L.Perez..................... 2 ⁄ 3 1 0 0 0 1Camp........................ 1 ⁄ 3 0 0 0 0 0Janssen.................... 2 ⁄ 3 4 3 3 0 1C.Villanueva............ 1 ⁄ 3 0 0 0 1 0Beck...... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 1 1 0 0 0 2WP—McGowan.

White Sox 8, Indians 4Chicago Cleveland

ab r h bi ab r h biD e Az a l f- rf 5 0 2 2 F uk dm r f 4 1 1 0A lR mr z s s 5 1 1 1 K ip nis 2 b 3 0 1 1P rz yn s d h 4 0 1 0 C San tn 1 b 4 1 1 1Rios cf 4 1 1 1 Hafner dh 3 1 1 2A .D un n 1 b 3 0 0 0 Du nc an l f 3 0 0 0P ie rr e p r- lf 0 1 0 0 Ca rr er c f 1 0 1 0Vicie do r f-1 b 3 2 1 0 D on al d ss 3 0 1 0M or el 3 b 4 2 2 3 C hs nh ll 3 b 4 0 1 0F lowrs c 4 0 1 1 Marson c 3 0 1 0B ck hm 2 b 3 1 0 0 H an nh n p h 1 0 0 0

C ro we cf- lf 3 1 0 0Totals 35 8 9 8 Totals 32 4 8 4Chicago.............................. 000 010 340 — 8

Cleveland........................... 000 002 020 — 4DP—Chicago 1. LOB—Chicago 3, Cleveland 5.2B—Pierzynski(29),Morel(18),Flowers(5),Fuku-dome (12), Kipnis (9). HR—Al.Ramirez (15), Rios(12),Morel(9), Hafner(13).SB—DeAza(11).CS—Donald (2). SF—Kipnis.

IP H R ER BB SOChicagoB ue hr le W ,1 2- 9. .. .. .. 6 4 2 2 2 2C ra in H ,2 2. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . 1 1 1 1 1 0Frasor....................... 1 ⁄ 3 2 1 1 0 0Ohman...................... 2 ⁄ 3 1 0 0 0 1S .S an to s. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 1 0 0 0 0 1ClevelandU .J im ene z L, 4- 3.. .. .. 7 6 4 4 2 7D ur bi n. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 1 3 4 4 1 1H er rm an n .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . 1 0 0 0 0 0Crain pitched to1 batter in the 8th.WP—U.Jimenez.

Orioles 6, Red Sox 4Baltimore Boston

ab r h bi ab r h biA nd in o 2 b 5 1 1 0 E ll su ry c f 4 0 1 0H ar dy s s 4 1 2 1 Av ile s 3b 4 1 1 0M ar kk s r f 3 1 1 0 Ad Gn zl 1 b 4 1 2 0G ue rr r d h 4 0 1 2 D. Or ti z d h 4 0 1 1W ie te rs c 4 0 1 0 P ed ro ia 2 b 4 1 1 0A dJ ons c f 4 1 1 0 Re ddc k r f 4 0 0 0

M rR yn l 1 b 4 2 2 3 Cr wf rd lf 4 1 3 2C .D av is 3 b 4 0 1 0 S cu ta ro s s 3 0 0 0Angle lf 4 0 0 0 Varitek c 3 0 0 1

L ow ri e p h 1 0 0 0Tot als 3 6 6 10 6 Tot als 3 5 4 9 4Baltimore............................ 010 001 220 — 6Boston................................ 001 210 000 — 4E—Ad.Gonzalez (4). DP—Baltimore 1, Boston 1.LOB—Baltimore 4, Boston 5. 2B—Markakis (28),Pedroia(37), C.Crawford(27).3B—C.Crawford (6).HR—Mar.Reynolds2 (36).SB—Andino (12),Angle(10).

IP H R ER BB SOBaltimoreTom.Hunter ............. 62 ⁄ 3 9 4 4 1 4Rapada W,2-0......... 2 ⁄ 3 0 0 0 0 1Eyre H,3 ................... 2 ⁄ 3 0 0 0 0 0Ji.Johnson S, 9-14 ... 1 0 0 0 0 0BostonBeckett L,13-6......... 71 ⁄ 3 7 6 6 1 8Aceves ..................... 12 ⁄ 3 3 0 0 0 1

Tigers 6, Royals 3Detroit Kansas City

ab r h bi ab r h biA Jc ks n c f 4 2 1 0 AGo rdn lf 4 1 1 0K el ly 1b 5 2 3 2 M eC ar r c f 3 1 1 0D Yo ng l f 5 0 1 0 B ut le r d h 4 1 2 1V Mr tn z d h 5 0 2 3 Ho sm er 1 b 4 0 1 0Avila c 5 0 2 0 Francr rf 4 0 1 1J hP er lt s s 4 0 1 0 Mo st ks 3 b 4 0 1 0D ir ks r f 2 0 2 0 Gi av tll 2 b 3 0 0 0R ab ur n p h- rf 2 1 0 0 B.Pen a p h 1 0 0 0R San tg 2 b 3 0 0 0 S. Pe re z c 4 0 2 0M iC ar r p h 1 0 1 1 AE sc or s s 3 0 0 0W or th p r- 2b 0 1 0 0Inge 3b 3 0 0 0To tal s 39 6 13 6 Tot als 3 4 3 9 2Detroit................................. 100 010 130 — 6Kansas City ....................... 200 001 000 — 3E—Raburn (15), S.Perez (3). DP—Detroit 2.LOB—Detroit10,KansasCity5. 2B—Kelly(7), Avi-la (32), Mi.Cabrera (45), Me.Cabrera (43), Butler(40), Francoeur (47). HR—Kelly (6). SB—A.Jack-

son (21), A.Escobar (25). S—Inge.IP H R ER BB SO

DetroitS ch er ze r. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 5 5 2 2 1 5F is ter W, 10 -1 3 .. .. .. .. 3 2 1 0 0 2V al ver de S ,47 -4 7.. .. 1 2 0 0 0 1Kansas CityF .P au li no . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . 5 6 2 2 2 8Collins....................... 2 ⁄ 3 1 0 0 0 1L .C ol em an . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 1 1 1 1 0 0Crow BS,7-7............ 1 ⁄ 3 2 0 0 0 0K .He rr er a L, 0- 1. .. .. .. 1 2 3 3 0 0G .H ol lan d .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . 1 1 0 0 0 0HBP—by K.Herrera (Raburn). WP—Crow. PB—Avila.Umpires—Home,Bruce Dreckman;First,Gary Dar-ling;Second, Paul Emmel;Third, Rob Drake.T—3:00. A—28,776 (37,903).

Mariners 5, Twins 4Seattle Minnesota

ab r h bi ab r h biIS uzuki rf 4 1 2 1 Span cf 3 0 0 0S ea ge r s s 4 1 1 1 To son i l f 2 0 1 0A ck le y 2 b 4 0 1 1 R ev er e l f- cf 5 1 1 0C ar p l f- 1b 4 0 1 0 C ud dy r d h 5 1 3 0S mo ak d h 3 0 1 0 P ar me l 1 b 4 0 3 1W.Penapr-dh 1 1 0 0 LHughs pr 0 0 0 0Ol iv o c 4 1 1 0 V al enc i 3 b 4 0 0 0A Kn dy 1 b 2 0 0 0 P lo uf fe s s 5 2 3 1M Sn dr s c f 1 0 0 0 Dn kl m 2 b 5 0 2 1L id di 3 b 4 0 0 0 B en so n r f 4 0 1 1T Ro ns n c f- lf 4 1 1 2 RR iv er c 2 0 0 0

T ol be rt p h 1 0 0 0B ut er a c 0 0 0 0

To tal s 35 5 8 5 Tot als 4 0 4 14 4Seattle ................................ 000 002 300 — 5Minnesota.......................... 100 100 011 — 4E—Plouffe (11). DP—Seattle 1. LOB—Seattle 4,Minnesota12.2B—I.Suzuki(22),Seager(12),Ack-ley (14), Tosoni (3), Plouffe (16), Benson (6). SB—Dinkelman (2). S—A.Kennedy.

IP H R ER BB SOSeattleP in ed a .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 4 6 2 2 2 2Gray.......................... 2 ⁄ 3 2 0 0 1 0

C.Jimenez W,1-0.... 11

 ⁄ 3

1 0 0 0 1K el le y H ,1 . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . 1 0 0 0 0 2Wi lh el ms en H, 3. .. .. .. 1 2 1 1 0 0L eag ue S ,3 6- 41 . ... .. 1 3 1 1 0 0MinnesotaSlowey L,0-7............ 62 ⁄ 3 6 5 5 0 6Dumatrait.................. 2 ⁄ 3 2 0 0 0 1Al.Burnett................. 2 ⁄ 3 0 0 0 0 1S .Ba ke r. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 1 0 0 0 0 1WP—Pineda, Gray, C.Jimenez, Wilhelmsen.Umpires—Home, Adrian Johnson;First, Clint Fa-gan;Second,Gary Cederstrom;Third,Lance Barks-dale.T—2:48. A—36,263 (39,500).

Multipleoutletsare reportingthatthe Sept. 20 deadline set by the In-ternational League to approve theScranton/Wilkes-Barre Yankees’ ac-tion plan for the 2012 season haspassed without a decision.

The team’s plan was expected tobeapprovedat theIL Boardof Direc-tors meeting in Albuquerque. TheYankees willnot playthe 2012 seasonat PNC Field in Moosic because ofrenovations to the stadium.

Allentown (Lehigh Valley) andRochester, N.Y., appear to be fron-trunners for hosting the Yankees.The Ottawa Citizen reported Mondaythat Ottawa was out apparently of

the equation, and several outlets re-ported that the New York Mets areblocking a potential seasonin StatenIsland, home of the Class A NewYork-Penn League Yankees.

Last month, the Syracuse Post-Standard reported that the Yankees’home games against the SyracuseChiefswouldlikelybe playedin Syra-cuse, and maybe others.

“I don’t know if we’ll get four,eight,six (more). It’s hard tosay howmany,” Chiefs GM John Simone saidto the Post-Standard. “They have toplay somewhere. Unless they getan-other city to take the team for 72games, they will have to split it up.”

The Yankees are expected to re-turn to Moosic in 2013.

No decision on SWB

plans for 2012The Times Leader staff 

8/4/2019 Times Leader 09-22-2011

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/times-leader-09-22-2011 17/45

C M Y K

THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 PAGE 5B➛ N F L

150 Special Notices

WANTEDMALE SINGERS

(570) 696-3385

150 Special Notices

MONTYMONTY SASAYSYS

Thank you somuch FLB. Spe-cial thanks to Edand Sue. Greatto have you on

our side. Knockoff early today.

409 Autos under$5000

FORD �93 TAURUSNewly inspected,new brakes, new

 tires, air condition-ing. 102K.

$1850 FIRM.Call Vince after 5

570-258-2450

To place yourad Call Toll Free1-800-427-8649

GMC �96 JIMMY SLE4WD, Hunter

Green, 4 door, CD,168,000 miles.

$2,100 obo.(570) 262-7550

412 Autos for Sale

MAZDA 3S 07Sedan. 4 cylinder2.3, auto, FWD, allp ow er, k ey le ssentry, cruise, a/c,am/fm stereo/cd,

  AB S. 5 5k m il es .Excellent condition.

 Asking $11,600. Call570-574-2141

442 RVs & Campers

SUNLINE SOLARIS 9125’ travel trailer A/C.B un k beds. N ew

  fridge & hot waterheater. Excellentcondition. $3,900.

570-466-4995

451 Trucks/  SUVs/Vans

FORD 87 E150Great work truck.N ew inspec tion.$2,000. Call an y-

 time before 8pm.(570)690-8243

503 Accounting/ Finance

BUSINESS

MANAGEMENTFor Specialized

Trucking Company 

Full Charge Book Keeper. Manage-ment Responsibili-

  ties: 3 years Experi-enc e. Must work  well with oth ers.Start Immediately.

Send Resume Fax 

570-288-0617Or emailkingpaint1079@

aol.com

509 Building/  Construction/ Skilled Trades

CONSTRUCTION

MANAGER Minimum 5 years

experience. Ability  to organize daily 

quantities, materi-als, job costs & 

schedule/manageutility crews. Health

insurance & 401Kbenefits available.

Send resume to jamestohara@aol.

com or fax 570-842-8205

PROJECT MANAGER 5 years PM experi-ence, commercial/ residential. Estimat-in g experienc e.Sales ability. Com-petitive Compensa-

 tion Package.e-mail resume to

[email protected] or fax  to 570-718-0661

ROOFER Part time flexible.Repair large com-mercial roof. Saw

 tooth. Must beexperienced.

Larry 570-430-1565

5 42 L og is ti cs/   Transportation

DELIVERY DRIVER Full time. Benefits.

401 K.No Phone Calls. Apply in person

9am-4pmColours

50 Dana Street

5 42 Lo gi sti cs/   Transportation

CDL-A DRIVER Gas field/landscapedrivers plus someh an ds o n l ab orrequired. Operatedump truc ks an dload equipment onlowboy. Deliver to

  job site. Must oper-ate skid steer exca-vator, hydro-seed

  truck, etc. Will plowin winter. Must haveclean driving recordand pass drug test.

Call HarvisInterview Service @

542-5330. Leavemessage. Will send

an application.Or forward resume:

[email protected]

Employer is  Varsity, Inc.

No walk-ins. EOE

 Transportation

DD RIVERSRIVERS WWANTEDANTEDClass B CDLRequired, Tanker

EndorsementRequired, Tri-Axle

ExperienceRequired.

 All Shifts Available Work Available

in Williamsport Areas

Fax resume to570-288-2219 or

Call Rich @570-357-8319

548 Medical/Health

NURSINGThe Meadows

Nursing andRehabilitation

Center

POSITIONS AVAILABLECNA’s

3-11 Part Time (5-9days bi-weekly)

11-7 Part Time (2-4days bi-weekly)

CNA’s can apply online at:

https://home.eease.com/recruit/?id=29

6360

Individualizedorientation program

GREAT startingrates!!

 Vacation, Holiday and Personal Days

TuitionReimbursement

Health insuranceand Pension Plan

Child Day Care onpremises

Meadows Nursing& Rehabilitation

Center4 East Center Hill

RoadDallas PA 18612

Email – [email protected]

e.o.e.

551 Other

ROOFERS & LABORERSDrivers license aplus. Please call

824-6381

GET THE WORD OUTwith a Classified Ad.

570-829-7130

VAN DRIVER Needed Monday 

 thru Friday- 6-61/2hour days.

No weekends,No holidays.

HOUSEKEEPER Needed Part Time

Every other  Weekend, Every 

other Holiday. Apply within.

KeystoneGarden Estates

100 Narrows RdRoute 11

Larksville, PA 18651NO PHONE CALLS 

PLEASE.

554 Production/ Operations

INDUSTRIALELECTRICIAN I

MATERIAL HANDLER Fabri-Kal Corpo-ration, a m aj or

 thermoforming plas-  tics company has

ull time benefittedpositions for:

IndustrialElectrician I and

Material Handler.HS/GED required.

Electrician: 3  years experiencerequired. Conduit,e mt a nd r id ge dpipe; E qu ipment

  te st in g; A C/ DCmotors and drives;PLC systems.

Material Handler:

One year fork liftexperience within  the past five years.Current forklift certi-ication preferred.

  Availability for over-  time required. Drug& Alcohol screeningan d back groun dchecks are condi-

  tion s of employ-ment. Competitivewage and benefitspack ag e: H ealthInsurance, Prescrip-

 tion, Dental & Vision,Disability, 401K,E du ca ti on , P ai dL ea ve . A pp ly o nsite: Monday-Friday 8AM-5PM; or for-ward resume to:

Fabri-KalCorporation

 ATTN: HumanResources

 Valmont IndustrialPark 

150 Lions DriveHazle Township,

566 Sales/Retail/ Business

Development

RETAIL

SALES CLERK Part time. Ability to

work flexibleschedule required.

 Will train. CallEFO Furniture570-207-2975

10am-6pm

ARCHBALD

137 Cemetary St.

SASATURDATURDAY Y , SEPT 24, SEPT 248:00-4:008:00-4:00

DIRECTIONS: 81 TO

R T. 6E TO E XIT 4(S ALEM RD.)

 A RCHBALD. TURN

LEFT ON S ALEM RD

 TO LEFT ON

CEMETARY .Entire contents of 

home including fur-niture, nice vintage

Mahogany lamp tables, beautiful

Broyhill diningroomset, country kitchenset, two gorgeous Antique bedroom

sets, glider & patio furniture, glass-ware, Waterford

Crystal, china sets,paintings & wall

hangings, jewelry,like new ladiesdesigner clothing,

holiday items & much more!

CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED!

Sale by Cook &Cook Estate Liquidators 

www.cookand cookestate 

liquidators.com 

BEAR CREEK TOWNSHIP

366 Old East EndBlvd

Saturday 9/248-3

FIRST TIME YARD SALECLEANED OUT

2 HOUSES!Jeep stroller, baby swing, wooden highchair, exersaucer,many other assort-ed children’s itemsa nd t oy s. H om edecor including TV,Home Interiors pic-

  tures, giftware andassorted h ou se-wares. Christmasdecorations. Much,much, more. Mostitems under $1.00

DALLAS

9 Idlewood Drive8:30 - 4:00

Garage Sale:Stainless steel

microwave, lawnmower, hot air furnace, toys,

household itemsand more!

DALLAS

Irem Country ClubPavilion

Sunday Sept. 25th10 am to 5 pm

  Arts, craft & col-lectible show. More

 then 50 vendors.Baked goods,

super door prizes & ample parking.

DALLAS

Klein ChiropracticParking Lot

Memorial Hwy Sat., Sept 24, 9-3

Great buys at bar-gain prices! Antique

 trunks, antique childbed. Across from

Dallas Agway.

HANOVER TOWNSHIPStark Holdings, IncSelf StorageUnits

110 West SaintMary’s Road

Saturday, Sept24

11am - 3pmStorage units forAuction Several

EDWARDSVILLE

133 Summit St.Saturday Sept., 24

9am - 3pmdouble stroller, car

seat, baby items,infant to toddlerclothing, gamespuzzles, books

housewares, etc.

Doyou needmorespace? A yard or garage sale

in classifiedis the best way

tocleanout yourclosets!You’re in bussiness

with classified!

EXETER 

138 A&B Jean StSaturday 8am-3pmCrossbow, weights,paint sprayer, beermiser, crafts, dolls,car ramps, house-hold items & more.

KINGSTON137 S. Maple Ave.

September 23 & 24Friday and Sat

9am -3pmHousehold items

KINGSTON226 Reynolds St

Saturday, Sept. 249am-3pm

 Artwork, tools, patiourniture, china, mir-

rors, lamps, min iridge, golf bags,

w om an ’s b ik e,wreaths & holiday items, doll furniture& much more!

KINGSTON

255 JOSEPH DRIVEFri, Sat. & Sun.

9am - 3pm Antiques, Jewelry,Collectibles, Music,

Clothing, Linens,Cashmere Sweaters,

 Yarn & LG Books.

LARKSVILLE

214 East State StSaturday 8am-1pm

Sweeper, pictures,bedding, tools, plussize clothes, kidsclothes, Christmasitems all new. Toomany items to list!

LUZERNE

212 KELLY ST.Sunday 25th 7-4Everything must

GO! Garage/HouseSale; dishes,

 furniture, tools, art!

MOUNTAIN TOP

1 Greystone Drive8 a.m. - 3 p.m.

Rain or shine,Undercover!

 Antiques, VHSplayer/movies, TVs,

Longaberger

MOUNTAIN TOP

15 Yeager RoadSaturday, Sept-24

9am - ?Nurses Scrubs,Toys, Children’s

Clothing & Lots of Crafts!

MOUNTAIN TOP

1544 Laurel LakesDrive

9/24, 8-2Lots of baby and

 toddler items;monitors (angel

care), stroller, carseat (converts to

booster seat),infant car seat, crib

sets, exersaucer,diaper genie, crib

 tent, ride along car, tricycle, large plas- tic yard jungle gym

and barbie play-house, lots more.Household items;

 teen comfortersets, adult com-

 forter sets, cornercomputer stand,picture frames,

motorcycle helmet,portable dvd player,girls ski boots (size

6 1/2) and more.

MOUNTAINTOP

14 Powell StreetSat. 9/24 8am-4pm

Household items,decor, yard stuff, tools, holiday & 

more! R  AIN OR SHINE!

MOUNTAINTOP

2055, 2088 & 2326

Prospect RoadSaturday, Sept-248am-1pm

Books, crafts, elec- tronics, exercise

bike, candles, tools,bikes, housewaresand more. Some-

 thing for everyone.

MOUNTAINTOP

24 Brook LaneBriar Brook 

Saturday 9am-1pmLots of new items!Glassware, dishes,

 jewelry & more!

MOUNTAINTOP

5 Terrace Dr.Fri 9-1 Sat 7:30-1  We have a wide

variety of items andeverything must go!

OLD FORGE

St. Nicholas Church320 Vine St.

Saturday, Sept. 24th8 am to 4 pm

RAIN OR SHINE!NO EARLY BIRDSEthnic food & 

Bake sale.

PITTSTON

174 Johnson St.Sat., Sept., 24

9am - 3pm All contents of 

home, furniture,accessories, ladies

clothing. Low prices

PITTSTON

168 Elizabeth Street(By St. Rocco’s 

Church) Saturday 9am-4pmENTIRE CONTENTS:

Living room, Set,2 Bedroom Suites,Bar & Bar Stools,

Dining Room & Kitchen Sets. M.T.

Tables, Mirrors,

Lamps, MikasaChina, Stereos, TV.,Tools, Mower,

Costume Jewelry,Loads of Kitchen

& More.

PLAINS

64 Skidmore St.S AT. 9/24 9 AM-3PM

SUN. 9/25 10 AM-3PM

2 older bedroomsets, costume jew-elry, Byod’s Bears,c edar wardrobe,

 AnnaLee dolls, olderdolls, Besse Pease

p ri nt s, r ev er sepainting, Francis-cian Ivy pattern din-n er wa re , L en ox  Garden Meadowdinnerware, knick k nack s ( Fenton,McCoy, Hull,B elleek , J apan) ,vaseline glass, oldc ups & sauc ers,kitchen wares, cur-

  tains, bedding, out-door yard decora-

  ti on s, N as ca r,scanners, holiday decorations. Toomuch to list. Stop by & check us out!!

PLAINS/HUDSON

15 East Bergh StFriday & Saturday 

Sept-23 & 249am-3pm

Entire contents of 9room home plus 2car garage. THIS

HOUSE IS LOADED  WITH COUNTRY 

DECOR. Antiques,oak fireplace man-

 tle, book cases,desk, corner cabi-

nets, couches,rockers, country shelving, maplekitchen table & 

chairs, vintage dollcollection, old toys,Precious Moments,

Boyd’s Bears,Nascar, Hess

Trucks, quilt rack,linens, Christmas,

  jewelry, Lenox,braided rugs, adult

& children’sclothes, toys, bikes,

 fridge, tools & more!

FOLLOW  THE BRIGHTGREEN SIGNS!

SWOYERSVILLE

18 Brown StSaturday, 9am-2pmFurniture, house-wares& much more!

SWOYERSVILLE

247 Slocum StFri 9/23, Sat 9/24 & 

Sun 9/259am-?

Estate jewelry, mir-rors, pictures plus

many many house-hold items! If youmissed the rest -come to the best!

NO EARLY BIRDS PLEASE

WILKES-BARRE

87 Academy StreetF id & S t d

SWOYERSVILLE30 Maltby Ave

Saturday, Sept 248am - 4pm

3 families, don’tmiss this sale!

WILKES-BARRE

524 Monument,Corner of 10th & 

MonumentSaturday, 9/24

9am - 3pmFurniture, wintercoats, householdgoods, children’sclothing and muchmore!

WILKES-BARRE807 N. Washington St

Saturday 9am-2pmTwo kitchen sets,drop down freezer,computer desk, cof-

ee & end tables,men’s & women’sclothing, kitchen-wares & more.

WILKES-BARRE

STREETSTREET

SALESALE200 TO 315

  WYOMING STREET

Saturday Sept. 248AM TO 1 PM

SOMETHING FOREVERYONE

 WILKES-BARRETWP

133 Old Ashley Rd.Thurs., Fri. & Sat.

9 am - 4 pmLast big sale of the

season. many itemsreduced.

WYOMINGFirst Baptist

Church52 E. 8th St.

MASSIVERUMMAGE

SALESaturday,September 24

8am -2pmlots of clothing

household, TV’scomputers, way 

VENDORS WANTED for

Car Cruise ShowSunday, Oct. 9th

11am-5pmCall 570-406-4432

or 570-313-0592by Sept-30, 2011

912 Lots & Acreage

PLAINS TWP.

14 + ACRESin an approved sub-division. Easy acc-ess to Rt 81 & PA Tpke. 1/2 mile fromMohegan SunCasino. $275,000.

772-260-0901

941 Apartments/ Unfurnished

DALLAS TWP

CONDO FOR LEASE:$1,800. 2 bedroom/ 

2 Bath. Call Us todiscuss our great

 Amenity & Mainte-nance program!

Sell your own home!Place an ad HERE

570-829-7130

KINGSTON

941 Apartments/ Unfurnished

FORTY FORT1665 Wyoming Ave.

3rd floor 1 bed-room, utilities

included. Off streetparking, security deposit required.

NO PETS$525/mo. available

immediately.570-690-0564 or

570-823-7564

KINGSTON795 Rutter Ave

Screened porch,kitchen downstairs,

upstairs living room,bedroom & bath-

room. $575/month+ utilities. No pets.

570-417-6729

NANTICOKE603 Hanover St

  Above Dental Prac-  tic e. 2n d floor, 1bedroom. No pets.$550 + security, util-ities & lease. Pho-

 tos available. Call570-542-5330

WILKES-BARRE2nd floor apt. 2 bed-rooms. No pets. Off s tr ee t p ar ki ng .

  Washer/dryer hook up, l ar ge ya rd$450/month + utili-

  ti es & s ec ur it y  deposit.

570-650-1844

WILKES-BARRE A  VAILABLE NOW!Two spacious, 5

room, 2 bedroomapartments. 1st & 2nd floor. Rent +utilities. Lease & 

security. No pets.$550 & $625

570-650-3008 or570-881-8979

LINEUP ASUCCESSFULSALE

INCLASSIFIED!Doyouneedmorespace? A yard or garage sale

in classifiedis the best way

tocleanoutyourclosets!You’re in bussiness

with classified!

WILKES-BARRE SOUTHTWO APARTMENTSRecently renovated

2 & 4 bedroomapartments avail-

able. Off streetparking. Serious

inquiries only. $600-$800 + utilities570-242-3327

WYOMING1 bedroom apart-ment. Wall to wallcarpet. Appliances

  furnished. Coin oplaundry. Heat, water& sewer included.$550/month. Call

570-687-6216 or570-954-0727

944 CommercialProperties

OFFICE SPACE239 Schuyler Ave, Kingston2,050 sf. 2nd floor.Modern, four sep-

arate offices, largereception area,

break room, con-  ference room, pri-

vate bathroom.$695/mos + utilitiesCall 570-706-5628

947 Garages

COMMERCIAL

G ARAGE SPACEKingston. 1,250 sf.

Excellent formechanic or ship-ping & receiving.

Separate overhead and entrance

doors. Gas Heat.Easy Access.

$450 + security & references.

570-706-5628

950 Half Doubles

WEST WYOMINGSmall 2 bedroom, 1

bath, off streetparking. Gas heat.

Non-smokers. ABSOLUTELY 

NO PETS!$575/per month,

plus security Call (570)609-5300

746 Garage Sales/ Estate Sales/ Flea Markets

746 Garage Sales/ Estate Sales/ Flea Markets

746 Garage Sales/ Estate Sales/ Flea Markets

746 Garage Sales/ Estate Sales/ Flea Markets

746 Garage Sales/ Estate Sales/ Flea Markets

PHILADELPHIA — MichaelVick took a small step towardreturning from a concussion.

Vick took part in a morning  walkthrough on Wednesday, butdidn’t practice in the afternoon.  There is a chance he will playagainst the Giants (1-1) on Sun-day.

“It’s hard to give you the fu-

ture because you have to dothings the right way and gothrough the process,” coach An-dy Reid said.

Vick was injured in Philadel-phia’s 35-31 loss to the Falconsin Atlanta on Sunday night, and was forced to leave the game inthe second half.

Head athletic trainer RickBurkholder said Vick doesn’thave “a whole lot of concussionsymptoms,” and would undergofurther testing, including seeing an independent neurologist inthe next day or two.

“Just because he doesn’t havesymptoms today doesn’t meanhe won’t have symptoms tomor-row,” Burkholder said. “Youcan’t predict.”

Vick threw for a pair of touch-downs for the Eagles (1-1), butcouldn’t continue after getting spun by a Falcons rusher intoone of his teammates, right tack-le Todd Herremans. He was re-placed by Mike Kafka. VinceYoung, who was signed to be thebackup, has missed the first twogames with a hamstring injury.He’s close to returning.

N F L

APPHOTO

Philadelphia Eagles quarter-back Michael Vick holds a foot-

ball during practice in Philadel-

phia on Wednesday.

Vick stillmight playvs. GiantsBy ROB MAADDI 

 AP Pro Football Writer 

FLORHAM PARK, N.J. —Mark Sanchez was unsure whatall the fuss was about. The NewYork Jets quarterback’s banged-up right arm feels fine, and sodoes his elbow.

So, hearing that his name wason the team’s injury report Wednesday surprised him a bit.

“They feel good,”Sanchez saidof his arm and elbow. “Our train-ing staff, they’re the best.

“They got me ready to roll. Itook every rep in practice, so Ifeel good.”

Sanchez hithisarm onthe hel-met of Jacksonville’s Matt Rothlate in New York’s 32-3 rout lastSunday.

It was his last throw of thegame, a pass intended to try toget Plaxico Burress a catch.

“I just banged it a little bit onthe helmet,” he said. “You get  your throwing motion and mo-mentum going at a helmet, andthen youhit something.It makesit hurt a little more and it freakseverybody out because it’s yourthrowing shoulder and stuff, buthonestly, it feels great.”

Coach Rex Ryan acknowl-edged that Sanchez is “fine” andthe notation on the injury report was purely a procedural thing.

QB Sanchezfeeling fine

for Week 3By DENNIS WASZAK Jr.

 AP Sports Writer 

8/4/2019 Times Leader 09-22-2011

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/times-leader-09-22-2011 18/45

C M Y K

PAGE 6B THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com➛ S P O R T S

tory over the previously unbea-tenWarriorsin a battleof a pairof  WVC titans.

 The scores were 25-23, 15-25,

25-19,25-16 to extendthe Royals’streak to 81.

“It definitely served as a wake-upcall,”saidGriswold, whoturn-ed in an overpowering perform-ance with 27 kills. “We knew wehadto step upin game three.“De-laware Valley is a hard-hitting team and just did a great job of hitting their spots.”

  The 5-foot-10 Griswoldstepped up in the final twogames. She hit with power andaccuracy andproved tobe a mainfactor.

“Griswold was amazing,” HolyRedeemer coach Jack Kablicksaid. “She made a big difference.Delaware Valley playedgood and wedidn’thavean answerfortheirhitters.”

  The Warriors (4-1) got solidperformances from 6-2 seniormiddlehitter CarissaDubeand5-11 sophomore outside hitter Tay-lor Braunnagle.

Dubewas dominant at thenet,notching eight kills and six ser-

  vice points. The high-jumping Braunnagle post 12 kills, includ-ing several spikes that enabledDelawareValleyto takecontrolof game two.

“Dube is an outstanding play-er,” Kablick said. “We knew thatgoing in and we were preparedfor her. But No. 18 (Braunnagle)

took usby completesurprise. We weren’t ready for her.”

Delaware Valley had a chanceto win game one. The Warriorstook a 19-18 lead on a Dube killbut couldn’t seal the deal. TheRoyals went on a 7-4 run to postthe 25-23 win.

 The Warriors took a 14-5 leadin game two on two straight killsby Braunnagle, andstretched thelead to17-6ona monsterblockbyCassidy Cohen, who wound up with eight kills, two blocks andfour service points.

After fallingbehind7-0 ingamethree, the Royals took control at18-12 on a Griswold kill en routeto a 25-19 win. The Royals werenever seriously threatened ingame four.

“I think the major difference  was their service play,” saidBraunnagle. “We didn’t handletheir serves and they handledours well. We could have donemuch better if we converted ourserves.”

According to Dube, the Re-deemerrallyin game twowastheturning point.

“We justgot downon ourselves when they came back,” she said.“We did some things really well,butthere aresomethings thatwestill have to improve on.”

BizEatondishedout 32 assists

and notched11 service points forRedeemer, Sydney Kotch had 15service points and four digs, while Julia Wignot had six killsand seven digs.

  Wignot said the Royals wereshocked by losing game two.

“We’re not used to playing likethat,” she said. “But then westartedplaying Redeemer volley-ball.”

MMI Prep 3,Berwick 2

AnnikaWesselhad 19kills and29 digs as she helped pull thePreppers past Berwick by scoresof 27-25, 25-20, 19-25, 29-27, 17-15.

Kristen Young contributed with 16 kills and 25 digs, AlyssaPriano had 70 assists and KaylaKarchner had nine kills and 24digs in the win.

Berwick’s Sarah Wilezynskihad six kills and seven digs, andBridget Orlando had eight killsand 11service points.

Wyoming Valley West 3,Tunkhannock 2

Hilary Norris accounted for 13service points and three kills as WyomingValley Westwent on to win by scores of 21-25, 25-19, 25-21, 22-25, 15-13.

Anna McNatty hadsixkillsandsix digs, Juliette Schmid had 10

service points and 25 digs, andJocelyn Amico had 21 assists.

In the losing effort for Tunk-hannock Anna Decker had 12kills and six blocks, while BrielleSherman had 26 assists.

Meyers3, GAR 0

Kyle Wolsieffer had 14 points,five aces and three kills inMeyers’ 25-5, 25-11, 25-14 win.

Summer Barrouk added ninepoints, four aces and a pair of digs.

Jocelyn Vazquez had threepoints, two aces and two kills forGAR. Brittany Stephenson hadfive aces, two digs and a kill.

Hazleton Area 3,Pittston Area 0

  The Cougars swept PittstonArea 25-17, 25-15, 25-21.

Ali Slomba led Pittston Area with eightpoints,seven digs,fiveaces and three kills. AlexandraKochis added nine digs.

VOLLEYBALLContinued fromPage 1B

Jay Dawsey and Chris Kon-icki each scored goal and anassist to lead Lake-Lehman to a3-1 win over Wyoming Valley West on Wednesday in a WVCboys soccer matchup.

Chris Edkins scored one goalas well with an assist by Z achManganella.

For Valley West JeremyBiagotti scored the lone goal with an assist by Nick Singer.Lake Lehman............................................... 1 2 — 3Wyoming Valley West................................ 1 0 — 1First half: 1.LL, Chris Konicki (Jay Dawsey),30:01; 2. WVW, Jeremy Biagotti (Nick Singer),37:39

Secondhalf:3. Dawsey(Konicki),37:58;4. LLChris Edkins (Zach Manganella), 38:56

Shots: LL 13, WVW 11; Saves: LL 7 (JohnButchko),WVW9 (ChrisJaworski);Corners: LL1,WVW 3.

Coughlin 6,Wyoming Seminary 2

Justin Okun collected twogoals and two assists as theCrusaders put the game away with three unanswered goals in

the second half.

Dave Marriggi added a goaland two assists while TravisKeil had a goal and an assist.Wyoming Seminary................................. 2 0 — 2Coughlin.................................................... 3 3 — 6First half: 1. WS, Henry Cornell (PK) 28:59; 2.COU, JoeTona(JustinOkun)12:43;3.COU,Tra-vis Keil 8:07; 4. WS, Cornell 1:53; 5. COU, DaveMarriggi (Okun), 1:10

Second half: 6. COU, Okun (Marriggi) 21:14;7. COU, Okun (Marriggi) 17:30; 8. COU, BobbyHawkins (Keil) 0:02

Shots: WS 5, COU 21; Saves: WS 9 (FrankHenry), COU 1 (Ted Mykulyn); Corners: WS 1,COU 9.

Dallas 5, Holy Redeemer 0

John Murray scored twogoals and added an assist asthe Mountaineers won withoutallowing a shot.

A.J. Nardone finished with agoal and an assist while DannySaba had two helpers.Holy Redeemer........................................ 0 0 — 0Dallas......................................................... 1 4 — 5First half: 1. DAL, Josh Shilanski (Danny Saba),36:44

Second half: 2. DAL, John Murray (A.J. Nar-done), 26:30; 3. DAL, Murray (Saba), 22:15; 4.DAL, Nardone 12:34; 5. DAL, Dante DeAngelo(Murray) 12:05

Shots: HR 0, DAL 21; Saves: HR 9 (IanMcGrane), DAL 0 (RyanKoslozski); Corners: HR0, DAL 4.

H . S . B OYS S O CC E R R O U N D U P

Black Knights beat WVWThe Times Leader staff 

 Wilkes University willofficially name its footballstadium in honor of legend-ary coach Rollie Schmidt onSaturday.

 The school will hold aceremony at 12:30 p.m. be-fore the 1 p.m. kickoff be-tween the Colonels and  Widener at the Ralston Ath-letic Complex.

Schmidt, who coached theprogram for 20 years,helped lead Wilkes to ahistoric 32-game winning streak in his tenure.

A member of the WilkesAthletic Hall of Fame,Schmidt also served as abaseball and golf coach atthe school.

FIELD HOCKEYOneonta State 4,

Misericordia 3

  The Red Dragons broke atie with less than threeminutes to play to hand theCougars a non-conferenceloss.

Haley Ellis had a goal andtwo assists for the Cougars(1-5) and Hannah Harveyand Samantha Sorokas bothadded goals.

WOMEN’S TENNISWilkes 9,

East Stroudsburg 0

  The Lady Colonelsopened their season with a

Kristofco and Melanie Nolt

all recorded wins at bothsingles and doubles for Wilkes.

King’s 7, Keystone 2

  The Lady Monarchs (1-1)earned their first win of theseason, taking down Keys-tone on the road.

Sara Lynn, Emily Biffen,Katlyn Rossowski and Va-nessa Wagner all won inboth singles and doublescompetition for the LadyMonarchs.

MEN’S GOLFMisericordia wins tri-match

Led by Bucky Aeppli’s1-over 73, Misericordiaearned wins over Wilkesand Marywood at Mt. Lau-rel Golf Club.

  The Cougars finished witha team score of 315, edging Marywood (325) and theColonels (332).

Matt Kachurak of Wilkesand Marywood’s Paul Kaniafinished tied for second at75 while Misericordia’s Jor-dan Wollenberg was fourthat 77.

WOMEN’S SOCCERWilkes 4,

Baptist Bible 0

Katie Cocchi led the LadyColonels with a goal andtwo assists as Wilkes wonits third straight non-confer-

L O C A L C O L L EG E R O U N D U P

Stadium ceremonySaturday at WilkesThe Times Leader staff Dallas edged Crestwood 3-2

on Wednesday in a girls tennismatch.

For the Mountaineers, DanaYu defeated Brittany Stanton6-7, 6-0, 6-3, Melissa Tuckerdefeated Melanie Kobela 4-6,7-5, 6-2, and in doubles actionChloe Alles and Talia Szatkow-ski topped Jenn Snyder andMelanie Snyder 6-2, 6-4.

For Crestwood in singlesKristi Bowman defeated BridgetBoyle 6-2, 6-63, and in doublesCorey Gallagher and Mary KateCoulter defeated Grace Schauband Lindsey Kelly 5-7, 6-4, 6-2.

Wyoming Valley West 4, GAR 1

Cathy Byrnes defeated Iudu-ku AKA- Ezoue 6-1, 6-0 as Wyoming Valley West went onto defeat GAR 4-1in singlesaction in tennis.

Christa Talpesh defeatedJosefa Ramero 6-0, 6-0, andLauran Monto defeated RaquelSosa 6-2, 6-0.

In doubles, Jillian Pajor andImani Mullins won by default.

GAR’s only win came whenCanessa Castillo and Dian Lo-pez defeated Emily Coslett andErica Gavenonis 7-6 (7-5), 6-3.

Tunkhannock 3, MMI Prep 2

Jessica Murley defeated En-glysh Handlong 6-3, 6-3 to lead Tunkhannock to a win overMMI.

In doubles Same Veety andCasey Micholowski defeated

6-0, 6-4.For MMI Gabriella Lobitz

defeated Hope Murray 6-3, 6-1,and Stephanie Pudish defeatedCarley Griffiths 6-0, 6-3.

Holy Redeemer 5,Wyoming Area 0

Fallyn Boich defeated ValerieBott 6-0, 6-0 in singles action tolead Holy Redeemer.

Nellie Chmil defeated LisaChihorek 6-0, 6-0 and EmilySuchocki defeated Emily Luka-savage 6-1, 6-2.

In doubles Allison Muth andShaina Dougherty defeatedBrina Platt and Alex Romano6-2, 6-2 and Trish Harenza andBeth Chmil defeated MorganBilbow 6-0, 6-2.

Coughlin 4, GAR 0

Jenna Latchko defeated IdukuAKA-Ezoue 6-1, 6-1 ten route toa Coughlin shutout.

Julie Barry defeated JosefaRamero 6-0, 6-2 and SummerLehtini won 6-0, 6-1.

In doubles Reba Shaffer andEryn Harvey defeated VanessaCastillo and Diane Lopez, andgame two was a default by GAR.

Wyoming Valley West 4,Hanover Area1

Cathy Byrnes defeated Mar-sha Geiser 6-2, 6-0 in singlesaction to lead Wyoming Valley West to a victory.

Devin Ryman defeated EliseHouse 6-0, 6-2, and Lana Montodefeated Kati McManus 6-1, 6-1.

H . S. G I R L S T E N N I S R O U N D U P

Mountaineers earn narrow3-2 victory vs. CrestwoodThe Times Leader staff 

Lindsay Hischak scored with3:14 left in regulation to breaka tie and give Crestwood atense 2-1win over Holy Re-deemer on Wednesday in a Wyoming Valley Conferencefield hockey game.

Jess Newak tied the game upin the second for the Comets

and also assisted on Hischak’s winner.

Marnie Kusakavitch had thelone goal for the Royals.

Crestwood’s Danielle De-spirito and Redeemer’s El-izabeth Nicholas finished withthree and seven saves, respec-tively.Holy Redeemer........................................... 1 0 — 1Crestwood.................................................... 0 2 — 2First half: 1. HR, Marnie Kusakavitch (MelanieKusakavitch), 21:43

Second half: 2. CRE, Jess Newak (ChandlerAckers),20:57; 3.CRE, LindsayHischak(Newak),3:14

Shots: HR6, CRE11;Saves: HR7 (ElizabethNicholas), CRE 3 (Danielle Despirito); Corners:HR 8, CRE 7

Meyers3, Honesdale 2

Meyers answered with threegoals after the break to rallypast Honesdale.

Kelly Mahalak broke a 2-2 tie

 with just1:01 remaining inregulation off a feed fromCathy Quinones to give theMohawks the victory.

Brianna DiMaggio andAmanda Tredinnick each had agoal and an assist for Meyers, which trailed1-0 after the first.Honesdale................................................. 1 1 — 2Meyers....................................................... 0 3 — 3First half: 1. HON, Mary Martin (Elyssa Stanton)16:10

Second half: 2. MEY, Brianna DiMaggio(Amanda Tredinnick) 14:20; 3. MEY, Treddinnick(DiMaggio) 10:41; 4. HON, Bailey Martin 9:40; 5.MEY, Kelly Mahalak (Cathy Quinones) 1:01

Shots: HON11,MEY9;Saves:HON6 (NicoleCush), MEY 8 (Rianna Daughtery-Smith); Cor-ners: HON 6, MEY 4.

Dallas 7, Nanticoke0

Seven different playersscored for the Mountaineers inthe shutout victory.

Evonna Ackourey, Jenny

Cave, Ashley Dunbar and KatyComitz each had a goal and anassist for the Mountaineers.

Nanticoke.................................................. 0 0 — 0Dallas......................................................... 2 5 — 7First half: 1. DAL, Ashley Dunbar (Jenny Cave),7:43; 2. DAL, Cave (Dunbar), 0:18.

Secondhalf: 3.DAL,EvonnaAckourey(KirbySzalkowski),21:26;4. DAL,VanessaParsons (Ka-ty Comitz), 20:40; 5. DAL, Comitz (Ackourey),17:59; 6. DAL, Kami McGee (Jess Missal), 10:59;7. DAL, Kayla Thomas (Szalkowski), 0:06.

Shots: NAN0,DAL27; Saves: NAN17(Alexa

Gorski),DAL1 (SarahStewart,DanaJolley); Cor-ners: NAN 0, DAL 15.

Coughlin 3,Lackawanna Trail 0

Kaitlin Wood scored twogoals and had one assist asCoughlin defeated Lackwanna Trail at home.

Dana Hayward had one goal while Madysen Jones and

Alyssa Monaghan had oneassist each.Lackawanna Trail........................................ 0 0 — 0Coughlin ........................... ............................ 0 3 — 3Second half: 1. Dana Hayward (Kaitlin Wood),28:29;2. Wood(MadysenJones),10:50;3.Wood(Alyssa Monaghan), 10:23

Shots: LT8, COU14;Saves: LT11(CourtneyDitchey), COU 7 (Paige Tedick); Corners: LT 7,COU 9.

Hazleton Area 4,Abington Heights 0

Kayla and Serena Garzioeach scored a goal as HazletonArea defeated host AbingtonHeights.

Also scoring for Hazleton were Allison Machey and LexiHenchenski.Hazleton Area..................................... 1 3 — 4Abington Heighs................................. 0 0 — 0First Half: 1. Haz, Kayla Garzio (UA), 27:40.Second Half: 1. Haz, Lexi Henchenski (UA)16:46, 2. Haz, Selena Garzio (UA) 5:35. 3. Haz,Allison Machey (UA) 1:40.

Shots: Haz 19, AH 4. Goalie Saves: Abing-

ton (Claire Notarriani) 11, Hazleton 2 (LeecaBaran).

Delaware Valley 2,Wyoming Area 0

Kirsten Brockmann assistedboth goals as Delaware Valleyposted a shutout.

Christy Murphy and GraceFarrell had the scores.Wyoming Area.......................................... 0 0 — 0Delaware Valley....................................... 1 1 — 2

Firsthalf: 1.DV, ChristyFarrell(KirstenBrock-mann), 22:44; Second half: 2. DV, Grace Farrell(Brockmann), 17:53.

Shots: WA 10, DV 7; Saves: WA 5 (NicoleCumbo), DV 10 (Faith Torkileson);Corners: n/a.

Wyoming Valley West 4,Lake-Lehman 0

Riki Stefanides had twosecond-half goals, allowing theSpartans to pull away for a victory.

Nicole Sott had two assists,also in the second half. MauraAnistranski and Danielle Gregahad the other goals.Wyoming Valley West............................. 1 3 — 4Lake-Lehman............................................ 0 0 — 0Firsthalf: 1.WVW,MauraAnistranski(SouniDa-venport),19:36; Secondhalf: 2.WVW,RikiStefa-nides (Kelcie Hromisin), 23:39; 3. WVW, Stefa-nides (Nicole Sott), 10:48; 4. WVW, Danielle Gre-ga (Sott), 5:35.

Shots: WVW 21, LL 2; Saves: WVW 1 (KateSmicherko), LL 17 (Nikki Sutliff); Corners: WVW11, LL 4.

Comets field hockey triumphsThe Times Leader staff 

Catherine Lombardo brokethe course record a 19:16 forPittston Area to as she finishedfirst in a six-way girls crosscountry meet Wednesday.

Pittston won all three of it’smeets defeating Berwick 22-25,Valley West 22-35 and North- west15-50.

Other scores were Berwick20, Wyoming Area 43; Valley West19, Wyoming Area 41.

In the boys cross countrymeet Wyoming Valley West’sBennett Williams took first ashe finished with17:26.

Valley West won all three itsmeets defeating Pittston Area21-38, Wyoming Area 15-50, andGAR 15-50

Other scores were PittstonArea 25, Berwick 30; Northwest15, Wyoming Area 50

Marisa Durako took firstplace for Holy Redeemer at a

time of 19:20 meet at HanoverArea in a six-way girls crosscountry meet

Holy Redeemer defeatedHanover Area 16-41, and Hazle-ton Area 23-32 in their meets

Other scores included Hanov-er Area 24, Seminary 31; Hazle-ton Area 19, Coughlin 50

Mitch Ford took first for HolyRedeemer in a six-way boyscross country meet at a time of 17:36.

Holy Redeemer won all threeof its meets defeating HanoverArea15-48, Nanticoke15-49, andHazleton Area19-43.

Other scores included Hanov-er Area 27, Coughlin 58; Semi-nary 20, Nanticoke 43

At Pittston AreaGirls top 20 RunnersCatherine Lombardo, PA; 19:16; Alex Plant,

WVW; 19:54; Sara Badzwilka, WA; 20:06; BiancaBolton, PA; 20:16; Kaitlyan Kuctha, PA; 20:40;Abby Bull, BER; 21:17; Julia Mericle, WVW; 21:18;Krysten Lombardo, PA; 21:53; Emily Leighow,BER; 22:06; Emily Tyler, WVW; 22:07; Mona Ni,

BER; 22:17; Karleigh Hartman, BER; 22:32; OliviaHanza, PA; 22:45; Amy Paddock, WVW; 23:00;Alicia Stavytszky, NW; 23:05; Gena Montecalno,BER; 23:06; Emily Seaman, PA; 23:06; AshleyMenyonyny, PA; 23:37; Alison Gordner, BER;24:02;

Boys Top 20 Runners

Bennett Williams, WVW; 17:26; Will Butkiewicz,WVW; 17:28; Michael Lewis, NW; 17:33; ZacharyBriggs, NW; 17:54; Jeff Nelson, NW; 18:31; TylerCummings, PA; 18:33; Jamie Connors, PA; 18:41;Eryc Filipiak, WA; 18:44; Jeff Austyn, WVW; 18:52;Andrew Guarilia, WA; 18:44; Tye Sotphen, WVW;19:08; Domitni Shea, PA; 19:15; Nick Odiesewsky,GAR; 19:28; Steve Barosn, WA; 19:28; Ryan May,BER; 19:30; Kevin Laubach, BER; 19:30; KevinYohey, BER; 19:31; Elliot Malshesky, BER; 19:32;Nathan Cheek, WVW; 19:37; P.J. Endler, WVW;19:41

At Hanover AreaGirls Top 20 Runners

Marisa Durako, HR; 19:20; Rachel Sowinski,HR; 20:03; Nicole Buehrle, HAZ; 20:36; CassieRupp, HAZ; 21:16; Brianna Ligotski, HR; 21:18;Cassandra Gill, HR; 21:26; Angie Marchetti, HAZ;21:29; Becki Marchetti, HAZ; 21:47; AlannaTrombetta, SEM; 21:48; Paige Antall, HAN; 21:51;Melissa Cruz, HR; 22:10; Mickie Kaminski, HAN;

22:14; Briana Pap, HAZ; 22:35; Nora Fazzi, COU;22:45; Amy Viti, HAN; 22:59; Melissa Ortiz, HAN;23:05; Emily Zaremba, HAZ; 23:07; Sally Mooney,SEM; 23:54; Renata O’Donnell, SEM; 23:55; KatiePerrine, SAM; 24:01

Boys Top 20 RunnersMitch Ford, HAN; 17:38; Jacob Fetterman,

HAZ; 17:40; Vinay Murthy, HR; 18:06; Pat Condo,HR; 18:36; Mike Ambrulavage, HR; 18:42; JimmyChimola, COU; 18:45; Frazie Sutphen, HR; 18:49;Forest Hawkins, HAN; 18:58; Jeff Capaci, HR;19:06; Andrew Myers, HAZ; 19:07; Chris Kabacnti,HR; 19:07; Luke Scenzak, COU; 19:22; TylerPecora, HAZ; 19:43; Ryan Josefacz, HAN; 19:50;Josh Foust, HR; 19:58; Matt Williams, HAN; 19:59;Kyle Skiner, HAZ; 19:59; Zack Mykulin, COU;19:59; Carl Daubert, HAN; 20:00

BILLTARUTIS/FORTHE TIMESLEADER

Runnersfrom Berwick,GAR, Northwest, Pittston Area, WyomingArea, and Wyoming Valley West begin the boys six-school cross

countryrun at Pittston Area High School in Yatesville on Wednes-

day afternoon.

H . S . C R O S S C O U N T R Y

Pittston Area girls

set record in winThe Times Leader staff 

Chase Makowskishota 1-under 34 asHoly RedeemerandPittston Area neededto gotofivegolfersto breaka tiein theRoyals’190-191victory on Wednesday at FoxHill CountryClub.

MarianoMedico shot aneven-par 35 whileWil Fulton(40), Mike Boland(40) andEricJones(41)alsoscoredfor theRoyals.

Leadingthe PatriotswereBrandonMatthews (37), Ryan Tracy (38),Matt Carroll(40),CalvinO’Boyle (40)and ChrisLynch (42).

Dallas168,Wyoming Valley West170

AustinSmithmedaledwitha37 toleadthe Mountaineersto anarrowwin atIremCountryClub(par36).

Scoringfor theSpartanswereChrisMcCue (41), ColinHarris(42), Evan Parillo(43)andChrisNixon 44.

Crestwood 169,MMI Prep190

Medalist JoeHurnfireda2-underpar as Crestwoodpickedup thewinat ValleyCountryClub,par35.

Jake Popowyczfireda 36,Billy Bumbrowski a 43 and ThomasGoyned a 48.

For MMIJeffLotzleadwith a42SamHarmanshot a 47,CaseyMcCoya 48,and EmilyMorrisona 54.

WyomingArea 173,Meyers189

JakeWysocki (40), NickRydzewski(41),Zack Mulhern(45)andCourtney Melvin(47)ledtheWarriors tovictoryatFox HillCountryClub(par 35).

Redeemer golf tops PatriotsThe Times Leader staff 

8/4/2019 Times Leader 09-22-2011

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/times-leader-09-22-2011 19/45

8/4/2019 Times Leader 09-22-2011

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/times-leader-09-22-2011 20/45

C M Y K

PAGE 8B THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com

8/4/2019 Times Leader 09-22-2011

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/times-leader-09-22-2011 21/45

C M Y K

        T      o        d      a      y

 The job marketEconomists expect the LaborDepartment to report a slight

drop in the number of peoplewho applied for unemployment

benefits last week. But there’llbe little excitement if the fore-

casts are right. The number of

applicants reached the highestlevel in three months in the

week ended Sept. 10. Thenumber must fall below

375,000 to indicate that em-ployers are hiring enough to

send unemployment rate down.

Nike’s take on the consumerNike’s earnings are also an indica-tor – of consumer’s willingness to

spend on things that aren’t neces-sities. The world’s largest maker

of athletic shoes and clothes hashad rising revenue around the

world in the last year. Its fiscal

first-quarter report will showwhether revenue was hurt by the

slowing global economy. Nike haswarned that rising prices for raw

materials could hurt profit margins.Analysts still expect it to report an

earnings gain.

 An economic readingfrom FedEx FedEx’s fiscal first-quarter earn-

ings report will reveal more thanhow it’s doing. The package deliv-

ery company is seen as a goodbarometer of the global economy

because the number of shipments

it handles rises and falls with busi-ness activity. It generally issues

an economic forecast along withits results. At least two financial

analysts have lowered their earn-ings expectations for FedEx

because of the slower economy.

First-time applications forunemployment benefits

Source: FactSet

Weekending

Sept. 10

428k

Weekending

Sept. 17

(-1%)

422kestimate

Price-to-earnings ratio: 16based on past 12 months’ results

Dividend: $0.52 Div. Yield: 0.7%

70

80

90

$100

1Q ’11

OperatingEPS

1Q ’12

est.$1.20 $1.46

FDX $72.50

$82.91

’11

Source: FactSet

Price-to-earnings ratio: 20based on past 12 months’ results

Dividend: $1.24 Div. Yield: 1.4%

70

80

90

$100

1Q ’11

OperatingEPS

1Q ’12

est.$1.14

$1.21

NKE $85.74

$78.37

’11

Source: FactSet

Google books deal delayedLawyers for authors, publishers and

Google have bought themselves moretime in their New York copyright caseas they try to reach a new deal thatcould create the world’s largest digitallibrary.

 The lawyers told federal Judge Den-ny Chin in Manhattan on Thursdaythat they are still negotiating.

In March, the judge rejected a $125million deal. That agreement haddrawn hundreds of objections fromGoogle rivals, consumer watchdogs,academic experts, literary agents andeven foreign governments.

A lawyer for Google said the currentnegotiations are making substantialprogress. Still, the judge agreed to acourt schedule that extends throughthe next year, with no trial date set.

Google already has scanned morethan 15 million books for the project. The lawsuit was filed in 2005.

Home sales signs mixed The number of Americans who

bought previously occupied homesrose in August. But sales were drivenby an increase in foreclosures, a signthat home prices could fall further next year and slow a housing recovery.

 The National Association of Realtorssaid Wednesday that home sales rose7.7 percent last month to a seasonallyadjusted annual rate of 5.03 millionhomes. That’s below the 6 million thateconomists say is consistent with ahealthy housing market.

Last month’s pace was slightly aheadof the 4.91 million sold in 2010, the worst sales level in 13 years.

Homes at risk of foreclosure madeup 31 percent of sales. That’s up from29 percent in July. Many are being bought by investors.

I N B R I E F

$3.58 $2.66$3.58

BUSINESS S E C T I O N B

THE TIMES LEADER THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011timesleader.com

DOW11,124.84—283.82

NASDAQ2,538.19

—52.05

S&P1,166.76—35.33

WALL STREET

52-WEEK

HIGH LOW NAME TKR LAST CHG

Stocks of Local Interest

9 8. 01 7 4. 58 A ir Pr od A PD 7 8. 13 - 4. 05

3 0. 70 2 2. 84 A m Wt rW ks A WK 3 0. 29 + .1 2

5 1. 50 3 6. 76 A me rig as A PU 4 3. 58 - .73

2 3. 79 1 9. 28 A qu aA m W TR 2 0. 95 - .61

3 8. 02 2 6. 00 A rc hDa n A DM 2 7. 18 - .85

3 33 .9 9 2 14 .0 0 A u toZon e A ZO 3 22 .7 9 - 4.96

15.31 6.01 BkofAm BAC 6.38 -.52

3 2. 50 1 8. 77 B kN YM el B K 1 9. 12 - 1. 09

17.49 5.59 BonTon BONT 5.80 -. 32

52.95 34.33 CIGNA CI 43.62 -2. 01

3 9. 50 2 9. 45 C VS C ar e CV S 3 5. 33 - .48

7 1. 77 5 7. 55 C oc aC ola K O 6 9. 28 - 1. 37

2 7. 16 1 6. 91 C om ca st C MC SA 2 1. 86 - .8 6

2 8. 95 2 1. 75 C m ty Bk Sy C BU 2 2. 06 - 1. 27

4 2. 50 1 7. 01 Cm ty Hlt CY H 1 7. 08 - .86

3 8. 69 2 9. 00 C or eM ar k C OR E 3 1. 18 - 1. 11

13.63 4.81 Entercom ETM 5.10 -. 20

2 1. 02 8 .5 5 F ai rc hl dS F CS 1 2. 64 - .48

9 .8 4 6 .2 9 F ro nt ie rCm F TR 6. 37 - .41

18.71 1 3.09 Genpact G 15.61 -. 16

13.74 7.00 Hart eHnk HHS 7. 98 -. 21

55.00 4 6.98 Heinz HNZ 49. 71 -. 90

5 9. 85 4 5. 67 H er sh ey HS Y 5 8. 21 - 1. 08

36.30 2 9.80 Kraft KFT 34.13 -.39

27.45 18.07 Lowes LO W 19.18 -. 74

9 5. 00 6 9. 23 M & T B k M TB 6 8. 29 - 3. 54

9 1. 22 7 2. 14 M cD nl ds M CD 8 7. 52 - 1 .7 9

2 4. 98 1 7. 50 N BT B cp NB TB 1 7. 55 - .96

1 0. 28 4 .2 5 Nex st ar B NX ST 6. 45 +. 08

65.19 4 2.70 PNC PNC 47. 69 -2. 50

2 9. 61 2 4. 10 P PL C or p P PL 2 8. 98 - .29

2 0. 25 1 3. 16 P en nM il l P MI C 2 0. 14 + .0 417.34 8.80 PenRE PEI 8.54 -.74

7 1. 89 5 9. 25 P eps iC o P EP 6 0. 79 +. 40

7 2. 74 5 4. 61 P hil ipM or P M 6 6. 80 - 1. 48

6 7. 72 5 7. 56 P ro ct Ga m P G 6 3. 02 - 1. 06

6 7. 52 4 4. 54 P r ude nt l P RU 4 5. 73 - 3. 25

17.11 10.92 S LM Cp SLM 12. 67 -. 50

6 0. 00 3 8. 00 S LM p fB S LM pB 4 2. 50 - .6 0

4 4. 65 2 3. 60 So Un Co S UG 4 1. 38 - .41

12.45 6.40 Supvalu SVU 6. 87 -. 38

59.72 4 2.49 TJX TJX 56.49 -1.75

3 3. 53 2 5. 81 U GI Co rp UG I 2 7. 71 - 1. 03

3 8. 95 3 1. 58 V er iz onC m V Z 3 5. 84 - .57

5 7. 90 4 8. 31 W al Mar t W MT 5 1. 32 - .97

4 2. 20 3 6. 77 We is Mk W MK 3 7. 43 - .94

3 4. 25 2 2. 58 W el ls Fa rg o W FC 2 3. 71 - .9 6

I GUESS I ALWAYSconsidered Motorolathe middle-of-the-road brand, as far asAndroid-based smart-phones go. The ubiq-uitous Droid, theDroid X, the Droid 2,

and all of the others — all fine, top-notch phones — seemed to lack theflair of Samsung, or the nice touchesthat made HTC phones more appeal-ing, in my opinion.

So, despite all the hype, I was some- what skeptical of the Droid Bionic — Iexpected it to be “just another evolu-tion” of the Droid product line.

I was wrong. The design leaves no doubt that it’s

from the same lineage as the Droid X

equal aplomb. The display

features a superi-or 256 pixel-per-inch density, and was one of themost clear I’veseen to date. Thecameras (thereare two, oneforward facing,one rear) wereexcellent quality— the main cam-

era is an 8 Megapixel model with dualflash – it can also shoot HD video —as is now standard of most high-endsmartphones. The Bionic is $299.99 with a two-year contract. Otherwise,it’s $589.99

come together to create an experiencethat can be described simply, and in

curved corners lend an air of sophisti-cation, for one. The choice of colorsand material, for another, give theimpression of quality.

But the real magic starts when youhit the power button.

One thing I have always liked aboutthe Motorola-manufactured Androidphones is their boot animation. Once you arrive at the “Home” page andstart using the phone, one thing be-comes clear: This phone is something special.

I would characterize it as one of themost responsive smartphones I’ve

NICK DELORENZOT E C H T A L K

Carrier: VerizonNetwork: 4G LTEProcessor: Dual-Core1GHZ Arm CortexA9Display: 4.3 Inch540x960 resolution256ppiGPU: GeForce Tegra 2Camera: 8MP HD 3264x2448 Primary,VGA secondaryOS: Android 2.3 (Gingerbread)Storage:16GB internal, 1GB RAM, 2GB Rom + Up to32GB on cardWireless: WI-FI, Bluetooth 2.0Price: 299.99 (w/contract) $ 589.99 (w/ocontract)

MOTOROLA DROID BIONICFROM VERIZON

Taking Motorola’s Droid Bionic from Verizon for a test drive

 WASHINGTON — The Feder-al Reserve has taken many un-precedented steps in the pastthree years to try to boost theeconomy and counter the effectsof a financial crisis thattriggereda painful recession. It’s kept theshort-term interest rate it con-trols at a record low near zerosince December 2008.

And it’s bought about $2 tril-lion in U.S. Treasurys and mort-

gage-backed securities to try tohold down longer-term rates. That’s caused the Fed’s portfolioto hit nearly $2.9 trillion, fromless than $1trillion in 2007.

Some steps the Fed has taken:• Dec. 15-16, 2008: The Fed

creates a targetrange for interestrates and cuts its key federalfunds rate to between zero and0.25percent.That’s a recordlow.

• Jan. 27-28-2009: The centralbank signals it’s prepared to buylonger-term Treasuries and ex-pand other programs.

• March 17-18, 2009: The Fedsays it will start buying up to$300 billion in governmentbondsover sixmonths.It also de-cides to boost purchases of Fan-nie Mae and Freddie Mac mort-

gage-backed securities and debt.• Aug.27, 2010: ChairmanBen

Bernanke lists several options toboostthe economy, including thepurchase of additional govern-ment bonds.

• Nov. 3, 2010: The Fed an-nounces it will buy $600 billionmore in Treasury bonds to try tohold down longer-term rates.

• June 22, 2011: The Fed con-firms itwill complete itspurchas-es of $600 billion in Treasurybonds by the end of the month.

• Aug. 9, 2011: It pledges tokeep its benchmark short-termrateat nearlyzerountil mid-2013.

• Aug. 26, 2011: Bernanke pro-poses no new steps to boost theeconomy. But he signals that

Congress should do more to pro-mote hiring and growth, or riskdelaying theeconomy’sreturn tofull health. He also says the Fed’sSeptember policy meeting willlast two days instead of one.

• Sept. 21, 2011: The Fed an-nounces that it will sell $400 bil-lion of its shorter-term securitiesto buy longer-term holdings totry to lower Treasury yields fur-ther.TheFedalsosaysit will rein-  vest its holdings of mortgage-backed securities.

Fed’s steps

to boosteconomyThe Associated Press

PLAINS TWP. -- The French love pizza. When you go to the grocery store in France, there is a freezer

stocked with frozen pizzas, trade adviser Romain Balluais said.So why can’t one of those pizza pies be manufactured here in Northeastern Pennsylvania?

 That wasthe question Vincent Nardone andJoe Bevevino of Wilkes-Barre-basedpizza maker Nardone

Bros. brought to theWhere inthe World, Bringing theWorld to NortheasternPennsylvania tradeshowat

the Woodlands Inn on Wednesday.

“We’re in 40 states here,” Bevevino said. “With the national acceptance that we’ve had with our products,

because of ourcapability to adapt to fit certain markets,we’re looking to seeif we can’t expandinto Europe.”

  The annual show brings companiesfrom seven counties in NortheasternPennsylvania together with trade advis-ers specializing in 38 international mar-kets.Thirty-two companies attended theshow Wednesday.

In the United States, Nardone Bros.sells a lot of its products to school dis-tricts, but Balluais, trade adviser for

France and Spain, said French schoolsmaynot be interested.But other buyers,including universities, large corporateoffices and stadiums might be, he ad- vised the Nardone representatives.

In particular, Balluais found the com-pany’s pizza in oven-able boxes particu-larly intriguing.

“That’s great; we don’t have that Ithink,” Balluais said. “That’s a greatproduct.”

 Thetradeadvisersat theshoware notdiplomats, but private contractors hiredby the state to provide guidance and as-

sistance to companies in developing products that fit international marketsand coordinating meetings with poten-tial buyers in other countries.

Cam Koons, of Deer Park Lumber in Tunkhannock, said he traveled to Chinaafter meetingwitha tradeadviser at last year’s show.

“We went over toChinaand they hada

taxi ready forus whenwe got offtheair-plane, becausewe don’t know howto dothat; we don’t speak the language,” hesaid. “And from that trip we picked up alot of business and a lot of new custom-ers, andit startedoutat a tradeshowlikethis.”

 Throughout the week they are travel-ing to 10 different regions around thestate to meet with Pennsylvania compa-niesas partof PennsylvaniaInternation-al Business Week. Thefreeprogram wasfundedby thestateDepartment of Com-munity and Economic Development’s

Office of International Business Devel-opment and sponsored locally by theNortheastern Pennsylvania Alliance.

 Wilfred H. Muskens, deputy secretaryfor international business developmentfor DCED, said that international mar-kets have become increasingly impor-tant for Pennsylvania companies as do-mestic sales have declined in many sec-

tors.Expandingabroadalsoallowscom-paniesto rideout recessionsmoreeasilyby spreadingtheir sales among multiplemarkets.

In the past decade, Muskens said,Pennsylvania has doubled the value of products it exports, and DCED’s interna-tional business development programlast year helped generate more than$525 million in export sales, producing $64 million in state tax revenues, at thecost of a $6 million state investment inthe program.

 A slice of world trade

PETE G. WILCOX/THE TIMES LEADER

Local business people meetwith international trade representatives during the Where In TheWorldtrade show at the

Woodlands Inn& Resort in Plains Township on Wednesday to discuss local businessesdealingin international trade.Theevent wasorganized by NEPA andPennsylvania Center for Trade Development.

By MATT HUGHES  [email protected]

8/4/2019 Times Leader 09-22-2011

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/times-leader-09-22-2011 22/45

C M Y K

PAGE 10B THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com➛ W E A T H E R

Call  Visit )\`)*5,7(JVT

Businesses get

the big save.

Northeastern PA businesses can save up to on health care coverage.*

Providing your employees with the health benefits they want at a price you can afford

 just got easier. With our new AffordaBlueSM plan, your company can save big on

health care coverage—up to 20%. To find out more, call your broker or Blue Cross of 

Northeastern Pennsylvania. AffordaBlue. It’s not just affordable. It’s Blue Cross.®

ALMANAC

REGIONAL FORECAST

NATIONAL FORECAST

For more weatherinformation go to:

www.timesleader.com

National Weather Service

607-729-1597

Forecasts, graphsand data ©2011

Weather Central, LP

Yesterday 71/56Average 71/51Record H igh 92 in 1931Rec or d L ow 32 in 1 956

Yesterday 1Month to date 69Year to date 77Last year to date 82Normal year to date 100*Index of fuel consumption, how far the day’smean temperature was below 65 degrees.

P

re

c

ip

ita

ti

o

nYesterday 0.00”Month to date 6.52”Normal month to date 2.73”Yea r to date 45.22”Normal year to date 27.74”

Su

s

qu

eh

an

na S

tag

e C

hg

. Fld

. S

t

gWilkes-Barre 4.38 -0.58 22.0Towa nd a 2 .53 -0 .39 21 .0Leh

ig

hBethlehem 2 .86 0 .54 16.0D

e

la

wa

rePort Jervi s 4 .42 -0.12 18.0

Today’s high/Tonight’s low

TODAY’S SUMMARY

H

ighs

: 71-76. Lows

: 59-62. Cloudy with achance of rain today. Cloudy skies withrain turning to showers tonight.

The Poconos

H

ighs

: 71-79. Lows

: 65-68. Cloudy with achance of rain today. Cloudy skies withrain turning to showers tonight.

The Jersey Shore

H

ighs

: 71-76. Lows

: 54-58. Mostly cloudywith a chance of rain today. Mostlycloudy with a chance of showers tonight.

The Finger Lakes

H

ighs

: 78-79. Lo

w

s

: 66-68. Cloudy with achance of rain today. Cloudy skies withrain turning to showers tonight.

Brandywine Valley

H

ighs

: 76-80. Lo

w

s

: 67-68. Cloudy withrain and a few thunderstorms today.Cloudy with a chance of rain tonight.

Delmarva/Ocean City

Anchorage 51/44/.06 54/43/sh 51/42/cAt lanta 85/69/ .00 80/67/t 77/63/tBaltimore 74/57/.00 78/67/t 76/63/rBos to n 75/59/ .00 73/63/r 71 /64/s hBuffalo 79/56/.00 7 1/56/c 67/54/s hCharlotte 75/68/. 43 83/65/t 80/61/tChicago 70/60/ .00 62/50/c 6 1/51/cCleveland 72/61/. 16 69/58/c 63/54/shD all as 92/67/ .00 8 0/60/t 8 3/61 /sDenver 68/38/.00 79/47/s 83/49/sDetro it 78/63/ .00 67/52/c 63/51/cHonolulu 86/77/ .00 88/73/s 87/72/sHouston 93/66/.00 94/69/c 88/68/pcIndianapolis 80/64/.00 67/50/c 64/50/pcLas Vegas 99/73/.00 99/73/s 99/73/sLos Angeles 69/62/.00 71/62/s 71/63/sMia mi 9 0/ 78/ .1 7 90/ 79/ t 9 1/ 79/ tMilwaukee 69/59/.00 58/46/c 56/49/c

Minneapolis 61/53/.05 55/39/c 62/43/c

Myrtle Beach 81/72/.00 82/72/t 81/70/tNas hv il le 81/66/ .16 82/58/c 74/5 1/tNew Orleans 89/72/.00 87/73/t 86/71/tNorfo lk 79/69/1. 61 80/70/t 79/68/tOklahoma City 80/61/.00 72/52/pc 81/58/sOm aha 70/ 52/ .0 0 6 6/4 2/s 6 8/4 4/sOrlando 90/76/.00 9 1/74/t 92/75/tPhoenix 104/75/.00 105/76/s 105/78/sPittsburgh 80/55/.00 73/55/r 65/52/shPortland, Ore. 82/59/.00 80/61/pc 83/59/sSt. Louis 77/60/ .00 67/50/pc 70/48/pcSalt Lake City 80/53/.00 83/56/s 85/56/sSan Antonio 93/71/.00 93/70/c 90/68/pcSan D iego 7 1/63/ .00 72/64/s 73/64/sSan Francisco 75/54/.00 77/56/s 75/55/sSeatt le 75/60/ .00 7 1/58/r 76/57/pcTa mp a 92/ 77/ .0 0 92/ 77/ t 9 0/ 77/ tTucs on 94/68/ .00 98/68/s 98/71/s

Washington, DC 75/64/.00 79/69/t 77/64/r

City Yesterday Today Tomorrow City Yesterday Today Tomorrow

Amsterdam 64/57/.00 59/50/pc 64/50/pcBaghdad 99/77/.00 103/74/s 106/74/sBei ji ng 81/48/ .00 80/53/s 78/5 1/sBer lin 68/48/ .00 64/49/pc 61/47/pcBuenos Aires 79/55/.00 69/48/pc 64/47/pcDublin 59/50/.00 59/48/c 60/51/pcFrankfurt 70/45/.00 67/48/pc 65/47/pcHong Kong 86/73/.00 86/78/c 85/77/cJerusalem 90/64/.00 87/66/s 80/64/tLondo n 64/55/.00 64/51/pc 68/53/pc

Mexico City 77/57/.00 73/56/sh 71/54/tMontreal 72/52/ .00 72/58/t 70/57/cMoscow 59/46/.00 62/51/sh 60/45/shPa ris 68/ 59/ .0 0 69/ 51 /s 70/49/sRio de Janeiro 82/72/.00 80/66/pc 82/68/pcRiyadh 102/73/.00 105/73/s 106/75/sRom e 8 2/63/ .0 0 8 3/61 /s 8 2/6 3/p cSan Juan 89/75/.00 89/77/t 88/77/pcTokyo 81/64/.00 79/69/sh 78/67/shWarsaw 70/46/.00 70/53/sh 61/44/pc

City Yesterday Today Tomorrow City Yesterday Today Tomorrow

WORLD CITIESR

iv

e

r Le

v

el

s

, from 12 p.m. yesterday.

K

e

y

:s -sunny, p

c-partlycloudy,c-cloudy, s

h-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, s

n-snow, s

f-snowflurries, i-ice.

Philadelphia79/67

Reading78/64

Sc

ra

n

to

n

Wilkes-Barre74/61

75/62

Harrisburg78/63

Atlantic City78/68

New York City77/65

Syracuse76/58

Pottsville75/59

Albany76/62

Binghamton

Towanda

73/58

74/59

State College74/58

Poughkeepsie75/62

80/60

62/50

79/47

89/63

55/39

71/62

72/55

70/48

83/50

71/58

77/65

67/52

80/67

90/79

94/69

88/73

51/41

54/43

79/69

S

u

n a

n

d M

o

o

nS

un

ri

s

e S

un

s

etToday 6:51a 7:01pTo mo rrow 6 :52a 6 :59p

M

o

on

ri

s

e Mo

on

s

etToday 1:07a 3:55pTom or row 2 :1 4a 4 :31 p

New First Full Last

Sept. 27 Oct. 3 Oct. 11 Oct. 19

NASA continuesto estimatewhen and wherethe remains ofan old researchsatellite will fallto earth thisFriday. The latestestimateis thatthe satellite willre-enter the

atmospheresometime duringthe afternoon,then breakapart. The piecesare not expectedto be passingover NorthAmerica at thattime. So there isa slim chance tonone at all ofbeing able to seeit over our area.Chances are itwill crash some-where into an

ocean in a pathexpected to beabout 500 mileslong. I'm hopingthe location canbe determinedto find out justhowbig thepieces were thathit the earth.

- T

o

m C

la

r

k

NATIONAL FORECAST: A cold front extending through the East and into the Gulf Coast states willproduce plenty of rain and thunderstorms. An area of low pressure will also produce a few showersover the northern Great Lakes. High pressure will provide dry weather from the northern and centralPlains through the Rockies and into much of the West.

Recorded at Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Int’l Airport

Tempe

ra

tur

es

H

e

a

ti

ng D

e

gr

e

e Da

y

s*

P

re

c

ip

ita

ti

o

n

TODAY

Partly sunny,a shower

FRIDAY

More rain

70°

62°

SUNDAY

Partlysunny

72°

57°

MONDAY

Cloudy

68°

57°

TUESDAY

Rainpossible

65°

50°

WEDNESDAY

Partlysunny

70°

50°

SATURDAY

Partlysunny

70°

60°

72°

62°

8/4/2019 Times Leader 09-22-2011

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/times-leader-09-22-2011 23/45

C M Y K

LIFES E C T I O N C

THE TIMES LEADER THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011timesleader.com

on Saleon SaleEVERY FLOOR In-Stock isSept 22nd - 30th

More deals added throughout the sale. First come, first served. Product prices and

dealsYour local store has been authorized to make deals

Did you know, that

its National Punc-

tuation Day on

“Saturday”!

If you immediately

caught everything wrong 

 with that sentence (which

should have read, “Did you

knowit’sNational Punctua-

tion Day on Saturday?”) you might especially appre-

ciatethis quasi-holiday.

If you’ve never heard of Na-tional Punctuation Day, maybethat’s because in this, its eighth year, the founders are trying todraw more attention to whatthey seeas a national problem.

  Widespread misuse of punc-tuation hasbecomeevidenton aplethoraof businesssigns – Em-

  ployee’s Only instead of Em- ployees Only; Todays specials instead of Today’s specials –andin social media – “ Does anyone

 know the schedule for the cen-ter city bus’s” instead of “center city buses” or “Friends, I need

  you’re help” instead of “your” help. Even nationally recog-nized clothing brand Old Navymade a highly publicized mis-take last month, printing a

 wholecollection of collegiateT-shirts cheering on variousteamswith“ LetsGo!”insteadof “ Let’s Go!”

 Why thelackof love forpunc-tuation? Isit lazinessor just for-getfulness of the basic rules welearned way back when?

Sherri Yeninas, a fifth-gradeteacher at State Street Elemen-

tary in Larksville, thinks tech-nologyplaysa part.

“I don’t know that punctua-tion is no longer important,butit might be that people don’tthink about it as much in every-day life because of texting andInternet language,” she said.

  Though the abbreviated,acronym-heavy online style of  writing is becoming increasing-ly prevalent, this doesn’t meanschools aren’t stressing tradi-tionalwriting.

Yeninas teaches Pennsylvania

System of School Assessment writing as part of her curricu-lum.She saidpunctuationplaysa bigpartnot only inthe testing 

Save the apostrophes from extinc-tion; don’t throw them aroundwilly-nilly. Go easy on the commas,too, but don’t forget them whenwarranted. And please reserve the

quotation marks for direct quotesor works titles or at least sarcasm.

• Apostrophe: Indicates the pos-sessive case, as in woman’s coat orman’s hat, but don’t forget that

certain words that do not becomeplural by adding an s still take theapostrophe in the same place, asin women’s coats. An apostrophealso indicates plurals of acronymsand symbols (several M.D.’s). The

most common modern-day mis-take? Apostrophes used to plural-

ize nouns, as in, “She has severalnotebook’s” or “My teacher’s areall nice this year.”

• Colon: Indicates a distinct divi-

sion in a sentence to show thatwhat follows is an elaboration orsummation of what comes before.Example: We need to bring plentyof camping supplies: food, water, atent and flashlights.(If you’d like to see a comma after

“tent,” don’t be offended but readon. The Oxford, or serial, comma isa matter of style rather than hard-and-fast rule. Journalists mostoften omit serial commas; lawyersrarely do. To quote TheodoreBernstein: “Grave issues of lawhave hung on commas.”

• Comma: Indicates the briefestpause of all punctuation marks.One basic rule: Use a comma in acompound sentence with twosubjects, two verbs and a conjunc-tion: “I like salt, but I don’t likepepper.” Ditch the comma in “I likesalt but don’t like pepper.”

• Semicolon: Almost equal to afull stop, it mainly separates claus-es not linked by a conjunction:“Rudeness to the teacher will not

be tolerated; do not talk back.”

• Quotation marks: A sign read-ing “Fresh” Fish can mean some-thing’s really fishy about the fish.

• Hyphen: A hyphen can eraseambiguity. A man-eating shark isdifferent from a man eating shark.Source: www.nationalpunctua-tionday.com; Theodore Bern-stein’s “The Careful Writer.”

MARKS TO LIVE BY

If we use our noodles, we’ll realize apostrophes don’t pluralize.

‘You’re’ is a contraction thatmeans ‘you are;’ ‘your’ is the

possessive form of ‘you.’

A colon should follow ‘IE,’ and

commas would come in handy

after ‘exposed’ and ‘change.’

Punctuation a thing of the past?By SARAPOKORNY 

 [email protected]

See PUNCTUATION, Page 5C

D

ETROIT— No question,looks matter. • Prettygirls win

prom queen. Gorgeous women get promoted. • That’s

 why you’ll never catch some women in public without

makeup. • “The message, in general, from the cosmet-

icsindustryis that you’ve gotto lookbeautiful, youhave

to be thin, you have to have this body type and that body type,” says

Joyce Pearlman, a clinical social worker and therapist based in Hun-

tington Woods, Mich. • “If that’s the message, you think you have to

have the most expensive things, and you think ‘He won’t love me un-

less I’m a size 4 and I have a perfect face.’ ”

On average, U.S. women spend $10billion on cosmetics, beauty suppliesand perfumes annually, according toHoovers Inc. And for some guys, a woman with a perfect face — or atleast onewith impeccable makeup—opens the dialogue.

Pedro Villarreal, 31, prefers a wom-

an who puts some effort into her ap-pearance. The quality analyst who  works in Dearborn, Mich., says a woman in makeup definitely wouldcatch his interest muchfaster than one not wear-ing makeup.

“Maybe it’s just be-cause I’m so used to see-ing women in makeup,”the single Woodhaven,Mich.,man says.“A wom-an not wearing makeup  would be more notice-able,but wearing makeup would get my attention.”

Overdoing it also getshis attention.

“When I goto the gym,andI seewomen inmake-

up, that’s weird,” he says.But, experts say, make-up firms target flaws toget people to buy theirproducts.

Paula Begoun, who has her ownbeauty line called Paula’s Choice andcalls herself the Cosmetics Cop, isn’tso sure about that. She says womenareless influenced thanstudies wouldlead us to believe.

“If I have a pimple, I don’t need anadvertisement to tell me to cover itup,” Begoun says. “I understand theadvertisement has to assert a nega-tive, but let’s say I have wrinkles —evenif theytellme,I knowI got wrin-kles.”

It’s farmore important fora woman

toexpressconfidenceinher looks,Be-goun says.

Michele Lockley, 34, says she hashad more dating success withoutheavy makeup and that no one needsit on a regular basis.

“You can be prettywithout it,” saysLockley of Redford, adding that her

boyfriend prefers her natural look.“I’ve had the same foundation for a

 year,” says the nursing assistant. “If I’m having a really bad day, and my

face is really, really red, I’ll wear a water-based sensi-tive-skinfoundationjust tolighten the red.”

 Then there are folks likeRashida Williams, who wear cosmetics almost ev-ery day. A makeup artist  with more than 10 years’experience, Williams saysshe wears makeup regular-lybecauseit makesherfeelgood and her goal is tomake her clients feel thesame way.

“It enhances all of thisnaturalGod-givenbeauty,”says themarriedmotherof one who lives in Romulus,Mich.

“When I don’t have on makeup, Ican admit that I do not feel that pret-ty,”shesays.“I knowthat soundssilly,butmakeupallowsmeto feel a lotbet-ter about me.”

 Whilelooking goodbolsters self-con-fidence, Pearlman says makeup shouldnever trump quality interactions withpeople. Sometimes cosmetics can putup a barrier whenit comesto intimacybecause women aren’t revealing theirtrue selves. That is, until the makeupcomes off at night.

“It’s gottobe somemiddleground,”Pearlman says.

Middle ground key to cosmeticsBy ERINHILL PERRY  Detroit Free Press

On average,U.S. women

spend $10billion on

cosmetics,beauty 

supplies andperfumesannually,

according toHoovers Inc.

MCT ILLUSTRATION

8/4/2019 Times Leader 09-22-2011

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/times-leader-09-22-2011 24/45

C M Y K

PAGE 2C THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com➛ C O M M U N I T Y N E W S

LUZERNE COUNTY WANTS YOUR TIRES

Luzerne County residents drop off your used

 Automobile, Motorcycle, Pick up Truck 

or SUV Tires...FREE of charge!

Tiresmust beREMOVED from RIMS and FREE of LIQUIDS andHEAVYMUD

Saturday - October 1, 2011: BUTLER TOWNSHIP FIREHOUSE, 14 W. BUTLER DRIVE, DRUMS9:00 AM TO 3:00 PM EACH DAY 

Saturday - October 8, 2011: HANOVER AREA JR/SR HIGH SCHOOL, 1600 SANS SOUCI PARKWAY, HANOVER TWP.

Sponsored by the Luzerne County Commissioners and the Department of Environmental Protection.

COLLECTIONIS NOTAVAILABLETO TIREDEALERS,

SERVICE STATIONSOPERATORS,REPAIRGARAGESORTIRESALESOUTLETS ANDRE-TRADERS.

PRE REGISTRATION IS A MUST - THERE IS A LIMIT OF 15 TIRES PER VEHICLEPRE REGISTRATION IS A MUST - THERE IS A LIMIT OF 15 TIRES PER VEHICLE 

TIRESWILL NOT BE ACCEPTED WITHOUT A PRE REGISTRATION NUMBERTIRES WILL NOT BE ACCEPTED WITHOUT A PRE REGISTRATION NUMBER 

PLEASE CALL 1-800-821-7654 TO PRE REGISTERPLEASE CALL 1-800-821-7654 TO PRE REGISTER 

FINALLY,WEIGHT LOSSMADE SIMPLE!

• Rapid weight loss of upto 2lbs per day!

• No injections or pillsto take

• Targets fat loss inproblem areas

Call Now For Your FREE Bottle

LOSEWEIGHTBUILDMUSCLE

Ground breaking research of HCG has changed the world of

weight loss forever! HCG is a chemical produced by the

human body that helps it use fat more efficiently. According

to renowned endocrinologist, Dr. Albert T.W. Simeons,

HCG effectively sends signals to the brain to release fat

stores. For years, HCG was only available by injection.

Now, with its new advanced liquid formula, SimplePure

Nutrition has made it available in sublingual drops.

Simply put the drops under your tongue and you’ll start toexperience rapid weight loss of up to 1-2lbs per day!

Hurry While it’s

FREE!For a limited time, makers of SimplePure HCG are

giving away a free bottle just for calling their toll

free hotline. Limit one per household. This offer

good while supplies last.

PUT MUSCLE

WHERE

THE FATWAS!

Coughlin High SchoolClass of 1961 reunion committeewill meet 6 p.m. Sept. 29 at Norm’sPizza and Eatery. Plans are being

made for the 50th anniversaryreunion to be held Oct. 8 at theGenetti Hotel and ConferenceCenter. All classmates are invited.Information is being sought on thefollowing classmates, Carol DonnaAnderson, Hedwig Duncan, Flo-rence Evans, Geraldine Golenski,Pamela Moseman and DoloresMrozinski. Anyone with informationcan contact Louise at 610-518-0484, or email [email protected].

Class of 1963 is holding its annualdinner 6-10 p.m. Oct. 22 at theAmerican Legion, 54 Chestnut St.,Georgetown section, Wilkes-Barre.Spouses and guests are invited.Cost is $21p er person. To makereservations, or for more informa-tion, call Marie Gerra Bombay at256-3627, Peggy Grimalia Lyons at823-8157 or Roseann KossakowskiSmith at 820-2509 by Oct. 10.

Class of 1971

will hold a reunionplanning meeting 7 p.m. Tuesday atRodano’s on Public Square, Wilkes-Barre. All graduates interested inhelping are encouraged to attend.

G.A.R. Memorial High SchoolClass of 1952 has changed thedate of the reunion meeting thatwas scheduled for Monday to 5

p.m. Tuesday at Bettelli’s Villa,Kidder Street, Wilkes-Barre.

Hanover High SchoolClass of 1963 will meet 5 p.m. Oct.4 at Happy Pizza, Main Street,Plymouth, to discuss plans for the50th anniversary reunion. All

classmates are encouraged toattend.

Class of 1969 is having a 60thBirthday Party 8-10 p.m. Oct. 1 atAlexis’ Tavern, St. Mary’s Road andSouth Main Street. There is no costfor each member or “honoraryclassmates” and guests. Dress iscasual and no pre-registration isnecessary. For more information,contact Joe at 823-9074 or Karenat 823-6877.

Marymount High SchoolClass of 1962 will meet 7 p.m. Oct.5 at Norm’s Pizza and Eatery,South Sherman Street, Wilkes-Barre, to begin plans for the 50thanniversary reunion. All localgraduates are encouraged to at-tend and to bring any informationon other classmates.

St. Vincent’s High SchoolAlumni Association will meet 6p.m. Tuesday at the PlymouthAmerican Legion, 33 Center Ave.,Plymouth. Meeting room entranceis on the right side of the parkinglot. Anyone who attended St. Vin-cent’s is welcome.

West Side Central Catholic High

SchoolClass of 1960 will hold a network-ing social meeting 5:30 p.m.Wednesday at the Beer Deli, WellesStreet, Forty Fort. All classmatesare welcome. For more informa-tion, contact Julie at [email protected] or 639-1390, orJane at [email protected].

Wyoming Valley West HighClass of 1976 will hold its finalorganizational meeting 7:30 p.m.Oct. 6 at the East Mountain Inn,Wilkes-Barre. There will be anicebreaker celebration at BrewsBros. West, Luzerne, on Nov.1 1.Classmates will be able to take atour of the Kingston High Schoolon Chester Street in the afternoonon Nov. 12. The reunion dinner willbe held Nov. 12 at the East Moun-tain Inn. Contact Michele Millingtonat 868-5564, or email [email protected].

Class of 1981 30th anniversaryreunion has been rescheduled to2-9 p.m. Oct. 1 at Konefal’s Grove,Chase Road, Jackson Township.Anyone wishing a refund from the

earlier date should send a self-addressed, stamped envelope toRose Pugh, 677 N. Walnut St.,Luzerne, Pa. 18709. Anyone whowould like to attend on the newdate should send $45 to RosePugh by Wednesday. Include phonenumber and make checks payableto WVW Class of 81. This informa-tion should be passed along toother classmates.

REUNIONS

8/4/2019 Times Leader 09-22-2011

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/times-leader-09-22-2011 25/45

1000 Dunham DriveDunmore, PA

570.346.2453

www.nawarhorse.com

*Demo models subject to change.Must be 21 years of age forVMAX, R1 or R6,all others 18 years of age, in the state of Florida,must be

21 to demo.All riders must wear long pants, shirt with sleeves , closed shoes, approved DOT helmet and have valid motorcycle license.

NORTH AMERICAN WARHORSE

    W    A    T    E    R    F

    R    O    N    T

    P    I    T    T    S    T

    O    N

      3      0      4

      K     e     n     n     e      d    y      B      l    v      d .

      6      5      4   -      6      8

      8      3

OUTDOOR CABANA 

OPEN DAILY 

$3 MARGARITAS EVERY DAY 

WE ARE OPEN

 All September Birthdays will be honored throughout theentire month of September.

ALL MONTH SPECIALS1/2 lb. Lobster

Tail Dinner$19.99

or

Surf & Turf 

$25.95Both served with FF & Cole Slaw

C M Y K

THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 PAGE 3C

Photographs and information mustbe received two full weeks before yourchild’s birthday.

To ensure accurate publication, yourinformation must be typed or comput-er-generated . Include your child’s

name, age and birthday, parents’,grandparents’ and great-grandparents’names and their towns of residence,any siblings and their ages.

Don’t forget to include a daytimecontact phone number.

We cannot return photos submittedfor publication in community news,including birthday photos, occasionsphotos and all publicity photos.

Please do not submit precious ororiginal professional photographs that

require return because such photos canbecome damaged, or occasionally lost,in the production process.

Send to: Times Leader Birthdays,15North Main St., Wilkes-Barre, PA 18711-0250.

GUIDELINES

Children’s birthdays (ages 1-16) will be published free of charge

➛ C O M M U N I T Y N E W S

If your child’s photo and birthdayannouncement is on this page, it willautomatically be entered into the“Happy Birthday Shopping Spree”drawing for a $50 certificate. Onewinner will be announced on the firstof the month on this page.

WIN A $50 GIFTCERTIFICATE

517 Pierce Street •Pierce PlazaKingston, 283-3354

CALL AHEAD:

• Sandwich Platters

• Corporate Lunches

• Catering Available for

any occasion on-site

or at your location

Scan for our complete menu

Free Delivery Free WiFi • Gift Cards

Mon., Wed., Fri.and Sat 7am - 3pm

HAPPY BIRTHDAY!

Timothy and Erik Nickas, sons of Tom and Deanna Nickas, Laflin, arecelebrating their second birthdays today, Sept. 22. Timothy and Erik arethe grandsons of Vincent and Mary DeGiusto, Plains Township, and Tomand Rose Mary Nickas, Stroudsburg. They are the great-grandsons ofFrancis Coniglio, Stroudsburg. Timothy and Erik have three sisters, Am-berle, 19, Rachel, 17, and Jeni, 12,and a brother, Tommy, 14.

Timothy and Erik Nickas

Jacob James Baron, son ofJeffrey and Carol Baron, As-ton, celebrated his 12th birth-day Sept. 18. Jake is a grand-son of Ronald and Carol Baron,Alden, Newport Township;Kathleen Donnelly, Philadel-phia; and the late William Don-nelly. He is a great-grandson ofTozia Baron and Mae GajdaLafferty, both of Nanticoke; thelate Theodore Baron; and thelate Edward Gajda. Jake has a

brother, Sean, 14.

Jacob J. Baron

Patrick Joseph DePriest, son ofSean and Nicole DePriest, iscelebrating is fifth birthdaytoday, Sept. 22. Patrick is agrandson of Bonnie Lahart,Wilkes-Barre; Thomas Lahart,Kingston; and Edward and Mar-garet DePriest, Exeter. He is agreat-grandson of Joseph Pu-gliese, Wyoming. Patrick has asister, Leah, 7.

Patrick J. DePriest

Jayce Decker, son of Brett andCharlene Decker, Hunlock Creek,is celebrating his fifth birthdaytoday, Sept. 22. Jayce is a grand-son of Agnes Klynowsky and thelate Robert Klynowsky, Weather-

ly, and Arden and Albert Decker,Hunlock Creek.

Jayce Decker Noah Richard Heck, son ofRick and Sheila Heck, PlainsTownship, is celebrating his13th birthday today, Sept. 22.Noah is a grandson of Johnand Roseann Corrigan,Wilkes-Barre, and Rose Heck,Mountain Top. He has two

sisters, Samantha, 19, andAlexandra, 17.

Noah R. Heck

Noah Garraoui, son of BechirGarraoui and Nabiha Garraoui,is celebrating his sixth birth-day today, Sept. 22. Noah is agrandson of Ahmed and AishaBey, Tunisia. He has a brother,Adam, 8.

Noah GarraouiKolton Bradyn Shovlin, son ofVic and Suzanne Shovlin, Wilkes-Barre, is celebrating his secondbirthday today, Sept. 22. Koltonis a grandson of David and MaryAnn Harkenreader, Laurel Run,and Michael and Florena Shovlin,Wilkes-Barre Township. He is agreat-grandson of Pauline Har-kenreader and Elizabeth Disler,Laurel Run; Martha Shovlin,Wilkes-Barre Township; andVictor and Ellen Hembold, Tunk-hannock. Kolton has a brother,Kaden, and a sister, Briee.

Kolton B. Shovlin

Michael John Stachowiak, son ofMegan and Mike Stachowiak,Nanticoke, is celebrating hisfourth birthday today, Sept. 22.Michael is a grandson of Bernardand Kathleen Czeck, Mocanaqua,and Mike and Janice Stachowiak,Nanticoke. He has a brother,Lucas, 6.

Michael J. Stachowiak

Loretta “Lettie” Troxell, daugh-ter of Jason and Brooke Trox-ell, Plymouth Township, iscelebrating her fourth birthdaytoday, Sept. 22. Lettie is agranddaughter of David andMolly Polons, Ashley. She is agreat-granddaughter of DonaldStemrich, New York; the lateLoretta Stemrich; EdwardPolons, Ashley; and the lateBetty Polons. She has a broth-er, Luke, 3 months.

Loretta Troxell

The Luzerne County Community College Foundation Inc. recentlyreceived a donation to establish and endow the Donald A. Whitt ‘84Memorial Scholarship. The scholarship donation was made by LindaGaines, MHEd., and her son, Daniel Whitt. Additional gifts were madeto the fund by friends and family. The scholarship will be awarded to aqualified student enrolled in the plumbing, heating and air condition-ing technology program at the college. Donald Whitt graduated fromthe college in 1984 and led a distinguished career with IBM for 26years. At the check presentation, from left: Mark Kobusky, assistantprofessor, technology and coordinator, building maintenance/plumbingand HVAC technology; Sandra Nicholas, executive director, LCCC Foun-

dation Inc.; Thomas P. Leary, president, LCCC; Daniel Whitt, Lagrange-ville, N.Y.; Linda Gaines, Lagrangeville, N.Y.; and JoAnne Yuhas, re-source development assistant, LCCC Foundation Inc.

Whitt family establishes LCCC scholarship

Pittston AreaHigh School recently selected its Homecoming Courtfor the2011-2012 schoolyear. Thequeen will be announced thisFridayduring a pep rally atthe school.She willbe crowned during the half-time ceremony at Friday evening’s football game. Homecoming festiv-ities will endon Saturday with a homecomingdanceat the high school.Members of the HomcomingCourt,from left, areNicollette Bradshaw,Danielle Fereck, Kelly Keener, KristiNaylor and Grace O’Neill.

Pittston Area announces Homecoming Court

Andrew Mhley, a senior at MMIPreparatory School, attended

the Penn-sylvaniaSchool forGlobalEntrepre-neurship(PSGE), aformerPennsylva-nia Gover-nor’s

School, at Lehigh Universitythis summer. The PSGE pro-gram is a selective, resi-

dential program that acceptsthe best and brightest of theworld’s high school students.Participating students spendfive weeks focusing on topicssuch as entrepreneurship,finance, ethics, project man-agement, cross-culturalcommunications, team build-ing, negotiations, and devel-oping a marketing and busi-ness plan. Sessions are facil-itated by Lehigh facultymembers and entrepreneursand leaders of the local andinternational business com-munity. Mhley, the son ofAndrew and Theresa Mhley,Hazleton, will speak to MMIsophomores and juniors thisfall about his experience atPSGE.

NAMES AND FACES

Mhley

8/4/2019 Times Leader 09-22-2011

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/times-leader-09-22-2011 26/45

C M Y K

PAGE 4C THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com➛ C O M M U N I T Y N E W S

SVC., PC

PSYCHIATRIC & COUNSELINGEARLY

Nick TelinchoTherapist

Dr. S. Rahman, M.D.Psychiatrist

 Accepting Medical Assistance, Medicare, BC/BS, Geisinger& most insurances

Expertise in Family/Marital/Couple/Grief/

Phase of Life Counseling

• Anger Management• Childhood Abuse• Drug/Alcohol/Smoking Cessation• Hypnotherapy 

Expertise in Panic AttackDepression, Anxiety, OCD, Bipolar,

PTSD, ADHD

Now acceptingnew patients for

medicaton management.Patients of all ages welcome.

SHAVERTOWN(Back Mountain)

674-3939

BLOOMSBURG784-5663

DANVILLE275-0390

HAZLETON454-2545

MOUNTAIN TOP474-0100

ELLISON CARPET

$5893 ROOMSPLUSHCARPET• INSTALLED WITH PAD • FREE ESTIMATES

MARKET ST., NANTICOKE

Call (570) 436-1500

Based On40 Sq. Yds.

ALL JUNK CARS &TRUCKS WANTED 

VITO & GINO 288-8995 •  Forty Fort 

Highest Prices Paid In Cash.Free Pickup. Call Anytime.

CALL 714-6460 TODAY! www.pinnaclerehabilitation.net 

Most Insurances Accepted.Most Insurances Do NOT Require A Referral

Pinnacle Rehabilitation AssociatesKevin M. Barno, MPT • K. Bridget Barno, PTSharon Marranca, MPT • Hal Glatz, MPT • Maria Hall, PTA 

K. Bridget Barno PT

Kevin M. Barno MPT

520 Third Avenue • Kingston

DOYOUHAVEARTHRITIS OF

THESPINEORHERNIATEDDISCS?

 WEDON’T NEEDMIRACLES!

 All of our therapists have over15 years experience treating your problems

Be able to sit, bend and walk pain free!

Ourexperthands-ontreatmentwill improve yourmobility, increase yourstrength and decrease yourpain.

NEED BRACES?

dr. penny mericle

dr. samantha abod

190 welles street • forty fort, pa 18704

(570) 287-8700braceplaceorthodontics.com

bod

• Same Dallas Location

• Same Friendly, Professional Staff.

• Same Great Therapy

27 Main Street, Dallas • 570-674-2659

The Gluten Free BasketOnly Location Dedicated to Gluten Free Foods

Pasta • Cereal • Baked Goods • Desserts

Snack Foods • Crackers • Spring Mix & Spinach • Meats

Homegrown, Farm Fresh Vegetables & Fruits in Season!

Give it a try! For a New, Healthy & Feeling Good Life!

Corner of Route 118 & 415 in Dallas (next to Subway)Call (570) 594-1046 or (579 406-7166

OPEN: Tues.-Fri., 9:30-530 • Sat. 9:30-5:00 • Sun. 9:30-4:00 • Closed Mon.

Come & Taste Gluten Free

Sabatini’s Pizza!Saturday, September 24 • 1-4 p.m.

along with other Gluten Free products

The Greater

Pittston YMCA

2011 Annual Dinner and 

 Awards Reception

Change A Life Dinner

September 26, 2011 • 6:00 p.m.In the Ballroom of

Mohegan Sun at Pocono Downs

 All proceeds will benefit the Greater Pittston YMCA.

We would like to request the pleasureof your presence at the

1280 Highway 315 | Wilkes-Barre, PA

PE ER DANCHAK OF PNC BANK 

2011 COPORORATE

LEADERSHIP AWARD

THOMAS REILLY

THE SAM MILAZZO

 VOLUNTEER OFTHE YEAR

LOUIS CIAMPI JR.

2011 LEADERSHIP AWARD

KRYSTINA PRINCE

THE JAMES

& JEAN YATES

 YOUTH LEADERSHIPAWARD

 Awards Ceremony will begin at 7:00 p.m. for this year’s honorees:

Tickets - $75 | Table of 10 - $750

SPONSORED BY:

   V a  l  l e  y

C o n t racting & E  x c a v  a t i n  g  (570) 574-3557

• Residential / Commercial• NewConstruction

• Remodeling • Baths• Kitchens

•Tile• Concrete• Drywall• Masonary•Windows &Doors

PA082626

       7        1        1        9       5        0

APPLE W AG O N RIDES

W e H ave ItAllFor Fall! • G roups W elcom e • O pen D aily 9-5

BRACE’S O RCH ARD 444 Brace Road, Orange • 333-4236

through ourorcha rd — W eekend s 12 -5   FEATUR ING a la rge va riety offres h p icked a p p les ,

fres h P a s teurized Ap p le Cid er, C a nd y, Ca ra m el Ap p les  a nd Ap p le Dump lings , Cid erDonuts , Honeya nd P um p kins  

       7       1       2       0       6       4

DallasMiddle School recentlynamedStudentCouncil Officers forthe2011-2012school year. TheStudent Council, under thedirection of ad-viser Joan Rakowski, partners withseveral local andnational orga-nizations throughout theyear to aidandassist those in need. Projectsforthis fall includehostingtheAmericanDiabetes walk on Saturdayandholding a fooddriveto support the BackMountain FoodPantry inNo-vember. Thecouncil alsoholds several school dances throughout theschool year, thefirst tobe held onSept. 30in the middleschool gym.Participants, from left: ThomasDuffy, principal; AlexandraRome;Char-lesSiegel;AnnaGiacometti; JoshFrankevich; JaredKrawetz; AndrewChupka;NathanDix; Chase Feeney; MichelleLeonard; andRakowski.

Student Council officers selected at middle school

8/4/2019 Times Leader 09-22-2011

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/times-leader-09-22-2011 27/45

C M Y K

THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 PAGE 5C➛ L I F E

WE DO IT ALL!Chimneys, Stoves, FireplacesSales - Service - Installation

 A Great Stove At A Great Price! 

JuniataMini Coal Furnace

We CarryBag & Bulk Coal

 Midway Between Tunkhannock & Dallas

570-298-2150

idway 

Delivery and set-upavailable

√ Large Ash Pan√ Fully Automatic√ Easy to Use

Simple, Reliable &Sturdy Design

√ 

√ 85,000 BTU’s

Also Available with Power Vent√ 

Standard 150lb. Hopper√ 

PA U L C H E  

RV Y CO A    

779-3727

 A llco alm in ed in H azleto n A rea

C O A L ?

L K IN G F O R    

Q U A L I T Y     P re m   i

 u  m  

“T ry O u rC o al- Y o u W o n ’tB e lieve T h e D IF F E R E N C E ” 

89% E fficien t C o alB o ilersN O W A V A IL A B LE 

777 Wyoming AvenueKingston • 288-3633

cookspharmacykingston.com

No Charge ForMedicare AndTricare Members

FLU SHOTSNOW AVAILABLE

822-8222

  We AcceptThe Access Card &

 All Major Credit Cards

Route 309, Wilkes-Barre Twp.BoulevardStoreHours •Wed.9-5•Thurs. &Fri.9-6• Sat.9-4

C&D SEAFOODFresh Steamed Hardshell Crabs starting at 1495 doz.

Fresh Steamed Crab Claws ............... 299 lb.

X-Large Shrimp ................................999 lb.

Crab Cakes........................................ 149 ea.

Maine Littleneck Clams.................... 1399 /per 100

White Littleneck Clams ....................1299 /per 50

Fried Haddock Platter ..................... 575 plus tax

(By The Big Cow) www.cdqualityseafood.com

5 WINDOW MINIMUM

ALLWINDOWS & SIDING

LIFETIMEGUARANTEE

MATERIALS& LABOR

Serving All Of WyomingValley,Back Mountain & MountainTopAreas

Tife ime

Windows& Vinyl Siding

L

29 Years Experience

Free Foam Filled Sashes & Foam Wrapped Frameswith All Triple Pane Double Hung Windows

 WEGIVE INSURANCE

ESTIMATES FOR

INTERIOR& EXTERIOR

FLOODDAMAGE

• PlusAll Phases of Interior& Exterior Remodeling

• Roong • Gutters

R-4 1” DOUBLE PANE

$239 INSTALLED

R-5 1” TRIPLE PANE

$279 INSTALLED

R-7 1” TRIPLE PANE

$329 INSTALLED

R-10 1” TRIPLE PANE

$369 INSTALLED

 Visit: lifetimewvs.com

287-1982 PA025042

       7        1        0        0        9       5

       7        1        0        0        9       5

OAK ST • PITTSTON TWP.654-1112

FRI. 6-8MR. KEYS,

PAUL OSCHALFRI. 9-1

OPEN MIC

EVERY THURS. 8-11

TONES

(866 )637 -245 7 (570 )253 -196 0

w w w .w a ynecountycc.com • Reserv a tionsa re recom m ended — C a lltoda y!

       7       1        2        2        0        0

RIDE THE R

 A IL

S TH I

S FA LL A N D SEE SO M E O F TH EM O ST BEAU TIFUL FALLFOLIAG E IN THE N O RTHEA 

ST!FALL TRA IN SCHEDU LE

HALLO W EEN G HO ST TR AIN — Sat.O ct.29 – Leavesa t1 1 AM & 2PM     $20 Ad ult• $1 5 C hildren (Under1 3)

W e a ryo urc o stum e a nd g e tre a d y fo rso m e tric k s a nd tre a ts! F un fo ra ll a g e s!A Short,Bea u tifu l Driv e From Luzerne & Lacka w a nna C ou nties

FALLFO LIAG E EX PLO RER — O ctober 1 ,2,8 & 9 Leav esa t9 :30 A.M .a nd 2:30 P.M .

$29 Adult• $27 Senior• $1 7 C hildrenThisis o urm o stpo pula rrid e so m a k e yo urre se rva tio ns e a rly!

BAV ARIAN FESTIV AL— Sat.Sept.24 — 1 2 Noon • $59 A fun fille d fe stiva l w ith m usic, d a nc ing a nd lo ts o ffo o d . Ge rm a n-Style fe a stinc lud e d .

For Reserv a tions For Loca l Inform a tion

RESCHEDULED!

GLORIA  ADONIZIOBLANDINA

 JEANNEBOVARD

DENISE VITALIBURNE

 ANNA CERVENAK

DEBBIEDUNLEAVY 

SR. MARYALICE JACQUINOTIHM

 APRIL LOPOSKY 

SONDRA MYERS

GINA POCCESCHI-BOYLE

DONNA SEDOR

KARENTHOMAS

 WENDY  WILSON

LINDA ZANESKI

 Meet e 

 oa our honorees with sparklingspritzers, fine wines and frosty brews.

 din on an endless array of tastysavories and delectable desserts.

 chse from an extensive selectionof exotic teas.

 celebate in the company ofNortheast Pennsylvania’s mostinfluential stakeholders.

 wea at with flair to ourHigh Tea. A winner of great 

  pizes you are bound to be!Individual Ticket $100 | Table of Ten $900

  u  s as we celebrate theGreat Women of NortheastPennsylvania at a fabulous

Tuesday, September 27, 20113 to 5 o’clock in the afternoon

Reservations Required by September 23rd.For reservations and payment information contact Kelly Brown at 969.6000 or

[email protected]. For your convenience, payment will also be accepted at the door.

TM SUPPLY

We’re Fully Stockedand Staffed to Assist You!

714-2734 278 Union St., LuzerneServing Luzerne County Over 50 Years

OPENTOTHEPUBLIC

Professional

Installation Available

PA NE LI NG C EI LI NG T IL E S TE EL D OO RS

INTERIOR DOORS REPLACEMENTWINDOWS

 S ta r ting a  t

Startingat 

 Also in stock:Birch, 6-Panel Pine, 6-Panel Molded in 18”, 24”,

28”, 30”, 32” and 36” sizes

 S t a  r t i n g a  t

4’ x 8’ (seconds)

2’ x 4’ Textured WhiteCeiling Tile

Silverline by AndersenReplacement Windows

Come in to see our selection of miscellaneous

Over 250 Windows, Doors and

other misc itemsto choose from!

Up to 79 United Inches10-14 Day Delivery 

Insulated Low-E Glassmeets all building codes

12” x 12” Staple UpManystyles& colorstochoose from!

While Supplies Last.

Pre-Hung 6-Panel Door32” x 80” or 36” x 80”

Pre-Hung HC Lauan Interior Doors

per sheet$999

24” x 80”$5299

per block $419

$129

OVERSTOCKED ITEMSOVERSTOCKED ITEMS

ALL Drastically Reduced! ALL Drastically Reduced!

$139per tile.89¢

Hurry in for

 your best selection

Let’sMake A Deal!

The staff at TM Supply is here to help you recover from our most recent natural disasters.

but in everydaylife.

“When you talk to someone, youcan useinflection, tone,facialand body movements,” she said.“You can’t do that in writing. Youneed to use punctuation to stressthose moments, just like you  would when you’re talking tosomeone.”

No matter the reason for mis-placed or missing commas, extra-neous apostrophes – which don’tmake a word plural – and abun-dance of quotation marks, punc-tuation fauxpas areeverywhere.

Former newspaper reporterJeffRubinfoundedNationalPunc-tuation Day, and this year educa-tors across the nation are getting involved. Some are challenging students to hit the streets withtheir smartphones and photo-

graph allthe errorsthey canfind. The results will become part of educationalvideoson YouTube.

“It’s sad to say, but writing skills, punctuationskills,commu-nicationskillsin general,havejustdeteriorated over the years,” Ru-

binsaidinapressrelease.“Youseeit in newspapers, magazines andeven books — misspelled words,  words used incorrectly. It’s ex-tremely frustrating. I want Na-tional Punctuation Day to bring this to theforefront of theAmeri-can consciousness in a fun, silly way.”

 We took to area streets to helpthe cause and, just so you know,  we played fair and even photo-graphedour ownslips.

PUNCTUATIONContinued from Page 1C

Social-networking websitespresent a minefield of punctua-tion and other problems.No one’s advocating public exco-riation, but these status updatesor comments that played fastand loose with punctuation can

provide a few teaching moments:

• If anyone in the Bay Area knowswhere I can find Dogfish HeadPunkin Ale I am willing to pay it’sweight in gold for it.

• Thanks for the birthday wishes.Its great turning 33.(Say it’s so, Joe. It’s with an apos-trophe means ONLY “it is” or “it

has,” no exceptions. Its by itself

needs no apostrophe to indicatepossession.)

• Getting through the work day thenheading to the Phillies game with mytwo favorite Steph’s! (No need to putan apostrophe in “Stephs.”)

• I guess everything is “closed” today

because of this stupidstorm. (Why the

quotation marks?)

• I just cant stand this head cold,and I still have to go to my neph-ews football game. (Two apos-trophes are needed here.)

• Hope your feeling better soon. (Ifyou mean “you are,”you need an

apostrophe in that contraction.)

FACEBOOK FAUX PAS

8/4/2019 Times Leader 09-22-2011

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/times-leader-09-22-2011 28/45

C M Y K

PAGE 6C THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com➛ T E L E V I S I O N

570-674-7677

HOURS: T-F: 10AM-6PM • THUR. 10AM-8PM • SAT. 10AM-5PM

FREE $10

*minimum $50 precious metal buy.

With this ad.

HIGHEST RECORD

PRICES PAID!

$ Also Buying Platinum, Silver,

Coins, Gold Chains, Dental& More...

  AT ROUTE 309, DALLAS • www.americangoldbuying.com

 AGB

MERICANMERICANOLDOLDUYING, Inc.UYING, Inc.

$

GAS CARD

       7        0        4        3       7       7

 You must be 17 with ID or accompanied by a parent to attend R rated features.Children under 6 may not attend R rated features after 6pm

NO PASSES

DRIVEDRIVE(XD) (R)

11:55AM, 2:25PM, 4:55PM, 7:35PM, 10:10PM

 APOLLO 18 (DIGITAL) (PG-13)12:20PM, 2:55PM,5:05PM,7:45PM,10:05PMBAD TEACHER (DIGITAL) (R)12:40PM, (6:45PM* EXCEPT 9/17)BUCKY LARSON: BORN TO BE A STAR(DIGITAL) (R)12:35PM, 3:00PM,5:25PM,7:50PM,10:15PMCONTAGION (DIGITAL) (PG-13)12:50PM, 2:10PM,3:30PM,4:50PM,6:05PM,7:30PM, 8:50PM,10:10PMCRAZY, STUPID, LOVE (DIGITAL) (PG-13)3:35PM, (9:35PM* EXCEPT 9/17)DEBT, THE (DIGITAL) (R)12:30PM, 3:20PM,6:55PM,9:55PMDRIVE (DIGITAL) (R)1:10PM, 3:40PM,6:15PM,8:45PM

HELP, THE (DIGITAL) (PG-13)12:25PM, 3:45PM,7:10PM,10:25PMI DON’T KNOW HOW SHE DOES IT(DIGITAL) (PG-13)12:15PM, 2:30PM,4:50PM,7:25PM,9:40PMLION KING,THE (2011) (3D) (G)12:10PM, 2:25PM,4:40PM,7:05PM,9:20PMOUR IDIOT BROTHER (DIGITAL) (R)1:05PM, 3:25PM,5:50PM,8:05PM,10:20PMRISE OF THE PLANET OF THE APES (DIGITAL)

(PG-13)

12:05PM, 2:35PM,5:10PM,7:55PM,10:35PM

SARAH’S KEY (DIGITAL) (PG-13)1:55PM, 4:45PM,7:15PM,9:45PM

SHARK NIGHT (3D) (PG-13)12:45PM, 3:05PM,5:20PM,7:40PM,10:00PM

SMURFS, THE (3D) (PG)1:35PM, 4:30PM,7:00PM,9:30PM

SPY KIDS:ALL THE TIME IN THE WORLD

(3D) (PG)12:00PM, 2:15PM,4:35PM,6:50PM,9:25PMSTRAW DOGS (DIGITAL) (R)12:05PM, 2:40PM,5:15PM,8:00PM,10:35PM

WARRIOR (DIGITAL) (PG-13)

1:00PM, 2:30PM,4:10PM,5:45PM,7:20PM,8:55PM, 10:30PM

*DOES NOT PLAY ON SATURDAY, 9/17.SNEAK PREVIEW OF “I DON’T KNOW HOW SHE DOES IT”WILL PLAY INSTEAD.

Don’t just watch a movie, experience it! 

All Stadium Seating and Dolby Surround Sound 

825.4444 • rctheatres.com• 3 Hrs. Free Parking At Participating Park & Locks with Theatre Validation

•Free Parking at Midtown Lot Leaving After 8pm and All Day Saturday & Sunday.

***$2.50 Additional Charge for 3D Attractions.***No passes, rain checks, discount tickets accepted to these features

D-Box Motion Seats are the admission price plus an $8.00 surcharge

(Parenthesis Denotes Bargain Matinees) All Showtimes Include Pre-Feature Content 

 Avoid the lines: Advance tickets available from Fandango.com

ALL FEATURES NOW PRESENTED IN DIGITAL FORMAT 

• FIRST MATINEE SHOW ALL SEATS $5.25 EXPERIENCE D/BOX MOTION ENHANCED

SEATING ON SELECT FEATURES

SPECIAL EVENTSMayweathervs OrtizFight Live

Saturday, September17that 9:00pmOnly

*Drive-R -115 Min.

(1:15), (3:50), 7:15, 9:45

*IDon’tKnowHowSheDoesIt- PG13

-100Min.

(1:30), (3:40), 7:30, 9:40

***TheLionKingin 3D- G- 100Min.(1:10), (3:20), 7:10, 9:20

**StrawDogs- R- 120Min.

(1:25), (4:00), 7:25, 10:00

Contagion- PG13 -120 Min.

(1:15), (3:45), 7:15, 9:45

Warrior- PG13 -150 Min.

(12:40), (3:40), 7:00, 10:00

WarriorDBOX- PG13- 150Min.

(12:40), (3:40), 7:00, 10:00

*BuckyLarson:BornToBe AStar- R-

110Min.

(1:50), (4:25), 7:30, 9:50 (There will be no

7:30 or 9:50 show on Sat, Sept 17)Apollo18-R-95Min.

(1:20), (3:25), 7:45, 9:50

***SharkNightin 3D- PG13- 105Min.

(12:50), (3:10), 7:00, 9:15

TheDebt-R-125Min.(12:30), (3:10), 7:10, 10:00

Colombiana- PG13- 120Min.

(1:00), (4:00), 7:40, 10:10

Don’tBe AfraidoftheDark-

R-115Min.

(1:00), (3:30), 7:30, 10:10

OurIdiotBrother- R- 100Min.

(1:10), (3:20), 7:25, 9:45

TheHelp- PG13 -160 Min.(12:30), (3:40), 7:00, 10:10

BELLES  C O N S TR U C T

IO N C O .

C A L L   

8 2 4 - 7 2 2 0  

FREE Trip le Pa ne Up gra d e o n a ll

Plygem L ifestyle W ind o w s

PA012959

ENERG Y S AVIN G S  

W IN D O W S A L E

TaxCreditApprovedM axim um Efficiency & Sound C ontrol

S id ing Exp erts To o !

smi leBecause of your smile, you

make life more beautiful

24 Cut Box • 12 Cut Box

French Bread Pizza

3 Slices Per Pack Since 1941,NardoneBros.has been

bringing nutritious,high qualityproductsto youand yourfamily.

Visit our retaillocation topurchase our Pizza items.

123HazleStreet,Wilkes-BarreMon-Fri9am-5pm,Sat 9am-3pm

A Member of the National Association for Information Destruction (NAID)

829-2206 • 877-586-8393495 Stanton St., Wilkes-Barre • SolomonContainer.com

SOLOMON CONTAINER SERVICE

FREE DOCUMENT SHREDDING Friday September 23rd & Saturday September 24th

• Businesses and residents welcome• Free shredding up to 20 boxes

• HIPAA & FACTA compliant

Hours: 8:00 am to 2:30 pmTo avoid delays, Call for an appointment

at participating locations with this coupon. 1 coupon per customer

Expires 10/31/11

 ®CURRYSDONUTS

3 DONUTSFOR

$1.00

1 - 12 oz.COFFEE &

DONUT

$1.0016 oz. ICED COFFEE

99¢

CASH FORYOUR GOLD

 AND SILVER Highest Prices Paid 

MR.GOLD

1 S. Main Street, 2nd FloorWilkes-Barre

 570-780-3009

We’re Here To HelpOur thoughtsOur thoughts

and concerns areand concerns are

with everyone with everyone

involved with theinvolved with therecent flooding.recent flooding.

We clean, repair and replace flood damaged oriental rugs 

33 W. Market StreetWilkes-Barre (570) 823-3405

• Carpet starting at $1.65 sq. ft. installed with padding5 colors in stock to choose from

• Hardwood flooring $5.75 sq. ft.

installed - 3 1/4 solid oak. All stains available

ALL OF OUR MATERIALS ARE  IN STOCK  AND CAN 

BE INSTALLED IN DAYS INSTEAD OF WEEKS!! 

FLOORING

• 12 mm. Laminate Flooring $4.25 sq. ft. installed

• 9 a.m. 3, 22 Anderson WallaceJeffs and former members of theFundamentalist Church of JesusChrist of Latter-Day Saints. (N)(TVG)• 9 a.m.16 Live With Regis andKelly Taylor Lautner; Celine Dion;

Minka Kelly. (N) (TVPG)• 10 a.m.16 The Ellen DeGeneresShow Actors Brad Pitt and ChrisPratt; Kelly Clarkson performs. (N)(TVG)• 11 a.m.16 The View Seth Myers;Clinton Kelly; Dyan Cannon; DancingWith the Stars. (N) (TV14)• noon 56 Jerry Springer Women

confront cheating partners andromantic rivals. (N) (TV14)• 2 p.m. 3, 22 The Talk WilliamBaldwin and Chynna Phillips; Jer-maine Jackson; guest co-hosts MollyShannon and Kris Jenner. (N) (TV14)• 3 p.m. The Doctors Three couplestry to beat three addictions in threedays. (N) (TVPG)

Daily grid contains updated information (PA) Parental advisory (N) New programming MOVIES

6 :00 6 :3 0 7 :0 0 7 :30 8 :0 0 8 :3 0 9 :0 0 9 :3 0 1 0: 00 1 0:3 0 11 :0 0 11 :3 0

0N ew s W or ld

NewsNewswatch 16

Power toSave

Charlie’s Angels (N)(CC) (TVPG)

Grey’s Anatomy “Free Falling; She’s Gone”Meredith loses her job. (N) (TV14)

N ew s ( :3 5)Nightline

3’s Com-pany

Ropers(TVPG)

GoodTimes

CoachesCorner

SportsExt. Mix

Coaches’Clinic

All in theFamily

All in theFamily

Newswatch 16

Seinfeld(TVPG)

Mad Abt.You

Mad Abt.You

6JudgeJudy

EveningNews

The Insid-er (N)

Entertain-ment

Big BangTheory

Big BangTheory

Person of Interest “Pi-lot” (N) (TV14)

The Mentalist (N)(CC) (TV14)

AccessHollyw’d

Letterman

<N ew s N ig ht ly

News

T BA J eo pa rd y!

(N)

Communi-

ty (N)

Parks/Rec

reat

The Office

(N)

(:31) Whit-

ney

Prime Suspect (N)

(CC) (TV14)

News at

11

Jay Leno

F30 Rock(TV14)

FamilyGuy (CC)

Simpsons FamilyGuy (CC)

The Vampire Diaries“The Hybrid”

The Secret Circle“Bound” (N) (CC)

Excused(TV14)

TMZ (N)(TVPG)

Extra (N)(TVPG)

AlwaysSunny

LPBS NewsHour (N)(CC)

State of Pennsylvania Our Town Berwick Homegrown Concerts Northeast BusinessJournal

NightlyBusiness

CharlieRose (N)

UThe People’s Court(N) (CC) (TVPG)

The Doctors (N) (CC)(TVPG)

Without a Trace (CC)(TVPG)

Without a Trace “Ab-salom” (TVPG)

True Hollywood Story(CC) (TV14)

Friends(TVPG)

Old Chris-tine

XTwo andHalf Men

Two andHalf Men

Big BangTheory

Big BangTheory

The X Factor “Auditions No. 2” Hopefuls per-form for the judges. (N) (TVPG)

News FirstTen

News10:30

Love-Ray-mond

How I Met

∞Without a Trace“Prodigy” (TVPG)

Without a Trace“Copy Cat” (TVPG)

Criminal Minds “Dis-tress” (TVPG)

Criminal Minds“Jones” (TV14)

Criminal Minds (CC)(TV14)

Criminal Minds (CC)(TV14)

#N ew s E ve ni ng

NewsEntertain-ment

The Insid-er (N)

Big BangTheory

Big BangTheory

Person of Interest “Pi-lot” (N) (TV14)

The Mentalist (N)(CC) (TV14)

News Letterm an

)King ofQueens

King ofQueens

How I Met How I Met Without a Trace (CC)(TVPG)

Without a Trace “Ab-salom” (TVPG)

The 10News

The Office(CC)

Excused(TV14)

The Office(CC)

+FamilyGuy (CC)

FamilyGuy (CC)

Two andHalf Men

Two andHalf Men

The Vampire Diaries“The Hybrid”

The Secret Circle“Bound” (N) (CC)

PIX News at Ten JodiApplegate. (N)

Seinfeld(TVPG)

Seinfeld(TVPG)

130 Rock(TV14)

Two andHalf Men

Two andHalf Men

Big BangTheory

Without a Trace (CC)(TVPG)

Without a Trace “Ab-salom” (TVPG)

Phl17News

Friends(TVPG)

Big BangTheory

30 Rock(TV14)

AMCHondo (‘53) ››› John Wayne, GeraldinePage, Ward Bond. (CC)

True Grit (G, ‘69) ››› John Wayne, Glen Campbell. A one-eyedmarshal and a Texas Ranger aid a vengeful teen. (CC)

True Grit (G, ‘69)››› John Wayne.

APRiver Monsters: Un-hooked (TVPG)

River Monsters: Un-hooked (TV14)

Swamp Wars “Canni-bal Gator” (TVPG)

Man-Eating SuperSnake (CC) (TV14)

Rattlesnake Republic(CC) (TVPG)

Swamp Wars “Canni-bal Gator” (TVPG)

ARTSThe First 48 (CC)(TV14)

The First 48 (CC)(TV14)

The First 48 (CC)(TV14)

The First 48 (CC)(TVPG)

Beyond ScaredStraight (TV14)

Beyond ScaredStraight (TV14)

CNBCMad Money (N) The Kudlow Report

(N)Trash Inc: The SecretLife of

Mob Money: Murdersand

American Greed Mad Money

CNNSituation Room John King, USA (N) Anderson Cooper 360

(CC)Piers Morgan Tonight(N)

Anderson Cooper 360(CC)

John King, USA

COMDailyShow

ColbertReport

30 Rock(TV14)

30 Rock(TV14)

Futurama Futurama Futurama SouthPark

SouthPark

Tosh.0(TV14)

DailyShow

ColbertReport

CSSportsNite(N)

PhilliesPregame

MLB Baseball Washington Nationals at Philadelphia Phillies. FromCitizens Bank Park in Philadelphia. (Live)

SportsNite (N) (CC) GSD: From the Vault

CTVPapal-Germany

Faith-Hope

DailyMass

The HolyRosary

The World Over Ray-mond Arroyo.

Crossingthe Goal

Live-Pas-sion

Life on the Rock(TVG)

DefendingLife

Women ofGrace

DSCDesert Car Kings(CC) (TVPG)

Pig Bomb Wild pigs.(CC) (TVPG)

Hogs Gone Wild (CC)(TV14)

MythBusters “DuctTape Hour” (TVPG)

MythBusters (CC)(TVPG)

MythBusters “DuctTape Hour” (TVPG)

DSY

Shake ItUp! (CC)(TVG)

GoodLuckCharlie

A.N.T.Farm(TVG)

GoodLuckCharlie

Shake ItUp! (CC)(TVG)

GoodLuckCharlie

So Ran-dom!(TVG)

Phineasand Ferb(TVG)

A.N.T.Farm(TVG)

GoodLuckCharlie

So Ran-dom!(TVG)

FishHooks(TVG)

E!Kourtney& Khloé

Kourtney& Khloé

E! News ( N) The E! True Hol ly-wood Story (TV14)

Kardashi-an

Kardashi-an

Kardashi-an

Kardashi-an

ChelseaLately

E! News

ESPNSportsCenter (N)(Live) (CC)

Audibles (N) (Live) College Football North Carolina State at Cincinnati. (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N)(Live) (CC)

ESPN2NFL32 (N) (Live) WNBA Basketball Atlanta Dream at Indiana

Fever. (N) (Live) (CC)WNBA Basketball Phoenix Mercury at Min-nesota Lynx. (N) (Live) (CC)

Women’s Soccer

FAMAmerica’s FunniestHome Videos (CC)

Dennis the Menace (PG, ‘93) ››WalterMatthau, Mason Gamble.

Richie Rich (PG, ‘94) ››Macaulay Culkin,John Larroquette.

The 700 Club (N)(CC) (TVG)

FOODIron Chef America“Flay vs. Cardoz”

Chopped (TVG) Chopped “Wok ThisWay”

Chopped Champions Sweet Genius “DarkGenius” (N)

Iron Chef America“Cora vs. Smith”

FNCSpecial Report WithBret Baier (N)

FOX Report WithShepard Smith

The O’Reilly Factor(N) (CC)

Political Debate (N) (Live) (TVG) The O’Reilly Factor(CC)

HALL Little House on thePrairie (CC) (TVG) Little House on thePrairie (CC) (TVPG) Little House on thePrairie (CC) (TVG) Frasier(TVPG) Frasier(TVPG) Frasier(TVPG) Frasier(TVPG) Frasier(TVPG) Frasier(TVPG)

HISTNostradamus Effect(CC) (TVPG)

Modern Marvels (CC)(TVG)

Ancient Aliens (CC)(TVPG)

Ancient Aliens (CC)(TVPG)

Ancient Aliens (N)(CC) (TVPG)

UFO Files (CC)(TVPG)

H&GPropertyVirgins

PropertyVirgins

HuntersInt’l

HouseHunters

HouseHunters

My FirstPlace

Selling NY PropertyBrothers

HouseHunters

HuntersInt’l

House Hunters: Mil-lion Dollar Homes

LIFProject Runway (CC)(TVPG)

Project Runway (CC)(TVPG)

Project Runway (CC)(TVPG)

Project Runway “Image Is Every-thing” (N) (CC) (TVPG)

(:32) Dance Moms(CC) (TVPG)

RussianDolls (N)

MTVThat ’70sShow

That ’70sShow

The Sub-stitute

Ridicu-lousness

Jersey Shore (CC)(TV14)

Jersey Shore (CC)(TV14)

Jersey Shore (N)(CC) (TV14)

Jersey Shore (CC)(TV14)

NICKiCarly(TVG)

Victorious SupahNinjas

Sponge-Bob

My Wifeand Kids

My Wifeand Kids

GeorgeLopez

GeorgeLopez

Friends(TV14)

Friends(TVPG)

That ’70sShow

That ’70sShow

OVATFame “Break Dance”(TV14)

Fame “Czech-Mate”(TVPG)

Gorky Park (R, ‘83) ›››William Hurt, Lee Marvin,Joanna Pacula.

Gorky Park (R, ‘83) ›››WilliamHurt, Lee Marvin.

SPD(4:00) Barrett-Jackson Automobile Auction From the Arena at Mandalay Bay in Las Vegas, Nevada. (N) (Live)(TVPG)

Pinks - All Out(TVPG)

SPIKEUFC Unleashed(TV14)

UFC Unleashed(TV14)

UFC Unleashed(TV14)

iMPACT Wrestling (N) (CC) (TV14) Damage (11:02) (R,‘09) Steve Austin.

SYFYOdysseus: Voyage to the Underworld (‘08)Arnold Vosloo. (CC)

Troy (‘04) ›››Brad Pitt, Eric Bana, Orlando Bloom. Achilles leadsGreek forces in the Trojan War. (CC)

Paranormal Witness(CC)

TBSKing ofQueens

King ofQueens

Seinfeld(TVPG)

Seinfeld(TVPG)

Family Guy (CC)(TV14)

Big BangTheory

Big BangTheory

Big BangTheory

Big BangTheory

Conan (N) (CC)(TV14)

TCMWhite Heat (‘49) ››› James Cagney, Vir-ginia Mayo. (CC)

The Ballad of the Sad Cafe (PG-13, ‘91) ››Vanessa Redgrave. (CC)

The Deceivers (PG-13, ‘88) ›› Pierce Bros-nan, Saeed Jaffrey. Premiere.

TLCLA Ink “Caught in aLie” (CC) (TVPG)

LA Ink (CC) (TVPG) Lottery Changed MyLife (TVPG)

Undercover Boss(CC) (TVPG)

Prison Diaries (N)(CC) (TV14)

Undercover Boss(CC) (TVPG)

TNT Bones “The He in theShe” (TV14) Bones (CC) (TV14) Bones (CC) (TV14) Bones (CC) (TV14) Bones “Fire in the Ice”(CC) (TV14) CSI: NY “UncertaintyRules” (TV14)

TOONAlmostNaked

World ofGumball

M AD A dv en t.Time

RegularShow

ProblemSolverz

King ofthe Hill

King ofthe Hill

AmericanDad

AmericanDad

FamilyGuy (CC)

FamilyGuy (CC)

TRVLFoodFeuds

FoodFeuds

Sturgis: Wild Ride(CC) (TVPG)

Sturgis: Cops (CC) TruckStop MO

TruckStop MO

FoodFeuds

FoodFeuds

Man v.Food

Man v.Food

TVLDSanford &Son

Sanford &Son

All in theFamily

All in theFamily

M*A*S*H(TVPG)

M*A*S*H(TVPG)

Love-Ray-mond

Love-Ray-mond

Love-Ray-mond

(:42) EverybodyLoves Raymond

3’s Com-pany

USANCIS Murdered mod-el. (CC) (TVPG)

NCIS “Boxed In” (CC)(TVPG)

Law & Order: SpecialVictims Unit

Law & Order: SpecialVictims Unit

Law & Order: SpecialVictims Unit

Burn Notice (CC)(TVPG)

VH-1(5:55) Tough Love(TVPG)

Tough Love (TVPG) Tough Love (TVPG) Tough Love (TVPG) Tough Love (TVPG) Fast Times at Ridge-mont High ››

WECharmed (CC)(TVPG)

Charmed (CC)(TVPG)

Bridezillas “Kim &Danielle” (TV14)

Bridezillas “Kim &Frankie” (TV14)

Bridezillas “Frankie &Marissa” (TV14)

Big Easy Brides (CC)(TV14)

GN-AOld Chris-tine

Old Chris-tine

America’s FunniestHome Videos (CC)

How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met WGN News at Nine(N) (CC)

30 Rock(TV14)

Scrubs(TV14)

WYLNTaroneShow

I.N.N.News

Legislative Expandingthe

Rehabilita-tion

BeatenPath

Chef Lou Storm Pol-itics

Local News (N) Classified Topic A

YOUTV(5:45) The X-Files“Conduit” (TV14)

Adrenalina HowcastTV

Say Yeson TV!

Say Yeson TV!

The X-Files “Conduit”(CC) (TV14)

(:15) The Green Hor-net (TVPG)

Batman (Part 2 of 2)(TVPG)

PREMIUM CHANNELS

HBO

24/7 May-weather

Vampires Suck (PG-13, ‘10) ›Matt Lanter, Jenn Proske, ChrisRiggi. (CC)

Avatar (PG-13, ‘09) ›››Sam Worthington, Voice ofZoe Saldana. A former Marine falls in love with a nativeof a lush alien world. (CC)

Bored toDeath: An-other

Real SexXtra: Go-ing Down

Cathouse:Come

HBO2

The Lovely Bones (5:30) (PG-13, ‘09) ››Mark Wahlberg, Rachel Weisz, Susan Saran-

don. (CC)

Hereafter (PG-13, ‘10) ››Matt Damon, Cé-cile de France. Death touches three people

in different ways. (CC)

BoardwalkEmpire

24/7 May-weather

Unstoppable (PG-13,‘10) ›››Denzel

Washington.

MAX

She’s Out of My League (6:15) (R, ‘10) ››Jay Baruchel, Alice Eve. An average Joelands a gorgeous girlfriend. (CC)

Big Stan (R, ‘07) ›››Rob Schneider, Jen-nifer Morrison. A con artist learns martial artsto protect himself in jail. (CC)

The Losers (PG-13, ‘10) ›› Jef-frey Dean Morgan, Zoe Saldana,Chris Evans. (CC)

(:40) SinCity Di-aries (CC)

MMAX

Waterworld (4:30)(PG-13, ‘95) ››Kevin Costner. (CC)

Stargate (6:50) (PG-13, ‘94) ›› Kurt Rus-sell. An artifact found in Egypt is the doorwayto another world. (CC)

Knight and Day (PG-13, ‘10) ›› TomCruise. A woman becomes the reluctant part-ner of a fugitive spy. (CC)

(10:50)Skin to theMax

Clash ofthe Titans(CC)

SHO

The Tillman Story(5:35) (R, ‘10) ›››iTV. (CC)

The Six Wives of Henry Lefay (7:15) (PG-13, ‘08) › Tim Allen, Elisha Cuthbert, PazVega. iTV Premiere.

Web Ther-apy(TV14)

The Big C(CC)(TVMA)

Weeds(iTV) (CC)

The Big C(CC)(TVMA)

Gigolos(CC)(TVMA)

SweetKarma (R,‘09)

STARZPlanet 51 (5:30) (PG,‘09) ›› (CC)

You Again (7:10) (PG, ‘10) ›› Kristen Bell,Jamie Lee Curtis. (CC)

The Karate Kid (PG, ‘10) ›› Jaden Smith, JackieChan, Taraji P. Henson. (CC)

Easy A(11:25)

TMC

BlackFilmmaker

Deadline (R, ‘09) Brittany Mur-phy. A screenwriter has a psycho-logical breakdown.

Remember Me (PG-13, ‘10) ››Robert Pat-tinson. Love begins to heal the troubled spiritof a rebellious young man.

The Twilight Saga: Eclipse (PG-13, ‘10) ››Kristen Stewart. Bella must choose betweenEdward and Jacob. (CC)

TVTALK

8/4/2019 Times Leader 09-22-2011

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/times-leader-09-22-2011 29/45

C M Y K

THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 PAGE 7C➛ D I V E R S I O N S

UNIVERSAL SUDOKU

MINUTE MAZE

 W I T H O M A R S H A R I F & T A N N A H H I R S C H

CRYPTOQUOTE

GOREN BRIDGE

B Y M I C H E A L A R G I R I O N & J E F F K N U R E K

JUMBLE

B Y H O L I D A Y M A T H I S

HOROSCOPE

CROSSWORD

PREVIOUS DAY’S SOLUTION

HOW TO CONTACT:Dear Abby: PO Box 69440 Los Ange-

For more Sudoku go to www.timesleader.com

O N T H E W E B

Dear Abby: I am writing in responseto the letter youprinted from “Re-spectful in Ohio”(July 25). I am soglad you addressedthe subject of proper

etiquette in cemeteries. The ceme-tery where my family membersare buried has become a playgroundfor the neighbors in the area. WhenI visit, I see people walking theirdogs on and off leashes even thoughthey are aware of the “No DogsAllowed” signs. Children arebicycling, rollerblading and skate-boarding, along with joggersand walkers.

I come to the cemetery to visit with my lost loved ones and tend

to their graves. I find it disgusting and disturbing that these folks areusing our sacred place for theirpersonal pleasures. Abby, thank you so much for your wisdom onthis matter.

 — Jean C. in Massachusetts

Dear Jean:  Thank you for agreeing  with me. However, some readersfelt differently, believing that cem-eteries are for the living as well asthe dead. My newspaper readerscomment:

Dear Abby: You should know that

there is a trend where groups of dog walkers are taking over the careof deteriorating cemeteries. In returnfor cleaning up, restoring and main-taining graveyards, dog walkers aregiven permission to walk and runtheir dogs there.

Some readers may find this practicedisrespectful, but it has resulted inmany cemeteries being restored tothe beauty and dignity its occupantsdeserve.

 — Carla in Virginia

Dear Abby:  When I read the letterfrom “Respectful,” it took me backa few years. As I was mowing inthe town cemetery, I went arounda gravestone into some tall grassand my mower stalled. When I

turned it over to see what I hadhit, I found a pair of pantyhose wrapped around the blade of themower. Apparently, cemeteries aresometimes used as a lover’s lane.I agree with you about practicing good behavior in places like these.But I’ll always laugh recalling whathappened to me. I wonder if thelady who forgot her hose that nightcaught a cold.

 — Groundskeeper 

Dear Abby: Several years ago ina nearby church cemetery, a young couple and their 4-year-old wereputting flowers on a relative’s grave. The child got a bit antsy and climbedon a headstone. The stone was looseand tipped over onto the child and

killed him. No one should let childrenplay in a cemetery.

 — Jan in Sartell, Minn.

Dear Abby: I want children to play on my grave. What could be betterthan spending eternity listening tothe laughter of children? As for dogs,unless you are going to diaper allthe pigeons, dogs are the least of my worries!

 — Alanson in New Jersey

DEAR ABBY A D V I C E

Readers differ on the role of cemeteries as places to pray and to play

To receive a collection of Abby’s mostmemorable — and most frequently re-quested — poems and essays, send a busi-ness-sized, self-addressed envelope, pluscheck or money order for $3.95 ($4.50 inCanada) to: Dear Abby’s “Keepers,” P.O. Box447, Mount Morris, IL 61054-0447. (Postageis included.)

ARIES (March 21-April 19). It willfeel as though you are gettingreacquainted with the real youafter being out of touch for awhile. You never really aban-doned yourself completely.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20). Youwill let loose and enjoy yourself.Your playfulness is so attractiveto people of all ages. You’ll revelin the attention you receivefrom people of several differentgenerations.

GEMINI (May 21-June 21). Youmay stray outside your realm ofexpertise, but you’ll be amazedat what you can do with verylittle practice. It’s because yougravitate toward what matchesyour natural talents and abilities.

CANCER (June 22-July 22). You’llbe inspired to make subtlechanges in your physiology.You’ll use your body to greateffect. With a stronger postureand a greater physical presence,you’ll command the kind ofrespect you deserve.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). You’ll learnquickly and apply what youdiscover right away. The problemis, if you don’t use this knowl-edge over and over, you’ll forgetthe steps.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). You’ll trysomething new that seems sus-piciously like something you’vetried a dozen times before. Alas,snake oil sold in different pack-

aging is still snake oil.LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). Peopleput on their best clothes whenthey plan to see you — at leastfiguratively. But you can bet thatwhen they primp in the mirror,they are thinking about whatyou’ll see.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). Whatyou want to become good at,you will become good at. Youhave to apply yourself, though.That is normally not a problemfor you, but today comes withextra-fascinating temptations.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21).Your philosophy will lead you toother people who think alongsimilar lines. It will be as thoughyou are sending out a radiosignal that only certain otherreceivers can hear.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19).There will be a choice. Shouldyou be strong, or should you beweak? It will be important foryou to take a dominant positionregardless of whether you areactually feeling that way.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18).Sometimes you wonder if theexciting days are all behind you.Well, this couldn’t be furtherfrom the truth. Your interestingpast will lead to an even moreinteresting future.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). Yousimply cannot make the sacri-fices and compromises you wereonce willing to make. It would beunwise, inconvenient and possi-bly physically impossible.

TODAY’S BIRTHDAY (Sept. 22).You claim your space andexpand your territory this year.A partner will help you, workingand negotiating on your behalf.

Your bold move in October yieldsresults. January brings the startof an exciting project that willshape your year. Loving wordswill be featured in the spring.Taurus and Leo people adoreyou. Your lucky numbers are: 6,34, 20, 1 and 32.

8/4/2019 Times Leader 09-22-2011

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/times-leader-09-22-2011 30/45

TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 PAGE 1D

MARKETPLACE

412 Autos for Sale

150 Special Notices

412 Autos for Sale

150 Special Notices

412 Autos for Sale

150 Special Notices

412 Autos for Sale

150 Special Notices

412 Autos for Sale

150 Special Notices

412 Autos for Sale

150 Special Notices

412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale

135 Legals/  Public Notices

412 Autos for Sale

135 Legals/  Public Notices

REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS

The County of Lackawanna Transit System(COLTS) is seeking written proposals forprofessional architectural, engineeringand related services required for the con-struction of the Intermodal TransportationCenter Project and Martz Site Parking LotFacility in Scranton, PA.

Copies of the complete Request for Pro-posals (RFP) will be available for downloadby Monday, September 26, 2011 on the“Business Opportunities” page of theCOLTS website (www.coltsbus.com). The“Business Opportunities” page can beound on the “About COLTS” pull down

menu on the COLTS website homepage.

  A non-mandatory Pre-proposal confer-

ence will be held at the Project Site locat-ed on the southwest corner of the inter-section of Lackawanna Avenue and Cliff Street in Scranton, PA, on Wednesday,October 12, 2011 at 10:00AM. The site islocated across Lackawanna Avenue from

he existing Martz Bus Terminal. Prospec-ive proposers are strongly encouraged to

attend and provide written questions prioro this meeting; Include “Scranton Inter-

modal Transportation Center” in the sub-ect line. Final written questions must be

submitted by Wednesday, October 19,2011, 5:00 PM. Written responses will bereturned by Friday, October 21, 2011 5:00PM. All questions shall be submitted by email only to Michael Hartley, ConstructionManager at [email protected].

The Proposer will be required to comply with all applicable Federal and State lawsand regulations including DisadvantagedBusiness Enterprise and EEO regulations.Furthermore, the project is subject toinancial assistance from the local jurisdic-ions, the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania

and the Federal Transit Administration andall applicable provisions of the laws andregulations must be followed. COLTSreserves the right to postpone, to acceptor reject any and all proposals, in whole orin part, or to waive informalities as itdeems to be in its best interest.

The design and engineering servicesrequired for the construction of the projectare expected to involve the following

asks:

1. Preliminary Design Development2. Final Design Development3. Preparation of Construction Documents4. Contract Procurement5. Contract Administration and

Construction Services

One (1) Technical Proposal on a CD in PDFormat and one original (marked “original”)

and four (4) copies of the technical pro-posal shall be submitted no later than12:00 Noon, prevailing time Wednesday,October 26, 2011. The Technical Proposalmust be submitted in a sealed containerand appropriately labeled – COLTS –Scranton Intermodal Transportation Cen-

er Project and Martz Site Parking Facility D es ig n. No Co s t P rop o sal s w i ll b ereceived at this time and no costs shall beincluded in the Technical Proposals. Seecomplete Request for Proposals for fulld etail s . T he p rop os als s ho u ld b eaddressed to:

Mr. Robert Fiume, Executive DirectorCounty of Lackawanna Transit System,

800 North South Road,Scranton, PA 18504.

CelebrationsArea Businesses To Help Make

Your Event a Huge Success!

To Advertise Call Tara 570-970-7374

CATERING

We specialize in

Italian/American Cuisine

Banquet facility at

West Wyoming Hose Co. #1

or we’ll bring it to you!

570-407-2703

Rates start at $10.95pp

BEVERAGES

WYO.VALLEYBEVERAGERt. 11 Edwardsville

COORS EXTRA GOLD30 PACK CANS

MILWAUKEE BEST30 PACK CANS

BEST CRAFT BEER

SELECTION AROUND!

$13.99

DUNDEEBEVERAGE

Keyco PlazaSan Souci Parkway

WITHOUT A DOUBTAREA’S COLDEST BEER

OPEN EVERY DAYEXCEPT CHRISTMAS

BEVERAGES

The Lesser The Lesser

Evil DJEvil DJ• Weddings

• Parties

• Dances• Karaoke

www.TheLesserEvilDJ.comCheck us out on Facebook!

(570) 954-1620 Nick(570) 852-1251 Allen

DJPARTIES

Banquet room available

for Parties! Birthdays,

Sweet 16s, Baby Showers& More! $200 for 4 hours.

CLUB 79

Bring your own food. Bartender Available.

825-8381 • 793-9390Free Pool Wed & Fri 8-10 

PARTIES

Fri, Sat & Sun@7pm

Presents:JOHNNY PATTON

Damenti’sRoman Holiday Sand Bar 

“Jam With A Country Western Icon” 

WE DO PARTIES

The Snack Shack 750 Wilkes-Barre Twp Blvd

Wilkes-Barre(570)-270-2929

• Office • Business• Birthday • School

• Fundraisers• CelebrationsDelivered to youor At The Shack

We’re YourWe’re Your One StopOne Stop

Pumpkin Place...Pumpkin Place...Try our delicious Pumpkin Ice

Cream, Pumpkin Rice Pudding,Pumpkin Sundaes, Pumpkin

Flurries, Pumpkin Shakes and Pumpkin Whoopie Pies

BONNERCHEVROLET.COM

694 WYOMING AVE., KINGSTON 287-2117$38,900*

Chevy Runs Deep

2011CHEVYTAHOELS

STARTINGAT

0% up to60 mos.+ $1000

ATTENTION:GMCCARDHOLDERSGMCARDTOPOFF PROGRAMUPTO$3000 ADDITIONALTO

SELECTGMCARDHOLDERS

WITHRECEIVEDMAILER.SEEDEALER

FORDETAILS.

100

 ANNOUNCEMENTS

110 Lost

ALL JUNK CARSWANTED!!

CALL ANYTIME

FREE REMOVAL

CA$H PAID

ON THE SPOT

570.301.3602

 ALLJUNK 

CAR &  TRUCKSWANTED

Highest PricesPaid!!!

FREE

REMOVAL

CallVito & Ginos 

Anytime

288-8995

LOST CAT. Female,a ll b la ck - s ho rthaired domestic.

  Answers to Daisy.Missing since 8/15S. WB area.

570-824-4794

Doyou needmorespace? A yard or garage sale

in classifiedis the best way

tocleanout yourclosets!You’re in bussiness

with classified!LOST. Hearing aidsi n w hi te l ea th erpouch on or around

  August 22 RewardPlease call570-954-6525

120 Found

 All Junk Cars &  TrucksWanted

HighestPricesPaid InCA$H

FREE

PICKUP

570-574-1275

F OU ND . K ey s.Pittston Park andRIde on 9/18.

570-883-9404

FOUND. Single key in CVS parking lot inS. WB. Tag attached

with 3 initials.Call to identify 

570-332-4536

135 Legals/  Public Notices

LEGAL NOTICE

DEADLINESSaturday 

12:30 on Friday 

Sunday 4:00 pm on

Friday 

Monday 4:30 pm on

Friday 

 Tuesday 4:00 pm on

Monday 

Wednesday 4:00 pm on

Tuesday 

 Thursday 4:00 pm on

 Wednesday 

Friday 4:00 pm on

Thursday 

Holidays call for deadlines

 You may email your notices to

mpeznowski@ timesleader.com

or fax to570-831-7312

or mail toThe Times Leader15 N. Main Street Wilkes-Barre, PA 

18711

For additionalinformation or

questions regard-ing legal notices

 you may callMarti Peznowskiat 570-970-7371or 570-829-7130

LINEUP ASUCCESSFULSALE

INCLASSIFIED!Doyouneedmorespace? A yard or garage sale

in classifiedis the best way

tocleanoutyour closets!You’re in bussiness

with classified!

LEGAL NOTICE

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that LettersTestamentary havebeen issued to JoanD. Reed, Executoro f t he E st at e o f  Daniel E. Rozanski,D e ce as e d, w hodied on September1 1, 2 01 1, l at e o f  Plains Township,Pennsylvania. Allpersons indebted to

  th e Es ta te a rerequired to makepayment and thosehaving any claims ord em an ds a re t opresent the same,without delay to theExecutor in care of 

 the undersigned.

PAULA G.BREGMAN, P.C.

1205 Wyoming AveForty Fort, PA 18704

135 Legals/  Public Notices

NOTICE

NOTICE is hereby given that LettersTestamentary havebeen granted in theEstate of KathleenD. Reese, late of thecity of Nanticoke,Lu ze rne Co un ty,Pennsylvania, whodied August 16, 2011

o Charles A. SheaI II o f 1 5 P ub li cSquare, Suite 210,

 Wilkes-Barre, Penn-sylvania, 18701

 All persons indebtedo said Estate are

requested to makepayment to the saidExecutor and thoseh avi n g c l ai ms o rdemands to present

h e s am e to s aidE xe cu to r o r h isattorney.

CHARLES A. SHEA III, ESQUIRE

CAVERLY, SHEA,PHILLIPS & 

RODGERS, LLC15 Public Square,

Suite 210 Wilkes-Barre, PA 

18701(570) 823-0101

LINE UP A GREAT DEAL...IN CLASSIFIED!Looking for the right dealon an automobile?Turn to classified.It’s a showroom in print!Classified’s gotthe directions!

ESTATE NOTICENOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that LettersTestamentary havebeen granted in the

Estate of Leo F.Bator, late of Edwardsville,

Luzerne County,Pennsylvania, who

died on June 13,2011. All personsindebted to said

Estate are required to make paymentwithout delay, and

 those having claimsor demands to

present the samewithout delay to the

Executrix, DonnaLysiak, in care of 

her attorney,MICHAEL J.BENDICK, ESQUIRE400 Third Avenue

Suite 318Kingston, PA 18704

LEGAL NOTICE

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that LettersTestamentary havebeen issued to PaulJ. Lukas, Executoro f t he E st at e o f  Leonard S. Lukas,D ec eas ed , w hodied on August 24,2011, late of Court-d al e B or ou gh ,Pennsylvania. Allpersons indebted to

h e E st at e a rerequired to makepayment and thosehaving any claims ord em an ds a re t opresent the samewithout delay to theExecutor in care of 

he undersigned.

PAULA G.BREGMAN, P.C.

1205 Wyoming Ave

Forty Fort, PA 18704

135 Legals/  Public Notices

PUBLIC NOTICE

LUZERNECOUNTY 

CONVENTION AND VISITORS

BUREAU

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT A 

MEETING OF THELUZERNE COUNTY CONVENTION AND VISITORS BUREAU

(LCCVB)  WILL BE HELD ONMONDAY, SEPTEM-

BER 26, 2011 AT 11:00 A.M. IN

THE LCCVB MAINOFFICE,

56 PUBLICSQUARE, WILKES-

BARRE,PA, FOR THE PUR-

POSE OF CON-DUCTING

THE GENERALBUSINESS OF THE

 AGENCY.

MERLE D. MACKINEXECUTIVE

DIRECTOR

The LCCVB Office isa facility accessible

 to persons with dis-abilities. Please

notify Connie Mazur

at 570.819.1877 noless than 48 hoursin advance if spe-cial accommoda-

 tions are required.

GET THE WORD OUT

with a Classified Ad.

570-829-7130

NOTICE:

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that Lettersof Administrationwere granted Sep-

ember 6, 2011 inhe Estate of Jason

C. Dahms,deceased, late of Kingston, LuzerneCounty, Pennsylva-n ia , who die d

  August 28, 2011 allpersons indebted tos ai d E st at e a rerequired to makepayment and thosehaving any claims ordemands to present

he same withoutd el ay u nt o t he

  Administrator, LeoDahms, Jr. in care of 

he undersigned.

Patrick J. Aregood,Esq.

1218 South Main St. Wilkes-Barre, PA 

18706

NOTICE:

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that LettersTestamentary weregranted September1 9, 2 01 1 i n t heEstate of Stanley A.Marczak a/k/a Stan-l ey Ma rcza k,deceased, late of 

 Wilkes-Barre,Lu ze rne Co un ty,Pennsylvania, whodied September 6,2 011 al l p erso n si n de b te d to s aidEstate are required

o make paymentand those havingclaims or demandsare to present thesame without delay unto the Executor,Joseph Marczak incare of the under-signed.Patrick J. Aregood,

Esq.

1218 South Main St. Wilkes-Barre, PA 

18706

135 Legals/  Public Notices

ESTATE NOTICENOTICE IS HERE-BY GIVEN that Let- ters Testamentary have been granted

in the Estate of RONALD DUD-

KIEWICZ, late of  the Township of 

 Wilkes-Barre,Luzerne County,

Pennsylvania, whodied July 14, 2011.

 All persons indebt-ed to said Estateare requested to

make payment andall those with claims

or demands are topresent the same to the Executrix,

Lynn Marie Barajas,in care of 

her attorneys,c/o Joseph R.Lohin, Esquire

Mahler, Lohin &  Associates, LLC

Suite 501 RiversideCommons

575 Pierce StreetKingston, PA 18704

NOTICE OFINCORPORATION

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT Articleso f I nc o rp o ratio n

have been filed, with  the Department of State of the Com-monwealth of Penn-sylvania at Harris-burg, Pennsylvania

  for the purpose of business corpora-

  tion to be organizedunder the provisionsof the PennsylvaniaBusiness Corpora-

  tion Law of 1988,approved Decem-ber 21, 1988, P.L.1444, No. 177, asa me nd ed . T hename of the corpo-ration is:

STAR PITTSTON,INC.

T he A rt ic le s o f  Incorporation were

  filed on August 23,2011. 400 Highway 3 15 , S ui te 2 20 ,Pittston, PA 18640.

150 Special Notices

 ADOPT: Adoringc ou pl e l on gs t oad op t n ew bo rn.For eve r lov e,s ec ur e f ut ur e

awaits your baby.Kim & Tim800-407-4318

To place yourad call...829-7130

 ADOPT: AdoringMom, Dad, Big

Brother would like  to share a lifetime

of hugs & kissesin our loving home

with a newborn.Please Call

Lynda & Dennis888-688-1422Expenses Paid

  ATTENTION FLOOD  VICTIMS: Call MikeKovach Plumbing,Heatin g and Ai rConditioning for all

  your needs. Spe-cializing in furnacerepair and replace-ment, water heaterinstallations, boil-ers and A.C.L ic en se d a nd

insured.570-709-6437 or570-709-6438

150 Special Notices

Couples spendan average of $4,000.00 on  their honey-

moom.bridezella.net

Shopping for anew apartment?

Classified letsyou compare costs -

without hassleor worry!

Get movingwith classified!

MONTYMONTY SASAYSYS

Thank you somuch FLB. Spe-cial thanks to Edand Sue. Greatto have you on

our side. Knockoff early today.

PPAAYING $500YING $500MINIMUMDRIVEN IN

Full size 4 wheeldrive trucks

 A

L

S

O P

 A

 YI

NG T

O

P $$$ for heavy equip-ment, backhoes,

dump trucks,bull dozers

HAPPY TRAILSTRUCK SALES570-760-2035

542-22776am to 8pm

WANTEDMALE SINGERS

(570)696-3385

330 Chi ld Care

DAYCAREin my Kingston

home. Licensed. Accepting

Lackawanna & Luzerne CCC.

570-283-0336

360 Instruction &  Training

CAREGIVER with 15 years expe-rience is looking forwork. 570-871-5668

406 ATVs/D uneBuggies

HAWK 2011 UTILITY ATV

NEW!! Full sizeadult ATV. Strong 4stroke motor. CVT

 fully automatic transmission with

reverse. Electricstart. Front & rear

luggage racks.Long travel suspen-

sion. Disc brakes.Dual stage head

lights. Perfect forhunters & trail rid-

ers alike. BRAND NEW 

&  READY TO RIDE.$1,695 takes it

away.

386-334-7448 Wilkes-Barre

HONDA`09 RECONTRX 250CC/Electric

shift. Like New.REDUCED

$3,650.(570) 814-2554

TOMAHAWK`10

  ATV, 125 CC. BrandNew Tomahawk midsize 125cc 4 wheel-er. Only $995 takesit away! Call

386-334-7448 Wilkes-Barre

409 Autos under$5000

BMW ‘98 740 IL White with beigeleather interior.

New tires, sunroof,heated seats. 5 cd

player 106,000miles .Asking

$5,995.570-451-3259570-604-0053

CADILLAC `94DEVILLE SEDAN94,000 miles,

automatic, front

wheel drive, 4

door, air condi-

 tioning, air bags,

all power, cruise

control, leather

interior, $3,300.

570-394-9004

CADILLAC ‘03DeVille. Excellent

shape, all leather.$4650. BUICK ‘03

Century. Greatshape $3400570-819-3140

570-709-5677

DODGE `95 DAKOTA2WD V6. RegularCab/6Ft. 5 speed.113,000 miles. Runslike a champ. Needssome work. $1,400.

570-814-1255

FORD ‘93 TAURUSNewly inspected,new brakes, new

 tires, air condition-ing. 102K.

$1850 FIRM.Call Vince after 5

570-258-2450

GMC ‘96 JIMMY SLE4WD, Hunter

Green, 4 door, CD,168,000 miles.

$2,100 obo.(570) 262-7550

HYUNDAI `02ELANTRA

129,995 miles, man-u al, fron t w he eldrive, 4 door, anti-lock brakes, air con-ditioning, air bags,power locks, powerw in d ow s, p ow erm irrors , AM/F Mradio, CD player,leather interior, sunroof, rear windshieldwiper, tinted win-dows, $3,500

570-654-8469

MERCURY `95 TRACER Reliable transporta-

  tion. Excellent fuelm il e ag e. Call fo rdetails. $600 OBO570-240-7539

409 Autos under$5000

MERCURY 96 SABLENew t ires a ndb ra ke s. N ee dswork. $1,000. Call

570-674-2630

Say it HEREin the Classifieds!

570-829-7130

412 Autos for Sale

 AC

ME AUT

O S

 AL

ES343-1959

1009 Penn AveScranton 18509

 Across from Scranton PrepGOOD CREDIT, BADCREDIT, NO CREDIT

Call Our Auto CreditHot Line to get

Pre-approved for aCar Loan!

800-825-1609www.acmecarsales.net

11 A UDI S5QUATTRO CONVERTIBLE

Sprint blue/black &  tan leather, 7speed, auto turbo,330 HP,Navigation, (AWD)

08 DODGE A  VENGER

Blue, auto, V6,69k miles

08 PONTIAC GRAND

PRIX SE

blue, auto V6

07 CHRYSLER 300LTD AWD silver,grey leather

06 PONTIAC G6Silver, 4 door auto

06 DODGE STRATUS SXT

RED.05 TOYOTA  C AMRY 

 XLE silver, grey leather, sunroof 

05 VW NEW JETTA 

gray, auto, 4 cyl05 CHEVY  M ALIBU

Maxx White, grey leather, sunroof 

04 NISSAN A LTIMA SL

3.5 white, black leather, sun roof 

03 A UDI S8 QUATTRO

Mid blue/light grey leather, Naviga-

 tion, (AWD)02 BUICK P ARK A  VE

Silver, V601 S ATURN LS 300

Blue01 V OLVO V70 STATION

 WAGON, blue/grey,leather, AWD

99 CHRYSLER

CONCORDE gold98 MERCURY GRAND

MARQUIS black 98 SUBARU LEGACY 

SW white, auto,4 cyl. (AWD)

98 HONDA  CIVIC EX,2 dr, auto, silver

SUVS, VANS,  TRUCKS, 4 X4’s08 C ADILLAC ESCALADE

Blk/Blk leather, 3rdseat, Navgtn, 4x4

07 FORD ESCAPE XLT

green/tan lint 4x407 D ODGE GRAND

C ARAVAN SXT Bluegrey leather, 7passenger mini van

06 CHEVY  TRAILBLAZER

LS V6 4 X  406 MITSUBISHI

ENDEAVOR XLS,Blue auto, V6, awd

06 H YUNDAI S ANTA  FE

GLS, green, auto, V6, awd

06 PONTIAC

TORRANTBlack (AWD)

06 DODGE GRAND

C ARAVAN ES, red,4dr, entrtnmt cntr,7 pass mini van

05 FORD F150 XLTSUPER CREW  TRUCK

Blue & tan, 4 dr. 4x405 GMC ENVOY SLE,

Silver,3rd seat, 4x4

05 FORD ESCAPE XLTSilver 4 x4

05 BUICK R ANIER CXLgold, tan, leather,sunroof (AWD)

05 GMC SIERRA 

 X-Cab, blk, auto,4x4 truck 

04 FORD E XPEDITION

Eddie Bauer,white & tan,

 tan leather,3rd seat, 4x4

04 FORD E XPEDITION

  XLT, white,3rd seat, 4x4

04 FORD EXPLORER

LTD pearl white,black leather, 3rdseat 4x4

04 MITSUBISHI

ENDEAVOR XLSred, auto, V6, 4x43rd seat, 4x4

04 CHEVY  SUBURBAN

LS, pewter silver,3rd seat, 4x4

03 FORD W INDSTAR LX green 4 door, 7

passenger mini van02 CHEVY  2500 HD

Reg. Cab. pickup truck, green,auto, 4x4

01 F ORD F150 XLTSuper Cab 4x4

  truck, white & tan00 CHEVY  1500

SILVERADO XCAB

2wd truck,burgundy & tan

00 GRAND C ARAVAN

SPORT, dark blue,4 door, 7 passmini van

99 FORD F150 XLT

grey, reg cab,73,000 miles,

4x4 truck 99 JEEP GRAND

CHEROKEE LAREDO,grey, auto, 4x4

98 E XPLORER XLTBlue grey leather,sunroof, 4x4

97 D ODGE R AM 1500  XCAB TRUCK

red, auto, 4 x 4

ACURA 02 RSX142,000 miles,

5 speed, $5,600570-239-9316

412 Autos for Sale

ACURA 06 TL4 Door 3.2 VTEC 6Cy li n de r e ng in e

  Auto with slapstick.Navigation system.

5 7k m il es . Bl ac k with Camel Leatheri n te ri o r. He ate dS eats. S un R oo f,Excellent condition.Satellite Radio, Fully loaded. $18,000.

570-814-2501

AUDI `04 A6 QUATTRO3.0 V6. Silver. New

  tires & brakes. 130k h ig hw ay m il es .Leather interior.H ea te d S ea ts .$7,500 or best offer.

570-905-5544

AUDI 05 A4 1.8TCabriolet Convert-i b le S -Li ne . 5 2Km il es . A ut o. A llo p ti o ns . S il ver.Leather interior.Ne w ti re s. M us tsell. $17,500 or bestoffer 570-954-6060

AUDI 96 QUATTRO  A6 station wagon.143k miles. 3rd rowseating. $2,800 orbest offer. Call

570-861-0202

09 Jeep Patriot$11,99509Escapexlt $11,99508MARINER 4 X 4 $13,99508I MPALA LS $10,99505EXPLORE3ROW  $11,99508R ANGER 50K $10,995

Full Notary ServiceTags & Title Transfers

BEN’S AUTO SALESRT309 W-BTwp.Near Wegman’s

570-822-7359

BMW `00 323IBlack w/ tan leatherinterior. All power. 6

cylinder. Sun roof.Recently inspected.

New tires. 140Kmiles. $6,800

(570) 868-6986

BMW `01 X54 .4 i. S il ver, fu ll y  loaded, tan leatherinterior. 1 owner.103k miles. $8,999or best offer. Call

570-814-3666

BMW ‘04 325 XI White. Fully loaded. 120k 

miles. $10,500or best offer.

570-454-3287

412 Autos for Sale

BMW `07 328xiBlack with black interior. Heatedseats. Back up & n avi gatio n s ys -

  tems. New tires & brakes. Sunroof.Garage kept. Many e xtras ! 4 6, 00 0Miles.

  Asking $20,500.570-825-8888 or

626-297-0155Call Anytime!

BMW `99 M3Co nvertib l e w ithHard Top. AM/FM. 6disc CD. 117 K miles.Stage 2 Dinan sus-p en si on . C ro ssdrilled rotors. Coldair intake. All main-

 tenance recordsavailable. $14,695.

570-466-2630

To place yourad Call Toll Free1-800-427-8649

BUICK 01 CENTURY4 door. 6 Cylinder.Power windows & 

locks. 53K. Looks & runs well. $4,800.

DEALER570-868-3914

BUICK 03 LESABRE3 5k m il es , V -6 .P ow er s tee rin g,brakes & windows.

 A/C, Nice, clean car.$7,300. Call

570-674-3185

BUICK 05 LESABREGarage kept. 1

owner. Local driv-ing, very good

condition.53,500 miles.

 Asking $9,700(570) 457-6414leave message

CADILLAC `04SEVILLE SLS

Beige. Fully loadedExcellent condition.

Runs great. Newrotors, new brakes.

Just serviced.108,000 miles. Ask-

ing $5,000.OR BEST OFFER(570) 709-8492

CHEVROLET `03IMPALA

97,000 miles,$3,300.

570-592-4522570-592-4994

8/4/2019 Times Leader 09-22-2011

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/times-leader-09-22-2011 31/45

PAGE 2D THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com

135 Legals/  Public Notices

135 Legals/  Public Notices

135 Legals/  Public Notices

135 Legals/  Public Notices

135 Legals/  Public Notices

150 Special Notices

135 Legals/  Public Notices

150 Special Notices

250General Auction 250General Auction

NOTICE TO BIDDERS

The Greater Wilkes-Barre Industrial Fundinvites Bids for the Re-Bid grading of Lot28 in the Crestwood Industrial Park, the

ormer Poseidon Pools ManufacturingFacility located at the intersection of Crestwood Drive and Elmwood Road,

  Wright Township, Luzerne County, Pennsylvania.

Bids will be received for thefollowing Prime Contract:

1. S it ew ork C onst ruct ion.

The Owner will receive bids until 2:00 p.m.on Friday, October 7, 2011 at the Office of 

he Greater Wilkes-Barre Industrial Fund,2 Public Square, Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylva-nia 18701, Attention: Mr. Thomas Williams,Director of Real Estate Projects. Bidsreceived after that time will not be accept-ed. All bids will be publicly opened at that

ime.

  All bids shall be enclosed in envelopes(inner and outer) both of which shall besealed and clearly labeled with the words"SEALED BID FOR CRESTWOOD INDUS-TRIAL PARK - LOT 28 GRADING – PHASE IREBID”, name of bidder and date and timeof bid opening, in order to guard againstpremature opening of the bid. Facsimilebids will not be considered.

Hard copies of the documents may beobtained at the office of Quad ThreeGroup, Inc., 37 North Washington Street,

  Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania 18701; Tele-phone 570-829-4200, Extension 292,

  Attention: Casey Monagan. Documentsmay be obtained for a non-refundable costof $100.00, plus cost of shipping and han-dling, payable to Quad Three Group, Inc.No partial sets of documents shall beobtainable. Digital copies of the biddingdo cumen ts a re av ai la bl e atwww.questcdn.com. You may download

he digital plan documents for $20.00 by inputting Quest project #1751552 on thewebsite’s Project Search page. Pleasecontact QuestCDN.com at 952.233.1632or [email protected] for assistance inree membership registration, download-

ing and working with this digital projectinformation.

 All bids shall remain firm for sixty (60) daysollowing opening of bids.

Each contractor and each sub-contractor

shall be licensed in the community wherehe work will occur.

The Contract shall be written to retain 10%or each request for payment. When the

Contract is 50% completed, one-half of he amount retained shall be returned tohe Contractor. However, the Engineer

must approve the Application for Payment.The Contractor must be making satisfac-

ory progress and there must be no spe-cific cause for greater withholding.

The Owner-Contractor Agreement will behe Standard Form of Agreement Between

Owner and Contractor, AIA Document A101, 2007 edition.

The Owner requires that all Bids shallcomply with the bidding requirementsspecified in the Instructions To Bidders.

  Attention is called to the fact that not lesshan the minimum prevailing salaries and

wages, as set forth in the Contract Docu-ments must be paid on the project. TheOwner may, at its discretion waive infor-malities in Bids, but is not obligated to doso, nor does it represent that it will do so.The Owner also reserves the right toreject any and all Bids. Under no circum-stances will the Owner waive any informal-ity which, by such waiver, would give oneBidder a substantial advantage or benefitn ot e nj o ye d b y al l o the r Bi dd ers .

Bonding companies for Performance andPayment Bonds must be listed in the U.S.Treasury Circular No. 570.

  A Bid Bond made payable to the Greater  Wilkes-Barre Industrial Fund, in theamount of 10% of each Base Bid shallaccompany each bid, executed by theContractor and a surety company licensed

o do business in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, as a guarantee that, if thebid is accepted, the bidder shall execute

he proposed contract and shall furnishand pay for a Performance and PaymentBond in the amount of 100% of the Con-

ract Price as security for the performanceof the Contract and payment of all costs

hereof, upon execution of Contract. If,after thirty days the bidder shall fail to exe-cute said Contract and Bond, the Bid Bondshall be forfeited to the Owner as liquidat-ed damages. The Bid Bond of all bidders,except the three low bidders, will bereturned within ten (10) days after theopening of the bids.

The Bid Bond of the three low bidders willbe returned within three days after theexecuted Contracts and required bondshave been approved by the Owner.

The successful Bidder will be required toile a Stipulation Against Mechanic's Liens

prior to commencing work.

The Contractor must ensure that employ-

ees and applicants for employment arenot discriminated against because of theirrace, age, color, religion, sex, national ori-gin, handicap or family status, and that to

he greatest feasible utilize project arebusinesses located in or owned in sub-stantial part by project area residents.

The Office of the Greater Wilkes-BarreIndustrial Fund reserves the right to rejectany or all bids or potions thereof, and towaive informalities in the bidding. Bidsmay be held by the Office of the Greater

  Wilkes-Barre Industrial Fund for a periodnot to exceed thirty days from the date of opening of bids for the purpose of review-i n g th e b i ds , p rio r to aw ardi n g th i sContract.

The Office of the Greater Wilkes-BarreIndustrial Fund does not discriminate on

he basis of race, color, national origin,sex, religion, age, family and handicappedstatus in employment or the provision of services.

The Bidding Documents and Forms of Proposal may be examined at the follow-ing site during regular business hours:

1. Quad Three Group, Inc., 37 North Washington Street, Wilkes-Barre,Pennsylvania 18701, telephone 570-829-4200, facsimile 570-829-3732.

Pre-Bid Conference: A Pre-Bid Confer-ence will be held at the site on Friday,September 30, 2011 at 9:00 a.m. ThePre-Bid Conference is not mandatory.

The Office of the Greater Wilkes-BarreIndustrial Fund, 2 Public Square, Wilkes-Barre is a facility accessible to personswith disabilities.

Thomas WilliamsDirector of Real Estate Projects

The Office of the Greater Wilkes-BarreIndustrial Fund is an

Equal Opportunity / Affirmative ActionEmployer

PUBLICMEETINGPENNSYLVANIA DEPARTMENT

OFTRANSPORTATION

S.R. 2004, SECTION 390RIVER STREET CORRIDOR, IMPROVEMENTS PROJECT,

LUZERNE COUNTYPUBLIC MEETING #2

 PLACE:Wilkes University, Henry Student Center2nd Floor Ballroom

84 South StreetWilkes-Barre, Pa 18766 DATE: October 6, 2011

TIME: 6:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m.

THE PURPOSE OF THIS MEETING IS TO PROVIDE PENNONIASSOCIATES AND THE PENNDOT STAFF AN OPPORTUNITYTO PRESENT THE PROJECT TO THE PUBLIC. THERE WILL

BE A FORMALPRESENTATION WITHA QUESTION ANDANSWER PERIOD FOLLOWING THE PRESENTATION.

PRELIMINARY DESIGN PLANS WILL BE AVAILABLE FORREVIEW.

THE RIVER STREET CORRIDOR IMPROVEMENT PROJECTIS A TRAFFIC CALMING AND PEDESTRIAN SAFETY IM-

PROVEMENT PROJECT ALONG RIVER STREET FROM THEINTERSECTION WITH WEST ROSS STREET TO THE

INTERSECTION WITH WEST NORTH STREET (SR 0011).AN ADDITIONAL GOAL OF THIS PROJECT IS TO PROVIDE

CONTINUITY WITH THEADJOINING TWO (2) LANE

SECTIONS OF RIVER STREET. THIS MEETING IS ALSOBEING HELD TO FULFILLTHE REQUIREMENTS OFSECTION 106 OF THE NATIONALHISTORIC PRESERVATION

ACT (NHPA) 36 CFR 800.

THE PUBLIC MEETING LOCATION IS ACCESSIBLE TOPERSONS HAVING DISABILITIES. ANY PERSONS HAVING

SPECIALNEEDS OR REQUIRING SPECIALAIDS AREREQUESTED TO CONTACT THE DEPARTMENT AT (570)

963-4334 PRIOR TO THE MEETING EVENT IN ORDER THATSPECIALDISABILITY NEEDS MAY BE ACCOMMODATED.

OctagonFamily Restaurant375 W Main St, Plymouth, PA 18651

570-779-2288

35 cent

WING SPECIALSaturday & Wednesday

* In house only, Minimum order of a dozen.

Home of the Original ‘O-Bar’ Pizza

        7        1        2        0        2        0

4 68 A ut o Pa rt s 4 6 8 A ut o Pa rt s

 ASALWAYS ****HIGHEST PRICES***** 

PAIDFOR YOURUNWANTED VEHICLES!!! 

DRIVE IN PRICES

Callfor Details(570)459-9901

 Vehiclesmust beCOMPLETE !!

PlusEnter toWin$500.00Cash!! DRAWING TO BE HELD SEPTEMBER 30

Harry’s U Pull It

www.wegotused.com

LAW

DIRECTORY

Call 829-7130To Place Your Ad

Don’t Keep YourPractice a Secret!

310 Attor ney

Services

 ADOPTIONDIVORCE

CUSTODY Estates, DUI

 A  TTORNEY 

M ATTHEW LOFTUS

570-255-5503

BANKRUPTCY FREE CONSULTGuaranteed 

Low Fees Payment Plan! 

Colleen Metroka570-592-4796

DIVORCE No Fau lt$295 divorce295.com Atty. Kurlancheek 

800-324-9748 W-B

310 Attorney

Services

Free Bankruptcy Consultation

Payment plans.Carol Baltimore

570-822-1959

FREE CONSULTATION  for all legal matters

 Attorney Ron Wilson570-822-2345

SOCIALSECURITY DISABILITY 

Free Consultation.Contact Atty. Sherry 

Dalessandro570-823-9006

AUTO AUTOSERVICE SERVICE DIRECTORY DIRECTORY 

462 Auto

 Accessories

  VENT SHADES  We at he r Te ch ,smoke color, fits ‘09Ford Fusion, 4 door,windows $39.LASER radar detec-

  tor, total band pro-  tection, brand newin box, never used$69. 570-636-3151

4 68 A ut o Pa rt s

 All Junk 

Cars &  TrucksWanted

HighestPricesPaid InCA$H

FREEPICKUP

570-574-1275

Need a Roommate?

Place an ad and

 find one here!

570-829-7130

4 68 A ut o Pa rt s

BEST PRICESIN THE AREA 

C A $H ON THE $POT,Free Anytime

Pickup570-301-3602

570-301-3602 

CALL US!TO JUNK

YOUR CAR

472 Auto Services

$ WANTED JUNK $VEHICLES

LISPI TOWING

We pick up 822-0995

 VITO’S& 

GINO’SLike New 

Tires 

$15 & UP! 

Like New 

Batteries 

$20 & UP! 

Carry Out Price

288-8995

 WANTEDCars & Full Size

Trucks. For prices...Lamoreaux AutoParts 477-2562

412 Autos for Sale

CADILLAC ‘06 STS AWD, 6 cylinder, Sil-

ver, 55,000 miles,sunroof, heated

seats, Bose soundsystem, 6 CD

changer, satelliteradio, Onstar, park-

ing assist, remotekeyless entry, elec- tronic keyless igni-

 tion, & more!$16,500 

570-881-2775

LINE UP

 A GREAT DEAL...IN CLASSIFIED!

412 Autos for Sale

CHEVROLET 86CORVETTE

4x3 manual, 3 over-drive, 350 engine

with aluminumheads. LT-1 exhaustsystem. White withred pearls. Custom

 flames in flake. New  tires & hubs. 1

owner. 61,000 origi-nal miles. $8,500(570) 359-3296

  Ask for Les

Lineupaplacetolivein classified!

412 Autos for Sale

 Rare, ExclusiveOpportunity To

Own...

2002 BMW 745i  The Flagship of

the FleetNew - $87,000

Midnight Emeraldwith beige leatherinterior. 61K miles.M in t c on di tio n .Loaded. GarageKept. Navigation

Stunning,

Must Sell!$20,000$18,600

‘26 FORDMODEL T

Panel Delivery 100 point

Concours quality restoration. Redwith black fend-

ers. Never Driven.0 miles on

restoration.RARE!

$40,000$38,000$36,500

1954 MERCURYMONTEREY

WOODY WAGON100 point restora-

  tion. $130,000invested. 6.0

 Vortec engine.300 miles on

restoration. Cus-  tom paint by 

Foose Automo- tive. Power win-

dows, a/c, andmuch more!Gorgeous

 Automobile!$75,000$71,000$69,900

From an Exotic, Private Collection

Call 570-650-0278

CHEVROLET `00CORVETTE

  V-8. 5.7 liter.345 Horse Power.

 Automatic.56,000 miles.

Pewter metallic.Hatch Back.

Glass top. Air conditioning.Leather interior.

Power seat,

locks & windows.Bose AM/FMstereo.

Cassette/CD Player. Very good to excel-

lent condition.$17,500

SERIOUS INQUIRIES ONLY 

(570) 696-0424

CHEVROLET 04

CORVETTE COUPETorch red withblack and redinterior. 9,700

miles, auto, HUD,removable glass

roof, polishedwheels, memory 

package, Bosestereo and twilight

lighting, factory body moldings,

 traction control, ABS, Garage kept

- Like New.$25,900

(570) 609-5282

CHEVY 07 AVEO LTPower window/doorlocks. Keylessentry. Sunroof. A/C.

Black with tanleather interior.22,000 original

miles. AM/FM/CD.New tires.

$12,000(570) 287-0815

412 Autos for Sale

CHEVROLET ‘06CORVETTE

CONVERTIBLESilver beauty, 1

Owner, Museumquality. 4,900

miles, 6 speed. Allpossible options

including Naviga- tion, Power top.

New, paid $62,000Must sell $45,900

570-299-9370

CHEVY 05 EQUINOXLT (premium pack-age), 3.4L, 47,000m il es . Al l w he e ldrive, power moon-roof, windows, locks& s eats. Le ath erinterior, 6 cd chang-e r, r ea r f ol di ngseats, keyless entry,onstar, roof rack,run n in g b oards ,garage kept.

$13,750.570-362-1910

CHEVY 95 CORVETTE  Yellow, auto, 67,300miles. New tires & brakes. Removable

  top , l e ath er. Ai rpower locks & win-dows, new radio.G oo d c on d iti on .$12,000. 287-1820

CHEVY ‘01 CAVALIER 2 door. 4 cylinder. Automatic. 79K.

Runs & looks well!$3,800.DEALER

570-868-3914

CHEVY ‘02 CAVALIER 2 door. 4 Cylinder.

 Automatic. 31K.  A/C. Runs & looks

well! $4,800.DEALER

570-868-3914

CHEVY ‘06 COBALT LT Auto. Moonroof.

 Alloys.$8,995

560 Pierce St.Kingston, PA 

www.wyoming valleymotors.com 

570-714-9924

CHEVY ‘11 MALIBU LTMoonroof.7K miles.$19,740

560 Pierce St.Kingston, PA 

www.wyoming valleymotors.com 

570-714-9924

CHEVY`01 MALIBU LSShinny midnight bluemetallic. Like neww it h a ll p ow ero p ti o n s : s u n ro o f,rear spoiler and alu-m in um w he el s.

  Ve ry w el l m ai n -ained. $4,295.

(570) 313-5538

GET THE WORD OUT

with a Classified Ad.

570-829-7130

CHRYSLER ‘95NEW YORKER

21K miles. Garagekept - like new. Fully loaded. Automatic.Total power: steer-ing, seats, windows.Cruise & tractioncontrol. Alarm sys-

 tem & much more.

$6,700 negotiable(570) 823-5236

DODGE 06 STRATUSOnly 55K. Brandnew tires, plugs,

wires, oil. ExcellentCondition. $6,995

(570) 562-1963

412 Autos for Sale

‘10 DODGE

C ARAVAN SXT32K, Power slidingdoors, Factory 

warranty!$17,799

‘09 DODGE

C ALIBER SXT 2.0 Automatic, 24k Factory Warranty!

$13,099

‘08 HONDA 

RIDGELINE RTL32K, Factory Warranty, LeatherSunroof. WholesalePrice........ $23,599

‘08 CHRYSLER

SEBRING CONV .Limited Edition,45K, Leather, Heat-ed Seats, 3.56 Cylinder $16,399

08 JEEP LIBERTY 

SPORT 4 X 434K, Red

$15,799‘08 SUBARU

Special Edition42k, 5 speed, AWD.

Factory warranty.$13,999

‘08 CHRYSLERSEBRING CONV 

4 cylinder, 40k $12,299

‘08 CHEVY 

SILVERADO 15004x4, Regular Cab,63K, Factory War-r an ty $ 13 ,9 99

‘ 08 CHEVY  IMPALA 

LS 4 d o or, o nl y  37K! 5 Yr. 100K fac-

ory warranty $12,599

‘08 CHEVY  IMPALA 

LS 60k. Factory warranty. $10,699

‘05 HONDA  CRV EX O ne o wn er, j u st

raded, 65k $13,899

‘ 01 LINCOLN TOWN

C AR Executive 74K$6,199

‘00 CHEVY  V ENTURE

O nl y 5 6L $ 4799

CROSSROADMOTORS

570-825-7988700 Sans Souci

Highway 

W W E  E  S  S E L L E L L

F O RF O R L L E S S  E S S ! !! !

TIT

LE TAG

S

FU

L

L NOT

A

RY

SERVICE

6 MONTH  WARR

ANTY

DODGE 05 MAGNUMClean Car. Local

Trade-in.$10,880

560 Pierce St.Kingston, PA 

www.wyoming valleymotors.com 

570-714-9924

EAGLE `95 TALONOnly 97,000 Miles.Full custom body kit,dark green metallicwith gray interior.Dual exhaust, 4 coilo ver ad ju stabl es tr ut s. A ll n ewbrakes, air intakeki t, s tru t b rakes ,custom seats, cus-

 tom white gauges, 2pillar gauges, newstereo, alarm, cus-

  tom side view mir-r or s. 4 c yl in de rau to matic , ru nsexcellent. $8,500.

Call 570-876-1355or 570-504-8540

(evenings)

412 Autos for Sale

FORD 04 MUSTANGMach I, 40th

 A NNIVERSARY  EDITION

 V8, Auto, 1,400miles, all options,

show room condi-  tion. Call for info.  Asking $24,995 Serious inquiries

only. 570-636-3151

FORD 07 MUSTANG63,000 highway 

miles, silver, runsgreat, $11,500.

negotiable.

570-479-2482

FORD `08 ESCAPE  XLT. 56,800 miles.Grey metallic withgrey cloth interior.2WD. Auto. Powerwindows & locks.Dual air bags. A/C.

 Alloy Wheels. Excel-lent condition.

$14,500Trades Welcome

570-328-5497

FORD `87 F150116k, rebuilt trans-mission, new radia-

  tor. R un s g re at.$1,250. Call

570-864-2339

FORD 90 MUSTANG GTMust See. Sharp!Black, new direc-

  tional tires, excel-lent inside / outside,

  factory stock, very clean, must see toap pre ci ate . F o rmore information,call 570-269-0042

Leave Message

FORD ‘02 MUSTANGGT CONVERTIBLE

Red with black  top. 6,500 miles.

One Owner.Excellent Condi-

 tion. $18,500570-760-5833

HONDA 03ACCORD EX

6 CD changer.Moonroof. Heated

seats. Power locks.Black with beigeleather interior.104,000 miles.

$8,600(570) 474-9563(570) 592-4394

HONDA 05 ACCORDEXL. Titanium exteri-or, grey leather inte-rior. Dual Airbags.

  ABS. Bucket Seats.CD changer. Cruise.Fog lights. GPS. Allpower. A/C. 104k.Sunroof / moonroof.

$10,900. Please Call570-814-0949

HONDA `07 ACCORD  V6 EXL. 77K miles. 1owner with mainte-n an ce r ec or ds .S la te b lu e w it hleather interior. Sun-roof. Asking $12,500.Call 570-239-2556

 VITO’S& 

GINO’S Wanted:

JunkCars &TrucksHighestPricesPaid!!

FREE PICKUP

288-8995

MAZDA 97 626115,000 miles.

Needs some work.$1,000

(570) 817-1524

412 Autos for Sale

HONDAS‘08 AccordsChoose from 3. Lowmiles. Factory war-ranty. Starting at

$16,495‘08 Civic LX Blue. 20 K miles.Factory warranty.

$15,800‘08 Civic LX Gray. 26K. 1 owner.

$14,400‘04 Civic4 door. Auto.

$8,495‘04 Honda Pilot4x4. Auto. AC.

$11,200* * * * * * * * * * * *

‘10 Chevy ImpalaLT6 cylinder. Auto.Leather. Low Miles.‘02 ChryslerSebring4 cylinder. Auto. Air.

$4,900* * * * * * * * * * * *MAFFEI AUTO

SALES570-288-6227

JAGUAR 00 S TYPE4 door sedan. Likenew condition. Bril-liant blue exteriorwith beige hides.Car is fully equippedwith navigation sys-

 tem, V-8, automatic,climate control AC,a la rm s ys te m,

  AM/FM 6 disc CD,garage door open-er. 42,000 originalmiles. $9,750Call (570) 288-6009

JAGUAR `01 SEDAN

S1 TYPE12,000 MILES

Old ladies car. Likenew! leather interi-or. Asking $10,900.

Located in Dal-las.570-675-1185

JAGUAR 98 XK8Convertible. 40k miles. Great condi-

  tion. Silver with black i n te rio r. G arag ek ep t. R ec en tl y  inspected. V8/auto/ 

  AC. AM/FM / 6 disc.$ 12, 00 0 o r b e stoffer. 570-310-1287

Collectcash, notdust!Clean out your

basement, garageor attic and call the

Classified depart-ment today at 570-

829-7130!

KIA 08 RONDOMaroon with beigeinterior. All options.78,000 miles. Still

u n de r w arran ty.Received 60,000mile servicing. New

  tires . K BB Val u e$8,500. Asking only $7,900. A Must See!

(570) 457-0553

LEXUS 98 LS 400Excellent condition,g ar ag e k ep t, 1owner. Must see.Low mileage, 90K.Leather interior. Allpower. GPS naviga-

  tion, moon roof, cdchanger. Loaded.$ 9, 00 0 o r b es toffer. 570-706-6156

LINCOLN 06Town Car LimitedFully loaded.

50,000 miles,Triple coated

Pearlized White.Showroomcondition.$16,900.

(570) 814-4926(570) 654-2596

WANTED!

 ALL 

JUNK 

CARS! 

CA$HPAID

570-301-3602

MAZDA 08 M IATAMX-5 CONVERTIBLE

Red. Power steer-ing, auto, AC, CD.

ONLY 5,500 MILES.$18,000

(570) 883-0143

MAZDA 3S 07Sedan. 4 cylinder2.3, auto, FWD, allp ow er, k ey le ss

entry, cruise, a/c,am/fm stereo/cd,

  ABS . 5 5k m il es .Excellent condition.

 Asking $11,600. Call570-574-2141

412 Autos for Sale

MERCEDES 92 500 SEL  Wh ite w i th g ray  leather interior, 17”c us tom c hro mewheels, 4 new tires,new breaks front & rear. Full tune-up, oilc han ge & fi lte rsd on e. B od y a ndinterior are perfect.C ar h as a ll t heoptions. 133,850miles. Original price:$140,000 new. Thisis the diplomat ver-s io n. N o r us t o rdings on this car -Garage kept. Sell for$9,500.Call: 570-876-1355

or 570-504-8540Evenings

MERCEDES-BENZ 95SL 500

Convertible, withremovable hard top, dark Blue,camel interior,

Summer DrivingOnly, Garage Kept.

 Very GoodCondition,

No Accidents.Classy Car.

Price Reduced! 

$10,995or trade for

SUV or other.570-388-6669

MERCURY `95GRAND MARQUIS

4 d oo r, V8, ful l y  loaded, moon roof,new tires & brakes.Interior & exterior inexcellent shape. 2

owners. Call(570) 822-6334 or

(570) 970-9351

MERCURY ‘99 SABLEWAGON

  Well kept, body ingreat condition, noru st, ti re s g oo d,mechanically sound,needs battery. Only 7 2, 56 0 m il es .Inspected until 10/11.

$3800 negotiableCall 570-779-3816

MINI ‘08COOPER 

2 door, automatic,leather, sky roof,

boost cd, fogs$18,880

560 Pierce St.Kingston, PA 

www.wyoming 

valleymotors.com 570-714-9924

Selling yourCamper?

Place an ad and find a new owner.

570-829-7130

MINI COOPER`08CLUBMAN S

S parkl i ng s i lve rmetallic. Roof andmirror caps in black.Black leather interi-or. Automatic step-

  tronic paddles. Dualm oo n ro of. Co ldweather package.Dynamic stability control. ExcellentCondition. 33,600m il e s. Ju st S er-viced. 30 MPG City.Factory warranty to50K miles. $20,995

(570) 472-9909(570) 237-1062

MITSUBISHI 02

Eclipse ConvertibleB la ck i nt er io r &  exterior 120,000miles, very goodcondition in & out,n ew t ir es , n ewbrakes. auto, clean

 title, $6,300.By owner.

570-991-5558

NISSAN 08 ALTIMA2.5 S. Silver/black i n te rio r. 4 1, 80 0m il e s. E xc el l en tcondition. CD Play-er. New tires.

$13,900(570) 675-8835

NISSAN 08 SENTRA58K miles. 4 cylin-der, 6 speed manu-al. Great condition.

  Al l p ow er . A /C .Cruise. $11,500. Call

570-333-4379after 6:30 pm

NISSAN 08 XTERRAGrey, Mint condition.35K miles. New, all-season tires. Siriusr ad io . 2 s et s o f  m ats , i nc l ud in gcargo mats.$18,400. Call

570-822-3494 or570-498-0977

412 Autos for Sale

NISSAN `09 370ZTOURING-MAG

BLACK 11,200 miles, auto-matic, 2 door, anti-l oc k b rake s, ai rconditioning, airbags, power locks,power windows,

p ow er m irrors,power seats, allp ow er, A M/ FMradio, CD changer,k ey le ss e nt ry,leather interior,custom wheels,$28,000. Call after5:00 p.m.

570-403-5343

PONTIAC 04 VIBE  White. New manual  trans mi s si on & clutch. Front wheeldrive. 165k highway miles. Great on gas.G oo d c on di tio n ,runs well. $4,500 orbest offer

570-331-4777

412 Autos for Sale

NISSAN ‘09 ALTIMA S Auto. CD Player.

Cruise.$13,995

560 Pierce St.Kingston, PA 

www.wyoming valleymotors.com 

570-714-9924

Say it HEREin the Classifieds!

570-829-7130

PONTIAC `05GRAND PRIX

Sedan. White. Greatcondition. Sunroof,

an leather interior.R ec en tl y m ai n-

ained. 70k miles.$5,000. Call

570-954-7459

Sell your own home!Place an ad HERE

570-829-7130

8/4/2019 Times Leader 09-22-2011

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/times-leader-09-22-2011 32/45

TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 PAGE 3D

412 Autos for Sale

PONTIAC 04 SUNFIRE2 door. Automatic.42 K. S un ro of .P ow er w i nd ow s.

  AC. Runs & looksgreat! $5,495.

DEALER570-868-3914

PONTIAC ‘69 FIREBIRD 400

CONVERTIBLEBlue/white top & 

white interior.Recent document-

ed frame-off 

restoration. Over$31,000 invested.will sell $19,900.

570-335-3127

PORSCHE 85 944Low mi lea ge,110, 00 0 m il e s, 5speed, 2 door, anti-lock brakes, air con-d iti on i ng , p o we rw in do ws , p o we rm irrors , AM/F Mradio, CD changer,leather interior, reardefroster, tintedwindows, customwheels, $8,000.

(570) 817-1803

ROWLANDSMountainside Auto, Inc.

Used car sales.1157 S. Main Rd.

Dorrance570-868-3914

SAAB `06 93  A E R O s p o r t .Leather interior.Heated seats. Sun-roof. Good condi-

ion. $8,000. Seri-ous inquiries only.

Call 570-760-8264

SATURN `02 SL1Sedan. 1 owner.

17,500 miles. War-ranty. $5,500.

R&K AutoWest Wyoming

(570) 693-9931

SUBARU`02FORESTER L. AWD. Red.$2,850. Hail dam-age. Runs great.

  Auto, air, CD, cas-sette, cruise, tilt. Allpower. 174K miles.Mechanical inspec-

 tion welcomed. Call570-561-9217

SUBARU 98OUTBACK WAGON155,000 miles.

Inspection good till7/12. New Tires.

$4,500.(570) 899-8725

SUBARU 06 FORESTER ONLY!!

$10,880

560 Pierce St.Kingston, PA 

www.wyoming valleymotors.com 

570-714-9924

SUBURU ‘06 LEGACYGT LIMITED SEDAN

4 d oo r, b la ck ,approximately 76,000 miles. 2.5liter engine, auto.asking $12,000.

570-510-3077

TOYOTA 05COROLLA-S

  Automatic, powerwindows, locks, mir-rors, air, cruise, key-less entry. Groundeffects.

68,700 miles. Asking $9,395570-388-2829 or

570-905-4352

TOYOTA 10Camry SE. 56,000

miles. Red, alloy wheels, black clothinterior. Will consid-

er trade. $14,200(570) 793-9157

VOLKSWAGEN 04Beetle - Convertible

GREAT ON GAS!Blue. AM/FM cas-sette. Air. Automat-ic. Power roof, win-d ow s, l oc ks &  doors. Boot cover

  for top. 22k. Excel-l en t c on di ti on .Garage kept.

Newly Reduced$14,000

570-479-7664Leave Message

415 Autos-Antique& Classic

CADILLAC 80COUPE DEVILLE

Excellent condition,$3,000 located in

Hazleton.570-454-1945 or

561-573-4114

CHEVROLET 65CORVETTE STINGRAYClean, sharp, runs

great! Must see.$13,500. As is.

(570) 269-0042LEAVE A MESSAGE - WE

  WILL CALL YOU BACK.

CHEVROLET 71MONTE CARLO

$2,000 or best offer(570) 650-8687

CHEVROLET 76PICKUP

 Very GoodCondition!

Low miles!$7500. FIRM

570-905-7389  Ask for Lee

CHEVY ‘30 HOTROD COUPE$49,000

FORD ‘76 THUNDERBIRD All original $12,000

MERCEDES ‘76 450 SL$24,000

MERCEDES ‘29Kit Car $9,000

(570) 655-4884hell-of-adeal.com

415 Autos-Antique& Classic

CHEVROLET 81CORVETTE

 Very good condi- tion. 350 engine,classic silver with

black bottom trim,all original, regis-

  tered as an antiquevehicle, removablemirror tops. 66,000

miles, chromewheels & tires in

very good shape,leather interior,

garage kept. Mustsee to appreciate. Asking $9,000 or

willing to trade for anewer Pontoon

boat.Call 570-545-6057

CHEVY 68CAMARO SS

396 automatic,400 transmission,

clean interior, runsgood, 71K, garage

kept, custompaint, Fire Hawk 

 tires, Kragerwheels, wellmaintained.

$23,900Negotiable

570-693-2742

CHEVY`75 CAMARO3 50 V8. O ri gi n alowner. Automatic

 transmission. Rare -  tuxedo silver / black vinyl top with black naugahyde interior.Never damaged.$6,000. Call

570-489-6937

Chrysler ‘68 New YorkerSedan. 440 Engine.

Power Steering & brakes. 34,500

original miles. Always garaged.

$6,800(570) 883-4443

DESOTO CUSTOM‘49 4 DOOR SEDAN

3 on the tree with  fluid drive. This All  American ClassicIcon runs like a topat 55MPH. Kin toChrysler, Dodge,Plymouth, ImperialDesoto, built in the

 American Midwest,afte r W WI I , i n ap l an t th at o n ce

p ro du ce d B29Bombers. In it’soriginal antiquity c on di tio n , w itho rig in al s ho p & p arts m an u al s ,she’s beautifully detailed and ready 

  for auction in SinCi ty . S pe n t h erentire life in Ari-z on a a nd N ewMexico, never sawa d ay o f rain o rrust. Only $19,995.To test drive, by appointment only,

Contact Tony at570-899-2121 orpenntech84th@ 

gmail.com 

FORD `52COUNTRY SEDAN

CUSTOM LINESTATION WAGON

 V8, automatic,8 passenger,

3rd seat, goodcondition, 2nd

owner. REDUCED TO

$6,500.570-579-3517

570-455-6589

FORD SALEEN ‘04281 SC Coupe

1,000 milesdocument. #380

Highly collectable.$28,500

570-472-1854

LINCOLN 66Continental Convertible

4 door. 67K miles. 1owner since `69.Good frame. Tealgreen/white leather.Restorable. $2,500

570-287-5775570-332-1048

LINCOLN 88TOWN CAR 

61,000 originalmiles, garage kept, triple black, leather

interior, carriageroof, factory wire

wheels, loaded,excellent condition.

$5,500. CallMike 570-237-7660

MAZDA 88 RX-7CONVERTIBLE 

1 owner, garagekept, 65k originalmiles, black with

grey leather interior,all original & never

seen snow. $7,995.Call 570-237-5119

MERCEDES 1975Good interior & 

interior. Runsgreat! New tires.Many new parts.

Moving, Must Sell.$2,300 orbest offer

570-693-3263  Ask for Paul

MERCEDES-BENZ 73450SL

Co nve rti bl e w i thremovable hard top,power windows, AM

 /FM radio with cas-s ette p l ay er, CDplayer, automatic, 4new tires. Cham-pagne exterior; Ital-ian red leather inte-rior inside. Garagekept, excellent con-dition. $31,000. Call

825-6272

STUDEBAKER ‘31Rumble seat,

CoupeGood condition.

Call for details(570) 881-7545

415 Autos-Antique& Classic

OLDSMOBILE 68DELMONT

DRASTICALLY REDUCED!! 

This model only produced in 1967

& 1968. Alloriginal 45,000

miles, ColorBurgundy, cloth& vinyl interior,

350 rocketengine, 2nd

owner. Fenderskirts, always

garaged. Trophy winner at shows.Serious inquiries

only, $7,500 .570-690-0727

OLDSMOBILE`68

DELMONT

Must Sell! Appraisedfor $9,200

• All original45,000 miles

• 350 Rocketengine

• Fender skirts• Always

garaged

Will sell for$6,000Serious

inquires only 570-

690-0727

PONTIAC `68CATALINA

400 engine. 2barrel carburetor. Yellow with black 

roof and white wall tires. Black interior.

$4,995. Call(570) 696-3513

PONTIAC 1937Fully restored nearoriginal. New paint,new interior, newwiring, custom tint-ed glass, new motor& tran sm is si o n.S pa re mo to r &  

  tr an s. 1 6” w id ewhite walls car inexcellent conditioni n s to ra ge f or 2

  years. $14,000 orbest offer. Seriousinquiries ONLY.

Call 570-574-1923

PORSCHE ‘78911 SC TARGA

60,000 miles. 5speed. Air. Powerwindows. Metallic

brown. Saddle Inte-rior. Meticulousoriginal owner.Garaged. New

Battery. Inspected.Excellent Condition.

$25,000. OBO(610) 797-7856(484) 264-2743

WANTED: PONTIAC`78 FIREBIRD

Formula 400Berkshire Green,Originally purchasedat Bradley-Lawlessi n S cranto n. Carw as l ast s ee n i n

 Abington-Scranton

area. Finder’s feepaid if car is foundand purchased. CallJohn with any info

(570) 760-3440

421 Boats &  

Marinas

CABELAS FISHCAT PANTHER 

9’. Approximately 5  years old. Retails$699, selling $350.FIRM 570-288-9719

CUSTOMCREST 15’

Fiberglassboat with

 trailer. Out-board propul-sion. Includes:

2 motorsErinmade,

“Lark II series”PRICE REDUCED! 

$2,400 NEGOTIABLE 

570-417-3940

LINEUP ASUCCESSFULSALE

INCLASSIFIED!Doyouneedmorespace? A yard or garage sale

in classifiedis the best way

tocleanoutyourclosets!You’re in bussiness

with classified!

ROW BOAT 12’& TRAILER 

  Al u mi n um , n ew  tires, new wiring on trailer, $699. neg.

570-479-7114

STARCRAFT ‘8016’ DEEP V

‘90 Evinrude out-board 70hp with tilt& t ri m— ‘ 92 E Zloader trailer. With‘00 Tracker Series60lbs foot pedal, 2downriggers, stor-ages, gallon tanks,2 fish finders andmore. MUST SEE.Make Best Offer.Call 866-320-6368

after 5pm.

427 Commercial Trucks & 

Equipment

CHEVY 04 DUMP TRUCK 36k miles. 9’6” Bosspower angle plow.Hydraulic over elec-

  tric dump box withsides. Rubber coatedbox & frame. Very g oo d c on di ti on .$22,500 firm. Call

570-840-1838

CHEVY ‘08 3500

HD DUMP TRUCK 2WD, automatic.Only 12,000 miles.

 Vehicle in likenew condition.

$19,000.570-288-4322

439 Motorcycles

‘96 HONDA  American ClassicEdition. 1100 cc. 1

owner, under20,000 miles. Yel-

low and white,extra chrome, VNH

exhaust, bags,lights, MC jack, bat-

 tery tender, hel-mets. Asking $3500

570-288-7618

To place yourad call...829-7130

BMW ‘07 K1200 GTLow mileage. Many 

extras. Clean.$9,500

(570) 646-2645

DAELIM 20061 50 C Cs . 4 ,7 00m il es . 7 0 M PG .New battery & tires.$1,500; negotiable.

Call 570-288-1246or 570-328-6897

HARLEY ‘01DAVIDSON

Electra Glide, UltraClassic, many 

chrome acces-sories, 13k miles,Metallic Emerald

Green. Garagekept, like new

condition. IncludesHarley cover.

$12,900570-718-6769570-709-4937

HARLEY 2011HERITAGE SOFTTAIL

Black. 1,800 miles. ABS brakes. Securi-  ty System Package.$16,000 firm.SERIOUS INQUIRIES ONLY 

570-704-6023

HARLEY ‘73Rat Rod.

$3,200Or Best Offer.

(570) 510-7231

HARLEY DAVIDSON 03100th Anniversary E di ti on D eu ce .G ar ag e k ep t. 1owner. 1900 miles.T on s o f c hro me .$38,000 invested. A must see. Asking$18,000. OBO

570-706-6156

HARLEY DAVIDSON 03NIGHTTRAIN

New rear tire. Very good condition. 23Kmiles. $8,500. Call

570-510-1429

HARLEY DAVIDSON 07Road King ClassicFLHRC. Burgundy / Cream. D ri ver & P ass en ge r b ack rest, grips, battery 

  tender, cover. WillieG accessories. 19k miles. $14,400 orbest offer. Call

262-993-4228

HARLEY DAVIDSON‘03 Dyna Wide Glide

Excellent condition -garage kept! Gold-

en Anniversary - sil-ver/black. New

Tires. Extras.19,000 miles.

Must Sell!$10,000.

570-639-2539

HARLEY DAVIDSON ‘05SCREAMING EAGLE

V-RODOrange & Black.Used as a show

bike. Never abused.480 miles. Excellent

condition. Asking$15,000

570-876-4034

HARLEY DAVIDSON ‘05  V-ROD VRSCA 

Blue pearl,excellent condition,3,100 miles, factory 

alarm with extras.$10,500.

or best offer.Tony 570-237-1631

HARLEY DAVIDSON‘08 SPORTSTER 

 XL 1200 Low Rider.6,700 miles. Lots of 

chrome & extras.Perfect condition.

$7,000 or best offer(570) 709-8773

HARLEY DAVIDSON

2006 NIGHTTRAINSPECIAL EDITION#35 of 50 Made

$10,000 in acces-sories including acustom made seat.E xo tic p ain t s e t,

  Alien Spider Candy Blue. Excellent con-dition. All Documen-

  tation. 1,400 Asking$15,000

570-876-4034

HONDA 03 REBEL250. Black with redrebel decal. 65MPG.Excellent condition.1,800 miles. $1,750or best offer. Call

570-262-6605

HONDA 2005 SHADOW VLX600, White,

10,000 miles& new back tire.

$3,000(570) 262-3697 or

(570) 542-7213

439 Motorcycles

HARLEY DAVIDSON ‘80Soft riding FLH.

King of the High-way! Mint origi-

nal antique showwinner. Factory 

spot lights, widewhite tires,

biggest Harley built. Only 

28,000 originalmiles! Never

needs inspec- tion, permanent

registration.$7,995

570-905-9348

HYOSUNG 04 COMET2 50 . 1 57 M il es .Excellent Condition.$1,200. Call

570-256-7760

KAWASAKI ‘03KLR 650. Green.

Excellent condition.6K Miles. $3,000(570) 287-0563

KAWASAKI ‘05NINJA 500R. 3300

miles. Orange.Garage kept. His & hers helmets. Must

sell. $2400570-760-3599570-825-3711

Kawasaki` 93

ZX11D NINJALIKE NEW

8900 Originalmiles. Original

owner. V@HExhaust and Com-

puter. New tires.$3,800.

570-574-3584

MOTO GUZZI `031 ,1 00 c c. 1 ,9 00miles. Full dress.Shaft driven. Garagekept. Excellent condi-ion. $6000. Health

Problems. Call570-654-7863

POLARIS ‘00VICTORY CRUISER 

14,000 miles,92 V-twin, 1507 cc,

extras $6000.570-883-9047

Q-LINK LEGACY 09250 automatic. Gunm etal g ray. M P3p l ay er. $ 3, 00 0.Great first motorcy-cle. 570-696-1156

SUZUKI 07 C50TCRUISER 

EXCELLENTCONDITION

 Windshield, Bags,Floorboards,V&H

Pipes, Whitewalls,Garage Kept.

6K Miles $5,200(570) 430-0357

SUZUKI ‘77GS 750

Needs work.$1,200

or best offer570-855-9417570-822-2508

UNITED MOTORS‘08 MATRIX 2 SCOOTER 

150cc. Purple & grey in color. 900

miles. Bought brandnew. Paid $2,000. Asking $1,600 or

best offer.(570) 814-3328 or

(570) 825-5133

YAMAHA ‘11 YZ 450Brand New!

$6,900(570) 388-2947

YAMAHA ‘97ROYALSTAR 1300

12,000 miles. Withwindshield. Runsexcellent. Many extras includinggunfighter seat,

leather bags, extrapipes. New tires & 

battery. Asking

$4,000 firm.(570) 814-1548

442 RVs & Campers

‘96 SUNLINE TRAILER 23’. Excellent con-

dition. Sleeps 3 or 4people. Reduced to$5,500 negotiable.

570-453-3358

CHEROKEE ‘10Travel trailer. 39 ft.,

4 slide outs, 3 bed-rooms, 2 bath

rooms, microwave,awning, tinted win-dows, Brand new.

Have no pets orsmokers. Much

more!!!!!$33,000

(cell) 682-888-2880

DUTCHMAN 96’5TH WHEEL

with slideout & sunroom built on. Setup on permanentsite in Wapwallopen.

Comes with many extras. $6,500.

(570) 829-1419 or(570) 991-2135

LAYTON ‘02TRAVEL TRAILER 

30 ft. Sleeps 9 - 3bunk beds & 1

queen. Full kitchen. Air conditioning/ 

heat. Tub/shower.$6,900

(570) 696-1969

442 RVs & Campers

EQUIPMENT/BOBCATTRAILER 

Brand new 2010 tandem axle, 4

wheel electricbrakes, 20’ long

  total, 7 x 16 wood

deck, fold up rampswith knees, remov-

able fenders foroversized loads,

powder coat paint for rust protection,

2 5/16 hitchcoupler, tongue

 jack, side pockets,brake away switch,

battery, 7 poleRV plugs, title & 

more!! Priced forquick sale. $2,595386-334-7448

 Wilkes-Barre

To place yourad Call Toll Free1-800-427-8649

FLAGSTAFF 08CLASSIC

Super Lite Fifth Wheel. LCD/DVD

 flat screen TV, fire-place, heated mat- tress, ceiling fan,Hide-a-Bed sofa,

outside speakers & grill, 2 sliders,

aluminum wheels,water purifier,

awning, microwaveoven, tinted safety 

glass windows,raised panel fridge

& many acces-sories & options.

Excellent condition,$22,500.

570-868-6986

NEWMAR 36’MOUNTAIN AIRE

5th wheel, 2 largeslides, new

condition, loadedwith accessories.Ford Dually diesel

 truck with hitchalso available.570-455-6796

PACE ‘99 ARROW VISIONFord V10. Excellentcondition. 8,700miles. 1 slide out. 2awnings. 2 coloredT Vs , g en erato r,back up camera, 2air conditioners,microwave/convec-

  tion oven, side by side refrigeratorw it h i ce m ak er ,

washer/dryer,queen size bed.$37,900 negotiable

(570) 288-4826(570) 690-1464

SUNLINE 06 SOLARISTravel Trailer. 29’,m in t c o nd iti on , 1slide out a/c-heat.Stove, microwave,

  fr id ge , s ho we rinside & out. Many more extras, includ-ing hitch equipmenta nd s wa y b ar s.Reduced. $12,500.

Call 570-842-6735

SUNLINE SOLARIS 9125’ travel trailer A/C.Bun k b e ds . New

  fridge & hot waterheater. Excellentcondition. $3,900.

570-466-4995

SUNLITE CAMPER 22 ft. 3 rear bunks,center bathroom,kitchen, sofa bed.

  Air, Fully self con-  tained. Sleeps 6.New tires, fridge

awning. $4500.215-322-9845

TRAVEL TRAILER 33 ftRear queen master

bedroom, Walk  thru bathroom.

Center kitchen +dinette bed. Frontextra large living

room + sofa bed.Big View windows.

 Air, awning, sleeps6, very clean, will

deliver. Located inBenton, Pa. $4,900.

215-694-7497

451 Trucks/  

SUVs/Vans

BUICK 05RENDEZVOUS CXL

BARGAIN!!  AWD, Fully 

loaded, 1 owner,22,000 miles.

Small 6 cylinder.New inspection.Like new, inside& out. $13,900.(570) 540-0975

CADILLAC 99ESCALADE

9 7k m il e s. Bl ac k with beige leatherinterior. 22” rims.Runs great. $8,500

Call 570-861-0202

CHEVROLET 10SILVERADO 1500

Extended Cab V71Package 4x4. Bed-liner. V-8. 5.3 Liter.Red. Remote start.Garage kept. 6,300

miles $26,000(570) 639-2539

CHEVROLET 97SILVERADO

with Western plow.4WD, Automatic.

Loaded withoptions. Bedliner.

55,000 miles.$9,200. Call

(570) 868-6503

CHEVY `00 SILVERADO

1500. 4x4. 8’ box.  Au to . A /C . 1 21 Kmiles. $5,995.

570-332-1121

451 Trucks/  

SUVs/Vans

CHEVY 10 SILVERADO4 Door Crew CabLTZ. 4 wheel drive.Excellent condition,low mileage.

$35,500. Call570-655-2689

CHEVY 99 SILVERADO  Au to. V6 Vortec .S tan d ard c ab. 8 ’bed with liner. Dark Blue. 98,400 miles.$6,899 or best offer

570-823-8196

CHEVY 02 AVALANCHE4X4. 130K highway miles. Cloth seats.H it ch . N o r us t.Mechanically excel-lent. Roof rack. Gray 

 tones. $7,250570-239-2037

CHEVY ‘03TRAILBLAZER LTZ

4WD, V6, leather,auto, moonroof 

$10,740

560 Pierce St.Kingston, PA 

www.wyoming valleymotors.com 

570-714-9924

1518 8th StreetCarverton, PA Near Francis 

Slocum St. Park 

CHEVY 05TRAILBLAZER LT

Leather. Sunroof.Highway miles.

Like Brand New!$6,995

Call For Details!570-696-4377

CHEVY ‘07 HHR LTMoonroof 

$13,784

560 Pierce St.Kingston, PA 

www.wyoming valleymotors.com 

570-714-9924

CHEVY ‘90 CHEYENNE2 50 0 s eri es . 8 ftbox with tool box.Heavy duty ladderrack. 150K miles.Great work truck.$1,500

570-406-5128

CHEVY ‘95 ASTRO  AWD. Good tires.  V6 . A ut om at ic .1 49 ,0 00 m il es .Power everything.H ea vy d ut y t owp ac ka ge . R un sgood. Just passedinspection.

$2,000(570) 855-8235

1518 8th StreetCarverton, PA Near Francis 

Slocum St. Park 

CHEVY ‘98CHEYENNE 25002-wheel drive

1 owner! Localnew truck trade!

$3,495Call For Details!570-696-4377

DODGE `99DURANGO SLT

5.9 V8, Kodiak Green, Just serv-

iced. New brakes.Tow package. AC. Very good condi-

 tion. Runs & drives100%. 68,000 miles.

 Asking $6,850 orbest offer

(570) 239-8165

1518 8th StreetCarverton, PA Near Francis 

Slocum St. Park 

FORD ‘00 TAURUSSTATION WAGON

3rd seat. Localnew car trade!

$3,995Call For Details!570-696-4377

FORD 04 EXPLORER Eddie Bauer Edition

59,000 miles,4 door, 3 row

seats, V6, all poweroptions, moon roof,

video screen$12,999.

570-690-3995 or570-287-0031

FORD 04 FREESTAR Limited. Leather. 7passenger.Remotedoors. DVD player,premium sound.Rear A/C. 57,800miles. $8,995. Call

570-947-0771

FORD 06 RANGER 2WD, regular cab, 4Cylinder, 5 speed,CD/radio & cruisecontrol. 64K miles.

  Al l m ain ten anc erecords available.Truck is very clean!

$7,700(570) 401-0684

FORD `90 TRUCK 17’ box. Excellentrunning condition.

 Very Clean. $4,300.Call 570-287-1246

JEEP 99 CHEROKEE4WD, low miles,new inspection,new tires, runs

good, $4,500 OBO(570) 752-5229

451 Trucks/  

SUVs/Vans

1518 8th StreetCarverton, PA Near Francis 

Slocum St. Park 

FORD 02 F150Extra Cab. 6

Cylinder, 5 speed.  Air. 2WD. $4,995Call For Details!570-696-4377

FORD 03 RANGER $11,995

560 Pierce St.Kingston, PA 

www.wyoming valleymotors.com 

570-714-9924

1518 8th StreetCarverton, PA Near Francis 

Slocum St. Park 

FORD 05ESCAPE XLT

Sunroof, leather,Local New SUV 

Trade!$6,995

Call For Details!

570-696-4377

1518 8th StreetCarverton, PA Near Francis 

Slocum St. Park 

FORD ‘99 F1504x4. Short box. Auto. 4.6L. V8.

1 Owner!!$4,495.

Call For Details!570-696-4377

GMC `04 4500

D uramax D ie se lengine. Aluminum16’ ft M ic key b ox  

ruck; allison auto-

matic transmission;heavy duty tuck-a-way lift gate with rollup r ea r door ;

ranslucent roof;e xh aus t b rakes ;inside adjustablemirrors; Oak floor;new heavy duty bat-

eries and new tires;under CDL. Excel-lent condition. 114k miles. $17,500 OBO

(570) 855-7197(570) 328-3428

HONDA 10ODYSSEY

Special Edition.Maroon, Fully 

loaded. Leatherseats. TV/DVD,

navigation, sun roof 

plus many otherextras. 3rd seat .Only 1,900 Miles.

Brand New. Asking $37,000(570) 328-0850

HONDA 06 CRV SELeather & Moonroof.

$18,745

560 Pierce St.Kingston, PA 

www.wyoming valleymotors.com 

570-714-9924

HUMMER ‘06 H3Leather & moonroof $20,880

560 Pierce St.Kingston, PA www.wyoming 

valleymotors.com 570-714-9924

JEEP `02 GRANDCHEROKEE LAREDO

Triple black, eco-nomical 6 cylinder.4x4 select drive.CD, re mo te d oo ropener, power win-d ow s & l oc ks ,cruise, tilt wheel.108k highway miles.Garage kept. Superclean inside and out.No rust. Sale price$6,895. Scranton.Trade in’s accepted.

570-466-2771

JEEP 03 LIBERTYS PO RT. R ar e. 5s pe ed . 2 3 M PG .102K highway miles.S il ver w ith b l ac k interior. Immaculatecondition, inside andout. Garage kept.No ru st, m ai n te -n an ce r ec or dsincluded. 4wd, allpower. $6,900 orbest offer, tradeswill be considered.Call 570-575-0518

451 Trucks/  

SUVs/Vans

JEEP 96 GRANDCHEROKEE LARADO

6 cylinder, 97k miles, excellent

condition, FloridaCar. $3,995, 3

month’s warranty.Call 570-417-4731

JEEP ‘07 CHEROKEEOnly 23,000 miles!

$19,750

560 Pierce St.Kingston, PA 

www.wyoming valleymotors.com 

570-714-9924

JEEP ‘07 PATRIOT4WD - Alloys

$17,440

560 Pierce St.Kingston, PA 

www.wyoming valleymotors.com 

570-714-9924

JEEP 08 COMPASS4 WD. Auto. CD.

$15,880

560 Pierce St.Kingston, PA 

www.wyoming valleymotors.com 

570-714-9924

JEEP 09 COMMANDER  AWD. Alloys.

$19,880

560 Pierce St.Kingston, PA 

www.wyoming valleymotors.com 

570-714-9924

LEXUS `06 GX 470

Cypress Pearl withivory leather interi-

or. Like newcondition, garagekept. All service

records. All optionsincluding premium

audio package, rearclimate control,

adjustable suspen-sion, towing pack-age, rear spoiler,Lexus bug guard.

48,500 miles.$26,950

(570) 237-1082

LEXUS 96 LX 450Full time 4WD, Pearlwhite with like newleather ivory interi-

or. Silver trim.Garage kept. Excel-

lent condition.84,000 miles, Ask-

ing $10,750570-654-3076 or

570-498-0005

1518 8th StreetCarverton, PA Near Francis 

Slocum St. Park 

MAZDA ‘04TRIBUTE LX

 Automatic, V6Sunroof, CD

1 ownerExtra Clean!

$4,995Call For Details!570-696-4377

Looking for the right dealon an automobile?Turn to classified.It’s a showroom in print!Classified’s gotthe directions!

1518 8th StreetCarverton, PA Near Francis 

Slocum St. Park 

MAZDA 03 MPV VAN V6. CD Player.1 owner vehicle!!

$3,495Call For Details!570-696-4377

MERCURY `07MARINER 

One owner. Luxury 4x4. garage kept.Showroom condi-

 tion, fully loaded,e ve ry o pt io n34,000 miles.

DRASTICALLY REDUCED

$15,500(570)825-5847

MITSUBISHI 08RAIDER 

 V ERY GOOD CONDITION!29,500 miles. 2-

4X4 drive option, 4door crew cab,

sharp silver colorwith chrome steprunners, premiumrims, good tires,

bedliner, V-6, 3.7liter. Purchased at

$26,900. Dealerwould sell for

$18,875.  Asking $16,900

(570) 545-6057

NISSAN 10 ROGUE SL AWD. Gray. Sun-roof. Bose stereo

system. Black leather seats. 5,500

miles. $24,000(570) 696-2777

451 Trucks/  

SUVs/Vans

MITSUBISHI 11OUTLANDER SPORT SE AWD, Black interi-

or/exterior, start/ stop engine with

keyless entry, heat-ed seats, 18” alloy 

wheels, many extra features. Only 4,800 miles. 10

 year, 100,000 milewarranty. $23,500.

 Willing to negotiate.Serious inquires

only - must sell,going to law school.(570) 793-6844

MITSUBISHI 9715’ CUBE VAN

Cab over, 4 cylinderdiesel engine.

Rebuilt automatic  transmission. Very 

good rubber. Allaround good

condition inside& out. Well

maintained.Ready to work.

PRICE REDUCED! $6,195  orbest offer

Call 570-650-3500 Ask for Carmen

NISSAN ‘10FRONTIER SE

6K miles! Auto-matic. $19,950

560 Pierce St.Kingston, PA www.wyoming 

valleymotors.com 570-714-9924

LINE UP A GREAT DEAL...IN CLASSIFIED!Looking for the right dealon an automobile?Turn to classified.It’s a showroom in print!Classified’s gotthe directions!

1518 8th StreetCarverton, PA Near Francis 

Slocum St. Park 

PONTIAC 02MONTANA V6. Nice

Inexpensive Van!

$2,995Call For Details!570-696-4377

SATURN `04 VUE65K, Auto, Loaded.Needs transmis-sion/airbags. Book value $10,000. Sell$3,000 or best offer

(570) 829-2875(570) 332-1252

SUZUKI 03 XL-78 5K . 4 x4 . Au to .Nice, clean interior.R un s g oo d. Newbattery & brakes. Allpower. CD. $6,800

570-762-8034570-696-5444

SUZUKI 07 XL-756,000 miles,

automatic,all-wheel drive,

4 door, air condi- tioning, all power,CD player, leather

interior, tintedwindows, customwheels, $13,000

Call 570-829-8753

Before 5:00 p.m.

TRACTOR TRAILERS

FREIGHTLINER’97 MIDROOF

475 CAT & 10speed transmission.

$12,000

FREIGHTLINER’99 CONDO

430 Detroit, Super10 transmission.  Asking $15,000.

‘ 8 8 F R U E H A U F 4 5 ’

with sides. Allaluminum, spread

axle. $6,500.

2 storage trailers.570-814-4790

VOLVO `08 XC90Fully loaded, moonroof, leather, heat-ed seats, electric

locks, excellentcondition. New

 tires, new brakesand rotors. 52,000

miles highway $26,500/ best offer.

570-779-4325570-417-2010 till 5

457 Wanted to Buy Auto

 ALLJUNK 

CAR &  TRUCKSWANTEDHighest Prices

Paid In Cash!!!

FREE

REMOVAL

Call V&G

Anytime

288-8995

LINEUP A SUCCESSFULSALE

INCLASSIFIED!Doyouneedmorespace? A yard or garage sale

in classifiedis the best way

tocleanoutyourclosets!You’re in bussiness

with classified!

8/4/2019 Times Leader 09-22-2011

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/times-leader-09-22-2011 33/45

PAGE 4D THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com

24

Mos.

CALL NOW 823-8888CALL NOW 823-8888

1-800-817-FORD1-800-817-FORD

Overlooking Mohegan SunOverlooking Mohegan Sun577 East Main St., Plains577 East Main St., Plains

Just Minutes from Scranton or W-BJust Minutes from Scranton or W-B

*Tax and tags extra. Security Deposit waived. All factory rebates applied **Lease payments based on 24 month lease 21,000 allowable miles. First months payment, $595 Bank Fee,and $2,500 down payment (cash or trade) due at delivery. See salesperson for details. All payments subject to credit approval by the primary lending source, Tier 0 rate. Special APR financing cannot be combinedwith Ford cash rebate. “BUY FOR” prices are based on 72 month at $18.30 per month per $1000 financed with $2,500 down (cash or trade). 0% APR for 60 Months Plus $1500 includes Trade-In Assistance Rebate.

Photos of vehicles are for illustration purposes only. Coccia Ford is not responsible for any typographical errors. No Security Deposit Necessary. See dealer for details. Sale ends SEPTEMBER 30, 2011.

WWW.COCCIACARS.COM

*Tax and tags extra. Security deposit waived. All factory rebates applied**Lease payments based on 24 month lease 21,000 allowable miles. First months payment,

$595 Bank Fee, and $2,500 down payment (cash or trade) due at delivery. Sale ends 9/30/11.

24

Mos.

3.7L V6, Auto., 17” Alum. Wheels, Air, Cloth Seat, 40/20/40 Split Seat,Sliding Rear Window, Decor Pkg.,Chrome Step Bar, CruiseControl, ABS, Floor Carpet,Pwr. Equipment Group,Limited Slip

NEW2011FORDF-150 4X4

72Mos.

3.7L V6, Auto., Air, Cloth Seat, AM/FM/CD, Cruise Control,40/20/40 Split Seat, XLPlus Pkg.,

 ABS, XLDecor Group

FOOT BOX

 Air, CD,Safety Canopy, Side Impact Safety Pkg., Pwr. Driver’s Seat, Auto.,PDL, PW, Fog Lamps, Privacy Glass, 16” Alum. Wheels, Roof Rack, Sirius Satellite Radio, RearCargo Convenience Pkg., KeylessEntry,

*Tax and tags extra. Security deposit waived. All factory rebates applied **Lease payments based on 24 month lease21,000 allowable miles. First months payment, $595 Bank Fee, and $2,500 down payment (cash or trade)due at delivery. Sale ends 9/30/11.

24

Mos.

 Auto., AM/FM/CD, Alum. Wheels, Tilt, PDL, PW,

Safety Pkg., Side Impact Air Bags,1st & 2nd Air Curtains, Anti-Theft

Sys., Sirius Satellite Radio, Pwr.Seat, Keyless Entry, Message

Center,

*Tax and tags extra. Security deposit waived. All factory rebates applied **Lease payments based on 24 month lease21,000 allowable miles. First months payment, $595 Bank Fee, and $2,500 down payment (cash or trade)due at delivery. Sale ends 9/30/11.

*Tax and tags extra. Security deposit waived. All factory rebates applied **Lease payments based on 24 month lease21,000 allowable miles. First months payment, $595 Bank Fee, and $2,500 down payment (cash or t rade)due at delivery. Sale ends 9/30/11.

*Tax and tags extra. Security deposit waived. All factory rebates applied**Lease payments based on 24 month lease 21,000 allowable miles. First months payment,

$595 Bank Fee, and $2,500 down payment (cash or trade) due at delivery. Sale ends 9/30/11.

NEW2012FORDESCAPE XLT 4X4

 Auto., Air, Pwr. Mirrors, AdvanceTrac with Electronic Stability Control, SideCurtains, AM/FM/CD, Pwr. Door Locks,Tilt Wheel, SYNC, Sport AppearancePkg., Rear Spoiler, Cruise Control,

15” Alum. Wheels,Keyless Entry w/Keypad

NEW2012 FORDFIESTA SE

 Automatic, Advanced Trac with Electronic Stability Control,Side Curtains, AM/FM/CD, Pwr.Door Locks, Air, Remote Keyless

Entry, Tilt Wheel, Pwr. Mirrors

 Auto., AM/FM/CD, 16” Alum. Wheels,Tilt Wheel, PW, PDL, Safety Pkg., Side

Impact Air Bags, 1st & 2nd AirCurtains, Anti-Theft Sys.,

Message Center, CruiseControl, Keyless Entry 

72

Mos.

NEW2012 FORD FIESTA

24

Mos.

MOS.

APR 

 P L U S

24

Mos.

24

Mos.

NEW2011FORDF-150SUPERCABSTX4X4

MOS.

APR 

 P L U S

MOS.

APR 

 P L U S

OVER

4040TOCHOOSE

FROM

NEW2012 FORD FOCUS SEL

NEW2012 FORD FOCUS NEW2012 FORD FOCUS SE

NEW 2012 FORD FOCUS SE

 Auto., AM/FM/CD, Anti-Theft Sys., Side Curtain Air Bags,PW, PL, 16” Steel Wheels, Tilt Wheel, AC, Instrument

Cluster, Message Center, Keyless Entry, Pwr. Side Mirrors,Fog Lamps, MyKey 

*Tax and tags extra. Security deposit waived. All factory rebates applied **Lease payments based on 24 month lease21,000 allowable miles. First months payment, $595 Bank Fee, and $2,500 down payment (cash or trade)due at delivery. Sale ends 9/30/11.

*Tax and tags extra. Security deposit waived. All factory rebates applied **Lease payments based on 24 month lease21,000 allowable miles. First months payment, $595 Bank Fee, and $2,500 down payment (cash or trade)due at delivery. Sale ends 9/30/11.

 Auto., AM/FM/CD, Anti-Theft Sys., SideCurtains Air Bags, 16” Steel Wheels, Tilt Wheel, AC, Instrument Cluster, MessageCenter, PL, PW, Keyless Entry, Pwr.Side Mirrors, Fog Lamps, MyKey,Convenience Pkg., CruiseControl, Map Light,Perimeter Alarm,

24

Mos.

SEL, Auto., AM/FM/CD, Anti-Theft Sys., Side Curtains Air Bags, Tilt, AC, Instrument Cluster, Message

Center, PW, PL, Keyless Entry w/Keypad, Pwr. SideMirrors, Fog Lamps, MyKey, Convenience Pkg.,

Cruise Control, Perimeter Alarm,

Remote keyless Entry, AM/FM/CD, Pwr. DoorLocks, Air, Anti-Theft Sys., Side Curtain Air Bags,Side Impact Air Bags, Message Center MyKey 

72

Mos.

24Mos.*Tax and tags extra. Security deposit waived. All factory rebates applied **Lease payments based on 24 month lease

21,000 allowable miles. First months payment, $595 Bank Fee, and $2,500 down payment (cash or trade)due at delivery. Sale ends 9/30/11.

NEW 2012FORDFUSIONSEMOS.

APR 

 P L U S

MOS.

APR 

 P L U S

NEW2012FORDFUSION

8/4/2019 Times Leader 09-22-2011

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/times-leader-09-22-2011 34/45

TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 PAGE 5D

412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale

503 Accounting/ 

Finance

BUSINESS

MANAGEMENTFor Specialized

Trucking Company 

Full Charge Book Keeper. Manage-ment Responsibili-

 ties: 3 years Experi-e nc e. M us t w ork w el l w ith o the rs.Start Immediately.

Send Resume Fax 570-288-0617

Or emailkingpaint1079@

aol.com

Shopping for anew apartment?

Classified letsyou compare costs -

without hassleor worry!

Get movingwith classified!

506 Administrative/ Clerical

OFFICE CLERICALH. A. Berkheimer, a

local tax administra-  tor, i s c urren tly  seeking FT OfficeSupport Clerks forour Scranton Office.Duties include pro-cessing tax forms,answering taxpayeri nq u iri es o n th ephone and in per-s on , an d c l eri calduties. Salary $9.04

 /hour. Qualified can-didates should pos-sess strong dataentry skills, previousclerical experienceand customer serv-ice skills. We offerpaid training, a com-prehensive benefitsp ac ka ge , a nd ab us i ne ss c asu alwork environment.

Fax resume to:610-863-1997

Or email: [email protected]

No Phone CallsPlease. EOE

506 Administrative/ Clerical

RECEPTIONISTP os i ti ve R es ul tsMarketing, Inc., oneof the area’s leadingadvertising agen-cies, is looking for adynamic individual

  to work at it’s MainStreet, Old Forgel oc at io n a s i t’ sreceptionist. Posi-

  tion is full-time andstarting pay is $8.per hour. First raise

guaranteed within9 0 d ay s and th isshall be commiser-ate w i th c le ric al

 /office skills. Fitnessmembership, healthinsurance and paidvacation are someof the benefits.

Please submit your resume to

[email protected] to be considered.

508 Beauty/  Cosmetology

STYLIST NEEDEDEXPERIENCED

Full or Part Time.Flexible hours with

clientele but notnecessary.

 Apply in PersonHair Solutions

115 South MountainBlvd., Mountain Top

5 09 B ui ldi ng/  Construction/ Skilled Trades

CARPENTER & PAINTER Part time. Localwork. Carpenter

with 10 years expe-rience in commer-

cial work. May lead to full time employ-

ment. Painter with10 years experience

and also may lead  to full time work.

Call 570-675-5873

CONSTRUCTION

PAVE FOREMAN Grade and Site

Foreman.Operators: gadall,

excavator, grader,dozer

Laborers: pipe,paving, grading

QUARRY Operators:

excavator, dozer

HAULINGClass B CDL triaxledrivers

EQUIPMENT Heavy Equipment-

Mechanic for Con-struction and Quarry 

 Apply at: American Asphalt

Paving Co.500 Chase RoadShavertown, PA 

18708Fax:570-696-3486 jobs@amerasphalt.

com. EOE

509 Bu il din g/  Construction/ Skilled Trades

CONSTRUCTION

MANAGER Minimum 5 years

experience. Ability  to organize daily 

quantities, materi-als, job costs & 

schedule/manageutility crews. Health

insurance & 401Kbenefits available.

Send resume to

 [email protected] or fax 570-842-8205

LABORERS &

CARPENTERS’ HELPERSConstruction

company seekingqualified individuals.

Drivers licenserequired, vacation/ holidays, medical,

dental & 401K. Applications taken

Monday-Friday,8am-4pm.

  A. PickettConstruction

128 W. Vaughn St.Kingston, PA 18704

570-283-2057EOE

PROJECT MANAGER 5 years PM experi-ence, commercial/ residential. Estimat-i ng e xp eri en ce .Sales ability. Com-petitive Compensa-

 tion Package.e-mail resume to

[email protected] or fax  to 570-718-0661

Doyou needmorespace? A yard or garage sale

in classifiedis the best way

tocleanoutyourclosets!You’re in bussiness

with classified!

Doyouneedmorespace?

 A yard or garage salein classifiedis the best way

tocleanoutyourclosets!You’re in bussiness

with classified!

ROOFER Part time flexible.

Repair large com-mercial roof. Saw

 tooth. Must beexperienced.

Larry 570-430-1565

5 13 Chi ld ca re

NANNY/CHILDCAREBack Mountainarea. Mature,

responsible non-smoker with flexible

schedule. Afterschool care and

non-school days.  Ages 9 & 12. Reli-able transportation

and valid driver’slicense a must.Must like dogs.

Send letter, refer-ences and salary requirements to:

The Times LeaderBox 2760

15 N. Main St. Wilkes-Barre, PA 

18711-0250

5 18 C us tom erSupport/Client Care

CUSTOMER SERVICE

JOBS!No Resume?No Problem!Monster Match

assigns aprofessional to

hand-match each job seeker witheach employer!

This is aFREE service!

Simply create yourprofile by phone oronline and, for thenext 90-days, ourprofessionals will

match your profile to employers who

are hiring right now!

CREATE YOURPROFILE NOWBY PHONE OR

WEB FREE!

Call Today, Sunday,or any day!

Use Job Code 14!

1-866-781-5627or

www. timesleader.com

NO RESUME NEEDED!Call the automated

phone profilingsystem or use ourconvenient Online

 form today so ourprofessionals can

get startedmatching you with

employers that arehiring - NOW!

Choose from oneof the following

positions to enter your information:

• Customer ServiceRepresentative

• Help Desk Representative

Looking for thatspecial placecalled home?Classified will addressYour needs.Open the doorwith classified!

524 Engineering

ARCHITECTURE

& ENGINEERING

 A/E team seekingarchitect and elec-

 trical, structural,and civil engineers.

Experience withPHFA, PDE, HUD,

PennDOT preferred.Proficiency in Revit,

  AutoCAD MEP,and/or Civil 3Drequired. EOE.

 All responses willbe held in confi-dence. Provide

resume and salary requirements to

[email protected]: A+E Group

140 Maffet Street Wilkes-Barre, PA 

18705

527 Food Services/ Hospitality

PIZZA MAKER/

KITCHEN HELPFull or part time.

 Weekends a must.Reply in confidence

 to: Box 2755C/O Times Leader15 N Main Street

  Wilkes-Barre, PA 18711

Let the Community Know!

Place your Classified Ad TODAY!

570-829-7130

533 Installation/ Maintenance/ 

Repair

ELECTRONICS

TECHNICIANBridon American, am arket l e ad e r i nmanufacturing of steel wire rope, hasa full time positiona va il ab le f or a nElectronics Techni-cian at our Exeterlocation in a union-ized environment.

Candidates shouldhave an AssociatesDegree or equiva-lent training as wellas experience withDC Controls, Vari-able Frequency andPLC’s.

The company offersa competitive start-i n g w ag e, b on usprogram, compre-h en si ve b en efi tp ackage , an d ane xc el l en t h eal thi n su ran ce p lan .Candidate must bea bl e t o w or k a 8hour shift rotation. If interested pleasesend a resume to,o r c om pl et e a napplication at:

Bridon American101 Stevens Lane,Exeter, PA 18643

EOE M/F/D/V  Affirmative

 Action Employer

ELECTRONICS TROU-

BLESHOOTER Looking for full timeElectronics Trou-b l es ho ote r w ithprinted circuits andschematic experi-ence. Knowledge of electrical, mechani-c al a nd m ai nt e-

nance of machinery.Must have ability to  troubleshoot andm ake n ec es sary  re pai rs . T ex til eknowledge a plus. A comprehensivebenefit package.

Please sendresumes to:

 American Silk Mills75 Stark Street

Plains, PA 18705

533 Installation/ Maintenance/ 

Repair

MAINTENANCE

MECHANIC•Perform equipmentrepairs/makereplacements accu-rately, completely & in a timely manner.•Handle preventa-

  tive maintenance & gen era l t rou-bleshooting on vari-

ous mechanical andelectrical equip-ment, production

  tas ks i n cl ud i ngchangeovers andinspections.•Follow all currentGMP’s•Effectively work with supervisors,o pe ra to rs , a ndother mechanics toensure timely andaccurate work.•El e ctric al s ki l lsi nc l ud in g w iri ngm oto rs an d c o n-

  tro ls , P LC trou -b le sh o oti ng an delectrical equipmentrepair.• Kn ow le dg e o f  p ne um at ic a ndhydraulic equipmentsystems.•Ability to work in amanufacturing envi-ronment and able tolift 50+lbs.•Critical Thinking & P ro bl e m S ol vin gskills.

High School Diplo-ma/GED Required.

E-Mail resume andcover letter to [email protected]

Find Your IdealEmployee! Place an

ad and end thesearch!

570-829-7130ask for an employ-

ment specialist

SIDING OR SIDING OR 

WINDOWWINDOW

INSTINSTALLER ALLER 5+ years experi-ence; must haveown tools, mustbe proficient inu si ng a m et alb rake to b en dcoil; Backgroundcheck and Refer-ences required;Must be reliable;M us t p os se ss

strong customerrelationship.

Contact #(330) 351-9034

Email:binghamton @

windowworld.inc.com

533 Installation/ Maintenance/ 

Repair

TRUCK MECHANICEXPERIENCED

Full time. Musthave own tools / PA 

Class 8 Inspectionlicense a plus. We

offer top wagesand benefits pack-age. Call for inter-

view and ask forPaul or Kevin.

Falzone TowingService, Inc.

271 N Sherman St Wilkes-Barre, PA 

570-823-2100

538 Janitorial/  

Cleaning

HOUSEKEEPER/

COMPANIONBenton area.

Call 724-771-1341

Collectcash,not dust!Clean out your

basement, garageor attic and call the

Classified depart-ment today at 570-

829-7130!

5 42 Log isti cs/   Transportation

CDL TRIAXLE

TRUCK DRIVER Full time position fordriver with currentmedical card andgood driving record.C la ss A a m us t.Deliveries of materi-als and equipment.

  Ap p ly i n p ers on .EOE.

Green Valley Landscaping, Inc.52 Reese Street

Plains, PA 

CDL-A DRIVER Gas field/landscapedrivers plus someh an ds o n l ab orrequired. Operated um p truc ks an dload equipment onlowboy. Deliver to

  job site. Must oper-ate skid steer exca-vator, hydro-seed

  truck, etc. Will plowin winter. Must haveclean driving recordand pass drug test.

Call HarvisInterview Service @

542-5330. Leavemessage. Will send

an application.Or forward resume:

[email protected]

Employer is  Varsity, Inc.

No walk-ins. EOE

DELIVERY DRIVER Full time. Benefits.

401 K.No Phone Calls. Apply in person

9am-4pmColours

50 Dana Street

5 42 Log isti cs/   Transportation

NES RENTALSNES RENTALS,

a leader in amulti-billion

dollar rentalindustry for con-struction is look-

ing to makeimmediate hires

 for the followingpositions in thePITTSTON, PA 

area:

DRIVER   You will operatemulti-dimension-al constructionequipment,delivery trucks,including tractor

  trailer combina-  tions to pick upa nd de li vere qu i pm en t toan d from c us -

  to me r w or k  sites, and is able

  to train in safeu sa ge o f t heequipment. H.S.d ip lo ma ( orequivalent), theability to lift 70lbs., have a validCDL license, sat-isfactory drivingr ec or d, a ndkno wl e dg e o f 

  fed eral m oto rcarrier regula-

  tions is required.Tw o y ea rs o f  commercial driv-ing experiencei nv ol vi ng t hem ov em en t o f  

  trucks and con-

struction equip-ment includingoversized loadsrequired. Knowl-edge of safety procedures fors ec uri ng an d

 transportingc ar go i s a ls oessential.

NES RENTALSoffers competi-

  ti ve w age s,medical/ dental, vision,

  tu it io n r ei m-bursement, and401(k).For considera-

  tion, apply online at our

Careers centerat www.

nesrentals.com/careers.

NES recognizes and values 

diversity.We are an 

EOE/AA/M/F/D/V employer.

LINEUP A SUCCESSFULSALEINCLASSIFIED!

Doyou needmorespace? A yard or garage sale

in classifiedis the best way

tocleanout yourclosets!You’re in bussiness

with classified!

5 42 Log isti cs/   Transportation

DRIVERS NEEDED:Maxum Petroleum

is currently seekingTransport Drivers

(CDL Class A) withHazmat and Tanker

 for our Scranton,PA location. Not an

over the road truck-ing company.

  We offer a full ben-efit package avail-able the first of the

month following 30days of employ-ment including 401K

company match. We offer DOT road-

side and annualachievable safety bonus programs

based on your safe- ty performance.

Paid holidays, sick days and vacationdays are provided

as well. EOE

Requirements:Class A Commercial

Drivers License,HAZMAT & Tanker

endorsements,Must have two

 years verifiableexperience and

clean drivingrecord, Positive

 Attitude/Willing to Work 

 Apply online athttp://www.

maxumpetroleum.com/careers.aspx 

Looking for the right dealon an automobile?Turn to classified.It’s a showroom in print!Classified’s gotthe directions!

LOOKING TO GROW

DRIVERS WANTED!

CDL Class A Local and OTR

Routes

Home daily Benefit package

includes:paid holiday andvacation; health,

vision, and dentalcoverage; 401K

with company match.

Candidates mustbe 23 years of 

age with at least2 years tractor

 trailer experience.Drivers paid by 

percentage.

 Applications canbe filled out online

at www.cds transportation.com

or emailed todchapin@cds

 transportation.comor you can apply 

in person atCDS

 TransportationDiane Chapin

One Passan Drive Wilkes Barre Pa

18702570-654-6738

5 42 Log isti cs/   Transportation

 Transportation

DD RIVERSRIVERS WWANTEDANTEDClass B CDL

Required, TankerEndorsement

Required, Tri-AxleExperience

Required. All Shifts Available

 Work Availablein Williamsport

 AreasFax resume to

570-288-2219 orCall Rich @

570-357-8319

Looking for Work?Tell Employers with

a Classified Ad.570-829-7130

545 Marketing/ 

Product

EXPERIENCED

MARKETER For long standinghome health agency.Must be familiar withmedical community and possess ener-getic, dynamic, andoutgoing personality.3-5 years in market-ing a must. Gener-o us s al ar y w it hbonus s t ruc tur e.Great earning poten-

  tial. Medical benefits& m il eag e r eim -bursement provided.Send resume to: c/o

The Times LeaderBox 2770

15 N. Main St Wilkes-Barre, PA 

18711-0250

548 Medical/Health

DENTAL OFFICE

ADMINISTRATOR Due to retirement,we’ll soon have aull time administra-or opening in our

Nanticoke office. 3+ years minimum den-

a l o ff ic e a dm inexperiencerequired. Includinginsurances, sched-u li n g, AR /AP an dother office duties.Call Brian Phillips @Harvis Svc for info @542-5330 or for-w ard res u me toHarvis Inc., Attn: Dr.

  Walting II, Family Dentistry, 75 Rock-view Ave., Shick-shinny, PA 18655 [email protected] no walk insor calls to the office.

Optician/Manager & 

Optical Sales AssociatesSeeking full-time

optician to managebusy optical center.

 Also seeking full- time/part-time opti-

cal sales associ-ates. Great salary,

commissions, bene- fits, and 401k. Call

1-800-248-2255EOE

8/4/2019 Times Leader 09-22-2011

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/times-leader-09-22-2011 35/45

PAGE 6D THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com

8/4/2019 Times Leader 09-22-2011

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/times-leader-09-22-2011 36/45

TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 PAGE 7D

548 Medical/Health

HEALTHCARE  A Leader in the

Receivables Man-agement Industry has multiple posi-

 tions available:• Data Entry • Cash Application• A/R

Representatives• Professional

CodingMedical office

experience pre- ferred. Ability to

work independently a PLUS.

Fax resume to570-208-5556.

NURSINGThe Meadows

Nursing andRehabilitation

Center

POSITIONS AVAILABLECNA’s

3-11 Part Time (5-9days bi-weekly)

11-7 Part Time (2-4days bi-weekly)

CNA’s can apply online at:

https://home.eease.com/recruit/?id=296

360

Individualizedorientation program

GREAT startingrates!!

 Vacation, Holiday and Personal Days

TuitionReimbursement

Health insuranceand Pension Plan

Child Day Care onpremises

Meadows Nursing

& RehabilitationCenter4 East Center Hill

RoadDallas PA 18612

Email – [email protected]

e.o.e.

RN & LPN OPENINGSFull Time

11-7pm shiftPart Time 7-3 / 3-11

pm and 3-8 pm

CNA PER DIEMall shifts

Lakeside NursingCenter

245 Old Lake RoadDallas, PA 18612(570) 639-1885

E.O.E

551 Other

HOT JOBS:IT Help Desk,

General Laborers,Customer Service, Admin Assistants,

Carpenters,Plumbers,

Maintenance, Workers, Pickers/ 

Packers, MachineOperators, And

Stock Clerks. www.expresspros.com

570.208.7000Paid Holiday & 

 Vacation

Part Time Driver/Greenhouse Person

Clean drivingrecord. Reliable.

Ketler Florist & Greenhouses

1205 S. Main St.Hanover Twp.

ROOFERS & LABORERSDrivers license aplus. Please call

824-6381

SHINGLE ROOFINGCREW OR 

EXPERIENCED SHINGLERS

WANTED570-819-4356

or 239-4491

VAN DRIVER Needed Monday 

 thru Friday- 6-61/2hour days.

No weekends,No holidays.

HOUSEKEEPER Needed Part Time

Every other  Weekend, Every 

other Holiday. Apply within.

KeystoneGarden Estates

100 Narrows RdRoute 11

Larksville, PA 18651NO PHONE CALLS 

PLEASE.

Shopping for anew apartment?

Classified letsyou compare costs -

without hassleor worry!

Get movingwith classified!

VENDINGATTENDANTStock/Clean

MachinesOn-site location

Monday-Saturday 7AM-Noon

[email protected]

554 Production/ Operations

IMMEDIATE OPENINGUSM Ae ro struc -

  tu re s, C or p i n  Wyoming PA has animmediate opening

 for:Designer CATIA,

Solid Works /  Auto CAD

Experience inMechanical Designsheet Metal Parts

  Aerospace CNC Vertical/

Horizontal/LatheSetup/Operator, Ability to calculate

and factor feedrates using the

latest tooling technology 

Press brakemachine opera-tor needed. Set

 the machine up andrun it. This includes

changing toolingand programming

basic bend patternsbased on the blue

print

Send resume via e-mail only: r.delvalle@

usmaero.net

554 Production/ Operations

INDUSTRIALELECTRICIAN I

MATERIAL HANDLER Fabri-Kal Corpo-ration, a m aj or

hermoforming plas-ics company hasull time benefitted

positions for:Industrial

Electrician I and

Material Handler.HS/GED required.

Electrician: 3  years experiencerequired. Conduit,e mt a nd r id ge dpipe; Equipment

e st in g; A C/ DCmotors and drives;PLC systems.

Material Handler:O ne y ear fo rkli ftexperience within

he past five years.Current forklift certi-ication preferred.

  Availability for over-ime required. Drug

& Alcohol screeningan d b ackg ro un dchecks are condi-

i o ns o f e mp lo y -ment. Competitivewage and benefitsp ackage : He al thInsurance, Prescrip-

ion, Dental & Vision,D i sab il i ty , 4 01K,E du catio n , P ai dLe ave. App l y o nsite: Monday-Friday 8AM-5PM; or for-

ward resume to:

Fabri-KalCorporation

  ATTN: HumanResources

 Valmont IndustrialPark 

150 Lions DriveHazle Township,

PA 18202FAX: 570-501-0817

EMAIL:hrmail@hazleton.

 f-k.comwww.f-k.com EOE

LABORATORYTECHNICIAN

  A growing textilemanufacturing com-pany is seeking to fillan immediate posi-

  tion for a laboratory   tec h ni ci an. T hi sentry level positionincludes responsi-bilities of running the

  te xt il e t es ti ngmachines. The idealcandidate would beorganized, detailedoriented, energetic

and a team player.C ol or m at ch in gskills and computerskills are required.Basic knowledge of 

  textile is a plus butnot necessary. A comprehensivebenefit package,w hi ch i nc lu de s401K.

Send resumes to: American Silk Mills

75 Stark StreetPlains, PA 18705

PRODUCTIONOPERATORS

Lo cal b eve ragemanufacturer seekshighly motivated,goal driven qualifiedcandidates. Need tobe self-motivatedwith strong commu-nication skills. Mustb e a bl e t o w or k  c o mfo rtabl y i n a

  fast-paced changeover environment.Experience in a fast-paced manufactur-ing environment a

plus. Mechanicalknowledge a plus.Bottling and/or can-ning experience aplus. High Schooldiploma or equiva-lent/GED required.Must be willing tow or k a ny s hi ft(includes shift differ-e n ti als ) an d O T.Competitive wageand benefits uponqualification. E.O.E.Submit resume with

references to:c/o Times Leader

Box 276515 N. Main Street Wilkes-Barre, PA 

18711-0250

LINE UP A GREAT DEAL...IN CLASSIFIED!

566 Sales/Retail/ Business

Development

GROCERY CLERKSGerrity’s Supermar-kets is now hiringFull Time Grocery Cl erks. M us t b edependable and self motivated. Experi-ence preferred.

 Apply at:801 Wyoming Ave,

 West Pittston orwww.gerritys.com

E.O.E

RETAILSALES CLERK 

Part time. Ability towork flexible

schedule required. Will train. CallEFO Furniture

570-207-297510am-6pm

600FINANCIAL

6 10 Bus ine ssOpportunities

LIQUOR LICENSE$19,500. CALL JOHN

570-357-3055

610 B us in es sOpportunities

Ice Cream Parlor/DeliBusy West Side

Shopping Center.Soft & Hard IceCream, soups,

sandwiches,hotdogs. Interior & exterior furniture

included. All equip-ment, inventory & 

supplies & LLCincluded. $39,900

No Real Estate570-287-2552

NE PA TAX &ACCOUNTING PRACTICEFOR SALE. SeriousInquiries Send Let-  ter Of Interest to

Box 2740C/O Times Leader

15 N Main St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa

18711

630 Money To Loan

“ We c an e ra se  your bad credit -100% G UAR AN-

 TEED.” Attorneys  fo r t he F ed er alTrade Commissionsay they’ve neverseen a legitimatecredit repair opera-

  tio n . No o ne c anl eg al ly r em ov eaccurate and timely information from

  your credit report.It’s a process thatstarts with you andinvolves time and aconscious effort top ay y ou r d eb ts.Learn about manag-ing credit and debtat ftc. gov/credit. A message from TheTimes Leader and

 the FTC.

700MERCHANDISE

702 Air

Conditioners

 AIR CONDITIONERFrigidaire 12000BTU Window unit$170. 570-599-0102

  AIR CONDITIONER,8 ,0 00 BT U, $ 30 .12,000 BTU, $40.

570-592-7723

708 Antiques & Collectibles

$ ANTIQUES BU YING $Old Toys, model kits,

Bikes, dolls, guns,Mining Items, trains

& Musical Instruments,Hess. 474-9544

COMIC BOOKS -Gen 13-1, X-files,Spiderman & many others, $1 each.NEON SIGN - Elec-

  tric, Camel sign, 30 years old, $150.RECORDS - LP’S,78’ S, 4 5’ S F ro m40’S, 50’S, 60’S & 70’S. $1 each.

570-829-2411

CUCK OO CLOCKsmall, working $35.Hess in box 2010$22. 570-735-1589

JACKO ANTIQUES134 Route 11,

Larksville

(Next to Woody’s Fireplace & Pro-Fix )Oak Icebox.M ah og any S tac k B oo kc as e, O ak  Stack Bookcase.Lionel & AmericanFlyer Trains, Coins.

  We do upholstery,  furni ture rep air,chair caning, re-glu-i ng , c l oth & ru shseats. We also buy Gold, Silver & Coins.570-855-7197 or

570-328-3428

MILLER BEER col-lectors tin$ 20 . M us ic B ox  rom SF music box 

c om pa ny $ 20 .Italian plate Colos-seum $20. Antiquel amp sh ad e , p i nk $20. 570-760-4830

  WEAREVER antiquenew cookie gun andpastry decoratorc om pl et e, w it haccessories in box $5. 570-735-6638

 YEARBOOKS:Coughlin H.S. 26,

28, 32, 34, 43-44,46, 49, 51-55, 61,63, 67, 86-88, 94;GAR H.S. 34-37, 42-47, 55-56, 61, 72-73, 80, 84, 05, 06,Meyers H.S.: 60,74- 77, W yo mi ng

 Valley West H.S. 68-69, 71, 73, 78, 84,85, 86, 87, 88, 90,93; Old Forge H.S.66, 72, 74; KingstonH.S. 38-45, 49, 64;Plymouth H.S. 29-33, 35, 37, 38-39,4 6- 48 , 5 3- 55 ,Hanover H.S. 51-52, 54; Berwick H.S.52-53, 56-58, 60,67, 68-69; LehmanH.S. 73-76, 78, 80;

  Westmoreland H.S.52-54; Nanticoke

  Ar ea H .S. 76;Luzerne H.S. 51-52,56-57; West PittstonH.S. Annual 26-28,31-32, 54, 59-60,66; Bishop HobanH.S. 72-75; WestSide CentralCatholic H.S. 65, 75,80-81, 84; PittstonH.S. 63; St. Mary’sH.S. 29; NorthwestH.S. 73, 76, 77, 78;Lake Lehman H.S.74, 76, 78

Call 570-825-4721

710 Appliances

 A  P P L I A N C E

P   A R T S E T C .Used appliances.

Parts for all brands.223 George Ave.

 Wilkes-Barre570-820-8162

710 Appliances

DISHWASHER Ken-more needs heatelement $5.

570-283-0636

MICROWAVE GEsensor oven white

$40. 570-474-6028

MICROWAVE OVEN  Amana, $25. Coro-na kerosenep o rtabl e h e ate r$30. NEW 15” whitewall tire & rim for 78Chrysler Lebaron(Fr78-15) $45. firmSears Kenmore 5.0

cu. ft. chest freezer2 years old, excel-lent condition $100.

 firm.570-824-7807or 570-545-7006

PENN STATE foot-ball players on pro-

 fessional teams 200cards for $15. 570-313-5214/313-5213

REFRIGERATORG .E . n ew , w hi te$250. Black electricF rig id aire s tove$150. 283-9085

REFRIGERATORHaie r, 1/7 c u. ft.Great for collegestudent $25.

570-868-5450

REFRIGERATOR, lit-  tle, Budweiser, can  fit on counter, $40.Must sell. 674-5624

REFRIGERATOR/FREEZER works great,good for a garageor extra storage.$40. 570-446-8672

Retired Repairman top loading Whirlpool & Ken-

more Washers, Gas& Electric Dryers.

570-833-2965570-460-0658

STOVE, GE Space-maker, 27” drop-inelectric stove, self cleaning excellentcondition $299.

570-735-4979

  WATER COOLER,white, cold waterdispenser only $30.

570-779-4176

Why SpendHundreds onNew or Used Appliances?

M os t p rob le mswith your appli-ances are usually simple and inex-p en si ve t o f ix !S ave y ou r h ardearned money, Letus take a look at it

 first!30 years in

 the business.East Main

 Appliances

570-735-8271Nanticoke

712 Baby Items

BABY safety locks  for cabinets full box $5. Box 12 monthclothes, great con-dition $12. 815-6772

CLOTHING, New-born-12 months,girl, new with tags.$ 5 e ac h o r l e ss .Crib Mattress, $40.

570-825-0569

EXPEDITION JOG-GING stroller, newcondition $75. 6

570-655-3197.

HIGH CHAIR FisherPrice Space Saverexcellent condition-$25. Graco Pack & Play, excellent con-dition, Safari FriendsT he me , 2 e xt rap ad de d s he et sincluded $40. Zanz-ibar bouncer seat -

  two reclining posi-  tions, detachable  toy s, 5 s on gs , 3

soothing sounds.$25. 570-288-7905

716 Building

Materials

BATHROOM CABI-NET , w hi te s i nk,c hr om e f au ce t,32”hx49”wx23”d$75. 570-696-0187

BATHROOM SINKSET: Gerber whiteporcelain bathroomsink with mirror andmedicine cabinet.Matching set. $80.

570-331-8183

CEDAR SHINGLES-unpainted, variouswidths. Approxi-m ate c overage :10’X6’. Call after6pm. $60.288-8314

LIGHT BULBS Halo-gen 20 watt gu10&cnew in boxes totalof 30 bulbs all for$10. 570-735-6638

LIGHTS emergency power failure light, 2lights on each unit,hang & plug in $40.each. 570-636-3151

S I NK , w hi te w i th facets $40.

570-270-9059

STORM DOOR madeby Forever Doors.left hand opening36x80 brackets,door closures, hard-ware included $80.

 firm. 570-814-4315

  WINDOW, 40 3/4 X 40 3/4. Crane out,u se d o ve r s in k,g reat c on di tio n .$50. 570-825-3269

7 20 C em et er y

Plots/Lots

CEMETERY PLOTS FOR SALE

(4) Four plots, all together. CrestlawnSection of MemorialShrine Cemetery in

Kingston Twp. $600each. Willing to

split. For info, call(570) 388-2773

CEMETERY PLOTSPlymouth NationalCemetery in

  Wyoming. 6 Plots.$450 each. Call

570-825-3666

MEMORIAL SHRINELOTS FOR SALE6 lots available at

Memorial ShrineCemetery. $2,400.Call 717-774-1520

SERIOUS INQUIRES ONLY 

720 C em et er y

Plots/Lots

CEMETERY PLOTS(3) together.Maple Lawn

Section of Dennison

Cemetery.Section ML.$450 each.

570-822-1850

FOREST HILLSCEMETERY

Carbondale,Philadelphia suburbnear the old Nabis-c o & Ne sh am in y  M al l . 2 g raves +concrete vault withpossibility of doubled ec k. E sti mated

  Value $7,000. Ask-ing $5,000. Call

570-477-0899 or570-328-3847

MEMORIAL SHRINECEMETERY

6 Plots AvailableMay be SeparatedRose Lawn Section

$450 each570-654-1596

726 Clothing

BOYS CLOTHES-s iz e l arg e 12- 14mostly name brands30 items $35. Boyswinter coats size1 0- 12 N ik e, O ldNavy, JCPenny skicoat $10. each or all

  fo r $ 25 . B oy ss ch oo l u ni fo rm

pants, polos sizes12-14 20 items for$25. Men’s Sneak-ers DC skate shoe-brand new size 10.5$20. 570-237-1583

CLOTHING Jr. girls 6pair jeans size 13/14$15. 11 pieces size15/16 $12. 13 piecess iz e 1 5 $ 16 . 1 1pieces size 12/13$13. Girls sizes 10

 thru 12/14 35 pieces+ winter coat $30.23 pieces sizes 14-1 4 1 /2 $ 20. 2 2pieces + winter coatsize 14/16 & 16 $20.

 All Like New.570-474-6028

COAT Ladies black Persian lamb coatwith fur collar $35.Moving, must sell.

570-313-5214 or570-313-5213

G OW N, Jes si c aM cCl in toc k s iz e9/10, 2 piece laven-der color, satin fab-ri c, fu ll s kirt w ithn et ti ng, f it te d

bodice spaghettistraps, matchingwrap, pro cleaned.$20. 570-814-9845.

GOWNS: Light blue& silver size 12, gor-geous,hand made,strapless, lace-upcorset back $150.Dark blue & black semi-formal, size12, spaghetti straps,size 12, $75. Bothworn once, perfectcondition 406-1846

HOSPITAL SLACKS& TOPS $25. for all.

570-829-2599

JACKET leather, xlb l ac k $ 50 . Bl ac k H a r l e y D a v i d s o nboots size 8 $60.O ra ng e H ar le y  D avi d so n j acket$70. Black leatherve st s iz e L $ 40 .Harl e y D avi d so nh el me t, m ed i um$40. 570-262-1136

JACK ET: fo x fu rshort detachablelight brown, buttery soft leather sleeves.medium never worn$450. 446-8686

JACKETS3 leather jackets,black boys size 14 –g en ui ne i ta li anstone $25 each.

570-868-6018

PROM GOWNSblack size 10 $75.S iz es 1 0, 1 l im egreen, 1) watermel-on color $75. each.

  Al l w or n o nc e,excellent condition.

570-239-6011

SEMI/ PROM dress,D av id ’s B ri da lmetallic blue/ grey,

  tea length bubble,s trap le ss s iz e 4$10. Dolly’s Bou-

  tiq u e, b e au tifu lSherri Hill short vio-let & pink, bow atwaist, can be wornstrapless, size 3/4.$20. Unique tiffany 

  terra c otta c ol o rwith beading, lay-ered, lace, vintagelooking, strapless,Prom Excitement.

size 12, $20. Shortgold, sequin bodice,

  full tulle sparkly bot-  tom from David’SBridal, size 4, $10.BCBG black short,s eq ui ns o n t op ,

  flowy, size 4 $15.BCBG red , s ho rtpl eat ed cr isscrossed top, can beworn strapless, size4 $1 5. 7 d an cedresses sizes small,medium & large, $5.each . JACKET newin wrapper NintendoGamecub Bomber-man Jetters and A Series of Unfortu-nate Events $10.

570-696-3528

Lineup a place tolivein classified!SHOES 4 pairs of brand new in box women’s Hush Pup-pies size 9 with 1-3/4 to 2-3/4 heel, indifferent popularcolors $10. per pair.

570-868-5450

730 C ompu te rEquipment & 

Software

COMPUTER,i n cl ud e s to we r,monitor, mouse & keyboard. ExcellentCondition. $80.

570-824-7354

DESKS, Computer.Corner, $65, Large2 drawers, $100.Must sell. 674-5624

730 C om put erEquipment & 

Software

LAPTOPS Dell Lati-  tu d e d 60 0, very  good condition, win-d ow s 7. 1g b ram.dvdrw, ac adapter,wireless mouse,case included $140LENOVO S10, excel-lent condition, 10”screen, windows 7,ac adapter, mini-mouse included.$120 . 905-2985

732 ExerciseEquipment

C RO SS B OW b y    Weider with lat pulldown, like new. $40.570-655-4124

GYM Home Weider$150.

570-829-2599

HOME GYM: Impex Powerhouse Elite2000 $100.

570-696-4362

ROWING MACHINECon ce p t 2 $ 10 0.Nord ic trac $ 50 .Exercise bike free.Must pick up.

570-825-0178

TREADMILL Edge500 Manual, can be

  folded. Also has aconsole - needs twobatteries, to meas-ure your calories,distance. $50.

570-788-6694

TREADMILL electric  Weslo. $75.

570-603-0630

TREADMILL Wesloelectric, $40.

570-760-4830

  WEIGHT BENCH,large, hardly used,

$125. Must sell.570-674-5624

736 F ir ewoo d

FIREWOOD, 100%OAK, split and

delivered by thecord. September

Only. $140.00(570)704-9609

742 Furnaces & Heaters

EDEN PURE quartzi nfrare d e l ec tri cportable heater asmore than $350.Sell for $200.

570- 788-6654.

F UR NA CE G as , American, forced air150,000 BTU com-

plete with motor &   thermostat, runswell, very good con-dition. $250.

570-696-1847

HEATER Corona 22-dkb p ort able ,kerosene excellentcondition, used very l i ttl e. O pe rati ngbooklet included$50. 570-829-4776

HEATER Kerosene$25.

570-760-4830

HEATERS: vent free20,000 btu gas wallheater natural gasor propane new inbox with warranty.has thermostat & blower $190. Vent

  free 30,000 btu gaswall heater naturalgas or propane newin box with warranty 

  thermostat & blow-er $220.

570-675-0005

S PACE HEATE R,n atu ral g as w allmount vent free 14-30,000 BTU. Auto

  thermostat. Excel-lent condition. $100.OIL TANK upright275 gaLLON, very good condition $75.

call 570 288-9843

744 Furniture &  Accessories

BAR & BACKBAR,ideal for home recroom. Good condi-

 tion. $100 for both.570-287-9701

BEDROOM SET 6piece, dresser, mir-ror, chest, full orqueen size head-b oard, two n ig htstands, black mar-ble with gold trim

 finish. $275.570-814-5477

BEDROOM SET twop ie ce s in gl e b e dand chifforobe lighto ak c om pl et e.$250. 905-5602

B ED RO OM S ET  Vougham Basseett.Che rry . 6 i tem s:

q ue en /fu l l h ead -board, footboard,night stand, chest,dresser, tri-fold mir-ror. Very good con-dition. $500.

570-763-9874

BEDROOM SET, 6piece, dresser, mir-ror, chest, head-b oa rd , 2 n ig htstands. $250.

570-814-5477

BOOKSHELF60x12x29 cherry fin-ish wood, 4 shelveswith sliding glasseach 12” h. $25.

570-819-2174

BUFFET & HUTCHcombo by Kathy Ire-land, hutch has light& glass doors, light

  tan w oo d, b l ac k hardware, 2 shelves2 doors in buffet, 2shelves in hutch.Like new, must go.$950. 474-6153

BUFFET, 3 drawers,matching glass fronthutch, 2 shelves,67”L x 57”W. $45.

Call 570-814-9845.

C HA IR S ( 3) t annaugahyde on swiv-el castors, new con-dition $100. Air mat-

ress, queen sizewith pump $30.

570-696-2008

COUCH - excellentc on di tio n! M us ts ee . P erfec t fo r

  family room, com- fortable. $175.

(570) 446-8672

744 Furniture &  Accessories

COUCH full, blue & b ei g e, e xc el l en tcondition, like newmust sell $50.

570-457-9304

D IN IN G R OO MHUTCH 72h x5 1wd ar k w oo d $ 75 .K i tc h en tabl e, 4chairs, dark wood,g las s to p 4 7x 47$100. Oblong coffee

  table with glass top60l-36w driftwoodon bottom $75. 2light browndressers one withmirror $25. each. 2metal wardrobes63lx24w $15. each.Heavy d uty s tee l

  frame white gliderwith cushions $25.Heat surge Amish

  fireplace, remote,used twice $150.

570-603-0630

DINING TABLE solidwood $25. Coffee

 table $10. 696-3368

D I NNI NG R OO MSET, Maple, table & 6 c omman derchairs. Excellentcondition. $200.

570-675-6578after 5:00PM

ENTERTAINMENTCENTER Bassett,oak, 6 pieces, light-ed glass shelves,end table $450.

570-696-2212

ENTERTAINMENTc en ter s o li d o ak leaded glass door, 3shelves, 2 bottomdrawers, all solid,

brass handles 26”TV opening, like new$125. negotiable.

570-592-4858

ENTERTAINMENTCENTER, Riverside,41”wx75 1/2”lx211/4” d. Oak finish, 2sliding top doors, 2smaller doors underP ai d $ 89 9 + t ax  new. Sacrifice for$200 plus free 32”Toshiba TV. LOVE-SEAT Ashley Furni-

  ture, excellent con-d i ti on 6 8”wx 38 ”lx29”h, microfibercover, cranberry color, 1 year old, 2large contrast pil-lows $100.

570-333-4321

ENTERTAINMENTCENTER, Sauder54” H x 50” W x 21”D. Left side glassdoor with 2 shelves,2 drawers under-neath, right side 2door bottom under

  the section for TV.$50. Sony 27” Tri-natron color TV $50.

570-829-4776FILE CABINET, (3)

  three drawer legalsize with hanging

 file folders $50.570-270-9059

F U R N I S HF U R N I S H

F O R L E SSF O R L E SS*  NELSON  * 

*  FURNITURE  * *  WAREHOUSE  * Recliners from $299

Lift Chairsfr om $699New and Used 

Living Room Dinettes, Bedroom 

210 Division StKingston

Call 570-288-3607

HEAD/FOOTBOARDF RA ME S c he rr y  wood, 4 poster, kingsize 2 - 6 drawerdressers, mediumcolor, excellent con-dition, $395.

570-636-1798

HEADBOARD, oak  twin, $50. Oak nightstand $50.

570-825-0569

KITCHEN HUTCHgreen metal withwicker basket draw-ers, excellent condi-

  tion. Asking $100570-239-6011

KITCHEN ISLANDwhite, 36”L x 20”W 3 enclosed shelves.2 large openshelves, 1 pull outdoor. Gold & Ivory side chair basketweave sides $130.

570-288-4852

K I TCHE N T ABLES ET tabl e i s l i gh tsolid wood with fourmatching chairs,backs of chairs andlegs of table can bepainted any color.

  Very nice set, very g oo d c on di tio n.$95. 570-262-9162

KITCHEN TABLEsmall, 4 Windsorchairs $125.

570-829-2599

K I TCHE N T ABLEwooden, oak chairs

  to match great con-dition $150.

570- 208-3888

LAMPS (2) parlorstand up, grey metal& black. $25 each.

570-740-1246

LOFT BED IKEA sil-ve r m etal fram eonly, 73”h x 55”w x 77”l . Ladd er att-ached/ room under

  for desk, futon, etc. Very good condition.$75. 570-947-6531

 AFFORDABLEMATTRESS SALE

We Beat All Competitors Prices! 

Mattress Guy Twin sets: $159Full sets: $179

Queen sets: $199  All New 

  American Made 

570-288-1898 

M IR RO R. L ar ge frameless. 36x42.$50. 570-740-1246

PAT IO S ET 3 9”round resin tan col-o red tabl e , u se done summer $20.

570-868-5275 or570-301-8515

R OCKI NG CHAI RBoston $100.

570-847-336

SLEEPER SOFA fullsize, tan with flowerp atte rn . $ 15 0 o rbest offer.

570-868-5924

T V: F la t s cr ee nSanyo. 27” Perfectcondition. $45.

570-606-6624

744 Furniture &  Accessories

  WINGBACK chairold tapestry, tan-g re en -b l ue $ 75 .Chi n a Cabi n et & Buffet $125. for both5 0’ s vi ntage o l dpigeon hole deskl$50. TABLES maple,2 step tables $20.,coffee table $15.,c ob bl e rs b e nc h$20., side table withlarge drawer $25.,m ap l e m ag az i neholder $10. Antiquechild’s rocker $50.

Noritaki China serv-ice for 12 wheat pat-  tern $25. Electrichospital bed FREE

570-654-6584

750 Jewelry

ENGAGEMENT RING1/2 carat princesscut diamond soli-

  ta ir e s et i n 1 4Kw hi te g ol d . Li stprice of $1,495, Pur-chased fromLittmann Jewelers

  for $900, willing tosacrifice at $700.

Call 570-814-3383

752 Landscaping & Gardening

  ARE YOU TIREDOF BEING

RAKED?C al l J oe , 5 70 -823-8465 for all

  your landscapingand cleanup needs.See our ad in Call anExpert Section.

GARDEN TRESTLE

5 ’h x3 ’w b la ck ,wrought iron $25.

570-824-0591

LAW N M OW ER -TroyBilt. 21”. 6.5 HP.Easy Start mulcher.2 y ears o l d , j us ts ervic e d, ru ns & looks perfect. Notself propelled. Canadd bag for rear dis-charge or side dis-charge. $100. OBO

570-283-9452

LAWNMOWER elec-  tric Black & Decker,mulcher, bag underw arran ty $9 5. 2handle shovel $12.Han d p us h l awnmower $10. Lawnspreader $12. Elec-

  tric hedge clippers$15. Circular saw$12. Pitch fork oneend point/other flat$13. Home & Gar-den sprayer $12.

570-822-5623

LAWNMOWER Toroself-propelled, nobag, 6.5 hp goodrunning condition

$125. 570-655-3197Patrick & Deb’s

Lawn CareSee our ad underCall An Expert1162 Landscape & Garden

756 Medical

Equipment

HOS PI TAL BED ,g oo d c on d iti on .everything works.

 Asking $800 OBO.570-779-3965570-991-2364

POWER CHAIRJa zzy Sel ect ,$500. Walker - $25.

570-829-2411

SNOWBLOWER  ATTACHMENT 42”  for the FASTATTACHlawn tractorincludes chains & weights cost $1100.sell for $300. Usedone season.

570-563-3081

758 Miscellaneous

 All Junk Cars &  TrucksWanted

HighestPricesPaid InCA$H

FREE

PICKUP

570-574-1275

  ANTIQUE CEDARCHEST $200.

  Whirlpool refrigera- tor, $250. Air condi- tioner $50.

570-963-1401

  AQUARIUM. 20 gal.al l attac hm en ts,$15. Dayton electricbuffer/poli sher, $25,Craftsman, Searsl awn mo we r re arwheel drive, 6.5 hp,electric start, excel-lent, $125. Snow

  thrower, White, 5.5hp, $40. 4 diningroom chairs, woodand fabric seat. $15

 for set. 654-5169

  ATTACHE, leather,combination lock,new, $25. 696-2008

BACK PACK Bi ll -abong $20. Twilightbook collection $20.2 cassette decksboth $30. Dell Com-puter monitor $20.

570-760-4830

B ED LI NE R: 89Che vy S 10 truc k bedliner, standard6’ cab $25. Fourbarrel carb running

  from running Chevy motor $50. 5 useds to rm w in do ws29x53.5” $50. all.

570-740-1246after 5pm.

BOO KS 2 b ox eshardcover & paper-back, King, Grishometc $25. a box.

570-474-6028

CANES & WALKINGS TI CKS . O ve r 2 5avai l ab l e. $ 4- $5each. Many differ-ent sizes, shapes & heights! All handlesare different!

570-735-2081

CAR CARGO Lug-gage/Rack Carrier,$30. 570-270-9059

758 Miscellaneous

BOOKS: Enhance  your library with the following books: “AnI n vi tati on to th e

 White House” Hillary Rodham Clinton.“ Go in g R og ue ”Sarah Palin. “Jack & Jackie, a PerfectMarriage.” “Mem-o ir s o f B ar ba raBush”. “Living Histo-ry” Hillary RodhamClinton. “My Turn,Memoirs of Nancy Reagan.” $10 each,

 All for $40.570-655 9474

CANISTER SETPhalzgraft 3 piecesc erami c , n atu rewood design, excel-lent condition, $20.Rocky VCR Movies1 - 5 box set, excel-lent condition $25 .

570-239-6011

CHAI N LI NK d o gpen, $75. Must sell.

570-674-5624

CHEVY COVER forchevy S10 pickup 6’box, all hardware$50. 570-655-0546

CHURCH ORGAN.older model worksgreat sounds, ask-ing $125. 283-0636

COFFEE MAKERBu nn au to matic ,

  two burner, stain-less $95. 847-3368

COF F EE M AK ERDrip coffee makerw i th e xtra g las scarafe, & toaster -hunter green all for$10.868-5275/3018515

CUCK OO CLOCKG erman Cu ckooclock with colorfulb ir ds $ 80 . C ARRAMPS good condi-

  tion $35. CREEPER  for under car, goodcondition $25.

570-696-1030

DIRT BIKE boy’s 20”Redline $45. TechDeck skateboards & r am ps , o ve r 2 5pieces $20.

570-237-1583

D RYER 3 m on thsold, still under war-ranty $300. Caloricgas stove in excel-lent working condi-

  tion. $175.328-5926

FIBERGLAS TRUCKCAP 8ft. Good Con-dition. $25.

570-823-6829

FISHTANK 40 gal-lon, stand, lid, filter.$100. 570-299-9155

G AR AG E D OO RO PE NE R S ea rsCraftsman 1/2 hp

c hai n d rive w i thremote & controlbox. Good condi-

 tion. $55. 763-9874

G LA SS D OO R. 4way glass door forbath tub. $25

570-331-8183

GRILL/GAS small,good condition $15.neg. 570-510-7763

HUNT I NG K NI F EMaxium 9.5 Per-

  fect for hunting or  fishing all stainlesssteel $15.332-7933

KEG TAP SYSTEM,$ 45 . F lo o r Jack,

  ATD 7300, heavy d ut y, $ 4 5. J ac k  Stands (2), $10.Circular Saw, Skil-saw, $20. 693-0535

GET THE WORD OUT

with a Classified Ad.

570-829-7130

POTTERY handpainted Italian, quitea few pieces $35.

 for all. 829-2599

RELIGIOUS ITEMS -Hand madeRosaries, $5. PopeJohn Paul II Memori-blia. 570-829-2411

SAFE DEPOSIT BOX,h e avy d u ty $ 50 .Heater Tower, elec-

 tric, portable, $20.570-825-5847

SAUSAGE STUFFERantique, enterprisel arg e s iz e, g oo dcondition $75. minibi kE 4 hp, oldschool, runs good$175.570-655-3197.

S UM P P UM P 1/3electric utility pump,brand new $93. with

 tax sell for $65.570-822-5623

TEXTBOOKSLife As We Know It,ISBN 0743476867Survival In

  Aus ch wi tz I SBN9780684826806

  Writing a ResearchP ape r I SBN 1877653667. Great Tra-d i ti on s i n E thi c s

ISBN 0534081304  All b oo ks $ 2. 00each 696-3528

TIRES 225/70/R16Baja M&S 75% treadleft. Very good con-dition.$125.

570-855-3113

TIRES P205 65R 15s no w t ir es 9 0%

 tread $160.570-472-3632

TIRES, (2), 205/70/ R15, $30 each. AirCompressor, $150.Oil Heater, $25. Boy Bike, 26X1.95, $60.

 All items like new.570-357-4827

  VA CU UM B AG SElectrolux generic$1. each. 2Swifter wet jet mop$5. 570- 868-6018

  WARMER counter  top warmer 44”hx 28”dx36”w, lightedinside slide doors

  front & back, very g oo d c on di ti on$695. 570-636-3151

 WHEELS AND TIRES(4) five spoke forF or d W in ds ta rp21565r16 $325.

570-696-2212

762 Musical

Instruments

F LU TE : J up it erCarnegie XL silverbeginner flute withg ol d ke ys . P lay sbeautifully. $300.

570-406-1846

762 Musical

Instruments

BAND RENTALPROGRAM reason-a bl e q ua rt er ly  affordable rates.Rent with option tobuy. Flutes, Clar-inets, Sax, Drum,Trumpets, Violin.P ri vate l e ss on soffered.

 Andrea BoguskoMusic Co

Rte 309 W-B Twpnear Blackman St.

570-829-3679

GUITAR-CarloR ob el l i 6 -s tri ngacoustic soft casepicks and strings.$150. or best offer.

570-855-3113

PIANO Baldwin Con-sole medium oak matching bench.Tuned & delivered.$800. Mt. Top 570-898-1278

PIANO: Circa 1902Ludwig & Co mis-sion style uprightpiano, in very goodcondition. $500 orbest offer.

Call 570-674-1964

764 MusicalLessons/Services

GUITAR Washburn,electric blue $135.

570-735-1589

766 Office

Equipment

COMPUTER DESK49x23 good condi-

  tion $75. Chair $25.Pri nt er St and23.5x21, good con-dition $40. 2 Draw-er File Cabinet onwheels, good condi-

  tion $30. Four shelf wood book case,good condition $75.2 Drawer File Cabi-net, oak finish 16x17$25. 2 Drawer FileCabi n et 15. 5x 16$25. Or $275 for all.

570-655-4124

770 Photo

Equipment

CAMERA German  AG FA S LR l en s1:28/50 wide angle3.4/35, telephoto4 .0 /13 5. Aski ng$ 34 9. 5 70 -2 87-7684 after 5pm

MANFROTTOMono-Pod model681B, excellent con-dition $50. or besto ffe r. M INOLTA M ax xu m 8 00 0i35mm film camera,2 lenses, off camera

  flash unit very goodcondition $275. orbest offer 570-788-2388 after 5 pm

772 Pools & Spas

DIVING BOARD, 12’,w oo d l am in at e,commercial grade

  for inground pool,includes fittings & a nc ho rs , $ 12 5.SLIDING BOARD, 6’,F ib er gl as s f ori ng ro un d p oo l,includes fittings,$250.Buyer must remove.

570-388-6837

POOL, aboveg ro un d , 2 1’ p oo lwith filter & covers.$999 or best offer.

570-592-4685

774 Restaurant

Equipment

HobartSlicers

Mixers, MeatGrinders,Food Cutters,reconditioned. Call for brochure M-F9-5. 610-972-9084

RESTAURANT

EQUIPMENTBev Air 2 door

refrigerator/ sand-wich prep table,Model SP48-12,

$1300. For detailsCall 570-498-3616

RESTAURANT

EQUIPMENTSOMERSET TURNOVER MACHINE -Model # SPM45,

$500; ALSO, BunnPour Over CoffeeMachine, Model #

STF15, $225For more info, call

570-498-3616

RESTAURANT

EQUIPMENTSomerset Dough

Sheeter, ModelCAR-100. Only 

1 available. $1,500

Call for more info570-498-3616

776 Sporting Goods

BINOCULARS Yukon8 X2 5 R am bl erSeries nitrogen filledwaterproof fogproof compact, powerfullnew in unopenedbox. $69. 675-0005

BOWLING BALL- 16l bs . , b ran d n e w,green/navy/gold.beautiful pearl color.$15. 570-829-2695

CAMPING COTS (2)m et al f ra me ( 2)$25. each. Metalh amm oc k fram e$20. 570-824-0591

CONCEALEDFIREARM

PERMITcovering 33

states. Class 10/4,2011, Clarks Sum-

mit Fire Hall.Reservations

724-376-6336

CROSS BOW LEG-END exerci semachine, very goodcondition, sacrifice$200.570-788-2388

GOLF BAG, Wilson  Youth, with Putter,  Wedge, 1, 7, 9, 5Irons. $50.

570-270-9059

GOLF CART. Enzo,gas with roof. Box inrear for equipment.Excellent condition.$650. 388-6863

8/4/2019 Times Leader 09-22-2011

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/times-leader-09-22-2011 37/45

PAGE 8D THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com

412 Autos for Sale

412 Autos for Sale

412 Autos for Sale

412 Autos for Sale

412 Autos for Sale

412 Autos for Sale

412 Autos for Sale

522 Educa tion/ 

 Training

412 Autos for Sale

522 Educa tion/ 

 Training

533 Installation/ Maintenance/ 

Repair

554 Produc tion/ Operations

536 IT/SoftwareDevelopment

4 68 A ut o Pa rt s

533 Installation/ Maintenance/ 

Repair

554 Produc tion/ Operations

536 IT/SoftwareDevelopment

4 68 A ut o P arts

533 Installation/ Maintenance/ 

Repair

522 Educa tion/ 

 Training

522 Educa tion/ 

 Training

Wilkes-Barre Area School District is now accepting applications for 

DIRECTOR of TRANSPORTATION

Responsible for the organization, administrationand supervision of the District’s Transportation

System in accordance with state law and SchoolDistrict Policy.

Requirements:• College Degree Preferred• Ability to evaluate and schedule bus routes• Language skills and mathematical skills• Personal computer and spread sheet skills• Ability to establish and maintain effective

working relationships.

Applications are to be submitted no laterthan September 28, 2011

T0: Dr. Jeffrey T. Namey, SuperintendentWilkes-Barre Area School District

730 S. Main St., Wilkes-Barre, PA 18711An equal opportunity employer M/FH/V

  A Benson Family Dealership

HOURS: Monday Thru Thursday 

8:00am - 8:00pmFriday & Saturday 8:00am - 5:00pm

 A Benson Family Dealership

*Tax and Tags Extra.

JUST TRADED SPECIALS  JUST TRADED SPECIALSLOADED WITH LOCAL TRADESLOADED WITH LOCAL TRADES

$23,995

AllThe Toys, FactoryWarranty

2011 FORD ESCAPE XLT 4X4

2011 JEEP GRANDCHEROKEE LAREDO 4X4

$27,995

All New Body Style,Preferred Equipment

2010 FORD FOCUS SE

$14,995

One Owner,Perfectly Maintained

2010 CHRYSLER SEBRING TOURING CONV 

$18,995

27K Pampered Miles,Tons ofWarranty

2007 INFINITY FX 35 AWD

$22,995

JustTraded, Low Miles,All theToys!

2007 JEEP GRANDCHEROKEE LAREDO 4X4

$14,995

Leather,Moonroof, LocalTrade

$26,995

One Owner, New GMCTrade,Moonroof,AWD

2007 GMC YUKONDENALI XL

$20,995

Local One Owner,Only 46KMiles,Extra Clean!

2009 CHEVY EQUINOX LT AWD

2011 HYUNDAISONATA LIMITED

$25,995

Turbo Engine, Leather,Moonroof,One Owner,17K Miles

2010 JEEP WRANGLER X 4DR 4X4

$24,995

Sport Pkg,White Beauty,FactoryWarranty

2010 DODGE GRANDCARAVAN SXT’S

$18,995

Choose From 3,Tons Of Warranty

$13,995

24K Miles,Sport Red,Rear Spoiler

2009 PONTIACG5 COUPE

From

SERVICE TECHNICIAN 

APPLY IN PERSON:APPLY IN PERSON: 

229 Mundy Street229 Mundy Street 

Wilkes-BarreWilkes-BarreOR EMAIL RESUME ALL REPLIE S WIL L BE HELDOR EMAIL RESUME ALL REPLIES WILL BE HELD 

IN STRICT CONFIDENCE:IN STRICT CONFIDENCE: 

[email protected]@kenpollocknissan.com

KEN POLLOCK NISSAN

• Great Working Conditions• Team Environment

• Excellent Compensation• Benefits Package

• High Volume Service Dealership

Must be Experienced, Seasoned Professional with PA Inspection & Emission Licenses,

ASE Certified, Dealership Experience a plus.

W Y O M I N G V A L L E Y  

415 Kidder StreetWilkes-Barre, PA 18702

[email protected]

www.wyomingvalleyautomart.com

*For qualified Buyers. Bi-weekly payments greater than 171 /2% of monthly net income, additionaldown-payment may be required. Costs to be paid by Buyer at delivery: registration, taxes, title, doc fee.

0

$

DOWN*

DALLAS SCHOOL DISTRICT - EOEwww.dallassd.com

• SPECIAL EDUCATION AIDES• In District: Personal Care Assistants• Out of District: Personal Care Assistant – 

Wyoming Area Secondary Center • Rate of pay dependent on higher education

experience, no benefits

• Assistant Middle SchoolBoy’s Basketball Coach

• 7th grade Boy’sBasketball Coach

For clearance information and to download adistrict application, refer to our district website’s Employment page. Application packetsmust be received by the deadline date. Pleasesubmit a letter of interest, resume, district

application, references, letters of recommenda-tion, Act 34, 151 and 114 clearances and anyother supporting materials to:

Mr. Frank Galicki, SuperintendentDallas School District

PO Box 2000Dallas, PA 18612

DEADLINE:

October 3, 2011

or until the positions are filled

ASSISTANT PRINCIPALBear Creek Community Charter School, a pro-

gressive K-8 public school that offers parents a

choice in public education, is currently seeking

an experienced professional for the career posi-

tion of Assistant Principal. This is a full-time,

twelve month position.

The successful candidate will actively partici-  pate in facilitating an environment that pro-

motes academic excellence, environmental

stewardship, and accountability among all

stakeholder groups. Applicants should possess

a minimum of three years classroom teaching

experience and a graduate degree in an appro-

  priate field of study. Pennsylvania Principal

certification or the ability to obtain certification

within one year of hire is required.

Bear Creek Community Charter School is offer-

ing a competitive starting salary, comprehensive

 benefit package, performance-based annual

 bonus, and a rewarding work environment. Bear 

Creek Community Charter School is an Equal

Opportunity Employer. For more information

visit www.bearcreekschool.com

Interested candidates should submit a resume

and cover letter to:

Bear Creek Community Charter School

Attention: Human Resources

2000 Bear Creek Boulevard

Wilkes-Barre, PA 18702

Dynamically growing Sheet Metal &Assembly Manufacturer has immediate

multiple openings on all three shiftsfor the following positions:

• Welding• Press Brake• Spot Welding• Assembly• General Laborer

Looking for Skilled Machine Workers

Excellent wages & benefits

MANUFACTURING

FULL TIME

Apply in Person At:

1170 Lower Demunds RoadDallas, PA 18612

 A Drug-Free Workplace

Product TechnicalService Representative

Well established, local manufacturer is seeking aProduct Technical Service Representative. This

  position provides responsive and attentive service

on all product warranty and service issues. Basiccomputer knowledge and customer service skills

needed as well as the ability to comprehend anddiscuss technical information. This position is on

steady day shift, Monday through Friday and isnot an I.T. position. We offer competitive rates

and benefits and are located only 15 minutes from

Wilkes-Barre or Scranton.

Send resume to [email protected] orapply in person at:

401 Bridge StreetOld Forge, PA 18518

  An Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action/Drug 

 Free Workplace Employer 

BUYING JUNKVEHICLES$300 AND UP

$125 EXTRA IF DRIVEN,DRAGGED OR PUSHED IN!

NOBODY Pays More570-760-2035

Monday thru Saturday 6am-9pm • Happy Trails!

776 Sporting Goods

G OLF CLUBS s etGenertic, great con-dition $50.815-6772

PING PONG TABLE$25.

570-825-5847

ROLLER BLADES2Xs inline size 1,2,3& 4,5,6, blue/black black carrying bag$10. Ice Skates, girlswhite, Gold Medal,sizes 1 & 6, like newcondition, black car-rying bag $10. eachBoth very good con-

dition 696-3528

SKI’S Killington’sk-2’s,Technical ski-boots size 12 andc ol t t ec h c om ppoles. $150.

570-855-3113

780 Televisions/  A ccessories

TELEVISION,$19”, $100. 13”, $60.

570-357-4827

TELEVISION, 24”Daewood. In excel-lent condition. $25OBO. 570-696-1703

To place yourad call...829-7130TELEVISION: GE.2 8” w orks g oo d ,needs remote $80.

570-740-1246

TV 19: Emerson HDcolor, flat screen$125. Good workingcondition. 819-2174

TV 20” Phillips colorwith remote.

$15. 570-868-5450

TV COLOR19” $15.

570-510-7763

780 Televisions/  A ccessories

T V- 27 ” C ur ri eMathews, new withremote. $130.

570-299-9155

TV: 42” LCD. Sony Bravia & Sony DVDplayer. Like New.$300. 570-310-1287

TVS 2 color , 13 inchSayno, & Insigna,$20. 570-899-7384

782 Tickets

PENN STATE TICKETS

October 15, 2011vs. Purdue

Section NA -seat backs. (2)

at $75 each.570-675-5046

after 6 PM

TICKETS: (2) PennS tate Vs E as ternMichigan Football

  tickets 9/24 SectionEHU, cushion seats& y el l ow p arkin gpass included $110.

570-655-0211

784 Tools

CHIPPER/SPREAD-ER Craftsman 6.5hp, good condition$100. 708-2232

SNOWTHROWERSimplicity 10 HP 36 “chute 5 speed for-w ar d/ 2 s pe edreverse, excellentc o nd iti on , n ot i n

  flood) $550. Ryobicordless drill, flash-light, 2 batteries & charger $30.

570-655-9472

784 Tools

TORQUE WRENCHCraftsman $10.570-474-6028

786 Toys & Games

  AIR HOCKEY TABLE$450 new sell $275.new condition. Cashonly. 570-474-2397

BIKE Woman’s vin-  tage bike, collegate3, 26” $50.

570-654-2657

DOLL CRADLEHomemade $20.

570-829-2599

DOLLS, BRATZ col-lection, 4 boys, 13girls, two cases,p lu s a cc es so ry  items, great condi-

  tion. $45. 696-2008

LINEUP ASUCCESSFULSALE

INCLASSIFIED!Doyouneedmorespace? A yard or garage sale

in classifiedis the best way

tocleanoutyourclosets!You’re in bussiness

with classified!

788 Stereo/TV/ Elec tronics

S CANNE R R ad i oShack 200 channelhand held scanner.excellent condition.ba tte ri es, a cadapter included.Police/fire frequen-cies already pro-grammed in. Paid$ 11 5. s el l $ 75 .

570-905-2985

796 Wanted to BuyMerchandise

NEED CASH?We Buy:

Gold & Gold coins,Silver, Platinum,

old bills, Watches,Costume Jewelry,

Diamonds, GoldFilled, Sterling Sil-

ver Flatware,Scrap Jewelry,

Military items, oldTin & Iron Toys,

Canadian coins & paper money,

most foreignmoney (paper/coin).

 Visit our new loca-  tion @ 134 Rt. 11,

Larksvillenext to W OODY ’S

FIRE PLACE

& P RO FIX .

We make house calls!Buyer & seller of 

antiques! We alsodo upholstering.570-855-7197

570-328-3428

T h e V i d e oG a m e S t o r e

28 S. Main W.B.Open Mon- Sat,

12pm – 6pm570-822-9929 / 

570-941-9908

$$ CASH PAID $$V I D EO GAMES &

SY STEMSHighest $$ Paid

GuaranteedBuying all video

games & systems. PS1 & 2,

 Xbox, Nintendo,

 Atari, Coleco,Sega, Mattel,Gameboy,

 Vectrex etc.DVD’s, VHS & CDs

& Pre 90’s toys,The Video

Game Store1150 S. Main

ScrantonMon - Sat,

12pm – 6pm570-822-9929

 VITO’S& 

GINO’S Wanted:

Junk

Cars &

Trucks

HighestPricesPaid!!

FREE

PICKUP

288-8995

Find Something?Lose Something?

Get it back where itbelongs

with a Lost/Found ad!570-829-7130

WANTEDJEWELRY

WILKESBARREGOLD

570-48GOLD8(570-484-6538)

Highest Cash PayOuts Guaranteed

M o n - S a t1 0 a m - 6 p m

C lo s ed S u n d a y s

1092 Highway 315 Blvd( Pla za 3 1 5 )

3 1 5 N . 3 m iles a f t erM o t o rw o ld

We Pay At Least78% of the London

Fix MarketPricefor All Gold Jewelry

Visit us atWilkesBarreGold.com

Or email us atwilkesbarregold@

yahoo.com

800PETS & ANIMALS

810 Cats

CATS & KITTENS12 weeks & up.

 All shots, neutered, tested,microchipped

VALLEY CAT RESCUE824-4172, 9-9 only 

K IT TE N, F RE E togood home. Orange& white bottle fedmale. Very friendly.G oo d w ith o the rcats. Indoor kitten.Call 570-822-9479

K IT TE NS F RE E 5e mal e ki tte ns . 6

weeks old. 3 Cali-cos, 1 black & 1 tor-

oise shell. All arehealthy. Very playful& loving.

570-852-9850

K IT TE NS free togoo d home, 6weeks old.

570-288-9813

KITTENS: 3

ado rab le ki tte ns  found outside my home. Approximate6 weeks old, eating& using litterbox.

 Adapting very nicely   to i n do or l i fe . 1black & white, shorth ai r, 2 b la ck &  white, medium hair.

570-287-3876

KITTENS: Free togood home. Pleasecall

570-779-4173

815 Dogs

PAWSTO CONSIDER....

ENHANCE  YOUR PET

CLASSIFIED  AD ONLINE

Call 829-7130

Place your pet adand provide us your

email address

This will create aseller account

online and logininformation will be

emailed to you fromgadzoo.com

“The World of PetsUnleashed”

 You can then use your account to

enhance your onlinead. Post up to 6

captioned photosof your pet

Expand your text toinclude more

information, include your contact

information suchas e-mail, addressphone number and

or website.

COCKAPOO pups.

Black, well social-ized. Shots are cur-rent. $175 each.

570-765-1846

DOBERMAN PINSCHER Puppies AKC, red & rust, ready now, forappointment call

Cooper’sDobermans

570-542-5158

PUPPIES570-453-6900570-389-7877

ROTTWEILER PUPSGerman lines.

2 male & 3 females.Ready to go 9/30.

$650 firm.570-592-5515

LINE UP A GREAT DEAL...IN CLASSIFIED!Looking for the right dealon an automobile?

Turn to classified.It’s a showroom in print!Classified’s gotthe directions!

 Y0RKIE MIX PUPS.MINI POODLE MIX P UPS Al l m ale s,shots are current.$125 each.

570-765-1122

 AKC DOBERMAN

PINCHER PUPPIES

Ready October 22,Taking deposits nowCall 570-436-5083

845 Pet Supplies

BIRD CAGE:Small $10.

570-288-4852

PARAKEET CAGEwith stand, excel-lent condition $15.

570-457-9304

900REAL ESTATEFOR SALE

906 Homes for Sale

Havi ng t roublepaying your mort-g ag e? F al li ngb eh in d o n y o urpayments? Youmay get mail frompeople who promise

  to fo re s tal l y ou r foreclosure for a feein advance. Report

  them to the FederalTrade Commission,

  the nation’s con-sumer protectionagency. Call 1-877-FTC-HELP or click on ftc.gov. A mes-s ag e f ro m T heTimes Leader and

 the FTC.

906 Homes for Sale

AVOCA

314 Packer St.Remodeled 3 bed-room with 2 baths,

master bedroomand laundry on 1st floor. New siding

and shingles. Newkitchen. For more

info and photosvisit: www.atlas

realtyinc.comMLS 11-3174

$99,900Call Tom

570-262-7716

AVOCA

Saturday, Oct-1

11AM-1PM912 Vine Street

Over 3,500 square feet of living spacewith large detached

2 car garage andoffice– Vinyl Siding,

Newer windows,Spacious Rooms.MUST BE SEEN!

$159,900.MLS #10-3956

Call Pat McHale570-613-9080

BACK MOUNTAIN

1215 Mountain Rd. Well maintained

ranch home set on2 acres with apple trees on property.This home offers 3

bedrooms, sunroom& enclosed porch.

Lower level withbrick fireplace. 2

car garage.$172,500

MLS# 11-2436Call Geri

570-696-0888

BEAR CREEK 

Meadow Run RoadEnjoy the exclusive

privacy of this 6.1acre, 3 bedroom, 2

bath home withvaulted ceilings andopen floor plan. Ele-

gant formal livingroom, large airy 

 family room anddining room and

gorgeous 3 seasonroom opening to

large deck with hot  tub. Modern eat inkitchen with island,

gas fireplace,upstairs and wood

burning stovedownstairs. This

stunning property boasts a relaxingpond and walking

  trail. Sit back and savor the view

MLS 11-3462$443,900

Sandy RovinskiExt. 26

CROSSIN REALESTATE

570-288-0770

BEAR CREEK VILLAGE

333 Beaupland10-1770

Li vi n g roo m h asawesome woodlandviews and you willenjoy the steam/ s au n a. Lake an d

ennis rights avail-able with Associa-

ion membership.(membershipoptional). Minutesrom the Pocono's

a nd 2 h ou rs t oPhiladelphia or New

  York. $259,000Maria Huggler

CLASSICPROPERTIES

570-587-7000

BERWICK 319 East 10th St

Remodeled4 bedroom,

2 bath, 2 cargarage, large lot(No Flood Zone)

Columbia County.Low Taxes!$105,000,

570-204-6550c-investments.com

BERWICK

HANDYPERSON SPECIAL1145 6th AvenueLots of potential!

$36,500Can see online

c-investments.com570-204-6550

8/4/2019 Times Leader 09-22-2011

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/times-leader-09-22-2011 38/45

TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 PAGE 9D

STAYCATIONSBUS TRIPS, SHOWS, LAST MINUTE DEALS & MORE

CONTACT TARA AT 970-7374 • [email protected]

Visit NEWYORKCITY

RADIOCITYMUSICHALL

• Saturday, 11/12 - 1pmshow• Saturday, 11/19 - 1pmshow

• Saturday, 11/26 - 1pmshow• Monday, 11/28 - 2pmshow

•Wednesday, 11/30 - 2pmshow• Saturday, 12/3 - 2pmshow

•Wednesday, 12/7 - 2pmshow• Saturday, 12/10 - 2pmshow

•Wednesday, 12/14 - 2pmshow• Saturday, 12/17 - 2pmshow

•Wednesday, 12/21 - 2pmshow•Wednesday, 12/28 - 1pmshow

1-800-432-8069

Royal Travel & Tours

Limited tickets to

Visitour websiteor

calltoday!

NYCTrip.com570-714-4692

NYGIANTSFOOTBALLTICKETS

• 9/19 - Rams• 10/16 - Bills• 10/30 - Dolphins• 11/20 - Eagles

• 12/4- Packers• 12/18 - Redskins• 1/1 - Cowboys

1-800-432-8069

Dowehave SENIORDeals!!!!

BLACKLAKE, NY

(315)375-8962 • www.blacklake4fish.com

[email protected]

$50off Promotion AvailableNow!

Fall Fishing is the best of the year!

Come relax &enjoy greatfishing & Tranquility

at it’s finest.Housekeeping cottageson the water with all the

amenities of home.

300 Market St., Kingston, PA 18704288-TRIP (288-8747) [email protected]

October 15-22, 20118 shows +

$1,025 pp/double occupancyCall for details! 

Just Great Tours570-829-5756

Branson,Missouri

COOKIESTRAVELERS570-815-8330

NYCSanGennarioFestival 9/24-$40**FOOTBALL**

Steelersvs.Titans10/8&10/9$389lower;$359upperSteelersvs.Jaguars10/15& 10/16$389lower;$359upperPSUvs.Purdue10/15$139lowerOrBus&Tailgate$50

PSUvs.Illinois10/29$129Or Bus&Tailgate$50PSUvs.Nebraska11/12Bus& Tailgate$50RADIOCITY CHRISTMASSPECTACULAR

12/2,12/4, 12/9,12/11,12/16 &12/17CallforPricing!

COOKIESTRAVELERS.COM

Eastern CaribbeanJanuary 27-Feb 6, 2012

Royal Caribbean’s

EXPLORER OF THE SEASdeparts Bayonne, NJ,

no air needed

PaulMcCartney’s

Ocean Kingdom NYC BalletSat. Sept. 24 Matinee Performance w/

Exclusive“Meet a Dancer”Backstage Tour!$180 per person

DON ’T M I SS OU T!

Call for details570-820-8450

Labadee ~ San Juan ~

St. Maarten ~ St. Thomas

239 Spring Street, Wilkes-Barre, PA 18702

BROADWAY SHOWBUSTRIPS

CALLROSEANN@ 655-4247 TORESERVEYOURSEATS 

**RADIOCITY XMASSHOW**

Mon. Nov. 28th $85 2pm showWed. Dec. 14th $90 2pmshow

2nd Mezz seating

 JERSEYBOYSWed.Nov 9

$150 forFront Mezz seating

WICKEDWed. Nov. 9

$159 Orchestra Seats

10/05/11 Sailing fromNYC only $593

Includes all port taxes!!!!Seniors only, per person,

two sharing an inside cabin

STUCKER TOURS655-8458

www.stuckertours.comATLANTIC CITY OVERNITE 11/13

HILTON ACCOM., $10 FOOD, $40 SLOTPLAY $99

MACKINAC ISLAND, MI 9/24-30

DELUXE ACCOM. GRAND HOTEL, 9 MEALS INCL. 2ELEGANT 5-COURSE DINNERS, FORD MUSEUM,CARRIAGE TOUR, FRANKENMUTH TOUR $1,149

FINGER LAKES WINE TOUR 10/16-17CRUISE & LUNCHEON, WINE TASTING $199

RADIO CITY XMAS SHOW 11/28 $92

NEW YEARS EVE ATLANTIC CITYMOONLITER BUS SAT., 12/31 ONLY $49

PLACE

YOUR ADHERE

CARNIVALMIRACLE

Visit:GrandTurks, HalfMoonCay& Nassau

Call Now!!!!

906 Homes for Sale

BLAKESLEEQuiet Country 

Living

Impressive, well-c ared fo r, 4 Be dColonial on a beau-

iful 2 Acre home

site, just 20 minuteso W -B . L ot s of  storage with a hugebasement and 3 CarGa ra ge . En jo y  country living at it’sbest. Call Betty 

570-643-4842

570-643-2100

DALLAS

123 Orchard EastExceptionally wellmaintained 2 bed-

room 1 3/4 bath. 1st floor condo. Patio

off each bedroom. 1car stall for parking.

 Access to golf course and 2 pools.

MLS 11-3395$109,900

Jay A. CrossinExt. 23

CROSSIN REALESTATE

570-288-0770

DALLAS

23 Rice CourtIf you've reached

he top, live there inhis stunning 3,900

sq. ft., 4 bedroom, 4b at h h ome i n agreat neighborhood.Offers formal livingroom, dining room,2 family rooms, flori-da room, andki tc he n an y truechef would adore.Picture perfect con-dition. The base-ment is heated by aseparate system.SELLER PROVIDINGHOME WARRANTY.MLS#11-1005

$349,900Call Barbara Metcalf 

570-696-0883

LINE UP A GREAT DEAL...IN CLASSIFIED!Looking for the right dealon an automobile?Turn to classified.It’s a showroom in print!Classified’s gotthe directions!

DALLAS

400 Shrine ViewElegant & classic

stone & wood frame traditional in

superb locationoverlooking adja-cent Irem TempleCountry Club golf 

course. Living roomwith beamed ceiling

& fireplace; large formal dining room;cherry paneled sun-

room; 4 bedroomswith 3 full baths & 2 powder rooms.

Oversized in-groundpool. Paved,

circular drive.$550,000

MLS# 11-939Call Joe Moore

570-288-1401

DALLAS

705 The GreensImpressive, 4,000sq. ft., 3 bedroom,

5 1/2 bath condo features large living

room/dining roomwith gas fireplace.,

vaulted ceilingsand loft; master

bedroom with his& hers baths;

2 additional bed-rooms with private

baths; great eat-in kitchen with

island; den; family room; craft room;

shop. 2 decks.''Overlooking the

ponds''$499,000

MLS# 11-872Call Joe Moore

570-288-1401

DALLAS

NEW CONSTRUCTION2,400 sq feet

$329,000OPEN HOUSE

SUNDAYS, 11-1

patrickdeats.com570-696-1041

906 Homes for Sale

DALLAS

NEWBERRY  ESTATES

$109,0002 bedroom, 2 bath

unit in move in con-dition. Lease pur-

chase available.

$1,400/month with$4,800 assist atclosing. Call

Nancy Eckert570-696-0882or Terry Eckert570-696-0843

DALLAS

PRICE REDUCED! 

Cl ean & n eat 3 -4bedroom cape cod.2 car garage. Deck & p or ch es . G asheat. 85’ x 115’ lot.$110,000. CallBesecker Realty 

570-675-3611

DALLAS SCHOOLDISTRICT

100% Financing Wooded and privateBi-Level in DallasSchool District. Thishome features 1 CarGarage, 3Be dro om s, 1 3 /4B at h and niceupdates. Plenty of room on your pri-vate 2 acre lot.100%USD A F in anc i ngE l ig ib l e. Call fo rdetails.

REDUCED PRICE$166,000

Call Cindy King570-690-2689

www.cindykingre.com

570-675-4400

DALLAS

SHORT SALE!Charming 3 Bed-r oo m C ap e C odwith 1 Car Garage ingreat neighborhood.Close to Park/RecC en te r. D al la sS ch oo l D i stric t.P ri ce d a s S ho rtS ale , s ub je c t tobank approval.

Call Cindy 570-690-2689

www.cindykingre.com

570-675-4400

DALLAS

800SF ranch featur-ing 2 bedrooms, liv-

ing room, kitchen,one bath & laundry 

room. Perfect for the person who travels; updated

kitchen, bath, car-peting, drywall.

MLS#10-3628Reduced to

$79,900Maribeth Jones570-696-6565

DALLAS

FRANKLIN TWP.Orange Road

L us h s et ti ng o nalmost 5 acres bor-dered by magnifi-cent stone walls.F i sh p on d , l arg egarage, barn, sepa-rate offices for stor-ag e o r i n -h ou sebusiness, home with9 roo ms , 4 b ed -rooms, 3 baths, 2half baths all on 3

loors. 4400SF inotal. Home needs

TLC! MLS#11-1628Reduced to

$299,000Maribeth Jones570-696-6565

DRUMS226 S. Hunter Hwy 

26x40, 2 bedroom 1b at h r an ch o n a103x200 lot. Fully l and sc ap e d w i thd o ub le l ot p ave ddriveway. Call

570-788-6798

906 Homes for Sale

DRUMS

Sand Springs12 Sand Hollow Rd.Nearly new 3 bed-

room, 2.5 bath town home. Huge

Master with 2 clos-ets full bath. 1 carattached garage,wooded lot, endunit. Cul-de-sac.

Great golf community.

MLS 11-2411$172,000

Call ConnieEileen R. Melone

Real Estate570-821-7022

LINE UP A GREAT DEAL...IN CLASSIFIED!

DUPONT

Looking for a largehome? Here it is! 6b ed roo ms w i th

  first floor masterb ed ro om a nd

modern bath. Very l ar ge m od er nkitc he n. Li vi n groom, dining room,

  fa mi ly r oo m,enclosed porch,air conditioning,paved drive withparking area.

MLS 11-2385$163,000

BeseckerRealty 

570-675-3611

DURYEA

1140 SPRING ST.Large 3 bedroom

home with newroof, replacement

windows, hardwood floors. Great loca-

 tion! For more infor-mation and photos

visit: www.atlasrealtyinc.com.MLS 11-2636

$119,900.Call Tom

570-262-7716

DURYEA

1219 SOUTH ST.Renovated 1/2 dou-

ble with 3 bed-rooms in nice

neighborhood. Own  for what it takes to

rent. All new win-dows. For more info

and photos visit:www.

atlasrealtyinc.com MLS 11-2523

$54,900

Call Phil570-313-1229

906 Homes for Sale

DURYEA122 Lackawanna Ave

Just a few more finishing toucheswill complete therenovations. Thishome has a new

kitchen, newdrywall & newcarpeting.

$59,000MLS #11-1502

Call Tracy Zarola570-696-0723

DURYEA

302 Cherry St.Don’t miss out on

 this charming 2story which boasts

Pride of Ownership.Move in condition

with many updates.Modern eat in

kitchen, dining roomis open to living

room, 2 bedrooms,1 3/4 baths. As abonus enjoy the

view from yourlarge upper floor liv-

ing area with gas fireplace and slidingdoors that lead to a

spacious balcony.Beautiful manicured

corner lot.For more info and

photos visit:www.atlas 

realtyinc.com MLS 11-3512$129,900Call Terry 

570-885-3041 Angie

570-885-4896

LINEUP ASUCCESSFULSALE

INCLASSIFIED!Doyouneedmorespace? A yard or garage sale

in classifiedis the best way

tocleanoutyourclosets!You’re in bussinesswith classified!

DURYEA

38 Huckleberry Lane

Blueberry Hills4 BEDROOMS, 2.5baths, family room

with fireplace, 2 cargarage, large yard.

Master bath withseparate jetted tub,

kitchen with stain-less steel appli-

ances and island,lighted deck. For

more info and pho- tos visit: www.atlas

realtyinc.com.MLS 11-3071$329,000

Call Colleen570-237-0415

906 Homes for Sale

DURYEA

548 ADAMS ST.Charming, well

maintained 3 bed-room, 1 bath homelocated on a quietstreet near Blue-

berry Hills develop-ment. Featuresmodern kitchen

with breakfast bar, formal dining room,

 family room withgas stove, hard-

wood floors in bed-rooms, deck,

 fenced yard andshed. MLS#11-2947

$112,500Karen Ryan

283-9100 x14

DURYEA

805-807 Main St.Multi-Family. Largeside by side doublewith separate utili- ties. 3 bedrooms

each side withnewer carpet,

replacement win-dows and newer

roof. For more infoand photos visit:

www.atlasrealtyinc.com.MLS 11-3054

$89,900Call Charlie

570-829-6200

Shopping for anew apartment?

Classified letsyou compare costs -

without hassleor worry!

Get movingwith classified!

DURYEA

PRICE REDUCED!314 Bennett Street

Refashioned 3 or 4bedroom, two fullmodern baths. Twostory, 2300sf, withlevel yard with love-ly new landscapingand 1 car garage.New EVERYTHINGi n th is c harmi n gmust see property.C us to m b li nd s

h ro ug ho ut t hehome. Great neigh-borhood with Park beyond the back-

  yard. MLS# 11-3776$ 174,900Call Patti

570-328-1752Liberty Realty 

& AppraisalServices LLC

906 Homes for Sale

DURYEA

REDUCED

411 JONES ST.Beautiful 2 story 

English Tudor with

exquisite gardens,surrounding beauti- ful in ground pool,

private fenced yardwith a home with

 too many amenities  to list. Enjoy the

summer here!Screened in porchand foyer that justadds to the great

living spaceof the home

For more infoand photos:visit:www.

atlasrealtyinc.com MLS 11-2720$234,900

Call Phil570-313-1229

Doyou needmorespace? A yard or garage sale

in classifiedis the best way

tocleanoutyour closets!You’re in buss iness

with classified!

EDWARDSVILLE

9 Williams St.Large 4 bedroom

home with nice reardeck, replacementwindows, off street

parking. Possibleapartment in sepa-

rate entrance.Loads of potential.For more info and

pictures visit:www.atlas 

realtyinc.com MLS 11-2091

$69,900Call Tom

570-262-7716

EDWARDSVILLE

93 Washington St.Looking for a large

home? You found it!This home was gut-  ted down to studsin 1990 and family 

room additionadded in ‘93. Vinyl

sided and vinyl win-dows. 3 bedrooms,

2 full baths. Oak kitchen, tile, gas

 fireplace in family room and gas hot

water heat. Pulldown attic for stor-

age. Nice home justneeding your own

personal touch!MLS 11-3324

$85,000Mark R. Mason570-331-0982CROSSIN REAL

ESTATE

570-288-0770

906 Homes for Sale

EDWARDSVILLE

Sunday, Oct-210am-12pm

145 Short StreetMeticulously main-

 tained ranch on lot100x140. 6 rooms,3 bedrooms, 1 full

bath on main level.Finished lower level

with family room, full bath, laundry 

room, craft room & storage. MOVE IN

CONDITION.New Low Price

$94,900.MLS #11-2541

Call Pat McHale570-613-9080

Looking for thatspecial placecalled home?Classified will addressYour needs.Open the doorwith classified!

EXETER 

128 JEAN ST.Nice bi-level home

on quiet street.Updated exterior.

Large family room,extra deep lot. 2

car garage,enclosed rear

porch and coveredpatio. For moreinformation and

photos visit: www.atlasrealtyinc.com

MLS 11-2850$189,900

Call Charlie570-829-6200

EXETER 

164 E. First Street$134,900

  for an ALL BRICK,ranch with finished

basement. Fea- tures include hard-wood floors, plaster

walls, finishedbasement rooms

and car port.MLS #10-4363

Call Pat McHale570-613-9080

906 Homes for Sale

EXETER 

180 E. First Street$134,900 for a 5room ranch, with

spacious yard,enclosed porch and

Central Air.

5 Rooms, 3 Bed-rooms and full Bath.MLS #10-4365

Call Pat McHale570-613-9080

EXETER 

213 SUSQUEHANNA AVEOne of a kind prop-erty could be used

as a single family home or two unit.

 Wyoming Areaschools.

$125,000MLS#11-2811

Call John570-714-6124

SMITH HOURIGAN GROUP

EXETER 

OPEN HOUSESunday 12pm-5pm

362 Susquehanna AveCompletely remod-eled, spectacular, 2

story Victorianhome, with 3 bed-

rooms and 1.5baths, new rear

deck, full frontporch, tiled baths

and kitchen, granitecountertops, all

Cherry hardwood floors throughout,

all new stainlesssteel appliances

and lighting, new oil furnace, washerdryer in first floor

bath. Great neigh-borhood, nice yard.$174,900 (30 year

loan, $8,750 down,$887/month, 30 years @ 4.5%)

Owner financingavailable.

570-654-1490

Need a Roommate?

Place an ad and

 find one here!

570-829-7130

FACTORYVILLE

Gorgeous 4 bed-room colonial, Din-i ng ro om , fami l y  roo m, h ard wo o dloors, central air

and vac, Jacuzzi. Onover 0.5 acre. Movein ready. $264,800

Shari Philmeck ERA BRADY 

 ASSOCIATES570-836-3848

906 Homes for Sale

FORTY FORT18 E. Pettebone St

 Well Designed CAPECOD. 3 Bedroom, 13/4 baths with fin-ished lower level.Second floor has

spacious MasterBedroom, walk inc l os et, 3 /4 b athadjoining all purposeroom. Detached 2c ar g arage . n ic e

ree Lined Street.Priced to sell.

MLS 10-3951$169,500

Joan EvansReal Estate

570-824-5763

FORTY FORT

300 River StreetFor Rent or Sale

  A unique architec-ural design high-

lights this 3 bed-room with first floor

amily room. Built-i ns . G re at c ur bappeal and loadedwith character. Gasheat. Newer roof.

N ic e l ot . M an y  e xtras . R en t fo r$600 per month,Conventional financ-i n g: $ 4, 99 5 d n. ,4.25% int., 30 yrs.,$520 month. List#11-1275

$99,900.  Ask for Bob Kopec

Humford Realty 570-822-5126

FORTY FORT

83 Slocum StThis 3 bedroom, 2

bath home includesLiving room, diningroom, den, kitchen& sunroom on the

1st floor. New neu- tral carpeting, gasheat, central air, 3

car garage and

nice yard MLS #10-1762 Call Rhea570-696-6677

$ 136,500

FORTY FORT

REDUCED!

1301 Murray St. Very nice duplex, fully rented with

good return in greatneighborhood. Formore informationand photos visit:

www.atlas realtyinc.com MLS 11-2149$124,900

Call Charlie570-829-6200

906 Homes for Sale

FORY FORT

Great Walnut streetlocation. 8 rooms, 4bedrooms. wall tow al l c arp e t. G asheat. 2 car garage.Deck & enclosed

porch. MLS 11-2833$111,000Besecker Realty 

570-675-3611

GOULDSBORO

This is a must seelarge mobile. Only ive years old with

master bathJ ac uz zi . T hi s i slocated in the Beau-

iful Community of Indian Country quietand peaceful. Thishome backs up toState Game lands.

  Also the outdoorpool is across thestreet. The property is on one half acreof land. The price is$99,900. includesall furnishing whichis in great shape all

  you have to do is

m ove ri gh t i n . T osee all the picture of h e r o om s g o t owww.HomesIn ThePoconos.com and go to feature

listings.Thomas Bourgeois

516-507-9403Classic Properties

570-842-9988

HANOVER TOWNSHIP53 Countrywood

Estates

Townhouse, easy-o-love lifestyle. This

is Townhouse livingat it s B EST. 5rooms, 2 bedroom,2 1/2 bath, modernkitchen, inviting sunroom & deck, diningarea, Living Room,central air, attachedg arage , p ri vate

drive. MLS 10-1238$129,900Joan EvansReal Estate

570-824-5763

Looking for the right dealon an automobile?Turn to classified.It’s a showroom in print!Classified’s gotthe directions!

HANOVER TWP.

20 Dexter St.Nice starter home

with shed. Move-inready. Fenced yard.

Security system.New roof in 2006.

MLS #11-3023$39,000

Mary Donovan570-696-0729

Tracy Zarola570-696-0723

LINE UP A SUCCESSFULSALE

INCLASSIFIED!Doyou needmorespace? A yard or garage sale

in classifiedis the best way

tocleanout yourclosets!You’re in bussiness

with classified!

LINE UP A SUCCESSFUL SALE

INCLASSIFIED!Doyouneedmorespace? A yard or garage sale

in classifiedis the best way

tocleanout yourclosets!You’re in bussiness

with classified!

Say it HEREin the Classifieds!

570-829-7130

8/4/2019 Times Leader 09-22-2011

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/times-leader-09-22-2011 39/45

PAGE 10D THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com

796 Wanted to BuyMerchandise

796 Wanted to BuyMerchandise

39ProspectSt • Nanticoke

570-735-1487

WEPAY

THEMOSTINCASH

BUYING

11amto11pm

906 Homes for Sale

HANOVER TWP.

PRICE REDUCED!290-292

Lee Park Ave Very nice all brick double block with

 front and back porches. Beautiful

 yard with matureplantings; 3 bed-rooms, 1 bath oneach side. Out of 

 the flood zone!MLS#11-1988

$129,900Christine Pieczynski

570-696-6569

HANOVER TWP.

5 Raymond DrivePractically new 8 year old Bi-level

with 4 bedrooms, 1and 3/4 baths,

garage, fenced yard, private dead

end street. Formore info and pho-

 tos visit: www.atlasrealtyinc.com 

MLS 11-3422$179,000

Call Colleen570-237-0415

HANOVER TWP.

8 Diamond Ave.Loads of space in

his modernized tra-ditional home. 3rd

  floor is a large bed-room with walk-in

closet. Modernkitchen, family roomaddition, deck over-looking large corner

lot. Not just astarter home but a

home to stay 

in and grow! Formore informationand photos visit

www.atlasrealtyinc.comMLS #11-622

$119,000Call Colleen

570-237-0415

HANOVER TWP.HANOVER GREEN

Excellent condition& location. 3 bed-room, new kitchen,appliances included,1 1/2 bath with sepa-rate tub & shower.Living room, diningroom, with new car-pet. Large family roo m w ith h ard -wood floors undernew carpeting. 2enclosed patios.Laundry room withwasher/dryerincluded. Central

  AC, gas heat, pulldown floored attic.2 sheds. New roof.

  Vinyl siding. Win-d ow s. I ng ro u ndpool. Garage. 65 x 100 lot. Much more!  Asking $209,000

570-824-7196NO REALTORS

LINE UP A GREAT DEAL...IN CLASSIFIED!Looking for the right dealon an automobile?Turn to classified.It’s a showroom in print!Classified’s gotthe directions!

HANOVER TWP.

LIBERTY HILLS209 Constitution

 AvenueFantastic view from  the deck and patioof this 4 bedroom,

2.5 bath vinyl sided2 story home. Four

 years young with somany extras. A 

dream home!MLS# 11-2429

$299,900Call Florence570-715-7737

Smith HouriganGroup

570-474-6307

HANOVER TWP.

2 story in goodcondition with 3bedrooms, 1 full

bath, eat-inkitchen, 2 car

garage, fenced  yard & new

gas heat.MLS # 10-4324

Reduced to$44,000

Call Ruth at570-696-1195 or

570-696-5411

SMITH HOURIGAN GROUP

906 Homes for Sale

HANOVER TWP.

Price Reduced -Motivated Seller!19 Garrahan Street

 Attractive 2-story ingreat neighbor-

hood. Newer roof,

newer 2nd floorreplacement win-dows, newer split

 A/C system, largeeat-in kitchen, bed-room pine flooring,

walk-up attic & amostly fenced yard.

REDUCED$59,900

MLS#11-1754Call Steve Shemo(570) 288-1401

(570) 793-9449

Collectcash,not dust!Clean out your

basement, garageor attic and call the

Classified depart-ment today at 570-

829-7130!

HANOVER TWP.SALE BY OWNER12 Oaklawn Ave.

Out Of Flood Zone! P ri st in e 3 s to ry  home with garage,

 full basement, beau-

 tiful woodwork. Car-p e te d & p ain ted  throughout. NewerRoof, including allap pl i an ce s, g asheat, rooms withmany features. GreatNeighbors. No work 

  for you, move rightin! $120,000. Call

570-823-8710

HANOVER TWP.

Updated singlehome with 3 bed-

rooms & newly remodeled kitchen.Nice neighborhood.

New roof. Carportwith off street park-

ing. Some furnish-ings, furniture,

appliances includ-ed. Fenced yard.

Low taxes.Owner moving.

$38,200 negotiable.(570) 823-0508

HARDING

310 Lockville Rd.

SERENITYEnjoy the serenity of country living in this beautiful two

story home on 2.23acres. Great for

entertaining insideand out. 3 car

attached garagewith full walk up

attic PLUS another2 car detached

garage. WOW! A MUST SEE! For

more info and pho- tos visit: www.atlas

realtyinc.comMLS#11-831

$267,000Call Nancy 

570-237-0752Melissa

570-237-6384

HARDING

605 Apple TreeRoad

 White split stoneRanch with 1500 sq.  ft. of living space. 2

bedrooms, 1.5baths, propane gas

 fireplace with stonemantel. Customkitchen with oak 

cabinets with pullouts. Granite count-

er tops and island,plaster walls, mod-ern tile bath, open

 floor plan. 2ndkitchen in lower

level. Electric heat,wood/coal burner in

basement. Centralair, 2 stoves, 2dishwashers, 2microwaves, 2

 fridges, front loadwasher and dryer

included. Attached2 car garage and

detached 3 cargarage. Home in

near perfectcondition.

For moe info andphotos view:

www.atlasrealtyinc.comMLS 11-2968$229,900

Call Lu Ann570-602-9280

906 Homes for Sale

HARDING

Route 92“Picture Perfect”

  Vi e w. I f y ou arelooking for excep-

ional value in a ruralproperty, then don’t

pass up this 4 bed-room, 2 bath home.Beautiful Landscap-ing. Includes river-ront property. 1/2

m il e from p ub l icboat launch. Not inFlood Zone.

$150,000MLS 11-2996

Call Arlene Warunek 570-650-4169

Smith HouriganGroup

(570) 696-1195

HARVEYS LAKE

Pole 165Lakeside Drive A truly unique

home! 7,300 sq.ft.

of living on 3 floorswith 168' of lake frontage with

boathouse.Expansive living

room; dining room, front room all with

 fireplaces.Coffered ceiling;

modern oak kitchenwith breakfast

room; Florida room;study & 3 room & 

bath suite. 5bedrooms & 4baths on 2nd.

Lounge, bedroom,bath, exercise room

& loft on 3rd floor.In-ground pool & 2-

story pool house. AC on 3rd floor.

$1,149,000MLS# 10-1268

Call Joe Moore570-288-1401

HAZLETON

714 E. Samuels AveTERRACE Living at agreat price!!! 4 bed-rooms, 2 1/2 baths.Many “UPGRADED”

e atu re s: Ne we rCentral Air, NewerRoof, “Complete”Security System,andE po xy O ve rl a y Flooring in Garage,all add to the com-ort of this home.

Newer paint,car-p ets an d c u sto mwindow treatmentsm ak e i t m ov e i nready. Call Karen fora personal showing.

$164,900Century 21 SelectGroup - Hazleton

570-582-4938

HUGHESTOWN

SUNDAY , SEPT- 251:00pm-2:30pm97 Center Street

Looking for a soldhome with off streetparking & detached

garage? Look at  this one. Great

neighborhood and tremendous poten-

 tial. $64,900MLS #09-4385

Call Pat McHale570-613-9080

Looking to buy a

home?Place an ad hereand let the

sellers know!570-829-7130

JENKINS TOWNSHIP2 Owen Street

This 2 story, 3 bed-ro om , 1 1/2 b athhome is i n t hedesired location of Jenkins Township.S el le rs w er e i nprocess of updating

he home so a littleTLC can go a longw ay . Nic e y ard .Motivated sellers.

MLS 11-2191$89,900

Call KarenColdwell Banker 

Rundle Real Estate570-474-2340

906 Homes for Sale

JENKINS TWP.(Eagle View)

Home/Lot PackageBeautiful custombuilt home with a

stunning river viewoverlooking the

Susquehanna Riverand surroundingarea. Custom builtwith many ameni-

 ties included. A fewof the amenities

may include central A/C, master bed-room with masterbath, ultramodern

kitchen, hardwood floors, cathedral

ceiling, and a 2 cargarage. There are

are many other floor plans to

choose from orbring your own!

For more details & photos visit:

www.atlas realtyinc.com MLS 11-2642

$375,000Call Kim

570-466-3338

JENKINS TWP.

297 Susquehannock Drive

Settle into summerwith this great 2

story home on quietcul-de-sac with pri-vate back yard andabove ground pool.

Deck with awningoverlooking yard! 4

bedrooms, 2.5 bathhome in Pittston

 Area School Districtwith family room,

eat in kitchen, cen- tral a/c and garage.

Full unfinishedbasement

MLS 11-2432$259,900

Call Colleen570-237-0415

Job Seekers are

looking here! Where's your ad?570-829-7130 andask for an employ-

ment specialist

JENKINS TWP.

BACK ON THE

MARKET

23 Mead St.Newly remodeled 2

story on a cornerlot with fenced in

  yard and 2 cargarage. 4 bed-rooms, 1 bath,

1,660 sq. ft. Formore informationand photos visit

www.atlasrealtyinc.com

$84,900MLS 10-3684Call Bill

570-362-4158

JENKINS TWP.

NEW LISTING!10 Miller Street

3 bedrooms, 1 bathbrick front ranch on105 x 158 lot. Home features new car-

pet, paint, bath-room vanity top, fix-

 tures, oak trim, car-port, full unfinished

basement. Moveright in!

MLS#11-2891$129,900

Eric Feifer(570) 283-9100 x29

KINGSTON

129 S. Dawes Ave.4 bedroom, 1 bath,

large enclosedporch with brick 

 fireplace. Full con-crete basement

with 9ft ceiling. Lotsof storage, 2 car

garage on doublelot in a very desir-

able neighborhood.Close to schools

and park and recre-ation. Walking dis-

 tance to downtown Wilkes-Barre. Great

 family neighbor-hood. Carpet

allowance will be

considered. Formor info and photos

visit: www.atlasrealty.inc.com

$129,900MLS #11-1434

Call Tom570-262-7716

906 Homes for Sale

KINGSTON171 Third Ave

So close t o somuch, traditionally appointed 3 bed-room, 3 bath town-h om e w i th w arm

ones & wall to wallcleanliness. Modernkitchen with lots of cabinets & plenty of cl oset spa ce

hroughout, enjoy he privacy of deck 

& patio with fenced yard. MLS 11-2841

$123,000Call Arlene Warunek 

570-650-4169

Smith HouriganGroup

(570) 696-1195

KINGSTON58 S. Welles Ave

Large charmer hadbeen extensively renovated in the last

ew years. Tons of closets, walk-upatti c an d a l o we rlevel bonus recre-ation room. Greatlocation, just a shortwalk to Kirby Park.

MLS 11-3386$129,000

Call Betty atCentury 21

Smith HouriganGroup

570-287-1196ext 3559

or 570-714-612

Find Something?Lose Something?

Get it back where itbelongs

with a Lost/Found ad!570-829-7130

KINGSTON

76 N. Dawes Ave. Very well main-

 tained 2 bedroomhome with updatedkitchen with granitecounter. Large sun-

room over lookingprivate back yard. Attached garage,

large unfinishedbasement. For

more info and pho- tos visit: www.atlas

realtyinc.comMLS 11-2278

$139,900Call Colleen

570-237-0415

KINGSTON

76 N. Dawes Ave. Very well main- tained 2 bedroom

home with updatedkitchen with granitecounter. Large sun-

room over lookingprivate back yard. Attached garage,

large unfinishedbasement. For

more info and pho- tos visit: www.atlas

realtyinc.comMLS 11-2278

$139,900Call Colleen

570-237-0415

KINGSTON83 E. Vaughn St

  Yes, it’s really true,

$120,000. From theRoom size entranceoyer to every room

in the house, youind PERFECTION.

Living Room, DiningRoom/Family Room,Large Kitchen, But-ler-style work area,3 bedrooms, 1 1/2bath, lovely  enclosed screened-in porch. Off streetp arki ng . Cho i celocation. 11-2155

$120,000Joan EvansReal Estate

570-824-5763

KINGSTON

Completely remod-eled, mint, turn key condition, 3 bed-rooms, 1.5 baths,large closets, withhardwoods, carpet& ti le fl oo rs, n ewkitchen and baths,g as h eat, s he d,large yard.$134,900, seller willpay closing costs,$5000 down andmonthly paymentsare $995/month.Financing available.

WALSHREAL ESTATE

570-654-1490

906 Homes for Sale

KINGSTON

OPEN HOUSESunday 12pm-5pm

46 Zerby AveLease with option

 to buy, completely remodeled, mint,

 turn key condition,3 bedrooms, 1.5baths, largeclosets, with

hardwoods, carpet& tile floors, new

kitchen and baths,gas heat, shed,

large yard.$134,900 (30 year

loan @ 4.5% with5% down; $6,750

down, $684/month)WALSH

REAL ESTATE570-654-1490

KINGSTON

REDUCED

167 N. Dawes Ave.Move in condition 2story home. 3 bed-

rooms, 2 baths,hardwood floors,

ceramic throughout.Finished lower level,

security systemFor more info and

photos visit:www.atlas

realtyinc.comMLS 11-1673$154,900

Call Tom570-262-7716

Shopping for anew apartment?

Classified letsyou compare costs -

without hassleor worry!

Get movingwith classified!

KINGSTON

REDUCED!!

177 Third Ave.Neat as a pin! 3

bedroom, 2.5baths, end unit

 townhome with nice fenced yard. Bright

Spacious kitchen,main level family 

room, deck w/ retractable awning.

Gas heat/centralair, pull down attic  for storage and 1car garage. Very affordable town-

home in great cen- tral location!MLS 11-1282$134,500

Mark R. Mason570-331-0982CROSSIN REAL

ESTATE570-288-0770

KINGSTON

Stately brick 2-story eaturing formal liv-

ing room with fire-place, formal diningroom, modern cher-ry kitchen, knotty pine study, spaciousamily room, sun-

roo m, c om pu terroom, TV room, 4bedrooms, 5 baths.Finished basement.Hardwood floors inliving room, diningroom, bedrooms & study. Lovely fenced

  yard, 1 car garage.  Well built steel con-structed home in agreat location!

$339,000MLS#11-2250

Call Ruthie(570) 714-6110

Smith HouriganGroup

570-287-1196

LAFLIN

5 Fairfield DriveMotivated seller!Move right in just in

  time to entertain for the holidays in this

3 bedroom 2.5 bathhome in a private

setting. Prepare for the festivities in this

spacious gourmetkitchen with stain-

less steel appli-ances and Subzero

refrigerator. Yourguests can enjoy  the spectacularview of the Westmountains. Must

see to appreciateall of the amenities

 this home has to offer.For more info and

photos visit:www.atlas

realtyinc.comMLS 11-1686$314,900

Call Keri570-885-5082

906 Homes for Sale

LAKE NUANGOLALance Street

 Very comfortable2 bedroom home in

move in condition.Great sun room,large yard, 1 car

garage. Deededlake access.$135,000

Call KathieMLS # 11-2899

(570) 288-6654

LARKSVILLE

111 Falcon DriveBrand new since

2004, 3 bedrooms,2 baths, central air,2 car garage, shed,

6 car driveway.Roof, kitchen, fur-nace, a/c unit and

master bath allreplaced. Modernkitchen with granite

island, tile floors,maple cabinets.

Fireplace in family room, large closets,

modern baths.Stamped concrete

patio. For moreinformation and

photos visitwww.atlas 

realtyinc.com MLS #11-1166

$279,900Call Tom

570-262-7716

LUZERNE

4 bed, 1 1/2 bath.  WOW - Talk about

C ha rm ! S ta in edg las s w in do ws ,HUGE rooms, beau-

iful woodwork andw oo d fl oo rs p lu sstorage. Nice 162s q f t e nc lo se dporch, 1886 sq ft.Massive storageunit outback, can beconverted to a mul-

i p le c ar g arage .Endless possibilitieshere. Just needs theright person to loveit back to life. MLS11-3282. $139,900.Call/text for Details.

Donna Cain570-947-3824

LINEUP A SUCCESSFULSALE

INCLASSIFIED!Doyouneedmorespace? A yard or garage sale

in classified

is the best waytocleanoutyour closets!You’re in bussiness

with classified!

MOOSICFurnished home.

Greenwood Section3 Bedroom ranch,w el l m ai n tai ne d.Furniture and appli-an ce s i n cl u de d.Beautiful neighbor-hood & yard.$145,000 negotiable

Call 570-430-7017

MOUNTAIN TOP

257 Main Road S2 bedroom Ranch.

Large rear yard.Hardwood floors!

Large eat-inkitchen. Large living

room with hard-wood and family 

room with carpet.New roof in 2011!

Ideal starter home.MLS#11-1966

$119,000Call Jim Graham at

570-715-9323

MOUNTAIN TOP

35 Patriot CircleInterior unit with

oak laminate on 1st floor. Rear deck 

 faces the woods!MLS#11-1986

$106,000Call Jim Graham at

570-715-9323

906 Homes for Sale

MOUNTAIN TOP460 S. Mtn

Blvd.

NEW PRICE$221,900

CrestwoodSchool District

Large well cared  for home! 4 bed-ro om s, to ns o f storage.Cozy fam-i ly r oo m w it hmasonry, fireplacewith gas insert. 4zone efficient gas,how water base-board heat!Hardwood floors,huge kitchen withc en te r i sl an d.L ar ge p ri va te

  yard, backs up tow oo d s. Larg e Lshaped deck over-looking an 18x36,solar heated, in-ground pool, andpool house withbar! Replacementwindows, archi-

 tectural shingleroof. Convenient

 to Rt 309, 80 & 81,move in ready!

MLS# 11-382Call Michael Pinko

(570) 899-3865

Smith Hourigan

Group570-474-6307

MOUNTAIN TOP

66 Patriot CircleThis 3 bedroom, 1.5bath TOWN HOUSE is

in excellent move incondition in a very 

quiet subdivisionclose to town. It isbeing offered fully 

 furnished, decorat-ed and appointed.This TOWN HOUSE is

in the desirableCrestwood School

District and is close to shopping,

restaurants, fitnesscenters and more!Preview this home

www.66patriotcircle.comor call for details.

(267) 253-9754

MOUNTAIN TOP

72 Fieldstone Way Stunning 4 bed-room 2 story! 2

story family room fireplace. Granitekitchen, stainlesssteel appliances,

new sprinkler sys- tem, dining room

and living roomhardwood, 2.5

bath. Nice yard.MLS#11-492

$348,000Call Jim Graham at

570-715-9323

Doyou needmorespace?

 A yard or garage salein classifiedis the best way

tocleanout yourclosets!You’re in bussiness

with classified!

MOUNTAIN TOP

N EW L IS TI NG –N es tl ed o n j us tunder an acre justminutes from 81S

his colonial offers2194 sq. ft. of livingarea plus a finishedbasement. Enjoy 

  your summere ve n in gs o n th ewrap around porchor take a quick dip in

he above groundpool with tier deck.The covered pavil-ion is ideal for pic-nics or gatherings

 And when the winterwinds blow cuddlein front of the gasireplace and enjoy 

a quiet night. Priceo sell, $185,900

 Ann Marie Chopick 570-760-6769

(570) 288-6654

MOUNTAINTOP129 Timberwood Dr.

4-5 bedrooms, 2.5baths. 4,500 abovegr ou nd s q. f t.

  Whirlpool tub, mas-

e r s ui te ( app rox  650 sq. ft.) 2 story grand foyer with oak s tai rcas e, h ard -wood floors, formaldining room. Greatroom has cathedralc ei l in g an d fi re -place. Library, deck,3 car garage,security system.$595,000

More info at:forsalebyowner.com 

List # 20712604 570-474-2993

906 Homes for Sale

MOUNTAINTOP

29 Valley View Dr.R ais ed ranc h o ncorner lot. Spacious

w o c ar g ar ag el e ad s to fi ni sh edlower level. Modernkitchen & bath, tile

loors. MLS#11-2500$199,900

Call Julio Caprari:570-592-3966

MOUNTAINTOP

OPEN HOUSEMOVING SALESaturday 9/24

  from 3 to 4 pmSunday 9/25

 from 11am-2pmModern bi-level, 3bedroom, 1.5 bath,

ile kitchen and bathloor. New appli-

a nc es , g as h otwater furnace andarchitectural roof.Family room, 3-sea-son room and deck.2 car garage, large

  yard. Move-in con-dition. Convenientlocation. Reduced

o $225,000 OBO.Call (570) 403-6252or (570) 823-7540.

Let the Community Know!

Place your Classified Ad TODAY!

570-829-7130

MOUNTAIN TOP

130 CHURCH ROADThe feel of a truecolonial home withdouble entry doorsoff the foyer into theliving room and din-ing room. Spaciouskitchen breakfastarea, family room

leading to a fencedrear yard. 3-seasonroom with cathedralceiling. Hardwood

loors, fireplace,recently remodeled2.5 bath and 2-cargarage. Located on3.77 acres, all theprivacy of country l i vi ng y et c on ve -n i en tly l oc ate d.MLS#11-2600

$187,500Jill Jones 696-6550

NANTICOKE25 Shea StreetNEW LISTING 

SUNDAY - SEPT. 251PM - 3PM25 SHEA ST

(left on prospect, Lon State, L on Shea)CAPE ANN: Large& Brig ht, 3 b ed -r oo ms , e at -i nki tc he n , CarraraGlass Bathroom,F in is he d L ow erLevel, Family Room(knotty pine) withBAR. Oil heat, very large lot. Estate.

  View the mountainsr om t he f ro nt

porch. #11-2970$99,000Go ToThe Top... Call

JANE KOPPREAL ESTATE

570-288-7481

NANTICOKE

414 E. Grove Street3 bedroom, 1 bath,

2 story with off street parking,

backyard, new oil furnace, windows,

wiring, kitchen,bath, flooring & paint. Excellent

condition. $88,500.Sellers pays 1st

 year property tax.Call Bill Remey @

570-714-6123

906 Homes for Sale

NANTICOKEHoney Pot Section

207 Garfield St

Nice double block in Honey Pot sec-

  tion of Nanticoke.2 car garage, cov-

e re d p at io , o ff  s tre et p arki ng .Each side has 3Bedrooms. 1 sideh as upd at edki tc he n an d 1. 5b ath s. Us ed assingle family, canb e 2 uni ts b y  removing doors.

NEW PRICE! $56,900 

MLS# 11-2202Call Michael Pinko

(570) 899-3865

Smith HouriganGroup

570-474-6307

  P  E  N  D  I  N  G

NANTICOKE

Rear 395 E. Washington St.

2 family home with2 bedrooms each

side, separate utili- ties, great income

earning potential.One side occupied,

one available  for rent. For more

info and photosvisit: www.atlas

realtyinc.comMLS 11-2425

$59,900Call Colleen

570-237-0415

Need to rent that Vacation property?

Place an ad andget started!

570-829-7130

NANTICOKEVERY CUTE HOME2 bedrooms, 1

bath room, off-street parking,

well maintained,natural woodwork,

hardwood floors,new carpet,

kitchen floor, dropin stove, large

deck, new heatingsystem.

$33,000.570-902-5244

NEW COLUMBUS19 Academy St

Peaceful living witheasy drive to town.

Beautifully main- tained 3Bedroom

Ranch on 1.5 acres,2 car garage, gas

 fireplace, hard-

woods, largedeck... Lots to see.Call today for a pri-

vate showing.MLS 10-3480

$138,700Five Mountains

Realty 570-542-2141

NOXEN

PRICED TO SELL!Bric k ranc h w ithlarge living room, 3b ed ro om s, s unroo m, d ec k, fu llbasement, shedsand garage on 0.54ac re s i n No xe n.$139,500.

Jeannie Brady ERA BRADY 

 ASSOCIATES570-836-3848

NOXEN

SPACIOUSCOLONIAL

T otall y u pd ate dh om e w ith e xtralarge living room, 4suites, family roomand screen porchconveniently locat-e d o n M ai n S t.Noxen. $187,000.

Jeannie Brady ERA BRADY 

 ASSOCIATES570-836-3848

 Wanna make yourcar go fast? Placean ad in Classified!

570-829-7130.

 Wanna make yourcar go fast? Placean ad in Classified!570-829-7130.

LINEUP ASUCCESSFULSALE

INCLASSIFIED!Doyouneedmorespace? A yard or garage sale

in classifiedis the best way

tocleanoutyourclosets!You’re in bussiness

with classified!

8/4/2019 Times Leader 09-22-2011

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/times-leader-09-22-2011 40/45

8/4/2019 Times Leader 09-22-2011

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/times-leader-09-22-2011 41/45

PAGE 12D THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com

906 Homes for Sale

PITTSTON TWP.

STAUFFER POINT42 Grandview Drive

NEW PRICE

better than new endunit condo, with 1st

loor master bed-room and bath, Liv-ing room with gasireplace, hardwoodloors in living, din-

ing room & kitchen,granite countertopsand crown moldingin kitchen, with sep-arate eating area,l st fl oo r l aun d ry ,h eated s u nroo mwith spectacularview, 2 additionalbedrooms, full bathand loft on the 2ndloor, 2 car garage,

gas heat and cen-ral air, priced to sell

$274,500 MLS 11-2324

call Lu-Ann602-9280

additional photosand information can

be found on ourweb site, www.

atlasrealtyinc.com

LINE UP

 A GREAT DEAL...IN CLASSIFIED!Looking for the right dealon an automobile?Turn to classified.It’s a showroom in print!Classified’s gotthe directions!

PITTSTON TWP.

Sunday, Sept. 2511 am-1 pm

HIGH & DRY 20 Fairlawn Drive

STAUFFER

HEIGHTS RANCH,containing 2,300

sq. ft. finishedspace on lot

100x90. Unique1960’s home – hasbedrooms on mainlevel & living area

below. Featureslarge, eat in

kitchen. Sideentrance to main

level room createspossibility for in

home office.New Price$115,000.

MLS #10-4198Call Pat McHale

570-613-9080

PLAINS1610Westminster Rd

DRASTIC 

REDUCTION 

Gorgeous estatelike property withlog home plus 2

story garage on 1acres with many 

outdoor features.Garage. For more

info and photosvisit: www.atlas

realtyinc.comMLS# 11-319$300,000

Call Charles

PLAINSK EYSTONE SECTION

9 Ridgewood Road

TOTAL BEAUTY

1 ACRE- PRIVACYBeautiful ranch 2bedrooms, 1 bath,attic for storage,washer, dryer & 2ai r c on di tio ne rsincluded. NewR oof & F urnaceFurnished or unfur-nished.

Low Taxes! Newprice $118,500

570-885-1512

PLAINS

PENDING

17 N. Beech Road(N. on Main St.,

Plains, turn right inBirchwood Hills and

onto Beech Rd,House on right)Lovely updated

Ranch home with 3bedrooms, 1 bath. 1

car garage in thevery desirable

Birchwood Hillsdevelopment. Elec-

 tric heat, newerroof, great curb

appeal. Huge fenced in back yard

with new shed,plenty of closets

and storage.www.atlas

realtyinc.comMLS 11-3003

$139,900Call Keri Best

570-885-5082

906 Homes for Sale

PLAINS TOWNHOMECompletely remod-eled In quiet plains

neighborhood.2 bedroom, 1.5

bath. with finishedbasement/3rd bed-

room. Hardwood floors, central air,

electric heat,new roof & 

appliances.$118,000

Motivated Seller!(570) 592-4356

PLYMOUTH

1 Willow St. Attractive bi-levelon corner lot with

private fend in yard.3-4 bedrooms and1.5 baths. Finishedlower level, officeand laundry room

MLS 11-2674$104,900

Jay A. CrossinExt. 23

CROSSIN REALESTATE

570-288-0770

PLYMOUTH

161-63 Orchard St Well cared for dou-ble block – 6/3/1 oneach side. Live inone side and let a

 tenant pay yourmortgage.

$59,900MLS #11-2174

Call Pat McHale570-613-9080

PLYMOUTH6 Mooney Road

M ob i le h o me o npermanent founda-

ion with basement& built-in garage.Two parking areas,rear patio. Pleasantroad off the beatenpath. 11-3372

$36,000Call Betty atCentury 21

Smith HouriganGroup

570-287-1196ext 3559

or 570-714-612

Find Something?Lose Something?

Get it back where itbelongs

with a Lost/Found ad!570-829-7130

PLYMOUTH

Don’t miss this spa-cious 2 story, with a17 x 11 Living room,ormal dining room,

eat in kitchen plus ½b ath o n th e fi rst

loor & 2 bedrooms& bath on 2nd floor.Extras include anenclosed patio anda detached garage.Reasonably pricedat REDUCED! 

$34,900.MLS 11-2653

 Ann Marie Chopick 570-760-6769

570-288-6654

PRINGLE372 Hoyt Street

This two story homeh as 4 b ed roo ms

with space to grow.First floor has gash e at an d s ec on d

loor has electrich ea t. O ff s tr ee tparking for one inback of home.

MLS 11-640$59,900

Call KarenColdwell Banker 

Rundle Real Estate570-474-2340

906 Homes for Sale

PRINGLE

Sunday, Oct-212:30pm-2:00pm

Broad Street

HIGH & DRY Solid, meticulous,

1500 S.F., brick ranch, containing 6rooms, 3 bedrooms

and 1 full bath on the main level and

  full bath in base-ment, situated on1.03 Acres. NEW 

kitchen with granitecounter tops, wood

cabinetry, newstove, dishwasher,

microwave, tiled  floors. Bath has

new tile floor and tub surround, dou-ble vanity and mir-rors. Lower level

has summerkitchen, full bath

and large, dry-walled area. Over-size, 2 car garage/ 

workshop andshed. Property has

been subdividedinto 4 lots. Call Pat

 for the details.$249,900.Pat McHale

(570) 613-9080

Looking for thatspecial placecalled home?Classified will addressYour needs.Open the doorwith classified!

SCRANTON1504 Euclid Ave

Charming 3 bed-room, 2 1/2 bath,o versi z ed 2 c argarage built in 2004i n t he b ea ut if ulTripps Park Devel-opment in Scranton.Mo de rn e at -i nkitchen with maplecabinets, tiled floor,center island andFrench doors lead-ing out to large deck o verl oo kin g th e

enced yard. Newhardwood floors in

h e fami l y roo m.Formal living anddining rooms. Mas-

er bedroom withm as ter b ath an dwalk-in closet. 2ndloor laundry 

MLS 11-1841$259,000

Marilyn K SnyderReal Estate

570-825-2468

SHAVERTOWN200 Woodbine Road

Distinctive 2 story.Outstanding outsidean d i n . Be au tifu lbrick paver drive-way and walkway l e ad i n to a g ran doyer with oak stair-

case. Hardwoodsand marble floors

hroughout. Retreato a fu ll f i ni s he d

b as em en t w it hstone fireplace, wetb ar an d fu ll b ath .D ec k, p at io a ndsprinkler system.

MLS 11-1463$429,900

Call Arlene Warunek 570-650-4169

Smith HouriganGroup

(570) 696-1195

SHAVERTOWN

4 Genoa LaneThere is much

attention to detail in this magnificent 2

story, 4 bedroom, 2  full bath all brick home on doublecorner lot. Large family room withbrick fireplace, all

oak kitchen withbreakfast area,

master suite, solidoak staircase to

name a few.MLS #11-3268

$525,000Jay A. Crossin

Ext. 23CROSSIN REAL

ESTATE570-288-07770

SHAVERTOWN58 Longdale Ave

New Construction1,980 SF. 2 story, 3bedroom, 2.5 bath,large kitchen, laun-

dry room, livingroom, family room,dining room, 2 car

garage, front porch& rear deck. Large

70’x225’ flat lot.$245,000

Call (570) 674-5173

906 Homes for Sale

SHAVERTOWN

E xq ui s ite 4 b e d-r oom 2 st or y.Formal living roomwith floor to ceilingb ric k fi re pl ace .Formal dining room.

B ea ut if ul e at i nkitchen with cherry cabinetry, granitecounters & stainlesssteel appliances.Stunning customstaircase. Mastersuite with ash hard-wood floors, his & her closets & pri-v at e b al co ny.M aste r b ath w i thc he rr y v an it y &  granite counters.S pac io us 2 4x 28

ami l y ro om w i thentertainment unit & bar. Office with built-ins. Sunroom. 3 cargarage. Completely updated and wellm ain tai ne d . T hi shome is convenient-ly located on 2.5park like acres justminutes from theCross Valley. Call for

  your appointmentoday! $519,000.

MLS#11-2008Call Ruthie

(570) 714-6110

Smith HouriganGroup

570-287-1196

SHICKSHINNY17 Main Road

REDUCED

Lovely Country set-ing for the cute Bi-

Level on 5.34 acres.Property features 4Be dro om s, 1.75baths, living room,kitchen, family room& l aun d ry ro om .Plus 2 car attachedgarage, 30' X 35'detached garageand 14' X 28' shed.

MLS 11-1335$210,000

Five MountainsRealty 

570-542-2141

SHICKSHINNY

Completely remodeled 3 bed-

room, 1.75 bathbrick & aluminumranch on over 4

acres with Pond.New stainless steel

appliances, 2 carattached and 1 car

built-in garage,paved driveway,

open front porch,3 season room,rear patio, brick 

 fireplace & property goes to a stream

in the back.PRICE REDUCED

$179,900MLS# 10-4716

Five MountainsRealty 

570-542-2141

SPRING BROOK TWP

6 Williams St.Great value for the

price on quietstreet which is

closed to all mainroads is a must

see. Also comeswith homewarranty.

MLS 10-3210$157,900

Thomas Bourgeois516-507-9403

CLASSICPROPERTIES

570-842-9988

SWEET VALLEY23 Wesland Avenue

Immaculate 2 story home in nice areawith kitchen, livingroom, dining room,amily room, laundry 

& 3 /4 b ath o n 1stloor. 4 Bedrooms,ull bath & walk-in

closet on 2nd floor.Plus new roof, 2 tierdeck, 2 car garage,paved driveway & above ground pool.

MLS 11-1526$230,000

Five MountainsRealty 

570-542-2141

SWEET VALLEY570 Grassy Pond Rd

Ni ce Co un try Bi -

Level on 40 acreswith 3 bedrooms,1.5 baths, kitchen,living room, family room, office & laun-d ry r oo m. P lu sattached oversized2 car garage withw or ks ho p, r ea rdeck & 3 sheds.

MLS 11-1094$319,900

Five MountainsRealty 

570-542-2141

906 Homes for Sale

SWOYERSVILLE

120 Barber St.Nice Ranch home,

great neighbor-hood.

MLS 11-3365$109,000Call David

Krolikowski570-288--0770CROSSIN REAL

ESTATE570-288-0770

SWOYERSVILLE

171 Oliver St. Very well main-

 tained 2 story home. 3 bedrooms

and a bath with gasheat. Front roomwas former store

 front which wouldmake a nice size family room/den!Many possibilities

MLS 11-1451$74,000

Mark R. Mason570-331-0982CROSSIN REAL

ESTATE570-288-0770

SWOYERSVILLE

Estate. Nice brick ront ranch home on

a corner lot. 1 carattached garage,c i rc l e d rive way,central air. 2 bed-rooms, 1 full bathwith 2 showers, Fullb as em en t w it hb ran d n e w w ate rp roo fin g s ys tem

hat includes a war-ranty. Great loca-

ion. MLS 11-2127$115,500

Call/text for Details.Donna Cain

570-947-3824

THORNHURST

  A Great home in aGreat Community Thornhurst Country Club Es ClubhouseGolf with all day play or only $10, tennis

courts and outdoorp oo l . T h is h o meb ac ks u p t o PA  State Game lands.T hi s h om e i s a nEasy commute to

  Wilkes-Barre andScranton close to allmajor highways.This is a must seecustom made homewith Three Bathsand 4 Bedroom. Formore information go

 to HomesInThe 

Poconos.com 

$165,000Thomas Bourgeois

516-507-9403Classic Properties

570-842-9988ext 1412

WANAMIE

PRICE REDUCED!950 Center St.

Unique property. Well maintained - 2

story 10 year oldset on 3.56 acres.

Privacy galore, polebarn 30x56 heated

 for storage of equipment, cars orboats. A must see

property. GEO Ther-mal Heating Sys-

 tem.Only 10 minutes  from interstate 81 & 

15 minutes to turn-pike. MLS#10-3802

$249,900Call Geri

570-696-0888

Let the Community Know!

Place your Classified Ad TODAY!

570-829-7130

WAPWALLOPEN359 Pond Hill

Mountain Road

T hi s 4 b ed ro omh om e fe atu re s agreat yard with over2 acres of property.S itu ate d ac ro ssrom a playground.

Needs some TLCb ut c om e take alook, you wouldn’twant to miss out.There is also a pond

at the far end of thep ro pe rt y t ha t i su se d b y a ll s ur -rounding neighbors.T hi s i s an e stateand is being sold asis. No sellers prop-erty disclosure. Willentertain offers ino rd er t o s et tl eestate. MLS 11-962

$64,900Call Karen

Coldwell Banker Rundle Real Estate

570-474-2340

906 Homes for Sale

WEST HAZLETON

100 Warren St16,000 sq. ft. com-mercial building withwarehouse / offices.G re at l o catio n. 1block west of Route

93. Approx. 3 milesrom 80/81 intersec-ion. Many possibili-ies for this proper-

  y--storage lockers;lea market; game/ 

entertainment cen-e r; l aun dro mat;

auto garage.$119,000

Call Karen atCentury 21 SelectGroup - Hazleton

570-582-4938

WEST PITTSTON2 FAMILY HOME

3 bedroom, bath,kitchen, living, din-

ing room each side.Recently remod-

eled. Quiet neigh-borhood. Did not

receive any waterdamage at all. NoRealtors, please.

$87,500570-945-7423

Leave A Message

WEST PITTSTON

225 Race StreetCompletely reno-

vated 2 story home.New kitchen with all

new appliances,new bathrooms,

new windows, new flooring throughout.

Priced underappraised value!

Seller is husband of Licensed AgentMLS # 11-3078

$140,000(570) 288-1444

Shopping for anew apartment?

Classified letsyou compare costs -

without hassleor worry!

Get movingwith classified!

WEST PITTSTON322 SALEM ST.

REDUCED

Great 1/2 doublelocated in nice

 West Pittston loca- tion. 3 bedrooms,

new carpet. Verticalblinds with all appli-ances. Screened inporch and yard. For

more informationand photos visit

www.atlasrealtyinc.comMLS#10-1535

$49,900Charlie VM 101

WEST PITTSTON

OPEN HOUSEOPEN HOUSESUN. 12-5

232 North StreetCompletely remod-eled two story homewith, 2 bedroom & 1 .5 b at hs . N ewkitchen, bath, car-pet, tile, hardwoods,a ll a pp li an ce s,including washer & d ry er i n u ps tai rsbath. This is an awe-s om e h o me w ithlots of extra ameni-

ies, large closetspace, driveway,nice yard and neigh-borhood. $139,900with $5,000 down,inancing at 4.5% 30

  yrs, monthly pay-me nt o f $ 87 5.(Owner financingavailable also.)

Call Bob at570-654-1490

WEST WYOMING

292 W. 3rd St.Charming Ranch ingreat location with

7 rooms, 3 bed-rooms, finishedbasement, sun-

room, central air.Newer roof and

windows, hardwood floors. For moreinfo and photosvisit: www.atlas

realtyinc.comMLS 11-2946

REDUCED$119,900Call Tom

570-262-7716

906 Homes for Sale

WEST WYOMING438 Tripp St

OPEN HOUSESunday 12pm-5pm

Completely remod-e le d h om e w it he veryth in g n ew .New kitchen, baths,b ed ro om s, t il e

loors, hardwoods,granite countertops,al l n ew s tai n le sssteel appliances,refrigerator, stove,microwave, dish-washer, free stand-ing shower, tub for

w o, h ug e d e ck,large yard, excellentneighborhood$154,900 (30 yearloan @ 4.5% with 5%down; $7,750 down,$785/month)

570-654-1490

WILKES-BARE

Nice home, greatprice. 3 bedrooms, 1

bath, wood floors,off street parking,

  Approx 1312sq ft.Currently rented out

or $550 monthly,no lease. Keep it asan investment ormake this your newhome. MLS 11-3207

$46,000Call/text for Details.

Donna Cain570-947-3824

WILKES-BARRE100 Darling St

Nice tow bedroomsingle, gas heat,e nc l os ed p orc h,enced yard. Closeo downtown & col-

leges. Affordable at$42,500. Call  Town & Country Real Estate Co.570-735-8932570-542-5708

WILKES-BARRE

100 Solomon St.Beautiful split levelin quiet neighbor-

hood. 3 bedrooms,1.5 baths, rec roomw/wet bar and fam-

ily room w/access to laundry room.

Pristine hardwood floors throughoutmain level. Large fenced yard andscreened porch.

Priced to sell!MLS 11-3354

$122,500Debbie McGuire

570-332-4413

CROSSIN REALESTATE

570-288-0770

WILKES-BARRE

122 Oak Street Very nice oak 

kitchen with tile floor! Fenced in

 yard. 3 nice sizebedrooms. Large

living room andlarge dining room +

2 modern bathswith tile & pedestal

sink! Nice neighbor-hood! Built-in win-

dow seats in middlebedroom. Rear

shed - 4 window airconditioners.MLS#11-2481

$119,500Call Jim Graham at

570-715-9323

WILKES-BARRE129& 131Matson AveD ou b le Blo c k, 6ro om s + b ath o neach side. $79,000

Call 570-826-1743

WILKES-BARRE

134 Brown StreetNicely remodeled,spacious 2-story 

with attachedgarage on corner

lot. Modern, eat-inkitchen with stain-

less steel appli-ances; large lower

level Theatre Roomand additional recroom with dry bar

and 5th bedroom.Newer roof, mostly newer replacementwindows & gas fur-nace. MLS# 11-1817

Owner says'just sell it'!

REDUCED $99,900Call Steve Shemo

(570) 288-1401(570) 793-9449

906 Homes for Sale

WILKES-BARRE

156 Sherman StreetHANDYMAN SPE-CIAL. Extra Largeduplex with 7 bed-rooms, 2 baths, fire-p lac e, s cree n edporch, full basementand 2 car garage ondouble lot in Wilkes-Barre City. $59,500

ERA BRADY  ASSOCIATES

570-836-3848

Looking for the right dealon an automobile?Turn to classified.It’s a showroom in print!Classified’s gotthe directions!

WILKES-BARRE164 Madison Street

S po tle ss 3 b e d-r oo m, 1 .5 b at hh om e w ith h ard -wood floors, stainedglass, and modernkitchen in move-incondition. 11-2831

$79,900

Marilyn K SnyderReal Estate

570-825-2468

WILKES-BARRE

231 Poplar St.Nice 3 bedroomhome in move-in

condition.Hardwood floors in

living & diningroom. Upgraded

appliances includingstainless double

oven, refrigerator & dishwasher. Great

storage spacein full basement& walk-up attic.

REDUCED PRICE$75,000

MLS# 10-4456Barbara Young

Call 570-466-6940

COLDWELL BANKER,RUNDLE REAL ESTATE570-474-2340

Ext. 55

WILKES-BARRE241 Dana Street

S paci o us 3 b e d-room, 1.5 baths with

extured ceilings,updated kitchen, allappliances includingdishwasher, tiledbath with whirlpool

ub, 2nd floor laun-dry room. Replace-ment windows.

Drastic Reduction$60,000

MLS# 11-88Call Arlene Warunek 

570-650-4169

Smith HouriganGroup

(570) 696-1195

WILKES-BARRE

26-28-30Blackman Street

Nice investment tri-plex conveniently 

located on busroute close to

schools. Grossesover $3,000/month!Separate gas, elec-  tric & water; park-

ing for 10+ cars.MLS#11-423

Call Steve Shemo(570) 288-1401

(570) 793-9449

WILKES-BARRE

35 Murray St.Large well kept 6bedroom home in

quiet neighborhood.Off street parking,

good size back  yard. Owner very motivated to sell.

MLS 10-3668$79,900

Call Don Crossin570-288-0770CROSSIN REAL

ESTATE570-288-0770

WILKES-BARRE382 Parrish St

3 Bed roo m 1 1/2baths with naturalw oo dw or k a ndstained glass win-dows throughout.

MLS 10-4382$49,900

Marilyn K SnyderReal Estate

570-825-2468

906 Homes for Sale

WILKES-BARRE382 Parrish Street

3 bedroom, 1 1/2baths with natural

woodwork andstained glass win-dows throughout.

MLS 10-4382$45,000Marilyn K Snyder

Real Estate570-825-2468

WILKES-BARRE

39 W. Chestnut St.Lots of room in thissingle with 3 floors

of living space. 3bedrooms, 1 bath

with hardwood floors throughout,natural woodwork,

all windows havebeen replaced,

laundry/pantry off of kitchen. 4x10 entry  foyer, space for 2

additional bed-rooms on the 3rd

 floor. Roof is new.MLS 11-325

$69,900

Jay A. Crossin570-288-0770Ext. 23

CROSSIN REALESTATE

570-288-0770

WILKES-BARRE

49 Hillard St.Great 3 bedroomhome with largemodern kitchen.

Ductless air condi- tioning on 1st floor.

Laundry on 2nd floor. Nice deck and

 fenced in yard. Off street parking for 2cards via rear alley 

MLS 11-2896$85,000

Call Shelby Watchilla

570-762-6969CROSSIN REAL

ESTATE

570-288-0770

LINEUP ASUCCESSFULSALE

INCLASSIFIED!Doyouneedmorespace? A yard or garage sale

in classifiedis the best way

tocleanoutyour closets!You’re in bussiness

with classified!

WILKES-BARRE62 Schuler St

3 bedroom, 1 3/4bath in very goodc on d iti on . Hard -wood floors

hroughout, updat-e d k it ch en a ndb at hs , n at ur alwoodwork, over-sized yard on a dou-ble lot. Off streetparking.

MLS 10-4349$79,900

Marilyn K SnyderReal Estate

570-825-2468

WILKES-BARRE62 Schuler Street

3 bedroom, 1 3/4bath in very goodc on d iti on . Hard -wood floors

hroughout, updat-e d k it ch en a ndb at hs , n at ur alwoodwork, over-sized yard on a dou-ble lot. Off streetparking. $79,900

MLS 10-4349

Marilyn K SnyderReal Estate570-825-2468

WILKES-BARRE64 West River St

Beautifully restored1890 Queen Annewith working eleva-

or loca ted in  Wilkes-Barre’s His-

oric District. Built by Fred Kirby. Close toRiverfront Parks andDowntown shopsand restaurants.This architecturalgem has six bed-ro om s & 5 b ath sa nd a mo dernkitchen with granitecounters and Stain-l e ss S tee l app l i-ances. Original 2-s to ry c ar ri ag ehouse for two cars.

Hot tub included.MLS 11-2316

$349,900Marilyn K Snyder

Real Estate570-825-2468

906 Homes for Sale

WILKES-BARRE74 Frederick St

T hi s v er y n ic e 2story, 3 bedroom, 1b ath h om e h as alarge eat in kitchen

or family gather-

ings. A great walk up attic for storageand the home is inmove-in condition.

MLS 11-1612$63,900

Call KarenColdwell Banker 

Rundle Real Estate570-474-2340

WILKES-BARRE

Centrally located,his triplex is fully 

occupied and has 2bedrooms in eachunit. Nicely main-

ained with one longerm tenant on 3rdloor and off street

parking. An annualincome of $17,520makes it an attrac-

ive buy. $99,000MLS 11-825

 Ann Marie Chopick 

570-288-6654

570-760-6769

WILKES-BARRE

DOUBLE LOT IN WILKES-BARRECITY Extra large duplex with a total of 7 bed-ro om s, 2 b ath s,hardwood floors,ireplace, screened

porch, full basementand 2 car garage.$58,000.

Jeannie Brady ERA BRADY 

 ASSOCIATES

570-836-3848

WILKES-BARRE

Great price! 3 bed-ro om , 1 1/2 b ath,needs some love.High ceilings, open

l oo r p l an d ow n-stairs, extra roomupstairs for closet,o ffi ce , s torage ,whatever you need.S ub je c t to s h ortsale, bank approval.

$37,900MLS 11-3134

Call/text for Details.Donna Cain

570-947-3824

WILKES-BARRENOW REDUCED!

191 Andover St.Lovely single family 

3 bedroom homewith lots of space.Finished 3rd floor,

balcony porch off of 2nd floor bedroom,

gas hot air heat,central air and

much more.Must see!

MLS 11-59$66,000

Jay A. Crossin570-288-0770

Ext. 23CROSSIN REAL

ESTATE570-288-0770

Doyou needmorespace? A yard or garage sale

in classifiedis the best way

tocleanoutyour closets!You’re in bussiness

with classified!

WILKES-BARRE

REDUCED

29 Amber LaneRemodeled 2 bed-room Ranch home

with new carpeting,large sun porch,new roof. Move

right in! For moreinfo and photos

please visit:www.atlas

realtyinc.comMLS 11-749

$79,900

Call Colleen570-237-0415

 Wanna make yourcar go fast? Placean ad in Classified!

570-829-7130.

Need a Roommate?

Place an ad and

 find one here!

570-829-7130

LINEUP A SUCCESSFULSALE

INCLASSIFIED!Doyouneedmorespace? A yard or garage sale

in classifiedis the best way

tocleanoutyourclosets!You’re in bussiness

with classified!

Need a Roommate?

Place an ad and

 find one here!

570-829-7130

8/4/2019 Times Leader 09-22-2011

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/times-leader-09-22-2011 42/45

TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 PAGE 13D

906 Homes for Sale 906 Homes for Sale 906 Homes for Sale

906 Homes for Sale 906 Homes for Sale 906 Homes for Sale 906 Homes for Sale

342-4115 • www.nasserrealestate.com • 587-5155

NasserREAL ESTATE INC.

Since 1950 

SOUTH SCRANTON $84,900Duplex in the Minooka Section, set on a 50x150 lot. Spacious owner’sunit plus a 2 car garage. MLS#11-2878

SCRANTON $69,9003 bedroom ranch in Tripp Park. Features include eat-in kitchen withbuilt-ins, appliances. Roof and mechanics are in good condition.MLS#11-3966

OFFICENTERS - Pierce St., Kingston

 Professional Office RentalsFull Service Leases • Custom Design • Renovations • Various Size SuitesAvailable

Medical, Legal, Commercial • Utilities • Parking • Janitorial

Full Time Maintenance StaffAvailable

 For Rental Information Call: 1-570-287-1161

906 Homes for Sale

WILKES-BARRE

REDUCED

29 Amber LaneRemodeled 2 bed-room Ranch home

with new carpeting,large sun porch,new roof. Move

right in! For moreinfo and photos

please visit:www.atlas

realtyinc.comMLS 11-749

$79,900Call Colleen

570-237-0415

WILKES-BARRE SOUTH

2 story Brick, Stuc-co & Wood home.G as b as eb oa rdheat. 3 bedrooms, 11/2 bath. Beautifulhardwood floors.

Semi-modernkitchen. Lower-level

ami l y ro om w ithi re pl ac e. N ew,

lower price! 11-2987$79,900

BESECKERREALTY 

570-675-3611

LINE UP A GREAT DEAL...IN CLASSIFIED!Looking for the right dealon an automobile?Turn to classified.It’s a showroom in print!Classified’s gotthe directions!

WILKES-BARRETo settle Estate 

314 HORTON STREET

SATURDAY, SEPT 24

1PM TO 3PM  Wonderful Family Home, 6 rooms (3b ed roo ms ), 1 1/2baths, two-story,Li vi n g ro om w ithbuilt-in Bookcase,ormal Dining Room

w ith e ntran ce todelightful porch.Eat-in kitchen. Pri-vate lot, detachedgarage. A must seehome. MLS 11-2721

  Asking $75,000GO TO THE TOP...

CALL 

JANE KOPPREAL ESTATE570-288-7481 

WILKES-BARRE TOWNSHIPD ou bl e b lo ck , 3b ed roo ms . S un -room, kitchen, din-ing room & parlor.Oil heat, baseboard,water. Driveway & garage. 50x150 footlot fen ced i n.$25,000 + closing.Call 570-822-2382

WILKES-BARRE

McLean St.Large home featur-ing 2200SF of livingspace Hardwoodloors on first, new

carpeting on sec-ond. Modern eat-inkitchen with laundry,3 to 4 bedrooms,

enced rear yard,

gas heat.MLS#11-2659$86,500

Maribeth Jones570-696-6565

WILKES-BARRE

MINERS MILLS SECTION

Business commer-cial zoning (previ-

ous dental office) & gracious attached

home with updatedroof, furnace, waterheater and kitchen.Hardwood and pine

 floors, 3 bedrooms,large living roomand formal dining

room, 1-car garage& carport. MLS#11-1009 Reduced to

$102,000Maribeth Jones570-696-6565

906 Homes for Sale

WYOMING

26 Bubblo St. Absolutely beautiful

renovation. This 3bedroom, 1 bath

Cape Cod has it all.New roof and

kitchen with stain-less appliances,bath, flooring, doors

windows 1st floorlaundry, paint inside

and out. High effi-ciency hot air fur-nace and central

air. Extremely effi-cient home, newly insulated through-

out. Nice deck andnewly landscaped

 yard to enjoy. Noth-ing to do but move your stuff right in

MLS 11-3318$134,900

Mark R. Mason570-331-0982CROSSIN REAL

ESTATE570-288-0770

WYOMING364 Susquehanna

 Avenue

  Are you waiting forhe Perfect Ranch?

This home has Per-ect Everything! 3

bedrooms, 2 NEW b ath s, n ew w in -d o ws , n ew roo f,modern kitchen withGranite Counter-

o p s. Hard wo odloors, New Rennai

Tankless Hot WaterSystem, SpaciousDeck with Hot Tub,

MLS 10-3671$162,000.

Joan EvansReal Estate

570-824-5763

WYOMINGFor Sale by Owner.Double Block, easily convertible to sin-gle. Kitchen, livingroom, 3 bedrooms& bath each side.New 2 car garage.66’x100’ lot. Asking$160,000. Call

570-693-2408

WYOMING

Price Reduced -Motivated Seller!!

Nicely maintained2-story traditional in

great neighbor-hood. Modern oak 

kitchen, open layoutin family room/den

with new floors,above ground pool

in fenced rear yard.1-car detached

garage with work-shop area, all on a

nice wide lot.MLS#11-2428

$142,900Call Steve Shemo

(570) 288-1401(570) 793-9449

YATESVILLEPRICE REDUCED

12 Reid st.Spacious Bi-levelhome in semi-pri-vate location with

private back yard. 3season room. Gas fireplace in lower

level family room. 4bedrooms, garage.For more informtion

and photos visitwwww.atlas

realtyinc.comMLS 10-4740

$149,900Call Charlie

570-829-6200 VM 101

Collectcash,not dust!Clean out your

basement, garageor attic and call the

Classified depart-ment today at 570-

829-7130!

YATESVILLE

REDUCED!

61 Pittston Ave.Stately brick Ranchin private location.Large room sizes, fireplace, central

 A/C. Includesextra lot. For more

information andphotos visitwww.atlas

realtyinc.comMLS #10-3512

PRICE REDUCED$189,900

Call Charlie570-829-6200

 VM 101

909 Income &  Commercial

Properties

AVOCA

25 St. Mary’s St.3,443 sq. ft.

masonry commer-

cial building withwarehouse/officeand 2 apartments

with separate elec- tric and heat. Per-

 fect for contractorsor anyone with stor-

age needs. Formore information

and photos log ontowww.atlas

realtyinc.com.Reduced to

$89,000MLS #10-3872

Call Charlie570-829-6200

 VM 101

DUPONTINVESTMENT

OPPORTUNITY 

Single family homewith a separate

building containinga 1 bedroom apart-

ment and 5 cargarage all on 1 lot.For more info and

photos visit:www.atlas

realtyinc.comMLS 11-2828

Priced to sell at$85,000

Call Charlie570-829-6200

DURYEA

REDUCED!!!!

921 Main St.Over 2,000 S/F of 

commercial space +2 partially furnished

apartments,garage, and off street parking.

Great convenientlocation. For more

info and photosvisit: www.atlas

realtyinc.comMLS #11-1965

$167,500Call Tom

570-282-7716

EDWARDSVILLE

89-91 Hillside St.Out of the flood

plain, this doublehas potential.

Newer roof andsome windows

have beenreplaced. Property 

includes a largeextra lot.

MLS 11-3463$87,000

Call Roger NenniExt. 32

CROSSIN REALESTATE

5770-288-0770

Looking for thatspecial placecalled home?Classified will addressYour needs.Open the doorwith classified!

HAZELTON

Spacious doublew it h 6 r oo ms , 3bedrooms, 1 batheach, semi-modernkitchens & baths,separate heat ande l ec tri c , fe nc ed

  yard. Plenty of stor-age w ith w al k u pbasement. $34,500

MLS 11-1637 Ann Marie Chopick 

570-760-6769

570-288-6654

909 Income &  Commercial

Properties

KINGSTON

Wellness Center /professional

offices. LeaseSpace Available.

Bric k an d s tuc c oacade offered on

building exteriorwhile interior fea-

ures built-in officeswith natural wood-w ork and g las s.Modern style loftsallow for bonus inte-r io r s pa ce a ndwarehouse space isoffered as Built toSuit.--SPACES AVAIL-

 ABLE: 1200 SF, 1400SF, 4300 SF(Warehouse space,also offered as built

o suit)--Custom Leasesrom $8.00-$12.00/ 

square feet basedon terms.--Price/ square footnegotiable depend-ing on options. (ASK

  ABOUT OUR FREERENT)--Property ideal fora medical, business,o r p ro fe ss io na loffices.- -1 00 + P ar ki ngSpaces. Call Cindy 

570-690-2689

www.cindykingre.com

570-675-4400

NANTICOKE

423 E. Church St.Great 2 family in

move in conditionon both sides, Sep-

arate utilities, 6rooms each. 3 car

detached garage insuper neighbor-

hood. Walking dis- tance to college.For more info and

photos visit:www.atlas

realtyinc.comMLS 11-1608

$127,500Call Tom

570-262-7716

PITTSTON

118 Glendale Road Well established 8

unit Mobile HomePark (Glen MeadowMobile Home Park)in quiet country like

location, zonedcommercial andlocated right off 

Interstate 81. Con-venient to shopping

center, movie the-ater. Great incomeopportunity! Park is

priced to sell.Owner financing is

available with a

substantial downpayment. For moredetails and photos

visit www.atlas realtyinc.com MLS 11-1530$210,000

Call Kim570-466-3338

PITTSTON

35 High St.Nice duplex in greatlocation, fully occu-

pied with leases.Good investment

property. Separateutilities, newer fur-naces, gas and oil.

Notice needed toshow. For more info

and photos visit:www.atlas

realtyinc.comMLS 11-3222

$89,900Call Tom

570-262-7716

Looking to buy ahome?

Place an ad hereand let the

sellers know!570-829-7130

PITTSTONTownship Blvd.

MAKE AN OFFER!Ideal location

between Wilkes-Barre & Scranton.

 Ample parking withroom for additionalspaces. Perfect formedical or profes-

sional offices. Con- tact agent to show.

  Asking $945,000Contact Judy Rice

570-714-9230MLS# 10-1110

909 Income &  Commercial

Properties

PLAINS

107-109 E. Carey St.High traffic, high

potential locationwith enough space

 for 2 second floorapartments. A 

stones throw away  from the casino.Large front win-

dows for showroomdisplay. Basement

& sub-basement foradditional storage

or workspace.PRICE REDUCED

$110,000MLS# 10-1919

Call Stanley (570) 817-0111

Coldwell Banker Rundle Real Estate

570-474-2340

PLAINSCOMMERCIAL PROPERTY15 South River St.

Not in Flood Zone For Sale By Owner4,536 sq. ft., high

 traffic area, across from Rite-Aid, gas

heat. For more info,call 570-820-5953

PLYMOUTH

155 E Walnut St.Good investment

property knockingon your door. Don'tmiss out, come and

see for yourself. Also included in thesale of the property is the lot behind the

home. Lot size is25X75, known as

147 Cherry St.$82,000

MLS# 10-2666Call Karen

Coldwell Banker Rundle Real Estate

570-474-2340

SCRANTON

  We l l m ai n tai ne dDuplex, separateutilities, 1st floor hasan enclosed 3 sea-son patio plus fin-i sh e d b as e me ntwith summerki tc he n. M ove i nc on di ti on w it henced yard.

$76,500 Ann Marie Chopick 

570-760-6769

570-288-6654

Job Seekers arelooking here!

 Where's your ad?570-829-7130 andask for an employ-

ment specialist

SHAVERTOWN

 Woodridge II1195 Lantern Hill Rd

Prime residential2.86 acre wooded

lot with plenty of privacy. Gently 

sloping.MLS#11-1601

Call Joe Moore570-288-1401

WEST WYOMING331 Holden St

10-847

Many possibilitiesor this building. 40 +

parking spaces, 5offices, 3 baths andwarehouse.

$425,000Maria Huggler

CLASSICPROPERTIES

570-587-7000

WEST WYOMING

379-381 Sixth St.Perfect first home  for you with one

side paying most of  your mortgage.

 Would also make anice investment

with all separateutilities and nice

rents. Large fenced yard, priced to sell.

Don’t wait too long.Call today toschedule a tour.MLS 11-1453

REDUCED!!$84,900

Mark R. Mason570-331-0982

CROSS REALESTATE

570-288-0770

909 Income &  Commercial

Properties

WILKES-BARRE101 Old River Road

Duplex - “Today’sBuy, Tomorrow’sSecurity” Do you

appreciate the gen-l e f or ma li ty o f  

beamed ceilings,French style doorswith beveled glass& beautiful wood-work? Each unit: 2bedrooms, bath, liv-i ng ro om , d in i ngroo m, g as h eat.Spacious rooms.Separate utilities. 2car d et ach edgarage. 10-0920

$89,900.Joan EvansReal Estate

570-824-5763

Shopping for anew apartment?

Classified letsyou compare costs -

without hassleor worry!

Get movingwith classified!

WILKES-BARRE495-497 Grant St

Nice double block ingood condition with2 b ed ro om s o neach side. New vinylsiding. Bathroomsrecently remodeled.Roof is 2 years old.Fully rented. Ten-ants pay all utilities.MLS 11-580.$55,500

Call Darren SnyderMarilyn K Snyder

Real Estate570-825-2468

WILKES-BARRE84 Madison Street

Price Reduced

Nice duplex.Renovated 2nd floor. Great invest-

ment or convertback to single.

3 bedroom, 1 bathon 1st Floor.

2 bedroom, 1 bath2nd floor. Detached

garage.$75,000

MLS# 11-1095Call Jeff Cook 

Realty WorldBank Capital

570-235-1183

WILKES-BARREPRICE REDUCED

819 North Washington St.

2020 Sq. Ft,Commercial build-

ing on corner lotwith parking. Prime

location. Lower

level streetentrance. Close to

major highways.Lease PurchaseOption Available.

Price Reduced$145,000

MLS# 10-3225Call Jeff Cook 

Realty WorldBank Capital

570-235-1183

WYOMING

PRICE REDUCED!

285 Wyoming Ave.First floor currently 

used as a shop,could be offices,

etc. Prime location,corner lot, full base-ment. 2nd floor is 3bedroom apartment

plus 3 car garage

and parking for6 cars. For moreinformation and

photos go towww.atlas

realtyinc.comMLS #10-4339

$169,900Call Charlie

 VM 101

912 Lots & Acreage

DALLASLocated in Top

Rated DallasSchools

2 Acres $39,5005 Acres $69,900

 We challenge any-one to find similarac re age i n th isdesirable of alocation at theseprices. Costs todevelop land make

 this irreplaceableinventory at theseprices and gives

  the n e xt o wn e rinstant equity atour expense. Callowner.

570-245-6288

912 Lots & Acreage

DURYEA 

44.59 ACRES

Industrial Site. Railserved with all

utilities. KOZapproved. For more

information and

photos visitwww.atlas

realtyinc.com$2,395,000

MLS#10-669Call Charlie

Find Something?Lose Something?

Get it back where itbelongs

with a Lost/Found ad!570-829-7130

EXETER Ida Acres, Wyoming

 Area School District.6 lots remain, start-ing at $38,000. Pri-vate setting. Under-ground utilities.

570-947-4819

GOULDSBORO902 Layman Lane

  Wooded lot in BigBass Lake. Currentperc on file. Pricedbelow cost, sellersays bring all offers.MLS#10-3564. Low

price $10,000Thomas Bourgeois

516-507-9403CLASSIC

PROPERTIES570-842-9988

GOULDSBORO

  A great place for ah un tin g Cabi n o rCamper, short walk 

o s ta te g ame sl an ds . T hi s l otcomes with electricseptic and well so

ust drop off yourcamper and you areall set to go. Only $ 20 ,0 00 . V is itwww.HomesIn ThePoconos.com 

Thomas Bourgeois516-507-9403

Classic Properties570-842-9988

HARDINGLOCKVILLE RD

2.3 ACRESSacrifice $37,000.

Not perked.570-760-0049

HARVEYS LAKESELLER SAYS

SELL!Land withLake View

90' x 125' Lot with  View of the Lake.

Sewer PermitRequired. $19,000

MLS# 10-2523Call Cindy 

570-690-2689www.cindykingre.com

570-675-4400

JENKINS TWP.

Hospital St.Eagle View

Great residential lotoverlooking the

Susquehanna River for a stunning viewof the river and sur-rounding area. Build

 your dream homeon this lot with the

best river and valley views in Luzerne

County. Gas, tele-phone, electric and

water utility con-nections are

available.For more details & 

photos visit:www.atlas 

realtyinc.com MLS 11-2640

$125,000Call Kim

570-466-3338

912 Lots & Acreage

LAFLINLot#9

Pinewood Dr

BUILD YOUR 

DREAM HOMEon one of the lastavai l ab l e l ots i nd es irabl e Lafl i n.Convenient locationnear highways, air-p or t, c as in o &  shopping.DIRECTIONS Rt 315

o laflin Rd; makeleft off Laflin Rd ontoPinewood Dr. Lot ison corner of  Pinewood Dr. andHickorywood Dr.

MLS 11-3411$34,900

atlas realtyinc.comCall Keri Best

570-885-5082

Looking for the right dealon an automobile?Turn to classified.It’s a showroom in print!Classified’s gotthe directions!

LEHMAN

New Listing!Market StreetOVERLOOKING THE

HUNTSVILLE GOLFCOURSE. Own andb ui ld y ou r o wndream house over-l oo kin g th e 10thgreen at the presti-gious Huntsville Golf Course. Picturesquesetting in the Back Mountain area of Lehman. Near PennS ta te C ol le ge ,Lehman. Accessedb y M ar ke t S t. ,downtown Lehmancorner off Rt. 118 orpassed theHuntsville dam. Dri-veway in place, sep-

ic approved. All onover 1 acre of prime10th g re e n vi ewland. MLS#11-2860

$107,000Bob Cook 

570-696-6555

MOUNTAIN TOP130 CHURCH RD

Looking for land tobuild your dream

home on? 5.23acres awaits! This

wooded parceloffers 600+ feet of 

road frontage. Pub-lic water. Publicsewer available.

This parcel can alsobe perk tested for

on-lot system.MLS#11-2898

$46,900Jill Jones 696-6550

912 Lots & Acreage

MOUNTAIN TOP

333 Oakmont LaneOwner had property 

surveyed.Copiesavailable upon

request. Property was partially 

cleared for a home2-3 years agoMLS 11-3300

$39,900John Shelley 

570-288-0770CROSSIN REAL

ESTATE570-288-0770

MOUNTAIN TOP487(Lot#3)

Mountain Blvd. S Vacant commercial

land. Not yetassessed for taxes.

Map on property available with set-

backs, etc. High  traffic area. All utili-

 ties available.Call for appointment

$49,900MLS#11-1004

Call Vieve Zaroda(570) 474-6307

Ext. 2772

Smith HouriganGroup

570-474-6307

MOUNTAIN TOPCrestwood Schools!126 Acres for Sale!

Mostly wooded withapprox. 970 ft on

Rt. 437 inDennison Twp.

$459,000Call Jim Graham at

570-715-9323

MOUNTAIN TOPSeveral building lots

ready to build on! ALL public utilities!

Priced from$32,000 to

$48,000! Use yourown Builder! Call

Jim Graham at570-715-9323

Need to rent that Vacation property?

Place an ad andget started!570-829-7130

NEW PRICING!!!

EARTHCONSERVANCY 

LAND FOR SALE*61 +/- Acres

Nuangola$99,000

*46 +/- AcresHanover Twp.,

$79,000*Highway 

CommercialKOZ Hanover Twp.

3 +/- Acres11 +/- Acres

*  Wilkes-Barre Twp.32 +/- Acres

Zoned R-3See additional Land

  for Sale atwww.earth 

conservancy.org 570-823-3445

912 Lots & Acreage

NEWPORT TOWNSHIP1 mile south of L.C.C.C. 2 lots

available.100’ frontage x 228’ deep.

Modular homewith basement

accepted.Each lot $17,000.

Call570-714-1296

LINEUP ASUCCESSFULSALE

INCLASSIFIED!Doyouneedmorespace? A yard or garage sale

in classifiedis the best way

tocleanoutyourclosets!You’re in bussiness

with classified!PLAINS TWP.

14 + ACRESin an approved sub-division. Easy acc-e ss to R t 8 1 & P A Tpke. 1/2 mile fromMo hegan SunCasino. $275,000.

772-260-0901

SHAVERTOWN

1195 Lantern

Hill RoadPrime residentialwooded lot with

plenty of privacy.Gently sloping.

$150,000MLS# 11-1601

Call Joe Moore570-288-1401

SHAVERTOWN

LANDHarford Ave.

4 buildable residen-  tial lots for sale indi-

vidually or take all4! Buyer to confirm

water and sewerwith zoning officer.Directions: R. on E. Franklin, R. on 

Lawn to L. on Harford.

$22,500 per lotMark Mason

570-331-0982CROSSIN REAL

ESTATE570-288-0770

SUGAR NOTCH273 Broadhead Ave

 Wooded buildinglot. All utilities - gas

electric, sewer & cable TV. Call for

appointment$19,900

MLS# 10-2967Call Vieve Zaroda

(570) 474-6307Ext. 2772

Smith HouriganGroup

570-474-6307

Motorcycle for sale?Let them see it here

in the Classifieds!570-829-7130

Purebred Animals?Sell them here with a

classified ad!570-829-7130

Find homes for your kittens!

Place an ad here!570-829-7130

Find anewcaronline

at

timesleader.com

ONLYONE LEADER.

.

timesleader.com

Purebred Animals?

Sell them here with a

classified ad!

570-829-7130

 Wanna make yourcar go fast? Placean ad in Classified!

570-829-7130.

 Wanna make yourcar go fast? Placean ad in Classified!

570-829-7130. Say it HEREin the Classifieds!

570-829-7130

8/4/2019 Times Leader 09-22-2011

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/times-leader-09-22-2011 43/45

PAGE 14D THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com

944 CommercialProperties

FORTY FORT...PRIME

FEATURES:

HI N’ DRY!

• High Traffic, C1 Zoned.

• Commercial or Professional

• PLENTY OF PARKING

• NEW EXTERIOR:

CULTERED STONE

DRIVET, (STUCCO LOOK)

2-TONE

• NEW ROOF - 4/11

• 2 Modern offices; 1 new ‘09

• CENTRAL AIR (optional)

• FLOOD-FREE WYOMING AVE.

Call(570) 288-2195

912 Lots & Acreage

SWEET VALLEY

Mooretown Road Well and septicalready on site.

Build your home on this beautiful 2.2

acre lot. 2 car

garage on site with fruit trees, flowers,grape vines and

dog run. From Dal-las take Rt. 118 toright on Rt. 29 N,

left on MooretownRoad for about 1/2

mile, see signon left.

MLS 11-2779$59,200

Call Patty Lunski570-735-7494

Ext. 304  ANTONIK AND ASSOCIATES,

INC.570-735-7494

 WILKES-BARRE

PARTLY CLEARED

VACANT LOTS:

Lot #13,E Thomas St

 Approximately 0.57 acre

MLS #11-2616$32,000

Lot #18,E Thomas St

 Approximately 0.73 acre

MLS #11-2615$35,000

Call Jeff Cook Realty WorldBank Capital

570-235-1183

915 Manufactured

Homes

ASHLEY PARK Laurel Run & SanSouci Parks,Likenew, several to

choose from,Fin ancing &Warranty,MobileOneSales.netCall (570)250-2890

HAZLETONBeau ti ful d ou bl e

wide ranch. 3 bed-room, 2 bath, livingroom, dining room,

  fam il y ro om w ithgas fireplace. Newroof. Deck. Shed.Only 10 years old.M us t s el l d ue todivorce. Reduced to

$55,000(570) 453-1642

HUNLOCK CREEK Move in ready & 

affordable 2 bed-room located in

quiet, country set-  ting. $14,000.

Financing availablewith minimum

down.570-477-2845

HUNLOCK CREEK Quiet country set-

  ting. Lots available.$295 per month.I nc l ud es w ate r,sewer & trash. CallBud 570-477-2845

PITTSTONStay in area, out of 

 flood zone. 3bedrooms, 2baths, 10 year old

double wide, allwindow treatments,w/w carpet, central

air, kitchen appli-ances, porch furni- ture, electric grill,3/4 furnished plusmuch more, over-

sized shed & olderland Rover included

all under $64,000Call Office

570-655-2050

SPRINGBROOK 2 bedroom. Clean.

Needs no work.Remodeled

 throughout. Owner financing. $14,000.

570-851-6128 or610-767-9456

Doyou needmorespace? A yard or garage sale

in classifiedis the best way

tocleanout yourclosets!You’re in bussiness

with classified!

918 Miscellaneous for Sale

 Veteran’sBring your VA 

EntitlementCertificate

 And If You Qualify, ICan Help You Find

 And Purchase A Home In Luzerne

County!Right now there arehundreds of homeslisted in our MLS in

 this county thatmay qualify for

100% VA financing.Give me a call at

788-7511 or emailme at

[email protected]’s sit down and  talk, make a plan,

and help you get‘moving” into a

home.Dee Fields,

 Associate Broker

927 Vacation

Locations

POCONO TIMESHARE  Wo rld wi d e p riv-eleges. 1 bedroom.Furnished. 40% off.Call 845-536-3376

930 Wanted to BuyReal Estate

DALLAS WANTED TO BUY 5 or more acres in

  the Dallas SchoolDistrict. Not to bedivided - to buildour dream home.

570-510-5226570-675-9340

WE BUY HOMES  Any Situation

570-956-2385

938 Apartments/ Furnished

 WILKES-BARRE1 bedroom. Fully fur-nished. Off-streetparking. Everythingi n cl u de d! $ 50 0/ month + security & references. Ready Now! 570-328-5063

941 Apartments/ Unfurnished

ASHLEYModern 2nd floor,

2 bedrooms. Allappliances, off 

street parking. Nopets. $500 + utili-

  ties. 570-820-9606

ASHLEYSingle 1 bedroom

apartment. Off street parking. Washer dryer

hookup. Appliances.Bus stop at the

door. $550. WaterIncluded.

570-954-1992

BACK MOUNTAINSunny, spacious 1bedroom. Modernkitchen. Large din-ing room. Large liv-ing room. Privateentrance. Off streetparking. Nice views.Lawn privileges.Deep well water. Nopets. No smoking.References please.$575, heat included.

570-477-5010

DALLAS(Franklin Township)

1st floor, 2 bedroom.1 b at h. W as he rdryer hookup. Car-port. $595 + utilities,lease & security.Call after 6.

570-220-6533

DALLAS1 bedroom, near

Misericordia. Lease,security, referencesrequired. Absolutely 

no pets/no smok-ing. $495/month +

some utilities570-298-2478 or

570-417-0144

DALLAS1st floor apartment.Off street parking.Heat & Hot waterincluded. No pets.

  Available October 1.$600 / month. Call

570-675-5873

DALLAS2 bedroom. 2 story.

1.5 bath. Fridge & stove. Laundry 

hook up. Privateentrance. Deck. Off street parking for 2

cars. No pets. 1 year lease. Credit

check & referencesrequired.

$660/month.570-696-0842

Leave message.

DALLAS TWP

CONDO FOR LEASE:$1,800. 2 bedroom/ 

2 Bath. Call Us todiscuss our great

 Amenity & Mainte-nance program!

Call 570-674-5278

LINE UP A GREAT DEAL...IN CLASSIFIED!Looking for the right dealon an automobile?Turn to classified.It’s a showroom in print!Classified’s got

the directions!Dallas, Pa.MEADOWS

 APARTMENTS220 Lake St.Housing for the

elderly & mobility impaired; all utilities

included. Federally subsidized program.

Extremely lowincome personsencouraged to

apply. Income less than $12,250.570-675-6936,

8 am-4 pm, Mon-Fri.EQUAL HOUSING

OPPORTUNITY 

H ANDICAP A CCESSIBLE

EDWARDSVILLE2 apartments. Spa-cious. Each with 2b ed ro om s, 2 nd

  flo or, o ff s tre e tparking. Washer/ d ry er h oo k u p &  dishwasher, refrig-erator. $450/$600month + 1 year lease

  /se cu rity, re fe r-ences & utilities. Nopets. Non Smoking.

Not approved forSection 8. Call Rudy 

at 570-288-6626

EDWARDSVILLEMain Street. Small 1& 2 bedroom apts.$450 month + secu-rity. No pets.

570-406-2366

941 Apartments/ Unfurnished

EXETER Senior Apartments

222 SCHOOLEY  A  VE.E XETER, PA 

 Accepting appli-cations for 1 bed-room apartments.

Quality apart-ments for ages

62 and older.Income limits

apply. Rent only $437 month.

*Utilities Included

*Laundry Facilities*On SiteManagement

*Private parking

Call for appointment570-654-5733

Monday - Friday 8am-12pm. EqualHousing Opportunity 

EXETER Two Apartments

1 BEDROOM. $425.Newly remodeled,off street parking.

2 BEDROOM. $525.Newly remodeled,off street parking.

570-602-0758

FORTY FORT103 River St

2 nd fl oo r, 1 b ed -room, living room,appliances. Parking.$550, heat & waterincluded. Tenantpays electric. PetFriendly. Call

570-814-9700

FORTY FORT1665 Wyoming Ave.

3rd floor 1 bed-room, utilities

included. Off streetparking, security deposit required.

NO PETS$525/mo. available

immediately.570-690-0564 or

570-823-7564

FORTY FORT2ND FLOOR

Kitchen with appli-an ce s, n ew c up -boards, new vinyl

 flooring. Large livingroom, 2 bedrooms,all rooms are large.N ew b at hr oo m.

  Washer/dryer. Wall  to Wall carpeting.Lighted off streetparking. Gas heat.Utilities by tenant.Security, lease & r ef er en ce s. N opets. $650/month.

570-714-9331

FORTY FORT2nd floor, 4 rooms,wall to wall carpet,h eat, h ot w ate r,public water, sewer& re cy cl i ng fe esi nc l ud ed . S to ve,

 fridge & dishwasher  furnished. Laundry room with hook-ups

  for washer & dryer.Good location, off street parking, Nopets. 1 year lease & security, $675. Call

570-655-0530

FORTY FORT All utilities included.Clean 4 room 2nd

  floor. Appliances.Covered parking.Non smoking, nop ets . S tartin g at$635/month.

570-714-2017

FORTY FORT

AMERICA REALTY

RENTALSOUT OFFLOODZONE!

Wilkes-BarreNear

GeneralHospital

“Over 2Generations Of 

ManagedService”

  ALL UNITSNO PETS OR

SMOKING,1 BEDROOMS

$465 & UP. 2  YEAR LEASES/SAME RENTS/

Employment Verification

Required.288-1422

FORTY FORT Available October 11st floor, very wellm ai n tai ne d s p a-cious 2 bedroom, 2bath apartment in

great neighborhood.Large living / diningarea. Extra largeeat-in kitchen withwasher/dryer hook-up. Hardwood floors

  throughout. Frontporch, screenedback porch. Excel-lent storage, centralair. Off street park-ing. $950 + utilities.

Call 570-510-4778 from 9am-5pm for

an appointment

FORTY FORTLarg e, m od ern 2bedroom, 2nd floorapartment. Eat ink it ch en w it h a llappliances. Spa-cious living room,bath, a/c units, laun-dry, off street park-ing. Great location.No pets or smoking.$575 + utilities. Call

570-714-9234

FORTY FORTNewly renovated,

great neighbor-hood. 2nd floor.

Non smoking. Oak  floors, new carpet

in master bedroom.new windows, 4

paddle fans, bathwith shower. Stove& fridge. Off street

parking, coin- oplaundry. $600 +gas, electric & 

water. Referencesrequired, no pets570-779-4609 or

570-407-3991

941 Apartments/ Unfurnished

GLEN LYON1 bedroom 2nd floorapartment availablewith new carpet.Building has beenremodeled & securi-  y system installed.

OSP. Stove & refrig-erator included. Nop et s. S ec ur it y  d e po si t & c red i tcheck required.

$450/monthCall Judi

570-474-6307 or

570-715-7736

SMITH HOURIGAN GROUP

HANOVER TOWNSHIP West End RoadClean & bright 3bedroom apart-

ments. Heat, water,garbage & sewer

included with appli-ances. Off streetparking. No pets,non smoking, not

section 8 approved.References, securi-

 ty, first and lastmonths rent.

$725/month570-852-0252570-675-1589

HANOVER TWP.1 b ed ro om . A llremodeled. Ceram-i c & h ar dw oo d

  floors. Fire place.$475/month + utili-

 ties. No pets.Call (570) 332-2477

HANOVER TWP.Out of flood zone.

Beautiful 2nd floor,3 bedroom. Wall to

wall carpet, largeliving room & 

kitchen, 2nd floorporch with spectac-ular views, washer/ 

dryer hookup.Garbage & sewer

included. $650/ month + utilities & security. No pets

(570) 592-4133

HARVEYS LAKE1 bedroom, LAKE

FRONT apartments. Wall to wall, appli-ances, lake rights,off street parking.

No Pets. Lease,security & 

references.570-639-5920

JENKINS TOWNSHIPNi ce 2 nd fl oo r 5room apartment.Gas range included,g as h e at, c ei l in g

  fans, knotty pineenclosed porch, off s tr ee t p ar ki ng ,

 fenced yard. $400 +utilities, security & re fe ren ce s. No nsmoking.Call after 5

570-655-1907 or570-814-2297

JENKINS TWP.3rd floor, 1 bed-room. All utilities

included. Refrigera-  tor & stove. No

pets. Available endof September $600

month. call570-655-0539

KINGSTON$500/month -

everything included.Unique apartment -

No pets/smoking.Call (570) 814-3859

KINGSTON1 bedroom,

 ALL UTILITIESINCLUDED.

$520/month. Nopets, section 8 OKCall 570-817-3332

KINGSTON131 S. Maple Ave.

4 room apartment -2nd floor. Heat & hot water included.Coin Laundry. Off street parking. Nopets/smoking. $695

570-288-5600or 570-479-0486

KINGSTON1st floor 5 rooms, 2bedroom, with hard-wood floors, mod-ern bath, gas heat & p arki ng . Le as e,security, no pets.

 Anne Marie Chopick 570-760-6769

570-288-6654

KINGSTON2 bedroom, 1 bath.

$600. Water includ-ed. New tile, car-pet, dishwasher,

garbage disposal, Washer/Dryer

hookup - Large yardDouble Security Facebook us atBOVO Rentals

570-328-9984

KINGSTON2 b ed roo m, 2 nd

  flo or. Ni ce area.S to ve & f ri dg e.$600 per month +utilities. No pets orsmoking.Call (570) 332-8765

KINGSTON2 bedroom, largerooms with closets.Plenty of storage.Laundry with wash-er & Dryer. . $650 / month. Call

570-332-3222

KINGSTON2nd floor large effi-ciency apartment.

  All utilities paid by landlord. Free use of washer/dryer. Nosmoking. No pets.1s t m on ths re nt,s e cu ri ty & 1 y earlease. $525/month.570-331-7016 Days

or 288-6764 Night

941 Apartments/ Unfurnished

KINGSTON795 Rutter Ave

Screened porch,kitchen downstairs,

upstairs living room,bedroom & bath-

room. $575/month+ utilities. No pets.

570-417-6729

KINGSTONNewly remodeled 1bedroom, centralheat & air, off-streetparking, wall to wall,washer/dryer hook-up, No pets. $450

Call 570-288-9507

KINGSTONN ic e f ir st f lo orapartment. 2 bed-room. Stove, fridge,w as h er & d rye r.L ot s o f s to ra gespace. $675. Heatincluded. Call

570-333-4567

KINGSTONPenn St.

6 ro om s, 3 b ed -rooms, 1.5 baths.Fully carpeted. 4closets. Gas heat.

  Washer/dryer hook up. Parking. Yard.No s ec tio n 8 . Nopets. $725 + utilities.

570-714-1530

KINGSTON

SDK GREENACRES HOMES

11 Holiday DriveKingston

“A Place ToCall Home”

Spacious 1, 2 & 3Bedroom Apts

3 BedroomTownhomes

Gas heat included

FREE24hr on-site GymCommunity Room

Swimming PoolMaintenance FREEControlled Access

Patio/Balcony and much more...

Call Today or stop by 

  for a tour!570-288-9019

APTAPT RENTRENTALSALSKINGSTON

1 BEDROOM2 BEDROOM3 BEDROOM

WILKES-BARRE1st & 2nd floor2 BEDROOMS

WYOMING1 BEDROOM

  All ApartmentsInclude:

 APPLIANCESCARPETINGSEWEROFF ST PARKINGMAINTENANCE

Lease & CreditCheck Required

Call 899-3407Tina RandazzoProperty Mgr

LINE UP A GREAT DEAL...IN CLASSIFIED!

LARKSVILLE3 bedroom, 1 bath.$775. With discount.

  All new hardwood  floors and tile. Newc abi ne ts / b ath -room. Dishwasher,

garbage disposal. Washer/dryer hook-up. Off street park-ing. Facebook us at

BOVO Rentals570-328-9984

LARKSVILLENEWLY REMODELED!3 rooms & bath.Heat, hot water,

electricity, stove,refrigerator & off 

street parkingincluded.

$535/month + $535security. 1 yearlease. No pets.570-779-2258

LUZERNE1 bedroom, wall to

wall, off-streetparking, coin

laundry, water,sewer & garbage

included. $495/ month + security 

& lease. HUDaccepted. Call

570-687-6216 or570-954-0727

LUZERNE1st floor. 1 bedroom.Stove, refrigerator,washer/dryer hook 

up included. Off street parking.

$475/month+ security.

Call (570) 466-3603

LUZERNE41 Mill Street

1st floor, 2 bed-room, large bath

with shower, stove,refrigerator and

dishwasher, wash-er/dryer hookup,

1 car attachedgarage. Fieldstoneworking fireplace.

Non Smoking.Too many extras to

mention, call formore details.

$720 + utilities.570-288-3438

Midtowne Apartments

100 E. 6thStreet,

Wyoming PA 18644

Housing for

Extremely Low &  Very Low Income

Elderly,Handicapped & 

disabled.570-693-4256 ALL UTILITIES

INCLUDEDRents based on

income.Managed by EEI

941 Apartments/ Unfurnished

MINERS MILLSCoz y 1 b ed roo m,3rd floor apartment.Heat, h ot w ate r,stove & fridge includ-ed. $430 / month.

Call 570-472-3681

MOUNTAIN TOP1 Bedroom apart-ments for elderly,

disabled. Rentsbased on 30% of 

 ADJ gross income.Handicap Accessi-ble. Equal HousingOpportunity. TTY711

or 570-474-5010This institution is an

equal opportunity provider & employer.

Mountain Top1st floor. 1 or 2

bedrooms. Laundry, facilities, porch.

No pets.$600/month + utili-

 ties, security, lease& credit check.

(570) 868-6503

MOUNTAIN TOPWOODBRYN

1 & 2 Bedroom.No pets. Rents

based on incomestart at $405 & $440. Handicap

 Accessible. EqualHousing Opportuni-

  ty. 570-474-5010TTY711

This institution is anequal opportunity 

provider andemployer.

Immediate Opennings!Shopping for a

new apartment?Classified lets

you compare costs -without hassle

or worry!Get moving

with classified!

MOUNTAINTOP1 bedroom with full

kitchen. Remodeledrecently, first floor,ample parking. Hot

water, sewer & garbage included.On Rt 309 - close

 to all amenities! Nopets. Non smoking.

$650/month + secu-rity & references.

570-239-3827

NANTICOKE1 bedroom, 1st floor,newly renovatedapartm en t. Newwall to wall. Modernkitchen with stove & 

  fr id ge . W as he rdryer hookup. Large

  fr on t p or ch , n osmoking or pets,water & sewer by landlord. $475 + util-ities, security, leasec re d it and b ack-ground check. Call

570-239-8728

NANTICOKE2 bedroom, 1st

 floor. Large eat inkitchen, fridge,

electric stove, largeliving room, w/w

carpeting, masterbedroom with cus-  tom built in furni-

 ture. Ample closetspace. Front/back porches, off street

parking, laundry room available. No

pets, smoking,water, sewer,garbage paid.

$600/mo + gas,electric, security,

lease, credit, back-ground check.

Call (570)696-3596

NANTICOKE2nd Floor apart-

ment for a tenantwho wants the

best. Bedroom, liv-ing room, kitchen & 

bath. Brand new. Washer/dryer hook-

up, air conditioned.No smoking or

pets. 2 year lease,all utilities by ten-

ant. Sewer & garbage included.

Security, first & lastmonth’s rent

required. $440.00570-735-5185

NANTICOKE603 Hanover St

  Above Dental Prac-  ti c e. 2 nd fl oo r, 1bedroom. No pets.$550 + security, util-ities & lease. Photosavailable. Call

570-542-5330

NANTICOKEModern 3 room,wall to wall carpet,

washer/dryerhookup, fridge & 

range. Watersewer, garbage & off street parking

included. $430/mo.No pets. Call

570-735-3479

NANTICOKESpacious 2 bedroom

apartment. Livingroom, kitchen,

pantry, washer/ dryer. No pets.Sewer & trash

included.$495/mos.

570-262-5399

PITTSTON2 bedroom, 2nd

 floor, bath, kitchen,living room. Heat & 

water included.$575/ month. 1st

month & security.No pets

570-451-1038

PITTSTONGORGEOUS LOFTSTYLE. One large

bedroom, full bath-room & shower.

Large closet.Stove, refrigerator,

dishwasher. Off street parking.Motion lights.

Bar/booth stylearea. Deck for

socializing. Clean& neat. Gas heat.

$600/month +security. Call Steve

570-563-1261

941 Apartments/ Unfurnished

PITTSTONModern 2 bedroom,2nd floor. Includesappliances. Laundry 

hookup. Heatedgarage, off street

parking. Heat,sewer, water & 

garbage included.$695/mos. + securi-

  ty & lease. Nosmoking/pets.570-430-0123

PITTSTONRecently remodeled1 bedroom. Kitchen,living room & laun-dry on 1st floor. Off street parking. Gasheat. $500 + utilities

Call 570-299-9030

PITTSTON TWP.Large 3 bedroom ingreat location. Nopets. Non smoking.Off-street parking.Includes water & sewer. $800 + elec-

  tric, security & lastmonth.

570-237-6000

PITTSTON-

HUGHESTOWNCompletely remod-eled, modern 1 bed-room apt. Lots of closet space, withnew tile floor andcarpets. Includesstove, refrigerator,washer, dryer, gasheat, nice yard andneighborhood, nopets. $600/month

$1000 deposit.570-479-6722

PLAINS2 bedroom 1st floor.

Small pets ok.Large fenced in

  yard. $590/month.Includes water & 

sewer.Call (570) 574-6261

PLAINSLarg e, m od e rn 2bedroom 2nd floor.Li vi ng ro om w ithhardwood. Eat ink it ch en w it h a llappliances. Conve-nient location. Nopets. No smoking.$550 + utilities. Call

570-714-9234

PLAINS TWP.50 Chamberlain St.

FLOOD SPECIAL2nd floor. 4 rooms.

heat & waterincluded. short term

lease available.$500 month.

Call 570-814-1957

Looking for thatspecial placecalled home?Classified will addressYour needs.Open the doorwith classified!

SHEATOWNNANTICOKE AREA 

2nd floor apart-ments for rent.

 Availableimmediately.

Call 570-333-4627

WEST PITTSTON1 bedroom, newly remodeled, fridge & s tove , o ff s tre e tparking, $400 plusutilities. Small petswelcome. Call

570-357-1138

WEST PITTSTON159 Elm St.

2 bedroom Town-house w/full base-

ment. 1.5 baths, off street parking.

$600/per month+ utilities & security.No Pets

570-283-1800 M-F570-388-6422 all

other times

WEST PITTSTON2 nd f lo or 1 b ed -room. Kitchen withappliances and attics to ra ge . H ea t,w at er & s ew eri n cl ud e d. Q ui e tneighborhood, outof flood zone. 1 yearlease. No pets. $540+ first, last & securi-

  ty. Credit check & references required.

570-466-1545

West Pittston, Pa.GARDEN VILLAGE

 APARTMENTS221 Fremont St.

Housing for theelderly & mobility 

impaired; all utilitiesincluded. Federally 

subsidizedprogram. Extremely low income persons

encouraged toapply. Income less

 than $12,250.570-655-6555,8 am-4 pm,

Monday-Friday.EQUAL HOUSING

OPPORTUNITY 

H ANDICAP A CCESSIBLE

WILKES-B ARRE

MayflowerCrossing

 Apartments

57 

0.

82 

2.

968 

2, 3 & 4Bedrooms

- Li

g ht & b

r

i

g

ht

op

e

n f

l

oorpl

an

s

- All major

appliances included

- P

e

t

s we

l

c

ome*

- Clo

s e to e

v

eryth

ing

- 24hour em

e

r

ge

n

cy

main

t

e

na

nc

e

- Sho

r

t te

r

mle

a

se

s av

aila

ble

Call TODAY For 

AVAILABILITY!! www.mayflower 

crossing.com 

Certain Restrictions 

 Apply* 

941 Apartments/ Unfurnished

WILKES-BARRE /KINGSTON

Efficiency 1 & 2bedrooms. Includesall utilities, parking,

laundry. No pets.From $390.

Lease, security & references.570-970-0847

WILKES-BARRE123 GEORGE AVE

2nd floor, 2 bed-room. Stove, dish-washer, washer/ dryer hook up. $550per month + utilities& security.

460 SCOTT ST1st floor, 1 bedroom.Stove, refrigerator,washer/dryerhookup. $450 permonth + utilities & security.

No pets, lease,credit check,

references.570-472-9494

WILKES-BARRE2 & 3 bedroom, 1b ath ap artme ntsnear General Hospi-

  tal $525 & $575 +utilities, first, last & security. No pets.570-821-0463

570-417-3427

WILKES-BARRE264 Academy St

1.5 bedrooms,newly renovated

building. Washer & dryer available..$600/per month

includes heat, hotwater and parking.

646-712-1286570-328-9896570-855-4744

WILKES-BARRE2nd floor apt. 2 bed-rooms. No pets. Off s tr ee t p ar ki ng .

  Washer/dryer hook u p, l ar ge y ar d$450/month + utili-

  ti es & s ec ur it y  deposit.

570-650-1844

Collectcash,not dust!Clean out your

basement, garageor attic and call the

Classified depart-ment today at 570-

829-7130!

WILKES-BARRE A  VAILABLE NOW!Two spacious, 5

room, 2 bedroomapartments. 1st & 2nd floor. Rent +utilities. Lease & 

security. No pets.$550 & $625

570-650-3008 or570-881-8979

WILKES-BARRE  Available Oct 1st.Out of flood area. 1bedroom. 2nd floor.Living room, mod-ern kitchen & bath.E nc lo se d b ac k  p orc h. W as he r/ dryer hook up. Heat& hot water includ-e d. R efe re n ce ssecurity & lease.$595/monthCall (570) 822-4302

WILKES-BARREHeights Section

51 N. Fulton St.1 bedroom Bi-Level.Eat in kitchen withappliances. Shared

  yard. Wood floors.  Water i n cl ud e d.Tenant pays $400 +electric, gas, securi-

 ty. Pets considered.Call (570) 814-1356

WILKES-BARREHEIGHTS

Townhouse typeapartments. 2

bedrooms, Stove ,Fridge, washer/ 

dryer hookup. Off-street parking. Utili-  ties by tenant. NoPets. $495/month

570-825-83556 to 8 pm ONLY 

WILKES-BARRE

LAFAYETTE GARDENSS   AVE MONEY THIS YEAR ! 

113 Edison St.Quiet neighborhood.

2 bedroom apart-ments available for

immediate occu-pancy. Heat & hot

water included. $625Call Aileen at

570-822-7944

Formerly The Travel Lodge 497 Kidder St., Wilkes-Barre

Rooms Startingat:

Daily $44.99 + tax 

  Weekly $189.99+ tax 

Microwave,Refrigerator,

 WiFi, HBO570-823-8881

www.Wilkes BarreLodge.com 

WILKES-BARREWILKES-BARRE

LODGELODGE

WILKES-BARREMaffett St

Just off Old RiverR oad. 7 ro om , 3bedroom, 2nd floorduplex. Off streetp arkin g, d ec k i nrear. Ample closet / storage. Neutraldecor. Appliancesincluded. $625 +utilities, security & lease. No pets.

570-793-6294

WILKES-BARREM ay flo we r area,2nd Floor, 1 bed-roo m w ith ap pl i -ances. Nice apart-ment in attractivehome. Sunny win-dows & decorativeaccents. Off streetparking. No pets, nosmoking. Includeshot water. $400 +utilities.

570-824-4743

941 Apartments/ Unfurnished

WILKES-BARRE SOUTH

SECURE BUILDINGS1 & 2 bedroom

apartments.Starting at $440

and up. Referencesrequired. Section8 ok.

570-332-5723

WILKES-BARRE SOUTHTWO APARTMENTSRecently renovated

2 & 4 bedroomapartments avail-

able. Off streetparking. Serious

inquiries only. $600-$800 + utilities570-242-3327

WILKES-BARRESouth Welles St.

2 Bedrooms, 2nd floor. New bath.

 Washer/dryerhookup. Heat, hot

water, sewer & garbage included.

$595 + security,pets negotiable.

Call 570-589-9767

WILKES-BARRE

2nd floor apartmentavailable in HistoricDistrict of Wilkes-Barre. 1 bedroom,Li vi ng ro om , fu ll

bath, Kitchen (stove& fridge included),dining / computerarea. Front & reare nt ra nc es , O ff  s tre et p arki n g. 1

  year lease, $525m on th i nc lu de swater. Application & p roo f o f i n co merequired. Call Holly 

570-821-7022EILEEN R.

MELONE REALESTATE

570-821-7022

WILKES-BARRE1 bedroom

water included2 bedroomwater included4 bedroomhalf double1 bedroom effi-ciency waterincluded2 bedroom sin-gle family 

HANOVER4 bedroomlarge affordable2 bedroom

NANTICOKE2 bedroom

large, waterincluded

PITTSTONLarge 1bedroom waterincluded

OLD FORGE2 bedroom

exceptionalwater included

Plains1 bedroomwater included

McDermott & McDermottReal Estate

Inc. Property Management570-821-1650

(direct line)Mon-Fri. 8-7pm

Sat. 8-noon

WYOMING1 bedroom apart-ment. Wall to wallcarpet. Appliances

  furnished. Coin oplaundry. Heat, water& sewer included.$550/month. Call

570-687-6216 or570-954-0727

Looking for the right dealon an automobile?Turn to classified.It’s a showroom in print!Classified’s gotthe directions!

WYOMING

2ND FLOOR APT  Available immedi-ately, 2 bedrooms,re fri ge rato r ands tove p rovi de d,$650.00/per month,Heat paid. Call

570-351-4651

WYOMING

ONE BEDROOM ANDAN EFFICIENCY

For lease, availableimmediately, Wash-er-Dryer-Stove-Refrigerator, off-street parking, nopets, Non Smoking,$425.—$325/permonth, plus utilities,First Month + Secu-rity/security deposit.Call (570) 885-0843after 9:00 a.m. toset an appointmentor email:

[email protected].

WYOMING

TOWNHOUSECarpet, tile bath,appliances, washer

  / d ry er h oo ku p,sewer, parking by 

  front door. $600 +Utilities, Security & Lease. No smoking,no pets.

Call 570-693-0695

941 Apartments/ Unfurnished

ZION GROVENewer log home ingated community.

Cathedral ceiling inliving room & 

kitchen. Propane free standing stove.

Master suite withloft. Guest suite

with separateentrance. Large rec

room over 2 cargarage. 3 bed-

rooms/3 baths. 5miles from Hum-

boldt Ind. Park. 1 year lease required.$1,400/mo.Call Debbie

570-474-6307 or570-715-7746

SMITH HOURIGAN GROUP

944 CommercialProperties

DOLPHIN PLAZARte. 315

1,700 - 2,000 SFOffice / Retail

4,500 SF OfficeShowroom,

 WarehouseLoading Dock 

Cal l 570-829-1206

FORTY FORT1188 Wyoming Ave

This unique 2,800Sq Ft. interior (Circa1879), features 10’ceilings, large dis-

inctive chandeliersas well as two fire-places. Three frenchdoor entrances con-

ribute to the interi-o r’s l i gh t, b rig htatmosphere. Othereatures include:40 car, lighted

parking areaHandicapped

accessible entranceCentral A/C

Hardwood floors A large carpetedopen floor space.

This building’s curbappeal is second

 to none.The signage is per-ectly positioned onhe 179 ft. front

Over 15,000vehicles pass daily 

570-706-5308

FORTY FORTFree standing build-ing. Would be great

  for any commercialuse. 1900 sq. ft. on

  the g ro u nd fl oo rwith an additional800 sq. ft in finishedlower level. Excel-lent location, only 1block from NorthCross Valley  E xp re ss way an do ne b lo ck f ro m

 Wyoming Ave (route11) Take advantageof this prime loca-

  tion for just $995per month!

570-262-1131

FORTY FORTFully furnished Doc-

 tor’s office. Approx-imately 2200

square feet. Avail-able immediately.

Contact Colleen570-283-0524

MEDICAL,PROFESSIONAL, RETAIL

OFFICE SPACEMedical / profes-sional space - over2,000 sq ft. Retailspace, move in con-dition, over 2,000sq. ft. Located in S.

  Wilkes-Barre. Cor-ner of Carey Ave & Hanover St.Betw ee n M ye rsHigh & GeisingerSouth HospitalCall 570-824-0693

OFFICE BUILDINGFOR RENT

Thinking of startinga business? Look-i ng to re lo cate?Have you consid-ered a "Co-op" withanother small busi-ness?

$675 per monthrent plus utilities

Modern office build-ing, 4 offices, con-

e re nc e r oo m,reception area, sup-ply room, kitchenand full-bath. Handi-cap access and off street parking. Orpropose a lease/ option to purchaseand negotiate your

erms.Dee Fields,

 Associate Broker570-788-7511

[email protected]

LINEUP ASUCCESSFULSALE

INCLASSIFIED!Doyouneedmorespace? A yard or garage sale

in classifiedis the best way

tocleanoutyourclosets!You’re in bussiness

with classified!

8/4/2019 Times Leader 09-22-2011

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/times-leader-09-22-2011 44/45

TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 PAGE 15D

941 Apartments/ Unfurnished

941 Apartments/ Unfurnished

941 Apartments/ Unfurnished

SAINT JOHNApartments

419 N. Main St., Wilkes-Barre• Secured Senior Building for 62 & older.• 1 bedroom apartments currently available

for $501. per month INCLUDES ALLUTILITIES.

• YOU regulate heat & air conditioning• Laundry Room Access• Community Room/Fully equipped kitchen

for special events• Exercise Equipment• 24 Hour Emergency Maintenance• Garage & off street parking• Computer / Library area• Curbside public transportation

570-970-6694Equal Housing Opportunity 

IN THE HEART OF WILKES-BARRE

Immediate Occupancy!!

Efficiencies available@30% of income

MARTIN D. POPKY APARTMENTS61 E. Northampton St.

Wilkes-Barre, PA 18701

• Affordable Senior Apartments• Income Eligibility Required• Utilities Included! • Low cable rates;• New appliances; • Laundry on site;• Activities! •Curbside Public Transportation

Please call 570-825-8594D/TTY 800-654-5984

CEDAR VILLAGE Apartment

Homes Ask About Our 

Summer Specials! 

$250 Off 1st Months Rent,

& $250 Off Security 

Deposit With Good Credit.

1 bedroom starting @ $690 

F e a t u r i n g : Washer & Dryer 

Central Air  Fitness Center  Swimming Pool Easy Access to

I-81

Mon – Fri. 9 –5 

44 Eagle Court Wilkes-Barre, PA

18706 (Off Route 309)

570-823-8400cedarvillage@ 

affiliatedmgmt.com

EAST

MOUNTAIN

 APARTMENTS

The good life...  close at hand 

Regions Best  Address 

• 1 & 2 Bedroom Apts.

822-4444www.EastMountainApt.com

• 1, 2 & 3 Bedroom Apts.

288-6300www.GatewayManorApt.com

M onda y - Frida y 9-5Saturday 1 0-2

W    IL KE SW O OD    

822-2711 w w w .liv eatw ilkesw ood .com   

1 Bedroom Starting 

a t$675 .00 • Includes gas heat,

w ater,sew er & trash

• C onvenient to allm ajorhighw ays & publictransportation

• Fitnessce nter & pool

• P atio/B alconies

• P et friendly*• O nline rentalpaym ents• Flexible lease term s

 A PARTM E NTS 

*R estrictionsA pp ly

962 Rooms 962 Rooms

Rooms starting at

Daily $39.99 + taxWeekly $179.99 + tax

WiFiHBO

Available Upon Request:Microwave & Refrigerator

(570) 823-8027www.casinocountrysideinn.cominfo@casinocountrysideinn.com

Bear Creek Township

       C     o     u     n       t     r     y     s       i       d     e

       I     n     n

       C     a     s       i     n     o

CALL AN EXPERT 

Professional Services Directory

CALL AN EXPERT 

1006 A/C &  Refrigeration

ServicesFURNACES,

 WATER HEATERSHEAT PUMPS,

INSTALLATION &CLEANING

IMMEDIATE INSTALLATION

Licensed & InsuredCOMPLETE

HEATING SERVICES570-817-5944

1015 ApplianceService

KIRBY VACUUMS

 WHOLESALEPRICES

Sales, service,supplies.

Over 30 yearsexperience

570-709-7222

1024 Building & Remodeling

1st. Quality

Construction Co.Roofing, siding,gutters, insulation,

decks, additions,windows, doors,

masonry & concrete.

Insured & Bonded.

Senior Citizens Discount!State Lic. # PA057320

570-299-7241570-606-8438

 ALL OLDER HOMESSPECIALIST

825-4268.Remodel / Repair

Kitchen& Baths

Call theBuildingIndustry 

  Association ofNEPA to find aqualified mem-

ber for yournext project.

call 287-3331

or go towww.bianepa.com

NICHOLS CONSTRUCTION All Types Of Work 

New or RemodelingLicensed & Insured

Free Estimates570-406-6044

NortheastContracting GroupDecks, Sunrooms,

 Additions, Garages,Roofs, Concrete

sidewalks & Drive-ways, etc.

Special rates if affected by flood

(570) 338-2269

ROOFING, SIDING,

DECKS, WINDOWSFor All of Your

Remodeling Needs. Will Beat Any Price25 Yrs. Experience

References. InsuredFree Estimates570-899-4713

STORM OR FLOODDAMAGE??HUGHES

ConstructionROOFING, Home

Renovating.Garages,

K itchens, Baths,Siding and More!

Licensed andInsured.

FREEESTIMATES!!

570-388-0149

1 03 9 Chi mn ey

Service

A-1 A

B

LECH

IMNEY

Rebuild & RepairChimneys. All

  types of Masonry.Liners Installed,

Brick & Block,Roofs & Gutters.

Licensed & Insured

570-735-2257

Say it HEREin the Classifieds!

570-829-7130

1 039 C hi mn ey

Service

AVUTO C 

HIMN 

Y  S 

ER 

VIC 

E & Gutter Cleaning

Free EstimatesInsured

570-709-2479

CELLAR RESURFACINGChimney construc- tion, hauling, smalldemolition, stucco,

porches, sidewalks.Insured. Licensed.

I Return All Calls!570-457-5849

CHIMNEY REPAIRSParging. Stucco.Stainless Liners.

Cleanings. CustomSheet Metal Shop.570-383-0644

1-800-943-1515Call Now!

CHRIS MOLESKY CHIMNEY  SPECIALIST

New, repair, rebuild,liners installed.

Inspections. Con-crete & metal caps.Licensed & Insured

570-328-6257COZY HEARTH

CHIMNEY Chimney Cleaning,Rebuilding, Repair,Stainless Steel Lin-ing, Parging, Stuc-

co, Caps, Etc.Free Estimates

Licensed & Insured1-888-680-7990

570-840-0873

1048 Computer

Repairs

CB COMPUTER CARE Virus, Spyware,

Malware & WormRemoval. General

maintenance. FreePick up & delivery 

local area.570-814-2365

1054 Concrete & Masonry

A+ MASONRY Affordable RatesFree Estimates

Brick, Block,Concrete, Stone,Retaining Walls,

Basements, Porch-es, Patios, Side-

walks & Steps.20% SENIOR DISCOUNT

No Job Too Small!Lic. & insured.570-647-9669570-468-3988

Affordable GeneralMasonry & ConcreteNO JOB TOO BIG

OR TOO SMALL!Masonry /Concrete Work. Licensed & insured. Free est.

John 570-573-0018Joe 570-579-8109

D. PughConcrete All phases of 

masonry & concrete. Small jobs welcome.

Senior discount,Free estimates

Licensed & Insured288-1701/655-3505

Williams & Franks IncMasonry contrac-

 tors. Chimney,stucco & concrete.

570-466-2916

1057Construction & Building

Bob BrislinMasonry 

& Construction All phases of con-

struction, basementwaterproofing,

kitchens & bath-room remodeling.

PA 029323 (570) 780-7339

Bob BrislinMasonry 

& Construction All phases of con-

struction, basementwaterproofing,

kitchens & bath-room remodeling.

PA 029323 (570) 780-7339

*No job too small*Quality Guaranteed*Free estimates*Insured & Bonded*Specialist in doors,baseboard, flooring,m ol di ng , t ri m &  closets. PA056630

CREATIVECARPENTRY 

 A  ARON GERLACH

570-807-7465

Say it HEREin the Classifieds!

570-829-7130

1057Construction & Building

D&DProperty Maintenance

Landscaping, snowplowing, light & 

heavy excavationwork.

570-332-8640

GARAGE DOOR Sales, service,

installation & repair.

FULLY INSUREDHIC# 065008

CALL JOE570-606-7489570-735-8551

PEI ENTERPRISES, INC.Residential & Commercial

Building, Remodel-ing, Maintenance,Management, Land-scaping & Preserva-

  tion. PALic#079784(570) 496-0277

WWW .PEIENTERPR I SESINC.COM

PHILLIPSCONSTRUCTION

33 yrs experienceComplete

Construction ServicesRoofing, siding, win-

dows, additions,decks, etc.

Licensed & Insured.570-788-2283

FREE ESTIMATES

107 8 D ry Wal l

MARK ANDERSONDRYWALL COMPANY 

S INCE  1987 Hanging & finishing.

Swirreled & Tex- tured ceilings.

 Water damage & Plaster Repair570-760-2367

MIKE SCIBEK DRYWALLHanging & finishing,

design ceilings.Free estimates.

Licensed & Insured.570-328-1230

MIRRA DRYWALLHanging & Finishing

Drywall Repair Textured Ceilings

Licensed & Insured

Free Estimates

(570) 675-3378

1084 Electrical

GRULA ELECTRIC LLCLicensed, Insured,

No job too small.

570-829-4077

SLEBODA ELECTRICMaster electrician

Licensed & InsuredService Changes & 

Replacements.Generator Installs.

8 6 8 - 4 4 6 9

1093 Excavating

  All Types OfExcavating,

Demolition & Concrete Work.

FLOOD CLEAN UPLarge & Small Jobs

FREE ESTIMATES(570) 760-1497

Excavating, Grad-ing, drainage, treeremoval, lot clear-

ing, snow plowing,stone / soil delivery.No job too small

Reasonable Rates570-574-1862

GOT A FLOOD MESS?We can help.

Triaxle dump trucks,heavy equipment & demolition services

available. CallBONNER’S TRUCKING

& E XCAVATING

570-454-1458

1105Floor Covering

Installation

CARPET REPAIR &INSTALLATION

 Vinyl & wood.Certified, Insured.

570-283-1341

1129 GutterRepair & Cleaning

GUTTER 2 GO, INC.PA#067136- Fully 

Licensed & Insured. We install custom

seamless raingutters & leaf 

protection systems.C  ALL US TODAY ABOUT

OUR 10% OFF WHOLE

HOUSE DISCOUNT!570-561-2328

Say it HEREin the Classifieds!

570-829-7130

1129 GutterRepair & Cleaning

GUTTER CLEANING Window Cleaning.Regulars, storms,

etc. Pressurewashing, decks,

docks, houses,Freeestimates. Insured.

(570) 288-6794

1132 HandymanServices

 All in a CallFLOOD CLEAN UP,hardwood floors, tilevct, drywall / finish-ing, painting, powerwashing. Free Est.Dependable & Reli-able. Package dealsavailable. Call

570-239-4790 or570-388-3039

A

LL

MA

IN

T

E

N

A

N

CEW

E F

IX ITElectrical,

Plumbing,Handymen,

Painting

Carpet Repair

& Installation

 All Types

Of Repairs

570-814-9365

DEPENDABLEHANDY MAN

Home repairs & improvements.Luzerne Co. 30

  Years ExperienceDave 570-479-8076

DO IT ALL HANDYMANPainting, drywall,

plumbing & all typesof interior & exterior

home repairs.570-829-5318

LICENSED GENERALCONTRACTOR 

Plumbing, heatingelectrical, painting,roofs, siding, rough& finished carpentry - no job too big ors mal l. F ree E sti -mates. Call anytime.

570-852-9281

REYNOLDSHandyman ServicePower washing,

landscaping, treeremoval, grass cut- ting, home repairs,

plumbing, sheetrock, painting, fall

clean ups.Insured & Licensed

570-751-6140

The Handier Man 

  We fix everything!Plumbing,

Electrical & Carpentry.

Retired Mr. Fix It.Emergencies

23/7

299-9142

1135 Hauling &  Trucking

A A C L E A N I N G A1 Alwayshauling,cleaningattics, cellar,garage,one piece or

wholeEstate, alsoavailable 10& 20yarddumpsters. 655-0695592-1813or 287-8302

 AAA CLEANING A1 GENERAL H AULING

Cleaningattics,cellars,garages.

Demolitions,Roofing& TreeRemoval.

FreeEst. 779-0918or542-5821; 814-8299

  A.S.A.P HaulingEstate Cleanouts,

 Attics, Cellars,Garages, we’re

cheaper thandumpsters!.

Free Estimates,Same Day!

570-822-4582

 AAA Bob & Ray’sHauling: Friendly & Courteous. We takeanything & every-

  thing. Attic to base-ment. Garage, yard,

 free estimates. Call

570-655-7458 or570-905-4820

CASTAWAYHAULING JUNK 

REMOVAL823-3788 / 817-0395

1135 Hauling &  Trucking

AFFORDABLEJUNK REMOVAL

Cleanups/CleanoutsLarge or Small Jobs

FREE ESTIMATES(570) 817-4238

 All Junk Cars &  TrucksWanted

HighestPricesPaid InCA$H

FREE

PICKUP

570-574-1275

A

L

L K

IND

S OF

HA

U

L IN G& J

U

N

K

RE

MOVALTREE/SHRUBTREE/SHRUB

REMOV REMOV  AL ALEstate CleanoutEstate CleanoutFree Estimates

24 HOURSERVICE

SMALL ANDLARGE JOBS!

570-823-1811570-239-0484

WILL HAUL ANYTHINGClean cellars,

attics, yards & metal removal.

Call John570-735-3330

1147 Home

Restoration

BASEMENTPUMP-OUT

Insured Contractor.Reasonable Rates.

Fast Service. Call570-250-2890

1162 Landscaping/ Garden

  ARE YOU TIREDOF BEING

RAKED?Specializing In Trimming and

Shaping of  Bush-es, Shrubs

, Trees. A lso, Bed

Cleanup, Edging,Mulch and S tone.

Call Joe.570-823-8465570-823-8465

Meticulous and A  ffordable.

FFreeree EEstimatesstimates

BRUSH UP TO 4’HIGH, MOWING,

EDGING, TRIMMINGSHRUBS, HEDGES,

TREES, MULCHING,LAWN CARE, GUT-TERS, FALL CLEAN

UP. FULLY INSURED.FREE ESTIMATES

570-829-3261TOLL FREE

1-855-829-3261

Patrick & Deb’Patrick & Deb’ ssLandscapingLandscaping

Landscaping, basichandy man, clean-ing, moving & free

salvage pick up. AVAILABLE FOR

FALL CLEAN UPS!Call 570-793-4773

11 83 M as onr y

New Chimneys/ Repairs

Sidewalks, Steps,Concrete

Free EstimatesFully Insured

570-674-7588

CHOPYAK MASONRY

 Wanna make yourcar go fast? Placean ad in Classified!570-829-7130.

1189 MiscellaneousService

 VITO’S& 

GINO’S Wanted:

JunkCars &TrucksHighestPricesPaid!!

FREE PICKUP

288-8995

1195 Movers

BestDarnMovers

Moving HelpersCall for Free Quote.

We make moving easy.B D M h e l p e r s . c o m

570-852-9243

1204 Painting &  Wallpaper

 A & N PAINTING Airplane Quality atSubmarine Prices!

Interior/Exterior,pressure washing,

decks & siding.Commercial/Resi-

dential. Over 17 years experience!

Free estimates.Licensed & Insured570-820-7832

“A

+ CLAS

S

IC

A

L”  All phases.

Compl ete int/extpaint& renovations

Since 1990 Since 1990 Free Estimates

Licensed-Insured570-283-5714

A.

B.C. Profes

sionalPaint

ing36 Yrs Experience

 We Specialize InNew Construction

Residential

RepaintsComm./Industrial

 All InsuranceClaims

 ApartmentsInterior/Exterior

Spray,Brush, Rolls WallpaperRemoval

Cabinet Refinish-ing

Drywall/FinishingPower WashingDeck Specialist

Handy ManFREE ESTIMATES

Larry Neer 570-606-9638

JASON SIMMS PAINTINGInterior/ExteriorPower WashingFree Estimates

21 Yrs. ExperienceInsured

(570) 947-2777

M. PARALIS PAINTINGInt/ Ext. painting,Power washing.

Professional work at affordable rates.

Free estimates.570-288-0733

Serra PaintingBook Now ForFall & Save. All

 Work GuaranteedSatisfaction.

30 Yrs. ExperiencePowerwash & Paint

 Vinyl, Wood, Stucco Aluminum.

Free Estimates You Can’t Lose!570-822-3943

1 21 3 Pa vi ng & Excavating

EDWARD’S ALL COUNTY

PAVING & SEAL COATING3 Generationsof Experience.Celebrating 76 Years of Pride 

& Tradition! Licensed and

Insured.Call Today For Your

Free Estimate

570-474-6329Lic.# PA021520

Mountain TopPAVING & SEAL 

COATING 

Patching, Sealing,Residential/CommLicensed & Insured

PA013253570-868-8375

1228 Plumbing & Heating

STUCKERPLUMBING & HEATINGPlumbing, Heating,electrical, furnaces

& hot water heaters570-655-8458

 VMF -Service Now!  We fix Furnaces, Hot Water Heaters, Boil-ers & handle Plumb-i n g, He ati ng , Ai rConditioning, Refrig-e rati on . 2 4 Hou rService. Licensed & Insured. 30+ YearsExperience. Call

570-343-2035

1 23 4 P re ssure

 Washing

BEE CLEANPower Wash & LandscapingSeasonal Services,Rain Gutter Clean-ing, Snow Removal

& More.(570) 457-1840

Pressure Washing /Painting/Repair

Call JJ Murphy 

570-714-3637

1249 Remodeling & Repairs

D & DREMODELING

From decks andkitchens to roofs,

and baths, etc.WE DO

IT ALL!!!!!!!CALL US FORCALL US FOR

  ALL OF YOUR  ALL OF YOURINTERIOR ANDINTERIOR AND

EXTERIOREXTERIORREMODELINGREMODELING

NEEDSNEEDS570-406-9387Licensed/Insured  YOU’VE TRIED

  THE REST NOWCALL THE

BEST!!!

Refinish your bath  tub for as low as

$299 for jobsscheduled by 

Oct-14. Includesnon skid, S AVE $110!

Call Perma Glaze1-800-292-6502

RUSSELL’SProperty Maintenance

LICENSED & I NSURED

Carpentry, dry-wall, painting,

 flooring & powerwashing & more.FREE ESTIMATES

570-406-3339

1252 Roofing & 

Siding

J.R.V. ROOFING570-824-6381

Roof Repairs & NewRoofs. Shingle, Slate,Hot Built Up, Rubber,

Gutters & Chimney Repairs. Year Round.Licensed/InsuredFREE Estimates * 24 Hour Emer- 

gency Calls* 

Jim Harden570-288-6709New Roofs & 

Repairs, Shingles,Rubber, Slate,

Gutters, Chimney Repairs. Credit

Cards accepted.FREE ESTIMATES!Licensed-Insured

EMERGENCIES

SUMMERROOFING

Special $1.29 s/f Licensed, insured,

 fastservice570-735-0846

1327 Waterproofing

`DEFELICE CONSTRUCTIONStorm Damage,

Roofs,Waterproofing.Licensed \ Insured

Owner Operated, 20

 yrs, senior discount570-458-6274

13 36 Wi ndow

Cleaning

Professional Window Cleaning 

& More.Gutters, carpet,

pressure washing.Residential/com-

mercial. Ins./bond-ed. Free est .

570-283-9840

944 CommercialProperties

OFFICE OR STORENANTICOKE

1280 sq ft. 3 phasepower, central airconditioning. Handi-cap accessible restroom. All utilities by 

  tenant. Garbageincluded. $900 permonth for a 5 yearlease.

570-735-5064.

LINEUP

 ASUCCESSFULSALEINCLASSIFIED!

Doyouneedmorespace? A yard or garage sale

in classifiedis the best way

tocleanoutyourclosets!You’re in bussiness

with classified!

OFFICE RENTALKingston. First

Floor. Off StreetParking. Some

Furnishing Included Available 9/1/11.Call 287-3331 oremail danielle@

bianepa.com

OFFICE SPACE239 Schuyler Ave, Kingston

2,050 sf. 2nd floor.Modern, four sep-

arate offices, largereception area,

break room, con-  ference room, pri-

vate bathroom.$695/mos + utilitiesCall 570-706-5628

OFFICE SPACENEW PROFESSIONAL SPACEPittston Township

Facing PittstonBy Pass

Reception area,conference room,handicapped bath

room, privateoffices, off street

parking. Up to 2300sq. ft. available.

Call 570-654-5030

PITTSTON

328 Kennedy Blvd.Modern medical

space, labor & industry approved, ADA throughout, 2doctor offices plus

4 exam rooms, xray and reception and

breakrooms. Couldbe used for any 

business purpose. Will remodel to suit.

For lease$2,200/MO.

  Also available forsale

MLS #11-751Call Charlie

  VM 101

944 CommercialProperties

PITTSTONCOOPERS CO-OPLease Space

 Available, Lightmanufacturing,

warehouse,office, includesall  utilities with free parking.

I will save you money!

PROFESSIONALCOMMERCIAL SPACE

 West Pittston Village Shop

918 Exeter AveRoute 92

1500 sq. ft. & 2,000 sq. ft.

OUT OF FLOOD ZONE

693-1354 ext 1

FORTY FORT

AMERICA REALTYS 

OP /OFFICE  

RE N 

TALS  “2 GENERATIONS

OF S TANDARDS”UNDER W AY  -

M ANAGED UNITS

DIKE PROTECTEDSOO 

N T  

O B 

E  AVAIL 

 ABL 

E EU 

RO 

 A 

N  S 

T  

YL 

E R  

T  

 AIL SHO 

PS O 

R  O 

FIC 

S Leases Starting

 At $550.Busy Rte 11

Location

 A 

 p 

 p 

l  

on 

s B 

in 

 g En 

in 

d  570-288-1422

315 PLAZA900 & 2400 SFDental Office -

direct visibility toRoute 315 between

Leggios & Pic-A-Deli. 750 & 1750 SFalso available. Near

81 & Cross Valley.570-829-1206

WAREHOUSE/LIGHT

MANUFACTURINGOFFICE SPACE

PITTSTONMain St.

12,000 sq. ft. build-ing in downtownlocation. Ware-house with lightmanufacturing.

Building with someoffice space. Entirebuilding for lease or

will sub-divide.MLS #10-1074Call Charlie

570-829-6200 VM 101

944 CommercialProperties

READY-TO-GOCLASS A OFFICE

SPACES AT AFFORDABLE

PRICINGPlease visit our

websitemarklebuilding.com or better yet, stopby for a visit with

 the on-site BuildingManager. Officesready to go, from

460 to 5000 sq ft. Available, conven-

ient parking. Call

570-579-0009

947 Garages

COMMERCIAL

G ARAGE SPACEKingston. 1,250 sf.

Excellent formechanic or ship-ping & receiving.

Separate overhead and entrance

doors. Gas Heat.Easy Access.

$450 + security & references.

570-706-5628

Doyou needmorespace? A yard or garage sale

in classifiedis the best way

tocleanout yourclosets!You’re in bussiness

with classified!

950 Half Doubles

 ASHLEY 2 bedroom. Wall/ wall carpet. Yard.Off-street parking.$ 52 5 + u til i ti e s.Security, lease. NoP et s. S ec ti on 8approved.Call (570) 288-7753

EDWARDSVILLEHalf double, wall to

wall carpeting,washer / dryer

hookup, off streetparking. $525 +

security. No pets.570-288-6773

EDWARDSVILLE V  V ery nice 4 room,ery nice 4 room,v i ny l s i de d h a lf  v i ny l s i de d h a lf  d o ub l e. A l l n e wd o ub l e. A l l n e ww al l t o w al l c arw al l t o w al l c ar--p et in g. A ll w inp et i ng . A ll w in --d ow s t he rm ald ow s t he rm alp an e - 90 % a rep an e - 90 % a r ebrand newbrand new. Large. Larg espacious updatedspacious updatedk it ch en . B at hk it ch en . B at hu p dated . Al l w i nu p date d. Al l w i n--d ow s h av e n ewd o ws h a ve n e wmini blinds & newmini blinds & newcurtain rods. Steelcurtain rods. Steeli n s ul ated fro nt & i n su l ate d fro nt & r e ar d o or s w i thr e ar d o or s w i thdead bolts + stormdead bolts + stormdoors. Economicaldoors. Economicalg as he at . Y  g as h ea t. Y  ourouro wn d ri ve wa y  o wn d ri ve wa y  ..Short distance toShort distance tob u s s to p & s h opb u s s to p & s h op--p i ng . L e as e . N op i ng . L e as e . N opets. $550/monthpets. $550/month+ utilities.+ utilities.

570-650-3803570-650-3803

FORTY FORT26 BEDFORD ST.

1ST FLOOR1 bedroom. $550month. Off streetparking. Washer & dryer included. Fire-place in living room,Tenant pays gas & electric.

570-287-5090

HANOVER TOWNSHIP2 bedroom. $490

  /month + utilities & security. Back 

  yard & off streetparking. No pets.

570-262-1021

HANOVER TOWNSHIP3 bedroom, livingroom, dining room,kitchen. Off streetp arki ng . S to ve,

  fridge, washer & d rye r. G as h eat.M od ern iz ed . Nodogs. $625 + utili-

  ties. 570-417-5441

950 Half Doubles

HANOVER TOWNSHIP3 Regina St

Newly renovated 3bedroom, 1 bath. Allappliances inc. Off street parking. $750+ utilities. Sewage & 

  trash included. 1stmonth + security.C re di t & b ac k-ground check. Call

570-765-4474

Sell your own home!Place an ad HERE

570-829-7130

HANOVER TWP.Completely remod-eled 2 bedroom, 1b ath , w all to w allc ar pe t. S to ve ,washer/dryer hook up. Off street park-ing. $750/month +

  first, last & security.I n cl u de s w ate r,sewer & trash. Nopets. No smoking.References & creditcheck.

570-824-3223269-519-2634

Leave Message

950 Half Doubles

KINGSTONHalf Double- 5 bed-room, 1 Bath $875with discount. All newcarpet, dishwasher,garbage disposal,appliances, LargeKitchen, new cabi-nets, Washer/dryerh oo ku p, D ou b leSecurity. Facebook us @ BOVORentals

570-328-9984

Say it HEREin the Classifieds!

570-829-7130

KINGSTKINGSTONONLUZERNE AREA 

3 bedrooms,2 bathrooms,

  WARMING FIRE-PLACE, nice neigh-borhood, off street,

stove,refrigerator,dishwasher, garagestorage. NO PETS,$585 per month

plus utilities. Call732-892-0996

[email protected]

950 Half Doubles

OLD FORGE146 North Main St.

H al f D ou bl e. 6rooms. Refurbished- new paint, kitchen& stove, bath tub,carpets & vinyl floor.Extra clean. Largeprivate yard. Cellar.$700 + utilities. Call

570-687-1953

Shopping for anew apartment?

Classified letsyou compare costs -

without hassleor worry!

Get movingwith classified!

PARSONS2 o r 3 b ed roo m,w/w carpet, stove,

 fridge incl. Off streetparking, oil heat.w/d hookup, quietarea. No Pets. Allutilities by tenantexcept sewer andrecycling. $600/moplus security 

570-709-1868

950 Half Doubles

PITTSTONP ARSONAGE STREET

3 b ed ro om , 1 .5bath, living room,dining room, eat-inkitchen. Washer/ dryer hook-up. Wall

  to wall carpet. Fullbasement. $650 permonth + utilities & security deposit. Off street parking.Call (570) 406-8741

PLAINS2 bedroom. $530

per month + utilities.1 month deposit

required. No Pets.570-262-6893

To place yourad call...829-7130

PLAINS2 bedrooms, mod-e rn h alf d ou b le .New w all to w al lcarpet. Nice neigh-borhood. No pets.$550/ month + utili-

 ties. (570) 592-7723(570) 606-9149

950 Half Doubles

PLAINSPLAINS  Available immedi-ately, 3 bedrooms, 1bath room, wash-er/dryer hookup,off-street parking,no pets, No Smok-e rs , $ 50 0. 00 +Security/per month,plus utilities.

570-239-6586

Looking for thatspecial place

called home?Classified will addressYour needs.Open the doorwith classified!

PLYMOUTH3 bedrooms. Newly 

remodeled with  yard & large patio.

 Washer & dryerhookup, wall to wall

carpeting, $650 +utilities, 1st month

rent & depositrequired. Section 8

O.K. 570-779-3965

950 Half Doubles

WEST PITTSTON913 WYOMING AVE

1/2 double. 3 bed-rooms, 2 baths, fin-ished basement,walk up attic, wash-er/dryer hookup. Off street parking withcarport. Close toshopping center & h i gh s ch oo l . Nos mo ki ng . $ 70 0month + security.Pets negotiable.

570-237-5394

WEST WYOMINGSmall 2 bedroom, 1

bath, off streetparking. Gas heat.

Non-smokers. ABSOLUTELY 

NO PETS!$575/per month,

plus security Call (570)609-5300

953Houses for Rent

ASHLEY  Available immedi-ately, 4 bedrooms, 2b ath roo ms , o ff-street parking, nopets, No Smokers,$575 + Security/permonth, plus utilities.Call 570-239-6586

DALLAS2 bedroom. Off 

street parking.$600/month + firstmonth & security.

Call (570) 690-0233after 6pm

DALLASRestored Dallas Cen-

  tury Home. Excellentlocation. 3 bedroom,1.5 bath with appli-ances. 2 car garage.Security & refer-ences. $1,500/month+ utilities. No smok-ing. No Pets. NotSection 8 Approved.

570-261-5161

8/4/2019 Times Leader 09-22-2011

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/times-leader-09-22-2011 45/45

PAGE 16D THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com

STORM

DAMAGE?

Roofing • Siding • Structural Repairsand Replacement • Drywall

• Interior DamageWeWillWorkWithYour InsuranceCompany! 

MICHAELDOMBROSKICONSTRUCTION

570-406-5128 / 570-406-9682

25 Years Experience

Prompt– Reliable– Professional 

ALLTYPESOF REMODELING

PA#031715 • Fully Insured

412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale

412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale

      7      0      2      7      0      0

197 West End Road, Wilkes-Barre, PA 18706

825-7577

YOMING VALLEY  AUTO SALES INC.

SERVICED, INSPECTED, & WARRANTIEDFINANCING AVAILABLE

 www.WyomingValleyAutos.com

MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM

30THANNIVERSARY SALE!

07 COBALT 60K....................

$7,995

07 AVEO 84K............................

$6,995

03 VW JETTA GL .............

$6,595

04 SATURN VUE..........

$5,475

00 VW BEETLE 74K ......

$5,250

03 FOCUS ...............................

$4,995

02 WINDSTAR 85K..........

$

4,99500 IMPREZA AWD.............

$4,995

04 CAVALIER.....................

$4,450

99 ALTIMA .............................

$3,495

You r Frie n d In The Ca r B u s in e s s 

P a rtia lL is ting !

2 6 0 S ou th R ive r S t, P la in s , P A • 5 70 - 8 2 2 - 2 10 0      1     4     3     7     3     8H O M E O F L O W M IL EA G E

QU ALITY VEH ICLES     

W W W .AU TOB U D D IES ON L IN E.COM  

3 M on th P ow e rtra in W a rra n ty 

OVER 50 VEH ICL ES IN S TOCK !

2003 CHEVY M O NTE CARLO SS Only 75K M iles,Leather,Sunroof ..............$9,9952004 CHEVY M O NTE CARLO SS Only 68K M iles ...............................$9,9952002 O LDS BRAVAD A SUV AllW he elD rive,Leather,99K M iles ............$8,9952002 DO DG E STRATUS 4DR SEDAN Only 85K M iles ...............................$5,9952001 O LDS INTRIG UESunroof,Only 80K M iles ......................$5,4951999 PO NTIAC G RAND A M 4DR SDN Only 80K M iles ...............................$4,9951995 JEEP G RAND CHERO KEE 4X4Exc ellent C ondition ...........................$3,495

953Houses for Rent

HARVEYS LAKE2 bedroom home inquiet neighborhood,$650/month + utili-

 ties, security/lease.570-477-3882

HARVEYS LAKE2 bedroom StoneHouse. All kitchenappliances. Use of dock. 1 year lease.Renters insurance.No smoking.$1,400/month + utili-

 ties. (570) 696-5417

HARVEYS LAKELakefront

3 bedroom, 1 bath.Fully furnished.$1,000 monthly, +utilities. Call

570-283-2022

HARVEYS LAKELiving room, din-ing room, home

office/family room,3 bedrooms, 2 full

baths, screenedporch. Fresh

paint, new wall/ wall carpet. Appli-ances plus wash-er/dryer hookup.Garbage, water,

sewer, snowplow-ing included. No

Pets. Non-Smok-ing. Security, ref-erences & creditreport. 1st & last

months rent.

$1,025 monthly.570-639-5761

HUNLOCK CREEK Exceptional 2 story 18 acre wooded pri-vate setting. 4 bed-rooms, 3.5 baths, 2car attachedgarage, large deck,

  full basement. Petsconsidered. Utilitiesby tenant. Showingb y ap po i ntm en t.$1,500/monthCall Dale for details

570-256-3343Five Mountains

Realty 570-542-2141

 Wanna make aspeedy sale? Place your ad today 570-

829-7130.

KINGSTONExecutive Homewell maintained.

Newly remodeled.Front porch, foyer entrance,

hardwood floors,living room, dining

room, 4 bedrooms,2 fireplaces, 2.5

baths, granitekitchen, sun room,

basement withplenty of storage,no pets, no smok-

ing. $1,500/month570-472-1110

Nice Area

953Houses for Rent

MOUNTAIN TOP

316 Cedar Manor Dr(Bow Creek Manor)

4 b ed ro om , 3 1/2b at h 2 s to ry o nalmost 1 acre. Mas-

er bedroom suite.

Two family rooms.T wo fi re pl ace s.Office/den. Largedeck overlooking ap rivate w oo de d

  yard. 3 car garage.Rent for $1,800 perm on th w it h t heoption to buy.

MLS #11-3286Please CallBob Kopec

Humford Realty 570-822-5126

MOUNTAIN TOPRent to Own - LeaseOption Purchase 5bedroom 2 bath 3story older home.Completely remod-eled in + out! $1500month with $500m on th a pp li ed

  toward purchase.$245K up to 5 yrs.

 [email protected]

Collect cash, notdust!Clean out your

basement, garageor attic and call the

Classified depart-ment today at 570-

829-7130!

MOUNTAINTOP3 bedrooms, 1 bath.Positively no smok-ing in or on property.No pets.

570-474-6821

MOUNTAINTOP3 bedrooms, 2

baths, large eat inkitchen. Garage.Huge deck over-

looks woods. Washer/dryer, dish-

washer, fridge,sewer & water

included. Creditcheck. $1,200 +

security, No pets,no smoking. Proof 

of income required.Call (570) 709-1288

NANTICOKEDesirable 

Lexington Village Nanticoke, PA 

Many ranch stylehomes. 2 bedrooms

2 Free Months With A 2 Year Lease $795 + electric 

SQUARE FOOT REMANAGEMENT866-873-0478

NOXEN3 bedroom, 1 1/2bath, & big yard.

$950/ month +security & 1st

month, No pets.  Ask for Bob or Jean

570-477-3599

953Houses for Rent

PLYMOUTH417 E. Main St

Ready November 12 story, 3 bedroomhouse for rent. NewKitchen with stove,dishwasher, washerdryer hookup. Smallback yard and deck.$ 675 + u til iti es & security. Call

570-270-3139

WEST PITTSTONCompletely remod-eled 2 story, 2 bed-

ro om h om e w ithn ew kitc he n, 1. 5bath rooms, all newstainless steel appli-ances, includingrefrigerator, stove,dishwasher, washerand dryer, new car-pet tile and hard-wood, paved drive-way, electric heat,nic e yar d a ndneighborhood. Nopets $1200. month$2000 security.

570-479-6722

WILKES-BARRE2 bedroom, wall towall carpeting, smallbackyard, washer & dryer hookup, nopets. $525 + securi-

  ty & utilities. Call570-822-7657

Looking for the right dealon an automobile?Turn to classified.It’s a showroom in print!Classified’s gotthe directions!

WILKES-BARRE64 Terrace StreetSingle Family Home5 bedrooms. Fully 

  furnished. Every-  th in g f ro m A -Z .Ready to move in.

$800/monthCall (570) 200-5678

WILKES-BARRE  Ad o rab le 2 b ed -room. Huge base-m en t. O ff s tre etparking. Large back 

 yard. No pets. $585+ references, secu-rity & utilities.

570-766-1881

WILKES-BARREClean, 2 bedroom,

duplex. Stove,hookups, parking, yard. No pets/no

smoking.$495 + utilities.

Call 570-868-4444

WILKES-BARRERiverside Dr.

Stately brick, 4bedroom, 2 bath & 

2 half bath home.Hardwood floors,spacious rooms,

beautiful patio,all appliances

included. $1,600/ month + utilities.

MLS#11-2579570-696-3801

Call Margy 570-696-0891

953Houses for Rent

DO YOU HAVE  A HOUSE YOU

WOULD BEINTERESTED IN

LEASING?I have immediatequalified renters

looking for Homesor Townhomes to

lease. Please emailme at:

[email protected] for details and

areas, includingDrums, Conyngham

or Mountaintopareas.

Dee Fields, Associate Broker

570-788-7511

LEWITH & FREEMAN RE, INC

959 Mobile Homes

DORRANCE TWPMOUNTAIN TOP

Trailer rental. 2 bed-room, 2 baths. $400+ utilities & security.

Call 570-855-2405

PITTSTONQUIET COVE MOBILE

HOME P ARK

3 bedrooms, 1 bath,living room, eat-inkitchen, new car-

peting. Good condi- tion. Includes wash-

er & dryer. $600per month + utilities& security deposit.OPTION TO BUY!

Call (570) 406-8741

LINE UP A GREAT DEAL...IN CLASSIFIED!Looking for the right dealon an automobile?Turn to classified.It’s a showroom in print!Classified’s gotthe directions!

SHAVERTOWNMany mobile homel o ts avai l ab l e atEcho Valley Estates.Bring your new orused mobile homei n, n ev er w or ry  about flooding again.Cl eane s t & m os tb e au tifu l m ob i leh o me p ark i n th earea. Please con-

  tact the office to setup an appointment

  to view availablelots. 570-200-5046

962 Rooms

KINGSTON HOUSENice, clean

 furnished room,starting at $315.

Efficiency at $435month furnished

with all utilitiesincluded. Off street parking.570-718-0331

WYOMINGSleeping room.

Private entrance & bath. Non smoking,

drug free. Subject to background

check. $100 weekly + $200 security.570-239-3997

Leave Message!

9 65 R oo mm at e

 Wanted

WILKES-BARRE Wanted to share 3

bedroom apart-ment. Non smoker.

$275/month, all util-ities included.

570-793-7856

LINEUP ASUCCESSFULSALE

INCLASSIFIED!Doyouneedmorespace?

 A yard or garage salein classified

is the best waytocleanoutyour closets!You’re in bussiness

with classified!

974 Wanted to Rent

Real Estate

MOUNTAIN TOP AREALOOKING TO LEASE

2 CAR GARAGEFOR STORING

 VEHICLES AND  WORK AREA.

Call 570-899-1896

Anonymous Tip Line

1-888-796-5519Luzerne County Sheriffʼs Office

WENEED

YOURHELP!

SellingYour Car?

We’ll run your ad untilthe vehicle is sold.

Call Classified829-7130

ad untilsold.

ed