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WILKES-BARRE, PA TUESDAY, JULY 19, 2011 50


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Rupert Murdochs hold on
News Corp. slipping.
BUSINESS, 8B
Losing a media
empire?
Back Mountain bashes Plains,
10-0, in Legion Baseball.
SPORTS, 1B
Winning the
winners bracket
WILKES-BARRE About 15
children were playing Monday at
the splashless Coal Street Park.
As temperatures and humidity
climbed, attendance at city parks
dropped off as kids chose to stay
in air conditioning or head to pri-
vately owned swimming pools.
As boys and girls swung on
swings and slid on sliding
boards, the site of the citys soon-
to-open splash pad sat idle. A
fence has been erected around
the site to keep children and
adults fromfalling into the 6-foot
hole that awaits a new vault for
the pad.
A splash pad would be great
in this weather, said Maria Ko-
rona of Wilkes-Barre. The kids
would be able to cool off. The
city has done a great jobwiththis
No big splash at Coal Street Park
W-B facility waits for splash
pad while attendance at city
parks drops off due to heat.
By BILL OBOYLE
boboyle@timesleader.com
PETE G. WILCOX/THE TIMES LEADER
Construction of the splash pad at the Coal Street Park in Wilkes-
Barre has come to a halt.
See SPLASH, Page 12A
IS LOCKOUT ON
WAY OUT?
People familiar with
talks to end the NFL lockout
say that if an agreement is
ratified by Thursday, team
executives will be updated
on the deals terms that day.
The people said the leagues
32 clubs were told Monday
that topics would include the
rookie salary system and
guidelines for
player trans-
actions. 1B
SPORTS
SCOREBOARD
NATIONAL LEAGUE
CUBS 6
PHILLIES1
MARLINS 4
METS1
BRAVES 7
ROCKIES 4
AMERICAN LEAGUE
YANKEES 5
RAYS 4
RED SOX15
ORIOLES10
SCRANTON Scrantons Community Medical Center
andGeisinger HealthSystemareexpectedtodaytoreveal
plans to merge.
A source says the deal, anticipated to be the subject of
an11:15 a.m. press conference, would mean an infusion of
$158.6 million for capital projects at CMC. Among the
planned upgrades would be new operating suites, im-
provements to the intensive care unit and the addition of
an electronic health records system. Included in the
merger would be CMC-owned Mountain View Assisted
Living Center at Montage Mountain
inScrantonandtwophysical therapy
centers, one in Clarks Summit and
one in the Green Ridge section of
Scranton.
Matthew Van Stone, a spokesman
for Geisinger, declined comment
Monday. CMC spokeswoman Wendy K. Wilson declined
to provide specific details but offered a brief assessment
of the pending announcement.
Geisinger, CMC merging
Source says the
joining is
expected to
bring major
upgrades for
Scrantons
Community
Medical Center.
By ANDREWM. SEDER
aseder@timesleader.com
First reported at
3:33
p.m.
timesleader.com
See MERGER, Page 12A
6 09815 10011
HORIZON CITY, Texas
The cinderblocks that make up
Maria Teresa Escamillas new
home will do little to shield
her from the triple-digit heat
that has been scorching West
Texas. She has no electricity
yet, and the roof is not proper-
ly attached, leaving the interi-
or exposed to the elements.
Escamilla has been living in
an air-conditioned apartment
that she can no longer afford.
But when the lease ends in two
weeks, she has to move a
day she dreads because it
means shell have no escape
from the searing temper-
atures.
As Americas midsection bakes,
poor face life-and-death dilemma
By JUAN CARLOS LLORCA
Associated Press
AP PHOTO
Amarion Jordan, 5, of Des
Moines, Iowa, battles the heat
by playing in a fountain. See HEAT, Page 12A
Two lawsuits connected to
Steve Floods actions as Luzerne
County controller followed him
to his death, but a controversial
2004 juvenile detention center
trade secrets
lawsuit against
himwas quietly
discontinued in
December,
court records
show.
One of the
pending suits
was filed by for-
mer county pension fund money
manager ASCO Financial Group
Inc. and its president, Donald
Williamson, over statements
made by Flood on a November
2002 radio program.
This libel suit is scheduled for
jury trial at10a.m. onSept. 26be-
forecountyJudgeThomasBurke,
according to court records.
NewJerseyattorneyCraigHill-
iard, who is representing ASCO,
and Wyomissing attorney Ken-
neth A. Goodman, who repre-
sents Flood, couldnot be reached
for comment Monday on what, if
any, impact Floods death will
have on the proceeding.
Flood, 67, of Dorrance Town-
ship, died Saturday afternoon af-
ter suffering a second stroke.
Kingston attorney Joseph Gio-
vannini, who is assisting Hilliard,
said Monday he believes the trial
will proceed as planned because
an oral deposition of Flood under
oath may be presented in court.
The suit alleges Flood made
false and defamatory statements
about WilliamsonandASCOdur-
ingaNov. 13, 2002, interviewona
talk radio show hosted by Kevin
Lynn on WILKradio.
ASCO Financial and William-
son were among several county
retirement fundmoneymanagers
fired by Flood and other retire-
ment board members in Septem-
ber 2002as part of the funds reor-
ganization.
Flood
libel suit
still on
schedule
It is not known what impact
the former county controllers
death will have on the case.
By JENNIFER LEARN-ANDES
jandes@timesleader.com
See FLOOD, Page 12A
Flood
HOOP, HOOP, HOORAY!
FRED ADAMS/FOR THE TIMES LEADER
Z
oe Kanellis, 11, of Edwardsville, gets six hula hoops going at the Funday Monday event on Public Square in Wilkes-
Barre. The program, now in its third season, presents fun activities for children each Monday from 4:30 to 7 p.m.
during the summer. For information, call event organizer DeRiel Hernandez at 793-3447.
Anewreport issuedMondaysays Pennsyl-
vanias middle class is an endangered spe-
cies, and its authors touted ways to save the
groupbut saidthere is noovernight fixtothe
situation.
Under Attack: Pennsylvanias Middle
Class and the Job Crisis, a 13-page report
compiled by the Keystone Research Center
and left-leaning, New York-based think tank
Demos, outlines how Pennsylvanians are
facinga lackof goodjobs, decliningaccess to
benefits, higher costs to raise children and
decreasing access to college.
They also said there now is a legislative
climate that has contributed to the econom-
ic recession.
Anthony F. Liuzzo, a professor of business
at Wilkes University, said he does not need
toreadareport toknowthat themiddleclass
is being squeezed.
Its a fact, he said.
And as the debate in Washington over
whether to raise the debt ceiling rages on, he
said its becoming clearer to him that things
will likely get worse before they get better.
Report: States middle class under siege
Job and benefit loss, child-raising costs
and reduced access to college are cited.
By ANDREWM. SEDER
aseder@timesleader.com
See MIDDLE, Page 12A
INSIDE
A NEWS: Obituaries 2A, 8A
Local 3A
Nation & World 5A
Editorials 11A
B SPORTS: 1B
B BUSINESS: 8B
Stocks 9B
C HEALTH: 1C
Birthdays 3C
Crossword/Horoscope 5C
Television 6C
Movies 6C
Comics 8C
D CLASSIFIED: 1D
WEATHER
Angelina Holliday
Mostly sunny, hot. High
88, low 68.
Details, Page 10B
K
PAGE 2A TUESDAY, JULY 19, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
Brzozowski, Irene
Edwards, Jacqueline
Figlock, Mary
Flood, Stephen
Garbus, Julia
Golden, Diane
Keiner, Elsie
Layaou, Beatrice
Pascale, Nancy
Pisano, Genevieve
Refolo, Joseph
Roberts, Jacklyn
Samson, Genevieve
Spivey, Darren
Weber, Frederick
OBITUARIES
Page 2A, 8A
A CLARIFICATION NEEDS
to be made in an article that
ran in the Sunday, June 26,
edition of The Times Leader
about homicide cases settled
in Luzerne County.
William Perrego was con-
victed of third-degree murder
in March 2008 and sentenced
to life in prison in the fatal
beating of Lewis Jones on
March 14, 2007, in Wilkes-
Barre. Perrego is appealing
the conviction.
BUILDING
TRUST
The Times Leader strives to
correct errors, clarify stories
and update them promptly.
Corrections will appear in this
spot. If you have information
to help us correct an inaccu-
racy or cover an issue more
thoroughly, call the newsroom
at 829-7242.
HARRISBURG (AP) Tues-
days Pennsylvania Cash 5
jackpot will be worth at least
$330,000 because no player
matched the five winning
numbers drawn in Mondays
game.
Lottery officials said 66
players matched four num-
bers and won $272 each;
2,235 players matched three
numbers and won $13.50
each; and 28,533 players
matched two numbers and
won $1 each
Thursdays Pennsylvania
Match 6 Lotto jackpot will
be worth at least $700,000
because no player holds a
ticket with one row that
matches all six winning
numbers drawn in Mondays
game.
LOTTERY
MIDDAY DRAWING
DAILY NUMBER 8-3-7
BIG 4 0-0-8-1
QUINTO - 7-0-5-5-1
TREASURE HUNT
01-03-05-22-29
NIGHTLY DRAWING
DAILY NUMBER - 0-9-5
BIG 4 - 8-1-4-2
QUINTO - 8-9-0-8-1
CASH 5
04-13-22-32-42
MATCH 6 LOTTO
03-05-11-19-36-44
DETAILS
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Issue No. 2011-200
HANOVER TWP. Hanover
Area School Board is considering
going green with a solar array on
a small hill outside the high
school that, accordingtoonecon-
sultant who talked at a work ses-
sion Monday, could be built at no
cost or risk to the district.
Jane Heiple of Lyceum Group
Inc. told the board an array could
be built through a power pur-
chase agreement. Aninvestor or
companywouldpayconstruction
andmaintenance costs, while the
district bought the power at a
guaranteed rate for a set number
of years, typically 15 to 20.
If done right, Heiple said, the
contract assures a lower rate than
the district is payingnow, andthe
rate rises more slowly than what
commercial providers charge, so
savings grow over time. Heiple
said the average increase of elec-
tricity charges was about 5 per-
cent per year while the business
was heavily regulated, but that
since government deregulation
took hold, some are projecting
cost increases to hit 30 percent
annually.
Heiple said Power Purchase
Agreements are particularly at-
tractive to companies right now
because the federal government
offers tax credits and grants that
can cover up to 50 percent of the
cost. She noted a key incentive,
which covers about 30 percent of
cost, is set toexpire inDecember.
Stressing that all estimates are
rough guesses until a company
comes in and does more rigorous
engineering research, Heiple
said it looks as though the field
where the array would be located
could produce about 320 kilo-
watts. Neither she nor district of-
ficials knew how much the dis-
trict currently uses, but Heiple
said that would be below the
maximum need.
If the district opted to build
such an array on its own, Heiple
said a rough cost estimate would
be between $1.2 million to $1.5
million. But building it through a
purchase power agreement
means the company contracted
would assume all risks and re-
sponsibilities, including mainte-
nance. The district would simply
buy the power at the pre-set
rates.
The board could negotiate op-
tions at the end of the contract,
such as having an option to buy
the array or have the company
come and remove it.
The board took no action, but
members generally voiced sup-
port for drawing up and publiciz-
ing a request for proposals that
would invite companies to offer
costs and contract terms for a
power purchase agreement. The
board would either have to call a
special meeting to vote on doing
that or wait until its regular Au-
gust meeting.
Hanover Area considering solar power
The school district could buy
power at a lower rate, a
consultant says.
By MARK GUYDISH
mguydish@timesleader.com
Mark Guydish, a Times Leader staff
writer, can be reached at 829-7161.
Problems with the press
caused delivery of The
Times Leader to be late in
some areas and forced us to
eliminate some features.
We apologize to our readers
for the inconvenience. Fea-
tures missing from the
Monday paper are included
in todays edition.
E D I T O R S N O T E
J
acklyn (Audi) Roberts, 59, of
Taylor, passed away Sunday, July
17, 2011, in the Hospice Community
Care, Dunmore, after a brief illness,
surrounded by her loving family.
Born in Wilkes-Barre, on October
17, 1951, Jacklyn was a daughter of
Jack and Alice Audi.
She graduated from Riverside
High School and Millersville Uni-
versity.
Jacklyn was employed as a read-
ing specialist for 33 years at the Riv-
erside School District, and retired
in 2007.
Left to cherish her memory are
her husband of 34 years, Joseph Ro-
berts, Taylor; son, Michael Roberts,
and his wife, Amanda, Duryea;
daughter, Alyson Roberts, at home;
parents, Jack and Alice Audi, Moos-
ic; sister, Cathy Audi, Yatesville;
brother Attorney John Audi and his
wife, Terrie, Jenkins; brother Mi-
chael Audi and his wife, Sandy, Ya-
tesville; nephew, Nicholas Audi;
nieces, Emily Audi and Nicole Audi;
and numerous cousins, relatives
and friends.
Aside from her love of teaching,
Jacklyn loved nothing more than
gathering together with her extend-
ed family and friends. She enjoyed
sharing travel, vacations, special
events and simple get-togethers
with those she loved.
Among her many retirement
pleasures were casino gambling and
QVCshopping. Awomanof tremen-
dous and abiding faith, she was a
member of St. Marys Antiochian
Orthodox Church, Wilkes-Barre.
Jacklyn was a devoted wife and
mother who dedicated her life to
nurturing her family, as well as a
wonderful daughter, sister, aunt and
friend. She will be deeply mourned
and missed by all who knew and
loved her.
A funeral will be held at 11 a.m.
Wednesday from the Mamary-Dur-
kin Funeral Service, 59 Parrish St.,
Wilkes-Barre. Services will be held
at 11:30 a.m. in St. Mary Antiochian
Orthodox Church, 905 S. Main St.,
Wilkes-Barre. Interment will be
held at the parish cemetery, Hanov-
er Township. Friends may call from
4 to 7 p.m. today at the funeral
home.
Donations in Jacklyns memory
may be made tothe Multiple Sclero-
sis Research Institute, established
by Dr. Jeffery I. Greenstein, 1341 N.
Delaware Ave., Philadelphia, PA
19125.
Jacklyn Roberts
July 17, 2011
J
ulia Barbara Banaszek Garbus,
88, of Glenmoore, formerly of
Glen Mills, passed away Saturday,
July 16, 2011, surrounded by her
family, after a long illness.
She was the wife of the late Allen
W. Garbus with whom she shared
65 years of marriage before his
death in 2008.
BorninDupont, she was a daugh-
ter of the late Francis and Eleanor
Sieraszewska Banaszek.
Julia was a graduate of Columbia
School of Nursing with an RN de-
gree andservedas a visitingnurse, a
World War II U.S. Army nurse, and
was a 35-year participant in the Har-
vard Nursing Study.
She was a passionate gardener
andbirdwatcher, anavidreader and
a gourmet cook.
Among her many civic activities,
she served on the Board of the Cam-
den Day Care, was Sunday School
Director for the Philadelphia Ethi-
cal Society, president of ARC of
Chester County, president of the
Locksley Garden Club, and pio-
neered the Thornbury Recycling
Center.
She and her husband, Allen, who
shared her love of gardening, volun-
teered for 20 years at the Colonial
Plantation at Ridley State Park.
Julia was a devoted supporter of
many charities including Special
Olympics, the Arbor Foundation,
Chester County Library, The Na-
ture Conservancy, and the Gettys-
burg and Monticello Memorials.
In addition to her husband, she
was predeceased by her sisters, Ma-
ry and Natalie; and brother, Stanley.
Julia is survived by her three
daughters, Catherine Garbus, Tunk-
hannock; Barbara Garbus and her
husband, Chuck Broyles, and Amy
Jo Garbus, all of Glenmoore; three
grandchildren, Emelyn Fuhrman
and her husband, Jeffrey, Pitts-
burgh; Jesse Smith, currently serv-
ing in Iraq; and Alyda Heeman,
Tunkhannock; two great-grandchil-
dren, Brock McClain and Evange-
line Fuhrman; three sisters, Ann
and Helen, Syracuse, N.Y., Gene,
Wilkes-Barre; two brothers, Edward
and Hank, Wilkes-Barre; and many
beloved nieces and nephews.
A celebration of the lives of
JuliaandAllenwill beheldpri-
vately.
A donation in Julias memory
may be made to Special Olympics
of Chester County, 458 E. King
Road, Malvern, PA 19355, or if you
are in town, just stop by her favorite
spot, the Exton Diner, and order a
cup of soup in her honor.
To send online condolences,
please visit, www.wentzfuneral-
home.com. Arrangements are by
Wentz Funeral Home, Coatesville.
Julia B. Garbus
July 16, 2011
More Obituaries, Page 8A
LEHMAN TWP. -- The board
of supervisors announced
Monday that the township re-
ceived a compliance notice
from the Luzerne County Con-
servation District regarding
the way in which the township
has been clearing the berm of
the roads.
On July 13, representatives
from the district inspected the
berms and noted the township
failed to provide effective ero-
sion and sedimentation con-
trols. Chairman Dave Sutton
said the district is cracking
down on all municipalities and
is requiring corrective mea-
sures that arent practical and
are dangerous.
Sutton said the district is re-
quiring the township to put up
silt fences or line the berms
with hay bales, which he said
would pose a risk to motorists.
Township crews have been
clearing the berms to help con-
trol runoff and flooding for the
past several weeks on several
township roads. He said the
board plans to discuss the mat-
ter with the district.
Well try to explain that
what theyre asking us to do
isnt practical, he said. It
could cause a real safety is-
sue.
Supervisor Doug Ide said
crews from drilling company
Encana are working to reclaim
the exploratory natural gas
well pad at the Salansky site on
Zosh Road in Lake Township.
Once the company finishes the
work and truck traffic is gone
from the area, the company
will begin to repair the roads it
damaged. The affected roads
are Outlet, Meeker, Meeker-
Outlet, Slocum and Ide roads.
The board opened bids for
construction of a new roof for
the municipal building. Only
two bids were received which
were from out-of-town contrac-
tors. Ark Builders Corp., of Al-
lentown presented a bid of
$37,730 and Spotts Brothers
Inc., of Schuylkill Haven, sent
in a bid in for $21,460. No local
firms sent proposals for the
job, despite advertising in The
Times Leader and The Citi-
zens Voice newspapers on two
occasions, said Treasurer Al
Cragle. The township engineer
will review the bids and make a
recommendation.
In other business, the board
granted temporary permits to:
Lake Silkworth Volunteer
Fire Department for its annual
bazaar on the grounds of Our
Lady of Mount Carmel Church
from July 29 through July 31.
Dallas Cross Country
Booster Club for the Annual
Run for the Fallen at Penn
State Wilkes-Barre campus on
Aug. 17.
Penn State Wilkes-Barre
for its annual cross-country
meet on Sept. 17.
Lehman Twp. disputes claim road work improper
Luzerne County Conservation
District rules are impractical
and dangerous, official says.
By CAMILLE FIOTI
Times Leader Correspondent
SALEM TWP. The town-
ship supervisors and the plan-
ning commission are examining
a proposed townhouse project
that might be scheduled for con-
struction in 2012 on a tract of
landformerly knownas the Bow-
er farm off Bomboy Lane.
It has been named The Salem
Township Project.
Marr Rentals LLC of Blooms-
burg has submitted a plan for 32
units intended, according to in-
formation provided at a public
hearing in May, for people 55
years old and older. Kristan
Mertz, rental administrator for
Marr LLC, said on Monday that
the proposed project has met
with initial adverse reaction
from residents on East 7th, 8th,
9th and 9th streets and an
amended plan has been pre-
pared by S.M. Design Architects
of Wilkes-Barre.
The amended plan must still
be submitted to and approved by
township officials.
Mertz said the hearing attract-
ed a capacity crowd, and for the
most part, objection was raised
about traffic, although concern
was raised about the units being
rented to people other than
Marrs stated clientele. Original-
ly she said ingress and egress
was designed for East 9th Street,
but has since been changed to
Luzerne Avenue.
It was said that part of the mo-
tivation for the proposed project
is a demographic study that sug-
gests that there is a high number
of seniors in the Berwick-Salem
area who are in need of such
rental housing and, in addition,
there are prospects of a third
unit being constructed at PPLs
Susquehanna Steam Electric
Station.
According to plans presented
to township officials, the intent
is for one- and two-bedroom
apartments designedfor individ-
uals and couples, not families.
Each unit, Mertz said, will be
one floor with an attached ga-
rage. She said rental rates will be
between $750 and $950 per
month.
Nancy J. Marr, is listed as the
president and owner of Marr As-
sociates, as well as an associated
firm, Heidorn Development.
Salem Twp. studying 32-unit townhouse project
By TOMHUNTINGTON
Times-Leader Correspondent
SCRANTON A Catholic
priest has been removed from
ministering as pastor of St.
Michael the Archangel parish
pending the outcome of an in-
vestigation into his allegedly
providing alcohol to a minor.
According to a statement re-
leased by the Diocese of
Scranton, diocesan officials
were informed on Sunday that
the Rev. Michael OLeary, a
member of the Priestly Frater-
nity of St. Peter, allegedly fur-
nished alcohol to two individ-
uals, including an underage
young adult and a minor.
The Priestly Fraternity of
St. Peter is a Clerical Society
of Apostolic Life in the
Church, established by Pope
John Paul II in 1988 to offer
the Traditional Latin Rite of
the Mass and the sacraments
to the faithful.
At the time the incident was
reported, OLeary was serving
as pastor at St. Michaels in
Scranton, where Masses are
offered in the Traditional La-
tin Rite. He has served in that
capacity since January 2010.
Diocesan officials have spo-
ken with the parents of the
two individuals and reported
the matter to law enforce-
ment. The incident was also
reported to the appropriate
superiors from the Fraternity
of St. Peter.
OLeary has been removed
from ministry and from St. Mi-
chaels Parish pending the out-
come of the investigation.
Diocesan officials remain
committed to fully cooperat-
ing with law enforcement in
the investigation, the state-
ment said.
The Rev. Eric Flood, North
American District Superior
for the Priestly Fraternity of
St. Peter, could not be reached
for comment on Monday.
A supervisor with Scranton
police did not immediately re-
turn a message Monday seek-
ing more information.
According to the diocese
website, OLeary was or-
dained in 1993. He had been
residing at St. Michaels Rec-
tory, 1703 Jackson St., Scran-
ton.
Diocese removes Scranton-area pastor
The Rev. Michael OLeary
allegedly gave alcohol to an
underage adult and a minor.
By STEVE MOCARSKY
smocarsky@timesleader.com
WILKES-BARRE City
police reported the following:
Two men were charged
with burglary and criminal
trespass after police responded
to a burglary in progress on
Monday.
Police said they found Jo-
seph Bevan, 27, of Laurel
Street, Wilkes-Barre, inside a
building at 123 Hazle St. and
placed him under arrest when
they responded there shortly
after 2 p.m.
Jeremy Bevan, 23, of Cam-
eron Street, Plymouth, alleged-
ly fled the building and was
arrested after a short foot
chase, police said.
The burglary victim was
identified as Marion Nardone.
Steve OConnor, of 300
Parkview Circle, on reported
receiving harassing phone calls
from an unknown male on
Thursday.
John Kashuba reported
that someone threw eggs on
his 2009 Chevrolet while it
was parked near 389 S. Empire
St. on Monday.
William Neeley, 28, of
Plymouth, was charged with
retail theft after he allegedly
was caught taking sunglasses
valued at $24 from Boscovs
Department Store, 15 S. Main
St., on Monday, police said.
Tawana Lovell, of 40 S.
Franklin St., Wilkes-Barre,
reported on Monday that
someone smashed the rear
drivers side window on her
Ford Expedition while it was
parked near 17 W. Ross St.
Robert Kuhn reported that
someone smashed a window at
58 Wyoming St. on Monday.
POLICE BLOTTER
C M Y K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com TUESDAY, JULY 19, 2011 PAGE 3A
LOCAL
timesleader.com
PHILADELPHIA
Cardinal Rigali resigns
P
ope Benedict XVI has accepted
the resignation of Philadelphia
Archbishop Cardinal Justin Rigali
and will name a replacement as early
as today, according
to a published re-
port.
Michael Sean
Winters, of the
National Catholic
Reporter, indicated
the move could
come as early as
this week. The
region includes the Diocese of Scran-
ton.
Church law mandated that Rigali
submit his resignation on turning 75,
which he did earlier this year. But it
was not known if the Vatican would
accept it.
Rigali is the head of the Arch-
diocese of Philadelphia, which has
been rocked with recent revelations
of child abuse at area churches.
A grand jury report issued in Feb-
ruary determined the archdiocese
did not follow its own procedures
when clergy members were suspect-
ed or found to have abused children.
The grand jury criticized the arch-
diocese for leaving priests suspected
of abuse in ministerial positions.
Three priests and a teacher were
charged this year by the grand jury
with rape of children. A monsignor
in the archdiocese was also charged
with endangering children by trans-
ferring the suspected priests.
The Associated Press
PITTSTON TWP.
Airport will hold exercise
The Wilkes-Barre/Scranton In-
ternational Airport will hold a live
major aircraft accident response
exercise on Saturday morning start-
ing at 8:30.
The drill will involve airport fire-
fighters, emergency fire and medical
equipment from surrounding com-
munities and area agencies including
the emergency management agen-
cies of Lackawanna and Luzerne
counties and the American Red
Cross.
The drill will have no effect on
airline operations and all flights will
operate as scheduled. The airport
says that every effort will be exerted
to make the drill as realistic as pos-
sible, including the use of sirens on
emergency vehicles.
This type of exercise is required at
least once every three years by the
Federal Aviation Administration.
HERSHEY
Teens go to Honors Camp
Blake Donovan of Shavertown and
Reid Skiro of Plains Township are
among a group of 48 teenagers from
across Pennsylvania at the State
Police Academy in Hershey this
week learning about state police
operations and government through
the annual Commissioners Honors
Camp.
The cadets, age 13-18, were select-
ed from among more than 1,500 boys
and girls who participated in local
Camp Cadet programs last summer.
Troopers teach Honors Camp
cadets about criminal investigations,
police skills, use-of-force and related
topics. The Honors Camp continues
through Saturday, ending with a
graduation ceremony at the State
Police Academy.
KINGSTON
School Board will meet
Wyoming Valley West School
Board will hold an emergency meet-
ing today at 8:30 a.m. in the Middle
School auditorium. The school is
located on Chester Street, Kingston,
and is handicapped accessible from
the side of the building.
The meeting was advertised for
special purposes, meaning actions
must be limited to agenda items.
LUZERNE
ODonnell hired as officer
The borough council voted unani-
mously at a special work session on
Monday to hire Patricia ODonnell as
a part-time officer for the month of
August.
The special meeting was called
because ODonnells name was not
announced prior the formal vote to
hire additional officers at the regular
July meeting.
N E WS I N B R I E F
Rigali
WILKES-BARRE Louise
Olenik thought Monday would
bring some closure to a year-
old case in which her niece was
scheduled to plead guilty to
taking $107,000 from the 79-
year-old.
But now, Olenik, who had to
put her home up for sale and
sell all her belongings, has to
wait another two months, after
her nieces attorney on Mon-
day asked for a continuance in
scheduled proceedings.
Oleniks niece, Marisa Har-
len, was scheduled to enter a
guilty plea to one felony count
of receiving stolen property af-
ter police said she began tak-
ing the money after assuming
Oleniks power of attorney.
Harlen, 29, of Kingston, who
was charged in September,
said in November at a court ap-
pearance that she intends on
paying back the money to her
aunt and will plead guilty be-
cause of a gambling addiction.
Shes waiting for me to die,
Olenik said Monday. Thats
what shes doing. That was my
first thought.
Olenik said Monday shortly
after hearing the proceeding
had been rescheduled to Sep-
tember that she thought some
closure would come, but now
she has to wait even longer.
When reached Monday by
telephone, a secretary for at-
torney Joseph Yeager, when
asked about Mondays contin-
uance, said no comment.
Im so furious, I cant even
speak. Ill make it and shell
spend her time in jail, Olenik
said.
Oleniks home nurse, Mi-
chelle ONeill, said Olenik be-
gan to cry after being told
about the September court
date.
Its gonna be a bad day,
Olenik said Monday. But, to-
morrow will be better.
Most of Oleniks belongings
were sold last weekend in an
estate sale at her Sondra
Drive, Larksville, home. There
is also a buyer for the house
that was listed for sale in Janu-
ary for $230,000.
Olenik said she put her
home and belongings on the
market because she is no long-
er able to afford the house and
the 24-hour at-home nurses
aid she requires.
Olenik said she and her hus-
band, Edward, who died in De-
cember, worked their entire
lives -- he as a carpenter, plum-
ber and mechanic and she as a
government employee.
They saved their money and
eight years ago bought the
Sondra Drive house where
they planned to live the rest of
their lives.
Olenik is now temporarily
staying at her brothers Har-
veys Lake home until she can
move in with another relative
in Tunkhannock.
2-month trial delay pains victim
Louise Olenik is selling her
house. Her niece is accused
of taking her money.
By SHEENA DELAZIO
sdelazio@timesleader.com
Harlen Olenik
Sheena Delazio, a Times Leader
staff writer, may be reached at
829-7235.
WILKES-BARRE The city has filed
another appeal of a court ruling that
scuttled its efforts to recoup part of a
$500,000 settlement paid to a police of-
ficer who was injured when his cruiser
was struck by another vehicle.
The appeal, filed in the case of officer
George Cole, is the latest in a long, con-
voluted legal battle the city has waged
relating to access to assets that remain
in Coles bankruptcy estate.
Legal fees associated with the court
battle have cost the city $78,000 as of
June, according to copies of invoices ob-
tainedthrougha Right toKnowrequest.
The decision to file a new appeal was
criticized by Coles attorney, Paul Perl-
stein, who contends it is pointless as the
city has no legal basis to continue the
legal fight.
The case focuses on the citys right to
attach a $500,000 settlement Cole re-
ceived from the driver of the other car
involved in a 1996 collision with his po-
lice cruiser. Cole never received the
money, which has been held in escrow
by the trustee appointed to oversee the
bankruptcy filing Cole made in 2007.
The city has been attempting to ac-
cess that money to recoup part of the
$450,000 in Heart and Lung benefits it
paid Cole, who was off the job for nine
years before returning to work in 2005.
Pennsylvania law allows an employer
to attach workers compensation bene-
fits if an employee recovers money from
the third party who caused the injury.
There has been a dispute over whether
that same provision applies to Heart
and Lung benefits, which are similar to
workers compensation.
In 2009, the Third Circuit Court of
Appeals ruled Heart and Lung and
workers compensation were essentially
the same, therefore city was entitled to
seek the money. But that decision was
negated in May by a ruling issued by
U.S. District Judge James Munley.
Munleys decision was based on a
state Supreme Court ruling issued in Ja-
nuary that said Heart and Lung benefits
are not subject to attachment. The city
had argued that ruling should not apply
to Coles case because it was issuedafter
Third Circuit decision.
But Munley, citing a previous U.S. Su-
preme Court rulinginanother case, said
federal law states that he must base his
decision on the state law that was in ef-
fect at the time the federal case was be-
ing reviewed.
Coles case, which had been returned
to Munley for a ruling in a separate mat-
ter bythe ThirdCircuit Court, remained
active. That meant the January ruling
by the state Supreme Court did apply to
Coles case, Munley said.
The city appealed Munleys latest rul-
ing to the Third Circuit Court in June.
Perlstein said the city continues to ar-
gue Munley did not have authority to
negate the Third Circuits ruling, but
has failed to cite any case law support-
ing its position. The U.S. Supreme
Court ruling is irrefutable, he said,
therefore he believes any further ap-
peals are pointless.
In a prepared statement released by
the city, Thomas MacNeely, the citys at-
torney, said he is confident the city will
prevail in the latest appeal. MacNeely
said the case is important to the city be-
cause it will set a precedent that could
affect future cases.
Far fromwastingthe taxpayers mon-
ey, the city is acting in the best interests
of its taxpayers by not only asserting its
rights to the funds that are at issue in
this case, but also by protecting its
rights in similar cases that may arise in
the future, MacNeely said.
Perlstein disputed that. He said all fu-
ture cases involving Heart and Lung
benefits will be ruled upon based on the
precedent set by the January ruling is-
sued by the state Supreme Court. Coles
case will have no bearing.
I understand they dont like losing,
but I dont know what the basis of their
appeal is, Perlstein said.
W-B again appeals ruling it cant claim officers cash
The long-running case grows out of
a 1996 collision involving a police
officer and his settlement money.
By TERRIE MORGAN-BESECKER
tmorgan@timesleader.com
WILKES-BARRE The Luzerne
County Coroners Office has identified
two of the three people who died as a
result of crashes early Monday morn-
ing, includingaCrestwoodHighSchool
student.
Coroner John Corcoran said16-year-
old Brian Madry
died after a crash
around1a.m. along
Lake Road in Fair-
viewTownship.
Madry was a
Crestwood la-
crosse player, ac-
cordingtoTheTimesLeadersarchives.
There will be anautopsy at 9a.m. to-
day, Corcoran said. Madrys age was
one factor in the autopsy decision, but
Corcoran would not elaborate on oth-
ers.
Shavertown resident Darren Spivey,
44, died from multiple traumatic inju-
riesafterhismotorcyclecrashedonEast
Franklin Road in Kingston Township
around 7 a.m.
Athirdperson, whodiedafter a1994
Dodge truck hit a tree along Route 115
inBuckTownshipabout1milenorthof
Thornhurst Roadaround5:30a.m., had
not been identified as of Monday eve-
ning, Corcoran said.
Hesaidall familymembersof thevic-
timhad not yet been notified.
State police at Wyoming said the
truck was northbound on Route 115,
struck a roadsignandspuninto a near-
by wooded area.
Corcoran said three unrelated fatali-
ties withinafewhours intheabsenceof
foul weather was atypical.
Weve had it happen before, but it is
unusual. Thank God we had the man-
power and everyone was able to dedi-
cate the time necessary, he said.
Two killed
in crashes
identified
By SHEENA DELAZIO
sdelazio@timesleader.com
First reported at
2:58
p.m.
timesleader
.com
DURYEA Would you be concerned if
you saw a picture of a lion wearing a
crown or a pair of pitchforks drawn on
your teenagers notebook?
Howabout a star with the number 5 or
6 in the center drawn on the wall in his or
her bedroom along with some groups of
letters?
Some of these symbols combined
withother factors suchas certaintypes of
behavior could be signs that your child
is in a gang or wants to be, said two
agents withtheFederal Bureauof Investi-
gations Safe Streets Task Force, who
gave a gang awareness presentation to
more than 50 area parents, residents and
members of law enforcement Monday at
the borough municipal building.
Sponsored by the Duryea Neighbor-
hoodCrime Watchandthe Duryea Police
Department, the presentationwas aimed
at educating residents about gangs so
they could help police if signs of gangs
appear, said crime watch representative
Trina Moss.
Duryea Police Chief Nick Lohman said
he didnt think Duryea has a gang prob-
lem, but hewants residents tobeawareof
signs of gangs in case they do crop up.
Were directly in the middle between
Scranton and Wilkes-Barre and there are
a lot of drug arrests on Main Street.
(Drug traffickers) think if they stay off
the Interstate and take side roads, they
can avoid state police. So we want to
make our officers aware of the gang pres-
ence in the area, as well as officers from
other communities, Lohman said.
The FBI task force agents, who asked
that their names not be published be-
PETE G. WILCOX/THE TIMES LEADER
Leonard Scarantino of Duryea, left, and Ed Gross of Wilkes-Barre look over a pamphlet on a Parents Guide to Gangs at
Monday nights community meeting about gangs held at the Duryea borough building.
Signs of gang activity discussed
FBI agents help parents identify
indications of youth involvement.
By STEVE MOCARSKY
smocarsky@timesleader.com
See GANGS, Page 10A
C M Y K
PAGE 4A TUESDAY, JULY 19, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
N E W S
SENIORS
Nanticoke, Glen Lyon, Hanover, and Plymouth Area , y , , y , y , , y
BIRCHWOOD
REHABILITATION AND NURSING CENTER
invites you to attend
NO COST TO PLAY BINGO
on July 28, 2011 - 5:30 PM located at the center
This NO COST event features great prizes,
Food and Desserts
RSVP by July 25, 2011 (Seating is limited to 40 guests)
570-735-2973
Look for our series of free senior events to follow!
Mark your calendars!
395 Middle Road
Nanticoke, PA 18634
3
0
1
2
9
1
WILKES-BARRE City coun-
cil canexpect tobeobservedat its
next meeting.
According to Mary Catherine
Roper, staff attorneyfor theAmer-
ican Civil Liberties Union Penn-
sylvania office, the organizationis
looking for a volunteer among its
active membership to attend the
next council meeting. Council is
scheduledtomeet inworksession
Aug. 9andinregular sessionAug.
11.
Our volunteer wont engage in
any question-and-answer ses-
sion. Roper said. He (or) she
will be there just to be our eyes
andears andreport backtoour of-
fice.
Roper responded to e-mails
from Mark Robbins, the Forty
Fort manwhospokeat last weeks
council meeting alleging a kick-
back and bribery scheme among
the citys contracted towing com-
pany, LAG Towing, Mayor Tom
Leighton and the citys police
chief. Robbins contends he was
overcharged for the tow. He also
took exception to the way he and
other people, such as Bob Kadlu-
boski, the citys former towing
contractor, are treated at council
meetings.
When contacted Monday,
Roper said she will write a letter
to city council regarding com-
plaints she has received.
The letter will be a lecture on
groundrules, Roper said. Hope-
fully, theywill get theletter before
they enact newrules.
Council Chairwoman Kathy
Kane is proposing changes to the
protocol for public input at coun-
cil meetings. She said she is con-
cernedaboutthedecorum, orlack
of it, at recent meetings. Kanesaid
she has asked the city attorney to
offer language for a resolution
that would call for possible sanc-
tions or penalties for people who
show a pattern of disruptive be-
havior at meetings.
You cant require people to act
with decorum, Roper said of
Kanes idea. Adversarial condi-
tions are never productive, but
people including those holding
elective office are protected by
the First Amendment.
Ropersaidtimelimitsonpublic
comment are common with most
public entities.
There are norules that require
elected officials to respond at all
topubliccomment orthat theylis-
tenattentively,shesaid. Theon-
ly requirement is that they allow
the public to speak.
Melissa Melewsky, media law
counsel for the Pennsylvania
Newspaper Association, said the
Sunshine Act contains guidelines
for the way public meetings
should be conducted.
Five minutes seems to the
common time for public input,
she said. But there should be
some flexibility. If a person needs
more time to air their concerns,
depending on the circumstances,
additional time should be grant-
ed. A stopwatch type of adminis-
trationof that typeof policycanbe
problematic.
Roper said a person addressing
council should not be cut off be-
causeof what heor shechooses to
talk about, unless its completely
unrelated to council business.
She also talked about the issue of
name calling at meetings.
Kadluboski was called cup-
cake byKaneandbyLeightonon
separate occasions.
I am sorry if the gentleman is
insulted by being called a cup-
cake, but thatsnot alegal matter,
Roper said.
ACLU will observe W-B council
The planned visit was sparked
by disputes over public
comment at the meetings.
By BILL OBOYLE
boboyle@timesleader.com
PITTSBURGH A western
Pennsylvania woman filed a law-
suit claiming that local officials
improperly seized her newborn
son after a positive drug test re-
sulted from her having eaten sal-
ad dressing containing poppy
seeds.
The lawsuit is the second in a
year accusing Lawrence County
Children and Youth Services and
Jameson Hospital of improperly
taking a newborn because of
flawed drug testing.
Eileen Ann Bower, a Lawrence
County resident whose residence
and age were not provided, gave
birth to a son, Brandon, on July
13, 2009, according to a com-
plaint filed Friday. She had re-
ceived prenatal care and passed
every drug test, and was stunned
when a blood test at Jameson
Hospital came back positive for
opiates, according to the lawsuit.
Her son was taken into foster
care three days after birth and re-
turned 75 days later, according to
the complaint, a copy of which
was obtained by The Associated
Press.
Bower saidshe hadeatena pas-
ta salad made with Salad Su-
preme dressing withpoppy seeds
immediately before going into la-
bor. She is suing the county agen-
cy, a caseworker and Jameson
Health Systemfor negligence, in-
vasion of privacy and violation of
due process.
Messages left by The Associat-
ed Press for Lawrence County
Children and Youth Services Di-
rector Jane Gajda and for Jame-
son Hospital were not immedi-
ately returned Monday.
Litigation in a similar lawsuit
filed by another mother last year
is ongoing.
Pa. mother blames poppy
seeds for failed drug test
The Associated Press
K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com TUESDAY, JULY 19, 2011 PAGE 5A
N A T I O N & W O R L D
LONDON
Scandal hits police force
B
ritains tabloid phone-hacking scan-
dal enveloped the London police
force Monday with the rapid-fire resig-
nations of two top officers and claims
of possible illegal eavesdropping, brib-
ery and collusion. U.K officials immedi-
ately vowed to investigate.
Prime Minister David Cameron,
feeling the political heat from his own
close ties to individuals within Rupert
Murdochs media empire, cut short his
trip to Africa and called an emergency
session of Parliament for Wednesday.
U.K lawmakers today will grill Mur-
doch, his son James and Rebekah
Brooks, the ousted chief executive of
Murdochs U.K. newspaper arm, in a
public hearing.
A whistleblower on the phone hack-
ing former News of the World jour-
nalist Sean Hoare was found dead
Monday.
Police said the death was being treat-
ed as unexplained but was not consid-
ered suspicious, according to Britains
Press Association.
TRIPOLI, LIBYA
Report: Meeting with U.S.
The Libyan government spokesman
said Monday that representatives of
Moammar Gadhafis embattled govern-
ment held face-to-face talks with U.S.
officials on repairing ties between the
nations.
There was no independent confirma-
tion that such a meeting took place and
the United States has been a strident
opponent of Gadhafis government
throughout the civil war with rebel
forces based in the east of the country.
Spokesman Moussa Ibrahim told
reporters in Tripoli that the purported
talks were held Saturday but he refused
to say where or which officials took
part.
ROCHESTER, N.Y.
Police: Bus tire blew out
A tour bus likely had a front tire
blowout just before it veered off a high-
way and overturned, killing two pas-
sengers and injuring 35 people, three
seriously, state police and a company
spokesman said Monday.
The driver of the Niagara Falls-
bound bus, which was carrying Indian
nationals from Washington, D.C., lost
control Sunday and ran off Interstate
390 into woods near Avoca, 55 miles
south of Rochester.
The bus driver, 58-year-old John
Dinardo Jr., had no history of driving
violations or criminal activity and his
logbook was in order, New York State
Police Superintendent Joseph DAmico
said.
There is no evidence of any excess
speed, of any alcohol, of any driver
fatigue or of any other violation,
DAmico said.
WASHINGTON
Nuke safety changes urged
Nuclear Regulatory Commission
Chairman Gregory Jaczko is urging his
agency to decide within 90 days how to
proceed with safety changes intended
to improve the U.S. nuclear industrys
response to catastrophic events such as
the tsunami that crippled a nuclear
plant in Japan.
A task force appointed by the NRC
said last week that nuclear plant oper-
ators should be ordered to re-evaluate
their earthquake and flood risk.
The task force also recommended
adding equipment to handle simultane-
ous damage to multiple reactors and
ensuring electrical power and instru-
ments are in place to monitor and cool
spent fuel pools after a disaster.
I N B R I E F
AP PHOTO
So, whats the buzz?
Beekeeper Wang Dalin is covered with
tens of thousands of bees Sunday
during a contest against another bee-
keeper in Longhui County of
Shaoyang City, central Chinas Hunan
Province. Wang won in the hour-long
duel with 57 pounds of bees covering
his body, Xinhua News Agency said.
KABUL A new U.S. com-
mander, Gen. John Allen, for-
mally took control of the war
in Afghanistan on Monday, in-
heriting a nearly decadelong
conflict that has cost the lives
of at least 1,668 American
troops.
Allen succeeds Gen. David
H. Petraeus, who is leaving to
head the CIA. Petraeus had
been in command for only a
year, hastily taking the helm
after President Barack Obama
forced out Gen. Stanley
McChrystal after Rolling
Stone magazine reported in-
temperate comments by his
staff about the administra-
tions civilian leadership.
Petraeus tenure coincided
with the arrival of a surge of
U.S. troops, and the military
said the extra manpower
yielded battlefield dividends,
particularly in Afghanistans
south. But senior command-
ers have described these gains
as fragile and reversible, and
some military officials have
voicedfears that the American
drawdown that began this
month will leave remaining
troops particularlyvulnerable.
Moreover, the danger level
has steadily increased for Af-
ghan civilians. The United Na-
tions reported last week that
noncombatant deaths jumped
by15 percent inthe first half of
the year. Insurgents were
blamed for four-fifths of those
fatalities, but many Afghans
lay the responsibility for the
growing danger of daily life at
the doorstep of foreign troops.
Allen takes command at a
time when many U.S. lawmak-
ers are looking for ways to cur-
tail the U.S. presence in Af-
ghanistanandNATOallies are
looking for ways to scale back
their presence. Afghan troops
aretakingsecuritycontrol this
month of seven cities or areas,
a process that began this week
with the formal transfer of re-
sponsibility in Bamiyan, one
of Afghanistans safest prov-
inces.
New commander takes over war
Gen. John Allen replaces
Gen. David H. Petraeus
By LAURA KING
Los Angeles Times
AP PHOTO
U.S. Gen. David Petraeus, the outgoing commander in Af-
ghanistan, greets new commander U.S. Gen. John Allen.
WASHINGTON Baby
boomers say their biggest health
fear is cancer. Given their wais-
tlines, heart disease and diabetes
should be atop that list, too.
Boomers are more obese than
other generations, a new poll
finds, setting them up for un-
healthy senior years.
And for all the talk of 60 is the
new 50 and active aging, even
those who
arent obese
need to do
more to stay fit,
according to
the Associated
Press-Life-
GoesStrong-
.com poll.
Most baby
boomers say
they get some
aerobic exercise, the kind that
revs up your heart rate, at least
once a week. But most adults are
supposed to get 2
1
2 hours a week
of moderate-intensity aerobic ac-
tivitythings likea briskwalk, a
dance class, pushinga lawnmow-
er. Only about a quarter of boom-
ers polled report working up a
sweat four or five times a week.
Worse, 37 percent never doany
of the strengthtrainingneededto
fight the muscle loss that comes
with aging.
Walking is their most frequent
formof exercise. The good news:
Walk enough and the benefits
add up.
Based on calculation of body
mass index from self-reported
height and weight, roughly a
third of the baby boomers polled
are obese, comparedwithabout a
quarter of both older and young-
er responders. Only half of the
obese boomers say they are regu-
larly exercising.
An additional 36 percent of
boomers are overweight, though
not obese.
The nation has been bracing
for a surge in Medicare costs as
the 77 million baby boomers, the
post-war generation born from
1946 to 1964, begin turning 65.
Obesity with its extra risk of
heart disease, diabetes, high
blood pressure and arthritis
will further fuel those bills.
Theyre going to be expensive
if they dont get their act togeth-
er, said Jeff Levi of the nonprofit
Trust for Americas Health. He
points toastudythat foundMedi-
care pays 34 percent more on an
obese senior than one whos a
healthy weight.
About 60 percent of boomers
polled say theyre dieting to lose
weight, and slightly more are eat-
ing more fruits and vegetables or
cutting cholesterol and salt.
But it takes physical activity,
not just dieting, to shed pounds.
Thats especially important as
people start to age.
Poll finds
obesity is
a boomer
problem
Staying fit with age will be a
challenge for a giant segment
of the population.
By LAURAN NEERGAARD
AP Medical Writer
But it
takes
physical
activity to
shed
pounds.
WASHINGTON With the deadline
swiftly approaching for a deal to resolve
thedebt-ceilingcrisis, thevolumeonCapi-
tol Hill is about to be cranked up to 11.
House Republicans are pushing ahead
with votes this week on a proposal backed
bychamber conservativesthat wouldraise
the debt ceiling the required $2.4 trillion
but would ultimately cap government
spendingat18percent of thenations gross
domestic product, require Congress to
pass a balanced budget each year, and
slash more than $110 billion fromthe 2012
fiscal year budget.
The measure, which may pass the
Housebyamajorityvotebut isexpectedto
go nowhere after that, is either a final, de-
fiant albeit symbolic standby House
Republicans before acceding to a compro-
mise on the debt ceiling or a formal show
of intransigence that illustrates how diffi-
cult it will be for the House to sign off on
any deal that includes President Barack
Obamas signature.
The White House Monday wasted no
time twisting the dial, with the president
threatening to veto the House bill, even
though theres little chance it can pass the
Senate.
At anyrate, it appears that withtheAug.
2 deadline for a debt-limit increase loom-
ing, things will slow down for a bit before
they speed up. Republican leaders in the
HouseandSenatehaveindicatedthat they
want tofoldintime for a floor debate inor-
der to mollify conservatives on both ends
of the Capitol, who are certain to squawk
long and hard about any final deal that
does not include the kind of significant
spending cuts they seek.
That doesnt meanbothsides have stop-
pedtalking. Senateleaders areworkingon
a budget proposal that would cut $1.5 tril-
lion, while other reports have House
Speaker John Boehner and the White
Housestill workingonsomeversionof the
grandbargain that couldwipeout $4tril-
lionor morefromthebudget over thenext
decade but wouldalso likely include some
elements of entitlement-program reform
as well as a some accord on modifying the
tax code.
Then there is the in-case-of-emergency-
break-glass optionthat was floatedbySen-
ateMinorityLeader MitchMcConnell last
week, which involves a dose of procedural
flim-flammery that would provide the
White House with a debt-ceiling increase
tostaveoff economic calamitywhilehand-
ingtheGOPsomepolitical coverbyvoting
on the record against the increases.
But the attention, at least for the next
couple of days, will fall on the House. The
proposal being offered would force federal
spending to fall below 20 percent of GDP
by 2021, which would require massive
spending cuts, likely including the Penta-
gon or entitlement programs or both.
U . S . D E B T C R I S I S
AP PHOTO
Pamela Donehower, of Middleburg, Va., left, John Holman, of Denver, Colo., center, and others with the group No Labels
rally Monday in Washington to urge Congress and the president to find a bipartisan solution to the fiscal crisis.
GOP works on proposal
President threatens to veto House
bill even though Aug. 2 deadline for a
debt-limit increase is looming.
MCT News Service
ORLANDO, Fla. Casey
Anthonys whereabouts for her
first week of freedom were a
closely guardedsecret Monday,
known only to a select few as
she tries to start a newlife after
being acquitted of killing her
daughter. One of her lawyers
says an elaborate plan was
made to protect her from peo-
ple with the lynch-mob men-
tality.
Her options for starting a
new life could be limited by
lawsuits pending against her,
the scorn of multitudes who
think she was guilty of the kill-
ing and a criminal record from
her convictions for lying to po-
lice. She walked out of jail on
Sunday, shortly after midnight.
Her attorney Cheney Mason
told NBCs Today Show on
Monday that hes confident in
Anthonys safety, but declined
to answer questions about
where she was.
Shes gone, shes safe and
elaborate plans had to be made
to keep the people away from
her, Masonsaid. Her lifeis go-
ingtobe very difficult for a very
longtime as longas there are so
many people of the lynch-mob
mentality.
Asked about how Anthony
was paying for her fresh start,
Mason replied that many vol-
unteers have offered their help.
Her notoriety couldalso help
her earn money. Experts who
havehelpedother notorious de-
fendants through rough times
say she will have opportunities,
but it wont be easy for the 25-
year-old, who was found not
guilty of killing her 2-year-old
daughter, Caylee, but convict-
ed of lying to investigators.
In response to a question
about whether Anthony
planned to cash in on her fame,
her lead attorney, Jose Baez
told Fox News Channel late
Sunday that she has certain
rights as an individual in this
country. Attorneys planned to
handle Anthonys affairs in a
dignified manner, he said.
If she decides she wants to
speak publicly about it, shell
make that decision, he said.
Another former Anthony
lawyer, Terry Lenamon, said he
had no clue where she was
headed, and that probably only
a few people close to her knew.
Lawyer: Elaborate plans made for Casey Anthonys safety
Acquitted womans
whereabouts after jail
release are kept secret.
By MIKE SCHNEIDER
and MATT SEDENSKY
Associated Press
AP PHOTO
Casey Anthony, right, climbs into an SUV with her lawyer
Jose Baez, left, after her release early Sunday.
C M Y K
PAGE 6A TUESDAY, JULY 19, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
N E W S
CALL
AN EXPERT
Professional Services Directory
CALL
AN EXPERT
1006 A/C &
Refrigeration
Services
STRISH A/C
Ductless / Central
Air Conditioning
Free Estimates
Licensed & Insured
570-332-0715
1015 Appliance
Service
LEN HOSEY
Appliance Service
Washer/Dryer
Range/Dishwasher.
Whirlpool, Maytag,
Kitchenaid & Roper
287-7973
1024 Building &
Remodeling
1st. Quality
Construction Co.
Roofing, siding,
gutters, insulation,
decks, additions,
windows, doors,
masonry &
concrete.
Insured & Bonded.
State Lic. # PA057320
570-606-8438
ALL OLDERHOMES
SPECIALIST
825-4268.
Remodel / Repair
Masonry, stucco,
& concrete
Call the
Building
Industry
Association of
NEPA to find a
qualified mem-
ber for your
next project.
call 287-3331
or go to
www.bianepa.com
DAVE JOHNSON
Expert Bathroom
Remodeling, Whole
House Renovations,
Interior & Exterior
Carpentry. Kitchens
and Basements
Licensed &Insured
570-819-0681
NICHOLS CONSTRUCTION
All Types Of Work
New or Remodeling
Licensed & Insured
Free Estimates
570-406-6044
Northeast
Contracting Group
Decks, Sunrooms,
Additions, Garages,
Roofs, Concrete
sidewalks & Drive-
ways, etc.
(570) 338-2269
ROOFING, SIDING,
DECKS, WINDOWS
For All of Your
Remodeling Needs.
Will Beat Any Price
25 Yrs. Experience
References. Insured
Free Estimates
570-899-4713
1039 Chimney
Service
A-1 ABLE CHIMNEY
Rebuild & Repair
Chimneys. All
types of Masonry.
Liners Installed,
Brick & Block,
Roofs & Gutters.
Licensed &
Insured
570-735-2257
CAVUTO
CHIMNEY
SERVICE
& Gutter Cleaning
Free Estimates
Insured
570-709-2479
Chimney Construction
CONCRETE & STUCCO
Chimneys rebuilt &
repaired. Block,
sidewalks, walls &
steps. Estimates
free. 570-457-5849
Licensed. & insured
CHIMNEY REPAIRS
Parging. Stucco.
Stainless Liners.
Cleanings. Custom
Sheet Metal Shop.
570-383-0644
1-800-943-1515
Call Now!
Say it HERE
in the Classifieds!
570-829-7130
1039 Chimney
Service
CHRIS MOLESKY
CHIMNEY SPECIALIST
New, repair, rebuild,
liners installed.
Inspections. Con-
crete & metal caps.
Licensed & Insured
570-328-6257
COZY HEARTH
CHIMNEY
Chimney Cleaning,
Rebuilding, Repair,
Stainless Steel Lin-
ing, Parging, Stuc-
co, Caps, Etc.
Free Estimates
Licensed & Insured
1-888-680-7990
1042 Cleaning &
Maintainence
A+ CLEANING BY VERA
Homes, apartments
& offices. Day,
evenings &
weekends.
570-309-8128 or
570-709-3370
HOME HEALTH AIDE
& HOUSEKEEPING
Driving, house-
keeping & com-
panionship. Rea Rea- -
sonable rates sonable rates
& excellent & excellent
references. references.
Current Criminal
Background Check
(570) 639-2704
LOOKING FOR
someone Reliable &
Dependable to
clean your home?
SAME PERSON
EVERY TIME!
570-793-0776 or
570-814-2685
RELAX THIS SUMMER
Let Us Do The
Cleaning!!!
Christophers
Cleaning Service
Call Today
570-299-9512
or email us at:
nepacleaning@
gmail.com
Residential & Commercial
CLEANING BY LISA
Pet Services also
available, including
pick up & drop off.
570-690-4640 or
570-696-4792
1054 Concrete &
Masonry
Affordable General
Masonry & Concrete
NO JOB TOO BIG
OR TOO SMALL!
Masonry /Concrete
Work. Licensed &
insured. Free est.
John 570-573-0018
Joe 570-579-8109
D. Pugh
Concrete
All phases of
masonry &
concrete. Small
jobs welcome.
Senior discount,
Free estimates
Licensed & Insured
288-1701/655-3505
1057Construction &
Building
GARAGE DOOR
Sales, service,
installation &
repair.
FULLY INSURED
HIC# 065008
CALL JOE
570-606-7489
570-735-8551
H-D Contracting
Flooring, siding,
decks & much
more. Both large
and small jobs.
Free Estimates.
Call Salvatore
570-881-2191
1069 Decks
DECK STAINING &
PRESSURE WASHING
Interior/Exterior
Painting.
Experienced,
Reliable & Honest.
570-899-5759
1078 Dry Wall
MIKE SCIBEK DRYWALL
Hanging & finishing,
design ceilings.
Free estimates.
Licensed & Insured.
570-328-1230
MIRRA DRYWALL
Hanging & Finishing
Drywall Repair
Textured Ceilings
Licensed & Insured
Free Estimates
(570) 675-3378
1084 Electrical
GETZIE ELECTRIC
Licensed & Insured.
100 & 200 amp
service upgrades.
No job too small!
570-947-2818
GRULA ELECTRIC LLC
Licensed, Insured,
No job too small.
570-829-4077
SLEBODA ELECTRIC
Master electrician
Licensed & Insured
Bucket truck to 40
8 6 8 - 4 4 6 9
1093 Excavating
EXCAVATING & MODULAR HOMES
6-9 ARBORVITAE
Tree Planting Available
Driveways,
concrete pads & all
types of Excavating!
(570) 332-0077
1105 Floor Covering
Installation
CARPET REPAIR &
INSTALLATION
Vinyl & wood.
Certified, Insured.
570-283-1341
NORTHEAST FLOORING
SYSTEMS, INC
Installing
& Refinishing
Hardwood floors.
We install laminate
flooring too!
570-561-2079
1129 Gutter
Repair & Cleaning
GUTTER 2 GO, INC.
PA#067136- Fully
Licensed & Insured.
We install custom
seamless rain
gutters & leaf
protection systems.
CALL US TODAY ABOUT
OUR 10% OFF WHOLE
HOUSE DISCOUNT!
570-561-2328
GUTTER CLEANING
Window Cleaning.
Regulars, storms,
etc. Pressure
washing, decks,
docks, houses,Free
estimates. Insured.
(570) 288-6794
1132 Handyman
Services
All in a Call
Painting, Grass Cut-
ting, floor mainte-
nance, basements /
attics cleaned. Free
Estimates. Depend-
able & Reliable.
Package deals
available. Call
570-239-4790 or
570-388-3039
ALL
MAINTENANCE
WE FIX IT
Electrical,
Plumbing,
Handymen,
Painting
Carpet Repair
& Installation
All Types
Of Repairs
570-814-9365
Call Johnnie
Need help with a
project or small
jobs done?
Evenings & week-
ends. References.
570-855-3823
Licensed Contractor
Free Estimates. No
job too big or small!
10% off with this ad.
Great prices. Call
now. 570-852-9281
1132 Handyman
Services
DO IT ALL HANDYMAN
Painting, drywall,
plumbing & all types
of home repairs,
also office cleaning
available.
570-829-5318
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 Always hauling,
cleaning attics, cellar,
garage, one piece or
whole Estate, also
available 10 &20 yard
dumpsters.655-0695
592-1813or287-8302
AAA CLEANING
A1 GENERAL HAULING
Cleaning attics,
cellars, garages.
Demolitions, Roofing
&Tree Removal.
FreeEst. 779-0918or
542-5821; 814-8299
AAA Bob & Rays
Hauling: Friendly &
Courteous. We take
anything & every-
thing. Attic to base-
ment. Garage, yard,
free estimates. Call
570-655-7458 or
570-905-4820
AFFORDABLE
JUNK REMOVAL
Cleanups/Cleanouts
Large or Small Jobs
FREE ESTIMATES
(570) 817-4238
ALL KINDS OF
HAULING & JUNK
REMOVAL
TREE/SHRUB TREE/SHRUB
REMOV REMOVAL AL
Estate Cleanout Estate Cleanout
Free Estimates
24 HOUR
SERVICE
SMALL AND
LARGE JOBS!
570-823-1811
570-239-0484
CASTAWAY
HAULING JUNK
REMOVAL
823-3788 / 817-0395
Mikes $5 & Up
We do cleanups -
basements,
garages, etc. Yard
waste removal,
small deliveries, cut
grass & more.
Same day service.
793- 8057 826- 1883
S & S TOWING
& GARBAGE
REMOVAL
Free estimates.
Clean out attics,
basements, estates
We buy junk cars
too! 570-472-2392
WILL HAUL ANYTHING
Clean cellars,
attics, yards &
metal removal.
Call John
570-735-3330
1162 Landscaping/
Garden
EARTHTONES HARDS CAPE
Walkways, Paver
Patios, Retaining
Walls. Repairs
Welcome. Creative,
Reliable & Honest.
570-899-5759
Find homes for
your kittens!
Place an ad here!
570-829-7130
1162 Landscaping/
Garden
MOWING, TRIMMING
EDGING, SHRUBS
& HEDGES. TREE
PRUNING. TILLING.
LAWN CARE.
MULCHING.
FULLY INSURED.
CALL & SAVE 10%
OFF LAST BILL.
FREE ESTIMATES
570-814-0327
Patrick & Deb Patrick & Debs s
Landscaping Landscaping
Landscaping, basic
handy man, house
cleaning & help
moving. We even
do inside painting.
Any salvageable
items can be picked
up for free.
Free estimates.
Call 570-793-4232
Or 570-793-4773
Rainbow
Landscaping
& Lawn Service
Spring & Fall
Cleanups. Trimming,
mulching, complete
landscape installa-
tion. Lic. & Insured.
Call 570-674-2418
Reynolds
Landscaping
&
Power Washing
570-751-6140
JOHNS
Picture Perfect
LANDSCAPING
Bobcat : Grading
Excavator : Digging
Shrub/Tree Trimming,
Install or Removal
Be safe, not sorry.
Edging/Mulch/Stone
Lawns, Tilling & more
Hauling / Removal
Handyman, all types.
Fencing / Deck Wash
Blinds/Closets & more!
Reasonable & Reliable
570-735-1883
TOP SOIL
SCREENED & BLENDED
Delivery Available
Hunlock Sand
& Gravel
570-336-0411
1186 Miscellaneous
WINDOWS
INSTALLED FREE
with small investment
* Limited time only *
570-855-6127
1189 Miscellaneous
Service
Assisting the Elderly &
Disabled in their homes.
See ad in Elderly
Care Section 350
VITOS
&
GINOS
Wanted:
Junk
Cars &
Trucks
Highest
Prices
Paid!!
FREE PICKUP
288-8995
VITOS
&
GINOS
Wanted:
Junk
Cars &
Trucks
Highest
Prices
Paid!!
FREE PICKUP
288-8995
1195 Movers
BestDarnMovers
Moving Helpers
Call for Free Quote.
We make moving easy.
BDMhel pers. com
570-852-9243
1204 Painting &
Wallpaper
A & N PAINTING
Airplane Quality at
Submarine Prices!
Interior/Exterior,
pressure washing,
decks & siding.
Commercial/Resi-
dential. Over 17
years experience!
Free estimates.
Licensed & Insured
570-820-7832
A + CLASSICAL
Int./Ext. Experts!
Aluminum, Wood
& Deck Staining
Free Estimates
Licensed-Insured
30 Years
Experience
Locally Owned
Sinced 1990
570-283-5714
A&A Painting
Single Home $1,100
Double - $2,300 &up
Free Estimates.
Call Bob
570-212-0266
A.B.C. Professional
Painting
36 Yrs Experience
We Specialize In
New Construction
Residential
Repaints
Comm./Industrial
All Insurance
Claims
Apartments
Interior/Exterior
Spray,Brush, Rolls
WallpaperRemoval
Cabinet Refinish-
ing
Drywall/Finishing
Power Washing
Deck Specialist
Handy Man
FREE ESTIMATES
Larry Neer
570-606-9638
AMERICA PAINTING
Interior/Exterior.
20 years experi-
ence. Insured.
Senior Discount
570-855-0387
DAVID WAYNE
PAINTING
Call about Interior &
Exterior Specials,
Drywall & Wallpaper
570-762-6889
JASON SIMMS PAINTING
Interior/Exterior
Power Washing
Free Estimates
21 Yrs. Experience
Insured
(570) 947-2777
M. PARALI S PAI NTI NG
Int/ Ext. painting,
Power washing.
Professional work
at affordable rates.
Free estimates.
570-288-0733
Serra Painting
Book Now For
Summer & Save. All
Work Guaranteed
Satisfaction.
30 Yrs. Experience
Powerwash & Paint
Vinyl, Wood, Stucco
Aluminum.
Free Estimates
You Cant Lose!
570-822-3943
1213 Paving &
Excavating
EDWARDS ALL COUNTY
PAVING & SEAL COATING
3 Generations
of Experience.
Celebrating 76
Years of Pride
& Tradition!
Licensed and
Insured.
Call Today
For Your
Free Estimate
570-474-6329
Lic.# PA021520
Mountain Top
PAVING & SEAL
COATING
Patching, Sealing,
Residential/Comm
Licensed & Insured
PA013253
570-868-8375
GET THE WORD OUT
with a Classified Ad.
570-829-7130
1234 Pressure
Washing
RUSSELLS
PROPERTY MAINTENANCE
Licensed & insured.
30+ yrs experience.
POWER WASHING,
PAINTING, CARPENTRY
& ALL HOME REPAIR.
Free Est.
570-406-3339
1249 Remodeling &
Repairs
D & D
REMODELING
From decks and
kitchens to roofs,
and baths, etc.
WE DO
IT ALL!!!!!!!
CALL US FOR CALL US FOR
ALL OF YOUR ALL OF YOUR
INTERIOR AND INTERIOR AND
EXTERIOR EXTERIOR
REMODELING REMODELING
NEEDS NEEDS
570-406-9387
Licensed/Insured
YOUVE TRIED
THE REST NOW
CALL THE
BEST!!!
1252 Roofing &
Siding
J&F ROOFING
SPECIALISTS
All types of roofing.
Repairs & Installation
25 Years Experience
Licensed / Insured
Free Estimates
Reliable Service
570-855-4259
J.R.V. ROOFING
570-824-6381
Roof Repairs & New
Roofs. Shingle, Slate,
Hot Built Up, Rubber,
Gutters & Chimney
Repairs. Year Round.
Licensed/Insured
FREE Estimates
Jim Harden
570-288-6709
New Roofs &
Repairs, Shingles,
Rubber, Slate,
Gutters, Chimney
Repairs. Credit
Cards accepted.
FREE ESTIMATES!
Licensed-Insured
EMERGENCIES
Mister V Mister V
Constr Construction uction
Year Round
Roof Specialist
Specializing In
All Types of
Roofs, Siding,
Chimneys
& Roof Repairs
Low Prices
Free Estimates
Licensed
& Insured
28 Years
Experience
570-829-5133
SUMMER
ROOFING
Special $1.29 s/f
Licensed, insured,
fast service
570-735-0846
1336 Window
Cleaning
Professional
Window Cleaning
& More.
Gutters, carpet,
pressure washing.
Residential/com-
mercial. Ins./bond-
ed. Free est.
570-283-9840
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
HANOVER TWP.
Three people were taken to
a local hospital Sunday after
a two-vehicle crash on the
Sans Souci Parkway.
Township police said a
vehicle driven by Donald
Morningstar, of Wilkes-
Barre, and a vehicle driven
by Deborah Yatko, of Ha-
nover Township, collided
approximately 200 yards
south of Main Road.
Police said Morningstars
vehicle rolled onto its roof
and struck an advertising
sign, while Yatkos car stop-
ped along the road. Yatko
and her passenger, John
Minkiewicz, were taken to
Geisinger Wyoming Valley
Medical Center, as well as
Morningstar.
HANOVER TWP.
Township police, in con-
junction with the Luzerne
County Drug Task Force,
said Christopher Green,
also known as Slim, 29, of
Willow Street, Wilkes-Barre,
was arrested after a car
crash in Forty Fort. Police
said they learned Green was
wanted on a warrant from
Hanover Township.
Green was taken to the
county prison to await
arraignment early Monday
morning. Police the charges
stem from the alleged deliv-
ery of crack cocaine in the
parking lot of the Parkway
Plaza in January.
Police said Green is fac-
ing three related charges,
including possession with
intent to deliver.
EAST UNIONTWP. A
Sheppton woman reported
to state police at Frackville
that a Sugarloaf man took
her 1999 Subaru from her
home without permission.
State police said Barbara
Wolk, 68, reported Robert
Wolk, 18, of Sugarloaf, took
the vehicle from her resi-
dence around 2 a.m. Mon-
day and fled in an unknown
direction. State police said
charges will be filed. Any-
one with information is
asked to call state police at
Frackville at 874-5300.
HANOVER TWP.
Township police reported
the following, unrelated
incidents:
A store manager at the
Dollar General on the Sans
Souci Parkway reported
Friday that a woman tried
to remove items from the
store. Police said the wom-
an was seen walking in the
parking lot of a nearby bank
and was later identified as
Lisa Mager, 40, of Wilkes-
Barre. Police said Mager
will be charged with retail
theft.
Joann Graf, of New-
town, Hanover Township,
reported to police that
Ronald Belcastro damaged
two doorways of her home
Thursday. Police said charg-
es are pending a damage
estimate.
Shirley Gasper, of
Warrior Run, reported to
police that while shopping
at the Gerritys Supermar-
ket in the Hanover Mall on
Saturday afternoon, a wom-
an reached into her purse
and took her wallet. An
investigation is continuing,
police said.
Gail Shaver, of Hanover
Village, reported to police
on Sunday that someone
entered her house through
a window and a video game
console was taken.
Township police said
they are investigating an
attempted break-in at the
EzExpress along the Sans
Souci Parkway on Sunday.
Police said a door was dam-
aged by a rock and a securi-
ty system caught the in-
cident on tape. Police said
Thomas Lewis, of Ashley
Street, was arrested for
alleged possession of a
small amount of marijuana
and drug paraphernalia
after he was stopped while
walking on the Sans Souci
Parkway near the attempted
break-in. Police said charges
will be filed.
Police said they arrest-
ed Ashley Long, of Oak
Street, Wilkes-Barre, early
Monday morning for alleg-
edly driving under the
influence. Police said they
found Long sleeping behind
the wheel at a stop sign on
Carey Avenue. Police said
charges are pending the
results of a blood-alcohol
content test.
Donald Decker, of
Hanover Township, report-
ed Monday someone stole
his sons Huffy Free Style
bicycle while the family was
away on vacation.
Scott Parkhurst report-
ed Monday that someone
shot out the front window
of his business with a BB
gun on Hazle Street around
8 a.m.
Nicholas Marsellas, of
Hanover Township, report-
ed both of his mirrors on
his 1997 Chrysler vehicle
had been broken off some-
time overnight.
WILKES-BARRE City
police reported the follow-
ing incidents:
Police said Bernard
Gayoski and Ronald Kukow-
ski, both of Austin Avenue,
were cited with harassment
after police responded to a
neighbor dispute late Sun-
day.
Police arrested a 17-
year-old juvenile after a
traffic stop on Highland
Drive late Sunday. Police
said the juvenile will be
charged with possession
with intent to deliver, resist-
ing arrest, providing false
identification, forgery and
sale and use of air rifles.
Police said he was taken to
a juvenile facility in North-
ampton County.
POLICE BLOTTER
WILKES-BARRE A
city man will stand trial in
November on charges he
fired a gun and injured a
person.
Craig Hickson, 21, of
Academy Street, will stand
trial on Nov. 29 on four
charges relating to the July
2010 shooting.
Hickson, who is repre-
sented by attorney Joe
Yeager, faces charges of
discharging a firearm, pos-
session of a firearm, and
two counts of reckless en-
dangerment.
Assistant District At-
torney Michael Vough is
prosecuting the case. Judge
Tina Polachek Gartley said
no further continuances will
be granted in the case.
Police said a man in his
20s was arguing with others
in front of 184 Academy St.
and brandished a handgun.
The suspect then fired shots
towards 184 Academy St., a
detached house. A bullet
traveled through a front
window and struck a 21-
year-old man in the head,
police said. The victim,
whom police did not identi-
fy, was taken to Wilkes-
Barre General Hospital for
treatment. Police later
identified Hickson as the
alleged shooter.
WILKES-BARRE A
West Wyoming man was
sentenced Monday to six to
23 months in county prison
on a robbery charge stem-
ming from a home invasion
in Larksville.
Gary Jones, 18, of Shoe-
maker Street, was sen-
tenced on the charge by
Luzerne County Senior
Judge Joseph Augello. He
pleaded guilty to the charge
in June.
According to court pa-
pers, in August 2010, Jones
and two other men conspir-
ed to break into the Wash-
ington Avenue residence
and steal a video game
system, video games, mon-
ey and other items. A man
at the home was assaulted
during the robbery, police
said.
Ryan ODonnell, 20, of
Wyoming, pleaded guilty
and was sentenced in
March to six months proba-
tion on one count of receiv-
ing stolen property.
Nathan Wynn, 18, of West
Pittston, pleaded guilty to a
burglary charge in February
and is awaiting sentencing.
COURT BRIEFS
HARVEYS LAKE The Luzerne
County Republican Party will host
a charity dinner in remembrance of
longtime party member and com-
munity volunteer Jonathan Bales-
ter, who was stabbed to death in-
side his home in May.
Dave Baloga, second vice chair-
man for the local political organiza-
tion, said he got the idea for the
benefit after speaking to several of
Balesters friends, who wanted to
do something to honor his memo-
ry.
Jonathan was very adamant
about being a friend to anyone who
was in need. He was always con-
cerned about doing the work of the
Lord, Baloga said. This is a nat-
ural extension of something we can
do to remember him.
Balester, 56, was found dead in-
side his Kingston Township home
on May 27. An autopsy determined
he died of multiple stab wounds.
His death, whichhas beenruleda
homicide, remains under investiga-
tion, according to the Luzerne
County District Attorneys Office.
Baloga said he got to know Bal-
ester through his work with Wyom-
ing Valley Chapter of Pennsylva-
nians for Human Life Crisis Preg-
nancy Center. Net proceeds from
the dinner will benefit the organiza-
tion.
It was something that was very
dear and important to him. Every-
one of his friends had the same sen-
timent that this was a worthy cause
to support, Baloga said.
The dinner, a Southern-style bar-
beque, will be at 5 p.m. Aug 13 at
the Lakeside Skillet, 279 Lakeside
Drive, Harveys Lake. The dinner
will include chicken, barbequed
pulledpork, vegetables, strawberry
shortcake and iced tea.
The benefit will also feature mu-
sic andactivities, as well as a basket
raffle. Numerous political candi-
dates for the upcoming election are
also expected to attend.
Reservations withpayment must
be made by Aug. 10. Make checks
payable to the Luzerne County Re-
publicanParty, 41S. MainSt., Suite
14, Wilkes-Barre, PA18702.
For more information, contact
Baloga and 570-477-3177.
GOP will honor the late Jonathan Balester
Stabbing victim was a longtime
party member and community
volunteer.
Times Leader staff
C M Y K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com TUESDAY, JULY 19, 2011 PAGE 7A
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LEHMAN TWP. The Lake-
LehmanSchool Boardhireda new
high school teacher, furloughed
another andappointedseveral em-
ployeesat itsmeetingMondayeve-
ning.
Michael Nonnenburg of Scran-
ton was hired as the secondary in-
dustrial technology teacher for the
2011-12school year witha salary of
$41,841. Nonnenburg served as a
long-term substitute with the dis-
trict last year after the retirement
of Daniel Williams.
The board also appointed the
following employees for the 2011-
12 school year: Valerie Williams as
district substitute caller with a sti-
pendof $3,500; JohnMcDonaldas
in-school suspension monitor at a
rate of $13.55 per hour, 7 hours
per day, 181 days per year; Jeffrey
Shook as school and community
resource officer at a rate of $15.15
per hour; and Molly Company as
part-time teacher associate at a
rate of $10.30 per hour, five hours
per day, 181days per year.
Theboardalsoapprovedthefur-
lough of Christine Sakoski, ele-
mentary library aide, effective
June13. Theboardcut theposition
during the budgeting process,
which included curtailing pro-
grams inthe secondary school and
elementary schools.
The board dedicated the ele-
mentaryspecial educationroomin
Lehman-Jackson Elementary
School astheFarrell LearningCen-
ter. The roomwas named in mem-
ory of the late boardmember John
Peter Farrell, who died in a car ac-
cident earlier this year.
Lorraine Farrell, who replaced
her latehusbandontheboardafter
his death, saidhe wouldhave been
humbled by the honor.
Board President Mark Kornoski
said the board wanted to honor
Farrell in some way and felt his
dedication to special education
should be recognized.
Inotherbusiness, JohnnaEvans,
president of the Lake-Lehman
Foundation, said the organiza-
tions golf tournament on July 15
was a success and announced an
upcoming Battle of the Bands fun-
draiser, to be held July 30.
Evans also mentioned the foun-
dation has been able to send six
students, three high school and
three elementary, to summer
camps due to a partnership with
Misericordia University. She said
next year the foundation will also
have the opportunity to send ju-
nior high students to camps at
Wilkes University.
L-L hires teacher,
other employees
An elementary library aide is
furloughed, the result of
program changes.
By SARAH HITE
shite@timesleader.com
The next meeting of the Lake-
Lehman School Board will be at 7
p.m. Aug. 15 in the library of Ross
Elementary School in Sweet Val-
ley.
W H AT S N E X T
WASHINGTON U.S. Rep.
Lou Barletta raised more than
$258,000 in campaign cash
during the years second quar-
ter, and the Hazleton Republi-
can soon may have a formal
opponent against whom to
spend all that money.
Democrat William Vinsko
Jr., a lawyer with his own prac-
tice and an assistant city attor-
ney for Wilkes-Barre, said
Monday in a phone interview
he plans to soon make an an-
nouncement about whether he
will challenge Barletta in 2012.
Vinsko said a decision has
been made, but would not re-
veal his plans. It appears, how-
ever, that Vinsko is poised to
make a run against Barletta.
Barletta had $229,581 on
hand as of June 30 after raising
$258,287 during the quarter,
according to his campaign fi-
nance report filed Friday. Bar-
lettas campaign committee al-
so carries a debt of about
$74,000.
The freshman Republican
defeated longtime incumbent
Paul Kanjorski last year.
Pennsylvania Republicans
will be looking to shore up
Barlettas 11th congressional
district when the post-census
lines are drawn this year, but
Democrats believe the district
will remain Democratic-lean-
ing in its makeup.
The nonpartisan, Washing-
ton-based Cook Political Re-
port as of July 14 rated Barlet-
tas district as one of 10 GOP-
held tossup seats for the
2012 campaign.
Meanwhile, U.S. Rep. Tom
Marino, R-Lycoming Town-
ship, last quarter raised con-
siderably less money than Bar-
letta. But Marino, a freshman
lawmaker who won his seat in
2010 by defeating Democrat
Chris Carney, also seems to
face less political pressure, at
this point, in his 10th congres-
sional district.
Marino raised $107,518 dur-
ing the second quarter and
had $124,913 on hand as of
June 30.
He has no announced oppo-
nent and the Cook Political
Report so far does not place
Marino on its list of compet-
itive House races for 2012.
Carney may be eyeing an-
other run, but not necessarily
against Marino, said one local
Democrat.
Depending on how lines are
drawn, Carney could run
against Barletta, setting up a
potential primary battle to
take on Barletta if Vinsko an-
nounces in the next few weeks
that he is in the race.
Carney could not be reached
for comment.
The Cook Political Report
notes that its ratings are sub-
ject to dramatic changes as
new maps are finalized in 2011
and 2012.
Vinsko may challenge Barletta in 2012
Barletta may need campaign
cash raised if Democratic
lawyer enters the race.
By JONATHAN RISKIND
Times Leader Washington Bureau
NUANGOLA Borough
council acted Monday evening
to implement a $3 million bank
loan for a sanitary sewer sys-
tem that has been proposed for
construction in 2014, but at the
same was informed of the pos-
sible revocation of a $3.2 mil-
lion federal grant that is part of
$6.2 million in the overall fund-
ing for project.
Under what Council Chair-
woman Regina Plodwick called
Ordinance No. 2, council voted
6-0 to underwrite the Fulton
Bank of Lancaster loan package
that will be issued to the Nuan-
gola Sewer Authority. The sys-
tem is projected to traverse
through Rice and Dorrance
townships.
In a letter from Susanne K.
Gantz, community programs
director for the U.S. Depart-
ment of Agriculture dated June
27, it was alleged that the bor-
ough has failed to act in a time-
ly manner. Gantz specifically
took issue with a 2014 start.
Gantz set a moratorium that
construction bids must be ad-
vertised no later than Nov. 1,
2011, and they be awarded by
Jan. 31, 2012.
She said that if these dead-
lines are not met, the grant
funds will be de-obligated
and returned to the federal gov-
ernment, with Nuangola hav-
ing no recourse for other feder-
al funding.
Part of Gantz commentary
referred to the boroughs failure
to secure support funding, but
it was noted that that issue was
resolved through the loan
agreement signed with Fulton
Bank. Councilman John Ko-
chan, chairman of the sewer au-
thority, said also the authority
has a new plan that he said was
formulated by Quad 3 Engi-
neers of Wilkes-Barre and we
are moving forward.
Council said these actions
contradict Gantz.
In addition, Melissa Weber,
secretary-treasurer, said she
has been in communication
with the office of U.S. Rep. Lou
Barletta, R-Hazleton, and she
has a preliminary commitment
from him that he will act to sus-
tain Nuangolas grant funds.
The sewer systemdominated
comment at the session, al-
though, in conjunction with the
project, Plodwick said council
met in executive session to dis-
cuss litigation filed by Milnes
Engineers of Tunkhannock and
issues relating to $309,000 in
funding from Citzens Bank.
Attorney Patrick Healy of
Lancaster served as Fulton
Bank representative for the
signing of official documents
implementing the loan to the
sewer authority.
Nuangola scrambles to avoid grant loss
At stake is $3.2 million in
sewer funds from the U.S.
Department of Agriculture.
By TOMHUNTINGTON
Times-Leader Correspondent
K
PAGE 8A TUESDAY, JULY 19, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
O B I T U A R I E S
The Times Leader publish-
es free obituaries, which
have a 27-line limit, and paid
obituaries, which can run
with a photograph. A funeral
home representative can call
the obituary desk at (570)
829-7224, send a fax to (570)
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confirm. Obituaries must be
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through Thursday and 7:30
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funeral home or crematory,
or must name who is hand-
ling arrangements, with
address and phone number.
We discourage handwritten
notices; they incur a $15
typing fee.
O B I T U A R Y P O L I C Y
G enettis
AfterFu nera lLu ncheons
Sta rting a t$7.95 p erp erson
H otelBerea vem entRa tes
825.6477
In Loving Memory Of
James (Jamie) Oliveri III
July 19, 1966 ~ Feb. 27, 2004
Happy Birthday In Heaven!
Deeply Loved and Sadly Missed by
Mom & Dad, Sister,
Family & Friends
IRENE BRZOZOWSKI, 91, of
Pittston, passedawaySaturday, Ju-
ly16, 2011, inWilkes-BarreGeneral
Hospital.
Funeral arrangements are
pending from the Anthony Recup-
ero Funeral Home, West Pittston.
J
oseph John Refolo, 91, of Wyom-
ing, passed away peacefully Sat-
urday, July 16, 2011, at the Depart-
ment of Veterans Affairs Medical
Center Hospice Care Unit, Plains
Township.
Joseph was born December 15,
1919, in Union City, N.J., and was a
son of the late Antonio and Anita
Refolo.
He resided in Union City with his
family and was co-owner of Refolo
Bros. Construction with his late
brother, Michael.
Josephandhis wife, Dolly, retired
to Vero Beach, Fla., for 25 years. Fol-
lowing his wifes death, Joseph relo-
cated to Pennsylvania to live with
his children.
He was U.S. Army Veteran of
World War II serving in MASHUnit
overseas.
Preceding himin death is his lov-
ing wife of 60 years, Dorothy
Dolly (Simone) Refolo, and his
brothers Michael andErnest Refolo.
Surviving are his sisters, Concet-
ta Delsini, Secaucus, N.J.; Angela
Rizzo, Union City, N.J.; brother
John Refolo and his wife, Florence;
Rutherford, N.J.; sisters-in-law, He-
lenRefolo, Ft. Lee, N.J.; JoanRefolo,
Rockaway, N.J.; and many cousins;
children, Hope Sinibaldi-Ozturk
and Arlene Refolo-McDonald,
Wyoming; son Joseph and his wife,
Irene, Pocono Lake; Joseph has
eight grandchildren, Charles, Mi-
chael and Gregory Sinibaldi; Mi-
chele and Eric Refolo; Kristina, Me-
lissa and Joseph-Michael Refolo;
four great-grandchildren, Ariana Me-
na, Christopher and Steven Sinibaldi,
and Michael-Peter Sinibaldi; as well as
many nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be held at
5 p.m. Wednesday in the Met-
calfe and Shaver Funeral Home Inc.,
504 WyomingAve., Wyoming, withFa-
ther Joseph J. Adonizio officiating.
Friends may call from 2 p.m. until the
time of service Wednesday at the fu-
neral home.
The family expresses their deepest
gratitude for the compassion and care
given to their father by the dedicated
staff at the Hospice Unit of the VA
Medical Center.
In lieu of flowers the family is re-
questing donations to be made in the
memory of Joseph John Refolo to:
Wilkes-Barre Department of Veterans
Affairs Medical Center Attn: Voluntary
Unit (Hospice Unit) 1111 East End
Blvd., Wilkes-Barre, PA18711.
Joseph Refolo
July 16, 2011
D
iane M. Golden, 74, of Wilkes-
Barre, entered into eternal rest
on Monday, July, 18, 2011, at Hos-
pice Community Care, Geisinger
South Wilkes-Barre.
Born in Wilkes-Barre, she was a
daughter of the late Alexander and
Elizabeth (Thomas) Sadowski.
Diane was a member of the Welsh
Presbyterian Church, Warrior Run.
She lovedtogotothe oceanandwas
passionate and devoted to animals
especially her pet bulldogs. Diane
will be sadly missed but fondly re-
membered by her family and
friends.
She is survived by her husband of
56 years, Thomas Golden; son, Tho-
mas R. Golden, and his wife, Judith;
her daughter, Vicki Golden, Wilkes-
Barre; sister, Victoria Brandt,
Wilkes-Barre; nephew, Gary Brandt
and his wife, Tracey, Ashley; and
cousins, Mary and Joseph Slavoski,
Sugar Notch.
Dianes funeral arrangements
are under the care of McCune Fu-
neral Home, 80 S. Mountain Blvd.,
Mountain Top, and will be held at
theconvenienceof thefamily. There
will be no public viewing.
Memorial donations for Diane
can be made to the Plains Animal
Hospital, which is under the caring
direction of D.J. Ayers, V.MD, 242 S.
River St., Plains Township, PA
18705.
View obituaries online at mccu-
nefuneralserviceinc.com.
Diane Golden
July 18, 2011
G
enevieve J. Pisano, 98, formerly
of Hazle Street, Wilkes-Barre,
passed away on Saturday, July 16,
2011, at the Little Flower Manor in
Wilkes-Barre.
She was born April 25, 1913 in
Wilkes-Barre, a daughter of the late
Vincenzo and Josephine Cessa Gui-
da. She attended GAR Memorial
High School.
Genevieve was a member of Holy
Rosary Church in Wilkes-Barre,
where she was a member of its Sa-
cred Heart and Rosary Society. She
was also a member of the St. Nicho-
las Senior Citizens Club.
She was preceded in death by her
husband, Carmen Pisano, in 1981;
and by her son-in-law, Peter Campi-
sano, in 2007. She was also preced-
ed in death by sisters, Mary Guida
and Christine Pisano; and by broth-
ers, Michael, Salvatore and Louis
Guida.
Surviving her are daughter, Joan
Campisano, North Brunswick, N.J.;
son, Joseph Pisano and his wife, Pa-
tricia, Drums; seven grandsons, An-
thony Campisano and his wife, Ja-
net; Christopher Campisanoandhis
wife, Pat; Carmen Pisano and his
wife, Mary Beth; Peter Campisano
and his wife, Jo Jo; Joseph Pisano
and his wife, Judy; Michael Campi-
sano and his wife, Amy; Ernie Pisa-
no and his wife, Sarah; 19 great-
grandchildren; and numerous niec-
es and nephews.
Genevieves family wishes to
thank the entire staff at Little Flow-
er Manor for the loving, compas-
sionate and spiritual care that they
provided for their mother and for
their entire family.
A Mass of Christian Burial will
be celebrated at 1 p.m. Friday in the
Chapel of Little Flower Manor, 200
S. Meade St., Wilkes-Barre. Inter-
ment will be inSt. Marys Cemetery,
Hanover Township. Friends may
call from5 to 8 p.m. Thursday at the
Nat & Gawlas Funeral Home, 89
Park Ave., Wilkes-Barre, and from
noon to 1p.m. Friday at the Little
Flower Manor.
Memorial donations may be
made to Little Flower Manor, 200 S.
Meade St., Wilkes-Barre, PA18702.
Online condolences may be sent
to www.natandgawlasfuneralhome-
.com.
Genevieve Pisano
July 16, 2011
F
rederick J. Weber Sr., 88, of
Wilkes-Barre, passed away Sat-
urday evening, July 16, 2011, at the
Department of Veteran Affairs Med-
ical Center Hospice Unit, Wilkes-
Barre.
Born in Wilkes-Barre on Decem-
ber 12, 1922, he was a son of the late
John Jacob and Augusta (Schadel)
Weber.
Frederick was a lifelong member
of the Messiah Lutheran Church,
Wilkes-Barre, where his parents
helped build the church and made
wine for communion.
He attended Wilkes-Barre area
schools. He served in the U.S. Air
Force in the 22nd Bomb Squadron,
341st Bomb Group (M) China-Bur-
ma-India.
Frederick was a member of the
IBEWLocal 163, retiringin1984. He
was also a member of the Plains
American Legion Post 558. He also
enjoyed gardening.
In addition to his parents, he was
preceded in death by his brothers,
George Weber, Carl Weber, Harry
Weber; sisters Bertha Weber, Ruth
Schwartz Buck and Helen Craig.
He is survived by his loving wife
of 62 years, Pauline (Gronski) Web-
er; sons, Frederick J. Weber Jr. and
his wife, Linda, MountainTop; John
A. Weber and his wife, Alicia, Wil-
liamsburg, Va.; grandchildren, Ni-
cholas and Ryan Weber, Alicia
(Weber) Shaughnessy and her hus-
band, Steve; Christina Weber; great-
grandchildren, Alec and Michaela
Shaughnessy, Dristan Groupe; sis-
ter Marian Zawilski; sister-in-law,
Helen Knapp and her husband, Jo-
seph; special family friend, Debi
Jenkins; several nieces and neph-
ews; and several great-nieces and
great-nephews.
Funeral services will be held
at 10 a.m. Thursday in Kniffen
OMalley Funeral Home Inc., 465 S.
Main St., Wilkes-Barre. The Rev.
Mary E. Laufer will be officiating.
Interment will follow at Chapel
Lawn Memorial Park, Dallas. Fam-
ily and friends may call from 4 to 7
p.m. Wednesday at the funeral
home.
Condolences may be sent at
www.BestLifeTributes.com.
In lieu of flowers, family request
memorial contributions may be
made to the VMACHospice, 1111E.
End Blvd., Wilkes-Barre, PA 18711
or Messiah Lutheran Church 453 S.
Main St., Wilkes-Barre, PA18701.
Frederick Weber
July 16, 2011
MARY FIGLOCK, 88, Hudson
sectionof Plains Township, passed
away peacefully Monday, July 18,
2011, following an illness. Born in
Tobyhanna, she was a daughter of
the late Charles and Anna Yakaita
Fedish. Mary was a graduate of
Coolbaugh High School, Class of
1941, and worked as a saleswoman
in local department stores until
her retirement. She was preceded
indeathby her husband, Henry, on
February 28, 1996. Mary is sur-
vived by a son, daughter-in-law,
two grandchildren, two sisters,
and several nieces and nephews.
Mary requested a private fu-
neral with no calling hours. Ar-
rangements were entrusted to Ya-
naitis Funeral Home, Plains Town-
ship.
NANCY PASCALE, of Mano-
rCare Nursing Center, Kingston,
formerly of Ridge Avenue, King-
ston, diedMonday, July18, 2011, in
Wilkes-Barre General Hospital.
Funeral arrangements are
pending from the Lehman Family
Funeral Service Inc., 689 Hazle
Ave., Wilkes-Barre.
E
lsie Pearl Keiner passed away
Sunday, July 17, 2011, two days
shy of her 99th birthday.
Elsie was born July 19, 1912 in
Slocum. She was a daughter of the
late William (Frank) and Bertha
(Deets) Rinehimer.
Before moving to Hunlock Creek
to live with her daughter, Elsie re-
sided in Pond Hill for over 70 years.
She retired from Luzerne Outer-
wear.
Elsie was the caretaker of Pond
Hill Cemetery for several years, and
was active in the Pond Hill Ambu-
lance Association.
She was an active member of St.
Marks United Church of Christ,
Pond Hill.
Elsie will always be remembered
by all who knew her, as someone
who was willing to give a helping
hand.
In addition to her parents, she
was preceded in death by her hus-
band of 50 + years, Paul (Pete) Kein-
er; brothers, Harry, Edward, Clar-
ence and Howard; sisters, Ethel and
Ellen.
Elsie is survived by brothers, El-
wood, Glen Lyon; James, Vernon,
N.Y.; children, Patricia Nickett and
her husband, George (Warrington),
and their children, Brian, Scott and
Gregory; son, James Keiner, and his
wife, Carol, Wapwallopen, and their
children, Jason, Jeffrey and Kandie;
daughter, Debra Kernag, and her
husband, Robert, Hunlock Creek,
andtheir children, Tricia Hollos and
Timothy.
She will be greatly missed by her
nine great-grandchildren, James
(Ritt) Nickett, Laina Nickett, Grace
Nickett, George Nickett, Abigail
Keiner, Nathan Keiner, Haylee Ker-
nag, Cassidy Hollos, and baby Kein-
er due in September.
Funeral arrangements are
made through Hellers Funeral
Home, Nescopeck. Friends andfam-
ily may call at 10 a.m. Wednesday,
with the funeral to followat noon at
Elsies request. The Rev. C. Glenn
Neely, pastor of Reyburn Bible
Church, Shickshinny will be presid-
ing.
In lieu of flowers, Elsie requested
that all donations be made to St.
Marks UnitedChurchof Christ, 285
Pond Hill Mountain Road, Wapwal-
lopen, PA18660.
Elsie Keiner
July 17, 2011
S
tephen L. Flood of Mountain
Top and formerly of Hanover
TownshippassedawaySaturday, Ju-
ly 16, 2011, at Mercy Special Care,
Nanticoke.
Born November 14,1943, in
Wayne, he was a son of the late John
and Irma Loche Flood.
Stephen was a graduate of Devon
Preparatory School, Devon, Class of
1962, attended Villanova and alum-
ni of Wilkes College.
As an U.S. Army veteran serving
with the 402nd MP-POW-CP, he
achieved the rank of sergeant and
was heavilyinvolvedwiththe Agnes
Flood recovery.
Formerly, Stephen was employed
by Kingston National Bank, CFO of
Wilkes Pools, CEO of A.A.G. Inter-
national, a military antiques recov-
ery auction house, CEOof Prospect
Harbor Trading Company of Pros-
pect, Maine, anindependent lobster
wholesale distributor, and former
Luzerne County Controller.
Steve was a member of Nanticoke
Kiwanis, Devon Prep Alumni Asso-
ciation and Wilkes College Alumni
Association.
He is survived by his longtime
partner, Heather Paulhamus of
Mountain Top; brother, David A.
Flood Sr., of State College; neph-
ews, David Flood Jr., of Canal-Win-
chester, Ohio; Robert Thomas John-
son of Duryea; nieces, Lisa Smith of
Indiana, Pa.; Victoria Gallagher of
Libertytown, Md.; Deborah Miller
of Wilkes-Barre; Anne Marie Namey
of Wilkes-Barre, and Theresa John-
son of Allentown; along with many
grandnephews and grandnieces.
Funeral services will be held
at 11 a.m. Thursday in the
Mamary-DurkinFuneral Service, 59
ParrishSt., Wilkes-Barre. Interment
will follow in St. Marys Cemetery,
Hanover Township. Friends may
call from 4 to 8 p.m. Wednesday at
the funeral home. Eulogy and reli-
gious service will be performed by
Father Richard S. Wyzykiewicz of
Devon Preparatory School.
In lieu of flowers, donations in
Stephens name may be made to the
American Stroke Association by
calling1-800-242-8721or by visiting
www.strokeassociation.org.
Stephen L. Flood
July 16, 2011
GENEVIEVE SAMSON, 97, a
guest at Kingston Commons, died
Saturday, July 16, 2011.
Funeral arrangements are
pending from the Yeosock Funeral
Home, 40S. MainSt., Plains Town-
ship.
DARREN W. SPIVEY, 44, of
Shavertown, passed away Mon-
day, July 18, 2011, at Geisinger
Wyoming Valley Medical Center,
Plains Township, after incurring
injuries ina motorcycle accident in
Shavertown.
Funeral arrangements are
pending from The Richard H. Dis-
que Funeral Home Inc., 672 Me-
morial Highway, Dallas.
B
eatrice Mae Layaou, 83, a resi-
dent of Forty Fort, passed away
on Sunday afternoon, July 17, 2011,
at the Wilkes-Barre General Hospi-
tal.
Her belovedhusbandwas the late
Chester A. Layaou Sr., who passed
away on July 10, 2002. Together,
Chester and Beatrice shared 56
years of marriage.
Born on September 6, 1927, in
Wilkes-Barre, Beatrice was a daugh-
ter of the late William and Cathe-
rine (Davis) Thomas.
Prior to her retirement, Beatrice
was employed as a seamstress for
the former Hill Handbag, Forty
Fort. Prior to her employment with
Hill Handbag, Beatrice was employ-
ed for 10 years by the former Blue
Ribbon Bakery, Kingston.
Devoted to her faith, Beatrice
was a member of Grace Episcopal
Church, Kingston. Active within
her church, Beatrice was a longtime
member of the churchs Altar Guild.
At the age of 65, Beatrice proudly
earned her Graduation Equivalency
Diploma and was presented with a
plaque for her hard work and deter-
mination in acquiring her diploma.
For 10 years, Beatrice volun-
teered with the Foster Grandparent
Program, Wilkes-Barre.
A woman of many enjoyments,
Beatrice especially enjoyed cooking
and baking for family and friends.
She was known for her blueberry
muffins, which were her specialty.
Beatrice loved when her family
and friends would stop in to visit
her. Always the gracious host, she
would have a meal waiting for
whoever was coming to visit with
her. One of her famous lines was Al-
ways set an extra plate because you
never know who may stop by.
Family was the center of Bea-
trices life and she cherished every
moment she had with her loved
ones. Her grandchildren were the
highlight and joy of her life and she
was a constant support tothem. She
never missed attending one of her
grandchildrens functions, taking
great pride in all of the accomplish-
ments they have made.
In addition to her parents, William
and Catherine Thomas, and her hus-
band, Chester, Beatrice was preceded
in death by her son, WilliamJ. Layaou,
who passed away on January 2, 2010;
five sisters; and two brothers.
Beatrice is survivedby her children,
Chester A. LayaouJr. andhis wife, Bar-
bara, Lake Carey; Pamela Paculavich,
South Glens Falls, N.Y.; Deborah Sgar-
let andher husband, David, Forty Fort;
Francis Layaou and his wife, Donna,
Wyoming; Donna Layaou, Forty Fort;
14 grandchildren; 14 great-grandchil-
dren; and many nieces and nephews.
Relatives and friends are respect-
fully invited to attend the funeral
which will be conducted at 10 a.m.
Thursday in the Grace Episcopal
Church, 30 Butler St., Kingston, with
the Rev. John Franklin Hartman, rec-
tor, officiating. Interment will follow
in Chapel Lawn Memorial Park, Dal-
las. Family and friends may call from4
to 8 p.m. Wednesday in the Wroblew-
ski Funeral Home Inc., 1442 Wyoming
Ave., Forty Fort, and also from 9 a.m.
until the time of funeral service Thurs-
day at the church.
For additional information or to
send the family of Mrs. Beatrice Lay-
aou an online message of condolence,
you may visit the funeral home web-
site, www.wroblewskifuneralhome-
.com.
The family requests that flowers be
omitted and memorial contributions
be made in Beatrices memory to
Grace Episcopal Church, 30 Butler
Street, Kingston, PA18704.
Beatrice Layaou
July 17, 2011
ANDRUZIS Blanche, funeral 9:30
a.m. today from the Kiesinger
Funeral Services Inc., 255 McAl-
pine St., Duryea, with a Mass of
Christian Burial at 10 a.m. at
Sacred Heart of Jesus Church,
Dupont. Friends and family may
call from 8:30 a.m. until time of
service today. The AM Vets honor
guard of Dupont will provide
military honors.
CARMADELLA Ann Marie, funer-
al 9:30 a.m. Wednesday from the
Thomas P. Kearney Funeral Home
Inc., Old Forge, with a 10 a.m.
Mass of Christian Burial and
Committal Rites in St. Lawrence
OToole Church, Prince of Peace
Parish, Old Forge. Relatives and
friends may pay their respects
from 5 to 8 p.m. today at the
funeral home.
CLONAN Ann, funeral 9 a.m.
Wednesday in the Baloga Funeral
Home Inc., 1201 Main St., Pittston,
(Port Griffith), with a Mass of
Christian Burial at 9:30 a.m. in St.
John the Evangelist Church,
William St., Pittston. Friends may
call from 5 to 8 p.m. today in the
funeral home.
JONES Helen, a Mass of Christian
Burial 10 a.m. today in St. Ignatius
Loyola Church, 339 N. Maple Ave.,
Kingston. Family and Friends may
call from 9 a.m. until the time of
the Funeral Mass at the church.
KLORAN Marjorie, services 11 a.m.
today from the Sheldon-Kukuch-
ka Funeral Home, 73 W. Tioga St.,
Tunkhannock. The family will
receive friends from10 a.m. until
the time of the service.
LOVE Blanche, funeral 11 a.m. July
30 in the Mehoopany Methodist
Church followed by a luncheon in
the church basement.
POLMOUNTER Catherine, funeral
9:30 a.m. Wednesday in the
Fierro Funeral Home, 26 W. Sec-
ond St., Hazleton, followed by a
Mass of Christian Burial at the
Holy Rosary Church, Hazleton.
Friends may call from 2 to 4 p.m.
and 6 to 8 p.m. today at the
funeral home.
ROBERTS Jacklyn, funeral 11 a.m.
Wednesday in the Mamary-Durkin
Funeral Service, 59 Parrish St.,
Wilkes-Barre. Services at 11:30
a.m. in the St. Mary Antiochian
Orthodox Church, 905 S. Main
St., Wilkes-Barre. Friends may call
from 4 to 7 p.m. on today in the
funeral home.
STEFONETTI Rosaria, funeral
Wednesday in the Solfanelli-
Fiorillo Funeral Home Inc., 1030 N.
Main Ave., with Mass of Christian
Burial at 9:30 a.m. in the Immac-
ulate Conception Church, 801
Taylor Ave. All attending the
funeral are asked to go directly to
church. Friends may call from 4
to 7 p.m. today at the funeral
home.
WASNICK John, Funeral Mass 1
p.m. Wednesday in the Chapel at
Little Flower Manor, 200 S.
Meade St., Wilkes-Barre. Vis-
itation in the Chapel from12:30 to
1 p.m.
YUSKO Joanne, funeral 8:45 a.m.
Wednesday in the Wroblewski
Funeral Home Inc., 1442 Wyoming
Ave., Forty Fort, followed by a
Mass of Christian Burial to be
celebrated at 9:30 a.m. in Ss.
Peter and Paul Church, 13 Hudson
Road, Plains Township. Family
and friends are invited to call
from 5 to 8 p.m. today at the
funeral home.
FUNERALS
J
acqueline Teresa (Curley) Ed-
wards, 85, of Exeter, passedaway
Sunday evening, July17, 2011, inthe
Hospice Community Care Inpatient
Unit of Geisinger South Wilkes-
Barre.
Born October 17, 1925, in Wilkes-
Barre, she was a daughter of the late
John and Dorothy McNey Curley.
Jacqueline graduated from
Coughlin High School. Following
graduation, she enlisted in the
Womens Auxiliary Army Corps and
served as a surgical technician. Af-
ter War World II, she worked in re-
tail womens wear until her mar-
riage after which she devoted her
time to family life. She was also an
avid reader.
In addition to her parents, she
was preceded in death by her son,
John J. Edwards, a Marine Lance
Cpl., killed in Vietnam.
Surviving are her are husband,
Ralph, with whom she celebrated
64 years of marriage; son Ralph Ed-
wards III and his wife, Lorraine, Jen-
kins Township; grandson, BrianJames
Edwards, West Pittston; and several
nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be held at
9:30 a.m. Wednesday in the Met-
calfe and Shaver Funeral Home Inc.,
504 Wyoming Ave., Wyoming, with a
Mass of Christian Burial at 10 a.m. in
St. Cecilias Church of St. Barbaras
Parish. Interment will be in St. Marys
Cemetery, Hanover Township.
Friends may call from5 to 8 p.m. today
at the funeral home.
Jacqueline Edwards
July 17, 2011
More Obituaries, Page 2A
C M Y K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com TUESDAY, JULY 19, 2011 PAGE 9A
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BEAR CREEK TWP. -- Stu-
dents will need an extra nickel
to get a breakfast or lunch at
the Bear Creek Community
Charter School, and school of-
ficials said newgovernment re-
quirements are to blame.
The schools board of trust-
ees voted Monday to increase
the price of breakfasts from $1
to $1.05, while lunches will go
from$1.75 to $1.80, a move the
schools CEOJimSmith said is
necessary to comply with the
requirements of the Hunger
Free Kids Act of 2010.
Smith said that even though
the schools meal programruns
efficiently enough to generate
a small surplus, the new act
sets aspecific formulafor pricing.
Under that formula, he said,
the meals are underpriced and
need to be increased, which will
likely increase the surplus. He
said the surplus of a few thou-
sanddollars is reinvestedintothe
program through things like spe-
cial free lunch days and small
equipment purchases.
The board discussed other op-
tions to compensate for the price
increase, such as increasing por-
tionsizes, but Smithsaidthe gov-
ernment also regulates portion
sizes and the types of foods that
are served.
The board also:
Ratified the purchase of 22
Dell OptiPlex 790 ultra small
form factor student computers/
monitors with Microsoft licens-
ing and four years of support for
$27,608.
Ratified the purchase of one
Dell PowerEdge R710 server, Mi-
crosoft Server 2008 and a three
year service plan for $5,466.
Approved the Bear Creek
Foundations request to replace
the schools front door and side-
lights for a cost of $7,525. The
Foundation owns the school
building.
Accepted the resignation of
Paulette Ashton.
Approved the hiring of Jillian
Everett as a full-time language
arts instructor for fifth and sixth
grade at salary of $33,000.
Price hike on menu for charter school meals
The increase of five cents a
meal will meet a federal
rule, the school CEO says.
By JANINE UNGVARSKY
Times Leader Correspondent
HARRISBURG Gov. Tom
Corbetts transportation funding
commission on Monday en-
dorsed a mixture of revenue
sources to generate about $2.5
billion in additional annual
spending for Pennsylvanias
roads, bridges and mass transit.
There were no no votes cast
and only a single abstention as
the commission voted to recom-
mend increased wholesale taxes
on oil companies, higher vehicle
and driver registration fees and
to dedicate a fraction of sales tax-
es for mass transit needs.
Its final report to the governor,
due Aug. 1, will lay the ground-
work for potential talks between
Corbett and the Legislature after
Labor Day on a long-term ap-
proachtotransportationfunding.
A key element of those talks
will be a list of the projects the
state could complete over the
next decade if the money is ap-
proved. That list is currently be-
ing developed internally by the
Pennsylvania Department of
Transportation, with input from
local and regional transportation
planning organizations, and
could be on the PennDOT web-
site by the end of August, said
Transportation Secretary Barry
Schoch.
I think everybody deserves to
say, If you are charging me, what
do we get for it? said Schoch,
who presided over the meeting.
The Transportation Funding
Advisory Commission, all Cor-
bett appointees, consisted of gov-
ernment officials, people who
work in the transportation indus-
try, representatives of mass tran-
sit and others. They were direct-
ed at the start not to consider
raising the gasoline tax that driv-
ers pay at the pump.
Panel proposes funding
mix to fix roads, bridges
By MARK SCOLFORO
Associated Press
C M Y K
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cause they are involved in under-
cover operations, noted that a
U.S. Department of Justice re-
port released in March indicated
that New York- and New Jersey-
based gangs were migrating and
strengthening operations in
Northeastern Pennsylvania and
are recruiting members.
Much of their presentation on
Monday was focused on helping
parents identify signs of gang in-
volvement by their children.
Jackie Stefanowicz of Duryea
questioned the agents about lo-
cally employing gang deterrent
tactics used in Los Angeles, such
as having marked patrol vehicles
with volunteers patrol areas
where gang members and drug
traffickers would likely hang out.
The agents said such initia-
tives are good ideas, but finding
local funding can be an issue.
Adam Chase of Old Forge said
his children attend school in Du-
ryea andhe thought the presenta-
tion would be a good opportuni-
ty to learn something about the
potential for trouble from gangs.
You cant get enough informa-
tion. Information is powerful.
The agents gave a slide pre-
sentation showing some of the
symbols and numbers associated
with gangs, including sports
items and graffiti, tattoos and
hand signs, and gang-influenced
music and movies. They also dis-
cussed changes in behavior that
could be indicative of gang invol-
vement.
GANGS
Continued from Page 3A
What to look for
Early adolescent years (ages 12 to 14)
are a crucial time when youths are
exposed to gangs and may consider
joining a gang. Youths who are
becoming involved in a gang may
exhibit the following behaviors:
Negative changes in behavior such
as withdrawing from family, declin-
ing school attendance, staying out
late without reason, unusual desire
for secrecy, confrontational behav-
ior, sudden negative opinions about
law enforcement or authority fig-
ures.
Unusual interest in one or two
particular colors of clothing or a
logo.
Interest in gang-influenced music,
videos and movies.
Use and practice of hand signals
to communicate with friends.
Peculiar drawings or gang symbols
on school books, clothing, notebooks
or even walls.
Drastic changes in hair or dress
style and/or having a group of
friends with the same hair or dress
style.
Withdrawal from longtime friends.
Presence of firearms/ammunition
or other weapons.
Non-accidental physical injuries
(indicative of accepting a beating for
gang initiation).
Unexplained cash or goods, such
as clothing or jewelry.
What parents can do
Talk to your children about gangs
and ways to avoid them and let them
know you disapprove of gangs and
do not want to see them hurt or
arrested.
Tell your children not to associate
with gang members, not to hang out
where gangs congregate, not to
attend any party or social event
sponsored by gangs, not to use any
kind of hand or finger signs that may
be meaningful to gangs and not to
wear clothing that may have mean-
ing to gangs in your area.
Get to know your childrens friends
and the friends parents.
Talk to your children about ways to
deal with pressure from friends.
Set firm limits with your children
and teens.
Plan family time.
For more information, visit time-
sleader.com for a links to the Par-
ents Guide to Gangs from the Na-
tional Gang Center or call (850)
385-0600, extension 224.
A N T I - G A N G T I P S F O R PA R E N T S
PITTSTON TWP. --
There is a new policy in the
yard waste program for res-
idents.
The program has an over-
whelming demand and the
supervisors are changing
the schedule so that it will
be picked up the second
Friday of each month in Up-
per and Lower Browntown,
Cork Lane including Te-
drick and Markets streets
west of the By-Pass.
It will also be collected
from Stauffer Heights,
Center Street, Laurel
Street, Doty Street, Mill
Street, Horizon Estates
and Stauffer Pointe.
The fourth Friday of each
month will include Butler
Heights and Highway 315,
Suscon, Langans Road, Poco-
no Ridge Estates, Houston
City, Packer Street, Glen-
dale, Route 502 and Quail
Hill.
Supervisors reminded resi-
dents that tree branches
must be bundled and tied.
Any other yard waste must
be in containers that do not
weigh more than 30 pounds.
Residents must call the
township building to arrange
to have their yard waste
picked up between 8 a.m. and
4 p.m. at least 24 hours prior
to the scheduled pickup date
as stated above.
Supervisor Stephen Rinal-
di wanted residents to know
that whatever they can pick,
they can dispose of.
In other matters, residents
asked the supervisors if they
can add more officers to the
police department staff.
Supervisors said they are
doing everything they can to
add more police.
Residents also said they
wanted the many potholes on
the corner of Armstrong and
Suscon to be patched.
Rinaldi said all work that
needs to be done is being ad-
dressed and will be complet-
ed on a timely basis.
A minor subdivision on
West Chapman Street was ap-
proved by supervisors.
The planning and zoning
were in line, and this led the
supervisors to approve the
subdivision.
Pittston Twp. changes pickup schedule
The supervisors say they
are working to beef up the
police force.
By JIMMORRISSEY
Times Leader Correspondent
PARISAlarge studyinolder
veterans raises fresh concern
about mild brain injuries that
hundreds of thousands of Amer-
icantroops havesufferedfromex-
plosions in recent wars. Even
concussions seem to raise the
risk of developing Alzheimers
disease or other dementia later in
life, researchers found.
Closed-head, traumatic brain
injuries are a legacy of the Af-
ghanistanandIraq wars. Body ar-
mor is helping troops survive
bombblasts, but thelong-termef-
fects of their head injuries are un-
known.
The study, reportedMonday at
the Alzheimers Association In-
ternational Conference in
France, challenges the current
view that only moderate or se-
vere brain injuries predispose
people to dementia.
Even a concussion or a mild
brain injury can put you at risk,
saidLaurie Ryan, a neuropsychia-
trist who used to work at Walter
Reed Army Medical Center and
now oversees Alzheimers grants
at the U.S. National Institute on
Aging.
The study was led by Dr. Kris-
tine Yaffe, a University of Califor-
nia professor and director of the
Memory Disorders Clinic at the
San Francisco VA Medical Cen-
ter. The U.S. Department of De-
fense and the National Institutes
of Health paid for the work.
Its by far the largest study of
brain injury and dementia risk,
she said. Its never been looked
at in veterans specifically.
Researchers reviewed medical
records on 281,540 veterans who
got care from Veterans Health
Administration hospitals from
1997 to 2000 and had at least one
follow-up visit from 2001-2007.
All were at least 55 and none had
been diagnosed with dementia
whenthe study began. This older
group was chosen because de-
mentia grows more common
with age, and researchers needed
enough cases to compare those
with and without brain injuries.
Records showed that nearly
5,000of the veterans hadsuffered
a traumatic brain injury, or TBI,
ranging from concussions to
skull fractures. Researchers dont
know how long ago the injuries
occurred. Many participants
were Vietnam War vets and their
injuries were during active duty.
None were due to strokes
those cases were weeded out.
Over the next seven years,
more than 15 percent of those
who had suffered a brain injury
were diagnosed with dementia
versus only 7 percent of the oth-
ers a more than doubled risk.
Injury is
linked to
dementia
Study of older veterans raises
concerns about brain injuries
from explosions during war.
By MARILYNN MARCHIONE
AP Medical Writer
He was a superhero when it came
to fighting corruption. He could
see troubles in elected officials
and in those who lurk behind the
scenes but whose hands
control all.
Harry W. Skene
The Forty Fort attorney eulogized former Luzerne County controller
Steve Flood, who died Saturday at age 67. Skene had worked as Floods
solicitor during an often contentious tenure beginning in 2002 in which
Flood challenged county officials on several hiring and spending issues.
Writer sees no debate
on risks of fracking
T
he natural gas companies in the Mar-
cellus Shale region pose two very
strong marketing weapons. They have
advanced the perception that they offer a
real solution to the problem of foreign
energy dependence and they have man-
aged to brand themselves as the cleanest
and greenest of todays fossil fuels.
Neither of these contentions has proven
to be true. Its no longer a secret that Che-
sapeake and other major natural gas play-
ers have sold large slices of their oper-
ations to the Chinese to satisfy the raven-
ous energy demand in that part of the
world. We apparently will see little benefit
in the way of energy independence from
domestic exploration.
As to the clean and green issue, we have
seen the evidence and heard the testimony
of those people who have been wronged by
these operations, and only the blind and
ignorant among us do not appreciate the
real horrors of the hydrofracturing process.
Many people argue that there are two
sides to this debate. Im sorry, but there
are not. Fracking contaminates ground-
water, threatens the health of families and
renders fresh water supplies useless. No
debate there.
The drillers employ a strategy that if you
repeat a lie frequently enough, it becomes
a truth. This strategy is effective but it
cannot erase the trail of environmental
destruction left by these profiteers wherev-
er they choose to blast the shale. Land-
scape is destroyed, wildlife is uprooted and
the agencies put in place to protect our
environment are bypassed.
Ignorance of the facts might have served
as an excuse in the early days of this issue
but it can no longer offer sanctuary to
those people who choose to turn their
heads. This mining practice is horrific and
destructive.
Its not too late to get involved. Contact
your representatives and demand a mora-
torium on fracking until we have time to
study its consequences.
JimSkrypek
Dallas
Obamas telling words,
but who will own pain
I
really thought President Obamas quote
after a recent debt crisis session was
illuminating: Everyone acknowledged
that pain will be involved politically on all
sides.
Im not sure if it would be the Repub-
licans or Democrats who are willing to
forfeit the largest portion of their salaries,
health benefits and pensions.
Gregory M. Suda
Nanticoke
A corporate takeover
now unfolding in nation
I
ts about time. After listening to the
Republican Congress members constant-
ly accusing President Obama and the
Democrats of not submitting cost-cutting
measures to reduce the countrys deficit,
finally, Obama called their bluff.
They are like a spoiled child stating, I
will cut only these programs and will not
discuss raising taxes or Ill leave the
discussions. This selfish attitude has gone
on long enough, and the American people
are weary of their representatives in Con-
gress playing a tit-for-tat game of politics
while millions of families are losing their
homes, losing their jobs and barely able to
pay their bills.
Its about time these congressional mem-
bers enact laws that will encourage banks
and corporations to begin hiring people
and begin getting this economy back on
track. The longer the unemployment rate
stays high and the housing market lags
behind because banks that are profiting
from the stimulus refuse to grant loans to
reliable American families, the longer the
economic downturn will continue.
With the number of foreclosures, you
would think the banks would change their
attitudes and encourage some of the home-
owners to pay smaller amounts on the
existing mortgages to help them through
these tough economic times. But if one
watches the stock market returns daily,
many large banks are profiting tremen-
dously and unfortunately are not feeling
patriotic enough to share some of the
profits.
An example of corporations and political
pawns showing contempt for the middle
class or poor of this nation is the recent
decision by the Republican-loaded Su-
preme Court that favored Wal-Mart over
working-class women. If one doesnt be-
lieve that corporations are being given
favorable treatment, research how many of
those same judges voted to let corpora-
tions have a big say in American elections.
When President Obama called them out
for that law when he delivered his State of
the Union address, the judges said it was
unethical for the president to do so.
So the next time you chose a candidate
to vote into office, please take the time to
find out who or what corporation is back-
ing him or her. Many of the recent Repub-
lican governors (Wisconsin, Ohio, Florida,
etc.) were put into office through vast
amounts of money donated by the sly
Koch brothers, billionaires who recently
had a meeting of their puppet governors
in Vail, Colo., to give them marching or-
ders.
All this to create a situation that will
continue to allow these corporate giants to
have laws enacted in their favor that allow
pollution to continue, and more important
to stop the Democrats from winning elec-
tions with the help of union-backed funds.
In this way our country eventually will
be run by aristocratic corporate giants, be
they industry, banks or Wall Street enti-
ties; and instead of a fair playing field for
the American worker, they will become
slaves of these giants running the govern-
ment purely for profit without any consid-
eration for the crumbling middle class or
poor.
M. Sivilich
Dallas
Kids should be cared for,
not put on picket line
I
t is expected that taxpaying adults some-
times will picket regarding issues that
affect their jobs, taxes and lives; but it is
disgusting to see children with signs.
Arent 7- and 8-year-old children a little
old for kindergarten? Parents who use
their children as an excuse to solve their
problems should be ashamed. Children
shouldnt be used as pawns to negotiate for
full-day kindergarten at a cost the property
owners cannot afford.
If parents have to work to sustain their
style of living, then they should be respon-
sible for arrangements with a day care, not
at taxpayers expense via the school sys-
tem.
Elaine Givens
Plymouth
Government actions dont
add up to much cents
T
he government makes no cents.
Newspapers, according to the law,
print property listings from the tax
claim office regarding people who owe
back taxes, the first step in sheriffs sale.
We give millions in foreign aid to other
nations. We are building roads, bridges and
schools in Iraq, Afghanistan and else-
where. Millions of Americans are receiving
rent subsidies. Middle-class Americans pay
their own mortgages and taxes.
A young man or woman joins the mil-
itary, serves one or two tours in Iraq or
Afghanistan, comes home to find their
parents home up for sheriffs sale while he
or she was helping to build schools, roads,
bridges with Americans tax dollars.
The government makes no cents.
George J. Kochis
Kingston
MAIL BAG LETTERS FROM READERS
Letters to the editor must include the
writers name, address and daytime
phone number for verification. Letters
should be no more than 250 words. We
reserve the right to edit and limit writers
to one published letter every 30 days.
E-mail: mailbag@timesleader.com
Fax: 570-829-5537
Mail: Mail Bag, The Times Leader, 15
N. Main St., Wilkes-Barre, PA1871 1
SEND US YOUR OPINION
K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com TUESDAY, JULY 19, 2011 PAGE 11A
I
TS A SHAME that Camp-
bell Soup Co. couldnt find
a better recipe to serve up
higher profits than to put
more salt into its soups to ratch-
et up their taste.
The Camden-based company
hopes to whet the finicky appe-
tite of consumers, who have
found its healthier soup varie-
tiesthat containlesssodiumless
appetizing. But most Americans
already consume more than the
maximum 2,300 milligrams of
sodium recommended daily.
Campbells spokesman An-
thony Sanzio said Friday that
the company plans to raise the
salt level from480mgto650mg
in some varieties. It will still of-
fer lower-sodium versions. The
announcement was greeted
warmly by business analysts,
who predict more salt will again
have consumers saying Mm
Mm good. But its disappoint-
ing that a company with a dem-
onstrated record of social re-
sponsibility is retreating on ef-
forts to cut sodium.
Most salt in food comes not
from the shaker, but from proc-
essed products. There has been
some conflicting research, but
most studies have linked in-
creased sodium levels to high
blood pressure a risk factor for
stroke, heart attack and other
ailments.
Light on the salt, please.
The Philadelphia Inquirer
OTHER OPINION: SALTY SOUPS
Campbells move
leaves bitter taste
B
OTHERED BY rude-
ness and unruly con-
duct at recent public
meetings, certain
Wilkes-Barre council mem-
bers, including Chairwoman
Kathy Kane, say something
needs to be done to ensure ci-
vility.
No question.
For starters, council mem-
bers, rather than
drafting a new ordi-
nance aimed at fur-
ther policing city res-
idents and other peo-
ple whoapproachthe
podiumtovoicetheir
thoughts, can modify
their own sometimes
boorish behavior. No
more clock-watching during a
citizens allotted5-minute com-
ment period. No more exasper-
ated looks or whispered ex-
changes behind the council ta-
ble. And definitely no more
name calling.
Kanes dismissal of one
speaker during a May meeting
by saying, See you, Cupcake
was not merely unprofessional;
it was immature.
Sure, we realize that these
city council members, as with
elected officials on township
commissions and school
boards, seldom get the credit
they deserve for their roles in
upholding democracy and in
helping people. They certainly
dont deserve to be treated as
stand-ins for the circus clown
who repeatedly takes a pie in
the face.
But they should fully expect
to hear from disgruntled con-
stituents, whose gripes might
or might not be legitimate.
Free speech, for better or
worse, is free to everyone, in-
cluding the louts, the loud-
mouths and the loons. Espe-
cially the loons whose ludi-
crous ideas today might later
become vindicated.
In Wilkes-Barre, council
members seemingly could ben-
efit by improving
their conduct. Per-
haps each citizen
speaker at the
next city council
session should
hoist a large mir-
ror, allowing coun-
cil members to
view themselves
duringthepublicpresentations
and literally reflect on their
postures and composures.
Make eye contact and listen
intently. Give as much cre-
dence to the person who is crit-
ical or questioning as to the
person delivering praise. Pay
more attention to the speakers
message thantohowmany sec-
onds he, or she, has remaining
before the 5-minute limit ex-
pires a deadline that
shouldnt be firmly followed.
If a speaker becomes bellig-
erent or otherwise misbehaves,
let the police intervene. If the
problempersists, yes, other ac-
tion might be warranted.
However, before Wilkes-
Barres council draws up new
sanctions and possibly dishes
out temporary suspensions to
rules breakers, it should first
try extending more of this: Re-
spect.
OUR OPINION: W-B DECORUM
Advice to council:
Do unto others
Give as much
credence to the
person who is
critical as to
the person
delivering praise.
QUOTE OF THE DAY
RICHARD L. CONNOR
Editor and Publisher
JOSEPH BUTKIEWICZ
Vice President/Executive Editor
MARK E. JONES
Editorial Page Editor
PRASHANT SHITUT
President/Impressions Media
EDITORIAL BOARD
MALLARD FILLMORE DOONESBURY
S E RV I NG T HE P UB L I C T RUS T S I NC E 1 8 81
Editorial
C M Y K
PAGE 12A TUESDAY, JULY 19, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
N E W S
BOTHERED BY rudeness and unruly
conduct at recent public meetings,
certain Wilkes-Barre council members
say something needs to be done to
ensure civility.
Making a change
County
remembers
Steve Flood
PHOTOS:
Out for the
day at the Big
Tent Bazaar
CLICK:
In my opinion, (it) will be one
of the most significant invest-
ments in health care in the greater
Scranton region, Wilson said.
This isnt the first time the two
entities talked about combining.
In August 2009, they signed a
non-binding letter of intent to ex-
plore possible ways to work to-
gether, but four months later the
talks ended with no partnership in
place.
If the merger does occur, it will
be the latest reshaping of the
health care landscape in North-
eastern Pennsylvania, which
would be led by two health sys-
tems: Danville-based Geisinger
and Franklin, Tenn.-based Com-
munity HealthSystems, whichis a
for-profit company.
Geisinger operates two hospi-
tals inLuzerneCounty-- Geisinger
Wyoming Valley in Plains Town-
ship and Geisinger South Wilkes-
Barre.
In recent years, CHS has target-
ed this region for purchases.
InMarch, aLackawannaCounty
judge approved the $150 million
sale to CHS of Scrantons Mercy
Hospital and affiliated facilities in
Nanticoke and Tunkhannock.
In May 2009, CHS purchased
the Wyoming Valley Health Care
System, which includes Wilkes-
Barre General Hospital, for $271
million. Part of that deal included
the promise of major upgrades, in-
cluding a $50 million expansion
that includes a newemergency de-
partment. Ground was broken for
that project last month.
The merger wouldrequire anin-
vestigation by the state Attorney
Generals Office since CMC is a
not-for-profit entity. The office
would make sure no anti-trust is-
sues would be raised and that the
hospitals donations andcharitable
assets are protected. A message
left with that office Monday was
not immediately returned.
Gladys G. Bernet, regional di-
rector for marketing and public re-
lations for the three CHS hospitals
that were purchased from Mercy
this year, declined comment on
the potential merger.
More changes may be instore in
the regions health care.
Last month, Geisinger and
Bloomsburg Health System an-
nounced the signing of a non-
binding letter of intent to explore
the potential merger of the small-
er Bloomsburg system into Geis-
inger.
MERGER
Continued from Page 1A
Andrew M. Seder, a Times Leader
staff writer, may be reached at 570-
829-7269.
The suit argues Floods state-
ments were inaccurate and hurt
the business. Flood had main-
tained that his comments were
justified.
Sued over fees
The other outstanding suit
was filed in 2010 by a Philadel-
phia law firm against Flood and
his partner andguardian, Heath-
er Paulhamus, claiming that the
firm is owed $205,696 in legal
fees for representing Flood in
the libel suit.
Wilkes-Barre attorney Robert
C. Trichilo, who is representing
Flood and Paulhamus, said
Monday that the suit is still in
the beginning stages of discov-
ery.
Trichilosaidhe andother law-
yers at Brady&Grabowski, P.C.,
may be filing a separate suit
against the county on behalf of
Flood or his estate arguing that
the county is responsible for the
legal fees. The lawyers are re-
searching a statute governing
the payment of legal fees for
county employees and depart-
ment heads, he said.
The county Retirement Board
had initially voted to pay for
Floods legal defense in the libel
suit but reversed the decision
shortly after Flood lost his bid
for re-election in 2005.
Thelawfirmseekingpayment
Schnader, Harrison, Segal &
Lewis also represented the re-
tirement board in a 2003 racke-
teering suit filed against past
county officials and pension
fund managers. A federal judge
dismissedthat suit inNovember
2007.
The county controller, com-
missioners and treasurer sit on
the retirement board, which
oversees the employee pension
fund.
Publicized lawsuit
The trade secrets lawsuit that
ended in December had been
highly publicized because it was
filed against Flood and two state
welfare officials challenging the
release of a draft audit critical of
the countys $58 million, 20-year
lease of PA Childcares Pittston
Township juvenile center.
The detention center was at
the center of corruption charges
later filed against former judges
MarkCiavarellaandMichael Co-
nahan, former center co-owner
Robert Powell and center build-
er Robert Mericle.
Conahan had sealed the trade
secrets suit, but the state Superi-
or Court overturned that deci-
sion after an appeal by The
Times Leader.
Federal authorities said Cona-
hans sealing without a hearing
was one example of fraud com-
mitted by Conahan in exchange
for a bribe, according to an in-
dictment against Conahan and
Ciavarella.
Court paperwork says PA
Child Care discontinued and
endedthe trade secrets suit with
prejudice, which means it cant
file the claimagain in the future.
PA Child Cares Pittsburgh at-
torney, Bernard M. Schneider,
declined comment Monday on
the reason for ending the suit.
Allstate Insurance Co. also
dropped a legal action against
FloodandPAChildCareinJanu-
ary, court records showed. The
companys suit argued that
Floods personal umbrella insur-
ance policy didnt require the in-
surer to defend Flood or provide
any monetary compensation in
the trade secrets suit.
Flood, who served as controll-
er from 2002 through 2005, has
been credited by many for un-
covering information and spark-
ingthe federal investigationthat
ledtocharges against Ciavarella,
Conahan, Mericle and Powell.
FloodsobituaryisonPage8A.
FLOOD
Continued from Page 1A
Luzerne County commissioners
ordered the county courthouse
flag at half staff Monday in honor
of former County Controller
Steve Flood, who died Saturday.
The flag will remain at half staff
until Floods funeral on Thursday,
Urban said.
C O U R T H O U S E H O N O R
Though he declined to pin-
point blame, Liuzzosaidmost of
the fixing requires a shift in the
psychology of lawmakers.
Role of politics
Bob Herbert, a Demos distin-
guished senior fellowand former
NewYorkTimes columnist, mod-
erated the media teleconference
and also talked about the role of
politics in creating the problem.
We have ideology and politics
standing in the way, Herbert
said.
Three generations ago, Amer-
ica created our single greatest in-
vention, not theInternet or thein-
ternal combustion engine or the
lightbulborthesolarpanel. Itwas
the vast American middle class,
Herbert said. This middle class
didnt just happen. It was the re-
sult of agrandbargainamonggov-
ernment, businesses and ordi-
nary workers who all agreed on a
set of shared values that basically
said, We believe that all Ameri-
cans should have a decent life.
Herbert said the agreements
made it possible to have good-
paying, meaningful jobswithben-
efits, pensions and paid time off.
He said chief executive officers
typically earned 25 times the av-
erage salary of his or her employ-
ees.
That hasnowrisento200times
that average salary, and boards of
directors and government-
backed tax cuts and incentives
have begun to take their toll on
what Herbert called The Ameri-
can Dream.
To start to swing the momen-
tumbacktoastrongmiddleclass,
Herbert said the nation needs to
refocus on job growth, investing
ininfrastructureandcreatingsus-
tainable jobs inindustries suchas
alternative energy. And policies
that help and not harmthe mid-
dle class are essential.
The report addresses several
factors contributing to strains on
the middle class of Pennsylvania.
Among them are stagnant wages
and an increased cost of college
tuition.
Overthelast 30years, inflation-
adjusted median annual earnings
for Pennsylvania workers (ages
18-64) have fluctuated with
changes in the economy, the re-
port shows.
Pennsylvanias median earn-
ings peaked at $36,750 in 2003,
beforefallingandthenrecovering
in the last few years to $36,050.
Though wages are below their
2003 level, they have grownsince
1980instepwiththerest of thena-
tion.
While annual earnings have in-
creased in the past few years, the
increase translates to a little over
$2 more per hour. This is not in
line with increased costs in ener-
gy, education, food, gasoline and
insurance.
TuitioninPa. high
The average college tuition in
the state was at $10,761 for 2009-
10 academic year. Thats well
above the national average of
$6,829. Tuition costs have in-
creasedexponentially inPennsyl-
vania over the past generation,
more than tripling over the past
25 years.
This has an impact on the mid-
dle class because a college degree
makesabigdifferenceinearnings
potential.
In 2010, median earnings for
workersage25to34withatleasta
bachelorsdegreewere$45,900in
Pennsylvania -- more than 62 per-
cent higher than the $28,356 a
typical high school graduate in
the same age range was earning.
College is more inaccessible
than ever, said Stephen Herzen-
berg, theexecutivedirector of the
Keystone Research Center.
And its only getting more cost-
lybecauseof statebudget tighten-
ing thats meant less funding for
state-run or state-related univer-
sities.
For the 2011-12 school year, the
state legislature reduced spend-
ing at the 14 Pennsylvania State
Systemof Educationuniversities,
which includes Bloomsburg and
East Stroudsburg, by about $70
million, or 14.5 percent. The
state-related universities, such as
Pittsburgh, Temple and Penn
State, saw 19 percent funding
cuts.
Asaresult, tuitionratesaresky-
rocketing at those schools next
semester. Temple University is
raising in-state undergraduate
tuitionrates ninepercent this fall.
As a point of reference, the cur-
rent rate on inflation is 3.6 per-
cent.
And for those who do go to col-
lege, their debt is high compared
to their counterparts across the
country.
Seventy two percent of college
graduates in Pennsylvania en-
teredthe labor force withstudent
debt in 2009, and their average
debt $27,066 was the sev-
enthhighestinthenation, accord-
ing to the report.
While the CEOs and govern-
ment were mentioned as contrib-
utors, Herbert declined to place
the blame on just one group.
There are a lot of people re-
sponsiblefor thefixthat werein,
Herbert said.
But to fix the problems, Liuzzo
said, it will likelymeanhighertax-
es. And that will hurt the middle
class even more.
The rich will pay more, but
they can afford it. The poor cant
pay it and so the middle class will
befootingthebill,hesaid. Thisis
the trend of the past fewdecades.
Andtheendresult, Liuzzosaid,
is that the rich get richer, the
poor get richer and the middle
class gets a little bit richer.
MIDDLE
Continued from Page 1A
park until now.
Korona said she and her friends
will take their children over to
Kingstons HamiltonPark, but she
said getting there could be diffi-
cult.
We walk everywhere, she
said. Its difficult to take a lot of
kids on a bus.
Korona said a nearby newgated
playground for toddlers is unusa-
ble because of the construction
project.
Its all pretty frustrating, she
said.
At last weeks City Council
meeting, Councilman Tony Tho-
mas Jr. said the concrete at the
new$145,439 splash pad installed
at the renovated park didnt cure
properly. Thomas said the con-
crete had to be removed.
ParrishPools, Hunt Valley, Md.,
is the subcontractor that did the
original work, according to Drew
McLaughlin, the citys administra-
tive coordinator.
He said the general contractor
is Bitting Recreation Co., Harris-
burg. Parrish Pools was hired as a
sub-contractor by Bitting through
the COSTARS program,
McLaughlin said.
The city is as eager to openthe
splash pad as any resident or park
visitor, said Mayor Tom Leight-
on. The forecasted hot weather
this week is exactly why I prior-
itized building the splash pad for
Coal Street, but the city was not
going to accept or pay for work
that was sub-par. The city is push-
inghardfor it tobe openedintime
for the end of the summer sea-
son.
By the looks of things at Coal
Street, the splash pad is weeks
away from being completed. Vis-
itors there said they havent seen
workbeingdoneonthesplashpad
since the beginning of July.
Allen Schmidt, who brought
three of his children to the park,
saidhe was looking for something
fun for the kids to do on a hot and
humid day.
Its so hot, Schmidt said. And
no splash pad open, well, thats
not good. And nothing is being
done. The city cant get anything
right.
William and Jacquelyn Morris
of Wilkes-Barre brought there 22-
month-old daughter, Ava, to the
park.
A splash park is still a great
idea, Morris said. At least it will
be available next year.
Randy Bitting was unavailable
for comment Monday anda call to
Parrish Pools was not returned.
McLaughlin said Bitting handled
the firing of the previous subcon-
tractor, and he is conducting the
search for a new one.
McLaughlin said the city will
have a ribbon-cutting for the com-
pleted recreational improve-
ments, such as the basketball
courts and toddler playground, in
the near future.
The city said the concrete vault
failed an inspection by the citys
building code office. The vault
holds the water filtration system
and all of the plumbing that con-
trols and operates the splash pad.
McLaughlin said it would not
cost the cityanyadditional money
to correct the problem.
Thomas saidthe splashpadwill
be a welcome addition to Coal
Street Park, which has undergone
a$14millionfacelift inthelast two
years. A splash pad is an area for
water play that has no standing
water and doesnt require a life-
guard or other supervision.
Lydia Naperkowski said there
could be water at Coal Street
soon.
Maybe it will rain, she said.
SPLASH
Continued from Page 1A
PETE G. WILCOX/THE TIMES LEADER
Damiana Schimdt, 8, of Wilkes-Barre, gets a push on the swings
from her dad, Allen Schimdt, as her sister, Brooklyn, 6, looks on.
The National Weather Service said
it will be hot and humid all week,
with temperatures in the 90s
every day. Thursdays high is
expected to hit 97 degrees and
the high on Friday will be 96.
Temperatures will moderate next
week when the high is expected to
dip to 82 degrees on Monday.
H O T T I M E S A H E A D
This is what I have to look
forward to, she said. There will
be no air conditioning and an
unbearable number of mosqui-
toes at night.
With much of the nation in
the grip of a broiling heat wave,
few people are hit as hard as the
poor, and few places are poorer
than the ramshackle communi-
ties along the Texas-Mexico
border known as colonias.
The misery was widespread
Monday, with the worst condi-
tions blanketing a broad band
from Texas to Minnesota and
Dakotas. Seventeen states is-
sued heat watches, warnings or
advisories. And the heat index
easily surpassed 100 degrees in
many places: 126 in Newton, Io-
wa; 120 in Mitchell, S.D.; and
119 in Madison, Minn.
The high temperatures were
nearly certain to persist for the
entire week. Forecasters ex-
pected the extreme discomfort
to spread soon to the East
Coast.
In towns large and small, the
withering heat was cruelest to
those who could not afford air
conditioning.
Built at the edge of the des-
ert, the colonias often lack elec-
tricity and running water. Peo-
ple bought the land before zon-
ing regulations were adopted,
hoping that utility services
would follow.
To finance her house, Esca-
milla, who is 62, had to take out
a loan against her funeral ser-
vices and buy building materi-
als recycled from demolition
sites in Ciudad Juarez, across
the border from El Paso.
Norma Salazar, who shares a
tiny trailer home with her hus-
band and six children in Hori-
zon City, on the outskirts of El
Paso, has to rely on an evapora-
tive cooler, a cheap alternative
to air conditioning that sucks
the hot, dry desert air through a
mesh of water-soaked fibers.
But it only cools half of the
trailer, and when the heat
climbs above 100, not even that.
In downtown Minneapolis,
where the heat index reached
106 degrees, the Salvation Ar-
mys Harbor Light Center threw
open its doors for anyone who
needed to cool off and drink a
glass of ice water.
Executive Director Bill Miller
said he allowed about 200 peo-
ple who slept at the shelter Sun-
day night to stay instead being
asked to leave in the morning.
We dont have them leave
when its this hot, he said. Its
hot enough to get dehydrated,
especially if youre drinking. In
this heat, it could kill you.
Chicago officials opened six
cooling centers, many of them
in lower-income neighbor-
hoods, along with hundreds of
air-conditioned public build-
ings such as libraries, park facil-
ities and police stations.
HEAT
Continued from Page 1A
C M Y K
SPORTS S E C T I O N B
THE TIMES LEADER TUESDAY, JULY 19, 2011
timesleader.com
W
ith a proud, gleeful trot,
Shane Victorino rounded
third base and headed for
home.
It was only then that Victorino dis-
covered his high, arcing shot over the
left field wall Sunday at Waterfront Park
had been ruled a foul ball.
I said, Thanks for letting me get all
the way around third before telling me,
Victorino said.
So for the second time this month,
Victorinos game told a tale of blunder.
He tripped while throwing fromthe
outfield against the Toronto Blue Jays
on July 3, which is howhe landed on
the disabled list with an injured right
thumb and why he spent this past week-
end completing a minor league rehabil-
itation assignment with Double-A
Reading.
Another embarrassing moment.
Why not? Victorino said. Two weeks
to the day.
Yet, the today the Phillies get so
much stronger, even boasting the best
record in baseball, because Victorino
returns Philadelphias lineup.
Late-inning relief specialst Brad
Lidge isnt far behind.
After throwing15 of his 16 pitches for
strikes while working a scoreless sev-
enth inning for Reading on Sunday,
Lidge figures hes one more rehab out-
ing away fromresuming his role as the
Phillies closer. He spent the first half of
this year recovering froma right rotator
cuff strain.
But its Victorinos absence thats put
a real strain on the Phillies, which is
why his return may have the biggest
impact on the team.
The high-energy All-Star center fiel-
der was hitting .303 with nine home
runs and 34 RBI at the time of his in-
jury. But more importantly, he solidi-
fied the middle of the Phillies lineup
after recently dropping to the teams
No. 5 hitter fromhis second slot in the
batting order.
Victorinos presence behind cleanup
man Ryan Howard gives a scoring-
challenged Phillies offense much more
potential and punch.
Even if hes not about to punch any-
thing just yet with his still ailing thumb.
Theres going to be pain, Victorino
said. Theres going to be some discom-
fort there. Ive just got to play through
it.
Hes never just playing around.
Anybody whos watched Victorino
cant help admiring his all-out, all-the-
time hustle and his penchant for deliv-
ering in big moments.
Remember his game-changing grand
slamagainst C.C. Sabathia in the 2008
National League playoffs? Or Victori-
nos lunging grab of a shot to the gap
against the Reds in last years postsea-
son?
He didnt slowdown much during his
rehab stint with Reading, hitting .500 in
two games even without his disputed
long ball.
I thought it was over (in fair territo-
ry), Victorino said of his first-inning
blast that hugged the left field line.
Obviously the umpire didnt.
That didnt stop himfromspending
the rest of his Sunday hustling through
center field and around the base paths.
Thats howI play the game, Victori-
no said. I kind of play it at one speed.
Its a non-stop ball of energy Phillies
fans truly appreciate.
Victorino is back in Philadelphia and
heading toward the plate again.
And this time, nobodys going to stop
him.
PAUL SOKOLOSKI
O P I N I O N
This shot is
just what the
Phillies need
ARCHBALD Kingston/For-
ty Fort took full advantage of the
term double elimination in the
Section 5 Little League Tourna-
ment.
Despite losing its first game to
AbingtonNational, it rebounded
to defeat Archbald by a score of
5-1 in the major baseball losers
bracket final at the Archbald
Athletic Com-
plex. King-
ston/Forty
Fort has al-
lowed just two
runs in the past
two games.
Hunter Max-
well was terrif-
ic on the bump for Kingston/
Forty Fort. He tosseda complete
game, allowing just one run on
four hits. He struck out five and
walked just two Archbald hit-
ters.
Kingston/Forty Fort contin-
ues play in the Section Five Lit-
tle League Tournament today. It
will have a rematch with Abing-
ton National, it lost to11-7 in the
opening round of the tourna-
ment.
Kingston/Forty Fort got on
the board in the top of the sec-
ond. Withtwoouts inthe inning,
Julian Simons drew a walk and
advancedwhenSeanJudge reac-
hed on an infield single to short-
stop. Maxwell helped himself
out with an RBI single to left-
center field.
With one out in the third in-
ning, Eric Latoski drew a walk.
Zack Sott then belted a two-run
L I T T L E L E A G U E
Maxwell,
KFF post
key win
Team defeats Abington
National to avoid elimination
in Section 5 Tournament.
By JOSH HORTON
For The Times Leader
See KFF, Page 4B
5
KINGSTON/
FORTY FORT
1
ARCHBALD
BLOOMSBURG During the first two
games of the Region 5 American Legion
Baseball Tournament, Steve Ruch blis-
tered the baseball with the bat leading
Back Mountain to a pair of wins.
On Monday in the winners bracket fi-
nal against Plains, the Holy Redeemer
grad showed what he could do on the
mound.
The right-hander tossed a complete-
game, six-hit shutout and stayed hot with
the bat as well going 2-for-3 with two RBI
as Back Mountain defeated its Wyoming
Valley American Legion League com-
rade, 10-0 in a game that
ended in eight innings
instead of nine. Ruch is
now hitting .643 (9-
for-14) at the plate in the
double-elimination
event.
Steve Ruch, what a
great pitcher. He doesnt hurt himself and
he makes the other teambeat him, Back
Mountain manager Tom Evans said.
Back Mountain has now defeated
Plains all five times the teams have
played this season, including two in the
regular seasonandnowthree times inthe
postseason. With Mondays win, Back
Mountain (22-4) which has scored 44
runs inthree games is guaranteeda spot
in Wednesdays regional championship
no matter what happens in todays game
against Cantonat 4:30p.m. at Central Co-
lumbia High School. If Back Mountain
wins today, it plays Wednesday at 11 a.m.
With a loss, the WVALL champions will
playsWednesday after the completion of
the first game.
Plains (18-9) falls into the losers brack-
et and will take on Green Ridge at 1 p.m.
today to try to stave off elimination in the
tourney. Withawintoday, Plains will play
AMERI CAN L EGI ON BASEBAL L
RUCH TOSSES A GEM
DON CAREY/THE TIMES LEADER
Eric Ringsdorf of Back Mountain waits for the ball as Jordan Bone #7 of Plains dives into first base during a game in
Bloomsburg Monday. .
Back Mountain pitcher shuts out Plains
10
BACK
MOUNTAIN
0
PLAINS
See LEGION, Page 4B
By DAVE ROSENGRANT
drosengrant@timesleader.com
FRANKFURT, Germany Once the
Americans get over the disappointment
of coming up just short at the Womens
World Cup, theyll find plenty of reasons
for optimism.
The U.S. team pulled together amid a
series of challenges that, just a fewyears
ago, would have broken it apart. And
while the illustrious careers of captain
Christie Rampone, Shannon Boxx and
maybe Abby Wambach are nearing their
end, Lauren Cheney, Alex Morgan and
MeganRapinoe provedinGermany they
are more thanable successors.
Theres also another major title to be
wonat next summersLondonOlympics,
andqualifyingstartsinjustafewmonths.
Its just unfortunate, just a bummer,
Carli LloydsaidaftertheAmericanswere
stunned by Japan in a riveting final Sun-
W O M E N S W O R L D C U P
AP PHOTO
U.S. soccer teammember Megan Rapinoe answers questions after she and
other members of the U.S. soccer teamarrived in Times Square on Monday
after a Japans win over the United States in the Womens World Cup.
U.S. team faces new challenges,
including the 2012 Olympics
By NANCY ARMOUR
AP National Writer
See SOCCER, Page 6B
finish line, NFLPA spokesman Ge-
orge Atallah said in Washington.
There still are things that can get you
tripped up, and were going to push
through.
Owners are set to
hold a special meet-
ing in Atlanta on
Thursday, whenthey
could ratify a new
agreement if
there is one. Execu-
tives from all 32
teams then would be
briefed there Thurs-
day and Friday on
howthe terms would
affect league busi-
ness, two people fa-
miliar with the plan
told The Associated
Press.
The people said
the clubs were told Monday that top-
ics would include the 2011 NFL calen-
dar, rookie salary system and guide-
lines for player transactions. They
spoke to the AP on condition of ano-
nymity because the process is sup-
posed to remain confidential.
Any tentative agreement also must
The NFL told club executives they
could be schooled in the ins and outs
of the new labor contract as early as
Thursday, and the players association
summoned its leader-
ship for a potential
vote the strongest
signs yet the lockout
might be nearing an
end.
Lawyers for both
sides met 8
1
2 hours
Monday in New York,
including 3
1
2 with a
court-appointed
mediator, to try to
close a deal to resolve
the sports first work
stoppage since 1987.
Talks were scheduled
to continue today.
Making progress,
said NFL Players Association outside
counsel Jeffrey Kessler, who also rep-
resents locked-out NBA players.
Commissioner Roger Goodell and
NFLPA head DeMaurice Smith spoke
to each other on the telephone Mon-
day andplannedtostay inregular con-
tact.
Nobodycheers for youat Mile25of
a marathon. You still have to cross the
N F L
Ready for some football?
It may be around corner
The Associated Press
Nobody cheers for
you at Mile 25 of a
marathon. You still
have to cross the
finish line. There still
are things that can get
you tripped up, and
were going to push
through.
George Atallah
NFLPA spokesman
See NFL, Page 4B
C M Y K
PAGE 2B TUESDAY, JULY 19, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
S C O R E B O A R D
Its yet another big16-race slate this evening at the MoheganSunat
Pocono Downs. Every race has at least nine entries, andmost of them
look highly competitive for sure. So without further hesitation, lets
get right down to business..
BEST BET: FILLY BAY (9TH)
VALUE PLAY: M A ROY (12TH)
POST TIME 6:30 p.m.
All Races One Mile
First-$15,000 Clm.Hndcp Trot;clm.price $12-15,000
1 Credit Score B.Simpson 4-1-2 Allard has him ready 4-1
7 The Windsurfer A L.Stalbaum 2-2-8 First off the gate 3-1
5 Carpathian Hooray G.Napolitano 2-1-1 Deadly consistent 5-2
9 Colin Power T.Buter 4-7-2 First start off the claim 6-1
8 Speculation A.Napolitano 8-2-9 Tries another new barn 12-1
3 Like A Lexis B.Clarke 1-9-9 Broke last two starts 10-1
6 Captain Brady C.Norris 1-3-3 Bumps up off the win 15-1
2 Money Machine J.Pavia 7-5-8 Off form 5-1
4 Fortysecondstreet M.Kakaley 6-2-6 Never in it 20-1
Second-$4,800 Clm.Pace;clm.price $5,000
7 Swingopolitan G.Napolitano 7-7-4 Drop in class does it 4-1
8 Bullvillelightning L.Stalbaum 5-4-5 Back to level of last win 7-2
3 Great Balldini J.Pavia 6-8-7 Sits close to the pace 3-1
4 Mon Ami Hall W.Mann 8-4-8 Best of the rest 6-1
5 Glors Boys H.Parker 8-2-7 Veteran not the same 9-2
1 Jellis As Hecht M.Kakaley 5-8-6 Very weak race 8-1
2 I Am So Glad K.Sizer 9-9-8 Back from Tioga 10-1
6 Highview Fella N J.Taggart 7-7-7 One worse than seventh 15-1
9 Listen To Your Art D.Ingraham 8-7-3 Stalls out 20-1
Third-$12,000 Cond.Trot;n/w $6,500 last 5
9 Definitely Mamie J.Pavia 3-7-7 Finds the right field to beat 7-2
4 Folk Tail M.Kakaley 8-7-2 From the Burke stable 6-1
8 NF Quotable L.Stalbaum 5-6-2 Cook a warm trainer 8-1
2 Spice It Up Lindy M.Simons 2-6-6 Racing decent at the Big M 3-1
7 Smedshammer G.Napolitano 5-6-5 Does pick up Napolitano 4-1
6 Gimme The Loot A.Spano 5-3-5 Not won in 2011 9-2
3 Donnegal G.Wasiluk 5-2-4 11yr old keep plugging 10-1
1 Andoversure D.Ingraham 7-3-7 Often a long price 15-1
5 Conway Lane K.Sizer 6-2-7 Not a factor 20-1
Fourth-$10,000 Clm.Pace;clm.price $15,000
8 Viper Hanover T.Buter 2-3-1 Knocks the door down 9-2
6 Pride And Glory D.Ingraham 1-1-3 Pacer in good form 7-2
1 Iron Train G.Napolitano 3-7-5 Rail a big plus 3-1
7 Loadedupntruckin J.Pavia 7-6-8 Does have solid early foot 6-1
4 Sandy Absolut M.Kakaley 2-7-6 Filly tries to tackle boys 4-1
3 Top Notch Hanover A.Napolitano 6-8-5 Overclassed most of year 10-1
2 My Edward M.Simons 1-8-7 Jogged against lesser at Tioga 15-1
5 Purple Mcrain Tn.Schadel 2-4-6 Longtime maiden 8-1
9 Marty B Shady J.Taggart 3-6-6 Stomped down 20-1
Fifth-$20,000 The Stallion Series
9 Orange Bigi M.Kakaley 1-1-2 Makes it three straight 4-1
2 Can Do It T.Smedshammer 3-3-6 Trond having great year 7-2
1 Lady Ridge J.Pavia 1-5-2 Meadows invader 8-1
7 Migisi J.Taggart 2-8-4 Nice catch driver for Jim 9-2
6 Mynah Hanover S.Schoeffel 1-2-6 Tends to tire late 3-1
8 Broadway Starlet T.Buter 9-7-9 Disappointing filly 10-1
3 Jogging Home C.Norris 5-6-4 Legs give out 6-1
4 Red Rum Lass M.Simons 6-3-6 Take another 15-1
5 Abundala D.Ingraham 6-7-8 Off since May 20-1
Sixth-$14,000 Clm.Pace;clm.price $25,000
2 Panamanian M.Simons 1-6-5 Repeat in sight 7-2
1 Dragon AHS M.Kakaley 4-5-6 Takes loot from inside 3-1
3 Pandapocket H.Parker 3-6-4 Sherman barn doing stout 4-1
4 Pams Legacy J.Pavia 4-2-1 Fairly steady 6-1
5 Running Ron G.Napolitano 5-4-5 Needs live cover 9-2
7 Town Treasure M.Romano 2-7-3 Note the driver change 8-1
9 Black Ace Hanover T.Buter 7-6-8 Struck down 10-1
6 A Fool For Mark D.Ingraham 6-7-2 Sent by team Ingraham 15-1
8 Stonebridge Deco J.Antonelli 7-8-5 Well back 20-1
Seventh-$20,000 The Stallion Series
2 Madam Stacey T.Smedshammer 7-5-4 Tackles a little easier 9-2
7 Ladys Night D.Palone 1-1-2 The one to beat 3-1
3 Sephora De Vie G.Wright 3-2-5 Kicks it in too late 7-2
8 Amourus J.Rattray 4-1-1 Fallen back to earth 4-1
5 Kelpie Hanover J.Taggart 7-4-1 Taggart does well for Wollam 6-1
9 Quantum Glidingby C.Norris 2-3-1 Much better since lasix 10-1
1 Shacklesonmyfeet J.Johnson 8-5-3 Yet to remove the key 15-1
4 Gasoline M.Kakaley 9-6-7 Burned 8-1
6 Abundaspice D.Ingraham 5-4-3 Has never hit the board 20-1
Eighth-$14,000 Cond.Pace;n/w $9,000 last 5
3 Lislea Moran J.Pavia 5-4-8 Pavia winds him up 7-2
7 Hes Great D.Palone 3-1-3 Live pacer 3-1
6 Cessna Flight M.Kakaley 1-5-5 More than capable if right 3-1
1 Last Conquest G.Napolitano 3-1-6 Back from Saratoga 4-1
2 Literate Hanover T.Buter 2-5-9 Buter the new pilot 8-1
5 Polaris N M.Simons 6-8-10 Better earlier in year 9-2
8 Caerleon Hanover L.Stalbaum 4-1-7 Speed folds tonight 10-1
9 Rusty Tank M.Romano 2-6-6 Post the main setback 15-1
4 Caviart Spencer K.Sizer 8-5-3 Fallen on hard times 20-1
Ninth-$20,000 The Stallion Series
3 Filly Bay D.Palone 1-1-2 Has plenty in reserve 5-2
7 Im A Centerfold M.Kakaley 7-5-2 Hard one to gauge 6-1
4 Linnea P T.Buter 7-4-1 Drops from Reynolds 7-2
6 Miss Caviar T.Smedshammer 4-6-5 Watch the tote action 8-1
5 My Good Side S.Schoeffel 3-1-4 In from the fairs 4-1
8 Devoutly Hanover G.Napolitano 5-8-3 Long road to haul 12-1
2 Lady Taggetha C.Norris 3-4-4 Fades away 5-1
9 Ginger Tree Lexie M.Simons 5-4-3 Not from this spot 15-1
1 Newtech D.Ingraham 4-8-7 Same results 20-1
Tenth-$24,000 Clm.Hndcp Pace;clm.price $25-30,000
6 Expensive Toy M.Kakaley 2-7-7 Fits perfect in here 7-2
8 Three New Dawns G.Napolitano 9-1-1 Back to level of claim 4-1
9 Four Starz Elder B.Simpson 1-3-1 Become hot commodity 3-1
4 Lucky Lucky Leo L.Stalbaum 7-8-8 Big price on the board 15-1
1 Lap Hanover J.Pavia 5-2-1 2nd start since the claim 9-2
2 Royal Cam-Hall A.Napolitano 6-1-3 Bounced off career mile 6-1
3 Blissfullcavalcade D.Ingraham 7-1-2 Back in with claimers 8-1
5 Triple Major M.Simons 5-6-7 Winless in 18 prior 20-1
7 Totally Empressive P.Berry 7-8-3 Didnt fire at Vernon 10-1
Eleventh-$9,700 Cond.Trot;n/w $4,000 last 5
2 Credit Approved G.Napolitano 8-4-8 Fires down the road 7-2
6 Showmeyourstuff H.Parker 3-9-3 Tries out the hopples 3-1
4 R Sam J.Taggart 3-6-9 Rounds out the triple 9-2
5 American Cool D.Ingraham 3-8-1 New to the Case stable 20-1
8 St Giannis M.Kakaley 5-8-8 In live hands 4-1
1 Overdraft J.Pavia 4-5-7 Not the best track record 8-1
9 Perfect Chance M.Simons 4-1-9 Looking for flat mile 10-1
7 Raps Legacy T.Buter 8-7-4 Needs big turn-around 6-1
3 Corky Duke J.Groff 5-5-4 Groff has just 1 win 15-1
Twelfth-$9,700 Cond.Pace;n/w $4,000 last 5
7 M A Roy M.Kakaley 6-2-7 Takes care of soft field 6-1
3 Sir Beach Dragon D.Ingraham 4-6-4 Makes for nice exacta box 7-2
6 Thee Town Hero L.Stalbaum 3-7-7 Bomber having solid campaign 3-1
5 Up Front George P.Berry 4-4-3 Jersey import 15-1
8 Rush Of Fools B.Simpson 3-9-10 New on the scene 4-1
4 Kingofthecastle G.Napolitano 6-6-4 Wrong part of town 9-2
1 The Real Dan A.Santeramo 5-3-5 Santeramo ice cold 8-1
2 Art Star D.Palone 5-6-1 Demoted 10-1
9 Artist Point T.Buter 5-7-3 Comes off scr-vet injured 20-1
Thirteenth-$9,800 Clm.Trot;clm.price $10,000
5 Litigator T.Buter 3-6-4 Sneaks it out 4-1
2 A Real Laser G.Napolitano 1-1-4 Certain favorite 5-2
4 Clear The Air M.Simons 2-8-3 First off the claim 5-1
3 Instant Photo J.pavia 1-4-1 Just dusted similar 7-2
7 Southern Beauty M.Kakaley 7-3-5 Use in superfecta 6-1
1 Dynamic Preacher L.Stalbaum 8-2-4 Moves back inside 8-1
6 Pinnochio D.Palone 4-3-3 Not even Palone can help 12-1
8 Funny Briefs A.Santeramo 3-4-3 Winless in prior 42 tries 15-1
9 Credit Limit A.Napolitano 4-4-5 Dusted 20-1
Fourteenth-$9,700 Cond.Trot;n/w $4,000 last 5
9 Rookie Mistake L.Stalbaum 7-4-2 With one big swoop 7-2
6 Aviewtoakill T.Buter 2-3-3 Buter-Raymer solid duo 3-1
2 Lost In The Fog M.Romano 3-3-7 Romano gets catch drive 8-1
1 Ive Got It All M.Kakaley 9-4-5 Meadowlands shipper 6-1
8 Calchips Muscle J.Pavia 2-5-8 Lacks that stamina 4-1
7 Katies Kiss J.Taggart 4-6-3 One of two mares in here 15-1
3 Alarming Quick M.Simons 3-5-5 The other gal 10-1
4 Zero Boundaries B.Simpson 2-9-9 Ill pass on 9-2
5 Money Man K D.Ingraham 4-7-3 Out of cash 20-1
Fifteenth-$9,700 Cond.Pace;maidens
2 Redside Manner G.Napolitano 8-7-2 Starts off late double 4-1
6 A Fool House M.Kakaley 8-3-3 Raced well here in the past 3-1
8 Showtime Shark T.Buter 5-5-3 Lightly raced colt 9-2
5 Hey Scoob A.Napolitano 3-2-3 Lacks the late presence 7-2
7 Fox Valley Renoir B.Simpson 9-2-4 Chicago invader 6-1
1 Solanos Dragon J.Taggart 1-3-8 Eligible at time of entry 10-1
3 Lookout Josh M.Simons 7-3-3 Been a maiden for some time 8-1
4 Cancun Prize H.Parker 5-2-8 .next 15-1
9 Odin Blue Chip L.Stalbaum 6-5-6 One more race to go 20-1
Sixteenth-$10,000 Clm.Pace;clm.price $15,000
8 Patient Major J.Taggart 4-4-2 Upset in the finale 9-2
3 Ifeelthelight L.Stalbaum 9-9-2 Grabs the pocket 7-2
7 Bungleinthejungle H.Parker 7-1-6 Tough, if you back to the Q 15-1
4 Real Liberator J.Pavia 4-4-1 Vulnerable chalk 3-1
5 Giant Cooper W.Mullin 4-7-9 Mullin again steers 6-1
2 Bring Them Home M.Kakaley 6-4-7 Rough spot for this filly 4-1
1 Beckys Dreamboat M.Simons 2-2-3 Ohio shipper 8-1
6 Kingofthehighlands G.Napolitano 5-8-3 Chances are low 10-1
9 Here To Stay P.Berry 6-3-9 See you tomorrow 20-1
On the Mark
By Mark Dudek
For the Times Leader
Restaurante. Any questions or
concerns, please call Tony at
430-7571.
Hanover Area Football Booster Club
will meet at 6:30 p.m. on Tuesday
at the football stadium. All mem-
bers are asked to attend. New
members are welcome.
Swoyersville Lille League will meet
this Wednesday, July 20, at 7:30
p.m. at the Rec Room on Hughes
Street. All are urged to attend to
help plan the year end banquet.
Fall ball sign ups will take place at
7 p.m. prior to the meeting. Cost is
$30 per player.
REGISTRATIONS/TRYOUTSALs
Wyoming Valley Baseball League
is seeking teams. Play starts Au-
gust 20 and players must be ages
12-14. For more information or to
register, please contact Alb at
287-1223 or 881-2626.
Nanticoke Area High School Boys
Soccer will hold registration at 4
p.m. on Thursday at the West Side
Park. Any boy entering grades 9
through 12 this fall interested in
playing soccer for Nanticoke Area
may signup at this time.
Plains Little League will have regis-
tration for Fall Baseball Sunday
July 24, and Sunday July 31 from 6
p.m. 8 p.m. at Tokatch Field. Cost
is $35 and is for ages six and up.
UPCOMING EVENTS
A Double Elimination Softball
Tournament will be held July 29,
30, and 31at the Pittston Little
League fields on Church Street in
Pittston. Proceeds will benefit
Fallen Officers Remembered. If
you have a team or can put one
together to take part in this event,
contact Neil Murphy at 570-237-
0059. Entrance fee is $150 per
team. Hours will be Friday 6 p.m. -
11 p.m., Saturday 10 a.m. 10 p.m.,
and Sunday approximately 9 a.m.
5 or 6 p.m.
The All-American Girls Fast-Pitch
League will host its 4th annual Fall
League beginning August 27th at
the 17th Street Lighted Field in
Hazleton. All age groups are avail-
able, including an open division for
girls over the age of 18. (10u, 12u,
14u, 16, 18u, OPEN). There will be
divisions for high school teams,
travel teams and recreation teams.
Players may also register as indi-
viduals and be placed on a team.
Teams will be able to create their
own schedule, choosing to play as
few as two games or as many as
20 games. Our lighted field allows
for evening games. Both weekend
and week day games are available
to suit your schedule. Already four
teams who have won high school
or ASA State Championships are
registered. For an application or
more information, contact Vince
Trivelpiece at 570-233-3925, 570-
788-7777 and vince11@ptd.net.
CAMPS/CLINICS
Kings College will host the Boys High
School Pre-Season Team Camp
August 1-5 from 5 p.m. 8 p.m. at
the Robert L. Betzler Athletic Com-
plex in Wilkes-Barre Township. This
camp is designed specifically to
prepare and improve your team for
the upcoming high school soccer
season. The staff will emphasize
technical and tactical training while
incorporating attacking and defend-
ing principles into each day of team
training. Coaches will emphasize the
importance of implementing the
days training into the nights 60
minute competitive matches. The
camp staff will assume the role of
instructor in hopes to prove your
teams likelihood of experiencing
success throughout the fall season.
A camp team champion and Top
Eleven will be recognized at the end
of camp. The camp will be under the
direction of Kings College Mens
Soccer Coach Mark Bassett. For
more information or a printable
brochure, go to www.kingscolle-
geathletics.com. Information can
also be obtained by contacting
Coach Bassett at markbas-
sett@kings.edu or call 570-208-
5900 ext 5334.
Kings College will host the Little
Monarch Soccer Camp at the col-
leges Robert L. Betzler Athletic
Complex in Wilkes-Barre Township
August 1-5 from 9:30 a.m. 11:30 a.m.
and is open to boys and girls ages
six though twelve. This camp is
geared towards the enjoyment of
soccer for all involved with technical
instruction incorporated into the
games. The technical instruction will
include the passing, dribbling, shoot-
ing and receiving of the ball as
needed to develop into an improved
player at this age. During camp the
staff will emphasize fun in an upbeat
enthusiastic manner that will pro-
vide for a great week of camp for
your son or daughter. The camp will
be hosted by Kings Mens Soccer
Coach Mark Bassett. For more in-
formation or a printable brochure,
go to www.kingscollegeathletic-
s.com. Information can also be
obtained by contacting Coach Bas-
sett at markbassett@kings.edu or
call 570-208-5900 ext 5334
Kings College Football Camp will be
held Saturday July 30, at the Robert
L. Betzler Athletic Complex. The one
day camp is available for students
entering 8th grade and above and
will be held from 8:30 a.m. to 3:30
p.m. Cost is $50 per person. The
camp staff will teach the funda-
mentals of each position with a
heavy emphasis on technique and
individual teaching drills. The camp
is geared to quarterbacks, wide
receivers, running backs, tight ends,
offensive lineman, defensive line-
man, linebackers, and defensive
backs. For a printable camp bro-
chure go to www.kingscollegeathlet-
ics.com. For additional information
contact coach Jeff Knarr at 570-
208-5900, ext 5378 or by email at
jeffknarr@kings.edu.
MEETINGS
Crestwood Football Booster Club will
meeting at 7 p.m. Aug. 8 at Kings
Bulletin Board items will not be
accepted over the telephone. Items
may be faxed to 831-7319, dropped
off at the Times Leader or mailed
to Times Leader, c/o Sports, 15 N,
Main St., Wilkes-Barre, PA18711-
0250.
BUL L E T I N BOARD
BASEBALL
Favorite Odds Underdog
American League
BLUE JAYS 8.0 Mariners
TIGERS 8.5 As
Red Sox 9.5 ORIOLES
Yankees 8.5 RAYS
TWINS 8.0 Indians
White Sox 9.0 ROYALS
Rangers 7.5 ANGELS
National League
Reds 8.5 PIRATES
MARLINS 7.0 Padres
METS 8.0 Cards
Phillies NL CUBS
Nationals 7.5 ASTROS
ROCKIES 8.5 Braves
Brewers 9.0 DBACKS
GIANTS 6.5 Dodgers
AME RI C A S
L I NE
By Roxy Roxborough
BOXING REPORT: In the WBA/IBF
junior welterweight title fight on July 23
in Las Vegas, Nevada, Amir Khan is
-$500 vs. Zab Judah at +$400. For the
latest odds & scores, check us out at
www.americasline.com.
T R A N S A C T I O N S
BASEBALL
Major League Baseball
MLBAnnounced Boston DH David Ortiz and Bal-
timore RHP Kevin Gregg had their four-game sus-
pensions reduced to three games.
American League
BALTIMORE ORIOLESSigned SS J.J. Hardy to
a three-year contract extension. Placed RHP Alfre-
do Simon on the restricted list. Recalled 3B Josh
Bell fromNorfolk (IL). Selected the contract of RHP
Mark Worrell from Norfolk. Recalled INF Josh Bell
from Norfolk.
BOSTON RED SOXActivated OF Carl Crawford
from the 15-day DL. Optioned INF Drew Sutton to
Pawtucket (IL).
CLEVELAND INDIANSPlaced OF Grady Size-
more on the 15-day DL. Recalled RHP David Huff
from Columbus (IL).
NEWYORKYANKEESPlaced INF Ramiro Pena
on the15-day DL. Recalled INF Brandon Laird from
Scranton/Wilkes-Barre (IL).
TAMPA BAY RAYSRecalled C Robinson Chiri-
nos, RHP Alex Cobb and LHP Alex Torres from
Durham(IL). Designated RHPAdamRussell for as-
signment. Placed C Jose Lobaton and RHP Juan
Cruz on the 15-day DL.
TORONTO BLUE JAYSReinstated RHP Jesse
Litsch from the 15-day DL and optioned him to Las
Vegas (PCL).
American Association
AMARILLO SOXSigned RHP Cody Evans. Re-
leased RHP Gary Perinar.
EL PASO DIABLOSSigned RHP Jorge Crespo
and RHPJosh Grady. Released RHPRigoberto Al-
monte, RHP Jose Sanchez, INF Kevin Smith and
LHP Roberto Martinez.
FARGO-MOORHEAD REDHAWKSSigned LHP
Kevin Light and INF Jake Krause.
FORT WORTH CATSReleased RHP Tim
Haines.
GRAND PRAIRIE AIRHOGSSigned RHP Kyle
Gunderson.
LINCOLN SALTDOGSSigned RHP Vince Bon-
giovanni. Acquired LHP Jino Gonzalez from Lake
County (North American) for future considerations.
Released RHP James Garcia.
ST. PAUL SAINTSReleased INF Jake Krause.
Signed INF Justin Snyder. Sold the contract of OF
Brandon Tripp to the Philadelphia Phillies.
SHREVEPORT-BOSSIER CAPTAINSSigned C
Scott Thomas. Released C Andrew Kuhn.
WINNIPEGGOLDEYESReleased RHP Eugene
Wright.
BASKETBALL
National Basketball Association
INDIANA PACERSNamed Jim Boylen assistant
coach.
FOOTBALL
National Football League
HOUSTONTEXANSPromotedMikeMaccagnan
to director of college scouting. Named Dale Strahm
a national college scout.
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
ANAHEIM DUCKSSigned D Mathieu Carle to a
one-year contract.
ST. LOUIS BLUESSigned Forward Ryan
Reaves to a one-year contract.
WINNIPEGJETSAgreedtoterms withRWBlake
Wheeler, D Brett Festerling, C Riley Holzapfel, D
Arturs Kulda, RW Spencer Machacek, C Ben Max-
well and RW Kenndal McArdle on new contracts.
SOCCER
Major League Soccer
COLUMBUS CREWNamed Clark Beacom vice
president of ticket sales.
NEW ENGLAND REVOLUTIONAnnounced the
resignation of MF Ousmane Dabo.
NEW YORK RED BULLSTraded MF Austin da
Luz to D.C. United to complete an earlier trade.
COLLEGE
ATLANTIC 10 CONFERENCENamed Drew
Dickersondirector of mediarelations andcommuni-
cations.
ABILENE CHRISTIANNamed Joe Golding
mens basketball coach.
BAYLORNamed Grant McCasland mens assist-
ant basketball coach.
BRADLEYPromoted Jennifer Jones to senior
woman administrator and associate director of ath-
letics for academics and student affairs.
CLEMSONAnnounced the addition of womens
golf starting in 2013-14.
COLLEGE OF CHARLESTONSigned mens
soccer coach Ralph Lundy to five-year contract ex-
tension through 2015.
DAYTONNamed Paul Ivkovich strength and con-
ditioning coach for mens and womens basketball
and golf teams.
DELAWARENamed Tenaya Tucker assistant
softball coach.
FAIRLEIGH DICKINSONPromoted mens as-
sistant basketball coach Marcus Toney-El to asso-
ciate head coach. Named Damon Francis mens as-
sistant basketball coach.
FORDHAMNamed Kevin Leighton baseball
coach
NEW MEXICONamed Ben Wallis mens assist-
ant volleyball coach.
QUINNIPIACSigned mens basketball coach
Tom Moore to a contract extension through the
2015-16 season.
SOUTHERN CALSuspended TB Marc Tyler
from all team activities and the season opener for
comments he made to TMZ.
W H A T S O N T V
CYCLING
8 a.m.
VERSUS Tour de France, stage 16, Saint-Paul-
Trois-Chateaux to Gap, France
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL
7 p.m.
ROOT Cincinnati at Pittsburgh
YES --- N.Y. Yankees at Tampa Bay
SNY --- St. Louis at N.Y. Mets
8 p.m.
CSN Philadelphia at Chicago Cubs
WNBA BASKETBALL
7 p.m.
ESPN2 Seattle at Chicago
I N T E R N A T I O N A L
L E A G U E
North Division
W L Pct. GB
Lehigh Valley (Phillies).......... 56 39 .589
Pawtucket (Red Sox) ............. 52 43 .547 4
Yankees.................................. 49 44 .527 6
Buffalo (Mets) ......................... 41 54 .432 15
Syracuse (Nationals) ............. 40 53 .430 15
Rochester (Twins).................. 36 58 .383 19
1
2
South Division
W L Pct. GB
Gwinnett (Braves) ................... 53 42 .558
Durham (Rays)......................... 52 42 .553
1
2
Charlotte (White Sox) ............. 48 48 .500 5
1
2
Norfolk (Orioles) ...................... 36 59 .379 17
West Division
W L Pct. GB
Columbus (Indians)................ 61 34 .642
Louisville (Reds) .................... 50 46 .521 11
1
2
Indianapolis (Pirates) ............. 48 48 .500 13
1
2
Toledo (Tigers)....................... 42 54 .438 19
1
2
Saturday's Games
Durham11, Pawtucket 8
Rochester 4, Buffalo 2
Toledo 7, Yankees 4
Lehigh Valley 8, Syracuse 6
Gwinnett 4, Norfolk 3, 11 innings
Columbus 7, Indianapolis 5
Louisville 4, Charlotte 2, 12 innings
Sunday's Games
Durham13, Pawtucket 3
Norfolk 4, Gwinnett 2
Charlotte 7, Louisville 6
Syracuse 8, Lehigh Valley 4
Columbus 6, Indianapolis 4
Toledo 7, Yankees 6, 11 innings
Buffalo 13, Rochester 4
Monday's Games
Gwinnett 5, Louisville 2
Durham 4, Rochester 1
Pawtucket 4, Lehigh Valley 1
Indianapolis 4, Charlotte 3
Toledo 9, Norfolk 3
Columbus 5, Yankees 2; btm 4th inning
Buffalo at Syracuse; ppd
Today's Games
Buffalo at Syracuse, 7 p.m.
Charlotte at Indianapolis, 7:05 p.m.
Lehigh Valley at Pawtucket, 7:05 p.m.
Durham at Rochester, 7:05 p.m.
Louisville at Gwinnett, 7:05 p.m.
Yankees at Columbus, 7:05 p.m.
Toledo at Norfolk, 7:15 p.m.
E A S T E R N
L E A G U E
Eastern Division
W L Pct. GB
New Hampshire (Blue Jays)... 53 40 .570
Trenton (Yankees)................... 50 44 .532 3
1
2
New Britain (Twins) ................. 48 44 .522 4
1
2
Reading (Phillies) .................... 49 45 .521 4
1
2
Binghamton (Mets).................. 38 57 .400 16
Portland (Red Sox).................. 36 57 .387 17
Western Division
W L Pct. GB
Harrisburg (Nationals) ........... 55 38 .591
Bowie (Orioles)....................... 50 42 .543 4
1
2
Richmond (Giants) ................. 48 44 .522 6
1
2
Akron (Indians) ....................... 49 46 .516 7
Erie (Tigers) ............................ 45 49 .479 10
1
2
Altoona (Pirates)..................... 39 54 .419 16
Saturday's Games
New Britain 5, Portland 4
Bowie 9, Richmond 2
Akron 11, Harrisburg 5
Altoona 11, Erie 8
Reading 13, Trenton 2
Binghamton 2, New Hampshire 1
Sunday's Games
New Britain 9, Portland 7
Erie 9, Altoona 3
Binghamton 4, New Hampshire 3
Reading 4, Trenton 3
Harrisburg 9, Akron 7
Bowie 6, Richmond 1
Monday's Games
Portland 7, Binghamton 4
Bowie 4, Harrisburg 2
New Britain 11, Richmond 6
Reading 3, New Hampshire 2
Erie 5, Trenton 4
Altoona 1, Akron 3; btm 7th inning
Today's Games
Binghamton at Portland, 7 p.m.
Bowie at Harrisburg, 7 p.m.
Reading at New Hampshire, 7:05 p.m.
Richmond at New Britain, 7:05 p.m.
Erie at Trenton, 7:05 p.m.
Altoona at Akron, 7:05 p.m.
N E W Y O R K -
P E N N L E A G U E
McNamara Division
W L Pct. GB
Staten Island (Yankees).......... 21 7 .750
Hudson Valley (Rays) ............. 16 13 .552 5
1
2
Brooklyn (Mets) ....................... 16 14 .533 6
Aberdeen (Orioles).................. 8 22 .267 14
Pinckney Division
W L Pct. GB
Batavia (Cardinals) .................. 17 13 .567
Jamestown (Marlins)............... 17 13 .567
Mahoning Valley (Indians)...... 17 13 .567
Williamsport (Phillies) ............. 16 14 .533 1
Auburn (Nationals)................... 15 15 .500 2
State College (Pirates) ............ 8 22 .267 9
Stedler Division
W L Pct. GB
Vermont (Athletics) ................. 16 11 .593
Connecticut (Tigers) ............... 13 15 .464 3
1
2
Lowell (Red Sox) ..................... 13 17 .433 4
1
2
Tri-City (Astros) ....................... 12 16 .429 4
1
2
Monday's Games
Connecticut 8, Hudson Valley 3
Lowell 11, Brooklyn 5
Staten Island 12, Tri-City 5
Jamestown 6, Mahoning Valley 5
State College 5, Williamsport 1
Auburn 4, Batavia 3
Aberdeen 7, Vermont 4; btm 8th inning
Today's Games
Connecticut at Tri-City, 7 p.m.
State College at Mahoning Valley, 7:05 p.m.
Batavia at Jamestown, 7:05 p.m.
Staten Island at Hudson Valley, 7:05 p.m.
Brooklyn at Aberdeen, 7:05 p.m.
Vermont at Lowell, 7:05 p.m.
Auburn at Williamsport, 7:05 p.m.
Wednesday's Games
Connecticut at Tri-City, 11 a.m.
Brooklyn at Aberdeen, 7:05 p.m.
Staten Island at Hudson Valley, 7:05 p.m.
Batavia at Jamestown, 7:05 p.m.
Vermont at Lowell, 7:05 p.m.
State College at Mahoning Valley, 7:05 p.m.
Auburn at Williamsport, 7:05 p.m.
S O C C E R
2011 Women's World Cup
(Top two nations in each group advance)
GROUP A
GP W D L GF GA Pts
x-Germany............ 3 3 0 0 7 3 9
x-France................ 3 2 0 1 7 4 6
Nigeria................... 3 1 0 2 1 2 3
Canada.................. 3 0 0 3 1 7 0
x-advanced to quarterfinals
Sunday, June 26
At Sinsheim, Germany
France 1, Nigeria 0
At Berlin
Germany 2, Canada 1
Thursday, June 30
At Bochum, Germany
France 4, Canada 0
At Frankfurt
Germany 1, Nigeria 0
Tuesday, July 5
At Moenchengladbach, Germany
Germany 4, France 2
At Dresden, Germany
Nigeria 1, Canada 0
GROUP B
GP W D L GF GA Pts
x-England.............. 3 2 1 0 5 2 7
x-Japan ................. 3 2 0 1 6 3 6
Mexico................... 3 0 2 1 3 7 2
New Zealand ........ 3 0 1 2 4 6 1
x-advanced to quarterfinals
Monday, June 27
At Bochum, Germany
Japan 2, New Zealand 1
At Wolfsburg, Germany
Mexico 1, England 1
Friday, July 1
At Leverkusen, Germany
Japan 4, Mexico 0
At Dresden, Germany
England 2, New Zealand 1
Tuesday, July 5
At Augsburg, Germany
England 2, Japan 0
At Sinsheim, Germany
New Zealand 2, Mexico 2
GROUP C
GP W D L GF GA Pts
x-Sweden.............. 3 3 0 0 4 1 9
x-United States..... 3 2 0 1 6 2 6
North Korea.......... 3 0 1 2 0 3 1
Colombia............... 3 0 1 2 0 4 1
x-advanced to quarterfinals
Tuesday, June 28
At Leverkusen, Germany
Sweden 1, Colombia 0
At Dresden, Germany
United States 2, North Korea 0
Saturday, July 2
At Augsburg, Germany
Sweden 1, North Korea 0
At Sinsheim, Germany
United States 3, Colombia 0
Wednesday, July 6
At Wolfsburg, Germany
Sweden 2, United States 1
At Bochum, Germany
North Korea 0, Colombia 0
GROUP D
GP W D L GF GA Pts
x-Brazil .................. 3 3 0 0 7 0 9
x-Australia............. 3 2 0 1 5 4 6
Norway.................. 3 1 0 2 2 5 3
Eq. Guinea............ 3 0 0 3 2 7 0
x-advanced to quarterfinals
Wednesday, June 29
At Augsburg, Germany
Norway 1, Equatorial Guinea 0
At Moenchengladbach, Germany
Brazil 1, Australia 0
Sunday, July 3
At Bochum, Germany
Australia 3, Equatorial Guinea 2
At Wolfsburg, Germany
Brazil 3, Norway 0
Wednesday, July 6
At Frankfurt
Brazil 3, Equatorial Guinea 0
At Leverkusen, Germany
Australia 2, Norway 1
QUARTERFINALS
Saturday, July 9
At Leverkusen, Germany
France 1, England 1, France won 4-3 on penalty
kicks
At Wolfsburg, Germany
Japan 1, Germany 0, OT
Sunday, July 10
At Augsburg, Germany
Sweden 3, Australia 1
At Dresden, Germany
United States 2, Brazil 2, U.S. won 5-3 on penalty
kicks
SEMIFINALS
Wednesday, July 13
At Moenchengladbach, Germany
United States 3, France 1
At Frankfurt
Japan 3, Sweden 1
THIRD PLACE
Saturday, July 16
At Sinsheim, Germany
Sweden 2, France 1
CHAMPIONSHIP
Sunday, July 17
At Frankfurt
Japan 3, United States 1
Major League Soccer
EASTERN CONFERENCE
W L T Pts GF GA
Philadelphia ................. 8 4 7 31 24 16
New York...................... 6 4 11 29 34 24
Columbus..................... 7 5 7 28 21 19
Houston........................ 5 6 9 24 24 23
Sporting Kansas City.. 5 6 8 23 24 25
D.C. ............................... 5 5 8 23 24 29
Chicago ........................ 2 6 12 18 20 25
Toronto FC................... 3 9 9 18 17 36
New England................ 3 9 7 16 16 27
WESTERN CONFERENCE
W L T Pts GF GA
Los Angeles ................ 10 2 9 39 27 16
Seattle .......................... 10 4 8 38 32 23
FC Dallas..................... 10 5 5 35 26 19
Real Salt Lake............. 8 3 6 30 23 12
Colorado...................... 6 6 9 27 25 27
Chivas USA................. 5 7 8 23 24 23
San Jose...................... 5 6 8 23 22 21
Portland........................ 6 9 3 21 22 31
Vancouver ................... 2 10 8 14 19 28
NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie.
Saturday's Games
Seattle FC 4, Colorado 3
Vancouver , Real Salt Lake
Columbus 0, San Jose 0, tie
Portland 1, Chicago 0
Houston 1, Sporting Kansas City 1, tie
FC Dallas 0, D.C. United 0, tie
Chivas USA 0, New York 0, tie
Sunday's Games
Philadelphia 3, New England 0
Wednesday, July 20
New England at D.C. United, 7:30 p.m.
FC Dallas at Toronto FC, 8 p.m.
New York at Colorado, 9:30 p.m.
Columbus at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m.
Vancouver at San Jose, 10:30 p.m.
Saturday, July 23
FC Dallas at New York, 6 p.m.
Portland at Columbus, 8 p.m.
Toronto FC at Sporting Kansas City, 8:30 p.m.
New England at Colorado, 9 p.m.
San Jose at Real Salt Lake, 10 p.m.
Houston at Chivas USA, 10:30 p.m.
Arena Football League
NATIONAL CONFERENCE
West Division
.................................................. W LT Pct PF PA
z-Arizona..................................15 20.8821059 787
Spokane................................... 9 80.5291002 952
Utah.......................................... 8 90.47110061048
San Jose.................................. 7100.412 9781023
Central Division
.................................................. W LT Pct PF PA
x-Chicago ................................13 40.765 916 779
x-Dallas....................................11 60.6471012 952
Tulsa......................................... 7100.412 823 834
Kansas City ............................. 6110.353 799 903
Iowa.......................................... 5120.294 8571053
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
South Division
..................................................... W LT Pct PF PA
z-Jacksonville............................13 40.7651083853
Georgia ......................................10 70.588 944872
Orlando.......................................10 70.588 939889
Tampa Bay ................................. 6110.353 745949
New Orleans.............................. 3140.176 782955
Eastern Division
....................................................... W LT Pct PF PA
Cleveland .....................................10 70.588835766
Pittsburgh..................................... 8 90.471809924
Milwaukee .................................... 6110.353818826
Philadelphia................................. 6110.353866908
x-clinched playoff spot
z-clinched conference
Friday's Games
Milwaukee 83, Iowa 49
Cleveland 67, Pittsburgh 55
Kansas City 49, Jacksonville 48, OT
Saturday's Games
Georgia 58, Tampa Bay 40
Orlando 85, Tulsa 49
Chicago 53, Dallas 44
Utah 62, New Orleans 58
Spokane 63, San Jose 61
Friday, July 22
Pittsburgh at Philadelphia, 7:05 p.m.
Utah at Cleveland, 7:30 p.m.
Spokane at Jacksonville, 8 p.m.
Saturday, July 23
New Orleans at Orlando, 7:30 p.m.
San Jose at Tampa Bay, 7:30 p.m.
Milwaukee at Chicago, 8 p.m.
Tulsa at Kansas City, 8 p.m.
Georgia at Iowa, 8:05 p.m.
Arizona at Dallas, 8:30 p.m.
F O O T B A L L
Canadian Football League
EAST DIVISION
W L T Pts PF PA
Montreal ..................................... 3 0 0 6 109 68
Winnipeg.................................... 2 1 0 4 66 53
Hamilton..................................... 1 2 0 2 59 55
Toronto....................................... 1 2 0 2 56 83
WEST DIVISION
W L T Pts PF PA
Edmonton................................. 3 0 0 6 103 55
Calgary ..................................... 2 1 0 4 76 75
B.C. ........................................... 0 3 0 0 75 97
Saskatchewan.......................... 0 3 0 0 56 124
Thursday's Game
Calgary 21, Winnipeg 20
Friday's Game
Montreal 40, Toronto 17
Saturday's Games
Hamilton 33, Saskatchewan 3
Edmonton 33, B.C. 17
Friday, July 22
Hamilton at B.C., 10 p.m.
Saturday, July 23
Winnipeg at Toronto, 4 p.m.
Edmonton at Calgary, 7 p.m.
Sunday, July 24
Saskatchewan at Montreal, 7 p.m.
B A S K E T B A L L
Women's National Basketball
Association
All Times EDT
EASTERN CONFERENCE
W L Pct GB
Indiana............................ 10 5 .667
Connecticut.................... 8 5 .615 1
New York ....................... 9 6 .600 1
Chicago.......................... 7 8 .467 3
Atlanta............................. 4 9 .308 5
Washington.................... 3 10 .231 6
WESTERN CONFERENCE
W L Pct GB
Phoenix .......................... 10 4 .714
Minnesota ...................... 9 4 .692
1
2
San Antonio ................... 8 4 .667 1
Seattle............................. 7 6 .538 2
1
2
Los Angeles................... 6 7 .462 3
1
2
Tulsa............................... 1 14 .067 9
1
2
Sunday's Games
New York 88, Tulsa 57
Connecticut 76, Indiana 71
Washington 89, Los Angeles 85, OT
Monday's Games
San Antonio at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m.
Today's Games
Indiana at Atlanta, 12 p.m.
Seattle at Chicago, 7 p.m.
New York at Connecticut, 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday's Games
Atlanta at Washington, 11:30 a.m.
Minnesota at Phoenix, 3:30 p.m.
C Y C L I N G
Tour de France
(After 15 stages)
1. Thomas Voeckler, France, Europcar, 65 hours,
24 minutes, 34 seconds.
2. Frank Schleck, Luxembourg, Leopard-Trek,
1:49.
3. Cadel Evans, Australia, BMC, 2:06.
4. Andy Schleck, Luxembourg, Leopard-Trek, 2:15.
5. Ivan Basso, Italy, Liquigas-Cannondale, 3:16.
6. Samuel Sanchez, Spain, Euskaltel-Euskadi,
3:44.
7. Alberto Contador, Spain, Saxo Bank Sungard,
4:00.
8. Damiano Cunego, Italy, Lampre-ISD, 4:01.
9. Tom Danielson, United States, Garmin-Cervelo,
5:46.
10. Kevin De Weert, Belgium, Quick Step, 6:18.
11. Rigoberto Uran, Colombia, Sky Procycling,
7:55.
12. Jean-Christophe Peraud, France, AG2R La
Mondiale, 8:20.
13. Rein Taaramae, Estonia, Cofidis, 9:02.
14. Pierre Rolland, France, Europcar, 9:20.
15. Haimar Zubeldia, Spain, RadioShack, 9:50.
16. Peter Velits, Slovakia, HTC-Highroad, 10:01.
17. Arnold Jeannesson, France, Francaise des
Jeux, 10:05.
18. Nicolas Roche, Ireland, AG2R La Mondiale,
10:56.
19. Sandy Casar, France, Francaise des Jeux,
11:54.
20. Jelle Vanendert, Belgium, Omega Pharma-Lot-
to, 12:06.
B O X I N G
Fight Schedule
July 20
At Sydney Entertainment Centre, Sydney, Danny
Green vs. Antonio Tarver, 12, for Greens IBOcrui-
serweight title.
July 22
At Morongo Casino Resort, Cazabon, Calif.
(ESPN2), Anthony Dirrell vs. KevinEngel, 10, super
middleweights; Lenard Lane vs. Joseph Elegele,
10, welterweights.
At Doubletree Hotel, Ontario, Calif., Juan Carlos
Burgos vs. Gilbert Sanchez Leon, 10, feather-
weights.
July 23
At Oriley Events Center, Springfield, Mo., B.J.
Flores vs. Nick Iannuzzi, 10, cruiserweights.
At Mandalay Bay Events Center, Las Vegas (HBO),
Amir Khan vs. Zab Judah, 12, for Khans WBA and
Judahs IBF junior welterweight titles; Peter Quillin
vs. Tarvis Simms, 10, middleweights.
At Ciudad Obregon, Mexico, Roman Gonzalez vs.
Omar Salado, 12, for Gonzalezs WBA flyweight ti-
tle.
At Guadalajara, Mexico, Ulises Solis vs. Omar Nino
Romero, 12, for Solis IBF light flyweight title and in-
terim WBA World super featherweight title.
July 29
At Homebush, Australia, Billy Dib vs. Jorge Lacie-
rva, 12, for the vacant IBF featherweight title; Junior
Talipeau vs. Zac Awad, 12, super middleweights.
At South Point Hotel Casino, Las Vegas, Beibut
Shumenov vs. Danny Santiago, 12, for Shumenovs
WBA World light heavyweight title.
At Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas (ESPN2), Victor
Cayo vs. Lamont Peterson, 12, IBF super light-
weight eliminator; Edison Miranda vs. Yordanis
Despaigne, 10, light heavyweights.
July 30
At Cibubur, Indonesia, Muhammad Rachman vs.
Porsanwan Porpramuk, 12, for Rachmans WBA
strawweight title; Ali Rochmad vs. Petchtrang Sor
Yuphinda, 12, super flyweights; Afrizal Cotto vs.
Frans Yarangga, 12, super featherweights.
At San Jose, Costa Rica, Brian Magee vs. Jaime
Barboza, 12, for the vacant WBA interimsuper mid-
dleweight title; Bryan Vazquez vs. Jose manuel
Osorio, 10, super featherweights; Elvin Perez vs.
Juan Ruiz, 10, light welterweights.
Aug. 5
At Chumash Casino, Santa Ynez, Calif. (ESPN2),
Tim Coleman vs. Vernon Paris, 10, light welter-
weights.
C M Y K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com TUESDAY, JULY 19, 2011 PAGE 3B
M A J O R L E A G U E B A S E B A L L
CHICAGO Aramis Rami-
rez and Carlos Pena homered
to back a dominant start by
Rodrigo Lopez, and the Chi-
cago Cubs beat Philadelphia
6-1 Monday on a night when
Phillies ace Roy Halladay left
the game because of the heat.
Halladay doubled over and
was visited by a trainer after
Starlin Castro led off the fifth
inning with a single. Drew
Carpenter came in to replace
him.
Halladay was drenched in
sweat on a humid night in
which the game-time temper-
ature was 91. The heat clearly
affected him.
He gave up three runs and
seven hits and took his first
loss since May 15. Halladay
had his first outing since
starting for the National
League in last weeks All-Star
game and pitching two per-
fect innings.
Marlins 4, Mets 1
NEW YORK Clay Hen-
sley came off the disabled list
to win his first major league
start in three years, leading
the resurgent Florida Marlins
past the New York Mets.
Mike Stanton hit a two-run
double and slumping Mike
Cameron followed with an
RBI single for the Marlins,
who have won nine of 10 to
put themselves on the brink
of climbing out of last place
in the NL East.
Florida improved to 15-9
under 80-year-old manager
Jack McKeon, who took over
after Edwin Rodriguez abrupt-
ly resigned late in the teams
1-19 June swoon.
In the makeup of a May 17
rainout, Hensley (1-2) allowed
one hit over five scoreless
innings against a depleted
Mets lineup. It was his 41st
big league start but first
since July 24, 2008, for San
Diego at Pittsburgh.
Nationals 5, Astros 2
HOUSTON Michael Morse
and Ryan Zimmerman home-
red and Zimmerman drove in
the go-ahead run in the ninth
inning to give the Washington
Nationals a in over the Hous-
ton Astros.
Laynce Nix added a pair of
insurance runs with an RBI
single after Zimmermans hit
in the ninth.
Braves 7, Rockies 4
DENVER Freddie Free-
man homered and drove in
three runs and right-hander
Derek Lowe handcuffed the
Colorado Rockies over 6 1-3
innings in the Atlanta Braves
7-4 win Monday night.
Lowe must have felt right
at home in the unusually
warm night in Colorado, and
the sunshine actually helped
him beat the Rockies for the
second time in two weeks.
N AT I O N A L L E A G U E R O U N D U P
Halladay leaves
start in loss
The Associated Press
Mets: Reyes likely
off DL today
NEW YORK Jose Reyes
appears ready to come off the
disabled list.
The New York Mets star
doubled and played six
innings at shortstop Monday
in a rehab game for Class-A
Brooklyn. Mets manager Terry
Collins says it looks as though
Reyes will be activated
Tuesday in time for the
opener of a three-game series
against St. Louis.
Leading the majors with a
.354 batting average and 15
triples, Reyes has been
sidelined since July 3 with a
strained left hamstring. He
was eligible to come off the
disabled list Monday, but the
Mets wanted him to test his
leg in a game first.
Reyes went 1 for 3 and
scored a run in Brooklyns 11-5
loss to Lowell.
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.
Russell Martin drew a basebs-
loaded walk with two outs in
the top of the ninth inning,
giving the New York Yankees a
5-4 victory over the Tampa Bay
Rays on Monday night.
Robinson Cano, Mark Teixei-
ra, Brett Gardner and Eduardo
Nunez also drove in runs for
the second-place Yankees, who
rallied from a 4-1 deficit to
remain 1
1
2 games behind the
Boston Red Sox in the AL East
standings.
Rookie left-hander Alex
Torres (0-1) yielded the win-
ning run in his major league
debut after New York loaded
the bases on Curtis Grander-
sons single, an intentional
walk to Nick Swisher and an-
other walk to Andruw Jones.
Martin worked Torres to a full
count, fouled off a pitch and
then took ball four to push
Granderson across the plate.
Red Sox 15, Orioles 10
BALTIMORE Dustin
Pedroia doubled in two runs to
spark an eight-run eighth in-
ning, and the Boston Red Sox
got home runs from Jarrod
Saltalamacchia and Josh Red-
dick in a rout of the Baltimore
Orioles.
Pedroia, Kevin Youkilis and
Darnell McDonald had three
RBIs apiece for the Red Sox,
who have won 13 of 15. The
run includes a 16-inning affair
against Tampa Bay on Sunday
night in which Boston mus-
tered only five hits.
Showing very little signs of
fatigue, the Red Sox banged
out 16 hits in rolling to their
seventh straight victory over
the Orioles.
Indians 5, Twins 2
Indians 6, Twins 3
MINNEAPOLIS Lou
Marson hit a tiebreaking solo
homer in the seventh inning
and the Cleveland Indians
completed a doubleheader
sweep with a 6-3 victory over
the Minnesota Twins, kicking
off the important four-game
series with a pair of victories at
sweltering Target Field.
Marson also doubled and
scored in the fifth against Scott
Diamond, who turned in a
decent major league debut for
the Twins but took the defeat.
Fausto Carmona (5-10) came
off the disabled list and won
for only the second time in his
last 12 starts, beating the heat
to finish six innings with two
runs allowed. Asdrubal Cabre-
ra hit a three-run homer to lift
the Indians to a 5-2 win in the
matinee and added an RBI
single in the nightcap.
White Sox 5, Royals 2
KANSAS CITY, Mo. Mark
Buerhle lasted seven innings in
another impressive start, and
the Chicago White Sox capital-
ized on an error by young
shortstop Alcides Escobar to
beat the Kansas City Royals on
a steamy.
Buehrle (7-5) hasnt allowed
more than three earned runs in
his last 14 starts going back to
April 22, though his modest
record doesnt indicate how
well hes been pitching.
The veteran left-hander, in
the final year of a four-year, $56
million contract, allowed five
hits while winning for the first
time since June 9. Buehrle
struck out three and walked
one while throwing 111 pitches
in 95-degree temperatures.
A M E R I C A N L E A G U E R O U N D U P
Yankees rally from
3 down to beat Rays
The Associated Press
STANDINGS/STATS
AP PHOTO
Philadelphia Phillies pitcher Roy Halladay lifts his cap as trainer
Scott Sheriday talks to himon the mound during the fifth inning
of a game against the Chicago Cubs Monday in Chicago. Halladay
left the game.
S T A N D I N G S
All Times EDT
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division
W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Away
Boston .......................................... 58 36 .617 9-1 W-3 28-17 30-19
New York...................................... 56 37 .602 1
1
2 6-4 W-3 30-19 26-18
Tampa Bay ................................... 50 44 .532 8 6
1
2 3-7 L-3 22-24 28-20
Toronto......................................... 47 49 .490 12 10
1
2 5-5 L-2 21-24 26-25
Baltimore ...................................... 38 55 .409 19
1
2 18 2-8 L-1 24-25 14-30
Central Division
W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Away
Cleveland ..................................... 51 44 .537 5-5 W-2 27-18 24-26
Detroit ........................................... 50 45 .526 1 7 5-5 W-1 28-21 22-24
Chicago ........................................ 47 49 .490 4
1
2 10
1
2 4-6 W-1 21-25 26-24
Minnesota .................................... 44 51 .463 7 13 6-4 L-2 23-22 21-29
Kansas City.................................. 38 58 .396 13
1
2 19
1
2 3-7 L-3 24-28 14-30
West Division
W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Away
Texas......................................... 55 41 .573 10-0 W-11 31-18 24-23
Los Angeles.............................. 51 45 .531 4 6
1
2 6-4 L-2 26-22 25-23
Seattle........................................ 43 52 .453 11
1
2 14 1-9 L-9 23-26 20-26
Oakland..................................... 42 54 .438 13 15
1
2 4-6 W-2 26-22 16-32
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division
W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Away
Philadelphia................................. 59 36 .621 6-4 L-1 34-15 25-21
Atlanta........................................... 57 39 .594 2
1
2 7-3 W-2 30-19 27-20
Washington.................................. 48 48 .500 11
1
2 9 5-5 W-1 28-18 20-30
New York...................................... 47 48 .495 12 9
1
2 4-6 L-2 20-25 27-23
Florida........................................... 47 49 .490 12
1
2 10 9-1 W-3 22-28 25-21
Central Division
W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Away
Milwaukee .................................... 51 45 .531 6-4 W-2 33-14 18-31
Pittsburgh..................................... 49 44 .527
1
2 6
1
2 7-3 W-1 23-22 26-22
St. Louis ....................................... 50 45 .526
1
2 6
1
2 5-5 L-1 25-21 25-24
Cincinnati...................................... 47 48 .495 3
1
2 9
1
2 4-6 W-1 25-22 22-26
Chicago ........................................ 39 58 .402 12
1
2 18
1
2 4-6 W-1 22-29 17-29
Houston........................................ 31 65 .323 20 26 2-8 L-2 15-36 16-29
West Division
W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Away
San Francisco.............................. 55 41 .573 7-3 W-1 28-16 27-25
Arizona ......................................... 51 44 .537 3
1
2 5
1
2 6-4 W-2 25-20 26-24
Colorado....................................... 45 51 .469 10 12 4-6 L-3 24-25 21-26
Los Angeles................................. 42 53 .442 12
1
2 14
1
2 5-5 L-2 23-27 19-26
San Diego..................................... 41 55 .427 14 16 2-8 L-1 20-30 21-25
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Sunday's Games
Detroit 4, Chicago White Sox 3
N.Y. Yankees 7, Toronto 2
Baltimore 8, Cleveland 3
Minnesota 4, Kansas City 3
Oakland 9, L.A. Angels 1
Texas 3, Seattle 1
Boston 1, Tampa Bay 0, 16 innings
Monday's Games
Cleveland 5, Minnesota 2, 1st game
Boston 15, Baltimore 10
N.Y. Yankees 5, Tampa Bay 4
Chicago White Sox 5, Kansas City 2
Cleveland 6, Minnesota 3, 2nd game
Tuesday's Games
Boston (Weiland 0-0) at Baltimore (Guthrie 3-13),
7:05 p.m.
Oakland (Moscoso 3-4) at Detroit (Porcello 8-6),
7:05 p.m.
Seattle (Pineda 8-6) at Toronto (Cecil 2-4), 7:07
p.m.
N.Y. Yankees (Colon 6-5) at Tampa Bay (Hellickson
8-7), 7:10 p.m.
ChicagoWhiteSox (Peavy 4-3) at Kansas City (Duf-
fy 1-4), 8:10 p.m.
Cleveland (Masterson 8-6) at Minnesota (Liriano
6-7), 8:10 p.m.
Texas (Ogando 9-3) at L.A. Angels (Chatwood 5-5),
10:05 p.m.
Wednesday's Games
Boston at Baltimore, 12:35 p.m.
Cleveland at Minnesota, 1:10 p.m.
Oakland at Detroit, 7:05 p.m.
Seattle at Toronto, 7:07 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees at Tampa Bay, 7:10 p.m.
Chicago White Sox at Kansas City, 8:10 p.m.
Texas at L.A. Angels, 10:05 p.m.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Sunday's Games
Philadelphia 8, N.Y. Mets 5
Cincinnati 3, St. Louis 1
Atlanta 9, Washington 8
Pittsburgh 7, Houston 5, 11 innings
Florida 7, Chicago Cubs 5
Milwaukee 4, Colorado 3
San Francisco 4, San Diego 3, 11 innings
Arizona 4, L.A. Dodgers 1
Monday's Games
Cincinnati at Pittsburgh, 7:05 p.m.
Florida 4, N.Y. Mets 1
Chicago Cubs 6, Philadelphia 1
Washington 5, Houston 2
Atlanta 7, Colorado 4
Milwaukee at Arizona, (n)
L.A. Dodgers at San Francisco, (n)
Tuesday's Games
Cincinnati (Leake 8-4) at Pittsburgh (Ja.McDonald
5-4), 7:05 p.m.
San Diego (Stauffer 5-6) at Florida (Ani.Sanchez
6-2), 7:10 p.m.
St. Louis (Lohse 8-6) at N.Y. Mets (Gee 8-3), 7:10
p.m.
Philadelphia (Cl.Lee 9-6) at Chicago Cubs (Garza
4-7), 8:05 p.m.
Washington (Zimmermann 6-7) at Houston (Happ
3-11), 8:05 p.m.
Atlanta (Beachy 3-1) at Colorado (Jimenez 5-8),
8:40 p.m.
Milwaukee (Gallardo 10-6) at Arizona (Enright 1-3),
9:40 p.m.
L.A. Dodgers (R.De La Rosa 3-4) at San Francisco
(Bumgarner 4-9), 10:15 p.m.
Wednesday's Games
Cincinnati at Pittsburgh, 12:35 p.m.
Washington at Houston, 2:05 p.m.
Philadelphia at Chicago Cubs, 2:20 p.m.
L.A. Dodgers at San Francisco, 3:45 p.m.
San Diego at Florida, 7:10 p.m.
St. Louis at N.Y. Mets, 7:10 p.m.
Atlanta at Colorado, 8:40 p.m.
Milwaukee at Arizona, 9:40 p.m.
N L B O X E S
Cubs 6, Phillies 1
Philadelphia Chicago
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Rollins ss 4 1 1 1 Fukdm rf 4 1 1 1
Mrtnz 3b 4 0 1 0 SCastro ss 5 0 2 0
Utley 2b 3 0 0 0 ArRmr 3b 3 1 1 2
Howard 1b 4 0 0 0 C.Pena 1b 3 1 3 2
Ibanez lf 4 0 0 0 Byrd cf 4 0 2 0
Ruiz c 3 0 1 0 ASorin lf 4 0 0 0
DBrwn rf 3 0 0 0 Smrdzj p 0 0 0 0
Mayrry cf 4 0 2 0 Marml p 0 0 0 0
Hallady p 2 0 0 0 K.Hill c 3 1 0 0
DrCrpn p 0 0 0 0 Barney 2b 4 1 2 1
Orr ph 0 0 0 0 RLopez p 1 1 1 0
BFrncs ph 1 0 0 0 JRussll p 0 0 0 0
Herndn p 0 0 0 0 Campn lf 1 0 0 0
Totals 32 1 5 1 Totals 32 612 6
Philadelphia....................... 000 100 000 1
Chicago.............................. 102 002 10x 6
EA.Soriano (6), Barney (9). DPChicago 1.
LOBPhiladelphia 7, Chicago 8. 2BMayberry
(11), Fukudome (15), Byrd (11), Barney (12). HR
Rollins (9), Ar.Ramirez (17), C.Pena (20). SB
S.Castro (11), K.Hill (1). CSS.Castro (2). S
R.Lopez 2. SFAr.Ramirez.
IP H R ER BB SO
Philadelphia
Halladay L,11-4....... 4 7 3 3 1 1
Dr.Carpenter ........... 2 3 2 2 2 1
Herndon ................... 2 2 1 1 0 2
Chicago
R.Lopez W,2-2........ 6
2
3 5 1 1 0 3
J.Russell ..................
1
3 0 0 0 0 0
Samardzija............... 1 0 0 0 0 1
Marmol ..................... 1 0 0 0 2 2
Halladay pitched to 1 batter in the 5th.
HBPby R.Lopez (Utley).
Nationals 5, Astros 2
Washington Houston
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Berndn cf-lf 3 1 1 0 Bourn cf 4 0 1 0
Espinos 2b 3 0 0 0 AngSnc ss 3 1 1 0
Zmrmn 3b 4 2 2 2 Kppngr 2b 4 0 0 0
Morse 1b 4 2 3 1 Pence rf 4 0 0 0
Werth rf 3 0 0 0 Ca.Lee 1b 3 0 2 1
L.Nix lf 4 0 1 2 Michals lf 4 1 1 0
Ankiel pr-cf 0 0 0 0 CJhnsn 3b 4 0 0 0
WRams c 4 0 0 0 Corprn c 4 0 2 1
Dsmnd ss 3 0 0 0 Lyles p 2 0 0 0
Marqus p 3 0 0 0 WLopez p 0 0 0 0
Storen p 0 0 0 0 FRdrgz p 0 0 0 0
Totals 31 5 7 5 Totals 32 2 7 2
Washington ....................... 000 010 103 5
Houston.............................. 000 011 000 2
DPHouston 2. LOBWashington 2, Houston 6.
2BCa.Lee 2 (27), Michaels (5), Corporan (6).
HRZimmerman (5), Morse (16). SEspinosa,
Ang.Sanchez, Lyles.
IP H R ER BB SO
Washington
Marquis W,8-4......... 8 6 2 2 1 9
Storen S,25-28........ 1 1 0 0 0 3
Houston
Lyles L,0-5............... 8
1
3 5 4 4 1 6
W.Lopez................... 0 2 1 1 1 0
Fe.Rodriguez...........
2
3 0 0 0 0 0
W.Lopez pitched to 3 batters in the 9th.
UmpiresHome, Bill Welke;First, Jeff Nelson;Se-
cond, Vic Carapazza;Third, Marty Foster.
T2:37. A28,975 (40,963).
Marlins 4, Mets 1
Florida New York
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Bonifac 3b 4 1 1 0 Pagan cf 4 0 0 0
Infante 2b 3 0 1 0 Harris 2b 3 0 2 0
Morrsn lf 4 0 1 1 DnMrp 3b 4 1 0 0
Wise lf 0 0 0 0 Hairstn rf 1 0 0 0
HRmrz ss 4 1 2 0 Evans 1b 2 0 1 0
GSnchz 1b 3 1 0 0 Duda 1b-rf 2 0 0 0
Stanton rf 4 1 1 2 Bay lf 2 0 0 1
Camrn cf 4 0 1 1 Thole c 2 0 0 0
J.Buck c 4 0 0 0 RPauln ph-c 2 0 0 0
Hensly p 1 0 0 0 RTejad ss 3 0 0 0
MDunn p 1 0 0 0 Capuan p 2 0 0 0
Mujica p 0 0 0 0 Beato p 0 0 0 0
Choate p 0 0 0 0 Pridie ph 1 0 0 0
LNunez p 0 0 0 0 Igarash p 0 0 0 0
Totals 32 4 7 4 Totals 28 1 3 1
Florida ................................ 000 300 010 4
New York ........................... 000 000 001 1
EBonifacio (5). DPFlorida 2. LOBFlorida 4,
NewYork 6. 2BStanton (18), Harris (9). SBBo-
nifacio (18), H.Ramirez (17), Harris (4). SInfante.
SFBay.
IP H R ER BB SO
Florida
Hensley W,1-2 ........ 5 1 0 0 2 3
M.Dunn H,9 ............. 1
2
3 1 0 0 1 1
Mujica H,8................ 1
1
3 0 0 0 0 3
Choate......................
1
3 1 1 1 2 0
L.Nunez S,27-30.....
2
3 0 0 0 0 0
New York
Capuano L,8-9 ........ 7
2
3 7 4 4 2 5
Beato.........................
1
3 0 0 0 0 0
Igarashi .................... 1 0 0 0 0 1
UmpiresHome, Angel Hernandez;First, Greg
Gibson;Second, ToddTichenor;Third, Gerry Davis.
T2:54. A32,411 (41,800).
A L B O X E S
Yankees 5, Rays 4
New York Tampa Bay
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Jeter ss 5 0 1 0 Damon dh 4 1 1 0
Grndrs cf 3 2 2 0 Zobrist rf 3 1 1 0
Teixeir 1b 5 0 1 1 Longori 3b 3 1 1 2
Cano 2b 5 1 1 1 Ktchm 1b 4 0 2 1
Swisher rf 3 1 1 0 BUpton cf 5 0 0 0
Dickrsn rf 0 0 0 0 SRdrgz 2b 5 0 1 0
Posada dh 2 0 0 0 Ruggin lf 3 0 1 0
AnJons
ph-dh 1 0 0 0 Fuld ph-lf 1 0 1 0
Martin c 4 0 1 1 Chirins c 3 1 1 0
Gardnr lf 3 1 1 1 EJhnsn ss 4 0 0 0
ENunez 3b 4 0 0 1
Totals 35 5 8 5 Totals 35 4 9 3
New York ........................... 100 010 021 5
Tampa Bay......................... 310 000 000 4
EA.J.Burnett (4), S.Rodriguez (7). DPNew
York 1, Tampa Bay 1. LOBNew York 12, Tampa
Bay 11. 2BLongoria (17), Ruggiano (4), Chirinos
(1). SBGranderson 2 (17), Gardner (27). CS
S.Rodriguez (4).
IP H R ER BB SO
New York
A.J.Burnett ............... 5
1
3 8 4 3 6 4
Noesi ........................ 1
2
3 1 0 0 1 2
Robertson W,3-0 .... 1 0 0 0 0 2
Ma.Rivera S,24-28 . 1 0 0 0 0 1
Tampa Bay
Cobb......................... 6 3 2 1 4 3
Jo.Peralta H,13.......
2
3 1 0 0 0 0
C.Ramos H,3...........
2
3 1 2 2 2 1
Farnsworth
BS,3-21....................
2
3 2 0 0 0 1
Al.Torres L,0-1 ........ 1 1 1 1 3 1
WPCobb.
UmpiresHome, Ed Hickox;First, Ed Rapuano-
;Second, Dan Iassogna;Third, Alfonso Marquez.
T4:01 (Rain delay: 0:18). A22,471 (34,078).
Indians 5, Twins 2
First Game
Cleveland Minnesota
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Brantly lf 4 1 2 0 Revere cf 4 0 0 0
ACarer ss 4 1 1 3 ACasill 2b 4 0 0 0
Hafner dh 4 0 1 0 Mauer 1b 4 1 3 0
CSantn c 4 0 1 0 Cuddyr rf 4 1 1 2
LaPort 1b 4 0 0 0 Thome dh 3 0 0 0
T.Buck rf 3 0 0 0 DYong lf 4 0 1 0
Kearns rf 1 1 1 1 Valenci 3b 3 0 1 0
Valuen 2b 4 0 0 0 Butera c 3 0 0 0
Chsnhll 3b 3 1 0 0 Nishiok ss 3 0 1 0
Hannhn 3b 1 0 0 0
Carrer cf 3 1 1 1
Totals 35 5 7 5 Totals 32 2 7 2
Cleveland........................... 004 000 001 5
Minnesota.......................... 000 000 002 2
EChisenhall (3), A.Casilla (10). DPCleveland
2. LOBCleveland 4, Minnesota 5. 2BD.Young
(13). HRA.Cabrera (17), Kearns (2), Cuddyer
(14). SBCarrera (1).
IP H R ER BB SO
Cleveland
D.Huff W,1-0............ 7 5 0 0 2 5
Sipp........................... 1 0 0 0 0 0
Durbin....................... 0 2 2 2 0 0
Pestano S,2-5.......... 1 0 0 0 0 1
Minnesota
Swarzak L,2-3......... 6 6 4 3 0 4
Mijares...................... 2 0 0 0 1 2
Capps....................... 1 1 1 1 0 0
Durbin pitched to 2 batters in the 9th.
UmpiresHome, Gary Darling;First, John Tumpa-
ne;Second, Alan Porter;Third, Rob Drake.
T2:44. A39,768 (39,500).
Indians 6, Twins 3
Second Game
Cleveland Minnesota
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Brantly lf 4 1 3 1 Revere cf 5 0 0 0
ACarer ss 4 0 1 1 ACasill ss 4 1 1 0
Hafner dh 5 0 2 2 Mauer c 4 0 3 1
Valuen pr-dh 0 1 0 0 Cuddyr 1b 4 0 1 0
CSantn 1b 5 0 1 1 DYong dh 4 0 0 0
OCarer 2b 5 0 0 0 Valenci 3b 4 1 2 1
Kearns rf 3 0 1 0 LHughs 2b 4 0 0 0
Hannhn 3b 4 0 1 0 Plouffe rf 3 1 1 1
Marson c 4 2 2 1 Repko lf 3 0 0 0
Carrer cf 3 2 0 0 Thome ph 1 0 0 0
Totals 37 611 6 Totals 36 3 8 3
Cleveland........................... 000 020 202 6
Minnesota.......................... 001 001 001 3
EJ.Smith (1), Valencia (12). LOBCleveland 8,
Minnesota 7. 2BBrantley (17), Marson (6), A.Ca-
silla (16), Mauer (6). 3BC.Santana (1). HRMar-
son (1), Valencia (11), Plouffe (5). SBCarrera (2).
CSKearns (3). SBrantley.
IP H R ER BB SO
Cleveland
Carmona W,5-10 .... 6 7 2 2 0 1
R.Perez H,9............. 1
1
3 0 0 0 0 0
J.Smith H,6..............
2
3 0 0 0 0 1
C.Perez .................... 1 1 1 1 0 1
Minnesota
Diamond L,0-1......... 6
1
3 7 4 3 2 1
Dumatrait.................. 0 1 0 0 0 0
Al.Burnett ................. 1
2
3 0 0 0 1 1
James....................... 1 3 2 2 0 1
Dumatrait pitched to 1 batter in the 7th.
HBPby Carmona (Plouffe). BalkJames.
UmpiresHome, Bruce Dreckman;First, Alan Por-
ter;Second, Rob Drake;Third, John Tumpane.
T3:03. A38,491 (39,500).
Red Sox 15, Orioles 10
Boston Baltimore
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Ellsury dh 4 3 3 1 Hardy ss 5 2 2 3
Pedroia 2b 5 1 2 3 Markks rf 5 0 1 2
AdGnzl 1b 5 1 1 1 AdJons cf 5 2 2 1
Youkils 3b 6 1 2 3 Wieters c 5 2 2 0
Reddck cf 4 2 1 1 D.Lee 1b 4 1 2 2
Crwfrd lf 5 2 2 1 MrRynl 3b 4 0 0 0
Sltlmch c 5 2 2 1 Reimld dh 5 0 1 2
J.Drew rf 3 0 0 0 Pie lf 2 1 0 0
DMcDn ph-rf 1 1 1 3 J.Bell ph-lf 1 1 1 0
Scutaro ss 5 2 2 0 Andino 2b 3 1 1 0
Totals 43151614 Totals 39101210
Boston.............................. 003 210 180 15
Baltimore.......................... 200 050 030 10
ED.Lee (5). LOBBoston 7, Baltimore 6.
2BPedroia (22), D.McDonald (3), Reimold (2).
3BD.Lee (1). HRReddick (4), Saltalamacchia
(7), Hardy (14), Ad.Jones (16). CSPie (2). SF
Ellsbury.
IP H R ER BB SO
Boston
Wakefield................. 4
2
3 9 7 3 2 3
Wheeler W,2-1........ 2
1
3 0 0 0 1 3
Williams.................... 1 3 3 3 1 1
F.Morales................. 1 0 0 0 0 3
Baltimore
Bergesen ................. 5 8 6 4 0 3
Patton H,1 ................ 1
1
3 1 1 1 1 2
Berken BS,2-2......... 0 1 0 0 0 0
M.Gonzalez L,1-2... 1 1 3 3 2 0
Worrell ...................... 0 2 3 3 1 0
Jakubauskas............ 1
2
3 3 2 2 1 1
Berken pitched to 1 batter in the 7th.
Worrell pitched to 3 batters in the 8th.
WPWilliams. PBSaltalamacchia 2.
UmpiresHome, Chris Guccione;First, Mike Mu-
chlinski;Second, Mike Winters;Third, Mike Everitt.
T3:37. A27,924 (45,438).
White Sox 5, Royals 2
Chicago Kansas City
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Pierre lf 5 1 2 1 Maier lf 4 0 0 0
AlRmrz ss 4 1 1 1 MeCarr cf 4 1 1 1
Konerk 1b 4 0 1 1 Butler dh 4 0 2 1
A.Dunn dh 3 0 0 0 Francr rf 3 0 0 0
Quentin rf 4 0 1 0 Hosmer 1b 4 0 0 0
Lillirdg pr-rf 0 1 0 0 B.Pena c 4 0 0 0
Rios cf 4 0 0 0 Mostks 3b 3 0 0 0
Przyns c 1 1 1 0 AEscor ss 3 1 2 0
Bckhm 2b 4 1 1 1 Getz 2b 2 0 0 0
Teahen 3b 4 0 0 1
Morel 3b 0 0 0 0
Totals 33 5 7 5 Totals 31 2 5 2
Chicago.............................. 101 002 010 5
Kansas City ....................... 000 020 000 2
EA.Escobar (11), Moustakas (4). LOBChicago
7, Kansas City 5. 2BKonerko (15), Butler 2 (24).
3BPierre (4). SBLillibridge (10). CSPierre
(11). SGetz. SFAl.Ramirez.
IP H R ER BB SO
Chicago
Buehrle W,7-5......... 7 5 2 2 1 3
Crain H,13................ 1 0 0 0 0 2
Thornton H,11.........
2
3 0 0 0 0 0
S.Santos...................
1
3 0 0 0 0 1
Kansas City
Davies L,1-9 ............ 5
1
3 5 4 2 3 9
Teaford.....................
1
3 1 0 0 0 0
L.Coleman ............... 2
1
3 1 1 1 1 1
Bl.Wood ................... 1 0 0 0 0 1
HBPby Buehrle (Moustakas), by Davies (Pier-
zynski). WPL.Coleman.
UmpiresHome, CB Bucknor;First, Dale Scott-
;Second, Jerry Meals;Third, Mark Ripperger.
T2:37. A17,190 (37,903).
HOUSTON Tests done
Monday on Texas Rangers
President Nolan Ryan
showed no new heart prob-
lems for the Hall of Fame
pitcher, who was hospital-
ized after experiencing
discomfort over the week-
end.
Ryan, 64, continues to
improve, the Rangers said
in a statement. He is ex-
pected to be released from a
Houston hospital in a day
or two.
Ryan has a pre-existing
heart condition that will
continue being treated with
medication, according to
the teams statement. He
had a double-bypass oper-
ation in 2000 and has a
family history of heart dis-
ease.
He sought treatment after
experiencing discomfort
Sunday morning while at
his home in Georgetown,
located about 170 miles
northwest of Houston.
Ryan had been expected
to join the Rangers in Ana-
heim, Calif., on Tuesday
night for the start of a
three-game series between
his AL West-leading club
and the Angels, who are in
second place, four games
back. He was scheduled to
throw out the ceremonial
first pitch and to take part
in a ceremony inducting
Gene Autry, the Angels late
owner, into the teams Hall
of Fame.
Ryan holds the records
for most no-hitters (seven)
and strikeouts (5,714). Hes
been running the Rangers
since 2008 and became
part-owner last summer.
Texas went to the World
Series for the first time last
fall.
Tejada leaves game with
possible injury
SAN FRANCISCO San
Francisco Giants shortstop
Miguel Tejada has left Mon-
days game against the Los
Angeles Dodgers with a
possible groin injury.
Tejada had attempted to
field Rafael Furcals sharp
grounder in the third in-
ning, but bobbled it for an
error then slid to the turf.
A team trainer came out
to check on Tejada, as did
San Francisco manager
Bruce Bochy, before the
three walked off the field
together.
Tejada, who was replaced
by rookie Brandon Craw-
ford, struck out in his only
at-bat against the Dodgers
Chad Billingsley.
N O T E S
Tests show no
new issues for
Nolan Ryan
The Associated Press
Braves 7, Rockies 4
Atlanta Colorado
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Schafer cf 4 0 0 0 CGnzlz lf 4 2 1 1
Prado 3b 5 0 2 0 M.Ellis 2b 5 0 1 0
McCnn c 5 1 2 0 Helton 1b 3 0 1 2
Fremn 1b 5 2 3 3 Tlwtzk ss 5 0 2 1
Uggla 2b 5 1 1 0 S.Smith rf 4 0 1 0
Hinske lf 3 2 2 1 Wggntn 3b 4 0 0 0
WRmrz lf 1 0 0 0 Iannett c 4 0 2 0
AlGnzlz ss 5 0 1 1 Fowler cf 3 1 0 0
McLoth rf 2 0 0 0 Hamml p 1 0 1 0
D.Lowe p 4 1 1 0 JHerrr ph 1 0 0 0
OFlhrt p 0 0 0 0 Stults p 0 0 0 0
Venters p 0 0 0 0 Splrghs ph 0 1 0 0
Kimrel p 0 0 0 0 Brothrs p 0 0 0 0
Alfonzo ph 1 0 0 0
RBtncr p 0 0 0 0
Totals 39 712 5 Totals 35 4 9 4
Atlanta ................................ 023 011 000 7
Colorado ............................ 001 000 300 4
EHelton (3). DPColorado 1. LOBAtlanta 9,
Colorado 9. 2BHinske (5). 3BS.Smith (5).
HRFreeman (14), Hinske (9). SBC.Gonzalez
(16). SFHelton.
IP H R ER BB SO
Atlanta
D.Lowe W,6-7 ......... 6
1
3 8 4 4 2 2
OFlaherty H,18.......
2
3 1 0 0 0 0
Venters H,20 ........... 1 0 0 0 1 0
Kimbrel S,29-34...... 1 0 0 0 1 3
Colorado
Hammel L,5-9.......... 5 8 6 4 3 1
Stults......................... 2 3 1 1 1 2
Brothers ................... 1 0 0 0 0 2
R.Betancourt ........... 1 1 0 0 0 3
S U N D A Y S
L A T E B O X
Red Sox 1, Rays 0
Boston Tampa Bay
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Ellsury cf 8 0 0 0 Damon dh 6 0 1 0
Pedroia 2b 7 0 3 1 Zobrist rf 5 0 0 0
AdGnzl 1b 7 0 1 0 Longori 3b 5 0 1 0
Youkils 3b 4 0 0 0 Ktchm 1b 5 0 0 0
D.Ortiz dh 4 0 0 0 BUpton cf 6 0 0 0
Sutton pr-dh 2 0 0 0 Loaton c 3 0 0 0
J.Drew rf 3 0 0 0 Ruggin lf 3 0 0 0
DMcDn ph-rf 1 0 0 0 SRdrgz 2b 6 0 1 0
Reddck lf 5 1 0 0 Fuld lf 2 0 0 0
Varitek c 6 0 0 0 Joyce ph 1 0 0 0
Scutaro ss 5 0 1 0 Shppch c 2 0 0 0
Brignc ss 6 0 0 0
Totals 52 1 5 1 Totals 50 0 3 0
Boston ...... 000 000 000 000 000 1 1
Tampa
Bay............. 000 000 000 000 000 0 0
LOBBoston 17, Tampa Bay 6. 2BPedroia (21).
SBPedroia (17), Damon (8). SVaritek, Shop-
pach.
IP H R ER BB SO
Boston
Beckett ..................... 8 1 0 0 0 6
D.Bard....................... 1 1 0 0 1 1
Albers....................... 1
2
3 1 0 0 0 2
F.Morales................. 1
1
3 0 0 0 0 1
Aceves W,5-1.......... 3 0 0 0 0 2
Papelbon S,21-22... 1 0 0 0 0 1
Tampa Bay
Niemann................... 8 2 0 0 2 10
Farnsworth............... 1 1 0 0 2 1
Jo.Peralta.................
1
3 0 0 0 1 0
Howell.......................
2
3 0 0 0 3 0
McGee......................
1
3 0 0 0 1 1
J.Cruz.......................
2
3 0 0 0 0 1
C.Ramos.................. 1 0 0 0 0 0
B.Gomes.................. 3 0 0 0 2 3
A.Russell L,1-2........ 1 2 1 1 1 0
Howell pitched to 2 batters in the 11th.
HBPby Aceves (Longoria, Kotchman), by
B.Gomes (Youkilis). UmpiresHome, Chad Fair-
child;First, Andy Fletcher;Second, Mike DiMu-
ro;Third, Jim Reynolds.
1909 Cleveland shortstop Neal Ball pulled off the
first unassisted triple play in modern major league
history.
1910 Cy Young registered his 500th career victo-
ry as the Cleveland Indians beat the Washington
Senators 5-4 in 11 innings.
1933 Rick Ferrell of the Boston Red Sox hit a
home run off brother Wes, pitching for the Cleve-
landIndians. Wes alsohomeredinthat game, mark-
ing the only time the two connected in the same
contest.
1974 Dick Bosman of the Cleveland Indians
pitched a no-hit, 4-0 victory over the world cham-
pion Oakland As.
1982 In the first Old-timers All-Star Classic,
played at Washingtons RFK Stadium before
29,000 fans, the AL won 7-2. Luke Appling, 75, led
off for the AL and hit a home run over the shortened
left-field fence off Warren Spahn.
T H I S D A T E I N B A S E B A L L
C M Y K
PAGE 4B TUESDAY, JULY 19, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
S P O R T S
The Back Mountain Ameri-
can Little League minor base-
ball team is on a roll. The
squad, comprised of 9 and 10
year-olds, won four consecutive
games last weekend to claim
the District 31 and Section 5
championships at North Poco-
no.
Now, the team has a chance
to capture a state champion-
ship.
Coach Jeff Doggetts team
opens first-round play at 2:30
p.m. Wednesday in Milton
against Warwick, the defending
state champion in the age brack-
et.
Warwick won the District 6
sectional tournament and they
are a very strong team, Dog-
gett said. They make plays in
the field and run well. They also
have good pitching.
According to Doggett, the
two teams match well and hes
confident that Back Mountain
American will be tough to beat.
Our biggest advantage is that
we can hit, he said. We score a
lot of runs and we also have
very good pitching. Im confi-
dent were going to put runs on
the board.
American had its back against
the wall last week in the double-
elimination tournament but re-
sponded like champions.
After dropping a 7-3 decision
to North Pocono in the opener,
American bounced back by win-
ning four games. The team beat
Wallenpaupack and North Poco-
no, then posted two straight
wins over Plains to lock up the
title.
We have 12 kids that are a
distinct privilege to coach,
Doggett said. Theyre very un-
selfish and tough between the
ears. They dont get caught up
in nonsense. Theyre a credit to
themselves, their families and
our league.
American (8-1) also prides it-
self by displaying sportsman-
ship, he added.
We shake hands with the op-
ponents, coaches and the um-
pires after every game. Its a ve-
ry unselfish group of kids, Dog-
gett said,
He credits assistant coaches
Scott Answini and Mike Luksic
for playing a key role in the
teams success.
Doggett said the key to
Wednesdays game is to strike
first.
We pitch and defend well
enough to stay ahead, he said.
We feel like we belong in the
state tournament. We earned it
by playing a lot of tough teams.
YO U T H B A S E B A L L
SUBMITTED PHOTO
Pictured are teammembers fromthe Back Mountain Americans 9-10 baseball team. First row, from
left: Michael Doggett, Mason Gattuso, Kyle McAndrew, John Betzko, Michael Collins, Darren Ker-
desky and Derek Answini. Second row, fromleft, Michael Luksic, Michael Anderson, Ethan Zawatski,
Dalton Simpson, and Zane Nardone. Third row: Coaches: Mike Luksic, Jeff Doggett and Scott Answi-
ni.
American set for state tourney
By VAN ROSE
vrose@timesleader.com
Back Mountain
American roster
Michael Anderson,
pitcher-third base
Derek Answini, second base
John Betzko, right field
Michael Collins, left field
Michael Doggett,
catcher-third base
Mason Gattuso, shortstop
Darren Kerdesky, right
field-third base
Mike Luksic, pitcher-third
base
Kyle McAndrew, right field
Zane Nardon, left field
Dalton Simpson, first
base-pitcher
Ethan Zawatski, center field,
pitcher
Click: American Legion playoffs
Joe Shag (center) with Michelle and JimGraziosi at the Plains-
Back Mountain Leion baseball game in Bloomsburg Monday.
Francis Gavin (left), and Dave Bienias at the Plains-Back Moun-
tain Leion baseball game in Bloomsburg Monday.
DON CAREY PHOTOS/THE TIMES LEADER
Gary Okun (left) and Dave Marriggi at the Plains-Back Mountain
Leion baseball game in Bloomsburg Monday.
be approved by the players, of
course, including star quarter-
backs TomBrady, Peyton Man-
ning and Drew Brees and the
other plaintiffs ina federal anti-
trust suit against the league.
Members of the NFLPA ex-
ecutive committee and repre-
sentatives of every team were
heading to Washington by
Wednesday, in preparation for
possible decisions on re-estab-
lishing a union and signing off
on a tentative pact with own-
ers.
Atallah said the players
would be gathering with the
hope they have something to
look at, and with the hope we
can move forward on this.
Owners locked out players
on March12, when the old col-
lective bargaining agreement
expired, leaving the countrys
most popular professional
sports league in limbo. The
sides are trying to forge a set-
tlement intime tokeepthe pre-
season completely intact. The
exhibition opener is supposed
to be the Hall of Fame game be-
tween the St. Louis Rams and
Chicago Bears on Aug. 7.
The regular-seasonopener is
scheduledfor Sept. 8, whenthe
Super Bowl champion Green
Bay Packers are to host the
New Orleans Saints.
Philadelphia Eagles quarter-
back Michael Vick tweeted
Monday: Soundlike we gonna
be back to work so soon!!!
One issue standing in the
way of a resolution, according
to a person from each side of
the dispute andspeakingtothe
AP on condition of anonymity:
Players want owners to turn
over $320 million in unpaid
benefits from the 2010 season.
Because there was no salary
cap that season, the old collec-
tive bargaining agreement said
NFL teams were not required
to pay those benefits.
On a separate matter, one of
those people, as well as a sec-
ond person familiar with the
negotiations, also told the AP
that a proposal currently under
consideration would set up
nearly $1 billion over the next
10 years in additional benefits
for retired players. That would
include $620 million in pen-
sion increases, long-term care
insurance and disability pro-
grams. Representatives of re-
tiredplayers are expectedto be
in New York for Tuesdays
talks; that groupcomplainedto
the court recently that it had
been excluded from negotia-
tions.
At federal court in Minneso-
ta, where the players antitrust
suit is pending, their lawyers
filed a motion Monday asking
for a summary judgment that
the lockout is illegal and that
players are entitled to damag-
es. The NFL, meanwhile,
asked the court for a weeks ex-
tension to file their formal re-
sponse tothe lawsuit; the origi-
nal deadline was Monday.
Those filings were neces-
sary, procedural moves that
would be rendered moot if an
agreement is reached before
the Aug. 29 hearing date. Later
Monday, the NFL and retired
players filed a joint request to
delay the hearing for at least a
month to allow owners to fo-
cus on the continuing media-
tion.
Atallah called the current
players filing an obligation to
protect the members of the
class.
Obviously, if we come to a
settlement, it all canbe liftedat
any time, he said.
NFL
Continued fromPage 1B
WILKES-BARRE John
Paul Yost tripled and doubled
as part of a three-hit effort that
led Hanover to a 14-6 victory
over Back Mountain National
in the major baseball Wilkes-
Barre Rec tournament.
Anthony Vitali and Kyle
Windt joined Yost with 3-for-4
performances. Winning pitcher
Tony Molitoris produced two
doubles.
Kyle Archer doubled for
Back Mountain National.
BABE RUTH
U8 SOFTBALL
Luzerne County Chaos 17,
Audubon 14
The Chaos captured the
state championship after win-
ning three consecutive games.
Aleigha Parnell scored two
runs for the Chaos. Jenna Bar-
on, Madison Hooper and Lind-
sey Mendygral powered the
offense.
The Chaos travels to Upper
Merion on July 29th for the
Mid-Atlantic Regional tourna-
ment where they will face state
champions from Maryland,
Delaware, New York and New
Jersey.
W-B REC
MINOR BASEBALL
Hanover 12, West Side 8
Collin Cook struck out four
in a relief appearance to pick
up the win for Hanover.
Hanovers Shaun Gurnari
(two hits, triple, two runs),
Brett Stevens (double, two
runs) and Cook (two hits,
double, two runs) led the offen-
sive attack.
For West Side, Nate Baranski
netted two hits and a run. Jake
Packer scored twice, and Zach
Davis singled.
EXETER CLASSIC
8-9 BASEBALL
Exeter 15, Pittston 5
Gavin Lahart pitched 4 2/3
strong innings allowing just
five hits to record the win.Ca-
leb Graham pitched the last
inning for the save.
Joe Gilroy, Kevin Claudio,
Conner Spudis, Tristen Chro-
nowski and Robin Wroblewski
led the Exeter offense.
Pittston statistics were not
made available by the home
team.
YO U T H B A S E B A L L R O U N D U P
Yost leads Hanover
with extra base hits
The Associated Press
homer over the left-center field
fence. The Kingston/Forty Fort
lead was 3-0 after three innings.
David McCue continued to
swinga hot bat withanRBI dou-
ble to center field. Maxwell
scored from first after reaching
on an infield single. The McCue
double extended Kingston/For-
ty Forts leadto 4-0 inthe fourth.
Archbald got one back in the
bottom half of the fourth. Ron-
nie Yanoski led off the inning
with a rocket double to left-cen-
terfield. Mike Laboutillier then
drew a walk to give Archbald
runners onfirst andsecondwith
nobody out.
Evan Carey hit a ball toward
left-centerfield gap, but Judge
made a terrific catch at short-
stop, then threwto first base for
the double play. Blake Evans
then put Archbald on the board
with an RBI single to right field.
However, one run was all Arch-
bald produced in the fifth, as
well as in the game.
Judge extended the King-
ston/Forty Fort lead to 5-1 with
a solo shot way over the center-
field fence.
Judge, Maxwell and McCue
led the Kingston/Forty Fort of-
fense with two hits each.
Mason Black pitched well in
the losing effort for Archbald.
He got his teamout of a big first
inning jam by getting Zack Sott
to fly out to left. He struck out
three and walked just two.
KFF
Continued fromPage 1B
at 11 a.m. Wednesday against the
winner of the Back Mountain-
Canton game.
Our backs are against the wall
andI hopethekids comeout with
some fire (today) because now
we got nothing to lose, Plains
manager Don Stark said. We felt
goodcomingintoday, but we had
some lapses and we need to fix
those lapses.
The only inning whichRuchal-
lowed two hits was the first.
Plains only got one hit in the
third, fourth, seventh and eighth.
He struck out just four batters,
but got a lot of help from his de-
fense. The Back Mountain de-
fense turned two double-plays.
Third baseman Marc Noyalis
started one of the twin-killings
and also made a pair of back-
handed grabs to save extra bases
and get a groundout.
I had a fastball working today
and I was throwing a two-seamer
a little bit and I was getting them
tohit it intothegroundandI have
a great defense behind me which
helps a lot in a nine-inning
game, Ruch said. They (the de-
fense) has been doing it all year
behind our pitching and the
pitching thanks them a lot.
Back Mountain jumped out to
a 2-0 lead in the top of the first
when Paul Narcum (3-for-5) and
Deep Patel (2-for-3) started off
the game with back-to-back dou-
bles. Patels hit scored Narcum
and then he scored on an RBI-sin-
gle by Noyalis.
That was more than enough of-
fense for Ruch, but Back Moun-
tain was far from finished as it
scored one run in the third and
sixth and put up three in the
fourth and eighth to end the
game early.
Putting up double digit runs
and getting strong pitching is
how Plains won its first two
games of the tournament as it
played just 14 innings entering
Mondays game.
But Monday wasnt the best
game for Plains.
Starter Bob Sorokas only last-
ed three-plus innings giving up
eight hits. And Plains hurt itself
witherrors withthe defense com-
mitting three miscues.
They hit Bobby pretty well.
He didnt hit his spots like he
wanted to and we didnt help him
out defensively either, Stark
added.
Jim Graziosi was the lone mul-
tiple hitter for Plains going 2-
for-3 and had the only extra-base
hit for the team with a double.
Josh Everett (2-for-4) joined
teammates Narcum, Patel and
Ruch as multiple hitters for the
winners.
Back Mountain 10,
Plains 0
(8 inn)
Back Mountain Plains
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Narcum c 5 3 3 1 Bone rf 3 0 1 0
Patel 2b 3 3 2 2 Sorokas p 3 0 1 0
Ruch p 3 0 2 2 DParsnik ph 1 0 0 0
Noyalis 3b 4 0 1 2 Savkns 3b 3 0 1 0
Rngsdrf 1b 4 0 0 0 Martinez ph 1 0 0 0
Ritsick lf 3 0 0 1 Gulius c 3 0 1 0
Yursha cf 5 1 1 0 Grillini 1b 3 0 0 0
Everett rf 4 1 2 0 JParsnik ss 3 0 0 0
Condo ss 3 2 1 0 Graziosi cf 3 0 2 0
Concini lf 1 0 0 0
Ell p 1 0 0 0
Okun p 1 0 0 0
Sod 2b 2 0 0 0
Emmett 2b 1 0 0 0
Totals 341012 8 Totals 29 0 6 0
Back Mountain.................... 201 301 03 10
Plains ................................... 000 000 00 0
2B Narcum, Patel 2, Ruch, Condo, Graziosi
IP H R ER BB SO
Back Mountain
Ruch (W)................... 8 6 0 0 1 4
Plains
Sorokas (L) ............... 3+ 8 5 5 1 0
Ell ............................... 3 3 2 2 1 3
Castellino.................. 1 0 0 0 0 2
Okun.......................... 1 1 3 3 4 0
LEGION
Continued fromPage 1B
Mondays Games
(at Central Columbia H.S.)
Winners Bracket
Back Mountain 10, Plains 0 (8)
Losers Bracket
Green Ridge 16, Danville 9
Canton 15, Jersey Shore 4
Todays Games
Winners Bracket
Back Mountain vs. Canton, 4:30
p.m.
Losers Bracket
Green Ridge vs. Plains, 1 p.m.
Wednesdays Games
Championship Game, 11 a.m.
*If another game is needed for
championship, it will begin 30
minutes after conclusion
R E G I O N 5
T O U R N A M E N T
COLUMBUS, Ohio Mon-
day nights game in Huntington
Park between the Columbus
Clippers and Scranton/Wilkes-
Barre was not completed by
press time.
In a game which included a
rain delay of one hour, 54 min-
utes, the Clippers led 6-2 going
into the bottom of the fifth in-
ning
TODAYS GAME The sec-
ond game of this four-game se-
ries is expected to feature Ivan
Nova on the mound for the Yan-
kees. No pitcher has been an-
nounced for Columbus. Nova is
1-1witha3.07ERAintwogames
started with Scranton/Wilkes-
Barre and is 8-4 with a 4.12 ERA
in17 games for NewYork.
NOTES The Yankees have
made 14 transactions involving
11 players during the first five
days since returning from the
Triple-A all-star break. Outfiel-
der Greg Golson was optioned
back to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre
on Sunday and was in the lineup
Monday.
I L B A S E B A L L
Rain holds up Yanks
EDITORS NOTE: At press time,
the Scranton/Wilkes-Barre Yan-
kees had just rallied for four runs
in the top of the ninth inning to
tie the Columbus Clippers, 6-6.
For a complete details from Mon-
day nights game, visit www.times-
leader.com.
By JARROD ULREY
For the Times Leader
WASHINGTON(AP) Next
stop for the World Series cham-
pion San Francisco Giants? The
White House.
President Barack Obama will
open the White House to the Gi-
ants on Monday in honor of
their first World Series title
since the franchise moved West
in 1958. San Francisco finished
off the Texas Rangers in five
games last year to win it all.
Its going to be very special,
manager Bruce Bochy.
Series champion Giants headed to White House
C M Y K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com TUESDAY, JULY 19, 2011 PAGE 5B
S P O R T S
110 Lost
LOST: ABYSSINIAN CAT
Jesse, reddish
brown, yellow eyes,
female, microchip,
near Yalick farms
$500. REWARD.
570-690-1808
135 Legals/
Public Notices
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE IS HEREBY
GIVEN that pursuant
to the provisions of
the Fictitious Names
Act of December 16,
1982, P.L. 1309, as
amended and as
supplemented (54
Pa. C.S.A. 301 et
seq.), Keats Pub,
INc., 92 Govier
Street, Wilkes-
Barre, Pennsylva-
nia, has filed with
the Office of Secre-
tary of the Com-
monwealth at Har-
risburg PA on April
18, 2011, an Applica-
tion to conduct
business under the
assumed or ficti-
tious name of:
Keats Pub
The principal
office/place of busi-
ness to be carried
on in the nature of a
tavern and restau-
rant business,
under or through
the fictitious name
is: 114 Bowman
Street, Wilkes-Barre
Luzerne County,
Pennsylvania 18705.
Joseph S. Falchek,
Esquire
412 Mill Street
Plains PA 18705
150 Special Notices
ADOPTION
A happily married
couple longs to
share our hearts
and home with
a newborn. Finan-
cially secure and
loving extended
family will offer
your child every
opportunity for a
lifetime of happi-
ness. Expenses
paid. Please call
Helen and John
1-800-604-1992
150 Special Notices
BOWLING PARTY
JULY 31, 2011
1 TO 6 PM
AT STANTON
LANES
TO BENEFIT
THE R.A.D.
SCHOLARSHIP
$10 TICKETS
WILL GET YOU
3 GAMES OF
BOWLING
WITH SHOE
RENTAL AND
RAFFLE TICKET
Also available
RAD Bracelets
Face Painting
provided by
Lollipop Services
RAD Shirts and
Basket Raffles
DJ MO
PERFORMING
Celebrity
Bartender in the
lounge at
Stanton Lanes!
All tips will go the
R.A.D.
Scholarship Fund!
470 Stanton St.
Wilkes-Barre
For details call
570-824-4661 and
ask for Terry or
visit the Athea
DeGraffenreid
Memorial page on
Facebook
Benefits the
Remember Athea
DeGruffenreid
Scholarship Fund
To place your
ad call...829-7130
412 Autos for Sale
BMW `00 323I
Black w/ tan leather
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creasingly hard to pick a favorite
heading into the last week of the
Tour.
Its still abit strangebecauseI
think people still look at the
Schleck brothers as favorites,
but theyre two minutes down,
Evans said Sunday after British
sprinter Mark Cavendish won
the15th stage. So its still about
Voeckler for now. Weve got
some more hills, some more rac-
ing and a time trial to go.
Evans is third overall, 2:06 be-
hind Voeckler, 17 seconds be-
hind second-place Frank
Schleck, nine seconds ahead of
Andy Schleck the runner-up
toContador inthelast twoTours
and 1:54 ahead of Contador.
Voeckler is in incredible
form, Contador said. He has a
big lead, it will be hard to make
that up.
None of the Tour contenders
managed to cut loose in the
three Pyrenean mountain stages
last week, and someone has to
make a big move in three puni-
shing Alpine stages that loom.
I dont want to arrive in Paris
with regrets, Contador said af-
MONTPELLIER, France
Withthe Tour de France heading
toward its decisive stages, there
is still no favorite in a wide open
race that is fueling the passions
of French fans who hope Tho-
mas Voeckler holds his lead
against all odds.
When racing resumes Tues-
day after a rest day, Voeckler will
open the 16th stage nearly two
minutes ahead of Frank Schleck
supposedly a weaker rider
than his younger brother, Andy
and four minutes ahead of
three-time champion Alberto
Contador.
Voeckler remains fiercely ada-
mant he has a zero percent
chance to become the first
French Tour winner since Ber-
nard Hinault in 1985, while
doubts persist about Contadors
troublesome right knee. Even
the Schleck brothers seemunde-
cided who is No. 1on their team,
while two-time runner-up Cadel
Evans is conspicuously staying
out of the limelight.
All of this means that it was in-
ter Cavendishracedtohis fourth
stage victory of the race and
19th overall in the Tour by
beating American sprinter Tyler
Farrar on a119.6-mile stage from
Limoux to Montpellier.
There should be plenty of op-
portunities for Contador to at-
tack the 32-year-old Voeckler in
the punishing Alps later this
week. But if the Frenchmandoes
not crack, then the race is going
to be decided on the penulti-
mate stage time trial.
Not that cycling fans are com-
plaining.
Voecklers unexpected rise to
the top adds an extra layer of in-
trigue because it has been 14
years since a Frenchman even
got on the podium let alone
won the race. Voeckler has also
become an extra, surprise, and
welcome contender.
Last years Tour was a duel be-
tween Contador and Schleck,
the year before it was Contador
beating Schleck again, with sev-
en-time champion Lance Arm-
strong completing the podium.
No great surprises there, even
with Armstrongs hyped return.
T O U R D E F R A N C E
AP
Saxo bank Sungard cycling team director Bjarne Riis of Denmark, left, and three-time Tour de
France winner Alberto Contador of Spain, right, discuss as they ride during a training on the sec-
ond rest day of the cycling race in Rochegude, southern France.
Voeckler has French fans excited
By JEROME PUGMIRE
AP Sports Writer
NEWYORKLance Arm-
strongs attorneys say illegal
government leaks of grand ju-
ryinformationhavesulliedthe
cyclists reputation, and have
asked a court to order federal
agents to discuss their con-
tacts with the media.
In a 20-page notice of al-
leged violations filed Wednes-
day in U.S. District Court in
Los Angeles, lawyers for the
seven-time Tour de France
winner cited more than a doz-
en articles in many media out-
lets from May 2010 through
last month about an ongoing
grand jury investigation into
whether Armstrong used per-
formance-enhancing drugs in
violation of U.S. law.
Thecyclists attorneys argue
that only someone in the gov-
ernment could be responsible
for the leaks, and a judge
should order the government
toexplainwhyit shouldnot be
held in contempt. In a last re-
sort, the lawyers said, the
court couldforce journalists to
reveal their sources.
The leaker in this case has,
fromthebeginning, actedwith
the obvious intent of legitimiz-
ing the governments investi-
gation of a national hero, best
known for his role in the fight
against cancer, the court pa-
pers said. Each leak has been
designed to propagate public
support for this investigation
by smearing Armstrong and
tarnishing his reputation. The
tactical nature of these leaks
cannot be ignored as it strong-
ly suggests an underlying par-
tisanship inherent in govern-
ment agents.
Armstrongs lawyers ac-
cused The Associated Press,
The New York Times, The
Wall Street Journal, Sports Il-
lustrated and CBS 60 Min-
utes of reporting illegally
leaked information.
Oneof Armstrongslawyers,
John W.
Keker, at-
tached a
statement
detailing 26
media re-
ports that
reported
the alleged
illegal leaks.
Responding to the notice,
Lou Ferrara, APs managing
editorforsports, said: TheAP
has been aggressive in cover-
ingthis important story. APre-
porters will continuetopursue
the truth. This action will not
stop us.
FiledbythesameCalifornia-
based lawyers who represent-
ed the Major League Baseball
Players Association and suc-
ceeded in having the govern-
ments seizure of player drug
tests and records declared ille-
gal, the request for an order to
show cause asks a federal
court to require that all agents
involved in the probe provide
sworn statements detailing
their contacts with media.
The filing has 17 references
to Jeff Novitzky, a Food and
Drug Administration special
agent who, in his prior job as
anIRSspecial agent, ranthein-
vestigation into the Bay Area
Laboratory Co-Operative
(BALCO). That probe led to
theseizureof thebaseball drug
list and the indictment of
homerunkingBarryBonds. A
prosecutor, Doug Miller, is
named in the filing but no oth-
er agent. Armstrongs lawyers
say the leaker was potentially
Novitzky himself.
The leading government
advocate for the Armstrongin-
vestigation, Novitzky, was re-
cently connected to an investi-
gation riddled with leaks to
some of the same reporters in-
volved in this case and has a
documented history of overre-
aching and disregarding indi-
viduals privacy rights, Arm-
strongs lawyers wrote.
Armstrong wants feds
to discuss media talks
By RONALD BLUM
AP Sports Writer
Armstrong
SANDWICH, England Dar-
ren Clarkes bleary, bloodshot
eyes told it all.
The party began shortly after
he walked off the 18th green at
Royal St. Georges with the claret
jug in hand. Beer and red wine
flowedthroughthe night, the rev-
elry not letting up until Clarke
had to return Monday morning
for a few more interviews and
some picture-taking at the spot
where he tapped in the final putt
to win the British Open.
I have not been to bed yet,
Clarke said. I probably wont get
any sleepuntil tomorrowat some
stage. You have to enjoy it while
you can.
Its been, he added mischie-
vously, a very good night.
Clarke sure earned it.
No one had ever gone more
than15 British Opens before win-
ning. Clarke did it on his 20th try
at 42, making himthe oldest first-
time major winner since Roberto
de Vicenzo in1967.
But that only tells part of the
story. Clarke lost his wife, Heath-
er, to cancer five years ago, leav-
ing him to raise two young boys.
Not surprisingly, his focus on the
course wavered, which sent him
plummeting out of the top 100 in
the world. It had been a decade
since he was a serious contender
in a major he didnt even qual-
ify for the three majors that pre-
ceded the Open.
I definitely appreciate an aw-
ful lot more what Ive achieved,
Clarke said. Ten years ago, I did
take an awful lot of things for
granted.
His parents and new love, fian-
ceeAlisonCampbell, wereat Roy-
al St. Georges to cheer him. Clar-
kes two boys stayed home in
Northern Ireland, but he phoned
them shortly after his three-
stroke victory over Americans
Phil Mickelson and Dustin John-
son.
Tyrone, myoldest one, wasve-
ry pleased, very proud, Clarke
said. He was going to tell every-
body his dad was Open cham-
pion.
And Conor, his youngest?
He wanted to know what he
could spend all the money on,
Clarke said, breaking into a grin.
Thats not surprising. Clarke
has always been a guy who lived
life to the fullest, so its only ap-
propriate that he passed on that
attitude to his children.
Thenagain, givenall thats hap-
pened, Clarke plans to handle the
spoils of this triumph a bit more
prudently than he would have,
say, 10 years ago. His Open prize
was nearly $1.5 million, andthere
will undoubtedly be a flood of
new endorsement opportunities.
I actually dont have anything
in mind because Ive been there,
done all that before, Clarke said.
Ive had the opportunity to buy
whatever I want to buy and all
that. This time, Im a little bit ol-
der and a little bit more sensible.
If I can put a little bit more aside
for my boys future, then thats
what Ill do, as opposed to look-
ing after myself.
Clarke has long been a stalwart
of the European Ryder Cup team,
and hes made no secret of his de-
sire to serve as captain one day.
He may have to put off those am-
bitions for a few years.
Turns out, this guy can still
play.
Playing, he said, is much
better than being a nonplaying
captain.
Clarke became the third golfer
fromtinyNorthernIrelandtowin
in the last six majors, following
U.S. Open champions Rory McIl-
roy and Graeme McDowell. The
Americans havent won any dur-
ing that span, their longest
drought of the modern Grand
Slam era, though they did have
five of the top seven at Royal St.
Georges.
Mickelson played the first 10
holes Sunday at 6 under and ac-
tually claimed a share of the lead
at one point, only to fade down
the stretch when his putter fal-
tered. Johnson was in contention
again at a major but made anoth-
er huge blunder, knocking a shot
out of bounds just five holes from
the finish.
NorthernIreland...... Golf cap-
ital of the world!! McIlroy tweet-
ed, andthere will undoubtedly be
a pushtoaddthat countrys Royal
Portrush club to the rotation of
nine courses that regularly host
the British Open.
Were all very aware of the fact
that threewinners fromNorthern
Ireland increases the interest lev-
el in this, R&A chief Peter Daw-
son said Monday. I have agreed
to take a look.
In1951, Royal Portrushbecame
the only course outside Scotland
and England to hold the cham-
pionship. But the Royal & An-
cient is concerned that a lack of
hotels and major roads would
make it difficult tohost sucha big
event in the modern era.
The usual mixture of a great
course and plenty of infrastruc-
ture combined with the prospect
of commercial success is whats
needed, Dawson said.
FromClarkes point of view, the
course at Royal Portrush is al-
ready worthy of a major. But he
understands other factors must
be considered.
G O L F
Clarke lets the good times roll
British Open upset champion
remains in celebratory mood
day after winning Claret Jug.
By PAUL NEWBERRY
AP National Writer
AP PHOTO
Darren Clarke and fiancee Ali-
son Campbell hold the Open
Golf Championship trophy at
Royal St Georges Monday.
C M Y K
PAGE 6B TUESDAY, JULY 19, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
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Lets begin by
not overstating
the case.
Predictions of
a soccer boom
in America have
done more to
hamstring the
development of the worlds game
here than all those well-orga-
nized, well-meaning parents who
became youth coaches with no
more than a vague idea of how
its played. And just so were
clear, there will be no explosion
this time, either.
After the U.S. women stunned
Brazil and just about everybody
else in a quarterfinal match at
the Womens World Cup, I wrote
that if Americans didnt fall in
love with soccer after that, well,
maybe they never would.
They did.
For exactly a week.
But thats how plenty of love
affairs go: torrid one day, indiffer-
ent the next.
Plenty of Americans already
love soccer. Anybody who doubts
that should check out the exhibi-
tions being played here this
month featuring several of Eu-
ropes top clubs among them,
Manchester United, Barcelona
and Real Madrid. Most of their
games will draw crowds that
make last weeks MLB All-Star
exhibition look like the softball
game at a company picnic.
The overnight TV rating for
the finale was 8.6, more than
tripling Sundays marquee event
for the boys the British Open
yet still finishing well behind
the 11.4 eventually posted in the
1999 cup-clinching win over
China. If you didnt get enough of
the U.S. women last week, dont
worry. Theyll be on the late-
night and early morning TV
circuit this week. Traffic on so-
cial media was more eye-popping
still, generating at its peak more
tweets-per-second than either
Britains royal wedding or the
announcement of Osama Bin
Ladens death.
But theres no need to waste
time wondering whether soccer
will ever be as popular on these
shores as the big three of foot-
ball, baseball and basketball. It
wont, for the next decade at
least, for reasons well get to
below.
Since long-term relationships
are built on learning, the better
question is what Americans
learned that they didnt know
after all the previous predictions
of booms that never material-
ized: two previous U.S. womens
cup wins (1991 and1999), play-
ing host to the mens cup in1994,
the creation of domestic leagues
for both sexes..
If were being optimistic, the
answer is this: We finally saw a
U.S. team playing a style that we
could call our own.
If asked, every coach and ball-
player will concede a team learns
more from a loss than a win. So
it was again Sunday, when a
determined Japanese team used
the same grit and hustle thats
been the hallmark of every U.S.
soccer team, men or women, on
a superior squad of Americans.
Thats how the U.S. women beat
Brazil and then in the semifinal,
France, teams that featured more
talented individuals and a better
understanding of the game.
But a funny thing happened on
the way to the final.
U.S. coach Pia Sundhage, a
Swede who played for her nation-
al team, knew only too well how
fast the gap was closing between
the American women and the
rest of the world in terms of
resources, organization and even
quality athletes. She had already
laid the groundwork for her
squad to rely less on athleticism
and more on technique; to play
the way the best of the rest of the
world does by moving the ball
quickly and accurately under
pressure.
That Sundhage moved the
strategy from the training
ground to the pitch for the big-
gest match of their careers shows
how much faith she had in this
bunch. Even more than Amer-
ican football, soccer is a game of
possession and finishing a few
scoring chances.. The U.S. wom-
en succeeded at the first task, but
came away with nothing too
many times from the opening
minute of the match through the
final penalty kick. Even so, they
came away with something.
Up until now, the closest thing
to a coherent playing style any
American squad displayed on a
world stage is what the English
used to call hit and hope. It
involves defending countless
attacks as if your life depended
on it, then booting the ball up
the field and hoping a teammate
latches onto it and somehow
beats a crowd of defenders to
score.
But this one time, even in a
loss, the U.S. women stuck their
foot in the door and let their
countrymen glimpse a wider
world of possibilities. Given their
legacy and continuing success,
its only fitting that theyd be the
first to break through soccers
glass ceiling in America. The
guess here is that youll see the
benefits as soon as next summer,
at the London Olympics, and not
just because the U.S. women will
be out for vengeance. They never
lacked for motivation and theyve
already learned the games most
important lesson.
Now its the mens turn. Its
been a black mark on their re-
cord that a nation of 300 million
has yet to produce even one
striker good enough to sit on the
bench of world powers like
Spain, Brazil, Argentina, England
or the Netherlands, let alone play
in the first team. Anyone who
thinks theyre getting their fair
share of elite athletes should
consider what the NBAs dozen
best point guards could do with a
soccer ball if they grew up play-
ing the game.
So its long past time to hope
we hit that jackpot. Its time to
start developing players who can
tame the ball with their feet,
move it and get it back with
enough time and space to carve
the same wide swath through the
World Cup as their female coun-
terparts.
There will be plenty of time
before then to start talking about
a soccer boom.
Despite U.S. run, soccer boom on hold
OPINION
J I M L I T K E
Jim Litke is a national sports colum-
nist for The Associated Press. Write
to him at jlitke(at)ap.org.
tobeat Brazil inthequarterfinals
in a thrilling match, and then
grindingdownFrance. But asen-
tertaining as they may be, the
Americans have been making
things harder on themselves
thanthey needtobe for almost a
year now.
They were upset by Mexico in
regional qualifying, forced to
beat Italy in a playoff to get the
very last spot in Germany. They
dropped their first game of the
season, to Sweden, then lost to
England for the first time in 22
years so long ago Morgan
hadnt even been born yet. After
winning their first two games in
Germany handily, they lost to
Sweden, thefirst U.S. losseverin
WorldCup group play.
In the past, wed always won
everything, Rampone said.
Those losses made our team
what it is today. We need each
other and you feel that, fromthe
locker room to the time we step
onthe field.
But the Americans need more
than a can-do attitude to keep
pace ina game that is improving
andevolving.
Sundhage wants the U.S. to
play a possession-oriented style
similar to the one Japan and
France worked to near perfec-
tion in Germany, saying the tra-
ditional American gameplan of
grindingopponents downonde-
fense and sending long balls up
to the forwards is too predict-
able. Theoffenseshoulddevelop
through the midfield, not start
up front. By working from flank
to center and back out with se-
ries of multiple passes, the
Americans can probe the de-
fense for weaknesses and create
moreopportunitiesincluding
chances for players who
wouldnt normally score.
The style also helps on de-
fense. Opponents cant score
whentheAmericansarekeeping
the ball for large chunks of the
game.
I thinkof it as a nice hybridof
the way the U.S. national team
usedtoplayandthewaythat the
game is evolving into much like
the mens game, a possession,
Barcelona-esque style, Wam-
bach said. It hasnt been with-
out troubles. Its sometimes got-
ten the best of us because we
have some players, like myself,
whoareoldschool andliketoget
theball inamorephysical, direct
style. Andwhenthings arent go-
ingwell, IliketogobacktowhatI
know.
day night, losing 3-1 in penalty
kicks after twice blowing leads
in a 2-2 tie. But theres another
WorldCup infour years.
For some. The majority of the
teamwill remain intact through
London, but Rampone (36) and
Boxx (34) are likely to call it
quits after that. Wambach said
itstooearlytosaywhat shell do,
but she is 31, and her body is
showing the wear and tear from
thefearlessplayingstylethathas
earnedher thirdplace onthe all-
timeWorldCupscoringlist with
13 goals.
Wambach passed Michelle
Akers (12) for top U.S. honors
withherheaderinthe104thmin-
uteSunday, herfourthgoal of the
tournament.
Im not thinking about that
right now, Wambachsaidwhen
asked about her future. I just
want to spend some time with
myteammates. This has beenan
emotional roller coaster ... and
the Olympics are right around
the corner. Well move on.
Part of what has always made
the U.S. so strong is the smooth
transition from one generation
to another, and the U.S. might
have its most promise since the
days of Mia Hamm, Julie Foudy,
Brandi Chastain.
Solo, winner of the Golden
Glove as the tournaments top
goalkeeper, is intheprimeof her
career at 29. Morgan and Che-
ney, both just 22, each finished
the tournament with two goals.
Cheney also had three assists
while Morgan had one. Rapinoe
displayed the accuracy and
touch on the flanks so critical in
coachPiaSundhagesdesirefora
possession-based offense, and
has the energy and spunk to
shoulder theburdenof beingthe
face of the team behind Wam-
bach.
No team found a way to con-
tain speedy Heather OReilly,
who makes a nice complement
to Rapinoe on the opposite side
of thefield. Lloydseemedtogain
confidence in directing the of-
fense as the tournament wore
on, havingone of her best games
against Japan.
Thats not to say there arent
issues.
The Americans achieved cult
status with their grit and resil-
ience in Germany, coming back
SOCCER
Continued from Page 1B
SHANGHAI If China is
feeling any pressure to maintain
its superpower status in diving,
it sure isnt showinginthe world
championships.
The host country won its
fourthgoldmedal andfifthover-
all in the outdoor pool Monday,
thrilling fans who cheered and
chanted China! each time
their divers appeared on the
boards.
Wang Hao and Chen Ruolin
led all every round in easily win-
ning the womens 10-meter syn-
chro after Li Shixin won the
mens 1-meter springboard and
teammate He Min took the sil-
ver.
Wang and Chen totaled
362.58 points.
It was Chens third consecu-
tive world title in synchro plat-
form, including 2009 in Rome
when she also teamed with
Wang. China has won six
straight world titles in the
event.
Since Chinese diving super-
star Guo Jingjing retired in Ja-
nuary, Chen has been consid-
ered her successor.
I dont want to think too
much about it, she said. My
performancewill beaffected. Al-
though the 10-meter platform
individual gold is also impor-
tant, it is not my goal. My goal is
the London Games.
Australias Alexandra Croak
and Melissa Wu earned the sil-
ver at 325.92 their countrys
fourth runner-up finish in the
event.
It definitely built the confi-
dence that we got a medal, said
Wu, who finished second in
2007. The competition is in-
tense. Its hard sometimes when
you have to rely on someone
else to do as well as you.
ChristinSteuer andNora Sub-
schinski claimed Germanys
second bronze of the day with
316.29.
Our opponents are all on a
high level, especially the Ger-
man and Australia duo, said
Chen, who has been on Chinas
national team since 2003. Its
very important to be in control
and perform our best.
Wang and Chen received one
perfect 10 for synchronization
on their second dive. After end-
ing the five-dive final with a
backward2
1
2 somersault with1
1
2
twists that barely created a
splash, the women climbed out
of the pool and hugged.
D I V I N G
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Chinas Wang Hao, left, embraces Chen Ruolin after winning the
gold medal in the womens 10-meter Synchro Platform final at
the FINA Swimming World Championships in Shanghai.
China strengthens
superpower hold
By BETH HARRIS
AP Sports Writer
Southern California tailback
Marc Tyler has been suspended
from all team activities and the
Trojans season opener for com-
ments he made to TMZ that im-
pliedhe gets paidtoplayfor USC.
When asked by TMZ whether
he could make more money at
USC or in the NFL, Tyler said,
USC, they breaking bread,
making a gesture indicating a
large stack of money.
USC coach Lane Kiffin sus-
pended his leading rusher Mon-
day for the Sept. 3 opener against
Minnesota and possibly longer.
The fifth-year senior is facing po-
tential discipline fromthe school
after what he said were two alco-
hol-related problems in April.
I am disappointed that I let
down all the people who have
supported me as I have been
working through some personal
issues, Tyler said in a statement
released by the school. I realize
how my behavior and my state-
ments, even though I was joking,
can reflect poorly on so many
people. As a veteran player, I
should know that my job is to be
an example for the younger
guys.
USC is entering the second
year of a postseason ban during
four years of NCAA probation
stemming from illegal benefits
provided to Reggie Bush.
TMZ recorded Tylers com-
ments last Thursday outside Voy-
eur, a West Hollywood nightclub.
Tyler, who turns 23 in Septem-
ber, also made a distasteful com-
ment to TMZ about Kim Kar-
dashian, Bushs ex-girlfriend.
That is not the waythat we ex-
pect our players torepresent USC
and our team, Kiffin said. Al-
though Marc may find this puni-
shment severe, it is imperative
we continue to have a high stan-
dard for player behavior. Marc
needs to work hard to show us
that he can meet the standards of
being a USC football player.
Athletic director Pat Haden
said Tyler stepped way out of
line. He did not represent him-
self, his university or his teamthe
way we expect. Marc has a lot to
do to prove he belongs on our
team. We hope Marc learns from
this and comes back a changed
and better person.
Last month, Tyler said he had
appeared before the schools Of-
fice of Student Judicial Affairs to
discuss two complaints made
against himinApril. Tyler was ac-
cused of spitting on a female stu-
dent while intoxicated, and later
touching another female student
inappropriately at a bar near
USCs downtown campus.
C O L L E G E F O O T B A L L
USCs Tyler suspended
after comments to TMZ
By GREG BEACHAM
AP Sports Writer
LONDONSecurity prepara-
tions for the 2012 Olympics will
not be harmed by the resigna-
tions of Londons top two police
officers a year before the games,
the British government said
Monday.
Scotland Yard chief Paul Ste-
phenson and Assistant Commis-
sioner John Yates, Britains top
anti-terrorist officer, have re-
signed amid an intensifying scan-
dal involving phone hacking and
alleged police bribery.
Bothindicatedthat theyquit to
ensure the police force had stable
leadership and no distractions in
the run-up to the first Olympics
inLondonsince1948, whichhave
a 757million-pound($1.2billion)
security budget.
And Olympics minister Hugh
Robertson insisted that much of
the security framework was al-
ready in place before counterter-
rorism minister Pauline Neville-
Jones left her job in May .
I am not concerned about the
resignations in relation to Olym-
pics security, Robertson said
Monday in statement to The As-
sociated Press. Pauline Neville-
Jones made a massive contribu-
tion to get this in a good place.
The appointment of Chris Alli-
son, as the Met assistant commis-
sioner in charge of all of this, has
alsoreally drivenit forward. He is
the point manonOlympic securi-
ty and I am100 percent confident
that we are where we ought to
be.
Sebastian Coe, the organizing
committee chairman for the Lon-
don Games, also said he wasnt
concerned about the resigna-
tions.
L O N D O N O LY M P I C G A M E S
Minister: Resignations
wont affect security plans
By ROB HARRIS
AP Sports Writer
C M Y K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com TUESDAY, JULY 19, 2011 PAGE 7B
C M Y K
T
o
d
a
y
Keeping up with iPad
orders?
Apples earnings report for
its fiscal third quarter will
show whether the company
has recovered from short-
ages of its iPad. Demand for
the tablet computer has been
so strong that Apple hasnt
been able to keep up with
orders. But financial analysts
say the iPad is on track to
make more money for Apple
than the entire Mac division
by the end of the year.
Bank of America earnings
The nations largest bank is
expected to report a net loss of
$8.6 billion to $9.1 billion for
the second quarter. Thats the
result of an $8.5 billion settle-
ment with investors over poor-
quality mortgage bonds that
were sold as securities and
that went sour in the financial
crisis. Investors want to know if
theres more bad news such
as a drop in trading income
that hurt other banks revenue
during the quarter.
A gradual improvement
Economists expect the Commerce
Department to report an incremen-
tal rise in the number of homes
that builders broke ground on last
month. But the number of housing
starts will still be down from its
high point this year, in January.
And that means its likely to be
less than half the annual rate of
1.2 million thats considered a
healthy housing market. Econo-
mists agree that any significant
improvement wont happen until
unemployment falls sharply.
Price-to-earnings ratio: 18
based on past 12 months results
240
290
340
$390
3Q 10
Operating
EPS
3Q 11
est.
$3.51
$5.82
AAPL $373.80
$251.45
10 11
Source: FactSet
Price-to-earnings ratio: N/A
based on past 12 months results
Dividend: $0.04 Div. Yield: 0.4%
8
13
$18
2Q 10
Operating
EPS
2Q 11
est.
$0.27
BAC $9.72
$15.39
10 11
Source: FactSet
Housing Starts
Annualized rate in thousand
450
500
550
600
Source: FactSet
J F M A M J
est.
575
-$0.85
Debt worries hit shares
Europes banking troubles and an
impasse over lifting the U.S. govern-
ments borrowing limit dragged down
stock markets in the U.S. and Europe.
Gold rose above $1,600 an ounce as
investors sought safe places to park
money.
The results of stress tests on Europe-
an banks came under more scrutiny.
Eight banks failed the test to measure
how well they would hold up under
additional financial strain. But the tests
didnt take into account how banks
would fare if Greece or Italy defaults.In
the U.S., the debt limit debate remains
at a standstill. The limit must be raised
by Aug. 2 or the government risks a
default.
Duncan, Lester promoted
Dale A. Duncan, publisher of The
Times Leader from1986 to 1994, has
been named to the
newly created position
of president of Maine-
Today Media. Duncan
will keep responsibility
of the Kennebec Jour-
nal and Morning Senti-
nel, but will now be
spending more time in
Portland helping me run the company,
said MaineToday Media CEO Richard
L. Connor.
Connor preceded Duncan as publish-
er of The Times Leader and returned
in 2006 to purchase the newspaper
from The McClatchy Co. In addition to
his role at MaineToday Media, Connor
is The Times Leaders editor and pub-
lisher.
Connor also said Michelle Lester has
been promoted to senior vice president
of advertising at MaineToday Media.
Before joining the Maine operations,
Lester was classified advertising direc-
tor at The Times Leader.
Table games pull in $500M
Tax revenue from table games at
Pennsylvania casinos totaled $81.4
million in the fiscal year that ended
June 30, the state Gaming Control
Board announced Monday. Table gam-
ing was launched at nine casinos July
8-18, 2010 and SugarHouse Casino in
Philadelphia opened with slot ma-
chines and table games last September.
Mohegan Sun at Pocono Downs
ranked sixth in the state with $38.6
million in table games revenue in the
period, yielding state tax payments of
$5.4 million and local share assessment
of $771,607.
Statewide, table games revenue was
$508 million.
No bids for Borders
Borders Group is seeking court ap-
proval to liquidate its 399 stores after it
failed to receive any bids that would
keep the 40-year-old chain in operation
and canceled an auction process.
Liquidation sales could start as soon
as Friday. The U.S. Bankruptcy Court
of the Southern District of New York is
set to approve the move on Thursday
Borders had been seeking a new
white knight bidder after a $215 mil-
lion bid dissolved late last week. Cred-
itors and lenders argued the chain
would be worth more if it liquidated.
I N B R I E F
Duncan
$3.68 $2.64 $3.59
$4.06
07/17/08
BUSINESS S E C T I O N B
THE TIMES LEADER TUESDAY, JULY 19, 2011
timesleader.com
DOW
12,385.16
-94.57
NASDAQ
2,765.11
-24.69
S&P
1,305.44
-10.70
WALL STREET
IF YOURE ONE of
the many Netflix
customers who was
put out by the an-
nouncement that
Netflix was increas-
ing prices, Block-
buster wants to make an offer you
cant refuse: If youre now a Netflix
customer, Blockbuster is offering you
a month for free, plus a slightly dis-
counted monthly rate (which is
cheaper than the equivalent Netflix
plans).
But it might be a good idea to wait
before you decide to jump ship in
righteous indignation over the villai-
nous Netflix plan the services differ
substantially.
According to Netflix, what theyve
actually done is split their DVD and
web-streaming services. So while you
were paying $9.99 per month for one
DVD at a time and unlimited stream-
ing movies, youll now end up paying
$15 per month for two services
DVD by mail at $7.99, and unlimited
streaming video for $7.99. For me,
this plan actually works out better I
have Netflix but I only use their
streaming service.
I can send off for a DVD, but Ive
never had any reason to. If you only
need their DVD service, its also
cheaper youre only paying $7.99 a
month. However, Blockbuster offers a
substantially different product that
includes Blu-Rays with its DVD
plans. Netflix charges extra not a
big deal for people who want to view
movies online, but maybe a game
changer for those of you who prefer
receiving movies in the mail. Block-
buster also includes Xbox360, Play-
station and Wii game rentals by mail
in their plans Netflix doesnt offer
the service. And Blockbuster allows
you to return and exchange videos at
a physical store location, where your
plan will net additional discounts. I
should mention that at present,
Blockbuster offers fewer titles than
Netflix. So while Netflixs increased
rates may be better or worse for you,
depending on how you use the ser-
vice, Blockbuster does offer addition-
al value for your dollar. Personally,
given how I use Netflix, it works out
better for me to stick with the ser-
vice but as always, your experience
will differ, and your mileage may
vary.
TECH TALK
N I C K D E L O R E N Z O
Nick DeLorenzo is director of Interactive
and New Media for The Times Leader. Write
him at ndelorenzo@timesleader.com.
NETFLIX
DVD Only:
1 DVD, $7.99/
mo.
2 DVDs, $11.99/
Month
Streaming:
$7.99/mo.,
unlimited
BLOCKBUS-
TER
Total Access
streaming
plus:
1 DVD, $11.99/mo. ($10 for
Netflix customers)
2 DVDs, $16.99/mo. ($15
for Netflix customers)
3 DVDs, $19.99/mo.
DVD Only:
1 DVD, $8.99/mo.
2 DVDs, $13.99/mo.
3 DVDs, $16.99/mo.
COMPARING THE PLANS
Netflix & Blockbuster try to outdeal each other
NEW YORK -- News Corp.s Rupert
Murdoch is struggling to control the
destiny of the company he began build-
ing six decades ago after a trusteddepu-
ty was arrested and Scotland Yards top
official quit over ties to a suspect in the
phone-hacking probe.
Independent directors of New York-
based News Corp. have begun question-
ing the companys response to the crisis
and whether a leadership change is
needed, said two people with direct
knowledge of the situation who
wouldnt speak publicly. Rebekah
Brooks, the former News International
chief who Murdoch backed until last
week, was arrested Sunday in London.
The shell of invulnerability that Rup-
ert Murdoch had
around him has been
cracked, said James
Post, a professor at
Boston Universitys
School of Management
who has written about
governance and busi-
ness ethics. His credibility and the
companys credibility are hemorrhag-
ing.
Murdoch and his 38-year-old son,
James Murdoch, are spending most of
their time with advisers preparing for
todays hearing before a British parlia-
mentary committee. They will face
questions over their role in and respon-
sibility for phone hacking that took
place at their now-defunct News of the
World tabloid. The company took out
advertisements in national British
newspapers this weekend to apologize
for the scandal.
Before Monday, News Corp. shares
had lost 17 percent since July 4, when
the Guardian reported that News of the
World employees had intercepted the
voice mail of Milly Dowler, a schoolgirl
who was later found murdered. The
slump has shaved more than $6 billion
off the combined value of the Class A
shares and the Class Bvoting stock that
gives the Murdochs control over the
company.
News Corp.s independent directors,
whoholdnineof 16boardseats, haveex-
pressed frustration over the quality and
quantity of information theyve re-
ceived about the scandal and concern
about managements ability to handle
the crisis given how slowly the compa-
ny has responded, the person said.
Some directors said Murdoch, the
companys 80-year-old chairman and
chief executive officer, appearedto be in
denial over the fallout from the scandal
in an interview he gave last week to the
Wall Street Journal, one of News Corp.s
newspapers.
News Corp.s independent directors,
including Dinh, Perkins and former
British Airways CEO Rod Eddington,
may have limited influence, given the
Murdochs stock holdings, said Charles
Elson, director of the John L. Weinberg
Center for Corporate Governance at the
University of Delaware.
Rupert Murdoch controls the votes
of the company through the Class B
shares, Elson said in an interview. He
can just replace them if he wants. They
may do something, but it will be tempo-
rary. Maybe he becomes chairman, but
this is still his company and he can do
what he wants. When he controls the
stock, he controls the board.
Murdoch attempts to control News Corp.
By CAROL HYMOWITZ,
JEFFREY MCCRACKEN
and AMY THOMSON
Bloomberg News
Murdoch
GM INVESTING IN FLINT PLANT WITH NEWTRUCKS
AP PHOTO
L
ine worker Randee Boose assembles a Chevrolet Silverado pickup Monday at the General Motors Flint
Assembly plant in Flint, Mich. GM says it will spend $328 million to update a factory in Flint that will
build new Silverado and GMC Sierra trucks. The investment will create or preserve 150 jobs at the site,
which now employs 2,047 people. The investment is part of $2 billion GM is spending to create or retain
about 4,000 jobs in eight states over the next 18 months.
ST. LOUIS As the economic re-
covery sputters forward, banks contin-
ue to bleed revenue in such mainstays
as commercial lending and, of course,
mortgages. So they are increasingly
catering to the only customers who
have survived the Great Recession rel-
atively unscathed: rich folks.
Customers with more than $1 mil-
lion in liquid assets can expect some
extracoddlingthesedays, as banks are
adding services and staff to their
wealth management divisions.
The new focus for many banks
stems largely from a simple lack of
other options as historic govern-
ment bailouts winddownandsobered
consumers and businesses grow in-
creasingly allergic tonewdebt. Nearly
a fourth of Americans are underwater
on their homes, and so wont be needi-
ng a mortgage; and starting or ex-
panding a business into the current
headwinds takes a brave and well-cap-
italized soul. Simultaneously, banks
have seen their bedrocks of revenue
from debit card and overdraft fees
eroded by new federal regulations.
By contrast, the 3.4 million people
in North America holding more than
$1 million in liquid assets actually
grew their wealth by 9.1 percent last
year, to $11.6 trillion, according to
Merrill Lynchs World Wealth Report
released last month. The number of
high-net-worth individuals in North
America has also risen, growing 8.6
percent last year.
Bank of Americas Global Wealth
and Investment Management divi-
sion, whichserves highnet worthindi-
viduals through its Merrill Lynch and
U.S. Trust business units, sawits first-
quarter revenue jump 11 percent, to
$4.5 billion.
When it released its wealth report,
Merrill Lynch said high-net-worth in-
dividuals were expected to continue
to shed their real estate investments
and increase their equity and com-
modities allocations.
So banks would be foolish not to fol-
low the money, said Joe Hoffmeyer,
principal of St. Louis-based Phoenix
Financial Services Consulting and a
former manager of First Banks wealth
management division. Everyboardof
directors of every bank in the world
wants tofocus onwealthmanagement
now, he said.
PNCBank is working onnewonline
services for its wealth management
customers so they can access income
projections on their smartphones and
contact PNCs wealth management
staff with questions about their ac-
counts via email or text message.
Those services are expected to be
rolled out by the first quarter of 2012.
Banks zero
in on aiding
ultra-rich
By LISA BROWN
St. Louis Post-Dispatch
C M Y K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com TUESDAY, JULY 19, 2011 PAGE 9B
T H E M A R K E T I N R E V I E W
McGrwH 42.15 -.19 +15.8
McMoRn 18.38 +.22 +7.2
MeadWvco 33.11 -.04 +26.6
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Merck 35.49 -.44 -1.5
Meritage 21.49 -.41 -3.2
Mesab 30.85 -3.41 -19.8
MetLife 40.48 -1.09 -8.9
MetroPCS 16.80 -.19 +33.0
Microchp 31.97 -.37 -6.5
MicronT 7.23 -.18 -9.9
Microsoft 26.59 -.19 -4.7
MdsxWatr 18.55 -.40 +1.1
Monsanto 73.21 -.85 +5.1
Moodys 35.52 -.93 +33.8
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MorgStan 20.69 -.40 -24.0
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NextEraEn 56.36 -.44 +8.4
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NikeB 90.64 -1.06 +6.1
NobleCorp 36.73 -.66 +2.7
NokiaCp 5.42 -.12 -47.5
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NorTrst 43.39 -.90 -21.7
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OfficeDpt 3.56 -.20 -34.1
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PPG 88.71 -.96 +5.5
PPL Corp 27.54 -.24 +4.6
Paccar 48.39 -.89 -15.6
Pacholder 9.50 -.04 +12.4
PallCorp 52.92 -1.57 +6.7
PatriotCoal 23.93 +.45 +23.5
PattUTI 32.82 -.68 +52.3
Paychex 29.40 -.67 -4.9
PeabdyE 59.90 +.29 -6.4
PennVaRs 27.21 -.43 -3.9
Penney 31.36 -.21 -2.9
PeopUtdF 13.40 -.16 -4.4
PepcoHold 19.12 -.28 +4.8
PeregrineP 1.81 -.07 -21.3
Petrohawk 38.17 ...+109.2
PetrbrsA 29.23 -.46 -14.5
Petrobras 32.32 -.44 -14.6
PetRes 29.61 -.29 +9.6
Pfizer 19.64 -.11 +12.2
PharmPdt 30.74 +2.88 +13.3
PhilipMor 66.83 -.10 +14.2
PimcoHiI 12.87 -.14 +1.3
PimcoMuni 13.20 +.02 +4.7
PinWst 43.33 -.57 +4.5
PitnyBw 21.87 -.26 -9.6
PlainsEx 39.21 -1.15 +22.0
PlumCrk 40.20 -.30 +7.3
Polycom s 30.74 -.28 +57.7
Popular 2.49 -.06 -20.7
Potash s 58.77 -.43 +13.9
PS USDBull21.48 +.05 -5.4
PSPrivEq 10.00 -.33 -7.0
PwShs QQQ57.54 -.31 +5.7
Praxair 105.86 -1.17 +10.9
PrinFncl 27.64 -.77 -15.1
ProLogis 34.40 -.39 +8.5
ProShtS&P 41.30 +.34 -5.8
PrUShS&P 21.00 +.35 -11.6
PrUlShDow 17.14 +.25 -17.2
ProUltQQQ 89.86 -.94 +10.4
PrUShQQQ rs49.30+.49 -15.2
ProUltSP 51.71 -.89 +7.6
ProUShL20 33.33 +.60 -10.0
ProUltR2K 45.86 -1.46 +7.4
ProUSSP50015.92 +.40 -18.0
ProUSSlv rs13.25 -.97 -66.3
PrUltCrde rs42.76 -1.25 -14.4
PrUShCrde rs47.43+1.31 -6.7
ProUShEuro17.64 +.08 -13.1
ProgrssEn 47.05 -.52 +8.2
ProgsvCp 19.97 -.09 +.5
ProUSR2K rs42.60+1.28 -15.2
ProvFnH 8.23 -.01 +13.6
Prudentl 59.78 -.98 +1.8
PSEG 31.58 -.26 -.7
PubStrg 118.09 -1.10 +16.4
PulteGrp 6.94 -.15 -7.7
PPrIT 6.42 +.03 +2.2
QiaoXing 1.42 +.32 -49.8
Qlogic 15.85 +.02 -6.9
Qualcom 55.28 +.32 +11.7
QstDiag 58.02 -.04 +7.5
Quidel 15.53 -.14 +7.5
RCM 5.60 +.04 +21.0
RF MicD 5.82 -.20 -20.8
RPC s 26.12 -.28 +44.2
RPM 22.16 -.22 +.3
RadianGrp 3.50 -.56 -56.6
RadioShk 12.48 -.28 -32.5
RangeRs 61.00 -.78 +35.6
Raytheon 45.43 -.62 -1.2
RegalEnt 11.23 -.50 -4.3
RegionsFn 5.84 -.15 -16.6
Renren n 10.95 +.69 -39.2
RepFBcp 2.06 -.06 -15.6
RepubSvc 29.31 -.34 -1.8
RschMotn 26.68 -.84 -54.1
Revlon 18.73 -.40 +90.3
ReynAm s 37.05 -.13 +13.6
RioTinto 69.51 -1.22 -3.0
RiteAid 1.24 -.04 +40.4
Riverbed s 38.77 -.80 +10.2
Rowan 36.70 -.38 +5.1
RoyDShllA 71.42 -.48 +6.9
SAIC 16.28 -.18 +2.6
SpdrDJIA 123.62 -.94 +6.9
SpdrGold 156.57 +1.37 +12.9
S&P500ETF130.61-1.08 +3.9
SpdrHome 17.31 -.27 -.5
SpdrKbwBk 22.70 -.37 -12.4
SpdrKbw RB24.67 -.36 -6.7
SpdrRetl 53.74 -.56 +11.1
SpdrOGEx 61.60 -.55 +16.8
SpdrMetM 69.29 +.15 +.7
SPX Cp 79.91 -1.14 +11.8
Safeway 23.62 -.13 +5.0
StJoe 17.85 -.25 -18.3
StJude 46.40 +.48 +8.5
SanDisk 40.50 -1.12 -18.8
SandRdge 11.19 -.01 +52.9
Sanofi 38.36 -.85 +19.0
SaraLee 19.36 -.14 +10.6
SaulCntr 39.89 -.07 -15.8
Schlmbrg 87.21 -.78 +4.4
SchoolSp 12.94 -.48 -7.1
Schwab 14.97 -.04 -12.5
SeagateT 16.53 -.28 +10.0
SearsHldgs 73.70 -.53 -.1
SeattGen 17.90 -.97 +19.7
SemiHTr 32.29 -.29 -.7
SempraEn 51.55 -.55 -1.8
ServiceCp 11.06 -.20 +34.1
ShawGrp 25.49 -.51 -25.5
ShengInno 3.45 +.82 -39.9
SiderurNac 10.97 -.22 -34.2
Siemens 129.28 -2.16 +4.0
SifyTech 6.28 +.19+177.9
Slcnware 5.03 -.13 -15.5
SilvWhtn g 39.69 +.89 +1.7
SilvrcpM g 11.83 +.45 -7.8
Sina 121.01 +3.84 +75.8
SinoClnEn 2.37 +.34 -64.1
SiriusXM 2.23 -.10 +37.1
SkyWest 12.30 -2.42 -21.3
SkywksSol 22.23 -.45 -22.4
Smucker 76.66 +.36 +16.8
SnapOn 61.40 -.21 +8.5
Sonus 2.98 -.10 +11.6
SouthnCo 39.99 -.23 +4.6
SthnCopper 36.00 +.01 -26.1
SoUnCo 43.33 -.06 +80.0
SwstAirl 10.46 -.26 -19.4
SwstnEngy 47.04 -.49 +25.7
SpectraEn 27.13 -.30 +8.6
SpectPh 10.71 +.08 +55.9
SprintNex 5.19 -.16 +22.7
SprottGold 13.92 +.02 +12.8
SP Matls 39.10 -.47 +1.8
SP HlthC 34.93 -.26 +10.9
SP CnSt 31.16 -.20 +6.3
SP Consum39.90 -.39 +6.7
SP Engy 76.60 -.26 +12.2
SPDR Fncl 14.65 -.20 -8.2
SP Inds 36.13 -.41 +3.6
SP Tech 25.83 -.09 +2.5
SP Util 33.04 -.32 +5.4
StanBlkDk 68.61 -1.08 +2.6
Staples 15.13 -.07 -33.6
Starbucks 39.40 -.40 +22.6
StarwdHtl 54.84 -1.02 -9.8
StateStr 42.95 -.88 -7.3
StlDynam 15.43 -.30 -15.7
StillwtrM 17.13 -.15 -19.8
Stryker 58.26 -.17 +8.5
SubPpne 50.63 -.79 -9.7
Suncor gs 39.15 -.70 +2.2
Sunoco 41.26 -.66 +2.4
SunTrst 23.95 -.69 -18.8
Supvalu 8.91 -.07 -7.5
SwiftTrns n 13.23 -.59 +5.8
Symantec 18.87 -.11 +12.7
Synovus 2.00 -.06 -24.2
Sysco 30.64 -.27 +4.2
TCW Strat 5.36 -.02 +2.7
TD Ameritr 18.07 +.05 -4.8
TE Connect 34.48 -.72 -2.6
TECO 18.61 -.07 +4.6
THQ 3.32 -.03 -45.2
TaiwSemi 12.14 -.08 -3.2
TalismE g 19.28 -.19 -13.1
Target 50.59 -.50 -15.9
TeckRes g 51.23 -1.19 -17.1
Teleflex 61.38 -.40 +14.1
TelefEsp s 21.86 -.25 -4.2
TelMexL 15.86 -.22 -1.7
Tellabs 4.01 -.11 -40.9
TempleInld 30.85 -.58 +45.2
TmpDrgn 30.22 -.19 -1.7
TenetHlth 6.01 -.01 -10.2
Tenneco 42.25 -1.43 +2.6
Teradata 56.70 -1.07 +37.8
Teradyn 13.48 -.21 -4.0
Terex 25.74 -1.13 -17.1
Tesoro 23.19 -.29 +25.1
TevaPhrm 47.30 -.67 -9.3
TexInst 30.48 -.34 -6.2
Textron 21.44 -.37 -9.3
ThermoFis 62.50 -.72 +12.9
3M Co 94.60 -.87 +9.6
TibcoSft 27.27 -.42 +38.4
THorton g 48.24 -.27 +17.0
TimeWarn 34.80 -.83 +8.2
TorDBk g 81.57 -1.54 +11.3
Total SA 53.92 -.27 +.8
Toyota 83.36 -.49 +6.0
TrCda g 41.81 -.61 +9.9
Transocn 62.08 -.90 -10.7
Travelers 56.52 -1.38 +1.5
Travelzoo 84.91 +7.82+105.2
TrimbleN 37.62 -.94 -5.8
TrinaSolar 17.91 -.54 -23.5
TriQuint 9.48 -.27 -18.9
TwoHrbInv 10.16 -.07 +3.8
TycoIntl 46.84 -.65 +13.0
Tyson 18.16 -.27 +5.5
UBS AG 16.26 -.54 -1.3
UDR 26.07 +.09 +10.8
US Airwy 7.03 -.41 -29.8
US Gold 7.02 +.35 -13.0
USEC 3.08 +.05 -48.8
UniSrcEn 37.21 -.59 +3.8
UnilevNV 31.89 -.27 +1.6
UnionPac 100.50 -.24 +8.5
Unisys 24.95 -.34 -3.6
UtdContl 20.45 -.40 -14.1
UPS B 72.42 -.66 -.2
US Bancrp 24.43 -.31 -9.4
US NGs rs 11.41 -.03 -4.8
US OilFd 37.59 -.54 -3.6
USSteel 42.16 -.85 -27.8
UtdTech 87.62 -.70 +11.3
UtdhlthGp 51.95 -.02 +43.9
UnumGrp 24.86 -.45 +2.6
Vale SA 32.33 -.11 -6.5
Vale SA pf 29.39 -.04 -2.7
ValeantPh 55.01 +.01 +94.5
ValenceT h 1.11 +.08 -33.9
ValeroE 25.12 -.14 +8.7
ValpeyFsh 2.84 -.02 -16.2
ValVis A 7.49 -.49 +22.6
VangTSM 67.65 -.63 +4.2
VangEmg 47.19 -.54 -2.0
VangEur 49.77 -1.02 +1.4
Verisign 33.24 -.42 +1.7
VertxPh 49.57 -1.11 +41.5
VestinRMII 1.35 -.03 -6.9
ViacomA 55.42 -1.79 +20.8
ViacomB 49.41 -1.26 +24.7
VimpelCm 11.82 -.07 -21.4
VirgnMda h 26.66 -.86 -2.1
Visa 88.07 -.68 +25.1
Vivus 8.17 -.17 -12.8
Vodafone 25.45 -.32 -3.7
Vornado 92.32 -1.20 +10.8
WalMart 53.32 -.31 -1.1
Walgrn 41.67 -.26 +7.0
WalterEn 118.55 +7.61 -7.3
WsteMInc 35.73 -.43 -3.1
WeathfIntl 18.33 -.20 -19.6
WebMD 32.48-14.00 -36.4
WellPoint 74.25 -.65 +30.6
WellsFargo 26.88 -.30 -13.3
Wendys Co 5.24 -.08 +13.4
WernerEnt 24.91 -.44 +10.2
WestellT 3.34 -.04 +2.1
WstnRefin 20.78 -.35 +96.4
WstnUnion 19.13 +.04 +3.0
Weyerh 21.38 -.27 +12.9
WmsCos 30.04 -.33 +21.5
Windstrm 12.49 -.11 -10.4
WiscEn s 31.07 -.24 +5.6
Worthgtn 22.35 -.27 +21.5
Wynn 164.89 +2.27 +58.8
XL Grp 20.81 -.38 -4.6
XcelEngy 23.76 -.27 +.9
Xerox 9.92 -.09 -13.9
Xilinx 33.28 -.20 +14.8
YRC Ww rs 1.21 -.10 -67.5
Yahoo 14.42 -.27 -13.3
Yamana g 13.28 +.18 +3.8
YingliGrn 6.98 -.22 -29.4
Youku n 33.01 -1.55 -5.7
YumBrnds 54.85 -.66 +11.8
Zagg 15.76 +.44+106.8
Zhongpin 10.25 -.99 -49.8
Zimmer 63.22 -.46 +17.8
ZionBcp 22.79 -.38 -5.9
ZollMed 56.24 -.49 +51.1
Zweig 3.32 +.02 -.9
ZweigTl 3.38 ... -5.1
DOW
12,385.16
-94.57
NASDAQ
2,765.11
-24.69
S&P 500
1,305.44
-10.70
6-MO T-BILLS
.06%
+.01
10-YR T-NOTE
2.90%
...
CRUDE OIL
$95.93
-1.31
GOLD
$1,602.10
+12.30
q q n n p p q q q q p p q q q q
EURO
$1.4090
-.0046
1,230
1,260
1,290
1,320
1,350
1,380
J J F M A M J
1,280
1,320
1,360
S&P 500
Close: 1,305.44
Change: -10.70 (-0.8%)
10 DAYS
2,560
2,640
2,720
2,800
2,880
J J F M A M J
2,720
2,800
2,880
Nasdaq composite
Close: 2,765.11
Change: -24.69 (-0.9%)
10 DAYS
Advanced 454
Declined 2598
New Highs 37
New Lows 94
Vol. (in mil.) 3,696
Pvs. Volume 3,921
1,728
1,785
540
2033
36
71
NYSE NASD
DOW 12475.26 12296.23 12385.16 -94.57 -0.76% t s s +6.98%
DOW Trans. 5341.77 5255.85 5283.92 -58.62 -1.10% t s s +3.47%
DOW Util. 431.99 426.69 427.76 -4.26 -0.99% t t s +5.62%
NYSE Comp. 8227.04 8081.54 8135.53 -91.51 -1.11% t s t +2.15%
AMEX Index 2405.19 2370.88 2384.15 -21.04 -0.87% s s s +7.96%
NASDAQ 2783.76 2743.79 2765.11 -24.69 -0.89% t s t +4.23%
S&P 500 1315.94 1295.92 1305.44 -10.70 -0.81% t s s +3.80%
Wilshire 5000 14000.73 13775.28 13868.34 -132.39 -0.95% t s s +3.80%
Russell 2000 828.77 811.85 815.97 -12.81 -1.55% t s s +4.12%
HIGH LOW CLOSE CHG. %CHG. WK MO QTR YTD
StocksRecap
Matthew Craft, Kristen Girard AP
U.S. government debt is considered one of the safest
bets around. A default would shake the confidence of in-
vestors around the world.
Economists say a default would also drive up borrowing
costs for everyone. Treasury yields would rise to compen-
sate buyers for their higher risk. Treasurys are used to set
interest rates throughout the economy. So mortgages and
borrowing by companies and local governments would be-
come more expensive for people.
Financial analysts say its nearly impossible to predict ex-
actly how a default would play out in the stock, bond and cur-
rency markets. They do say the immediate aftermath for
stocks might look like the financial crisis in September 2008. In
the month after Lehman Brothers' bankruptcy, the S&P 500
lost 28 percent.
Bonds could also fall after a default theyll have lost their
reputation for safety.
Few investments would be considered safe. Fear has
driven traders into precious metals, but gold is at $1,600 an
ounce, so its not cheap.
Some analysts say a default could freeze the short-term
lending markets that keep money moving throughout the fi-
nancial system. Treasurys and other government debt are
widely used as collateral for loans in these markets. Adefault
would shake the trust in that collateral. Lenders could respond
by demanding more. That would force borrowers to sell other
investments to meet those demands. Asimilar selling cycle
spread turmoil across markets when Lehman collapsed.
Panic selling might force Washington to quickly agree to
raise the debt limit. Think back to 2008. After the House re-
jected a bailout for banks on Sept. 29, the Dow fell 777
points. Four days later, Congress approved a bailout.
What
if?
Mutual Funds
Alliance Bernstein
BalShrB m 14.68 -.09 +6.3
CoreOppA m 12.63 -.09 +9.7
American Beacon
LgCpVlInv 18.76 -.20 +1.2
LgCpVlIs 19.78 -.21 +1.4
American Cent
EqIncInv 7.36 -.07 +3.2
GrowthInv 27.15 -.18 +5.1
IncGroA m 25.24 -.21 +5.8
UltraInv 24.39 -.16 +7.7
American Funds
AMCAPA m 19.68 -.15 +4.9
BalA m 18.54 -.11 +4.5
BondA m 12.39 -.01 +3.5
CapIncBuA m50.64 -.43 +3.3
CapWldBdA m21.05 -.03 +4.9
CpWldGrIA m35.60 -.50 +1.2
EurPacGrA m41.68 -.63 +0.7
FnInvA m 37.84 -.41 +3.8
GrthAmA m 31.43 -.27 +3.3
HiIncA m 11.39 -.01 +5.0
IncAmerA m 16.99 -.12 +4.7
IntBdAmA m 13.58 ... +2.4
IntlGrInA m 31.30 -.41 +2.2
InvCoAmA m 28.41 -.26 +1.8
MutualA m 26.27 -.22 +5.0
NewEconA m 26.41 -.23 +4.3
NewPerspA m29.22 -.33 +2.1
NwWrldA m 54.55 -.63 -0.1
SmCpWldA m39.27 -.46 +1.1
TaxEBdAmA m12.13 ... +4.9
USGovSecA m14.15 -.01 +2.8
WAMutInvA m28.76 -.24 +6.9
Artio Global
IntlEqI 29.89 -.49 -0.8
IntlEqIII 12.39 -.22 -0.6
Artisan
Intl d 22.42 -.29 +3.3
IntlVal d 27.21 -.58 +0.4
MdCpVal 21.48 -.25 +7.0
MidCap 36.37 -.45 +8.1
Baron
Asset b 58.80 -.84 +6.4
Growth b 55.46 -.88 +8.3
SmCap b 26.27 -.33 +10.5
Bernstein
DiversMui 14.51 ... +3.5
IntDur 13.98 -.02 +4.0
TxMIntl 15.12 -.29 -3.9
BlackRock
EqDivA m 18.42 -.15 +5.5
EqDivI 18.47 -.15 +5.7
GlobAlcA m 20.02 -.11 +3.1
GlobAlcC m 18.63 -.10 +2.7
GlobAlcI d 20.14 -.11 +3.3
CGM
Focus 32.18 -.10 -7.5
Mutual 27.78 -.03 -5.7
Realty 29.30 -.22 +9.6
Calamos
GrowA m 56.17 -.40 +5.2
Cohen & Steers
Realty 64.93 -.55 +11.9
Columbia
AcornA m 30.46 -.44 +5.3
AcornIntZ 40.29 -.54 +0.9
AcornZ 31.44 -.45 +5.5
DivBondA m 5.08 ... +3.3
DivrEqInA m 10.27 -.11 +2.4
StLgCpGrZ 13.94 -.11 +12.2
TaxEA m 13.21 ... +6.2
ValRestrZ 51.05 -.55 +1.6
DFA
1YrFixInI 10.36 ... +0.6
2YrGlbFII 10.22 ... +0.7
5YrGlbFII 11.31 +.01 +4.0
EmMkCrEqI 21.71 -.27 -1.5
EmMktValI 34.53 -.48 -4.1
IntSmCapI 17.08 -.29 +0.4
USCorEq1I 11.48 -.13 +4.9
USCorEq2I 11.40 -.14 +4.4
USLgCo 10.30 -.09 +4.9
USLgValI 20.90 -.27 +4.5
USMicroI 14.42 -.21 +4.9
USSmValI 26.48 -.43 +3.7
USSmallI 22.59 -.34 +6.0
DWS-Scudder
EnhEMFIS d 10.55 -.03 -0.7
HlthCareS d 27.52 -.23 +13.0
LAEqS d 47.87 -.51 -9.9
Davis
NYVentA m 34.55 -.36 +0.6
NYVentC m 33.28 -.35 +0.2
NYVentY 34.96 -.36 +0.8
Delaware Invest
DiverIncA m 9.41 ... +4.6
Dimensional Investme
IntCorEqI 11.11 -.19 +0.3
IntlSCoI 17.20 -.26 +1.3
IntlValuI 17.88 -.34 -0.8
Dodge & Cox
Bal 71.52 -.62 +3.0
Income 13.45 -.01 +3.8
IntlStk 35.10 -.59 -1.7
Stock 109.58 -1.28 +2.5
Dreyfus
Apprecia 41.10 -.23 +7.6
EmgLead ... ... -0.4
TechGrA f 33.08 -.37 +1.8
Driehaus
ActiveInc 11.07 -.02 +1.6
Eaton Vance
HiIncOppA m 4.44 -.01 +5.6
HiIncOppB m 4.44 -.01 +4.9
LrgCpValA m 18.27 -.16 +0.8
NatlMuniA m 9.15 +.01 +6.0
NatlMuniB m 9.15 +.01 +5.6
PAMuniA m 8.85 +.01 +6.2
FMI
LgCap 16.34 -.19 +4.7
FPA
Cres d 27.47 -.19 +3.5
NewInc m 10.81 ... +1.8
Fairholme Funds
Fairhome d 30.69 -.45 -13.7
Federated
KaufmanR m 5.52 -.06 +0.4
Fidelity
AstMgr20 13.03 -.04 +2.8
AstMgr50 15.73 -.11 +2.9
Bal 18.80 -.11 +4.0
BlChGrow 48.32 -.31 +6.5
Canada d 60.58 -.36 +4.2
CapApr 26.32 -.23 +3.9
CapInc d 9.59 -.04 +4.9
Contra 71.18 -.36 +5.2
DiscEq 23.41 -.23 +3.9
DivGrow 29.06 -.32 +2.2
DivrIntl d 30.24 -.44 +0.3
EmgMkt d 26.12 -.24 -0.9
EqInc 44.66 -.50 +1.7
EqInc II 18.46 -.20 +1.9
ExpMulNat d 22.44 -.19 +2.9
FF2015 11.71 -.06 +3.6
FF2035 11.81 -.10 +3.4
FF2040 8.25 -.07 +3.4
Fidelity 34.02 -.24 +5.9
FltRtHiIn d 9.82 ... +1.8
Free2010 14.02 -.07 +3.6
Free2020 14.24 -.09 +3.7
Free2025 11.88 -.09 +3.5
Free2030 14.19 -.11 +3.5
GNMA 11.72 -.02 +4.1
GovtInc 10.63 -.01 +3.1
GrowCo 92.03 -.65 +10.7
GrowInc 18.70 -.19 +2.9
HiInc d 9.07 -.01 +4.8
Indepndnc 25.60 -.23 +5.1
IntBond 10.78 -.01 +3.9
IntMuniInc d 10.20 ... +3.8
IntlDisc d 32.82 -.50 -0.7
InvGrdBd 7.57 -.01 +4.2
LatinAm d 56.57 -.47 -4.2
LevCoSt d 29.08 -.47 +2.3
LowPriStk d 41.23 -.41 +7.4
Magellan 72.26 -.59 +1.0
MidCap d 28.74 -.39 +4.7
MuniInc d 12.60 ... +5.1
NewMktIn d 15.92 -.02 +4.8
OTC 59.74 -.53 +8.8
Overseas d 32.74 -.59 +0.8
Puritan 18.57 -.09 +4.6
RealInv d 28.64 -.24 +11.5
Series100Index 9.11 -.06 +4.2
ShTmBond 8.53 -.01 +1.6
SmCapStk d 19.44 -.46 -0.8
StratInc 11.30 -.02 +4.8
StratRRet d 9.90 -.02 +4.8
TotalBd 10.95 -.02 +4.1
USBdIdxInv 11.53 -.03 +3.5
Value 69.66 -.96 +1.4
Fidelity Advisor
NewInsA m 20.89 -.11 +4.8
NewInsI 21.12 -.11 +5.0
StratIncA m 12.63 -.03 +4.7
ValStratT m 26.71 -.42 +3.2
Fidelity Select
Gold d 51.46 +.77 +0.7
Pharm d 13.84 -.13 +14.5
Fidelity Spartan
500IdxAdvtg 46.23 -.37 +4.9
500IdxInv 46.23 -.37 +4.9
ExtMktIdI d 39.83 -.58 +5.7
IntlIdxIn d 35.35 -.58 +0.8
TotMktIdAg d 38.18 -.36 +5.1
TotMktIdI d 38.17 -.36 +5.1
First Eagle
GlbA m 48.45 -.32 +4.5
OverseasA m 23.54 -.14 +3.9
FrankTemp-Franklin
CA TF A m 6.89 ... +5.3
Fed TF A m 11.73 +.01 +5.9
GrowB m 44.57 -.37 +4.1
Growth A m 46.67 -.38 +4.5
HY TF A m 9.96 ... +6.4
Income A m 2.21 -.01 +5.1
Income C m 2.23 -.01 +4.7
IncomeAdv 2.19 -.01 +4.7
NY TF A m 11.47 ... +4.7
RisDv A m 35.02 -.29 +6.6
US Gov A m 6.83 ... +3.4
FrankTemp-Mutual
Beacon Z 12.65 -.13 +2.8
Discov A m 29.59 -.33 +1.4
Discov Z 29.99 -.33 +1.6
QuestZ 18.16 -.15 +2.7
Shares A m 21.15 -.23 +2.5
Shares Z 21.34 -.23 +2.6
FrankTemp-Templeton
Fgn A m 7.12 -.14 +2.0
GlBond A m 13.84 -.04 +4.5
GlBond C m 13.86 -.04 +4.1
GlBondAdv 13.80 -.04 +4.6
Growth A m 18.48 -.31 +3.9
World A m 15.23 -.22 +2.6
Franklin Templeton
FndAllA m 10.68 -.11 +3.6
GE
S&SProg 41.63 -.35 +3.5
GMO
EmgMktsVI 13.74 -.17 +1.5
IntItVlIV 21.95 -.37 +2.5
QuIII 21.36 -.13 +7.4
QuVI 21.37 -.12 +7.5
Goldman Sachs
HiYieldIs d 7.32 -.01 +4.6
MidCapVaA m36.82 -.55 +2.6
MidCpVaIs 37.16 -.55 +2.8
Harbor
Bond 12.35 -.01 +3.3
CapApInst 39.89 -.32 +8.6
IntlInstl d 61.54 -1.15 +1.6
IntlInv m 60.86 -1.14 +1.4
Hartford
CapAprA m 33.34 -.42 -3.7
CapAprI 33.39 -.42 -3.6
CpApHLSIA 42.12 -.54 -0.6
DvGrHLSIA 20.16 -.19 +3.4
TRBdHLSIA 11.28 ... +3.5
Hussman
StratGrth d 12.33 +.03 +0.3
INVESCO
CharterA m 16.93 -.12 +4.7
ComstockA m16.09 -.19 +3.0
ConstellB m 21.79 -.15 +4.1
EqIncomeA m 8.73 -.06 +2.5
GlobEqA m 11.37 -.14 +5.9
GrowIncA m 19.54 -.18 +2.2
PacGrowB m 22.02 -.21 -1.3
Ivy
AssetStrA m 26.37 -.18 +8.0
AssetStrC m 25.53 -.17 +7.6
JPMorgan
CoreBondA m11.68 ... +3.7
CoreBondSelect11.67 ... +3.8
HighYldSel d 8.22 -.01 +4.5
IntmdTFSl 11.01 ... +3.9
ShDurBndSel 11.03 ... +1.4
USLCpCrPS 21.15 -.17 +2.3
Janus
BalJ 25.94 -.17 +4.5
OverseasJ d 44.78 -.62 -11.6
PerkinsMCVJ 23.42 -.21 +3.8
TwentyJ 65.68 -.62 -0.1
John Hancock
LifAg1 b 12.65 -.14 +3.0
LifBa1 b 13.25 -.10 +3.5
LifGr1 b 13.24 -.13 +3.1
RegBankA m 13.74 -.18 -6.1
SovInvA m 16.31 -.13 +4.4
TaxFBdA m 9.78 ... +5.0
Lazard
EmgMkEqtI d 21.23 -.22 -2.5
EmgMktEqO m21.59 -.22 -2.7
Legg Mason/Western
CrPlBdIns 10.99 -.01 +4.0
MgdMuniA m 15.59 +.01 +6.0
Longleaf Partners
LongPart 30.39 -.50 +7.5
Loomis Sayles
BondI 14.81 -.03 +6.5
BondR b 14.75 -.04 +6.3
Lord Abbett
AffiliatA m 11.53 -.12 0.0
BondDebA m 7.98 -.01 +5.5
ShDurIncA m 4.60 ... +2.4
ShDurIncC m 4.63 ... +2.0
MFS
MAInvA m 19.98 -.16 +4.4
MAInvC m 19.30 -.15 +4.0
TotRetA m 14.42 -.08 +3.4
ValueA m 23.40 -.22 +3.3
ValueI 23.50 -.23 +3.4
Manning & Napier
WrldOppA 8.79 -.13 +2.1
Merger
Merger m 16.11 -.03 +2.1
Metropolitan West
TotRetBdI 10.47 -.02 +3.5
TotRtBd b 10.48 -.01 +3.4
Morgan Stanley Instl
IntlEqI d 13.98 -.26 +2.7
MdCpGrI 41.04 -.46 +9.9
Natixis
InvBndY 12.46 -.02 +5.4
StratIncA m 15.37 -.04 +6.7
StratIncC m 15.45 -.04 +6.3
Neuberger Berman
GenesisIs 50.40 -.52 +9.7
GenesisTr 52.16 -.54 +9.5
SmCpGrInv 19.93 -.25 +11.5
Northern
HYFixInc d 7.40 ... +5.4
MMIntlEq d 10.00 ... +0.6
Oakmark
EqIncI 29.08 -.18 +4.8
Intl I d 19.20 -.33 -1.1
Oakmark I d 43.24 -.50 +4.7
Old Westbury
GlbSmMdCp 15.85 -.18 +4.4
Oppenheimer
CapApA m 45.92 -.32 +5.4
CapApB m 40.38 -.27 +4.9
DevMktA m 34.82 -.31 -4.5
DevMktY 34.50 -.30 -4.4
GlobA m 62.33 -.86 +3.2
IntlBondA m 6.67 -.02 +3.8
IntlBondY 6.66 -.03 +3.8
MainStrA m 32.92 -.25 +1.6
RocMuniA m 15.53 ... +5.5
RochNtlMu m 6.89 ... +8.3
StrIncA m 4.33 -.02 +4.4
PIMCO
AllAssetI 12.46 -.05 +5.0
AllAuthIn 10.91 -.03 +5.0
ComRlRStI 9.16 -.03 +6.7
DevLocMktI 10.95 -.03 +4.3
DivIncInst 11.60 -.02 +4.6
HiYldIs 9.38 -.01 +4.9
InvGrdIns 10.71 -.03 +5.1
LowDrA m 10.49 -.01 +2.0
LowDrIs 10.49 -.01 +2.2
RealRet 11.81 -.01 +6.7
RealRtnA m 11.81 -.01 +6.5
ShtTermIs 9.89 -.01 +1.0
TotRetA m 11.02 -.02 +3.2
TotRetAdm b 11.02 -.02 +3.3
TotRetC m 11.02 -.02 +2.8
TotRetIs 11.02 -.02 +3.4
TotRetrnD b 11.02 -.02 +3.3
TotlRetnP 11.02 -.02 +3.4
Parnassus
EqIncInv 27.41 -.23 +4.8
Permanent
Portfolio 49.36 +.02 +7.7
Pioneer
PioneerA m 41.86 -.40 +2.6
Principal
L/T2020I 12.17 -.10 +4.4
SAMConGrB m13.54 -.13 +3.2
Prudential Investmen
2020FocA m 16.90 -.14 +6.4
BlendA m 18.22 -.19 +5.9
EqOppA m 14.45 -.18 +4.1
HiYieldA m 5.57 -.01 +5.2
IntlEqtyA m 6.32 -.12 +2.1
IntlValA m 20.77 -.37 +0.8
JenMidCapGrA m29.69-.26 +8.4
JennGrA m 19.57 -.16 +8.4
NaturResA m 57.58 -.32 +0.9
SmallCoA m 21.79 -.24 +7.3
UtilityA m 10.84 -.10 +7.0
ValueA m 15.19 -.17 +3.1
Putnam
GrowIncA m 13.81 ... +2.5
GrowIncB m 13.56 ... +2.0
IncomeA m 6.90 ... +5.0
VoyagerA m 22.97 -.32 -3.1
Royce
LowStkSer m 19.06 -.10 +4.4
OpportInv d 12.05 -.22 -0.2
PAMutInv d 12.33 -.14 +5.8
PremierInv d 22.02 -.21 +8.2
TotRetInv d 13.70 -.15 +4.5
ValPlSvc m 13.96 -.12 +4.0
Schwab
1000Inv d 39.00 -.35 +4.9
S&P500Sel d 20.52 -.16 +4.9
Scout
Interntl d 32.43 -.51 +0.7
Selected
American D 41.71 -.44 +0.7
Sequoia
Sequoia 143.80 -1.16 +11.2
T Rowe Price
BlChpGr 40.88 -.24 +7.2
CapApprec 21.28 -.13 +4.8
DivGrow 23.89 -.20 +5.1
DivrSmCap d 17.44 -.24 +10.2
EmMktStk d 34.78 -.37 -1.4
EqIndex d 35.19 -.29 +4.8
EqtyInc 24.06 -.25 +2.4
FinSer 13.28 -.21 -6.3
GrowStk 33.96 -.21 +5.6
HealthSci 35.94 -.41 +18.7
HiYield d 6.84 -.01 +4.9
IntlBnd d 10.32 -.03 +5.2
IntlDisc d 45.13 -.60 +2.8
IntlGrInc d 13.62 -.25 +2.3
IntlStk d 14.28 -.23 +0.4
IntlStkAd m 14.22 -.24 +0.3
LatinAm d 51.02 -.60 -10.0
MediaTele 56.12 -.51 +8.5
MidCapVa 24.51 -.27 +3.4
MidCpGr 61.50 -.64 +5.1
NewAmGro 34.78 -.35 +5.4
NewAsia d 19.68 -.11 +2.6
NewEra 53.35 -.39 +2.3
NewHoriz 37.13 -.45 +10.9
NewIncome 9.59 -.02 +3.0
OrseaStk d 8.53 -.15 +2.3
R2015 12.36 -.08 +4.0
R2025 12.51 -.11 +3.9
R2035 12.71 -.12 +3.9
Rtmt2010 15.93 -.10 +3.8
Rtmt2020 17.08 -.13 +3.9
Rtmt2030 17.96 -.16 +3.9
Rtmt2040 18.09 -.17 +3.8
ShTmBond 4.86 ... +1.5
SmCpStk 37.08 -.46 +7.7
SmCpVal d 37.74 -.49 +4.5
SpecInc 12.54 -.04 +3.7
TaxFHiYld 10.63 ... +5.2
Value 24.03 -.27 +3.0
ValueAd b 23.77 -.26 +2.9
Templeton
InFEqSeS 20.11 -.36 +0.3
Third Avenue
Value d 50.49 -.67 -2.5
Thornburg
IntlValA m 28.41 -.37 +2.0
IntlValI d 29.04 -.38 +2.2
Tweedy Browne
GlobVal d 23.79 -.32 -0.1
VALIC Co I
StockIdx 25.97 -.22 +4.7
Vanguard
500Adml 120.34 -.98 +4.9
500Inv 120.33 -.98 +4.8
AssetA 25.35 -.23 +4.3
BalIdxAdm 22.11 -.14 +4.6
BalIdxIns 22.11 -.14 +4.6
CAITAdml 11.04 ... +5.3
CapOp d 33.44 -.35 +0.6
CapOpAdml d77.28 -.80 +0.7
CapVal 10.86 -.21 -1.5
Convrt d 13.47 -.11 +2.0
DevMktIdx d 10.13 -.16 +0.7
DivGr 15.19 -.14 +6.7
EmMktIAdm d39.34 -.55 -1.3
EnergyAdm d133.56 -.71 +10.4
EnergyInv d 71.11 -.38 +10.4
ExplAdml 73.16 -1.21 +7.8
Explr 78.56 -1.29 +7.7
ExtdIdAdm 43.74 -.64 +6.0
ExtdIdIst 43.74 -.63 +6.0
ExtndIdx 43.69 -.63 +5.9
FAWeUSIns d94.22 -1.43 +0.4
GNMA 10.96 -.01 +3.9
GNMAAdml 10.96 -.01 +3.9
GlbEq 18.44 -.27 +3.2
GrowthEq 11.53 -.08 +6.9
GrowthIdx 33.23 -.25 +5.7
GrthIdAdm 33.23 -.25 +5.8
GrthIstId 33.23 -.25 +5.8
HYCor d 5.80 -.01 +5.8
HYCorAdml d 5.80 -.01 +5.8
HltCrAdml d 58.44 -.45 +14.0
HlthCare d 138.47 -1.06 +14.0
ITBondAdm 11.53 -.01 +5.5
ITGradeAd 10.06 -.01 +4.9
ITIGrade 10.06 -.01 +4.9
ITrsyAdml 11.70 ... +4.7
InfPrtAdm 26.85 +.02 +7.3
InfPrtI 10.94 +.01 +7.4
InflaPro 13.67 +.01 +7.3
InstIdxI 119.53 -.97 +4.9
InstPlus 119.53 -.98 +4.9
InstTStPl 29.77 -.29 +5.2
IntlExpIn d 16.36 -.28 -1.9
IntlGr d 19.58 -.32 +1.2
IntlGrAdm d 62.34 -1.01 +1.3
IntlStkIdxAdm d26.44 -.39 +0.3
IntlStkIdxI d 105.78 -1.59 +0.3
IntlVal d 31.73 -.58 -1.3
LTGradeAd 9.51 -.08 +5.0
LTInvGr 9.51 -.08 +5.0
LifeCon 16.74 -.09 +3.3
LifeGro 22.71 -.22 +3.6
LifeMod 20.12 -.15 +3.7
MidCapGr 20.53 -.26 +8.1
MidCp 21.52 -.28 +6.0
MidCpAdml 97.75 -1.26 +6.1
MidCpIst 21.59 -.28 +6.1
MidCpSgl 30.85 -.40 +6.1
Morg 19.08 -.15 +5.8
MuHYAdml 10.37 ... +5.4
MuInt 13.62 ... +4.8
MuIntAdml 13.62 ... +4.8
MuLTAdml 10.97 ... +5.3
MuLtdAdml 11.10 ... +2.2
MuShtAdml 15.92 ... +1.1
PrecMtls d 26.37 +.02 -1.2
Prmcp d 68.09 -.69 +3.5
PrmcpAdml d 70.68 -.72 +3.5
PrmcpCorI d 14.32 -.14 +4.0
REITIdx d 20.22 -.16 +11.7
REITIdxAd d 86.31 -.67 +11.8
STBond 10.66 ... +2.2
STBondAdm 10.66 ... +2.2
STBondSgl 10.66 ... +2.2
STCor 10.78 ... +2.0
STGradeAd 10.78 ... +2.1
STsryAdml 10.80 ... +1.6
SelValu d 19.59 -.18 +4.4
SmCapIdx 36.84 -.55 +6.0
SmCpIdAdm 36.89 -.56 +6.1
SmCpIdIst 36.89 -.56 +6.1
SmGthIdx 23.82 -.36 +8.7
SmGthIst 23.88 -.36 +8.8
SmValIdx 16.53 -.25 +3.3
Star 19.57 -.17 +3.5
StratgcEq 20.12 -.26 +9.8
TgtRe2010 23.23 -.13 +4.1
TgtRe2015 12.90 -.08 +3.9
TgtRe2020 22.93 -.17 +3.8
TgtRe2030 22.50 -.20 +3.8
TgtRe2035 13.58 -.13 +3.7
TgtRe2040 22.29 -.23 +3.7
TgtRe2045 14.00 -.14 +3.7
TgtRetInc 11.61 -.04 +4.2
Tgtet2025 13.09 -.11 +3.7
TotBdAdml 10.77 -.01 +3.5
TotBdInst 10.77 -.01 +3.5
TotBdMkInv 10.77 -.01 +3.4
TotBdMkSig 10.77 -.01 +3.5
TotIntl d 15.80 -.24 +0.3
TotStIAdm 32.91 -.32 +5.1
TotStIIns 32.92 -.31 +5.2
TotStISig 31.77 -.30 +5.1
TotStIdx 32.91 -.31 +5.1
TxMCapAdm 65.83 -.59 +5.2
TxMIntlAdm d 11.65 -.20 +0.6
TxMSCAdm 28.93 -.40 +6.5
USValue 10.74 -.10 +6.3
ValIdxIns 21.42 -.21 +4.2
WellsI 22.41 -.12 +5.1
WellsIAdm 54.30 -.29 +5.2
Welltn 31.87 -.23 +3.9
WelltnAdm 55.04 -.41 +3.9
WndsIIAdm 47.16 -.43 +4.6
Wndsr 13.51 -.18 +0.7
WndsrAdml 45.60 -.58 +0.7
WndsrII 26.57 -.24 +4.6
Yacktman
Yacktman d 17.54 -.20 +6.0
YTD
Name NAV Chg %Rtn
YTD
Name NAV Chg %Rtn
YTD
Name NAV Chg %Rtn
YTD
Name NAV Chg %Rtn
YTD
Name NAV Chg %Rtn
YTD
Name NAV Chg %Rtn
52-WEEK YTD
HIGH LOW NAME TKR DIV LAST CHG %CHG
52-WEEK YTD
HIGH LOW NAME TKR DIV LAST CHG %CHG
Combined Stocks
ABB Ltd 24.74 -.78 +10.2
AEP Ind 27.91 -1.11 +7.6
AES Corp 12.29 -.25 +.9
AFLAC 44.33 -1.02 -21.4
AGL Res 40.79 -.58 +13.8
AK Steel 15.24 -.31 -6.9
AMR 4.91 -.10 -37.0
ASM Intl 29.89 -1.19 -14.6
ASML Hld 34.21 -.11 -10.8
AT&T Inc 30.12 -.19 +2.5
AbtLab 52.54 -.50 +9.7
AcadiaRlt 21.21 -.02 +16.3
Accenture 59.98 -.72 +23.7
ActionSemi 2.04 -.08 -5.1
ActivsBliz 11.70 -.21 -5.9
AdamsEx 11.01 -.08 +2.5
AdobeSy 28.77 -.52 -6.5
AdvBattery 1.18 +.09 -69.4
AMD 6.18 -.25 -24.4
Aetna 42.95 -.41 +40.8
AgFeed 1.60 +.13 -45.6
Agilent 45.46 -1.62 +9.7
AkamaiT 29.06 -.79 -38.2
AlcatelLuc 4.85 -.24 +63.9
Alcoa 15.17 -.31 -1.4
AlignTech 23.04 -.43 +17.9
AllegTch 64.47 -1.83 +16.8
Allergan 82.52 -.85 +20.2
AlliBInco 7.88 +.03 -.6
AlliantEgy 40.12 -.68 +9.1
AllscriptH 18.45 -.22 -4.3
Allstate 28.01 -1.46 -12.1
AlphaNRs 45.32 -.23 -24.5
AlteraCp lf 42.55 -.12 +19.6
Altria 26.60 -.09 +8.0
Amarin 13.99 +.36 +70.6
Amazon 211.53 -1.34 +17.5
Ameren 28.36 -.45 +.6
AMovilL s 25.97 -.14 -9.4
AMovilA s 25.85 -.26 -9.6
ACapAgy 29.01 -.26 +.9
AmCapLtd 9.70 -.11 +28.3
AEagleOut 13.57 -.11 -7.2
AEP 37.11 -.37 +3.1
AmExp 51.33 -.48 +19.6
AmIntlGrp 27.65 -.58 -42.7
AmOriBio 1.09 -.06 -54.6
AmSupr 7.22 -.48 -74.7
AmWtrWks 29.14 -.39 +15.2
Ameriprise 53.15 -.90 -7.6
Ametek s 43.19 -.75 +10.0
Amgen 54.66 -.39 -.4
Amylin 12.59 -.24 -14.4
Anadarko 79.23 -.96 +4.0
AnalogDev 35.46 -.31 -5.9
AnglogldA 45.24 +1.38 -8.1
ABInBev 55.40 -.74 -3.0
Ann Inc 27.08 +.43 -1.1
Annaly 17.79 -.17 -.7
ApolloInv 9.55 -.38 -13.7
Apple Inc 373.80 +8.88 +15.9
ApldMatl 12.30 -.15 -12.5
Arbitron 39.58 -.83 -4.7
ArcelorMit 31.29 -.91 -17.9
ArchCoal 26.36 -.14 -24.8
AresCap 15.16 -.47 -8.0
AriadP 12.59 +.01+146.9
ArmHld 27.72 +.16 +33.6
ArmourRsd 7.34 -.06 -6.0
ArrowEl 35.65 -1.32 +4.1
AssuredG 14.85 -1.26 -16.1
AstraZen 48.73 -1.07 +5.5
Atmel 12.56 -.34 +1.9
ATMOS 33.26 -.61 +6.6
Autodesk 35.33 -.82 -7.5
AutoData 52.34 -.77 +13.1
AveryD 37.81 -.60 -10.7
Avnet 28.78 -.97 -12.9
Avon 27.90 -.21 -4.0
BB&T Cp 24.98 -.34 -5.0
BHP BillLt 89.65 -1.43 -3.5
BJs Whls 50.26 -.08 +4.9
BP PLC 44.31 -.02 +.3
BP Pru 113.80 -.67 -10.1
BPZ Res 3.98 +.18 -16.4
Baidu 148.13 +1.20 +53.5
BakrHu 77.00 +1.51 +34.7
BallardPw 1.47 -.03 -2.0
BallyTech 39.74 -.79 -5.8
BcBilVArg 9.95 -.25 -2.2
BcoBrades 17.95 -.54 -11.5
BcoSantSA 10.08 -.20 -5.4
BcoSBrasil 9.66 -.43 -29.0
BkHawaii 44.92 -.45 -4.9
BkIrelnd 1.08 -.16 -59.2
BkAtl A h .87 -.04 -24.3
Barclay 13.48 -1.03 -18.4
Bar iPVix rs 23.64 +.48 -37.1
BarnesNob 17.23 -.06 +21.8
BarrickG 49.03 +.72 -7.8
Baxter 60.31 -.49 +19.1
BedBath 59.17 +.51 +20.4
BerkHa A 112650 -400 -6.5
BerkH B 75.11 -.25 -6.2
BestBuy 28.96 -.65 -15.5
BigLots 33.73 -.06 +10.7
BioRadA 116.98 -1.39 +12.6
Blackstone 15.39 -.51 +8.8
BlockHR 15.14 -.23 +27.1
Boeing 69.55 -1.73 +6.6
BostonSci 6.92 -.09 -8.6
BrigExp 31.92 -.49 +17.2
BrMySq 28.66 -.31 +8.2
Broadcom 32.65 -.62 -25.0
BrcdeCm 6.22 -.09 +17.6
Buckeye 64.59 -.14 -3.4
Buenavent 41.37 +1.05 -15.5
CA Inc 21.81 -.17 -10.8
CB REllis 23.07 -.22 +12.6
CBS B 27.37 -.28 +43.7
CH Engy 52.75 -.75 +7.9
CMS Eng 19.44 -.26 +4.5
CNO Fincl 7.18 -.27 +5.9
CSS Inds 20.18 -.70 -2.1
CSX s 25.19 -.13 +17.0
CblvsNY s 25.64 -.27 +8.3
CalaStrTR 9.41 -.06 +1.6
CampSp 33.57 -.35 -3.4
CapOne 48.35 -.15 +13.6
CapitlSrce 5.77 -.13 -18.7
CapsteadM 13.27 +.11 +5.4
Carnival 34.73 -.46 -24.7
Caterpillar 107.80 -1.10 +15.1
CedarF 20.05 -.66 +32.3
CelSci .49 -.01 -40.3
Celgene 59.14 -1.53 0.0
Cemex 7.73 -.10 -24.9
CenterPnt 19.40 +.01 +23.4
CentEuro 10.10 -.55 -55.9
CFCda g 23.98 +.52 +15.7
CVtPS 35.10 -.02 +60.6
CntryLink 37.83 -.59 -18.1
ChkPoint 61.17 +4.59 +32.2
Checkpnt 17.10 +.03 -16.8
Cheesecake32.70 +.01 +6.7
CheniereEn 9.57 -.40 +73.4
ChesEng 32.89 -.07 +26.9
Chevron 106.23 +.04 +16.4
Chicos 15.45 -.07 +28.4
Chimera 3.18 -.07 -22.6
ChurchD s 42.18 -.41 +22.2
CIBER 5.34 -.32 +14.1
CienaCorp 15.61 -.66 -25.8
Cisco 15.44 -.16 -23.7
Citigrp rs 37.74 -.64 -20.2
CleanDsl rs 6.55 +.48 -31.0
Clearwire 3.09 -.17 -40.0
CliffsNRs 97.77 -.23 +25.3
Clorox 73.04 -1.51 +15.4
CocaCE 27.93 -.24 +11.6
Coeur 28.29 +.21 +3.6
ColgPal 87.99 -1.02 +9.5
Comc spcl 23.19 -.17 +12.0
Comerica 32.31 -.28 -23.5
CmtyHlt 25.07 -.42 -32.9
Compuwre 9.33 -.12 -20.1
ConAgra 26.23 -.14 +16.2
ConnWtrSv 25.60 -.04 -8.2
ConocPhil 75.44 -.98 +10.8
ConsolEngy53.54 +1.20 +9.8
ConEd 52.53 -.72 +6.0
ConsolWtr 8.96 -.15 -2.3
CooperTire 18.36 -.84 -22.1
CornPdts 55.29 -.83 +20.2
Corning 16.50 -.24 -14.6
Covidien 51.57 -.57 +12.9
CSVS2xVxS21.98 +.97 -66.0
CSVelIVSt s16.07 -.40 +34.4
CredSuiss 35.29 -1.57 -12.7
Cree Inc 30.23 -.88 -54.1
CrownHold 36.67 -1.40 +9.9
Ctrip.com 43.61 -.45 +7.8
Cummins 103.50 -1.18 -5.9
CurEuro 140.59 -.36 +5.6
CybrOpt 9.28 -.02 +8.7
CypSemi 20.48 -.50 +10.2
CypSharp 12.67 -.30 -1.9
DCT Indl 5.24 -.11 -1.3
DNP Selct 10.00 -.05 +9.4
DR Horton 11.29 -.19 -5.4
DTE 49.79 -.54 +9.9
Danaher 52.48 -.14 +11.3
Darden 52.52 -.08 +13.1
DeanFds 11.21 -.36 +26.8
Deere 79.80 -1.89 -3.9
Dell Inc 16.79 -.18 +23.9
DeltaAir 8.06 -.35 -36.0
DenburyR 19.20 -.31 +.6
DeutschBk 50.78 -1.73 -2.4
DevelDiv 14.36 -.18 +1.9
DevonE 79.97 -.49 +1.9
Diageo 79.54 -1.04 +7.0
Diebold 30.86 -.43 -3.7
DirecTV A 51.68 -.48 +29.4
DrSCBr rs 35.63 +1.59 -23.9
DirFnBr rs 49.71 +1.93 +5.2
DirLCBr rs 35.47 +.96 -19.1
DrxEMBull 34.35 -1.28 -16.8
DirEMBear 18.87 +.63 -7.0
DrxFnBull 22.63 -.95 -18.7
DirxSCBull 78.20 -3.82 +8.0
DirxEnBull 77.35 -1.15 +32.3
Discover 25.80 +.37 +39.2
DishNetwk 30.67 -.10 +56.0
Disney 38.75 -.52 +3.3
DomRescs 48.00 -.46 +12.4
Dover 65.67 -.30 +12.4
DowChm 34.27 -.68 +.4
DrPepSnap 39.77 -1.06 +13.1
DryShips 3.96 -.08 -27.9
DuPont 53.47 -.62 +7.2
DukeEngy 18.63 -.22 +4.6
Dycom 17.03 -.21 +15.5
Dynegy 5.99 -.16 +6.6
ECDang n 11.05 -.79 -59.2
E-Trade 12.48 -.43 -22.0
eBay 32.70 -.12 +17.5
EMC Cp 26.64 -.17 +16.3
ENI 42.75 -.93 -2.3
EOG Res 101.52 +.33 +11.1
EQT Corp 59.06 +1.56 +31.7
Eastgrp 43.36 -.56 +2.5
EKodak 2.52 -.22 -53.0
ElPasoCp 20.12 -.01 +46.2
Elan 12.34 +.27+115.4
EldorGld g 18.43 +.55 -.8
ElectArts 23.61 +.01 +44.1
EmersonEl 54.86 -.51 -4.0
EnbrEPt s 29.55 -.16 -5.3
EnCana g 30.60 -.23 +5.1
EndvSilv g 10.83 +.25 +47.5
Ener1 .90 +.11 -76.3
Energen 59.15 -.40 +22.6
Energizer 78.60 +.20 +7.8
EngyConv 1.13 +.04 -75.4
EngyTsfr 47.99 -.33 -7.4
Entergy 67.22 -.12 -5.1
EntPrPt 42.88 -.13 +3.1
EntropCom 7.51 -1.05 -37.8
EnzoBio 4.08 -.20 -22.7
EricsnTel 13.59 -.25 +17.9
ExcoRes 16.21 -.21 -16.5
Exelon 43.11 -.26 +3.5
Expedia 29.75 -.51 +18.6
ExpScripts 51.72 -.25 -4.3
ExxonMbl 82.65 -.35 +13.0
Fastenal s 33.62 -.68 +12.2
FedExCp 90.46 -1.74 -2.7
FifthThird 11.99 -.06 -18.3
Finisar 16.98 -.19 -42.8
FstHorizon 9.35 -.25 -20.6
FMajSilv g 24.47 +1.90 +68.5
FstNiagara 12.89 -.22 -7.8
FirstEngy 42.88 -.40 +15.8
FlagstBcp 1.16 -.05 -28.8
Flextrn 6.15 +.01 -21.7
Fonar 2.04 +.08 +56.6
FootLockr 23.11 -.15 +17.8
FordM 12.90 -.19 -23.2
FordM wt 4.43 -.14 -45.6
ForestLab 37.95 -.51 +18.7
ForestOil 24.69 -.24 -35.0
FortuneBr 62.45 -.47 +3.7
FMCG s 55.05 -.29 -8.3
FDelMnt 26.31 -.84 +5.5
FrontierCm 7.58 -.13 -22.1
FuelCell 1.26 -.04 -45.5
FultonFncl 10.40 -.04 +.6
GT Solar 14.60 -.54 +60.1
GabDvInc 16.29 -.11 +6.1
GabelliET 5.96 -.10 +5.1
GameStop 23.42 -.17 +2.4
Gannett 13.01 -.47 -13.8
Gap 18.84 -.07 -14.5
GenElec 18.29 -.12 0.0
GenMills 37.40 -.35 +5.1
GenMot n 29.10 -.66 -21.1
GenOn En 3.98 -.12 +4.5
Gentex 29.68 -.84 +.4
Genworth 9.06 -.75 -31.1
Gerdau 9.23 -.26 -34.0
GileadSci 40.81 -.19 +12.6
GlaxoSKln 42.93 -.35 +9.5
GlimchRt 9.62 -.23 +14.5
GluMobile 5.78 -.05+179.2
GoldFLtd 15.57 +.12 -14.1
Goldcrp g 55.04 +.91 +19.7
GoldStr g 2.91 -.07 -36.6
GoldmanS129.33 -.83 -23.1
Goodyear 17.29 -.55 +45.9
Google 594.94 -2.68 +.2
Gramrcy lf 2.81 -.19 +21.6
GrtBasG g 2.24 +.06 -24.3
GtPanSilv g 3.96 +.03 +40.9
Greif A 63.37 -1.43 +2.4
GrifolsSA n 7.78 +.09 +1.7
GpoTMM 1.68 -.10 -32.7
Guess 39.26 -.27 -17.0
GulfportE 33.95 +1.95 +56.6
HSBC 47.66 -.77 -6.6
Hallibrtn 53.12 +.04 +30.1
HanJS 15.14 -.06 +.3
HarleyD 41.41 -.43 +19.4
HarrisCorp 41.83 -.69 -7.7
Harsco 30.76 -1.45 +8.6
HartfdFn 23.47 -.91 -11.4
Hasbro 39.40 -1.97 -16.5
HawaiiEl 23.82 -.29 +4.5
HeclaM 8.45 +.26 -25.0
HercOffsh 4.89 -.12 +40.5
Hertz 14.78 -.10 +2.0
Hess 72.49 -.44 -5.3
HewlettP 35.02 -.07 -16.8
HomeDp 35.69 -.22 +1.8
HonwllIntl 56.57 -.68 +6.4
Hospira 52.71 -.75 -5.4
HostHotls 16.49 -.31 -7.7
HudsCity 8.02 -.23 -37.0
HumGen 23.08 -.12 -3.4
HuntBnk 6.09 -.05 -11.4
Hydrognc 6.21 -.15 +65.2
IAMGld g 21.45 +.29 +20.5
ING 10.07 -.66 +2.9
INGPrRTr 6.06 -.05 +6.5
iShGold 15.69 +.13 +12.9
iSAstla 24.60 -.25 -3.3
iShBraz 68.79 -.81 -11.1
iSCan 31.60 -.36 +1.9
iShGer 25.30 -.39 +5.7
iSh HK 18.00 -.09 -4.9
iShJapn 10.53 -.13 -3.5
iSh Kor 64.50 -1.12 +5.4
iSMalas 14.85 -.37 +3.3
iSPacxJpn 45.37 -.54 -3.4
iSTaiwn 14.70 -.18 -5.9
iSh UK 17.29 -.21 -.5
iShSilver 39.47 +1.23 +30.8
iShChina25 41.21 -.12 -4.4
iShEMkts 46.12 -.54 -3.2
iShB20 T 95.24 -.93 +1.2
iS Eafe 57.32 -.86 -1.5
iSSPMid 96.17 -1.30 +6.0
iSR1KG 60.78 -.44 +6.1
iShR2K 81.48 -1.33 +4.1
iShREst 60.64 -.55 +8.4
ITT Corp 55.25 -1.15 +6.0
Immucor 26.83 -.04 +35.3
Informat 53.70 +.17 +22.0
IngerRd 43.54 -1.21 -7.5
InglesMkts 16.63 -.13 -13.4
Intel 22.28 -.09 +5.9
IBM 175.28 -.26 +19.4
IntlGame 17.74 -.27 +.3
IntPap 29.30 -.57 +7.6
Interpublic 11.86 -.26 +11.7
Intersil 11.83 -.35 -22.5
Intuit 48.40 -.96 -1.8
Invesco 21.43 -.76 -10.9
ItauUnibH 20.10 -.36 -15.9
JAlexandr 6.40 -.11 +21.9
J&J Snack 50.12 -.83 +3.9
JA Solar 4.45 -.14 -35.7
JDS Uniph 14.38 -.54 -.7
JPMorgCh 39.83 -.15 -6.1
Jabil 19.29 -.50 -4.0
JanusCap 8.66 -.22 -33.2
JpnSmCap 8.35 -.14 -6.9
JetBlue 5.42 -.19 -18.0
JohnJn 67.09 -.36 +8.5
JohnsnCtl 40.59 -.26 +6.3
JnprNtwk 30.03 -.60 -18.7
KB Home 9.23 -.12 -31.6
Kaydon 37.05 -.11 -9.0
Kellogg 54.97 -.27 +7.6
Keycorp 7.73 -.20 -12.7
Kimco 19.19 -.16 +6.4
KindME 73.19 +.14 +4.2
Kinross g 17.66 +.26 -6.9
KodiakO g 6.13 -.45 -7.1
Kohls 55.11 -.64 +1.4
KrispKrm 9.17 -.13 +31.4
Kroger 25.41 -.07 +13.6
Kulicke 9.30 -.30 +29.2
LDK Solar 6.32 -.20 -37.5
LSI Corp 6.53 -.16 +9.0
LamResrch 41.41 -.65 -20.0
LancastrC 62.07 -.88 +8.5
LVSands 44.17 -.83 -3.9
LennarA 17.37 -.37 -7.4
LeucNatl 32.91 -1.06 +12.8
Level3 2.26 -.09+130.6
LibtyMIntA 16.44 -.71 +4.2
LillyEli 38.05 -.28 +8.6
Limited 39.58 -.26 +28.8
LincNat 26.70 -.46 -4.0
LinearTch 30.07 -.41 -13.1
LizClaib 5.38 +.24 -24.9
LloydBkg 2.62 -.21 -36.3
LockhdM 77.44 -.93 +10.8
LaPac 7.99 -.11 -15.5
Lowes 22.50 -.22 -10.3
LyonBas A 36.84 -1.25 +7.1
MBIA 9.80 -.40 -18.3
MEMC 7.41 -.21 -34.2
MF Global 7.29 -.05 -12.8
MFA Fncl 7.70 -.09 -5.6
MMT 6.85 -.05 -.7
MGIC 4.62 -1.38 -54.7
MGM Rsts 14.79 -.14 -.4
Macys 29.69 -.29 +17.4
MagHRes 7.50 +.21 +4.2
Manulife g 16.25 -.52 -5.4
MarathnO s 31.40 -.28 +39.7
MarathP n 39.12 -.04 +.3
MktVGold 60.58 +.86 -1.4
MktVRus 37.92 -.74 0.0
MktVJrGld 39.07 +1.03 -2.1
MarIntA 34.24 -.70 -17.6
MarshM 29.47 -.40 +7.8
MarvellT 14.63 -.24 -21.1
Masco 11.32 -.05 -10.6
MassMCp s16.51 -.01 +8.0
Mattel 26.87 -.42 +5.7
MaximIntg 23.01 -.49 -2.6
McClatchy 2.46 -.17 -47.3
McCorm 49.02 -.21 +5.4
McDrmInt s 19.85 -.20 -4.1
McDnlds 85.40 -.08 +11.3
Name Last Chg %YTD Name Last Chg %YTD Name Last Chg %YTD Name Last Chg %YTD Name Last Chg %YTD Name Last Chg %YTD
The boutique investment bank post-
ed a 22 percent rise in second quar-
ter profit as financial advisory reve-
nue increased.
The womens clothing seller is re-
portedly in talks to sell its overseas
Mexx stores to private equity firms.
The president of the insurers strug-
gling home and auto insurance unit
is leaving the company immediately,
with no explanation
Europe's banking troubles and an impasse over
lifting the U.S. government's borrowing limit
helped drag stock prices sharply lower Monday.
The fears also sent gold prices to a record high
market price. Eight European banks failed tests
to measure how well they would hold up under
additional financial strain. The S&P 500 index
fell 0.8 percent. The Dow Jones industrial aver-
age fell 0.8 percent. The Nasdaq composite in-
dex fell 1.2 percent.
25
30
$35
A J M J
Allstate ALL
Close: $28.01 -1.46 or -5.0%
$26.86 $34.40
Vol.:
Mkt. Cap:
13.1m (3.0x avg.)
$14.65 b
52-week range
PE:
Yield:
11.4
3.0%
4
5
6
$7
A J M J
Liz Claiborne LIZ
Close: $5.38 0.24 or 4.7%
$4.07 $7.90
Vol.:
Mkt. Cap:
5.3m (2.0x avg.)
$508.9 m
52-week range
PE:
Yield:
...
...
40
50
60
$70
A J M J
Greenhill GHL
Close: $46.50 unchanged or 0%
$45.47 $84.51
Vol.:
Mkt. Cap:
2.1m (4.8x avg.)
$1.38 b
52-week range
PE:
Yield:
44.3
3.9%
Story Stocks
Stocks of Local Interest
98.01 68.54 AirProd APD 2.32 92.92 -1.37 +2.2
30.70 20.82 AmWtrWks AWK .92 29.14 -.39 +15.2
51.50 41.60 Amerigas APU 2.96 43.98 -.61 -9.9
23.79 18.50 AquaAm WTR .62 21.79 -.36 -3.1
38.02 26.50 ArchDan ADM .64 29.63 -.67 -1.5
302.00 201.90 AutoZone AZO ... 295.36 -1.92 +8.4
15.31 9.88 BkofAm BAC .04 9.72 -.28 -27.1
32.50 23.78 BkNYMel BK .52 24.64 -.46 -18.4
17.49 6.08 BonTon BONT .20 9.59 -.32 -24.2
52.77 30.06 CIGNA CI .04 51.61 -.05 +40.8
39.50 26.84 CVS Care CVS .50 36.74 -.08 +5.7
68.89 51.92 CocaCola KO 1.88 67.12 -.41 +2.1
27.16 16.76 Comcast CMCSA .45 23.94 -.20 +9.4
28.95 21.76 CmtyBkSy CBU .96 24.30 -.40 -12.5
42.50 22.33 CmtyHlt CYH ... 25.07 -.42 -32.9
38.39 25.61 CoreMark CORE ... 36.92 -.20 +3.7
13.63 4.97 Entercom ETM ... 8.03 -.22 -30.7
21.02 7.71 FairchldS FCS ... 16.25 -.25 +4.1
9.84 7.25 FrontierCm FTR .75 7.58 -.13 -22.1
18.71 13.09 Genpact G .18 17.38 -.27 +14.3
13.74 7.59 HarteHnk HHS .32 8.26 -.30 -35.3
55.00 44.35 Heinz HNZ 1.92 53.13 -.31 +7.4
58.20 45.31 Hershey HSY 1.38 56.37 -.43 +19.6
36.02 28.56 Kraft KFT 1.16 35.18 -.19 +11.6
27.45 19.35 Lowes LOW .56 22.50 -.22 -10.3
95.00 72.03 M&T Bk MTB 2.80 84.85 -.71 -2.5
86.46 68.59 McDnlds MCD 2.44 85.40 -.08 +11.3
24.98 19.27 NBT Bcp NBTB .80 22.17 -.35 -8.2
9.26 3.64 NexstarB NXST ... 7.10 -.29 +18.5
65.19 49.43 PNC PNC 1.40 55.93 -.89 -7.9
28.38 24.10 PPL Corp PPL 1.40 27.54 -.24 +4.6
17.72 11.98 PennMill PMIC ... 16.62 -.03 +25.6
17.34 10.03 PenRE PEI .60 15.47 -.46 +6.5
71.89 61.71 PepsiCo PEP 2.06 68.00 -.53 +4.1
71.75 49.20 PhilipMor PM 2.56 66.83 -.10 +14.2
67.72 59.17 ProctGam PG 2.10 64.55 -.28 +.3
67.52 48.56 Prudentl PRU 1.15 59.78 -.98 +1.8
17.11 10.24 SLM Cp SLM .40 15.93 -.12 +26.5
60.00 32.41 SLM pfB SLMpB 4.63 55.83 -.67 +27.4
43.62 22.02 SoUnCo SUG .60 43.33 -.06 +80.0
12.45 7.06 Supvalu SVU .35 8.91 -.07 -7.5
55.94 39.56 TJX TJX .76 55.08 -.18 +24.1
33.53 26.28 UGI Corp UGI 1.04 31.18 -.70 -1.3
38.95 26.41 VerizonCm VZ 1.95 36.71 -.11 +2.6
57.90 49.09 WalMart WMT 1.46 53.32 -.31 -1.1
42.20 32.99 WeisMk WMK 1.16 41.16 -.41 +2.1
34.25 23.02 WellsFargo WFC .48 26.88 -.30 -13.3
USD per British Pound 1.6048 -.0075 -.47% 1.5979 1.5307
Canadian Dollar .9595 +.0038 +.40% .9927 1.0540
USD per Euro 1.4090 -.0046 -.33% 1.3392 1.2947
Japanese Yen 79.05 -.06 -.08% 82.54 86.71
Mexican Peso 11.7442 -.0041 -.03% 12.0450 12.9312
CURRENCY CLOSE PVS. %CH. 6MO. 1YR.
Copper 4.40 4.41 -0.20 -0.51 +49.91
Gold 1602.10 1589.80 +0.77 +17.10 +35.58
Platinum 1774.40 1755.00 +1.11 -2.69 +17.56
Silver 40.33 39.06 +3.25 +39.56 +130.03
Palladium 793.35 779.40 +1.79 -1.86 +78.90
METALS CLOSE PVS. %CH. 6MO. 1YR.
Foreign Exchange & Metals
C M Y K
PAGE 10B TUESDAY, JULY 19, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
W E A T H E R
Attention
Lo.iouorro c Lu:.rr. Court Ho. Our.rs
FHA Title I is now available through approved lenders
to oualitied applicants tor home repairs up to
$
25,000
No Monev Down* No Eouitv Reouired*
Attro:.c otti:.ot:ors u:ii oo:. uori .oti.t.c
o o ouoi:t .r.u tro::c.c o:
Homeowner Resource Center
R.tio...rt V:rcous H.ot:r. Sst.
V:ri S:c:r. Roo/:r. Irsuiot:or Arc Mor..
*All applications will be numbered and processed on a frst come frst serve basis.
Sorry, No Exceptions
www.hrchelp.com
For More Information Call: 1-866-465-4620
contractor #: PA001581
For More Information Call: 1-877-917-8844
ALMANAC
REGIONAL FORECAST
NATIONAL FORECAST
For more weather
information go to:
www.timesleader.com
National Weather Service
607-729-1597
Forecasts, graphs
and data 2011
Weather Central, LP
Yesterday 89/66
Average 83/62
Record High 98 in 1953
Record Low 49 in 1956
Yesterday 13
Month to date 146
Year to date 354
Last year to date 471
Normal year to date 278
*Index of fuel consumption, how far the days
mean temperature was above 65 degrees.
Precipitation
Yesterday 0.00
Month to date 1.84
Normal month to date 2.28
Year to date 28.45
Normal year to date 20.45
Susquehanna Stage Chg. Fld. Stg
Wilkes-Barre 0.83 -0.15 22.0
Towanda 0.64 -0.07 21.0
Lehigh
Bethlehem 2.86 0.54 16.0
Delaware
Port Jervis 3.08 -0.01 18.0
Todays high/
Tonights low
TODAYS SUMMARY
Highs: 83-88. Lows: 60-63. Partly cloudy,
chance of scattered thunderstorms.
The Poconos
Highs: 84-89. Lows: 69-72. Partly cloudy,
scattered showers and thunderstorms.
The Jersey Shore
Highs: 84-88. Lows: 58-67. Becoming
mostly sunny.
The Finger Lakes
Highs: 89-91. Lows: 64-72. Partly cloudy,
chance of isolated thunderstorms.
Brandywine Valley
Highs: 84-95. Lows: 66-75. Partly to most-
ly cloudy, chance of isolated
thunderstorms.
Delmarva/Ocean City
Anchorage 64/53/.03 64/47/pc 66/51/pc
Atlanta 87/72/.00 95/73/t 94/75/t
Baltimore 94/70/.00 93/70/t 92/76/s
Boston 86/75/.00 86/67/pc 86/74/s
Buffalo 84/74/.11 85/67/pc 88/73/s
Charlotte 90/69/.00 95/73/t 96/75/t
Chicago 92/80/.01 88/76/t 94/78/pc
Cleveland 92/74/.07 84/72/pc 88/75/s
Dallas 101/82/.00 101/79/pc 101/80/pc
Denver 93/65/.00 95/64/t 91/64/t
Detroit 95/75/.59 90/74/pc 92/77/s
Honolulu 86/75/.00 89/74/s 88/74/s
Houston 92/79/.14 95/79/t 95/78/t
Indianapolis 92/75/.00 92/75/t 95/78/s
Las Vegas 104/80/.00 103/82/pc 103/81/pc
Los Angeles 74/62/.00 75/65/pc 75/63/s
Miami 93/78/.02 89/79/t 90/80/t
Milwaukee 94/74/.00 83/72/s 91/76/s
Minneapolis 98/80/.00 96/80/t 95/77/s
Myrtle Beach 86/66/.00 91/76/s 93/77/t
Nashville 92/71/.09 96/76/pc 96/76/t
New Orleans 82/75/.78 92/77/t 93/78/t
Norfolk 89/71/.00 95/75/t 95/76/s
Oklahoma City 100/79/.00 101/82/pc 105/82/s
Omaha 99/80/.00 99/79/s 99/80/s
Orlando 89/74/.00 93/74/pc 96/78/pc
Phoenix 111/90/.00 109/86/t 109/86/pc
Pittsburgh 87/69/.00 89/68/t 91/71/pc
Portland, Ore. 72/57/.01 72/58/c 71/57/c
St. Louis 96/78/.00 99/79/pc 102/84/pc
Salt Lake City 91/78/.00 93/68/t 89/69/pc
San Antonio 99/78/.00 96/77/t 96/75/pc
San Diego 74/64/.00 77/69/pc 75/67/s
San Francisco 74/57/.00 68/53/s 75/52/s
Seattle 70/50/.00 70/56/pc 67/53/sh
Tampa 92/77/.00 92/74/pc 93/78/pc
Tucson 102/77/.00 100/78/pc 101/80/pc
Washington, DC 91/73/.00 93/74/t 93/76/s
City Yesterday Today Tomorrow City Yesterday Today Tomorrow
Amsterdam 63/57/.00 66/56/sh 64/54/sh
Baghdad 109/88/.00 110/85/s 113/86/pc
Beijing 84/70/.00 85/71/t 87/70/t
Berlin 73/55/.00 75/61/pc 69/59/r
Buenos Aires 55/46/.00 54/43/sh 56/40/s
Dublin 61/54/.00 61/49/sh 61/48/pc
Frankfurt 68/55/.08 71/58/sh 68/56/sh
Hong Kong 91/79/.00 88/81/t 89/81/t
Jerusalem 91/70/.00 90/68/s 88/67/s
London 66/55/.00 70/55/sh 68/54/sh
Mexico City 75/57/.00 73/57/t 71/57/t
Montreal 82/70/.00 79/64/s 87/70/pc
Moscow 82/63/.00 85/65/pc 84/65/t
Paris 66/57/.00 66/54/sh 68/54/sh
Rio de Janeiro 77/66/.00 78/63/s 77/64/s
Riyadh 109/82/.00 114/87/s 114/86/s
Rome 81/66/.00 84/65/sh 81/63/s
San Juan 88/79/.00 90/78/t 90/79/t
Tokyo 91/81/.00 84/76/r 83/76/t
Warsaw 75/59/.04 79/64/t 78/62/t
City Yesterday Today Tomorrow City Yesterday Today Tomorrow
WORLD CITIES
River Levels, from 12 p.m. yesterday.
Key: s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sn-snow, sf-snowurries, i-ice.
Philadelphia
91/72
Reading
91/67
Scranton
Wilkes-Barre
87/61
88/62
Harrisburg
91/66
Atlantic City
87/70
New York City
89/70
Syracuse
88/62
Pottsville
89/63
Albany
85/63
Binghamton
Towanda
87/60
87/59
State College
88/62
Poughkeepsie
88/63
101/79
88/76
95/64
98/77
96/80
75/65
68/55
97/79
100/65
70/56
89/70
90/74
95/73
89/79
95/79
89/74
60/49
64/47
93/74
Sun and Moon
Sunrise Sunset
Today 5:47a 8:32p
Tomorrow 5:48a 8:32p
Moonrise Moonset
Today 10:33p 10:17a
Tomorrow 10:57p 11:16a
Last New First Full
July 23 July 30 Aug. 6 Aug. 13
This will likely be
our hottest week
of the summer
and the peak of
the heat will
arrive on
Thursday. What
lies ahead will
not be the worst
heat wave weve
ever had which
occurred in July
back in 1936.
Thats when we
had six straight
record breaking
days with tem-
peratures rang-
ing from 95 to
103 degrees.
Today, the
chance for a
stormwill be
much less than
on Monday now
that a front has
moved south of
here. Starting
tomorrow, the
heat will intensi-
fy and on
Thursday, read-
ings here in town
could reach 100.
The above aver-
age temps
should last into
next week and
by then, Ill be
more than ready
for some relief.
- Tom Clark
NATIONAL FORECAST: Scattered showers and thunderstorms will be spread throughout the eastern
United States today. Look for a chance of thunderstorms from portions of the Midwest, across the
Ohio Valley and Mid-Atlantic and down to the Gulf Coast. Some storms near the Ohio Valley have the
potential to be strong to severe.
Recorded at Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Intl Airport
Temperatures
Cooling Degree Days*
Precipitation
TODAY
Mostly sunny, hot
WEDNESDAY
Sunny,
hot
90
60
FRIDAY
Sun, a T-
storm
95
73
SATURDAY
Mostly
sunny
90
69
SUNDAY
Sun, a T-
storm
85
65
MONDAY
Partly
sunny
85
65
THURSDAY
Hotter,
humid
95
68
88

68

K
HEALTH S E C T I O N C
THE TIMES LEADER TUESDAY, JULY 19, 2011
timesleader.com
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0
6
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When The Quiz sees an article
titled Have a Brewski! Help
Your Health on the Amer-
ican Dietetic Associations
Eat Right page on the web-
site of Mens Health, no less
well, we cant help but click on
it. Take our quiz based on the
article, written not by Homer
Simpson but by a real-life
registered dietitian.
1. According to the Journal of
the American Dietetic Associ-
ation, people who drink one to
two alcoholic drinks of any
kind are less likely to suffer
from what condition?
a) Heart disease
b) Colon cancer
c) Sobriety
2. Why, says the article, is beer
good for heart health?
a) By lowering ones resting
heart rate, especially post-
exercise, thus reducing the
chances of a cardiac event.
b) By replenishing lost fluids
and electrolytes during the
summer months, when re-
search has shown many heart
attacks occur.
c) By making blood less sticky
so its less likely to clot by
increasing levels of good
HDL cholesterol while low-
ering unhealthy LDL choles-
terol.
3. What is the secret ingredient
that makes light beer lower in
calories and carbohydrate
content?
a) Folic acid
b) Ethanol
c) Caffeine
4. According to a Tufts Uni-
versity study, men who drank
one to two beers a day had
hip-bone densities how many
times greater than nondrink-
ers?
a) Slightly more than two times
b) About four times
c) 10 times
ANSWERS: 1. a; 2. c; 3. b; 4. b
From The Times Leader wire
service
NUTRITION QUIZ: Beer
Q: I was diagnosedwith
esophageal achalasia.
I didnot have anyre-
fluxissues just diffi-
cultywithfoodenter-
ingmystomach. I
havent hadanytreat-
ments inseveral years
andfoodstill hesitates at the point of
stomachentry. Is soft diet the best cure?
A: Achalasia is a coordinationproblem
withthe muscles involvedinswallowing.
Theres supposedtobe a contractionof
the lower esophageal muscles, followed
bya relaxationof the lower esophageal
sphincter as foodapproaches. If theres
damage or degenerationtothe nerves
that control all this, achalasia will result.
Symptoms of achalasia not onlyinclude
difficultywithswallowingbut alsomay
include chest painafter eating; heartburn;
cough; regurgitationof food; andweight
loss.
Althoughwe cant repair damagedor
degeneratednerves, we caninsert dilat-
ingtubes of graduallyincreasingdiameter
tostretchopenthe sphincter. There are
alsoinflatable tubes whichdothe same
thing. Success is seeninupto75percent
of folks for a periodof several years, but
theres a 3percent riskof rupturingthe
esophagus. Botox, the same drugusedto
treat facial wrinkles, has beeneffective for
one year in60percent of folks.
Surgerytocut throughsome of the
constrictingesophageal muscles is the
treatment of last resort. Moistenedsmall
mouthfuls of soft foodmayhelptoget
past a constrictedopening, but a sphinc-
ters tone maybe toostrongtoallowfood
toget through. Acidblockers shouldbe
takenafter anytreatment intervention.
Q: Couldyouplease write about the
dangers of moldinthe home?
A: Molds, whichare a fungus, will grow
anywhere indoors where theres moisture.
Molds produce allergy-provokingsub-
stances, irritants andmaycontaintoxic
substances that canmake us sick. Fatigue,
headaches, wateryeyes, irritatedlungs,
shortness of breath, asthma anda myriad
of healthconditions canbe linkedto
fungal toxins.
Stachybotrys moldis consideredtobe
the prototypical toxic mold. Youmay
have seenthis greenish-blackmoldgrow-
ingoncellulose fiberboardor sheetrockin
your dampbasement. Air conditioning
ducts andwhole-house humidification
units needtobe watchedfor moldas well.
If youve foundmoldinyour home, its
not important toidentifythe type of
mold. Treat all moldas beingpotentially
harmful. The first thingthat needs tobe
done is tofixor cleanupanyleaks, and
put a dehumidifier unit inyour home. Its
impossible toget ridof all moldandmold
spores; some spores are airborne. For
more information, heres a linktoanEPA
guide tomold: www.epa.gov/mold/
moldguide.html.
ASK DR. H
D R . M I T C H E L L H E C H T
Surgery is last
option to treat
throat disorder
Dr. Mitchell Hecht is a physician specializing
in internal medicine. Send questions to him
at: Ask Dr. H, P.O. Box 767787, Atlanta, GA
30076. Personal replies are not possible.
Elder program set
St. Lukes Villa, formally Heri-
tage House Retirement Commu-
nity, will host a Meet-n-Greet at
2 p.m. on Thursday in the main
lounge, 80 E. Northampton St.,
Wilkes-Barre.
The guest speaker is Brenda
D. Colbert, a certified elder law
attorney from the Law Firm of
Marshall, Parker, & Associates.
Colbert will discuss essential
estate planning tools, including
wills, trusts, powers of attorney
and advanced care planning. To
register, call 826-1031.
Red Cross benefit set
The American Red Cross will
benefit from an all-you-can-eat-
and-drink event from 3 to 7 p.m.
on Saturday at the Triple K
Saloon, Main Street, Edwards-
ville. There will be entertain-
ment, a Chinese auction and
prizes. Tickets are $25 per per-
son, with all proceeds bene-
fitting the Wyoming Valley
chapters local Disaster Relief
Fund.
The event was created by
Woody Meixsell, a past recipient
of Red Cross assistance. Meix-
sells home was affected by fire
nearly a year ago. For more
information or to purchases
tickets, contact Meixsell at
332-3085.
Go to bat for lung health
The American Lung Associ-
ation is participating in the
State Farm Go to Bat program.
The program, in which support-
ers play an online baseball
game, benefits nonprofit orga-
nizations based on the amount
of participants and points
scored.
Supporters are asked to visit
www.statefarm.com/gotobat,
select American Lung Associ-
ation and play the game. Partici-
pants may play three consec-
utive times per day. State Farm
will donate $18,000 to the char-
ity with the highest game bat-
ting average once a week for 10
consecutive weeks.
Also, an individual winner
who goes to bat for the winning
charity will be randomly select-
ed and receive a trip for two to
Games 3 and 4 of the 2011
World Series. A total of 10 win-
ners will be drawn throughout
the program, which will con-
clude on Sept. 26. The program
will culminate during the World
Series with a pre-game ceremo-
ny. State Farm will announce
and present a $25,000 donation
to the charity that finishes the
campaign with the highest Go
to Bat batting average.
The local chapter of the
American Lung Association asks
all supporters to add the event
information to their Facebook
pages.
IN BRIEF
Health briefs are limited to nonprofit
entities and support groups. To have
your health-oriented announcement
included, send information to Health,
Times Leader, 15 N. Main St., Wilkes-
Barre, PA18711-0250; by fax: 829-
5537; or e-mail health@timeslead-
er.com. Information must be received
at least two weeks in advance.
Parentsseekinghealthierres-
taurant meals for their kids can
start to look beyond chicken
nuggets and macaroni-and-
cheese. At least 19 restaurant
chains including Burger
King, Chilis, Outback Steak-
house, Cracker Barrel, Dennys
and Friendlys said Wednes-
day that they will include
healthier options on their chil-
drens menus. At least 15,000
restaurant locations will in-
creaseservingsof fruitsandveg-
etables, lean proteins, whole
grains and low-fat dairy. The
items will have less fats, sugars
andsodium.
Less healthy foods like burg-
ers and fries will still be on the
menu, but the restaurants say
they will do more to promote
healthier options. Chilis, for ex-
ample, will highlight a chicken
sandwich with a side of pineap-
ple or mandarin oranges on
their kids menu. Burger King
has recently reformulated chil-
drens chicken nuggets so they
include less sodium, and em-
ployees taking orders will now
ask if customers want healthier
apple fries instead of the stan-
dardfries withthat?
Theeffort is part of anewNa-
tional Restaurant Association
initiative. To be part of the pro-
gram, restaurants must include
atleastonekids menuitemthat
is 600 calories or less and meet
other nutritional requirements.
Aside dish worth less than 200
calories must also be included.
The federal government will
also soon require restaurants to
post calories ontheir menus.
Eateries will improve kids menus
By MARY CLARE JALONICK
Associated Press
The womeninside the Webster Groves,
Mo., studio looked as though they were
channeling Muhammad Ali, Mikhail Ba-
ryshnikov and any of a dozen Hollywood
starlets who have long lean torsos (think
Gwyneth Paltrow).
They stood, feet apart, abdomens
sucked in, punching the air with their
right fists. Their left hands were raised to
their left ear in a protective manner as in-
structor Kristin Dabney egged them on.
Cellphones, ladies. Keep your left
hand up near your ear, she yelled over
thumping music. Punch punch punch
punch.
The air inside The Scoop A Pilates
Studio was taking a brutal beating.
Piloxing is the latest group cardio exer-
cise craze. Its an interdisciplinary pro-
gram that combines the sculpting and
flexibilityof Pilates withthe power, speed
and agility of boxing. It also adds a
healthy dose of dance moves including
hip-hop, salsa and especially ballet, re-
quiring immense core strength, balance
and coordination.
In Pilates, all movement should begin
in what practitioners call the powerhouse
the hips, abs, lower and upper back,
buttocks and inner thighs and flow
outward to the limbs. That explains why
many of Piloxings moves have controlled
ballet-like movements that work the low-
er body.
WhenJosephPilates createdhis fitness
program in the early 20th century, he ini-
tially calledit Contrology andhis first stu-
dents were dancers who helped build on
his ideas. Coincidentally, or not, Piloxing
was created by Viveca Jensen, a Swedish
dancer and trainer to Hollywood celebri-
ties, to physically and mentally empow-
er women through fitness.
St. Louis Fitness Club on Hampton
Avenue, Main Street Gym in St. Charles
and the Jewish Community Center in
Creve Coeur and Chesterfield also offer
Piloxing classes.
During the Piloxing class at Scoop,
Dabney led the class through a routine
that went fromboxing andhip hop moves
to squatting with the knees turned out in-
toa modifiedplie, as inballet. Thepartici-
pants raised their left legs repeatedly in a
controlled manner, first out in front, then
to the side and finally to the back, until
lactic acid burned in their right thighs.
Then they switched to the other side and
did the same.
Sometimes they raninplace withchop-
py, rapid-fire foot falls while punching so
quicklythat their hands were practicallya
blur. Several women wore weighted
gloves to help further tone the arms and
maximize the cardiovascular effects.
Pilates movement fundamentals help
you find your balance and recruit your
muscles more efficiently, said Dabney.
But there was one woman at the JCC
who is a workout fanatic, and she said ev-
ery muscle in her body was sore the next
day. You recruit a whole set of muscles
you dont use in other workouts.
She compares building muscles with
Pilates and Piloxing to opening a Russian
nesting doll from the inside out you
start by working the small internal mus-
cles in the core which help with balance
and move outward to larger muscle
groups.
Andas we age, that element of balance
becomes morecritical soits prettyimpor-
tant for everybody, she said.
MCT PHOTOS
Viveca Jensen, right, the creator of Piloxing, and her instructor Sara Vorce lead a class in the Toluca Lake, Calif., studio.
Piloxing a new cardio craze
By CYNTHIA BILLHARTZ GREGORIAN
St. Louis Post-Dispatch
Kristin Dabney demonstrates piloxing,
which combines Pilates with boxing.
C M Y K
PAGE 2C TUESDAY, JULY 19, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
H E A L T H
LOOKINGFOR a holistic way
to reduce stress, cholesterol and
obesity? Get a pet. Statistics
show that 62 percent of Ameri-
can households own a pet. Ac-
cording to a national survey,
most pet owners say companion-
ship, love, company and affec-
tionaretheNo. 1benefits toown-
ing a pet.
We know that pets make good
companions and decrease loneli-
ness, but numerous studies have
shown other profound health
benefits of owning a pet:
1. Pets help recovery from
heart attacks. A National Insti-
tutes of Health study of 421
adults found that dog owners
had a better one-year survival af-
ter a heart attack, compared to
those who did not own dogs.
2. Pets help us calm down. A
study of 240 married couples
showed that pet owners had low-
er heart rates and blood pressure
as compared to those without
pets.
3. Pets help reduce stress bet-
ter than our human companions.
Pet owners had less stress and
quicker recovery from stress
when they were with their pets
as compared to when they were
with their spouse or friend.
4. Pet owners have less obesi-
ty. A study looking at 2,000
adults found that pet owners
who walked their dogs had less
rates of obesity and were more
physically active than those
without pets.
5. Pet owners have better mo-
bility in their golden years. An-
other NIHstudy looking at 2,500
adults aged 71-82 showed that
adults who regularly walked
their dogs had more mobility in-
side the house thannon-pet own-
ers.
6. Pets increase opportunities
for socialization. Many studies
have shown that walking a dog
leads to more conversations and
socialization.
7. Pets can help your choleste-
rol. TheCenters for DiseaseCon-
trol and Prevention states that
owning a pet can decrease cho-
lesterol, triglycerides and blood
pressure.
8. Pets can help comfort chil-
dren. Child psychologists have
found that pets can be very com-
fortingtochildrenandhelpthem
developempathy. Theyhavealso
been found to help autistic chil-
dren with socialization.
So for those of you with pets,
continue to enjoy the hidden
health benefits of your furry
friends. And for those of you
thinking of getting one do so.
Pet ownership may be a path
to your good health.
Surveys say pet owners may be healthier, happier
By DRS. KAY JUDGE
AND MAXINE BARISH-WREDEN
McClatchy Newspapers
BACK MOUNTAIN FREE MED-
ICAL CLINIC: 6:30 p.m. Fridays,
65 Davis St., Shavertown. Volun-
teers, services and supplies
needed. For more information,
call 696-1 144.
BMWFREE COMMUNITY
HEALTH CLINIC: 6-8 p.m.,
second Thursday, New Covenant
Christian Fellowship Church,
rear entrance, 780 S. Main St.,
Wilkes-Barre. Free basic care for
people without health insurance
and the underserved. Call 822-
9605.
CARE AND CONCERN FREE
HEALTH CLINIC: Registration
5-6:30 p.m. Wednesdays, former
Seton Catholic High School, 37
William St., Pittston. Basic
health care and information
provided. Call 954-0645.
THE HOPE CENTER: Free basic
medical care and preventative
health care information for the
uninsured or underinsured, legal
advice and pastoral counseling,
6 p.m.-8 p.m. Mondays; free
Chiropractic evaluations and
vision care, including free re-
placement glasses, for the
uninsured or underinsured, 6-8
p.m. Thursdays; Back Mountain
Harvest Assembly, 340 Carv-
erton Road, Trucksville. Call
696-5523.
PEDIATRIC HEALTH CLINIC for
infants through age 1 1, former
Seton Catholic High School, 37
William St., Pittston. Regis-
trations accepted from 4:30-
5:30 p.m. the first and third
Wednesday of each month.
Parents are required to bring
their childrens immunization
records. For more information,
call 855-6035.
VOLUNTEERS IN MEDICINE: 9
a.m.-5 p.m. Monday through
Friday, 190 N. Pennsylvania Ave.,
Wilkes-Barre. Primary and pre-
ventive health care for the
working uninsured and under-
insured in Luzerne County with
incomes less than two times
below federal poverty guide-
lines. For appointments, call
970-2864.
WILKES-BARRE FREE CLINIC:
4:30-7:30 p.m. Tuesdays and
5:30 p.m.-7:30 p.m. on the first
and third Wednesday, St. Ste-
phens Episcopal Church, 35 S.
Franklin St., Wilkes-Barre. Ap-
pointments are necessary. Call
793-4361. Physicians, nurse
practitioners, pharmacists, RNs,
LPNs and social workers are
needed as well as receptionists
and interpreters. To volunteer
assistance leave a message for
Pat at 793-4361.
FREE MEDICAL
CLINICS
LUZERNE COUNTY: The Wyom-
ing Valley Chapter of the Amer-
ican Red Cross hosts communi-
ty blood drives throughout the
month. Donors who are 17 years
of age or older, weigh at least
1 10 pounds and are in relatively
good health or 16 years old and
have a parental permission
form completed, may give blood
every 56 days. To learn more
about how to donate blood or
platelets or to schedule a blood
donation, call 1-800-REDCROSS
(733-2767). In addition to those
listed below, blood drives are
conducted at the American Red
Cross Regional Blood Center, 29
New Commerce Blvd., Hanover
Industrial Estates, Ashley, Mon-
days and Tuesdays from 9:30
a.m.-7 p.m.; Fridays and Sat-
urdays from 7:30 a.m.-3 p.m.;
and Sundays from 7:30 a.m.-
noon. Appointments are sug-
gested but walk-ins are accept-
ed. Platelet appointments can
be made by calling 823-7164,
ext. 2235. Blood Drives also
take place from 9 a.m.-noon on
the first and third Monday of
each month at the Hazleton
Chapter of the American Red
Cross,165 Susquehanna Blvd.,
Hazleton.
For a complete donation schedule,
visit: REDCROSSBLOOD.ORG or
call 1-800-REDCROSS (733-
2767). Area blood donation
sites include:
Today, noon-6 p.m., Thomas P.
Saxton Medical Pavilion, 468
Northampton St., Edwardsville;
12:30-6 p.m., Veterans of For-
eign Wars Post 4909, 403 Main
St., Dupont.
Thursday, 9 a.m.-3 p.m., Depart-
ment of Veterans Affairs Med-
ical Center, 1 1 1 1 East End Blvd.,
Plains Township.
Sunday, 8 a.m.-1:30 p.m., Our Lady
of Victory Church, Second
Street and Route 415, Harveys
Lake.
Monday, 10 a.m.-3 p.m., Geisinger
Wyoming Valley, 1000 E. Moun-
tain Drive, Plains Township;
12:30-6:30 p.m., Irem Country
Club, 397 Country Club Road,
Dallas Township.
July 26, 10:30 a.m.-4 p.m., Jewish
Community Center, 760 S. River
St., Wilkes-Barre; noon-6 p.m.,
American Legion Post 644, 259
Shoemaker St., Swoyersville; 1-6
p.m., Wright Township Fire Hall,
477 S. Main Road, Mountain
Top.
BLOOD DRIVES
TUESDAY
GASTRIC BYPASS SUPPORT:
5-8 p.m. Dorranceton United
Methodist Church, 549 Wyom-
ing Ave., Kingston. Call 864-
3289.
GENTLE YOGA CLASS FOR
CANCER PATIENTS & OTH-
ERS: 5:30-6:45 p.m., Candys
Place, 190 Welles St., Forty Fort.
Free to cancer patients (doctors
note required for all patients);
$5 per class or $30 per month
for all others. Call 714-8800.
INFERTILITY SUPPORT GROUP:
Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Area
RESOLVE peer-led support
group, 7 p.m., Kistler Learning
Center, Geisinger Wyoming
Valley, 1000 East Mountain
Blvd., Plains Township. Visit
www.resolve.org or contact
Stacey at 814-6552 or
stacft@aol.com.
WEDNESDAY
ALZHEIMERS & DEMENTIA
SUPPORT: for family, friends
and professionals, 6:30 p.m.,
Oakwood Terrace, 400 Gleason
Drive, Moosic. Call Sylvia at
451-3171, ext. 1 16, for more in-
formation.
CANCER SUPPORT GROUP: 4
p.m., Wilkes-Barre General
Hospital, radiation-oncology
department, 575 N. River St.,
Wilkes-Barre. Call 552-1300 to
register.
EXERCISE CLASS: 10:15-1 1:30
a.m., standing strong chair
class, Candys Place, 190 Welles
St., Forty Fort. Free to cancer
patients (doctors note required
for all patients); $5 per class or
$30 per month for all others.
Call 714-8800.
PARKINSONS SUPPORT: for
those with Parkinsons disease
and their caregivers, 4 p.m.,
board room, Charles Luger
Outpatient Center, Allied Ser-
vices, Moffat Drive, Scranton.
For information, call 348-1407.
THURSDAY
CHEMOTHERAPY SIDE EF-
FECTS: 6-7:30 p.m., Candys
Place, 190 Welles St., Forty Fort.
Call 714-8800 for reservations.
HIV CLINIC: for Wilkes-Barre
residents only, 2-4 p.m., Kirby
Health Center, 71 N. Franklin St.,
Wilkes-Barre. Call 208-4268 for
information.
LUPUS SUPPORT GROUP: in-
cluding an autoimmune disease
support group with the ob-
jective of overcoming obstacles
creatively with art, 1 1 a.m.,
Lupus Foundation of PA, 615
Jefferson Ave., Scranton. Call
(888) 995-8787 or visit www.lu-
puspa.org.
SPINA BIFIDA SUPPORT
GROUP: 7-9 p.m., Mercy Hospi-
tal, second floor meeting room,
Scranton. Call Christine Warner
at 586-0925 to register.
MONDAY
ADDICTION HELP: confidential
one-on-one discussion about
drug and alcohol addiction and
referrals, 7:30 p.m., Stickney
building, 24 S. Prospect St.,
Nanticoke. Call 762-4009 for an
appointment.
NAMI CONNECTIONS: a consum-
er support group for people
living with mental illness, 6-7:30
p.m., Suite 6 (second floor),
Thomas C. Thomas building, 100
E. Union St., Wilkes-Barre.
HEALTH CALENDAR
The health calendar is limited to
nonprofit entities and support
groups. To have your health-oriented
event listed here, send information
to Health, Times Leader, 15 N. Main
St., Wilkes-Barre, PA18711-0250; by
fax: 829-5537; or e-mail
health@timesleader.com. New and
updated information must be re-
ceived at least two weeks in ad-
vance. To see the complete calen-
dar, visit www.timesleader.com and
click Health under the Features tab.
Selecting a healthier version
of ice cream can be confusing
with all the options in todays
stores. Heres some advice from
Gloria Tsang, a registered diet-
itianandauthor of the newbook
Go Undiet:
Go easy on premium ice
cream. Premium means higher
fat typically, between 250 and
280 calories per serving com-
pared to 180 calories for regular
ice cream. Thats not necessarily
badif youcankeepportionsizeto
about half a cup. But choose a
lower-fat version if you need sev-
eral scoops to be happy.
Dont write off low-fat prod-
ucts. If you tried one of these ice
creams years ago and hated it,
try again. New whipping tech-
nology has made many brands
much creamier.
Avoid mix-ins and syrups.
Extra toppings add up quickly:
an ounce of chocolate syrup
adds 75 calories, for example,
while a blob of whipped cream
might be another 45.
Skipthe shakes. Large milk-
shakes from fast-food and chain
restaurants can pack as many as
1,500 calories. They also tend to
be loaded with fat, sugar and
even salt.
Try ice cream alternatives.
Frozen yogurt and gelato typi-
callyare made withmilkinstead
of cream, which can save 40 to
50 calories per half cup. Most
sherbet (about 105 calories per
half cup) and sorbet (about 100
calories) is made of fruit puree,
sugar and water; sorbet is milk-
free, while sherbet has low-fat
milk added. Choose one that
lists fruit puree as the first or
second ingredient.
Make ice cream a healthy snack
By ALISON JOHNSON
Daily Press (Newport News, Va.)
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AreYou Suffering With Pain,Tingling, or
Numbness inYour Feet or Ankles?
Do what Ed Labatch didHe Called The Neuropathy Center!
FREE
Consultation
I had very little feeling in my
legs and feet that I couldnt even
drive. After treatment at the Neu-
ropathy Center I can not only
drive again but enjoy life like I
used to without pain.
I had neuropathy in my legs and had very little
feeling to the point that I couldnt even drive my car.
I suffered for about three years. I couldnt stand very
long or do many of the regular activities that I loved
to do with my wife. I found that I sat around a lot.
After meeting with the professional staff at the
Neuropathy Center I knew that there was hope for
me.
After just my second treatment I felt life in my legs
again. I couldnt believe it!
My experience has been terric! Now my wife Betty
and I can continue to enjoy our active life doing the
things we love including Polka dancing!!
I would highly recommend anyone who is suffering
from Neuropathy pain to make an appointment
today.Their caring staff were never to busy to answer
any & all of my questions in fact we always look
forward to our visit.
NEUROPATHY CENTER KINGSTON
AT THE NEUROPATHY
CENTER - CALL
287-5560 TODAY
Ed Labatch
Michele Holincheck CRNP Charles Stevens MSPT
250 Pierce St. Suite 108 Kingston 287-5560
Going on now through July 23rd
C M Y K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com TUESDAY, JULY 19, 2011 PAGE 3C
Photographs and information must
be received two full weeks before your
childs birthday.
To ensure accurate publication, your
information must be typed or comput-
er-generated. Include your childs
name, age and birthday, parents,
grandparents and great-grandparents
names and their towns of residence,
any siblings and their ages.
Dont forget to include a daytime
contact phone number.
We cannot return photos submitted
for publication in community news,
including birthday photos, occasions
photos and all publicity photos.
Please do not submit precious or
original professional photographs that
require return because such photos can
become damaged, or occasionally lost,
in the production process.
Send to: Times Leader Birthdays, 15
North Main St., Wilkes-Barre, PA 18711-
0250.
GUIDELINES
Childrens 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 childs photo and birthday
announcement is on this page, it will
automatically be entered into the
Happy Birthday Shopping Spree
drawing for a $50 certificate. One
winner will be announced on the first
of the month on this page.
WIN A $50 GIFT
CERTIFICATE
HAPPY BIRTHDAY!
Meghan Katherine Hines, daugh-
ter of Katherine and Robert
Hines, Mountain Top, is cele-
brating her 14th birthday today,
July 19. Meghan is a grand-
daughter of Dorothy Farrell,
Wilkes-Barre; the late Gene
Farrell; and the late Robert Hines
and the late Anna Hines. She has
two sisters, Elizabeth, 12, and
Erin, 10.
Meghan K. Hines
Emma J. Solomon, daughter of
Jenny and Rick Solomon, Lu-
zerne, is celebrating her seventh
birthday today, July 19. Emma is
a granddaughter of Helen Solo-
mon, Forty Fort, and Ralph and
Alice Lepore, Exeter. She is a
great-granddaughter of Ralph
and Regina Lepore, Exeter. Em-
ma has a sister, Ava, 3.
Emma J. Solomon
Matthew Mark Richards II, son of
Matthew and Jennifer Richards,
Dallas, celebrated his sixth birth-
day on July 18. Matthew is a
grandson of Ann Etter and Bruce
and Catherine Richards, Wilkes-
Barre. He is a great-grandson of
Sandy Richards, Luzerne; the
late Stanley and Helen Szczup-
ski, Wilkes-Barre Township; the
late Fred and Brenda Phillips,
Wilkes-Barre; and the late John
and Christine Richards, Luzerne.
He has a brother, Tyler, 2.
Matthew M. Richards II
LUZERNE COUNTY: The
Luzerne County Commission-
ers and the Luzerne County
Veteran Affairs office is orga-
nizing a free chartered bus trip
for Luzerne County veterans
interested in attending the
Recruit Military Opportunity
Expo job fair taking place July
28 at Lincoln Financial Field in
Philadelphia.
This is a free hiring event for
veterans who already have
civilian work experience, men
and women who are transition-
ing from active duty to civilian
life, members of the National
Guard and reserves, and mil-
itary spouses.
For reservations and for
more information, contact Jim
Spagnola, director of Luzerne
County Veteran Affairs, at
706-3975. Participants must
also preregister for the job fair
at recruitmilitary.com.
PITTSTON: Ruth Gonzalez,
veterans employment repre-
sentative from the PA Luzerne
County CareerLink, will be at
the Veterans of the Vietnam
War Headquarters, 603 S.
Township Blvd., from1:30 to
3:30 p.m. on July 26.
Gonzalez will help veterans
with unemployment, job
searches, state and federal civil
service opportunities, local
jobs, resume assistance, in-
formation on education train-
ing options and more. Appoint-
ments are not required. Call
1-800-843-8626 for more in-
formation.
NEWS FOR
VETERANS
PETS OF THE WEEK
Name: Mikayla
Sex: female
Age: 1 year old
Breed/type: Turkish angora/Maine
Coon mix
Name: Sandy
Sex: female
Age: 2 years old
Breed/type: Welsh corgi-Sheltie mix
How to adopt: Call or visit the Hazle-
ton Animal Shelter, 101 North Poplar
St. (corner of Hemlock) in Hazle-
ton. Phone 454-0640. Hours for
adoptions are Monday through
Saturday from1 to 4 p.m.; Sunday 1 1
a.m. to 1 p.m. Business hours are
Monday through Saturday 8 a.m. to
4 p.m. and Sunday 8 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Wish List: donations of cat food,
cleaning supplies, paper products,
and blankets are in need.
The 58th anniversary of the end of the Korean War will be com-
memorated by the Korean War Veterans Association of Wyoming
Valley at 1 1 a.m. on Saturday on the south lawn of the Luzerne
County Courthouse, North River Street, Wilkes-Barre. In the event
of inclement weather the ceremony will take place inside the cour-
thouse. The principal speaker is Dr. Jere Packard, a Marine Corps
veteran and past president of Wyoming Seminary Preparatory
School. Special remarks will be provided by Vince Riccardo, staff
assistant to the director of the Department of Veterans Affairs
Medical Center, Plains Township. The ceremony will pay special
homage to prisoners of war, the wounded and the 142 servicemen
from Luzerne County who were killed in action during the three-
year Forgotten War, and the 33 soldiers from the federalized 109th
Field Artillery, Pennsylvania National Guard, who were enroute for
deployment when killed in a train wreck in Ohio. Committee mem-
bers organizing the event, from left, are Neno Sartini; Joe Sincav-
age, commander; Victor Habib; and Bob Alper, public affairs officer
and ceremony chairman.
Ceremony will commemorate Korean War ending
Holy Redeemer High School students hosted two interna-
tionally known speakers during an assembly on Chastity A
Choice for Life. Speakers were Molly Kelly and Mark Houck,
from The Kings Men in Quakertown. Caroline Jones, a student
at Holy Redeemer, also participated. She is an award winner
in the regional History Day contest and will compete in the
state contest with her performance Norma McCorveys Per-
sonal Struggle: A Monologue Regarding the Pro-Choice/Pr-Life
Debate, and will be a speaker at the Pennsylvanians for Lifes
Pro-Life Dinner later this year. From left are Anita Sirak, Holy
Redeemer principal; Jones; Houck; Kelly; Catherine Podczaski,
Holy Redeemer theology faculty member and Pro-Life Club
adviser; and the Rev. John Victoria, Holy Redeemer chaplain.
Redeemer students attend presentation on chastity
Employees from the Woodlands Inn & Resort and Evolution night
club won $500 and earned second place in a Bartender Olympics.
The bartenders donated their winnings to the American Diabetes
Association. Team Woodlands presenting the check to Dawn Fer-
nandez, associate director, American Diabetes Association, are Jen
Chang, marketing intern; Simone Allen, bartender; Jason Harris,
bartender; Kimberly Eckhar, bartender; Melissa Reynolds, bartend-
er; and Jeanne Stanton, manager.
Team Woodlands places in Bartender Olympics
The 109th Artillery Heritage
Association and Applebees in
Wilkes-Barre Township will host
Car Cruz events from 6-9 p.m.
Aug. 15 and Sept. 19 to raise
awareness about the 109th Field
Artillerys rich history. There will
be various giveaways, prizes
awarded for Best on Display, and
members of the Heritage Associ-
ation will be available to answer
questions about the field artillery
unit. Applebees manager Neil
Marcen was presented the Amer-
ican Patriot Award in recognition
of his sustained support of Army
National Guard soldiers. For
more information on these
events, call Bob Daubert at 824-
7015 or visit the 109th Artillery
Heritage Association on Face-
book for event photos. Repre-
sentatives, first row, are Billy
McGuiness, Marcen, Sgt. 1st Class
John Paul Karpovich, and Sgt. 1st
Class Bob Lemanski. Second row:
Jerry Yakobitis, Sgt. 1st Class
Matthew Lipo, David Kline, and
Daubert.
Car Cruz, Applebees
raising awareness
of 109th units history
EDWARDSVILLE: The
Edwardsville Senior Center, 57
Russell St., will host glaucoma
screenings by the Association
of the Blind from10 to 11:30
a.m. today.
For more information, call
Jim at 287-3381.
KINGSTON: Kingston Se-
nior Center, 680 Wyoming
Ave., will have a Show and
Tell event at 11:30 a.m. on
Wednesday.
Thursday is Country West-
ern Day. Members are encour-
aged you to dress accordingly.
Lunch begins at 11:40 a.m.
Dedra and Al will provide
entertainment from noon to 1
p.m.
New members are being
accepted. For more informa-
tion, call 287-1102.
MOUNTAIN TOP: An AARP
Driver Safety refresher class
sponsored by the Marian Suth-
erland Kirby Library from10
a.m. to 2:45 p.m. Thursday at
NEWS FOR SENIORS
See SENIORS, Page 4C
Editors Note: Information for
this column may be sent to peo-
ple@timesleader.com or Senior
News, The Times Leader, 15 N.
Main St., Wilkes-Barre, PA1871 1. To
ensure accuracy, information
must be typed or computer-
generated. The deadline is each
Thursday at noon for all copy. For
more information, contact Mi-
chele Harris at 829-7245.
C M Y K
PAGE 4C TUESDAY, JULY 19, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
C O M M U N I T Y N E W S
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the library.
This course is open only to
anyone who took the course
approximately three years ago.
Cost is $14 per person, with a $2
discount for AARP members.
Students should bring a light
lunch for the half-hour break.
Coffee, tea, and a snack will be
available.
To register, contact instructor
Pat Pisaneschi at 868-6732 or
ppisanes@epix.net.
MOUNTAIN TOP: The Moun-
tain Top Social Club will meet
July 26 in the Father Nolan Hall
Day Room at St. Judes Church.
Doors will open at 12:30 pm.
Anyone age 50 or older can join.
The club will travel to the
Rainbow Theatre, Lancaster, on
Aug. 17. The bus will pickup
Wilkes-Barre area residents at St.
Aloysius Church, Barney Street.
For reservations or more in-
formation call Otto at 474-0641.
PITTSTON: The Pittston Se-
nior Center, 441 N. Main St., is
forming a walking group to meet
at 9:30 a.m. every Monday,
Wednesday and Friday. For more
information, call 655-5561.
PITTSTON: Tobyhanna Army
Depot retirees will meet at 8 a.m.
on Wednesday at Perkins Restau-
rant & Bakery, state Route 315.
All TAD retirees and current
employees are invited. For more
information call Bernie Petrasek
at 287-9093 or 239-1682 bjpe-
tra@juno.com.
PLAINS TWP.: Plains Senior
Citizens, Project Head, will meet
at 1 p.m. on Wednesday in the
cafeteria at SS. Peter and Paul
School, Hudson Road. Refresh-
ments start at noon. Guest
speaker attorney Matt Cart-
wright will discuss seniors
rights. Upcoming trips will be
revealed by coordinator Michael
Boncheck.
Hosts Jean Curtis, Sophie
Czachor, Carmella DeBonis,
Marie Dominick, Eleanor Donato
and Mary Drew are asked to
arrive by 11:30 a.m. to setup the
refreshments. New members are
invited to join.
The group will have a table to
enlist new members at the
Night Out event planned from
5 to 9 p.m. on Aug. 2 at the Leo
Solomon School, Abbott Street.
TUNKHANNOCK: The Wyom-
ing County Senior Center, 101
Dymond Terrace, will host the
Sadie Green Sales Jug Band at
3:30 p.m. today.
Glaucoma screenings by the
Greater Wilkes-Barre Association
for the Blind will be offered
Wednesday.
Thursday is Country Day.
Members are invited to dress in
western attire.
An identity theft program pre-
sented by representatives of the
attorney generals office and state
Rep. Karen Bobeck will take place
Friday. Refreshments will be
served. For more information, call
836-2324.
The shuffleboard team will play
at Tunkhannock on Monday.
WILKES-BARRE: Glaucoma
screenings by the Greater Wilkes-
Barre Association for the Blind
will be offered at 10 a.m. today at
the Charles T. Adams Senior
Center, 5 E. Market St.
Thursday from noon to 4 p.m.
is Country Day.
A Christmas in July Party will
take place Monday. For more
information, call 825-3484.
WILKES-BARRE: The Rain-
bow Seniors of Wilkes-Barre will
meet at 1 p.m. today at Albright
United Methodist Church, Dana
and Grove streets. Servers are
Bernice Krasnahill, Ted and Joan
Krasnahill, and Betty Krasnahill.
New members are invited to
attend.
WILKES-BARRE TWP.: The
RCA Nipper Club will convene at
1 p.m. Wednesday at Old Country
Buffet, East End Centre.
WYOMING: The Wyoming-
West Wyoming Seniors will have
its annual picnic today at the
Daley Park pavilion, Shoemaker
Avenue, West Wyoming. Dinner
will be served at noon. Bingo and
games will be played. There will
be no meeting. The next meeting
is at 1:30 p.m. on Aug. 2 at St
Monica Parish. Servers are Ann
Koaloski, Mary Mattani and Char-
lotte Piezala. New members are
invited. Parking is available for
the handicapped.
Members celebrated the birth-
day of Ann Stashak at a recent
meeting. Fifty-fifty winners were
Mickey DeSalvo, Paul Delaney,
Theresa Kennedy and Eleanor
Seneski. The jackpot winner was
Donna Pocceschi.
SENIORS
Continued fromPage 3C
Allied Services Integrated Health
System sponsored a Lee Silverman
Voice Treatment certification
course on campus. Sixty physical
therapists, physical therapy aides,
and occupational therapists who
will practice at Heinz Rehab, Wilkes-
Barre Township, Allied Rehab and
Allied Skilled Nursing and Rehabil-
itation Center, Scranton, and the
Home Health Division and at out-
patient clinics throughout the re-
gion participated. LSVT BIG is a
proven treatment for patients with
Parkinsons disease. Instructors with
representatives of the Allied Ser-
vices divisions, from left, are Jenny
Tuccitto, instructor; Cynthia Fox,
Ph.D., instructor; Mike Irizarry,
home health therapist; Michelle
Donahoe, outpatient therapist;
Angela Prushinski, skilled nursing
therapist; Michelle Hyde, inpatient
therapist; Kathy Chupka, inpatient
therapist; Michelle Stark, outpatient
therapist; Heather Cianci, instructor,
Kathleen Salik, therapist.
Allied conducts certification
course on Parkinson disease
for 60 area therapists
Several classes at St. Jude
School presented a musical
program for parents and grand-
parents who volunteer at the
school. Two of their selections
were Hukilau, a Hawaiian song
about a fishing party, and The
Pirate Adventure, about trea-
sure hunting. Some of the mem-
bers of the second- and third-
grade classes, first row, are
Ashleigh Button, Sarah Stettler,
Ella Urosevich, and Tea Amer-
ise. Second row: Gabrielle Tam-
marine, Aubrey Ayre, Anna
Capaci, Aaliyeh Sayed and
Lauren Patrick. Third row: An-
thony Strish, Cameron Chalk,
Dominic Alberti and Alex Ry-
mar.
St. Jude students
serenade parents,
grandparents who
volunteer at school
C M Y K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com TUESDAY, JULY 19, 2011 PAGE 5C
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 DAYS SOLUTION
HOW TO CONTACT:
Dear Abby: PO Box 69440, Los Ange-
les, CA 90069
For more Sudoku go to www.timesleader.com
O N T H E W E B
Dear Abby: I loaned
money to a couple
of family members
when I was overseas.
They had fallen
behind on their
bills, so I sent them
each $1,000 to get
caught up.
Its two years later, and I have yet to
see a dime from either one of them. I
have sent them both letters asking to
have some money paid back; both
sent me excuses about why they cant
pay anything. However, on Facebook
they write about how they went shop-
ping, joined a gym and so on. What
can I do to get this settled?
Taken Advantage of in Minnesota
Dear Taken Advantage Of: Try this
... post on your Facebook page: Its
funny what short memories some
people have. I loaned Tom and Geri
$1,000 two years ago when they
fell behind on some bills. Instead of
repayment, I have received nothing
but excuses and all the while I
see their postings about shopping at
the mall and going to the gym. What
DEADBEATS!
Maybe it will shame your relatives
into paying up.
Dear Abby: Do I have to stop wear-
ing my wedding ring? My husband
died three years ago. We had been
married 53 years and 12 days. Abby,
I pledged until death do us part. I
just cant seem to make myself take
off the ring he put on my finger so
many years ago.
Im tired of being told that I have
to give up something so precious
to me. Is there a time limit, or is it
OK for me to go ahead with wearing
the ring and ignore the people who
pester me about taking it off? Maybe
a time will come when Ill want to,
but not now, not yet. Please give me
some sound advice.
Arizona Widow
Dear Widow: Please accept my sym-
pathy for your loss. Widows and wid-
owers usually remove their wedding
ring at the point when they decide
they would like to begin dating again.
When they do, some of them choose
to move the ring from their left to the
right hand. Others put it away as a
treasured keepsake.
There is no set time at which your
wedding ring must come off. If and
when you feel the time is right, it will
happen or not.
Dear Abby: Im 15 years old, and Im
afraid to kiss! I wont date anyone be-
cause Im afraid my kiss will suffer by
comparison. I know no one becomes
an expert without practice, but I dont
want anyone to be my first kiss.
Several guys are into me, but I
cant date them because eventually
theyll want to kiss. It would be so
embarrassing to be horrible at it. Any
advice?
Too Freaked Out to Make Out
Dear Freaked Out: Kissing isnt a
competitive sport, so stop worry-
ing that you wont measure up. A
kiss doesnt have to be the way its
portrayed in the movies, with heavy
breathing and mouths agape. Wheth-
er a guy wants to kiss you isnt as im-
portant as whether you WANT him to
kiss you. If you do, all you have to do
is close your eyes, tilt your head a bit
to the side and lean in. He will take
care of the rest.
DEAR ABBY
A D V I C E
Not-so-friendly Facebook post might prompt family debtors to pay up
To receive a collection of Abbys most
memorable and most frequently re-
quested poems and essays, send a busi-
ness-sized, self-addressed envelope, plus
check or money order for $3.95 ($4.50 in
Canada) to: Dear Abbys Keepers, P.O.
Box 447, Mount Morris, IL 61054-0447.
(Postage is included.)
ARIES (March 21-April 19). You
know how to deal with passion-
ate, intemperate people, and
youll use this knowledge to suc-
ceed. Youll read the signs and
stay your distance until you feel
kindness beckoning you forward.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20). Some
are content to kill time, but you
will strive for a much more ami-
cable arrangement. You want
time to favor you, to stop for you
once in a while, and of course,
you want to be able to borrow
from it when you come up short.
GEMINI (May 21-June 21). Youll
have a grievance or two. Some
of the people around you need
a wakeup call, and youre the
alarm clock. Once you get a few
things off your chest, youll enjoy
yourself much better.
CANCER (June 22-July 22). Let
the little joys add up while you
let the little disappointments slip
into the cracks. This is pretty
easy. All you have to do is catch
the joys and hold on to them so
that your hands are too full to
clasp any negativity.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). You some-
times equate wealth with hard
work, but the reality is that often
it doesnt happen that way at all.
Stay open to the possibility that
good fortune may come without
effort.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Your
body may send you signals that
are more intelligent than those
your mind sends. You will stum-
ble upon an arrangement that is
a perfect fit for you.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). Youre
very independent now, and you
refuse to get carried away with
anyone elses ideology. The oth-
ers want you on their side, but
you feel an even stronger calling
to do your own thing.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). Busy
people are the toughest to
attract. Whether the relationship
is business or personal, the rule
is the same: The other person
has to have room for you; other-
wise, it wont work.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21).
Visit face to face whenever pos-
sible. You never know where
the conversation will lead. Youll
likely wind up doing something
thats slightly out of character
for you but so much fun!
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). You
have a personal stake in what
youre doing. As for the oth-
ers, they may need help getting
involved. Invite them to increase
their level of participation.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18).
Malls and casinos are purposely
designed for visitors to get lost
in them. This day will seem simi-
larly patterned to delight, dis-
tract and tempt you away from
your original plans.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). You
may rise with a conflict already
brewing in the recesses of your
mind. Two ideas are at war with
each other. You always have a
right to adapt and change your
position.
TODAYS BIRTHDAY (July 18).
You quickly learn what you
need to learn in order to make a
situation work. This may mean
communicating differently with
someone or adding new skills
to your arsenal. Capricorn and
Sagittarius people adore you.
Your lucky numbers are: 3, 15,
49, 11 and 26.
C M Y K

PAGE 6C TUESDAY, JULY 19, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com


T E L E V I S I O N
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The Insid-
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NCIS: Los Angeles
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48 Hours Mystery
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News Letterman
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How I Met How I Met MLB Baseball New York Yankees at Tampa Bay Rays. From Tropi-
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PIX News at Ten Jodi
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Two and
Half Men
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MLB Baseball Philadelphia Phillies at Chicago Cubs. From Wrigley
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The Matrix (5:00) (R, 99) Keanu
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Cycles South (GP, 71) TBA The Ray Lucia Show (TVG)
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CNBC
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What Happened in
60 Minutes on CNBC CNBC Titans Ted
Turner
Mad Money
CNN
Situation Room John King, USA (N) In the Arena (N) Piers Morgan Tonight
Tatum ONeil.
Anderson Cooper 360 (N) (CC)
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Scrubs
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Show
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Report
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Around
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WNBA Basketball Seattle Storm at Chicago
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SportsNation (CC) 2011 ESPYs (CC)
FAM
The Nine Lives of
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Restaurant: Impossi-
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Little House on the
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That 70s
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Fame (CC) (TVPG) Fame (CC) (TVPG) Tupac: Resurrection (R, 03) The life and music of
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Star Trek: Enterprise
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Underworld: Evolution (R, 06) Kate
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Drop off or return this completed form with your photo to: The Times Leader, We Salute
You, 15 N. Main St., Wilkes-Barre, PA 18711. Please include name on back of photo. Any
photo wishing to be returned must be picked up at The Times Leader office.
Name: ______________________________________________ Phone:___________________________
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years served and if applicable, the war or
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photo to promotions@timesleader.com or
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Old or current photos will be accepted. Color or black
and white photos will be accepted. The Times Leader
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C M Y K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com TUESDAY, JULY 19, 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 DAYS SOLUTION
HOW TO CONTACT:
Dear Abby: PO Box 69440, Los Ange-
les, CA 90069
For more Sudoku go to www.timesleader.com
O N T H E W E B
Dear Abby: Keep-
ing It Real in Laguna
Beach, Calif. (May
27), who is embar-
rassed by the dialects
of his Southern
relatives, should
learn some Southern
hospitality! Yes, we may say Ma and
Pa, yall, yonder and I reckon,
but we would not laugh or be embar-
rassed if a California relative came
to visit. Wed be overjoyed and
welcoming.
K.I.R., get off your high horse and
get over yourself! If you visited, wed
show you around town, take you to
see friends and relatives, and smother
you with affection. Wed have big fam-
ily gatherings, sit on the front porch
and drink lemonade. We would never
ridicule your different accent.
Come spend some time with us
hicks. We welcome everyone and
are glad to have you. Well serve you
white gravy and homemade butter-
milk biscuits, pecan pie and sweet
tea. And when you leave, well give
you a big, air-constricting hug and
some sugar (Southern slang for
kisses) and say, Yall come back now,
ya hear?
Georgia Girl
Dear Georgia Girl: To heck with
K.I.R. invite me! Youll be
pleased to know your fellow south-
erners came out in force against
K.I.R.s uppity attitude. Read on:
Dear Abby: Keeping It Real is liv-
ing in a fantasy world a sad one at
that. Our country is made up of all
kinds of people. How can he not see
the charm in a simple, down-home ac-
cent? Using different regional phrases
or expressions doesnt make a per-
son stupid or uneducated a fact
K.I.R. might understand if he were
more educated himself.
I adore my Southern heritage. I
love being able to tell the difference
between the drawl of someone from
the Carolinas versus the Cajun tones
of folks from Louisiana. Theres rich-
ness to those voices. You can almost
hear the history by listening to
someone speak. Id much rather hear
about Ma and Pa than be repeatedly
subjected to words like dude or
gnarly. All I can say to K.I.R. is
bless your heart!
Proud Belle in Arkansas
Dear Abby: Why would K.I.R. as-
sume that because his Southern fam-
ily doesnt live in an uneducated
area, their accents are fake? His
generalizations show how little he
knows about the rich and varied
Southern culture. He should read
Tennessee Williams, Eudora Welty or
Truman Capote, or watch a documen-
tary about the South. In other words,
educate HIMSELF to keep from com-
ing off as embarrassingly shallow in
front of his relatives.
Southern Yankee in Texas
Dear Abby: Im guessing the country
folk are having fun with him. I have
a masters degree in English and can
quote Milton and Yeats. But around
snobs like this, Id go all Jed Clam-
pett so fast hed think hes been slog-
walloped by a she-critter without no
young-uns.
Brian in North Carolina
Dear Abby: That fool can kiss my
grits!
Kaye in Virginia
DEAR ABBY
A D V I C E
Southern readers rise in force to defend their use of the word yall
To receive a collection of Abbys most
memorable and most frequently re-
quested poems and essays, send a busi-
ness-sized, self-addressed envelope, plus
check or money order for $3.95 ($4.50 in
Canada) to: Dear Abbys Keepers, P.O. Box
447, Mount Morris, IL 61054-0447. (Postage
is included.)
ARIES (March 21-April 19). You
have terrific social instincts.
Youre likely to pull a quality
new friend into your world just
because you were the one who
said hi when no one else did.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20). Osho,
a great spiritual teacher of the
20th century, said that all artis-
tic activity is on the way toward
becoming religious. Today your
creativity will lead you to a
sacred place in your own soul.
GEMINI (May 21-June 21). You may
have trouble relating to some-
one until you broaden your base
of acceptable commonalities.
You are of the same species on
the same planet, and there is
enough to agree on right there.
CANCER (June 22-July 22). Being
loved by another person is not
nearly as fulfilling as loving
another person. You will be hap-
pily occupied in the activities
that demonstrate your affection.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). You know
that by engaging a passionate
person who is already in a cer-
tain kind of mood, you are asking
for trouble. However, as a risk-
taker, you may find it irresistible
anyway.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Sure,
there are aspects of your history
that you tend to glamorize. And
yet, it is your firm opinion that
the future will hold ever-more
amazing treasures.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). You
deserve to deal strictly with
people of integrity. Therefore,
the ones who tell you to buy
what you dont need have to go.
Also, theres no time to entertain
those who wouldnt do the same
for you.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). The one
who said truth does not blush
was not paying close enough
attention. The truth can be very
uncomfortable to hear today,
and it will provoke a visceral
response.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21).
People are talking about you
and saying just what you wanted
them to say. But this should
come as no surprise to you.
Youve been working pretty dili-
gently to form a certain public
image, and now your work is
paying off.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19).
Once a stressful situation passes
or a problem is resolved, you will
feel better than new. Indeed, you
will be better than new, having
grown in strength and confi-
dence from the experience.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). What
you physically can or cannot do
might affect your plan and your
thinking. But dont let it affect
your opinion of yourself.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). Avoid
twisting yourself up into a knot
to prove how flexible and willing
to please you are. Instead, walk
tall. Its better to err on the side
of rigidity now.
TODAYS BIRTHDAY (July 19).
Your tenacity and stamina are
marvelous attributes that youll
apply to remarkable feats.
Through the next five weeks,
good fortune comes by way of
community projects and sales.
Youll be shown affection and will
enjoy a large number of friends
and acquaintances. Libra and
Gemini people adore you. Your
lucky numbers are: 8, 20, 14, 12
and 30.
F U N N I E S TUESDAY, JULY 19, 2011 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
SALLY FORTH
CLASSIC PEANUTS
STONE SOUP
BLONDIE
BEETLE BAILEY
THATABABY
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
GET FUZZY
CLOSE TO HOME
ARGYLE SWEATER
B.C.
PICKLES
PARDON MY PLANET
MARMADUKE HERMAN
DRABBLE
GARFIELD
HAGAR THE HORRIBLE
MOTHER GOOSE & GRIMM
TUNDRA
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com TUESDAY, JULY 19, 2011 PAGE 1D
MARKETPLACE
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
150 Special Notices
412 Autos for Sale
150 Special Notices
412 Autos for Sale
150 Special Notices
135 Legals/
Public Notices
150 Special Notices
135 Legals/
Public Notices
LEGAL NOTICE
Notice is hereby given that the Harveys
Lake Zoning Hearing Board will hold a pub-
lic meeting on Tuesday, August 2, 2011 at
7:00 PM at the Harveys Lake Borough
Building.
1. Harveys Lake Zoning Hearing Board
will hear testimony on the application of
Kate Finnerty regarding a property at 47
ODonnell Lane, Harveys Lake, PA 18618.
Applicant is requesting relief from Section
503.4 (C) (E), front and side yard setback,
in the R-2 zoning district.
2. Harveys Lake Zoning Board will hear
testimony on the application of Kevin and
Julie Carty regarding a property at 202
Lakeside Drive, Harveys Lake, PA 18618.
Applicant is requesting relief from both the
height and rear yard setback limits for an
unattached accessory building in an R-2
zoning district. Regulations are detailed in
Section 302.2 (A) (B).
Copies of the applications can be
reviewed at the Harveys Lake Municipal
Building during regular business hours.
Andy Luzetski
Zoning Officer
LEGAL NOTICE
Notice is hereby given that the Harveys
Lake Zoning Hearing Board will hold a pub-
lic meeting on Tuesday, August 2, 2011 at
7:00PM at the Harveys Lake Borough
Building.
Harveys Lake Zoning Hearing Board will
hear testimony on the application of Mela-
nia & James Serfass regarding a neigh-
boring property at Pole-9, Harveys Lake,
PA 18618. Applicant is appealing the deci-
sion of the Zoning Officer and contends
that the Zoning Officer should take action
to require the owner of Pole-9, Jay & Molly
Crossin, to alter construction solely on
information received from the applicant.
Copies of the applications can be
reviewed at the Harveys Lake Municipal
Building during regular business hours.
.
Andy Luzetski
Zoning Officer
Celebrations
Area Businesses To Help Make
Your Event a Huge Success!
To Advertise Call Tara 570-970-7374
BEVERAGES
WYO. VALLEY BEVERAGE
Rt. 11 Edwardsville
YUENGLING Dolphin Plaza
1159 Rt. 315
Wilkes-Barre, PA 18702
(570) 208-2908
gymboreeclasses.com
PARTIES FOR
CHILDREN 5 & UNDER
PARTIES
BEST CRAFT BEER SELECTION AROUND!
G&B Tent Rentals
LOWEST PRICES GUARANTEED
570-378-2566
FROM 40 X 160 WEDDING
TENTS TO 20 X 20 BACKYARD
BARBEQUE TENTS.
TENT RENTAL MUSIC
Harpist
Music for Banquets,
Weddings, Christmas
Parties & More!
Sherri L. Trometter
570-988-1972
harpingalong@wildblue.net
BIRTHDAY PARTIES
The Snack Shack
750 Wilkes-Barre Twp Blvd
Wilkes-Barre
(570)-270-2929
Business Parties
We Deliver Complete
Party Packages
including Ice Cream,
Food, Face Painting,
Party Host and
Lifeguards.
DUNDEE
BEVERAGE
Keyco Plaza
San Souci Parkway
WITHOUT A DOUBT
AREAS COLDEST BEER
OPEN EVERY DAY
EXCEPT CHRISTMAS
BEVERAGES
BIRTHDAY, BACHELOR &
BACHELORETTE PARTIES
PARTIES
Club 79
Banquet room available for Parties!
Birthdays, Sweet 16s,
Baby Showers & More!
Bring your own food.
Bartender Available.
825-8381 * 793-9390
$200 for 4 hours
Free Pool Wed. & Fri. 8pm-10pm
DJ
The Lesser
Evil DJ
Weddings
Parties
Dances
Karaoke
www.TheLesserEvilDJ.com
Check us out on Facebook!
(570) 954-1620 Nick
(570) 852-1251 Allen
CATERING
We specialize in
Italian/American Cuisine
Banquet facility at
West Wyoming Hose Co. #1
or well bring it to you!
570-407-2703
Rates start at $10.95pp
$12.99
PREMIUM & LIGHT
12 OZ., 24 PK. CANS
A Benson Family Dealership
HOURS:
Monday Thru Thursday
8:00am - 8:00pm
Friday & Saturday
8:00am - 5:00pm
A Benson Family Dealership
NEW CARS
All Prices Plus Tax & Tags, Customer Must Qualify for All Rebates. See Salesperson for Details. See dealer for details. Some restrictions apply. Dealer may discontinue program at any time.
NEW 2011 BUICK REGAL TURBO
$
27,764
NEW 2011 GMC ACADIA DENALI
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$
42,391
3 At This Price
The Sharpest Sport Utility Made, Stop In And See It
NEW 2011 GMC SIERRA 1500 EXT CAB 4X4
STK#1703
MSRP $30,720
STK#1729
MSRP $46,190
STK#1554
5 IN STOCK
$
29,255
NEW 2011 GMC YUKON 4X4
$
38,391
NEW 2011 BUICK ENCLAVE
NEW 2011 GMC TERRAIN AWD
$
26,026
STK#1718
MSRP $27,060
STK#1713
MSRP $43,955
STK#1721
MSRP $39,570
$
35,976
WVONMO VALLEV
415 Kidder Street
Wilkes-Barre, PA 18702
570.822.8870
steve@yourcarbank.com
www.wyomingvalleyautomart.com
*For qualied Buyers. Bi-weekly payments greater than 17
1/2% of monthly net income, additional
down-payment may be required. Costs to be paid by Buyer at delivery: registration, taxes, title, doc fee.
0
$
DOWN*
UV MEME PAV MEME UV MEME
08 Sa tu rn Au ra
08 Sa tu rn Au ra
4 D r
4 D r
JO -D A N M O TO RS JO -D A N M O TO RS
1339 N .R iver R d .,P lain s,PA 829-2043
Tax,tag,title,d oc fee extra.
w w w .jo-d an m otors.com
JO -D A N M O TO RS JO -D A N M O TO RS
SPECIAL OF
THE W EEK
$
11,995
$
11,995
O UR O UR
PRICE PRICE
N ADA Book Price $ 14 ,97 5 N ADA Book Price $ 14 ,97 5
4 D r,A utom atic,CD,Cruise,
6 Cyl,A lloys,XClean,P ow erSunroof
You r Frie n d In
The Ca r B u s in e s s
P a rtia lL is ting !
260 S ou th R ive r S t, P la in s , P A 570 - 8 22- 210 0
1
4
3
7
3
8
H OM E OF L OW M IL EAGE
QU AL ITY VEH ICL ES
W W W .AU TOB U D D IES ON L IN E.COM
1995 FO RD M USTA NG C O BRA
5.0,5 S peed,50K M iles.......................$9,995
1996 FO RD M USTA NG G T
A uto,82K M iles ..............................$6,995
2002 DO DG E STRA TUS SDN
85K M iles ....................................$6,995
2004 KIA O PTIM A SDN
110K M iles...................................$6,495
2002 KIA SEDO NA V A N
98K M iles ....................................$5,995
2004 DO DG E G RA ND C A RA V A N
135K M iles ..................................$7,995
2006 A C URA TSX
76K M iles................................$17,995
3 M on th P ow e rtra in W a rra n ty
OVER 50 VEH ICL ES IN S TOCK !
100
ANNOUNCEMENTS
110 Lost
ALL JUNK CARS
WANTED!!
CALL ANYTIME
FREE REMOVAL
CA$H PAID
ON THE SPOT
570.301.3602
110 Lost
FOUND: Black
Cocker Spaniel.
Red flea collar. No
tags. Found near
Hillside Ice Cream
on 7/11/11. Please
call (570) 779-5701
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
LOST CAT:
FEMALE CALICO
lost July 9th, area
of Parish & High St.
Yellow eyes, purple
collar. Please call
570-704-6196
110 Lost
LOST: ABYSSINIAN CAT
Jesse, reddish
brown, yellow eyes,
female, microchip,
near Yalick farms
$500. REWARD.
570-690-1808
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
110 Lost
LOST: Chihuahua
Name - Princess.
Brown. White paws
with brown freckles.
White stomach up
to chin & white
around nose. Thin
white stripe bet-
ween eyes. Brown
tail with white tip.
Please return, was
raised since a
puppy and dearly
missed. Last seen
on Friday 7/8/2011
2:30 pm by play-
ground in center of
Mayflower Crossing
Apt. Complex wear-
ing a pink collar.
570-582-7672
REWARD $500
120 Found
FOUND female Bea-
gle, tan. nylon leash
on 400 block of
Mclean St.819-0448
Looking for that
special place
called home?
Classified will address
Your needs.
Open the door
with classified!
RAT TERRIER
F O U N D : W e l l
Trained. White, with
black markings.
Pittston Area. Call
570-655-8071
135 Legals/
Public Notices
NOTICE
NOTICE IS HEREBY
GIVEN that Articles
of Incorporation for
American
Landscaping, Inc.
were filed with and
approved by the
Department of State
of the Common-
wealth of Pennsyl-
vania, Harrisburg,
Pennsylvania on
June 29, 2011. The
corporation has
been incorporated
under provisions of
the Pennsylvania
Business Corpora-
tion Law of 1988, as
amended.
Joseph S. Falchek,
Esquire
412 Mill Street
Plains, Pennsylvania
18705-2818
135 Legals/
Public Notices
LEGAL NOTICE
DEADLINES
Saturday
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 to
570-831-7312
or mail to
The Times Leader
15 N. Main Street
Wilkes-Barre, PA
18711
For additional
information or
questions regard-
ing legal notices
you may call
Marti Peznowski
at 570-970-7371
or 570-829-7130
Collect cash, not dust!
Clean out your
basement, garage
or attic and call the
Classified depart-
ment today at 570-
829-7130!
135 Legals/
Public Notices
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE IS HEREBY
GIVEN that pursuant
to the provisions of
the Fictitious Names
Act of December 16,
1982, P.L. 1309, as
amended and as
supplemented (54
Pa. C.S.A. 301 et
seq.), Keats Pub,
INc., 92 Govier
Street, Wilkes-
Barre, Pennsylva-
nia, has filed with
the Office of Secre-
tary of the Com-
monwealth at Har-
risburg PA on April
18, 2011, an Applica-
tion to conduct busi-
ness under the
assumed or ficti-
tious name of:
Keats Pub
The principal
office/place of busi-
ness to be carried
on in the nature of a
tavern and restau-
rant business, under
or through the ficti-
tious name is: 114
Bowman Street,
Wilkes-Barre
Luzerne County,
Pennsylvania 18705.
Joseph S. Falchek,
Esquire
412 Mill Street
Plains PA 18705
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
NORTHEAST PA TOP JOBS
The following companies are hiring:
Your company name will be listed on the front page
of The Times Leader Classieds the rst day your ad
appears on timesleader.com Northeast PA Top Jobs.
For more information contact The Times Leader sales
consultant in your area at 570-829-7130.
East Coast
Logistics &
Distribution
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
PAGE 2D TUESDAY, JULY 19, 2011 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
468 Auto Parts 468 Auto Parts
AS ALWAYS ****HIGHEST PRICES*****
PAID FOR YOUR UNWANTED
VEHICLES!!!
DRIVE IN PRICES
Call for Details (570) 459-9901
Vehicles must be COMPLETE !!
Plus Enter to Win $500.00 Cash!!
DRAWING TO BE HELD JULY 31
Harrys U Pull It
www.wegotused.com
BUYING JUNK VEHICLES
$300 and Up
$125 extra if driven,
pulled or pushed in.
NOBODY Pays More
570-760-2035
Monday thru Saturday 6am-pm
Happy Trails!
LAW DIRECTORY
Dont Keep Your Practice a Secret!
Call
829-7130
To Place Your Ad
310 Attorney
Services
ADOPTION
DIVORCE
CUSTODY
Estates, DUI
ATTORNEY
MATTHEW LOFTUS
570-255-5503
BANKRUPTCY
FREE CONSULT
Guaranteed
Low Fees
Payment Plan!
Colleen Metroka
570-592-4796
DIVORCE No Fault
$295 divorce295.com
Atty. Kurlancheek
800-324-9748 W-B
GET THE WORD OUT
with a Classified Ad.
570-829-7130
310 Attorney
Services
Divorce, Custody,
Support, PFA
FREE Consultation.
Atty. Josianne
Aboutanos
Wilkes-Barre
570-208-1118
Free Bankruptcy
Consultation
Payment plans.
Carol Baltimore
570-822-1959
FREE CONSULTATION
for all legal matters
Attorney Ron Wilson
570-822-2345
SOCIAL SECURITY
DISABILITY
Free Consultation.
Contact Atty. Sherry
Dalessandro
570-823-9006
310 Attorney
Services
Attorney
Keith Hunter
Bankruptcies
MAHLER, LOHIN
& ASSOCIATES
(570) 718-1118
MARGIOTTI
LAW OFFICES
BANKRUPTCY
Free Consult
Payment
Plans
(570) 223-2536
Stroudsburg
AUTO
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
462 Auto
Accessories
AUTOMOTIVE 12 volt
back up camera kit
$40. 12 volt blue
tooth $40. 12 volt
travel refrigerator
holds 6 six packs
$35. 570-675-7024
TRUCK CAP for
small pickup truck,
excellent condition.
$275.570-760-4830
468 Auto Parts
All Junk
Cars &
Trucks
Wanted
Highest
Prices
Paid In
CA$H
FREE
PICKUP
570-574-1275
Need a Roommate?
Place an ad and
find one here!
570-829-7130
468 Auto Parts
BEST PRICES
IN THE AREA
CA$H ON THE $POT,
Free Anytime
Pickup
570-301-3602
570-301-3602
CALL US!
TO JUNK
YOUR CAR
472 Auto Services
$ WANTED JUNK $
VEHICLES
LISPI TOWING
We pick up 822-0995
VITOS
&
GINOS
Like New
Tires
$15 & UP!
Like New
Batteries
$20 & UP!
Carry Out Price
288-8995
WANTED
Cars & Full Size
Trucks. For prices...
Lamoreaux Auto
Parts 477-2562
Need a Roommate?
Place an ad and
find one here!
570-829-7130
135 Legals/
Public Notices
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE IS HEREBY
GIVEN that Articles
of Incorporation for
KEATS PUB, INC.
were filed with and
approved by the
Department of
State of the Com-
monwealth of Penn-
sylvania, Harris-
burg, Pennsylvania
on April 18, 2011.
The corporation
has been incorpo-
rated under the
provisions of the
Pennsylvania Busi-
ness Corporation
Law of 1988, as
amended.
Joseph S. Falchek,
Esquire
412 Mill Street
Plains, Pennsylvania
18705-2818
ESTATE NOTICE
NOTICE IS HEREBY
GIVEN that Letters
of Administration
have been issued to
Wesley Alan Lauer
of Palm Beach Gar-
dens, Florida,
Administrator of the
Estate of Bruce M.
Lauer, Deceased,
who died on June
24, 2011, late of
Kingston, Luzerne
County, Pennsylva-
nia. All creditors are
requested to pres-
ent their claims and
all persons indebted
to the decedent will
make payment to
the aforementioned
Administrator or his
attorney. ROSENN,
JENKINS & GREEN-
WALD, LLP 15 South
Franklin Street,
Wilkes-Barre, PA
18711-0075
150 Special Notices
ADOPT ADOPT
Loving family offers
your precious child
a life time of love
and happiness.
1-888-600-6341
ADOPT: A t r ul y
happy, devoted,
married couple will
give your newborn
endless love,
warmth & a bright
future. Expenses
paid. Call
Christine & John
1-855-320-3840
ADOPT: Adoring
Mom, Dad, Big
Brother would like
to share a lifetime
of hugs & kisses
in our loving home
with a newborn.
Please Call
Lynda & Dennis
888-688-1422
Expenses Paid
ADOPTION
A happily married
couple longs to
share our hearts
and home with
a newborn. Finan-
cially secure and
loving extended
family will offer
your child every
opportunity for a
lifetime of happi-
ness. Expenses
paid. Please call
Helen and John
1-800-604-1992
Adoption Adoption is a
choice youve
made out of
love. We dream
of giving your
newborn a safe,
secure lifetime
of love. Expens-
es paid. Please
call Theresa &
Steve @ 1-877-
801-7256 or visit
The r e s a AndSt e v e
. s hut t e r f l y. c om
Let the Community
Know!
Place your Classified
Ad TODAY!
570-829-7130
Let the Community
Know!
Place your Classified
Ad TODAY!
570-829-7130
ADORING FAMILY OF 3
hoping to become 4
promises your new-
born a bright,
secure future filled
with endless love.
Denise & Tony
1-888-515-9347
150 Special Notices
BOWLING PARTY
JULY 31, 2011
1 TO 6 PM
AT STANTON
LANES
TO BENEFIT
THE R.A.D.
SCHOLARSHIP
$10 TICKETS
WILL GET YOU
3 GAMES OF
BOWLING
WITH SHOE
RENTAL AND
RAFFLE TICKET
Also available
RAD Bracelets
Face Painting
provided by
Lollipop Services
RAD Shirts and
Basket Raffles
DJ MO
PERFORMING
Celebrity
Bartender in the
lounge at
Stanton Lanes!
All tips will go the
R.A.D.
Scholarship Fund!
470 Stanton St.
Wilkes-Barre
For details call
570-824-4661 and
ask for Terry or
visit the Athea
DeGraffenreid
Memorial page on
Facebook
Benefits the
Remember Athea
DeGruffenreid
Scholarship Fund
A Korean wed-
ding procession
includes ducks
since they mate
for life.
bridezella.net
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
DO YOU ENJOY
PREGNANCY ?
Would you like
the emotional
reward of helping
an infertile
couple reach
their dream of
becoming
parents?
Consider being a
surrogate. All
fees allowable by
law will be paid.
Call Central
Pennsylvania
Attorney,
Denise Bierly, at
814-237-6278
ext. 226
ALL
JUNK
CAR &
TRUCKS
WANTED
Highest Prices
Paid!!!
FREE
REMOVAL
Call V&G
Anytime
288-8995
P PA AYING $500 YING $500
MINIMUM
DRIVEN IN
Full size 4 wheel
drive trucks
ALSO PAYING TOP $$$
for heavy equip-
ment, backhoes,
dump trucks,
bull dozers
HAPPY TRAILS
TRUCK SALES
570-760-2035
542-2277
6am to 8pm
330 Child Care
DAYCARE
in my Kingston
home. Licensed.
Accepting
Lackawanna &
Luzerne CCC.
570-283-0336
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
340 Health Care
Services
Caregiver for the Elderly
My Speciality is
providing care for
Alzheimers
Patients. Assisting
with personal care,
housekeeping,
cooking meals &
companionship.
Accommodating
Kingston &
Wilkes-Barre Area.
570-606-6551
Leave a message
350 Elderly Care
Assisting the Elderly &
Disabled in their homes.
Flexible hours -
bachelors degree in
social work.
Contact Nancy at
570-824-3417
leave message if
not available.
406 ATVs/Dune
Buggies
HONDA`09 RECON
TRX 250CC/Electric
shift. Like New.
$3,800.
(570) 814-2554
TOMAHAWK`10
ATV, 125 CC. Brand
New Tomahawk mid
size 125cc 4 wheel-
er. Only $995 takes
it away!. Call
386-334-7448
Wilkes-Barre
YAMAHA`02 GRIZZLY
660, Limited edi-
tion, 22 inch ITP,
Chrome wheels.
$3,500
Or best offer.
(570)333-4236
YAMAHA`04 RHINO
Excellent condition,
200 hours. Priced
to sell. $6,500 or
best offer. Call
Keith 570-971-4520
409 Autos under
$5000
CADILLAC `94
DEVILLE SEDAN
94,000 miles,
automatic, front
wheel drive, 4
door, air condi-
tioning, air bags,
all power, cruise
control, leather
interior, $3,300.
570-394-9004
CHEVY `01 CAVALIER
71K miles. 4 door.
A/C. CD. New
brakes / service.
$4,195 or best offer.
570-704-8685
FORD `01
WINDSTAR VAN
New Inspection,
runs well. $1,695 or
best offer
(570) 474-5504
409 Autos under
$5000
FORD 02
FOCUS ZTS
2 door.
Hatchback.
Emerald green.
New inspection.
$4,495
GMC 96 JIMMY SLE
4WD, Hunter
Green, 4 door, CD,
168,000 miles.
$2,100 obo.
(570) 262-7550
PONTIAC `98 GRAND
PRIX SE
112,000 miles,
$1,750
(570) 655-5404
SAAB `89
CONVERTIBLE
White with tan inte-
rior. New top, very
good condition. no
rust, no accidents,
all service records.
81k miles $4,000
(570)474-5283
412 Autos for Sale
AUDI `02 A4
3.0, V6, AWD
automatic, tiptronic
transmission. Fully
loaded, leather
interior. 92,000
miles. Good condi-
tion. Asking $9,500.
Call (570) 417-3395
08Mariner 4x4$13,995
09Escape xlt $12,995
09 IMPALA LS $11,995
08Taurus SEL $12,995
08RAM 1500 $12,995
05EXPLORER4X4$11,995
Full Notary Service
Tags & Title Transfers
BENS AUTO SALES
RT 309 W-BTwp.
Near Wegmans
570-822-7359
BMW `00 323I
Black w/ tan leather
interior. All power. 6
cylinder. Sun roof.
Recently inspected.
New tires. 140K
miles. $6,800
(570) 868-6986
BMW `01 X5
4.4i. Silver, fully
loaded, tan leather
interior. 1 owner.
103k miles. $12,999
or best offer. Call
570-814-3666
BMW `02 330
CONVERTIBLE
83K miles. Beautiful
condition. Newly
re-done interior
leather & carpeting.
$13,500.
570-313-3337
BMW `03 530 I
Beige with tan
leather interior.
Heated seats, sun-
roof, 30 MPG high-
way. Garage kept.
Excellent condition
86,000 miles.
Asking $11,000.
(570) 788-4007
Selling your
Camper?
Place an ad and
find a new owner.
570-829-7130
BMW `04 325i
5 Speed. Like New!!
New Tires, tinted
windows, sun roof,
black leather
interior. Only
57,000 Miles!!!
PRICE REDUCED TO
$14,000!!
For more info,
call (570) 762-3714
BMW `07 328xi
Black with black
interior. Heated
seats. Back up &
navigation sys-
tems. New tires &
brakes. Sunroof.
Garage kept. Many
extras! 46,000
Miles.
Asking $20,500.
570-825-8888 or
626-297-0155
Call Anytime!
BMW `93 325 IC
Convertible,
Metallic Green
Exterior & Tan
Interior, 5 Speed
Transmission,
Heated Seats. 2nd
Owner, 66k Miles.
Excellent Condition,
Garage Kept,
Excellent Gas
Mileage. Carfax
available. Price
reduced $7,995
or trade for SUV or
other. Beautiful /
Fun Car.
570-388-6669
BMW `99 M3
Convertible with
Hard Top. AM/FM. 6
disc CD. 117 K miles.
Stage 2 Dinan sus-
pension. Cross
drilled rotors. Cold
air intake. All main-
tenance records
available. $16,695
570-466-2630
BUICK `98 LESABRE
4 door. All leather.
114,000 miles. Great
shape. $2,600. Call
570-819-3140 or
570-709-5677
412 Autos for Sale
ACME AUTO SALES
343-1959
1009 Penn Ave
Scranton 18509
Across from Scranton Prep
GOOD CREDIT, BAD
CREDIT, NO CREDIT
Call Our Auto Credit
Hot Line to get
Pre-approved for a
Car Loan!
800-825-1609
www.acmecarsales.net
11 AUDI S5 QUATTRO
Convertible.
Sprint blue, 2 tone
black/brown leather
int. 19 alloys,
330HP turbo (AWD)
08 CHRYSLER 300
SILVER V6
08 FORD FUSION SE
grey, auto, V6
08 CHEVY IMPALA LT
Dove grey, alloys,
V6
08 BUICK LACROSSE
CXL, Silver/grey
leather, sunroof
07 AUDI S4 QUATTRO
silver, black leather,
6 speed, 4.2v8,
(AWD)
06 DODGE STRATUS XXT
RED.
05 CHEVY MALIBU
Maxx White, grey
learther, sunroof
05 JAGUAR X-TYPE
3.0, hunter green,
tan leather (AWD)
04 NISSAN ALTIMA SL
3.5 white, black
leather, sun roof
01 VOLVO V70 STATION
WAGON, blue/grey,
leather, AWD
01 AUDI S8 QUATRO
Burg./tan lthr.,
Nav., 360 HP, AWD
01 AUDI A8 L
green, tan leather
nav., AWD
00 CADILLAC CATERA
silver/blk leather,
sunroof, 56K
00 NISSAN ALTIMA GXE
Blue/grey
leather, auto, 4cyl.
99 CHRYSLER
CONCORDE gold
98 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 X4s
08 CADILLAC ESCALADE
Blk/Blk leather, 3rd
seat, Navgtn, 4x4
07 DODGE GRAND
CARAVAN SXT Blue
grey leather, 7
passenger mini van
06 BUICK RENDVEOUS
Ultra blue, tan
leather, 3rd seat
AWD
06 PONTIAC
TORRANT
Black (AWD)
06 DODGE GRAND
CARAVAN ES, red,
4dr, entrtnmt cntr,
7 pass mini van
06 JEEP COMMANDER
Slvr, 3rd seat, 4x4
06 DODGE RAM 1500
SLT, Quad cab, slvr,
5.7 hemi, auto, 4x4
06 DAKOTA QUAD CAB
SLT, silver, auto.,
V6, 4x4
06 JEEP LIBERTY 4X4
SPORT white, V6,
05 GMC ENVOY SLT
grey, black
leather, 4x4
05 CHEVY EQUINOX LS
Black, AWD
05 GMC JIMMY
ENVOY SLE, Silver,
3rd seat, 4x4
05 FORD ESCAPE XLT
Silver 4 x4
05 BUICK RANIER CXL
gold, tan, leather,
sunroof (AWD)
05 GMC SIERRA
X-Cab, blk, auto,
4x4 truck
04 CHEVY TRAILBLAZER
LS blue, 4x4
04 DODGE DURANGO
SLT hemi, blue/
grey, 3rd seat, 4x4
04 CHEVY SUBURBAN
LS, pewter silver,
3rd seat, 4x4
04 LINCOLN AVIATOR
pearl white, grey
leather, 3rd seat,
AWD
04 FORD F-150
Heritage, X-cab,
blk, auto, 4x4
04 NISSAN XTERRA SE
blue, auto, 4x4
03 FORD XLS ESCAPE
yellow, 4x4
03 FORD WINDSTAR
LX blue, 4 door
mini van
3 CHEVY 1500, V8,
X-cab, white, 4x4
7 pass. mini van
01 VOLVO V70
AWD, station
wagon, blue grey
leather, 84k miles.
99 JEEP GRAND
CHEROKEE LAREDO,
grey, auto, 4x4
98 EXPLORER XLT
Blue grey leather,
sunroof, 4x4
95 CHEVY 1500 XCAB
TRUCK, green 4 x 4
95 GMC JIMMY
2 door, purple 4x4
CADILLAC `02 DEVILLE
84K miles. Charcoal
with tan leather
interior. Recent
head gaskets &
water pump. Drives
great. $3,750. Call
570-417-5979
CADILLAC `04
SEVILLE SLS
Beige. Fully loaded
Excellent condition.
Runs great. New
rotors, new brakes.
Just serviced.
108,000 miles. Ask-
ing $8,000. (570)
709-8492
CADILLAC 06 STS
AWD, 6 cylinder, Sil-
ver, 52,600 miles,
sunroof, heated
seats, Bose sound
system, 6 CD
changer, satellite
radio, Onstar, park-
ing assist, remote
keyless entry, elec-
tronic keyless igni-
tion, & more!
$17,000
570-881-2775
CHEVY `06 COLORADO
Extended cab. Auto.
Power steering, a/c.
40k miles. 2 wheel
drive.
$12,600, negotiable.
570-678-5040
412 Autos for Sale
Rare, Exclusive
Opportunity To
Own...
2002 BMW 745i
The Flagship of
the Fleet
New - $87,000
Midnight Emerald
with beige leather
interior. 61K miles.
Mint condition.
Loaded. Garage
Kept. Navigation
Stunning,
Must Sell!
$20,000
$18,600
26 FORD
MODEL T
Panel Delivery
100 point
Concours quality
restoration. Red
with black fend-
ers. Never Driven.
0 miles on
restoration.
RARE!
$40,000
$38,000
$36,500
1954 MERCURY
MONTEREY
WOODY WAGON
100 point restora-
tion. $130,000
invested. 6.0
Vortec engine.
300 miles on
restoration. Cus-
tom paint by
Foose Automo-
tive. Power win-
dows, a/c, and
much more!
Gorgeous
Automobile!
$75,000
$71,000
$69,900
From an Exotic,
Private Collection
Call 570-650-0278
CENTRAL CITY
MOTORS
319 W. Main St.
Plymouth, PA
HIGHEST QUALITY
VEHICLES
All Guaranteed
Bumper to
Bumper For
30 Days
570-779-3890
570-829-5596
CHEVROLET `00
CORVETTE
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/FM
stereo.
Cassette/CD Player.
Very good to excel-
lent condition.
$19,700
SERIOUS INQUIRIES ONLY
(570) 696-0424
Boat? Car? Truck?
Motorcycle? Air-
plane? Whatever it
is, sell it with a
Classified ad.
570-829-7130
CHEVROLET `03
IMPALA
97,000 miles,
$3,300.
570-592-4522
570-592-4994
CHEVROLET `05
TAHOE Z71
Silver birch with
grey leather interior,
3rd row seating,
rear A/C & heat,
4WD automatic with
traction control, 5.3l
engine, moonroof,
rear DVD player.
Bose stereo + many
more options. Imm-
aculate condition.
76,000 adult driven
miles. $15,600. Call
(570) 378-2886 &
ask for Joanne
CHEVROLET `86
CORVETTE
4x3 manual, 3 over-
drive, 350 engine
with aluminum
heads. LT-1 exhaust
system. White with
red pearls. Custom
flames in flake. New
tires & hubs. 1
owner. 61,000 origi-
nal miles. $8,500
(570) 359-3296
Ask for Les
CHEVROLET `98
CAMARO
Excellent condition.
3.8L, V8 automatic
with overdrive.
T-top convertible.
Bright purple
metallic with dark
grey cloth interior.
Only 38,200 miles.
New battery. Tinted
windows. Monsoon
premium audio
system with DVD
player. $6,500
(570) 436-7289
CHEVROLET 06
CORVETTE
CONVERTIBLE
Silver beauty, 1
Owner, Museum
quality. 4,900
miles, 6 speed. All
possible options
including Naviga-
tion, Power top.
New, paid $62,000
Must sell $45,900
570-299-9370
412 Autos for Sale
CHEVY `03 BLAZER
LS 4WD 2 door
$6,280
MARSH MOTORS
1218 Main St.
Swoyersville, PA
570-718-6992
Buy-Sell-Trade
CHEVY `04 CAVALIER
Sedan. 4 cylinder
auto. Green. 128k
miles. A/C, cruise,
power locks, ABS.
$4,499 or best
offer. Call
570-704-8685
CHEVY `05 EQUINOX
LT (premium pack-
age), 3.4L, 47,000
miles. All wheel
drive, power moon-
roof, windows, locks
& seats. Leather
interior, 6 cd chang-
er, rear folding
seats, keyless entry,
onstar, roof rack,
running boards,
garage kept.
$13,750.
570-362-1910
GET THE WORD OUT
with a Classified Ad.
570-829-7130
CHRYSLER `05
SEBRING LX
Low mileage, blue,
2 door, automatic.
Excellent condition
$7,000
(570) 740-7446
CHRYSLER `92
LEBARON
CONVERTIBLE
Needs engine seals
56K Original Miles.
Radiant Red. Mint
condition, new
paint, automatic,
new battery, tune
up, brakes, top.
Runs well, needs
some work.
$1,400 firm
(347) 452-3650
(In Mountain Top)
CHRYSLER 06
300C HEMI
Light green, 18,000
miles, loaded,
leather, wood trim,
$24,000.
570-222-4960
leave message
10 DODGE
CARAVAN SXT
32K, Power sliding
doors, Factory
warranty!
$18,399
09 DODGE
CALIBER SXT 2.0
Automatic, 24k
Factory Warranty!
$13,899
08 HONDA
RIDGELINE RTL
32K, Factory
Warranty, Leather
Sunroof
$24,399
08 JEEP LIBERTY
SPORT 4X4
34K, Red
$16,399
08 CHEVY
IMAPALA LS
4 door, only 37K! 5
Year / 100K
Factory Warranty!
$13,599
07 CHEVY IMPALA
LS
4 door, only 45k / 5
Year 100K Factory
Warranty!
$11,499
01 LINCOLN
TOWN CAR,
Executive, 74K
$6,899
CROSSROAD
MOTORS
570-825-7988
700 Sans Souci
Highway
W W E E S S E L L E L L
F O R F O R L L E S S E S S ! ! ! !
TITLE TAGS
FULL NOTARY
SERVICE
6 MONTH WARRANTY
DODGE `06 STRATUS
Only 55K. Brand
new tires, plugs,
wires, oil. Excellent
Condition. $7,495
(570) 562-1963
FORD `04 MUSTANG
Mach I, 40th
ANNIVERSARY EDITION
V8, Auto, 1,300
miles, all options,
show room condi-
tion. Call for info.
Asking $24,995
Serious inquiries
only. 570-636-3151
FORD `05 RANGER
X-Cab V6 Auto
2WD; $5,980
MARSH MOTORS
1218 Main St.
Swoyersville, PA
570-718-6992
Buy-Sell-Trade
FORD `07 MUSTANG
63,000 highway
miles, silver, runs
great, $11,500.
negotiable.
570-479-2482
FORD `87 F150
116k, rebuilt trans-
mission, new radia-
tor. Runs great.
$1,250. Call
570-864-2339
412 Autos for Sale
FORD `90 MUSTANG GT
Must See. Sharp!
Black, new direc-
tional tires, excel-
lent inside / outside,
factory stock, very
clean, must see to
appreciate. $9,000
or best offer. For
more information,
call 570-269-0042
Leave Message
FORD 02 MUSTANG
GT CONVERTIBLE
Red with black
top. 6,500 miles.
One Owner.
Excellent Condi-
tion. $18,500
570-760-5833
FORD 08 MUSTANG
GT convertible.
23k low miles. 1
owner. $13,500
MARSH MOTORS
1218 Main St.
Swoyersville, PA
570-718-6992
Buy-Sell-Trade
FORD 08 MUSTANG
V6 convertible.
Auto. Power win-
dows & locks.
44K. Very Clean.
$14,980
MARSH MOTORS
1218 Main St.
Swoyersville, PA
570-718-6992
Buy-Sell-Trade
HARLEY DAVIDSON
`08 NIGHTSTER
Orange / Black,
low miles
$7,700
MARSH MOTORS
1218 Main St.
Swoyersville, PA
570-718-6992
Buy-Sell-Trade
HONDA `07 CIVIC
EX. 34k miles.
excellent condition,
sunroof, alloys, a/c,
cd, 1 owner, garage
kept. $13,000. Call
570-760-0612
VITOS
&
GINOS
Wanted:
Junk
Cars &
Trucks
Highest
Prices
Paid!!
FREE PICKUP
288-8995
Job Seekers are
looking here!
Where's your ad?
570-829-7130 and
ask for an employ-
ment specialist
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
HYUNDAI 03
ELANTRA
4 cylinder,
automatic, cd,
1 owner.
Economy Car!
$3,995
Call For Details!
570-696-4377
HYUNDAI `04
TIBURON GT
Blue, 5 speed
manual, CD, Air,
factory alarm,
power windows &
locks. 38K.
$7,500 negotiable.
Call 570-540-6236
KIA `08 RONDO
Maroon with beige
interior. All options.
78,000 miles. Still
under warranty.
Received 60,000
mile servicing. New
tires. KBB Value
$8,500. Asking only
$7,900. A Must See!
(570) 457-0553
KIA 08 RIO LX
Sedan, automatic,
low miles
$11,650
560 Pierce St.
Kingston, PA
www.wyoming
valleymotors.com
570-714-9924
PONTIAC 99 SUNFIRE
4 door, 4 cylinder,
automatic.
$1,950
FORD 96 RANGER
Pickup, 4 cylinder,
automatic, $1,650
OLDSMOBILE 99 INTRIGUE
4 door, 6 cylinder,
automatic, $1,650
FORD 95 EXPLORER
4 door, 6 cylinder,
automatic, 4 wheel
drive, $1,650
Current Inspection
On All Vehicles
DEALER
570-825-8253
LEXUS `08 IS 250
AWD Sedan. 17,200
miles. No accidents.
Perfect condition.
Black with leather.
V6 Automatic.
Moonroof. 27 MPG.
Never seen snow.
$26,800
(570) 814-1436
412 Autos for Sale
LEXUS `98 LS 400
Excellent condition,
garage kept, 1
owner. Must see.
Low mileage, 90K.
Leather interior. All
power. GPS naviga-
tion, moon roof, cd
changer. Loaded.
$9,000 or best
offer. 570-706-6156
LINCOLN`06
TOWN CAR LIMITED
Fully loaded.
46,000 miles,
Triple coated
Pearlized White.
Showroom
condition.
$18,900.
(570) 814-4926 or
(570) 654-2596
WANTED!
ALL
JUNK
CARS!
CA$H
PAID
570-301-3602
MAZDA `08 MIATA
MX-5 CONVERTIBLE
Red. Power steer-
ing, auto, AC, CD.
ONLY 5,300 MILES.
$18,500
(570) 883-0143
MAZDA 2 `11
Low mileage, 197
miles. Selling due to
death in family. Lime
green. Loaded.
$15,500. Call
570-788-4354
SUBARU `05 LEGACY
SPORT AWD
Air, new tires &
brakes, 31,000
miles, great
condition. $11,995.
570-836-1673
412 Autos for Sale
MERCEDES-BENZ
`02 SLK-320
Red with black
interior, hardtop/
convertible.
REAL SHARP!
Accepting Offers
(570) 740-8900
MERCEDES-BENZ `06
C-CLASS
Silver with leather
interior. Good condi-
tion. 34,000 miles.
$15,000 Negotiable
(570) 885-5956
MERCEDES-BENZ `95
SL 500
Convertible, with
removable hard
top, dark Blue,
camel interior,
Summer Driving
Only, Garage Kept.
Very Good
Condition, No
Accidents. Classy
Car. Price
Reduced!
$13,995
or trade for
SUV or other.
570-388-6669
MERCURY `95
GRAND MARQUIS
4 door, V8, fully
loaded, moon roof,
new tires & brakes.
Interior & exterior in
excellent shape. 2
owners. Call
(570) 822-6334 or
(570) 970-9351
MERCURY 01 GRAND
MARQUIS
58k miles. 1 owner
$5995.
09 HONDA ACCORD
12k miles, 1 owner.
$18,900
570-655-3344
570-362-1644
TOYOTA `03 SOLARA
Coupe. Auto. Silver.
Power windows &
locks. A/C. Satellite
radio, CD. $6,200.
Call 570-899-5076
Sell your own home!
Place an ad HERE
570-829-7130
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com TUESDAY, JULY 19, 2011 PAGE 3D
FREE STATE INSPECTION AS LONG AS YOU OWN THE CAR!
Most with Cruise Control, AM/FM/CD, Air
Conditioning, Moonroof, Keyless Entry, Tilt
Wheel, Traction Control, ABS, Roof Rack
Most with Cruise Control, AM/FM/CD, Air, Leather
Seats, Keyless Entry, 3rd RowSeat, TowPackage
TO CHOOSE
FROM
Most with Cruise Control, AM/FM/CD, Air, Leather Seats,
Keyless Entry, Heated Mirrors, Parking Sensors, ABS
AU1639- Cruise Control, CD, Air
Conditioning, Keyless Entry, Rear Air,
Moonroof, DVDPlayer, Navigation System
STARTINGAT STARTINGAT
LOWMILES!
STARTINGAT STARTINGAT
LOWMILES!
STARTINGAT STARTINGAT
TO CHOOSE
FROM
LOWMILES!
TO CHOOSE
FROM
STARTINGAT STARTINGAT
LOWMILES!
Most with Pwr. Leather Heated Seats,
Moonroof, Keyless Entry, ABS, Rear
Defogger, 6 Disc CD, Satellite Radio
TO CHOOSE
FROM
STARTINGAT STARTINGAT
LOWMILES!
STARTINGAT STARTINGAT
TO CHOOSE
FROM
MILES UNDER
10K!
Most with Pwr. Leather Heated Seats, Keyless
Entry w/Keypad, Rear Defogger, 6 Disc CD,
Parking Sensors, Heated Mirrors, Cruise
CALL NOW 823-8888 CALL NOW 823-8888
1-800-817-FORD 1-800-817-FORD
Overlooking Mohegan Sun Overlooking Mohegan Sun
577 East Main St., Plains 577 East Main St., Plains
Just Minutes from Scranton or W-B Just Minutes from Scranton or W-B VISIT US AT 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. See salesperson for details. All payments subject to credit approval by the primary lending source, Tier 0 rate.
Special APR financing cannot be combined with 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). 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 JULY 31, 2011.
63
MOS.
15K MILES!
72
MOS.
TO CHOOSE
FROM
STARTING AT
TO CHOOSE
FROM
24K MILES!
14K MILES!
15K MILES! 15K MILES!
33K MILES!
63
MOS.
63
MOS.
14K MILES!
4,200 MILES!
22K MILES!
TO CHOOSE
FROM
STARTING AT
12K MILES!
PAGE 4D TUESDAY, JULY 19, 2011 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com TUESDAY, JULY 19, 2011 PAGE 5D
412 Autos for Sale
MINI COOPER `06
Chili red, with
white bonnet
stripes, roof and
mirror caps. Origi-
nal owner with
29,000 mi. Auto.
Cold Weather
Pkg. Dynamic Sta-
bility Control.
Front fog lamps.
Rain-sensing
wipers. Black
leather interior.
Asking $14,900
FUN TO DRIVE!
570-674-5673
MINI COOPER S `06
GARAGED
Pure silver metallic.
Roof & mirror caps
in black. Tartan red
cloth / panther black
leather interior.
Black bonnet
stripes. Automatic.
Steptronic paddles.
Dual moon roofs,
Cockpit chrono
package, conven-
ience, cold weather
(heated seats) &
premium packages.
Dynamic stability
control. Xenon
headlights, front
and rear fog lights.
Parking distance
control. Harmon-
Kardon sound sys-
tem. Chrome line
interior. Mint condi-
tion. 17,000 miles.
Must Drive!
$21,500
570-341-7822
MINI COOPER`08
CLUBMAN S
Sparkling silver
metallic. Roof and
mirror caps in black.
Black leather interi-
or. Automatic step-
tronic paddles. Dual
moon roof. Cold
weather package.
Dynamic stability
control. Excellent
Condition. 33,600
miles. Just Ser-
viced. 30 MPG City.
Factory warranty to
50K miles. $20,995
(570) 472-9909
(570) 237-1062
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
PONTIAC 03 VIBE GT
4 cylinder,
6-speed, cd,
sunroof, 1 owner.
Sharp Sharp Car!
$5,495
Call For Details!
570-696-4377
PONTIAC `05
GRAND PRIX
Sedan. White. Great
condition. Sunroof,
tan leather interior.
Recently main-
tained. 70k miles.
$5,000. Call
570-954-7459
Find Something?
Lose Something?
Get it back where it
belongs
with a Lost/Found ad!
570-829-7130
PONTIAC 07 VIBE
Automatic, moon-
roof, AWD
$10,740
560 Pierce St.
Kingston, PA
www.wyoming
valleymotors.com
570-714-9924
PONTIAC 69 FIREBIRD 400
CONVERTIBLE
Blue/white top &
white interior.
Recent document-
ed frame-off
restoration. Over
$31,000 invested.
will sell $21,500.
570-335-3127
PORSCHE `02 BOXSTER
S
Great convertible,
black top, 6 speed
manual transmis-
sion, carbon fiber
dash, leather interi-
or, front & rear
trunk, fast & agile.
$18,000 or best
offer. Call
570-262-2478
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
SATURN 05 ION
4 cylinder,
automatic, cd,
1 owner.
Extra Clean!
$3,995
Call For Details!
570-696-4377
SUBARU `98
OUTBACK WAGON
155,000 miles.
New Tires.
$5,000.
(570) 899-8725
SUBARU 05 LEGACY
2.5i Limited AWD,
Excellent Condition,
Dark Blue, Loaded
with features such
as sun roof and
heated seats.
Manual 5-speed
transmission.
116,000 accident-
free highway miles.
Asking $7,500. Call
570-575-0656
412 Autos for Sale
TOYOTA `10
Camry SE. 56,000
miles. Red, alloy
wheels, black cloth
interior. Will consid-
er trade. $14,200
(570) 793-9157
TOYOTA `10 COROLLA
LE. Grey. 20K miles.
Auto. Air. Keyless
entry. Power. War-
ranty. Like new.
$14,900. Call
570-878-9234
TOYOTA 07 CAMRY LE
4 cylinder sedan,
automatic
$15,545
560 Pierce St.
Kingston, PA
www.wyoming
valleymotors.com
570-714-9924
VOLKSWAGEN `01 GTI
Great running
condition. Red with
cloth interior, power
door locks, power
windows, power
moon roof,
5 speed, just
serviced, 117k.
Asking $5,300
570-885-2162
VOLKSWAGEN `04
BEETLE
CONVERTIBLE
Blue. AM/FM cas-
sette. Air. Automat-
ic. Power roof, win-
dows, locks &
doors. Boot cover
for top. 22k. Excel-
lent condition.
Garage kept.
Reduced
$14,000
570-822-1976
Leave Message
VOLVO `01 XC70
All wheel drive,
46,000 miles, bur-
gundy with tan
leather, complete
dealer service histo-
ry, 1 owner, detailed,
garage kept, estate.
$9,100.
570-840-3981
VOLVO 04 XC70
Cross Country,
All Wheel Drive
$9,982
560 Pierce St.
Kingston, PA
www.wyoming
valleymotors.com
570-714-9924
415 Autos-Antique
& Classic
CADILLAC `80
COUPE DEVILLE
Excellent condition,
$3,000 located in
Hazleton.
570-454-1945 or
561-573-4114
CHEVROLET `69 NOVA
SS clone. 350
engine, 290 Horse-
power. 10 bolt posi-
rear. PowerGlide
transmission. Power
disc brake kit. Over
$20,000 invested,
sacrifice at
$7,500 Firm.
Call 732-397-8030
(Wilkes-Barre)
CHEVROLET `76
PICKUP
Very Good
Condition!
Low miles!
$7500. FIRM
570-905-7389
Ask for Lee
CHEVROLET `81
CORVETTE
Very good condi-
tion. 350 engine,
classic silver with
black bottom trim,
all original, regis-
tered as an antique
vehicle, removable
mirror tops. 66,000
miles, chrome
wheels & tires in
very good shape,
leather interior,
garage kept. Must
see to appreciate.
Asking $9,000 or
willing to trade for a
newer Pontoon
boat.
Call 570-545-6057
CHEVY `68
CAMARO SS
396 automatic,
400 transmission,
clean interior, runs
good, 71K, garage
kept, custom
paint, Fire Hawk
tires, Krager
wheels, well
maintained.
$23,900
Negotiable
570-693-2742
CHEVY`75 CAMARO
350 V8. Original
owner. Automatic
transmission. Rare -
tuxedo silver / black
vinyl top with black
naugahyde interior.
Never damaged.
$6,000. Call
570-489-6937
FORD SALEEN 04
281 SC Coupe
1,000 miles
document. #380
Highly collectable.
$28,500
570-472-1854
415 Autos-Antique
& Classic
1949 DESOTO CUTOM
4 DOOR SEDAN
3 on the tree with
fluid drive. This All
American Classic
Icon runs like a top
at 55MPH. Kin to
Chrysler, Dodge,
Plymouth, Imperial
Desoto, built in the
American Midwest,
after WWII, in a
plant that once
produced B29
Bombers. In its
original antiquity
condition, with
original shop &
parts manuals,
shes beautifully
detailed and ready
for auction in Sin
City. Spent her
entire life in Ari-
zona and New
Mexico, never saw
a day of rain or
rust. Only $19,995.
To test drive, by
appointment only,
Contact Tony at
570-899-2121 or
penntech84th@
gmail.com
FORD `52
COUNTRY SEDAN
CUSTOM LINE
STATION WAGON
V8, automatic,
8 passenger,
3rd seat, good
condition, 2nd
owner. REDUCED TO
$6,500.
570-579-3517
LINCOLN `66
CONTINENTAL
4 door,
Convertible, 460
cu. engine, 67,000
miles, 1 owner
since `69. Teal
green / white
leather, restorable,
$2,500 570-287-
5775 / 332-1048
LINCOLN `88
TOWN CAR
61,000 original
miles, garage kept,
triple black, leather
interior, carriage
roof, factory wire
wheels, loaded,
excellent condition.
$5,500. Call
Mike 570-237-7660
MAZDA `88 RX-7
CONVERTIBLE
1 owner, garage
kept, 65k original
miles, black with
grey leather interior,
all original & never
seen snow. $7,995.
Call 570-237-5119
MERCEDES BENZ
`74 450 SE
SOLID CAR!
Interior perfect,
exterior very good.
Runs great! New
tires, 68K original
miles.
$5,500 FIRM.
570-905-7389
Ask for Lee
MERCEDES-BENZ `73
450SL
Convertible with
removable hard top,
power windows, AM
/FM radio with cas-
sette player, CD
player, automatic, 4
new tires. Cham-
pagne exterior; Ital-
ian red leather inte-
rior inside. Garage
kept, excellent con-
dition. $31,000. Call
825-6272
MERCEDES-BENZ `88
420 SEL
Silver with red
leather interior.
Every option.
Garage kept, show-
room condition.
$7,000.
(570) 417-9200
OLDSMOBILE `68
DELMONT
DRASTICALLY
REDUCED!!
This model only
produced in 1967
& 1968. All
original 45,000
miles, Color
Burgundy, cloth
& vinyl interior,
350 rocket
engine, 2nd
owner. Fender
skirts, always
garaged. Trophy
winner at shows.
Serious inquiries
only, $7,500.
570-690-0727
PONTIAC `68
CATALINA
400 engine. 2
barrel carburetor.
Yellow with black
roof and white wall
tires. Black interior.
$4,995. Call
(570) 696-3513
PONTIAC 1937
Fully restored near
original. New paint,
new interior, new
wiring, custom tint-
ed glass, new motor
& transmission.
Spare motor &
trans. 16 wide
white walls car in
excellent condition
in storage for 2
years. $14,000 or
best offer. Serious
inquiries ONLY.
Call 570-574-1923
STUDEBAKER 31
Rumble seat,
Coupe
Good condition.
Call for details
(570) 881-7545
415 Autos-Antique
& Classic
PORSCHE 78
911 SC TARGA
60,000 miles. 5
speed. Air. Power
windows. Metallic
brown. Saddle Inte-
rior. Meticulous
original owner.
Garaged. New
Battery. Inspected.
Excellent Condition.
$25,000. OBO
(610) 797-7856
(484) 264-2743
VW CLASSIC `72
KARMANN GHIA
Restoration
Vehicle. Family
owned, garage
kept, good shape.
Needs some
interior work, new
seats, needs
carburetor work.
Only 58,000 miles.
Asking $5,000.
Serious inquiries
only! Call
570-343-2296
WANTED: PONTIAC
`78 FIREBIRD
Formula 400
Berkshire Green,
Originally purchased
at Bradley-Lawless
in Scranton. Car
was last seen in
Abington-Scranton
area. Finders fee
paid if car is found
and purchased. Call
John with any info
(570) 760-3440
421 Boats &
Marinas
ALUM V-TRAILER 14
15 Evinrude/55 lb.
min. anchor, oars,
seats, etc. Ready to
go, just add poles &
bait. $2,995.
570-751-8689
CUSTOM
CREST 15
Fiberglass
boat with
trailer. Out-
board propul-
sion. Includes:
2 motors
Erinmade,
Lark II series
PRICE
REDUCED!
$2,400
NEGOTI ABLE
570-417-3940
STARCRAFT 80
16 DEEP V
90 Evinrude out-
board 70hp with tilt
& trim 92 EZ
loader trailer. With
00 Tracker Series
60lbs foot pedal, 2
downriggers, stor-
ages, gallon tanks,
2 fish finders and
more. MUST SEE.
Make Best Offer.
Call 866-320-6368
after 5pm.
BOAT SPACE NEEDED
Looking for a place
near Harveys Lake
to park boat for
summer.
570-784-8697
424 Boat Parts/
Supplies
LADDER Folding
boat ladder, three
steps, in excellent
condition, $10 Call
570-328-5611 or
570-328-5506
RIGGERS: 2 can-
non uni troll down
riggers - swivel
bases & weights
avail. - $250.
FISH FINDER -
hummingbird wide
100. $40 firm.
GAS TANK:
3 gallon quicksilver
plastic gas tank with
fuel line $20.
570-262.0716
427 Commercial
Trucks &
Equipment
CHEVY 08 3500
HD DUMP TRUCK
2WD, automatic.
Only 12,000 miles.
Vehicle in like
new condition.
$19,000.
570-288-4322
DUMP TRAILER 05
10 yards, 4 ton limit,
very good condi-
tion. Asking $3,900
Also, E-350. Cheap
For more info, call
973-906-8404
FORD 99 E350
BUCKET VAN
Triton V8. 2 speed
boom; 92,000miles;
$9999 or best price.
Great condition. Call
570-675-3384 or
570574-7002
439 Motorcycles
96 HONDA
American Classic
Edition. 1100 cc. 1
owner, under
20,000 miles. Yel-
low and white,
extra chrome, VNH
exhaust, bags,
lights, MC jack, bat-
tery tender, hel-
mets. Asking $3500
570-288-7618
BMW 07 K1200 GT
Low mileage. Many
extras. Clean.
$9,500
(570) 646-2645
HARLEY DAVIDSON `01
Road King 19,000
miles, new tires, lots
of extra chrome.
Like New. $12,900.
Call 570-639-1989
or 570-760-1023
439 Motorcycles
HARLEY 01
DAVIDSON
Electra Glide, Ultra
Classic, many
chrome acces-
sories, 13k miles,
Metallic Emerald
Green. Garage
kept, like new
condition. Includes
Harley cover.
$12,900
570-718-6769
570-709-4937
HARLEY DAVIDSON `03
100th Anniversary
Edition Deuce.
Garage kept. 1
owner. 1900 miles.
Tons of chrome.
$38,000 invested. A
must see. Asking
$18,000. OBO
570-706-6156
HARLEY DAVIDSON `07
Road King Classic
FLHRC. Burgundy /
Cream. Driver &
Passenger back
rest, grips, battery
tender, cover. Willie
G accessories. 19k
miles. $14,400 or
best offer. Call
262-993-4228
HARLEY DAVIDSON
01 SPORTSTER
883 cubic inch
motor, Paco rigid
frame, extended &
raked. Low miles.
$5,000 or best
offer.(973) 271-1030
HARLEY DAVIDSON
03 DYNA WIDE GLIDE
Golden Anniversary.
Silver/Black. New
Tires. Extras. Excel-
lent Condition.
19,000 miles
$10,000.
570-639-2539
HARLEY DAVIDSON 05
SCREAMING EAGLE
V-ROD
Orange & Black.
Used as a show
bike. Never abused.
480 miles. Excellent
condition. Asking
$18,000 or best
offer. Call
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.
$8,000 or best offer
(570) 709-8773
HARLEY DAVIDSON
2006 NIGHTTRAIN
SPECIAL EDITION
#35 of 50 Made
$10,000 in acces-
sories including a
custom made seat.
Exotic paint set,
Alien Spider Candy
Blue. Excellent con-
dition. All Documen-
tation. 1,400 Asking
$20,000 or best
offer. Call
570-876-4034
HARLEY DAVIDSON 80
Soft riding FLH.
King of the High-
way! Mint origi-
nal antique show
winner. Factory
spot lights, wide
white tires,
biggest Harley
built. Only
28,000 original
miles! Never
needs inspec-
tion, permanent
registration.
$8,500
570-905-9348
HARLEY DAVIDSON
92 DAYTONA DYNA
SPECIAL EDITION
Bike #770 of 1,770
made. Many extras.
Must sell. 13,300
miles. Get on this
classic for only
$6,995
570-477-1109
HONDA 2005 SHADOW
VLX600, White,
10,000 miles
& new back tire.
$3,000
(570) 262-3697 or
(570) 542-7213
KAWASAKI
`08 NINJA
250 cc, blue, like
new, under 1,000
miles. Great starter
bike. $2,800 Seri-
ous inquiries only.
Call 570-331-4777
KAWASAKI 05
NINJA 500R. 3300
miles. Orange.
Garage kept. His &
hers helmets. Must
sell. $2400
570-760-3599
570-825-3711
POLARIS 00
VICTORY CRUISER
14,000 miles,
92 V-twin, 1507 cc,
extras $6000.
570-883-9047
Q-LINK LEGACY `09
250 automatic. Gun
metal gray. MP3
player. $3,000.
Great first motorcy-
cle. 570-696-1156
439 Motorcycles
Kawasaki` 93
ZX11D NINJA
LIKE NEW
8900 Original
miles. Original
owner. V@H
Exhaust and Com-
puter. New tires.
$4,100.
570-574-3584
SUZUKI `07 C50T
CRUISER
EXCELLENT
CONDITION
Windshield, Bags,
Floorboards,V&H
Pipes, White
walls,Garage Kept.
6K Miles $5,200
(570) 430-0357
SUZUKI 77
GS 750
Needs work.
$1,200
or best offer
570-855-9417
570-822-2508
UNITED MOTORS
08 MATRIX 2 SCOOTER
150cc. Purple &
grey in color. 900
miles. Bought brand
new. Paid $2,000.
Asking $1,600 or
best offer.
(570) 814-3328 or
(570) 825-5133
YAMAHA `04 V-STAR
1100 Custom. 5800
miles, light bar,
cobra exhaust,
windshield, many
extras, must sell.
$4,900. Call
570-301-3433
YAMAHA 1975 80
Antique. Very good
condition. Must see.
Low milage. Road
title. Asking $1,260
Call (570) 825-5810
Leave Message
YAMAHA 97
ROYALSTAR 1300
12,000 miles. With
windshield. Runs
excellent. Many
extras including
gunfighter seat,
leather bags, extra
pipes. New tires &
battery. Asking
$4,000 firm.
(570) 814-1548
YAMAHA 97
ROYALSTAR 1300
12,000 miles. With
windshield. Runs
excellent. Many
extras including
gunfighter seat,
leather bags, extra
pipes. New tires &
battery. Asking
$4,000 firm.
(570) 814-1548
442 RVs & Campers
96 SUNLINE TRAILER
23. Excellent con-
dition. Sleeps 3 or 4
people. $6,000
negotiable.
570-453-3358
DUTCHMAN 96
5TH WHEEL
with slideout & sun
room built on. Set
up on permanent
site in Wapwallopen.
Comes with many
extras. $6,500.
(570) 829-1419 or
(570) 991-2135
EQUIPMENT/BOBCAT
TRAILER
Brand new 2010
tandem axle, 4
wheel electric
brakes, 20 long
total, 7 x 16 wood
deck, fold up ramps
with knees, remov-
able fenders for
oversized loads,
powder coat paint
for rust protection,
2 5/16 hitch
coupler, tongue
jack, side pockets,
brake away switch,
battery, 7 pole
RV plugs, title &
more!! Priced for
quick sale. $2,995
386-334-7448
Wilkes-Barre
FLAGSTAFF `08
CLASSIC
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, microwave
oven, 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 large
slides, new
condition, loaded
with accessories.
Ford Dually diesel
truck with hitch
also available.
570-455-6796
SPEEDWAY TRAILER
4x8, steel. 12
wheels. Built-in
Loading ramps.
3,000 lb gross
weight. $350. Call
570-655-1129
442 RVs & Campers
SUNLINE `06 SOLARIS
Travel Trailer. 29,
mint condition, 1
slide out a/c-heat.
Stove, microwave,
fridge, shower
inside & out. Many
more extras, includ-
ing hitch equipment
and sway bars.
Reduced. $12,500.
Call 570-842-6735
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 ft
Rear queen master
bedroom, Walk
thru bathroom.
Center kitchen +
dinette bed. Front
extra large living
room + sofa bed.
Big View windows.
Air, awning, sleeps
6, very clean, will
deliver. Located in
Benton, Pa. $4,900.
215-694-7497
451 Trucks/
SUVs/Vans
BUICK `05
RENDEZVOUS CX
HARD TO FIND!!
AWD, Fully
loaded, 1 owner,
20,000 miles.
Small 6 cylinder.
New tires. Like
new, inside &
out. $14,900. Call
(570) 540-0975
CHEVROLET `05
SILVERADO LT Z71
Extended cab,
automatic. 4x4.
Black with grey
leather interior.
Heated seats.
59,000 miles. New
Michelin tires.
$16,000
(570) 477-3297
CHEVROLET `09
EQUINOX LS
Low mileage,
16,000 miles, auto-
matic, all-wheel
drive, 4 door, anti-
lock brakes, air con-
ditioning, air bags,
power locks, power
windows, power
mirrors, cruise con-
trol, AM/FM radio,
Sirius radio, On-Star,
cassette player, CD
player, keyless
entry, rear de-
froster, rear wind-
shield wiper, tinted
windows.
REDUCED PRICE
$16,500.
(570) 954-9333
Call after 9:00 a.m.
CHEVROLET `10
SILVERADO 1500
Extended Cab V71
Package 4x4. Bed-
liner. V-8. Red.
Remote start.
6,300 miles
$26,000
(570) 639-2539
CHEVROLET `97
SILVERADO
with Western plow.
4WD, Automatic.
Loaded with
options. Bedliner.
55,000 miles.
$9,200. Call
(570) 868-6503
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
CHEVY 00 ASTRO
CARGO VAN
Automatic, V6
1 owner
Clean Work Van!
$3,995
Call For Details!
570-696-4377
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
CHEVY 05 BLAZER
2 Door. Auto. V-6.
CD. Extra Sharp.
$5,995
Call For Details!
570-696-4377
CHEVY `00 SILVERADO
1500. 4x4. 8 box.
Auto. A/C. 121K
miles. $5,995.
570-332-1121
CHEVY `04 EXPRESS
2500
Series. 6.0 Litre V8.
Heavy Duty version.
Excellent cargo van.
85K miles. Excellent
condition. $8,700
570-829-4548 or
570-417-5991
CHEVY `10 SILVERADO
4 Door Crew Cab
LTZ. 4 wheel drive.
Excellent condition,
low mileage.
$35,500. Call
570-655-2689
CHRYSLER `07 PACIFICA
Silver. Only 83K
miles. All wheel
drive, 4.0L V6. All
Power. A/C. Loaded.
Must Sell.
PRICE REDUCED
$10,500 or best
offer. Call
570-417-7937
451 Trucks/
SUVs/Vans
CHEVY 03
TRAILBLAZER LTZ
4WD, V6, leather,
auto, moonroof
$11,990
560 Pierce St.
Kingston, PA
www.wyoming
valleymotors.com
570-714-9924
CHEVY 06 EQUI NOX LT
$12,880
560 Pierce St.
Kingston, PA
www.wyoming
valleymotors.com
570-714-9924
CHEVY 95 BLAZER
4 door. Teal.
92K miles.
New inspection.
$3,895
CHEVY 99
S10 PICKUP
Extended cab.
4x4. Excellent
condition.
$4,295
CHEVY`05 TRAILBLAZER
NEW PRICE
$9,500 OR
BEST OFFER
JUST REDUCED!
SAVE MONEY! GET
READY FOR THE
WINTER! Dont pay
dealer prices! White
with grey interior.
Looks and runs like
it just came off the
lot. Four Door, 4
wheel drive, 84,900
miles, new tires,
tow package, anti
lock brakes, driver
and passenger
airbags, power
windows, power
mirrors, power
locks, rear window
defroster and
wiper, privacy tint,
air conditioner,
cruise control. CD,
keyless entry and
much more.
Call
570-332-4999
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
DODGE 06 DAKOTA
QUAD CAB SLT 4X4
Automatic, CD
Tool Box
Like New!
$8,995
Call For Details!
570-696-4377
DODGE `00 RAM
1500 QUAD CAB
4X4, V8 automatic.
New tires & brakes.
Fully loaded. Lea-
ther interior. Many
extras. Must see.
Excellent condition.
(570) 970-9351
To place your
ad Call Toll Free
1-800-427-8649
DODGE `05 DAKOTA
SLT Club Cab. 4
wheel drive. V8
auto. Blue. 49k
miles. Many extras.
Garage kept. Excel-
lent condition.
$14,000 negotiable
570-430-1396
DODGE `94 CARAVAN
6 cylinder, auto,
front wheel drive,
excellent condition.
Asking $2,800 or
best offer
(570) 655-2664
DODGE `99 CARAVAN
SE. 2 sliding doors.
Very clean. Runs
great. 107k miles.
$2,500. Call
570-709-5677 or
570-819-3140
DODGE `99
DAKOTA SPORT
4 X 4, extended
cab, 117,000
miles, new
inspection, just
serviced, oil, trans
flushed, new fluid
transfer case &
axels, cooling sys-
tem flushed.
$6,599.00
Call 693-1262
after 5:00 PM
451 Trucks/
SUVs/Vans
DODGE `99
DURANGO SLT
5.9 V8, Kodiak
Green, Just serv-
iced. New brakes.
Tow package. AC.
Very good condi-
tion. Runs & drives
100%. 68,000 miles.
Asking $6,850 or
best offer
(570) 239-8165
DODGE `99 RAM
1500 CLUB CAB
Good condition.
Runs great. High
miles. Asking
$2,700
(570) 239-3950
DODGE 02
CARAVAN
Silver
Ice Cold Air
$4,295
DODGE 05 MAGNUM
Clean Car. Local
Trade-in.
$12,861
560 Pierce St.
Kingston, PA
www.wyoming
valleymotors.com
570-714-9924
DODGE 07 NITRO
Low Mileage!
$17,448
560 Pierce St.
Kingston, PA
www.wyoming
valleymotors.com
570-714-9924
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
FORD 97 F-150 4X4
Automatic,
4.2L V6, AC
Economical
Work Truck!
$4,995
Call For Details!
570-696-4377
FORD `03
EXPLORER
Low mileage,
63,500 miles,
automatic, all-wheel
drive, 4 door,
anti-lock brakes,
air conditioning, air
bags, power locks,
power windows,
power mirrors,
power seats, all
power, cruise
control, AM/FM
radio, CD changer,
keyless entry,
leather interior, sun/
moon roof, rear
defroster, rear
windshield wiper,
tinted windows.
$12,500.
(570) 362-0938
FORD `04
EXPLORER
SUV, V6, 4x4,
automatic,
85,000 miles
Black Beauty.
Garage kept.
Must sell.
$8,700
(570) 883-2754
FORD `04 FREESTAR
Limited. Leather. 7
passenger.Remote
doors. DVD player,
premium sound.
Rear A/C. 57,800
miles. $8,995. Call
570-947-0771
FORD `04 FREESTAR
Automatic, front
wheel drive, 4 door,
anti-lock brakes, air
bags, power locks,
power windows,
power mirrors,
power seats, cruise
control, AM/FM
radio, CD player,
rear defroster, rear
windshield wiper,
tinted windows,
new starter, just
inspected, $3,900.
570-594-4992.
Call after 4:30 p.m.
FORD `05 WHEEL
CHAIR LIFT VAN
Seating capacity for
7 plus 2 wheel
chairs. 140,000
miles. Great condi-
tion. Asking $7,000.
For more details,
Call 570-589-9181
FORD `06
EXPLORER
78,400 miles, auto-
matic, four wheel
drive, 4 door, anti-
lock brakes, air
conditioning, air
bags, power locks,
power windows,
power mirrors,
power seats,
cruise control, AM/
FM radio, CD
changer, DVD play-
er, keyless entry,
leather interior,
moon roof, rear
defroster, rear
windshield wiper.
$16,000
(570) 954-5462
Call after 9 a.m.
451 Trucks/
SUVs/Vans
FORD `97 DIESEL
Cummins engine,
8-L. 49,049
miles. 33,000
gross wt. 6,649
light wt. $19,500
Must see!
(570) 829-5886
FORD `99 E250
Wheelchair Van
78,250 miles. Fully
serviced, new bat-
tery, tires & rods.
Seats 6 or 3 wheel-
chairs. Braun Millen-
nium lift with
remote. Walk up
door. Front & rear
A/C. Power locks &
windows. Excellent
condition. $7,500.
570-237-6375
FORD 03
TARUS SES
Moonroof. Air
conditioning.
1 year warranty.
New inspection.
$4,995
Collect cash, not dust!
Clean out your
basement, garage
or attic and call the
Classified depart-
ment today at 570-
829-7130!
GMC `04 4500
Duramax Diesel
engine. Aluminum
16ft Mickey box
truck; allison auto-
matic transmission;
heavy duty tuck-a-
way lift gate with roll
up rear door;
translucent roof;
exhaust brakes;
inside adjustable
mirrors; Oak floor;
new heavy duty bat-
teries and new tires;
under CDL. Excel-
lent condition. 114k
miles. $17,500 OBO
Trailmobile Storage Trailer
53 ft long. Coupler
height - 47.5;
height 136; width
96. Inside height
10. Shelving inside
length of trailer. Two
36 out swinging
double doors.
$2,400 OBO
(570) 855-7197
(570) 328-3428
GMC `93 PICKUP
SLE Package. Very
Clean. 105,000
miles. $3,500.
(570) 283-3184
GMC `99
SUBURBAN
Champagne
exterior,
leather interior,
power windows
& locks, 4 wheel
drive. $3,685.
Call
570-362-4080
GMC `99 TRUCK
SLE PACKAGE
2 wheel drive
84,000
original
miles
$5,900.
or best offer
570-
824-3096
HONDA `10
ODYSSEY
Special Edition.
Maroon, Fully
loaded. Leather
seats. TV/DVD,
navigation, sun roof
plus many other
extras. 3rd seat .
Only 1,900 Miles.
Brand New.
Asking $37,000
(570) 328-0850
HONDA 08 ELEMENT
Only 6,000 miles!
$19,820
560 Pierce St.
Kingston, PA
www.wyoming
valleymotors.com
570-714-9924
INTERNATIONAL 95
DUMP TRUCK
Refurbished, rebuilt
engine, transmis-
sion replaced.
Rear-end removed
and relubed. Brand
new 10 dump. PA
state inspected.
$12,900/best offer.
570-594-1496
PAGE 6D TUESDAY, JULY 19, 2011 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
522 Education/
Training
533 Installation/
Maintenance/
Repair
512 Business/
Strategic
Management
522 Education/
Training
533 Installation/
Maintenance/
Repair
512 Business/
Strategic
Management
522 Education/
Training
533 Installation/
Maintenance/
Repair
515 Creative/Design 515 Creative/Design 515 Creative/Design 515 Creative/Design
522 Education/
Training
522 Education/
Training
We are an equal opportunity employer committed to diversity in the workplace.
JJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJoooooobbbbbbssssssssssssss ooooooob JJJJJJJJJJJJ Autos
THE TIMES LEADER
timesleaderautos.com
PARTTIME
IMAGING POSITION
Saturday & Sunday Nights
Experience in Photoshop a must!
Experience in scanning and toning of photos.
Knowledge of both PC and MAC platforms.
Page proofng required.
Knowledge of typesetting and plating software a plus.
Must be willing to work nights and weekends.
Pre-employment drug screening and background check
required. Interested candidates should send letter of interest,
resume and salary history to:
The Times Leader
Human Resources Department
15 N. Main Street Wilkes-Barre, PA 18711
rcoolbaugh@timesleader.com
No Telephone Calls Please!
Nursing
DNP Assistant Professor
Wilkes University invites applicants for an Assistant Professor in the School
of Nursing, Doctor of Nursing Practice Program. Wilkes University is an
independent institution of higher education with approximately 2,000
undergraduate and over 2,000 full time equivalent students at the graduate
and first professional levels. For more information about Wilkes Universi-
ty, please visit www.Wilkes.edu. The School of Nursings Bachelors and
Masters Programs are accredited by CCNE. The DNP is an on-line pro-
gram.
This is a tenure-track faculty position with a major responsibility to assist in
the development, implementation, and evaluation of the DNP Program cur-
riculum. This position requires online teaching expertise in higher educa-
tion, record of success in scholarship, participation in community and uni-
versity service, and student advising. In addition, the successful candidate
must possess the ability to communicate effectively. Integration of technol-
ogy in nursing education is also essential.
This position requires a masters degree with a major in nursing, plus an
earned Doctorate of Nursing Practice (DNP) or an earned doctorate in nurs-
ing (PhD, DNS, DNSe). The candidate must hold advanced practice certi-
fication as a Clinical Nurse Specialist or Nurse Practitioner, preferably in
Adult-Gerontology or Psychiatric Mental Health Nursing and an unencum-
bered RN license in the state of Pennsylvania.
To apply send a letter of interest, curriculum vita, transcripts and three let-
ters of reference to:
Wilkes University
DNPAssistant Professor Search
Reference # F00286
P O Box 3924, Scranton, PA 18505-0924.
To apply by email, send application materials as listed above to:
eapply@wilkes.edu. Include the reference # on the mailing envelope, or in
the email subject line. Indicate in your letter where you found out about the
position vacancy. Please make sure to include the reference # or the appli-
cation will not be processed.
Wilkes University is constantly seeking to become a more diverse commu-
nity and to enhance its capacity to value and capitalize on the cultural rich-
ness that diversity brings. The University strongly encourages applications
from persons with diverse backgrounds.
Automation/Controls Technician
Advanced Automated Controls, Inc., a leader in the industrial automa-
tion industry, has openings for Electrical Controls System Technicians.
One (1) full time & one (1) part time position will be available and will
be offered out of our Greater Scranton Corporate Office. Applicants
will work closely with project leaders and managers and be responsi-
ble for the programming, installation, and commissioning of electrical
controls and automation systems in the manufacturing industry.
The position will include off-site development and engineering assis-
tance at our Greater Scranton Facility and on-site installation services
at our customer facilities throughout Eastern PA.
Applicants must possess a basic knowledge of Variable Frequency
Drives, HMIs and PLCs. SCADA system knowledge is a plus.
Responsibilities Include:
Interfacing with customers and AAC project managers to assure
successful development and implementation of projects.
Capability of editing ACAD drawing utilized in the project design
phase.
Development and modifications to new and existing control
systems programs utilizing PLC, HMI, & Drive Systems software.
Field installation and design modifications of control systems.
The individual must also possess strong communication skills and
work well with others in a team environment. We offer competitive
benefits including Blue Cross/Blue Shield, dental, vision, 401K, and
vehicle reimbursement.
AAC, Inc. is entering its 13th year of operation and has grown signif-
icantly on a consistent basis as our reputation for supplying high qual-
ity automation solutions to the manufacturing industry has made us a
leader in the industry. Interested candidates should submit their resume
and compensation requirements to info@aac247.com.
Visit us on the web www.AAC247.com
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
The Wyoming Valley Childrens Association, a
local non-profit organization, is seeking a highly
motivated, seasoned professional to manage
approximately 35 employees.
Develop strategies and plans for the welfare of
the organization.
Coordinate with the board of directors to devel-
op and implement programs designed to meet the
organizational goals and objectives.
Manage the organizations resources within
budget guidelines..
Supervise management and general operations
of the agency.
Assure the organization & its mission, programs,
products and services present a positive image.
Oversee the quality of programs, products and
services.
At least 3 to 5 years experience in the administra-
tion of a human service agency. Degree in human
service or related field. Evidence of relevant
experience in interagency relationships, planning,
fiscal management, fund raising, and human
resources administration
Please send resume and salary requirements
in strict confidence to:
C/O Times Leader
Box 2620
15 N. Main St., Wilkes-Barre, PA 18701
or Fax (570) 829-8663
451 Trucks/
SUVs/Vans
HYUNDAI `05
TUCSON
61,000 miles, auto-
matic, four wheel
drive, 4 door, anti-
lock brakes, air con-
ditioning, air bags,
power locks, power
windows, cruise
control, AM/FM
radio, cassette play-
er, CD player, key-
less entry, sun/
moon roof, rear
defroster, rear
windshield wiper,
new towing pack-
age, auto start.
$9,500
(570) 762-4543
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
JEEP 99
GRAND CHEROKEE
6 cylinder,
automatic,
sunroof, CD
Excellent runner!
$4,995
Call For Details!
570-696-4377
JEEP `02 GRAND
CHEROKEE LAREDO
Triple black, eco-
nomical 6 cylinder.
4x4 select drive.
CD, remote door
opener, power win-
dows & locks,
cruise, tilt wheel.
108k highway miles.
Garage kept. Super
clean inside and out.
No rust. Sale price
$6,895. Scranton.
570-466-2771
JEEP `02 LIBERTY
Blue/grey, new
rebuilt engine with
warranty, new
tires & brakes,
4,000 miles.
$5,900 or
best offer.
570-814-2125
JEEP `03 LIBERTY
SPORT. Rare. 5
speed. 23 MPG.
102K highway miles.
Silver with black
interior. Immaculate
condition, inside and
out. Garage kept.
No rust, mainte-
nance records
included. 4wd, all
power. $6,900 or
best offer, trades
will be considered.
Call 570-575-0518
JEEP `06
COMMANDER 4X4
Lockers, V-8. Heat-
ed leather. All
power. Navigation,
Satellite, Blue tooth,
3rd row, More.
69,000
highway miles.
$14,900. Call
(570) 855-3657
JEEP 09
COMMANDER
$19,880
560 Pierce St.
Kingston, PA
www.wyoming
valleymotors.com
570-714-9924
KIA 05 OPTIMA LX
$6,980
560 Pierce St.
Kingston, PA
www.wyoming
valleymotors.com
570-714-9924
LEXUS `06 GX 470
Cypress Pearl with
ivory leather interi-
or. Like new
condition, garage
kept. All service
records. Brand new
tires. All options
including premium
audio package, rear
climate control,
adjustable suspen-
sion, towing pack-
age, rear spoiler,
Lexus bug guard.
46,000 miles.
$27,950
(570) 237-1082
LEXUS `96 LX 450
Full time 4WD, Pearl
white with like new
leather ivory interi-
or. Silver trim.
Garage kept. Excel-
lent condition.
84,000 miles, Ask-
ing $10,750
570-654-3076 or
570-498-0005
MAZDA 08 TRIBUTE
Utility, 4WD
$16,450
560 Pierce St.
Kingston, PA
www.wyoming
valleymotors.com
570-714-9924
451 Trucks/
SUVs/Vans
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
MAZDA 04
TRIBUTE LX
Automatic, V6
Sunroof, CD
1 owner
Extra Clean!
$5,495
Call For Details!
570-696-4377
MERCURY `07
MARINER
One owner. garage
kept. Showroom
condition fully
loaded, every
option 34,000 mi.
$16,500
(570)825-5847
MERCURY 09 MILAN
4 cylinder,
automatic,
Only 9,800 miles
$16,875
560 Pierce St.
Kingston, PA
www.wyoming
valleymotors.com
570-714-9924
Line up a place to live
in classified!
MINI 08
COOPER
2 door, automatic,
leather, sky roof,
boost cd, fogs
$19,945
560 Pierce St.
Kingston, PA
www.wyoming
valleymotors.com
570-714-9924
MITSUBISHI `08
RAIDER
VERY GOOD CONDITION!
29,500 miles. 2-
4X4 drive option, 4
door crew cab,
sharp silver color
with chrome step
runners, premium
rims, good tires,
bedliner, V-6, 3.7
liter. Purchased at
$26,900. Dealer
would sell for
$18,875.
Asking $16,900
(570) 545-6057
MITSUBISHI `95
MONTERO SR 4WD
177,102 miles, auto-
matic, four wheel
drive, 4 door, anti-
lock brakes, air con-
ditioning, air bags,
power locks, power
windows, power
mirrors, power
seats, cruise con-
trol, AM/FM radio,
cassette player, CD
changer, leather
interior, sun roof,
rear defroster, rear
windshield wiper,
new Passed inspec-
tion, new battery.
$2,500
(570) 868-1100
Call after 2:00 p.m.
MITSUBISHI `97
15 CUBE VAN
Cab over, 4 cylinder
diesel engine.
Rebuilt automatic
transmission. Very
good rubber. All
around good
condition inside
& out. Well
maintained.
Ready to work.
PRICE REDUCED!
$6,195 or
best offer
Call 570-650-3500
Ask for Carmen
NISSAN `03 XTERRA
Black with grey inte-
rior. 196k highway
miles. 4x4. Power
windows & locks.
New tires, brakes,
rotors. Great condi-
tion. $4,850. Call
570-574-7140
NISSAN 06 ALTIMA S
Automatic, CD,
Local Trade
$11,880
560 Pierce St.
Kingston, PA
www.wyoming
valleymotors.com
570-714-9924
NISSAN 08 ALTIMA SE
Sporty 2 Door
$19,790
560 Pierce St.
Kingston, PA
www.wyoming
valleymotors.com
570-714-9924
Pontiac 02 Montana
1 Owner. Exception-
ally well maintained
- very good condi-
tion. Fully loaded.
Trailer hitch. Seats
8. 126K highway
miles. $4,800
(570) 650-3368
TRUCKS FOR SALE
Ford, GMC,
International-Prices
starting at $2,295.
Box Truck, Cab &
Chassis available.
Call U-haul
570-822-5536
451 Trucks/
SUVs/Vans
SATURN 09 VUE XE
4WD, automatic
Moon Roof
$16,770
560 Pierce St.
Kingston, PA
www.wyoming
valleymotors.com
570-714-9924
SUZUKI `07 XL-7
56,000 miles,
automatic,
all-wheel drive,
4 door, air condi-
tioning, all power,
CD player, leather
interior, tinted
windows, custom
wheels, $13,000
Call 570-829-8753
Before 5:00 p.m.
SUZUKI 06 AERIO SX
Hatch
$8,888
560 Pierce St.
Kingston, PA
www.wyoming
valleymotors.com
570-714-9924
TRACTOR
TRAILERS
FREIGHTLINER
97 MIDROOF
475 CAT & 10
speed transmission.
$12,000
FREIGHTLINER
99 CONDO
430 Detroit, Super
10 transmission.
Asking $15,000.
88 FRUEHAUF 45
with sides. All
aluminum, spread
axle. $6,500.
2 storage trailers.
570-814-4790
457 Wanted to Buy
Auto
ALL
JUNK
CAR &
TRUCKS
WANTED
Highest Prices
Paid In Cash!!!
FREE
REMOVAL
Call V&G
Anytime
288-8995
506 Administrative/
Clerical
ASSISTANT TO THE
PRESIDENT
Individual needed to
support leading
non-profit organiza-
tion. Must be detail-
oriented, able to
multi-task, work well
in a team environ-
ment, and have
experience in
recording minutes
of meetings. Associ-
ates degree in sec-
retarial science/
office management
or equivalent expe-
rience and a mini-
mum of 3 years
experience in a sim-
ilar position are
required. Microsoft
Office proficiency
necessary. Compet-
itive salary and ben-
efits package.
Send resume by
July 26th to:
Times Leader
C/O Box 2640
15 N. Main St.
Wilkes-Barre,
PA 18711
BOOKKEEPER
Part-time.
30-40 hours/week.
Benefits. Duties
include A/R, A/P, &
payroll. Knowledge
of Peachtree/Excel
a plus. Salary com-
mensurate with
experience.
Fax resume to:
570-823-3352
Attention Donna or
email: PioneerAgg@
yahoo.com
MEDICAL SECRETARY
Experience
necessary.
Send resume to:
P.O. Box C
Lehman, PA 18627
506 Administrative/
Clerical
PART TIME OFFICE
ASSISTANT
General office
duties. Experience
in Microsoft Word,
Excel & Quick-
Books. 3 hours/day.
Please fax resume
to 570-331-3088
SECRETARY POSITION
Computer experi-
ence. Detail-orient-
ed. Knowledge of
building trades
helpful. Send
resume to: HR
197 Courtdale Ave.
Courtdale, PA
18704
507 Banking/Real
Estate/Mortgage
Professionals
RENTAL MANAGER
Vacation rental dept
manager, PA real
estate license
required. Salaried
position plus bonus.
Benefits. Call
Pocono Resorts
Realty
800-444-3721 x 11
or send resume to
beckyacct@prr1.com
509 Building/
Construction/
Skilled Trades
CARPENTERS
LABORERS & ROOFERS
Local construction
company is seeking
experienced
carpenters with
valid drivers
license. Apply at
197 Courtdale Ave.
Courtdale, PA 18704
GAS DRILL SITE
APPARATUS/
EQUIPMENT OPERATOR
Immediate Opening
24 Hour Operation
located on gas
drilling sites is seek-
ing a qualified indi-
vidual to operate
excavator and
maintain a piece of
machinery. Individ-
ual must be willing
to work outside for
all day & night shifts,
as well as weekend.
Valid drivers license
required.
Contact Brian @
Harvis Interview
Service for
application or Qs
570-542-5330 or
susquehanna.harvis
@gmail.com. E.O.E.
518 Customer
Support/Client Care
CUSTOMER SERVICE/
INSIDE SALES
Full-Time. Growing
Medical Equipment
Sales & Svc. com-
pany.Greater W-B
Area. Responsibili-
ties include: Clerical
Duties, Customer
Svc. & Inside Sales.
Must be detail ori-
ented and possess
strong computer
(MS Office) & phone
skills. Competitive
Salary and Benefits.
Send resume to:
c/o Times Leader
Box 2645
15 N. Main Street
Wilkes-Barre, PA
18711-0250
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
TELEPHONE
OPERATORS
Early morning
hours. Saturdays a
must. Must type 35
words per minute.
Call between 10am-
2pm. 570-474-7705
521 Editorial/
Writing
FREELANCE SPORTS /
NEWS
CORRESPONDENTS
Abington Journal
Clarks Summit
The Abington
Journal has
immediate open-
ings for freelance
writers/news and
sports correspon-
dents to attend
and report on
local meetings
and sports events
in the newspaper
coverage area.
Gain clips and
valuable experi-
ence for your
future in journal-
ism or writing.
Report and write
byline stories con-
cerning sports,
local government,
school board and
other public
meetings. Pay
commensur at e
with experience.
Writing experi-
ence preferred.
Please send
resume and
writing samples
to:
The Abington
Journal
Attention:
Kristie Grier
Ceruti, Editor
211 South State St
Clarks Summit
PA 18411
Email: kgrier@
theabington
journal. com
Fax:
570-586-3980
No phone calls
please.
522 Education/
Training
DAYCARE
STAFF NEEDED
Experience a must.
Early Childhood
Education a plus.
To inquire call Scott
at 570-655-1012.
527 Food Services/
Hospitality
COOK
Part Time
Experienced cook
with excellent
communication
skills to assist our
Dietary Depart-
ment with prepar-
ing delicious
meals. Healthcare
experience is a +
Great Pay, PTO
& Benefits
Email: Jobs@
horizonhrs.com
Fax:
866-854-8688
Please
complete
application
Birchwood
Nursing & Rehab
395 Middle Rd.,
Nanticoke, PA
Wilkes-Barre
Area
533 Installation/
Maintenance/
Repair
AUTO COLLISION SHOP
Now taking
applications for an
Auto Body Painter.
Set up and painting.
Must have valid PA
license & minimum
of 3-5 years
experience. Call for
appointment.
823-2211; 8:30a-5p,
Monday-Friday.
EXPERIENCED GARAGE
DOOR INSTALLER
Growing local com-
pany needs polite,
honest, customer &
quality oriented,
self-motivated team
player. Full Time
Crew Leader posi-
tion with benefits &
salary based on
your experience.
Contact
Rowe Door Sales @
570-655-7701
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
TYPEWRITER REPAIR
Needed to repair
Royal Manual Circa
1960. 283-0575
533 Installation/
Maintenance/
Repair
MAINTENANCE
TECHNICIAN
2nd shift opening
for experienced
maintenance tech
with strong
mechanical skills
set to troubleshoot,
repair and maintain
factory production
equipment.
*Also available
Maintenance
Apprentice position
Send resume to:
Kappa Graphics,
50 Rock Street,
Pittston, PA 18640.
Fax: 570-655-8379
MAINTENANCE/
GARDNER
Part time. Kingston
area. Experienced,
or retired contractor
preferred. Must be
reliable, organized,
detailed and likes
dogs. Lazy person
need not apply.
Call 570-472-1110
MAJOR APPLIANCE
REPAIR PERSON
Subcontractor. Must
have experience.
Neat in appearance.
Call 570-287-9631
Ask for Nancy or Pat
MECHANICS
Mavis Discount Tire/
Cole Muffler is
actively hiring expe-
rienced A or B level
Mechanics. Must be
PA certified inspec-
tor, have own tools
and be experienced
in brakes, suspen-
sion, front-end work
and alignments.
Call 914-804-4444
or e-mail resume to
cdillon@
mavistire.com
SERVICE ADVISOR/
COUNTERPERSON
Award winning
dealership has
immediate openings
in our parts and
service department.
Experienced per-
sons are needed to
fill these positions.
Prior Ford motor
company certifica-
tions in these areas
are a plus. We offer
an excellent pay &
benefits package.
Contact:
Rudy Podest
Parts & Service
Director
email: rpodest@
cocciacars.com
Coccia Ford
Lincoln
577 East Main St
Wilkes-Barre, PA
570-823-8888
SERVICE MANAGER
Opening for Experi-
enced Service Man-
ager- 2nd shift. We
Offer Top Wages &
Benefits Package.
Call For Interview
and Ask for Jon:
Falzone Towing
Service, Inc.
271 N. Sherman St.
Wilkes-Barre, PA
18702
570-823-2100
TRUCK MECHANIC
Opening for Experi-
enced Full time Truck
Mechanic. Must
Have Own Tools/PA
Class 8 Inspection
License a Plus. We
Offer Top Wages &
Benefits Package.
Call For Interview
and Ask for Jon:
Falzone Towing
Service, Inc.
271 N. Sherman St.
Wilkes-Barre, PA
18702
570-823-2100
539 Legal
LEGAL SECRETARY/
RECEPTIONIST
Full time position.
Must have legal
experience and be
able to use a dicta-
phone. Salary &
benefits commen-
surate with experi-
ence.
Send resume to: c/o
The Times Leader
Box 2650
15 North Main St.
Wilkes-Barre, PA
18711-0250
542 Logistics/
Transportation
CDL CLASS B DRIVER/
LABORER
For commercial rear
load route. Experi-
ence preferred, but
will train the right
person. Paid BC/BS
and Dental insur-
ance. Paid Holidays.
EOE. Pre-employ-
ment drug screen.
Ellsworth Disposal
Inc. 570-693-1514
NES RENTALS
NES RENTALS,
a leader in a
multi-billion
dollar rental
industry for con-
struction is look-
ing to make
immediate hires
for the following
positions in the
PITTSTON, PA
area:
DRIVER
You will operate
multi-dimension-
al construction
equipment,
delivery trucks,
including tractor
trailer combina-
tions to pick up
and deliver
equipment to
and from cus-
tomer work
sites, and is able
to train in safe
usage of the
equipment. H.S.
diploma (or
equivalent), the
ability to lift 70
lbs., have a valid
CDL license, sat-
isfactory driving
record, and
knowledge of
federal motor
carrier regula-
tions is required.
Two years of
commercial driv-
ing experience
involving the
movement of
trucks and con-
struction equip-
ment including
oversized loads
required. Knowl-
edge of safety
procedures for
securing and
transporting
cargo is also
essential.
NES RENTALS
offers competi-
tive wages,
medical/
dental, vision,
tuition reim-
bursement, and
401(k).
For considera-
tion, apply
online at our
Careers center
at www.
nesrentals.
com/careers.
NES recognizes
and values
diversity.
We are an
EOE/AA/M/F/D/V
employer.
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
DRIVERS
CDL drivers needed
Experience a must.
Background check
and drug screening
required. Please visit
ceankiewicz.com to
complete application
Fax 570-868-3654
Email ceatrucking@
frontier.com.
NEEDED IMMEDIATELY
FORKLIFT OPERATORS
AND EXPERIENCED
CLAMP TRUCK
MUST HAVE 1 YEAR
EXPERIENCE.
BENEFITS AFTER
90 DAYS.
401K, Health Insur-
ance, Aflac. Paid
Holidays, Vacation
after 1 year.
Apply in person
East Coast Logistics
& Distribution
140 Industrial Drive
Pittston, PA (old
Techneglas building)
R
Sponsored by:
timesleader.com
THE
ONE
AND
ONLY.
CALL 800-273-7130
OR VISIT TIMESLEADER.COM
24/7 TO PLACE YOUR CLASSIFIED AD.
GET DIRECTIONS TO
GARAGE SALES AT
TIMESLEADER.COM!
Find the best deals with timesleader.coms Garage Sales Map.
Customize your search by city or date. Its simple. Click on the
Garage Sales icon at the top of our home page to get started!
WB
g
s
t
o
n
F
o
rty-F
o
rt
Dallas
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com TUESDAY, JULY 19, 2011 PAGE 7D
412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale
551 Other
548 Medical/Health
542 Logistics/
Transportation
551 Other
548 Medical/Health
542 Logistics/
Transportation
551 Other
548 Medical/Health
545 Marketing/
Product
548 Medical/Health
545 Marketing/
Product
SAFETY DIRECTOR
Martz Trailways is currently interviewing
candidates for the position of Safety Director.
The successful candidate will possess:
A minimum, of 5 years leadership/management
experience
In depth knowledge of all DOT regulations and
policies
Accident investigation experience
Driver Training experience
CDL
Excellent communications skills, verbal and
written.
This is a highly visible position reporting to the
General Manager. We offer a competitive compen-
sation and benefits package. Interested candidates
should send resumes including salary history to:
Martz Trailways
239 Old River Road
Wilkes-Barre, PA 18702
or email esteltz@martzgroup.com
Martz is an equal opportunity employer by choice
SOCIAL MEDIA SPECIALIST
AD AGENCY - FULL TIME
Top integrated advertising agency in North-
eastern PA is seeking a Social Media Special-
ist. Our ideal candidate has current social
media experience and a strong understanding
of the strategies and related planning tactics
necessary for harnessing a multitude of new
media options and putting them to work for
our clients.
Can you build a Facebook page that will max-
imize our Likers, drive Comments and
produce Leads for our clients? Do you have
an entrepreneurial spirit and a strong inde-
pendent work ethic? If the answer is yes,
please consider joining our team! Multi-task-
ing skills are a must with the ability to devel-
op new client strategies and monitor existing
clients on a daily basis. The ability to develop
results-driven content for Facebook, Twitter,
YouTube and Yelp that will increase client vis-
ibility is a must.
Additional position requirements:
Advertising agency experience a plus.
Familiarity with syndicated research and
social media monitoring tools to measure
results and outcomes of efforts.
Client communication, strong analytical
and presentation skills.
Ability to supervise the social media team.
Bachelor's degree in advertising, marketing,
communications, or equivalent, relevant
experience
The Social Media Specialist reports to the VP
of Marketing and is also responsible for assist-
ing in the development and execution of the
agencys social media and online community
strategies.
Qualified candidates need only apply.
Forward resume with cover letter to
prminc14@aol.com.
Alzheimers Association-
Greater Pennsylvania Chapter
Family Services Coordinator,
Northeast Regional Office,
Wilkes-Barre, PA
Seeking a professional with two or more years
experience in the human service field, prefer-
ably with the aging population. Primary
responsibilities include coordination of
regional support groups, care consultation
with families and presentations of educational
programs within the community. Knowledge
of dementia and healthcare delivery systems
and issues such as: Medicare, Medicaid, man-
aged care, HMOs ect. A Bachelors degree
with experience in social work, gerontology or
related field is required. Position involves
travel throughout service area. Interested can-
didates should forward a cover letter with
salary requirements & resume to Alzheimers
Association Greater Pennsylvania Chapter,
3544 North Progress Avenue, Suite 204, Har-
risburg, PA17110, Attn: Erica Hood or e-mail
to Erica.Hood@alz.org No phone calls. EOE
Full-Time OT Home Health
Excellent salary & benefits offered, home health
experience preferred to work for this JCAHO-
accredited, well-established home health agency
with excellent patient outcomes.
Call Complete Home Care @ 287-4711,
ask for Lynn or Kathy.
Earn Extra Cash
For Just A Few
Hours A Day.
Deliver
To nd a route near you and start
earning extra cash, call Rosemary at
570-829-7107
Mountain Top/ Wapwallopen
$900 Monthly Prot + Tips
159 daily papers / 192 Sunday papers
Saint Marys Road, Blue Ridge Trail,
Pond Hill Mountain Road, Lily Lake Road, Yocum Road
Dallas
$370 Monthly Prot + Tips
83 daily papers / 107 Sunday papers
Baldwin Ave., East Center Hill Rd., Midland Dr., Southside Ave.
Shavertown
$800 Monthly Prot + Tips
172 daily papers / 207 Sunday papers
Carverton Road, Frangorma Drive, Highland Avenue,
Meadowcrest Apartments, Staub Road, Terrace Avenue
Exeter
$430 Monthly Prot + Tips
89 daily / 98 Sunday / 66 Pittston Dispatch
Aster Court, Bluebell Court, Buttercup Court,
Donnas Way, Fairway Drive
Pittston
$700 Monthly Prot + Tips
167 daily / 160 Sunday / 124 Pittston Dispatch
LaGrange St., Nafus St., Swallow St., Tedrick St.,
Market St., Vine St., Pine St.
Available routes:
( No Col l ect i ons)
2
9
5
7
2
8
MOTORTWINS
2010 Wyoming Ave., Wyoming
718-4050
CALL STEVE MORENKO
NEW LOW PRICES!
$
4,990
*
2002 Hyundai
Elantra GLS
$
4,990
*
4DR, Sunroof, Air, All Power
2003 Kia
Spectra LS
$
5,990
*
Air, 4-Cyl, Auto, 4DR
1993 Toyota
Four Runner SR5
$
3,490
*
*All Prices Plus Tax & Tags.
2000 Dodge
Stratus SE
$
3,490
*
1999 Buick
Century
2002 Ford
Focus SE
$
4,990
*
5 Speed 4x4, V6, 4DR Wagon
4 Door, 4-Cyl, Air, 82K Miles 6-Cyl, Air, All Power, 59K
Air, Auto, 4-Cyl, 4DR, 72K
RN Supervisor
Part Time Day Shift,
Every Other Weekend
LPNs
Per Diem 7-3, 3-11 & 11-7
CNAs
Full Time, Part Time & Per Diem
7-3, 3-11 & 11-7
For More Information
Or To Schedule an Interview
Contact 877-339-6999 x1
Or Come Visit Our Beautiful Facility
395 Middle Road, Nanticoke Pa
Wilkes-Barre Area
Competitive Pay Rates, Benefits
& Shift Differentials
542 Logistics/
Transportation
CLASS A
CDL DRIVERS
CDS Transporta-
tion, a subsidiary
of Valley Distribut-
ing & Storage
Company, offers
you the miles to
make more money
with our regional
runs! At CDS, CDL
truck drivers are
offered job stabili-
ty, opportunity,
and are treated
like a member of
the family.
Our company driv-
ers are presented
a full benefit pro-
gram and late
model equipment.
If you are an
owner operator,
CDS offers you a
partnership with
weekly settle-
ments to protect
your cash flow.
Requirements
include a minimum
23 years of age,
two years T/T
experience, and a
good driving
record.
To Apply:
CDS
Transportation
Diane Chapin
One Passan Drive,
Laflin, PA.
570-654-6738
dchapin@
cdstransportation.
com
On line at www.
cdstransportation.
com
Collect cash, not dust!
Clean out your
basement, garage
or attic and call the
Classified depart-
ment today at 570-
829-7130!
DRIVERS
Fanelli Brothers
Trucking has
established new &
increased driver pay
package and an
increased sign on
bonus. Due to addi-
tional business,
Fanelli Brothers
Trucking Co. is
adding both regional
and local drivers to
our Pottsville, PA
terminal operation.
Drivers are home
most nights
throughout the
week. Drivers must
have 2-3 years of
OTR experience,
acceptable MVR
and pass a criminal
background check.
The new pay
package offers:
.38 cpm for
qualified drivers
$1,500 sign on
bonus
Paid vacations and
holidays
Health/Dental/
Vision Insurance
401K Plan
Contact Gary Potter
at 570-544-3140
Ext 156 or visit us
at 1298 Keystone
Blvd., Pottsville, PA
542 Logistics/
Transportation
DRIVERS
What sets
us apart
from the
rest?
Employee
Owned!
COMPANY DRIVERS &
OWNER OPERATORS
Established
East Coast Lanes
Flexible
Home Time
Personal
Dispatch 24/7
Full Benefits
Package
Email: drive@
pennsbest.net
Apply online at
www.
pennsbest.net
PENNS BEST INC.
800-233-4808
548 Medical/Health
CNAS
Full Time 3-11
CNAS & NURSES
Per Diem All Shifts
Competitive Salary
& Benefits Package
Golden Living
Center Summit
50 N. Pennsylvania
Avenue
Fax 570-825-9423
or pamela.smith2@
goldenliving.com
EOE M/F/D/V
Say it HERE
in the Classifieds!
570-829-7130
DENTAL HYGIENIST
Full time position.
No nights or
weekends.
Call 570-822-3040
DIRECT CARE WORKER
Allied Services In-
Home Services Divi-
sion has part-time
day shift hours
available in Luzerne
County. Minimum of
one (1) year home-
care experience
required.
If interested, please
apply online at:
www.allied-
services.org
or call Trish Tully at
(570) 348-2237.
Allied Services is an
Equal Opportunity
Employer.
548 Medical/Health
FULL TIME LPN/
MED ASSISTANT
Private Med office
Send resume to
824 McAlpine St.
Avoca, PA 18641
MEDICAL SECRETARY
Cardiology back-
ground a plus. Front
desk duties includ-
ing typing reports.
Monday-Friday
7:30am to3:30pm
Send resume to:
Mary King, Manager
Cardiovascular
Diagnostic Center
1099 S. Township
Blvd., Pittston. PA
18640
Job Seekers are
looking here!
Where's your ad?
570-829-7130 and
ask for an employ-
ment specialist
RNS & LPNS
Part time or week-
ends. Openings on
all shifts.
Short shifts avail-
able in evenings.
Lakeside Nursing
Center
245 Old Lake Road
Dallas, PA 18612
(570) 639-1885
E.O.E
SERVICE REP
Lincare, leading
national respiratory
company seeks car-
ing Service Rep.
Service patients in
their home for oxy-
gen and equipment
needs. Warm per-
sonalities, age 21+,
who can lift up to
120 lbs should apply.
CDL with DOT a plus
or obtainable.
Growth opportuni-
ties are excellent.
Stop by our office to
fill out application:
Lincare, Inc.
1574 Highway 315
Plains Twp.PA 18702
Drug-free
workplace. EOE.
SURGICAL TECH/
MEDICAL ASSISTANT
Part time position
available in west
side plastic surgery
office. Fax resume
to 570-288-4080.
551 Other
GOLF COURSE
LABORERS
SEASONAL POSITIONS
Golf course
experience
preferred. Apply in
person at the
Wyoming Valley CC
551 Other
SUNDA SUNDAY Y
INDEPENDENT INDEPENDENT
CONTRACT CONTRACT
HAULERS HAULERS
To deliver the
Times-Leader to
single copy loca-
tions, this
includes stores
and coin racks.
Delivery hours are
3 am to 7 am.
Must have reliable
vehicle with capa-
bility to haul a
minimum of 2000
lbs.
Call Rosemary at
570-829-7107
557 Project/
Program
Management
ASSISTANT
MANAGER TRAINEE
3 people needed to
assist manager.
Duties will include
recruiting, training &
marketing. Will train.
Call Mr. Scott
(570)288-4532
E.O.E
566 Sales/Retail/
Business
Development
BUSINESS OPENER
Responsible, reli-
able person to open
business. Part time.
Apply in person
8am-2pm
CONVENIENT
FOOD MART
610 Main St., Avoca
GET THE WORD OUT
with a Classified Ad.
570-829-7130
600
FINANCIAL
610 Business
Opportunities
A
Better
Career
Starts
Here!
Your chance to build
your own business with
a JAN-PRO Cleaning
Systems franchise.
Extensive Training
Guaranteed
Customers
Guaranteed
Financing
No Selling Needed
Just $950 starts your
career, so call
570-824-5774 today!
BEER DISTRIBUTOR
License available
with option to lease
building or sold
separately.
570-954-1284
FLORAL SHOP
The only shop
in the area!
1,300 sq/ft retail
& 1,300 sq/ft
storage
$63,000
Includes
established sales,
all equipment,
showcases,
inventory &
memberships to
FTD, Tele-Floral &
1-800-FLOWERS.
Willing to train
buyer. Owner
retiring after 25
years in business.
Room for
potential growth.
CALL 570-542-4520
Pictures available.
Landscaping
Business For Sale
Must have 5 years
experience in land-
scape design,
retaining walls and
all aspects of paver
work. Includes
dump truck, mini
excavator, 2 skid-
sters, trailer & 2
snow plows with a
great current snow
contract. Serious
inquiries only.
570-233-6880
PA LIQUOR LICENSE
For Sale. $25,000.
Please Call Anna,
570-540-6708
630 Money To Loan
We can erase
your bad credit -
100% GUARAN-
TEED. Attorneys
for the Federal
Trade Commission
say theyve never
seen a legitimate
credit repair opera-
tion. No one can
legally remove
accurate and timely
information from
your credit report.
Its a process that
starts with you and
involves time and a
conscious effort to
pay your debts.
Learn about manag-
ing credit and debt
at ftc. gov/credit. A
message from The
Times Leader and
the FTC.
700
MERCHANDISE
702 Air
Conditioners
AIR CONDITIONER:
Gibson 13,500 btu 3
years old 110v w-
remote $125.
570-901-1084
AIR CONDITIONER:
Gibson Low profile
6000 BTU Quiet
operation energy
efficient. Excellent
condition $115.
570-261-5161
AIR CONDITIONER:
Window 12,000
BTU. Gibson model
GAX12841A1. Used
one season then
kept in storage.
Works like new.
$175 or best offer.
570-574-8766
AIR CONDITIONERS
(2) Fedders 10,000
BTU & GE 8,000
BTU. Both are in
very good condition
have remotes, out-
door brackets &
produce ice cold air.
$100. 788-5030
708 Antiques &
Collectibles
$ ANTIQUES BUYING $
Old Toys, model kits,
Bikes, dolls, old gun
Mining Items, trains
&Musical Instruments,
Hess. 474-9544
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
COINS. Washington
Quarters 1934-D,
1836-0, 1937-D,
1939-D, 1940-D,
$115. 570-287-4135
COLLECTORS ITEM
Newspaper copies
of the 1972 flood in
Wyoming Valley.
Hundreds of pic-
turesand stories.
Quite a few copies.
Sell all for $100. call
Jim 655 9474
COMIC BOOKS -
Gen 13-1, X-files,
Spiderman & many
others, $1 each.
NEON SIGN - Elec-
tric, Camel sign, 30
years old, $150.
RECORDS - LPS,
78S, 45S From
40S, 50S, 60S &
70S. $1 each.
570-829-2411
DOLL HOUSE
1960S tin doll house
made by Superior
Toy Co. Very good
condition, has some
furniture &original
assembly instruc-
tions. $150. or best
offer. 570-239-6622
DOLL HOUSE made
from scratch, not a
kit, & fully lighted.
$500.570-288-5491
SWING. Wicker, 72
hanging on original
enclosed porch
circa 1940s. Un-
touched by modern
chemicals, waiting
to be restored. Ask-
ing $180 or best
offer. Call.
570-477-0899
TROLLEY: San Fran-
cisco music box
company collectible
trolley, retired
$40. Authentic traf-
fic signals $50.
570-760-4830
VINTAGE RECORD
PLAYERS (3)
1977 Sound design
stereo with 8 track
player & AM/FM
stereo, mint
condition $275.
1973 Console turn-
table AMFM stereo,
8 track player $375.
1940 RCA
Phonograph plays
33 & 45. $1,250.
Call 570-885-1512
WATERFALL BED-
ROOM FURNITURE
consists of war-
drobe, dresser, van-
ity with seat & small
wooden bedroom
chair Circa 1920-
1940. $400, or best
offer. 570-239-6622
708 Antiques &
Collectibles
YEARBOOKS:
Coughlin H.S. 1926,
1928, 1932, 1934,
1943, 1944, 1946,
1949, 1951, 1952,
1953, 1954, 1955,
1961, 1963; GAR
H.S.: 1934, 1935,
1936, 1937, 1945,
1946, 1955, 1956,
1961, 1972, 1973,
1975, 1976, 1984,
1980, 2005, 2006;
Meyers H.S.: 1935,
1936, 1937, 1938,
1942, 1943, 1944,
1945, 1946, 1950,
1957, 1960, 1974,
1975, 1976, 1977;
Old Forge H.S.:
1966, 1972, 1974;
Kingston H.S.: 1938,
1939, 1940, 1941,
1942, 1943, 1944,
1945, 1948, 1949,
1962, 1964; Ply-
mouth H.S.: 1930,
1931, 1932, 1933,
1938, 1960; Han-
over H.S.: 1951,
1952, 1954; Berwick
H.S.: 1952, 1953,
1956, 1957, 1958,
1960, 1967, 1968,
1969; Lehman H.S.:
1973, 1974, 1976,
1978, 1980; Dallas
H.S.: 1966, 1967,
1968; Westmore-
land H.S.: 1952,
1953, 1954; Nanti-
coke Area H.S.:
1976, 2008; Luzerne
H.S.: 1951, 1952,
1956, 1957; West
Pittston H.S. Annual:
1925, 1926, 1927,
1928, 1931, 1932,
1959, 1960, 1954;
Bishop Hoban H.S.:
1972, 1973, 1974,
1975; West Side
Central Catholic
H.S. 1965, 1975,
1980, 1981, 1984;
Pittston H.S.: 1963;
Hazleton H.S.: 1938,
1939, 1940, 1941,
1942, 1943, 1945,
1948, 1949, 1950,
1953, 1954, 1955,
1956, 1957, 1959,
1960, 1961, 1962,
1964; Hazle Twp.
Senior H.S.: 1951,
1952. 570-825-4721
710 Appliances
A P P L I A N C E
PA R T S E T C .
Used appliances.
Parts for all brands.
223 George Ave.
Wilkes-Barre
570-820-8162
DISHWASHER
Whirlpool original
price $450. like
new, only used 4
months, white, ask-
ing $200. Frigidaire
microwave, over
range, uses stan-
dard outlet, white
$35. 570-690-5145
DRYER: electric, 6.0
G.E. white, 4 years
old, works great
needs a timer knob,
asking $60.
570-762-1015
DRYER: Kenmore
electric, works
great, some
scratches. Good
Deal $75. 266-1478
GENES
RECONDITIONED
APPLIANCES
60 Day Warranty
Monday-Friday
8:00PM-5:00PM
Saturday
8:00AM-11:00AM
Gateway
Shopping Center
Kingston, PA
(570) 819-1966
GRILL electric
ceramic 12x12
nonstick. Smoke
free. New in box.
$15. 570-655-2154
MICROWAVE
$20.
570-474-5188
MICROWAVE OVEN
21lx15dx11h, Ken-
more, glass turn-
table $25. Wooden
microwave stand on
wheels $5.
570- 829-4776
MICROWAVE: GE, all
options, with
turntable, excellent
condition. $30.
570-675-4383
REFRIGERATOR
compact Magic
Chef, used only one
month, great for
dorm room, small
freezer, shelves,
small on door stor-
age, crisper, etc.
$100. 570-824-1062
REFRIGERATOR.
office sized black,
like new, $45.
DEHYDRATOR,
Ronco food, like
new, $40. MICRO-
WAVE Amana, $30
570-824-7807
REFRIGERATOR:
small cube, very
good condition,
brown $35.
570-675-4383
Retired top loading
Whirlpool, Kenmore
& Maytag Washers,
Gas & Electric Dry-
ers Repairman.
570-833-2965
STOVE Magic Chef,
gas, super capacity,
beige, like new
$175. 824-0600
STOVE, G.E., elec-
tric. $100.
570-235-6137
Why Spend
Hundreds on
New or Used
Appliances?
Most problems
with your appli-
ances are usually
simple and inex-
pensive to fix!
Save your hard
earned money, Let
us take a look at it
first!
30 years in
the business.
East Main
Appliances
570-735-8271
Nanticoke
712 Baby Items
BASSINETT off white
fabric with small ani-
mals on it. Can be
used for boy or girl.
good condition $20.
570-793-5499
LITTLE TYKES
shopping cart $8.
Little Tykes pink &
white doll high chair
$8. Todays kids
childs desk $15.
Little Tykes blue &
white childs rocker
$20. Call after 2pm
570-283-2920
NEWBORN SWING
$40. NEWBORN
CLOTHING girls up
to 12 months $5. or
less. 570-825-0569
716 Building
Materials
BATHROOM SINK
SET: Gerber white
porcelain bathroom
sink with mirror and
medicine cabinet.
Matching set. $80.
570-331-8183
CONCRETE
PAVERS: Red/Grey
Most pavers are 6
1/8 x 6 1/8 x 2 1/2.
Approximate 225 sq
ft. Removed from
backyard patio for
pool. $375.
570-474-9766
DOOR. 36x80
solid wood, 6 panel.
Exterior or interior.
Natural oak finish,
right or left with
hardware. $200.
SINK, stainless
steel, $50. Mailbox,
wrought iron,
includes stand. $100
Call 570-735-8730
or 570-332-8094
KITCHEN CABINETS
& GRANITE
COUNTERTOPS
10 ft.x10 ft., 1 year
old, Maple kitchen.
Premium Quality
cabinets, under-
mount sink. Granite
tops. Total cost
over $12,000.
Asking $3,890
570-239-9840
LIGHTS 3 emer-
gency power failure
lights, 2 lights on
each unit, 3 for
$125. 570-636-3151
To place your
ad call...829-7130
PORCH RAILING.
New, solid wrought
iron, two 10 long
plus 2 gates with
plates $175.
KITCHEN SINK
heavy duty, stain-
less, excellent con-
dition $45. 570-
822-1227 after 1pm
SINK, new bath-
room sink & vanity
33 wide white
$125. New Ameri-
can standard toilet
complete white $75.
570-693-1678
STORM DOORS
Forever, white, 1 left
1 right hand, good
condition 36 wide,
all hardware includ-
ed.$80. 814-4315
STORM WINDOWS 5
used 29x53.5 $50.
all. 740-1246
VANITY. Bathroom.
24 medium oak.
Sink, brass faucet
and drain. $60. Like
new. 570-817-8981
720 Cemetery
Plots/Lots
CEMETERY
PLOTS FOR SALE
(4) Four plots, all
together. Crestlawn
Section of Memorial
Shrine Cemetery in
Kingston Twp. $600
each. Willing to
split. For info, call
(570) 388-2773
CEMETERY PLOTS
Plymouth National
Cemetery in
Wyoming. 6 Plots.
$450 each. Call
570-825-3666
CEMETERY PLOTS
(3) together.
Maple Lawn
Section of
Dennison
Cemetery.
Section ML.
$550 each.
610-939-0194
MEMORIAL SHRINE
CEMETERY
6 Plots Available
May be Separated
Rose Lawn Section
$450 each
570-654-1596
726 Clothing
BATHING SUITS
girls 2 & 3 year old
$1. each. 474-5653
726 Clothing
LEATHER JACKET:
(Wilsons) Small. $50
570-262-1615 or
570-215-0215
LOOKING TO GET RID
OF OLD HALLOWEEN
COSTUMES?
Your donations
will go to under
privileged children
to enjoy a
halloween party
and a fun night of
trick or treating!
Please help bring
a smile to a childs
face!!!
Call Megan
570-674-3002
to donate!
PURSE - Liz Clai-
borne, white, 13W
x 10H, 2 handles, 3
zipper compart-
ments, pocket on
side, retails at $67,
asking $20.
570-333-4325
WEDDING GOWN,
New, tags on, ivory
strapless, size 10,
beautiful bead work,
beaded veil to
match & slip. Paid
$600. asking $100.
570-287-3505
730 Computer
Equipment &
Software
COMPUTER Gate-
way desk top 512
ram win xp $125.
570-991-8962
DESK. Computer
Desk $50. Call 735-
8730 or 332-8094
LAPTOP: Gateway
m405, excellent
condition, centrino
cpu. win xp. 1gb ddr
ram. dvdrw. ac
adapter, good bat-
tery. delivery. $140.
HP WS17E flat panel
monitor, excellent
condition, power
cord, video cable
included, built-in
speakers. best
offers welcome.
$65. 570-905-2985
SPEAKERS: Gate-
way computer
speakers they work
like there brand new
$50. 570-288-2224
732 Exercise
Equipment
WEIGHT BENCH/
Weights as is.
$20. or best offer
570-417-3251
742 Furnaces &
Heaters
FIREPLACE, corner,
electric, heater or
no heat $300. neg.
Brass fireplace
accessories $25.
570-675-7024
FURNACE. Hot air
propane. heats 6
room house. $200.
Stove pipe, 9 $6
each, 12, $8 each.
570-735-8730 or
570-332-8094
HEATER Timberline
vent-free propane
gas heater with fire-
log, wall-mounted,
in excellent condi-
tion. E-mail photo is
available, 15,000 to
25,000 BTUs (Sells
for $250) asking
$99. 570-328-5611
or 570-328-5506
HEATER. Corona
Kerosene Portable.
Excellent for
garage. $30.
570-824-7807
HEATERS (3) elec-
tric, Lasko 3 base-
board type, digital
control, hardly used
$35. each.
570-675-3328
OIL BOILER
runs great $100.
570-760-4830
744 Furniture &
Accessories
ANTIQUE Wardrobe
Cabinet 1950s vin-
tage, light wood
color cedar lined
good used condition
$100. call 655-3197
BEDROOM SET
Rustic, dark wood,
twin captains bed,
dresser with mirror,
chest of drawers,
desk with hutch &
chair, very good
condition $300.
neg. 570-868-6613
We Need Your Help!
Anonymous Tip Line
1-888-796-5519
Luzerne County Sheriffs Ofce
PAGE 8D TUESDAY, JULY 19, 2011 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
752 Landscaping &
Gardening
752 Landscaping &
Gardening
796 Wanted to Buy
Merchandise
796 Wanted to Buy
Merchandise
NEED TOP SOIL?
Screened & Blended.
Delivery Available.
Call Back Mountain Quarry
570-256-3036
39 Prospect St Nanticoke
570-735-1487
WE PAY
THE MOST
INCASH
BUYING
10am
to 6pm
744 Furniture &
Accessories
BED: girls twin bed
with lighted doll-
house bookcase
headboard, good
condition $100.
Couch & oversized
chair. Light brown/
grey microfiber.
good condition, no
rips or holes, from a
smoke free home-
$220. 868-5863
BEDROOM SET. 9
piece ivory color
lacquer color wood.
modern. $700. call
for sizes & details.
570-288-9843
BOOKCASE with
glass doors, $25.
570-824-6770
BOOKSHELF Sauder
vcr/book shelf with
12 interchangable
shelves, excellent
condition $15.
570-829-4776
CHEST OF DRAW-
ERS, solid wood
$125. 675-3328
COFFEE TABLE oval
[1]. End tables oval
[2]. Maple finish six
months old $79
each. 825-8289
CURIO CABINET:
maple, etched
wood, 3 sides of
glass, mirrored
back, 4 shelves,
electric lighting, 71 H
x 21 W, $80 or best
offer. 868-5886.
DESK OSullivan
Corner work center
pine 5.5x 5.5, like
new, (sells for $250)
asking $99. E-mail
photo available.
570-328-5611 or
570-328-5506
DESK, black, wood.
$15. FUTON, frame,
mattress & 2 cov-
ers. $150.
570-235-6137
DESKS drop down
top 3 drawers,
pecan finish, $85.
Computer with pull-
out for keyboard,
shelf for tower $15.
570-287-2517
DINING TABLE solid
wood $25. Sofa 3
seater reclining $25
570-696 3368
END TABLE cherry,
traditional Queen
Anne style, may
want to refinish $10
& dark pine wooden
chair $10. Good
condition. 675-1277
END TABLES, 2
wooden. $25.
NIGHTSTAND, $20.
TV STAND, $10.
CORNER SHELF &
BOOKCASE, $20.
570-883-0568
or 570-239-2699
FIREPLACE
SCREENS (2) new,
still in box, glass bi-
fold. New $400 sell-
ing $100. each.
570-829-2022
FURNITURE: Match-
ing Desk & Dresser
$50; Antique
Armoire $100; Oak
End Tables $50;
Dresser with 6
drawers $20
570-262-1615 or
570-215-0215
FUTON contempo-
rary piece, like new,
asking $50. Call
570-472-4027 or
570-283-5141
FUTON, steel frame
complete with
cover, nice condi-
tion $60. 474-6947
HEADBOARD, oak
twin, $50. Oak night
stand $50.
570-825-0569
KITCHEN SET -
table with chairs,
white back & legs.
White Hutch, light
colored wood trim.
$250. 256-4450
KITCHEN SET
maple, 4 chairs
good condition $50.
570-829-2778
KITCHEN TABLE,
medium colored
wood, 30X45 $20.
570-814-9845.
KITCHEN TABLES:
medium colored oak
with leaf $50. Wal-
nut colored kitchen
table with leaf $75.
Light oak twin bed
complete $25.
CEDAR CHEST $25.
570-287-8107
LAMPS (2) grey
metal & black. $25
each. 570-740-1246
LIFT CHAIR, dark
mauve excellent
condition $125.
570-693-1678
Selling Your
Furniture?
Do it here in the
Classifieds!
570-829-7130
LIVING ROOM SET 3
piece matching set
includes love seat,
wing chair with
matching ottoman,
green & camel
plaid, very good.
$275. 288-0691
AFFORDABLE
MATTRESS SALE
We Beat All
Competitors Prices!
Mattress Guy
Twin sets: $159
Full sets: $179
Queen sets: $199
All New
American Made
570-288-1898
PATIO SET - 36 in.
diameter table and
4 chairs, wooden,
foldable. Like New.
$50. 570-824-0591
PRAYER KNEELERS.
(2) $100 each.
570-735-8730 or
570-332-8094
RECLINER, very
good condition with
electric lift & mas-
sage feature. $100.
Picnic Table with
benches, very good
condition. $50.
570-446-8672
RUG beige oriental
wool $100. Beige
Lazyboy recliner
$50. Sage ottoman
$25. 570-287-7379
744 Furniture &
Accessories
SCHOOL TABLE / 6
chairs, very sturdy
built, paid over
$400. asking $100.
CORNER PATIO
STORAGE UNIT
$20. CLAY FIRE PIT
used 2 times, $40.
DINING TABLE, solid
wood, very nice, 8
chairs & hutch paid
1800. asking $400.
570-417-3251
SOFA 90 sage/
green/beige $150.
PATIO SET 4 chairs,
2 lounges, round
table, umbrella &
matching cushions
for all $150.
570-474-5188
GET THE WORD OUT
with a Classified Ad.
570-829-7130
SUNROOM FUR-
NITURE beveled
glass top 1/2 thick
table, 31/2 x7 , rat-
tan base,cream, 8
parson custom cov-
ered chairs, high-
back, pleated bot-
tom,cream & yellow
$690. SOFA 7 x 3
cream & floral
$200. CLUB
CHAIR cream with
yellow stripes
$200. HIGHBACK
CHAIR with rattan
frame cream & floral
matching ottoman
$200. GLASS TOP
COCKTAIL TABLE,
rattan base, cream
$100. GLASS SIDE
TABLE, rattan
base, cream $50.
RATTAN, CREAM
SHELVES, 2
shelves 5 8 1 shelf
211 $100. 2
MASLAND AREA
RUGS 8 x 10
cream & yelllow pat-
tern $100 each.
570-654-8385
TABLE: 48 long
sofa table, medium
color wood $35.
2 seater child high
back bench $14. 2
country wood
shelves $4 each.
Chrome clothes
tree $5. Large
assortment of coun-
try sunflower items
including dishes,
pictures, shower
curtain set, flower
arrangements, tiny
tea set, metal bas-
kets and much more
$.25 to $8. each
item. PERFUME
SETS: Eternity
Calvin Klein $40.
Mackie Bob Mackie
$20., Mambo Liz
Claiborne $40.
Wings Giorgio $25.,
White Diamonds
Elizabeth Taylor $5.,
all new in boxes.
570-868-5275 or
301-8515
TV Armoire. Fits 27
TV, light finish, made
by Broyhill, excellent
condition. $100.
570-868-6365
WICKER SET, 4
piece white, asking
$85. KITCHEN DIN-
ING SET 5 piece
walnut, table 60
round, cast iron &
wood, chairs, paid
$600. asking $200.
Both good condition
and you must see!
570-822-1094
LUZERNE CTY.
FAIR GROUNDS
July 2, 9, 16, 23
9AM TO 2PM
10 FT. FOR
ONLY $10.
VENDOR SET
UP
8AM
NO PRE-
REGISTRATION
REQUIRED!
RAIN OR SHINE
Mountaintop
25 Pine Tree
Burger King to High-
land Woods, Farm-
house to Pine Tree
WEDNESDAY,
July 20
9:00-3:00
LAST MINUTE beau-
tiful contents sale!
Living room, fabu-
lous dining room,
kitchen, Brass king
size bed and suite,
Family room , holi-
day, many smalls.
All beautiful, Too
much to list, all
priced to sell.
748 Good Things To
Eat
PICK YOUR OWN
BLUEBERRIES!
8am to 8pm
Closed Sundays
Sickler Blueberry
Farm - Vernon
570-333-5286
752 Landscaping &
Gardening
BLOWER GAS,
McCollough, runs
good. $40.
570-288-9940
CANNA PLANTS.
Tall red potted,
bloom until frost.
Have 25 at $4.50
each.570-288-9843
752 Landscaping &
Gardening
CHIPPER,
SHREDDER
VACUUM Troy Bilt
4-in-one chipper,
shredder, vacuum
w/ hose, 5.5HP
(used 5 times) $250
MOWER John
Deere 6.5HP, self-
propelled lawn
mower (model JS
63C) $75.
570.262.0716
CHIPPER, shredder,
mulcher, bagger.
Craftsman 5 HP. 3
cutting stages. Very
good condition.
Recently serviced.
$350. 675-4383
LAWNMOWER Troy-
built 4hp mulcher
runs good $65.
WHEELBARROW
contractor edition,
large steel tub,
good condition $35.
570-655-3197
LAWNMOWER, Toro
20 mulcher, rear
bagger with bag,
4.5 H.P. Briggs &
Stratton engine,
rear wheel drive,
new spark plug, air
filter, oil change,
blade sharpened,
runs & looks new.
$115. 696-2008.
Patrick & Debs
Lawn Care
See our ad under
Call An Expert
1162 Landscape &
Garden
YUCCA PLANTS
FREE YOU DIG EM
OUT. 570-675-7024
754 Machinery &
Equipment
HAULMARK 07
TRAILER 6X14
Like new with
electric brakes,
new tires and
reinforced tongue.
$2700.
570-239-5457
Motor, 6HP Single
phase 220 electric
motor. $300. or
best offer.
570-239-6622
SNOWBLOWER new
used 1 season ,
wont start, I dont
have time to mess
with, Troy-Built
storm 7524 $75. or
best offer. 417-3251
756 Medical
Equipment
DIAPERS adult size
XL originally $14 a
package on sale for
$5 a package.
570-696-2856
HOSPITAL BED
electric complete
$75. 570-287-8107
POWER CHAIR
Jazzy Select,
$500. Walker - $25.
570-829-2411
ROLLATOR Medline
Guardian Deluxe
Rollator, black, new
never out of box.
$75. 570-788-5030
SCOOTER
By Pride. Revo.
Blue. Front & back
baskets. 6 months
old. $2,000. Vehicle
lift also included.
Call 570-288-1879
WALKER, maroon
chrome on wheels
with seat, $15. Also
raised toilet seat, $2
Call 570-823-4941
WALKERS( 1) new
$12. (1) folding $20.
(1) folding with
wheels $25. Com-
mode aid, like new
$20. 4 prong cane
$20. (2 other canes)
$10 & $15.825-2494
WHEELCHAIR Rolls
Invacare, perfect
condition. $200.
570-735-8730 or
332-8094
Say it HERE
in the Classifieds!
570-829-7130
758 Miscellaneous
BASKETS, planters
& vases, .25 & .50
cents. Dishes, 2
sets $10 each.
570-823-4941
BATTERY Motor-
craft 735 cca top
mount battery $25.
570-740-1246
BEDLINER: 89
Chevy S10 truck
bedliner, standard
cab $30. Four bar-
rel carb running
from Chevy motor
$50. 5 storm win-
dows $50.740-1246
BICYCLES ladies
26 $50. Girls 20
$40. large bicycle
seat $10.
570-822-4251
CANES & WALKING
STICKS. New batch
Different sizes and
shapes. Made from
the roots of Slippery
Maple Trees. Over
20 available at $4. &
& $5. 735-2081.
CANNING JARS
1 dozen quart with
rims $4. 1 dozen pint
jars $3. 474-5653
COFFEEMAKER-
Krups 10 cup. white
$10. TELEVISION-
color 13 with
remote $15. Both
excellent condition.
570-852-0675
COINS/ foreign
coins from all over
the world total of
120 coins in good
condition all for
$20. 570-735-6638
758 Miscellaneous
FENCE Chain link
60 with gate &
hardware $100.
570-288-5788
FISH TANK, 20 gal-
lon w/stand $50.
PICTURES, $10
each.
570-883-0568 or
570-239-2699
GARAGE SALE
LEFT OVER
ITEMS
Antique claw foot
cast iron tub $100.
Hard plastic dog
crate $20. Plastic
coated medium dog
crate $20. Re-
placement window
rectangular, brand
new in box $25.
Antique wooden
beveled mirror $25.
Wooden antique
side mirrors 1 pair
$20. pair. Old wood-
en windows double
hung $8 each. Old
window weights $2.
each. Custom built
dog cage with
accessories, hinged
shingled roof, dou-
ble compartment,
insulated $50.
570-814-6443
GARAGE SALE
LEFT OVER
ITEMS
DRILL PRESS
Grizzley $200.
DATYON, HEATER
TORPEDO & GAS
TANK $115. TOYOTA
TACOMA 2009 BED
COVER 6 box.
$250. 822-8658
GARAGE SALE
LEFTOVER
ITEMS
Golf clubs & bag,
very good $75. Golf
club set, new
grips, very good
condition $100.
Ping Pong table &
net, excellent con-
dition $100 firm.
Head Hunter
bowling ball $20.
Alpine slider -
skier- never used,
NEW $25. AB
Roller with video
$20. Two alloy car
rims & tires 205
60R/16 $150. nego-
tiable. 570-288-1181
GARAGE SALE
LEFTOVER
ITEMS
Womens clothing
size 6 .50 each.
Mens Chico
pants, size 38-40
$2. each. Boys
suits $8. each.
Boys navy blaz-
ers $5 each. Army
over coat $15
Glass vases .50
each. Green bath-
room sink with
mounts $3. 12 TV
color with remote
$5. Yahama digi-
tal percussion
instrument $35.
570-822-5560
GIRLS BICYCLES: 2
16 $17.00. Girls
bicycle 20 $25.00.
Negotiable.
570-457-3879
GLASS DOOR. 4
way glass door for
bath tub. $25
570-331-8183
GRILL/GAS small,
good condition $35.
neg. 570-510-7763
HEATER small for a
bedroom or efficien-
cy apartment, brand
new, only used once
this past winter
$100. 288-2224
KNITTING machine,
used once. $25
Homedies sound
machine, $10.
Call 570-333-4539
LUMBER/USED 2
solid oak, ideal for
truck, side boards,
like new condition, 8
pieces $250. call for
sizes 570-466-0239
MINI BIKE old
school 3hp motor
runs good $200 firm
after 3pm 655-3197
MOTORCYCLE HEL-
METS: (3) $20 each
570-262-1615 or
570-215-0215
PATIO SET Red-
wood, 4 piece, 1
rocker, 1 chair ,1
lounger & 1 small
table set is in good
condition all for
$20. 570-735-6638
POLICE SCANNER,
200 channel hand
held. Excellent Con-
dition. $75. Firm.
570-371-3367
PORTAPOTTI for
trailer or boat, $10.
Call 570-328-5611
or 570-328-5506
RAMPS: steel ramps
for loading quad, 2
pieces good condi-
tion $60. firm Bicy-
cle mens Trek large
frame model 750
good condition
$175. 570-655-3197
RELIGIOUS ITEMS -
Hand made
Rosaries, $5. Pope
John Paul II Memori-
blia. 570-829-2411
ROMAN SHADE.
72x72. Still in box.
Natural color, looks
like bamboo. $25
570-829-2022
SAFE DEPOSIT BOX,
heavy duty $150.
570-825-5847
SAW, 10 Miter, $40.
HEATER, Kerosene,
$50, TOW BAR,
folding, $50, BIKE
CARRIER, holds 3
bikes, fits 2 receiv-
er, $50, COM-
FORTERS, King (1)
gray, $30, (1) Black
& White. $10. MIR-
RORS, clip on
adjustable towing.
$40. 570-817-5289
TELESCOPE Bush-
nell Sky Tour 114
mm-#78-9945 new
in box with audio
tour talking handset.
Cost $250. will sell
for $99. 570-822
4787/570-510- 0587
TOMATO STAKES.
3-4.5, $.50 each,
TRUCKS, Hess, new
in box 2000-2008
$50-$90.
570-675-4383
758 Miscellaneous
TYPEWRITER $5
Cat litter box with lid
+ food dishes $6.
Canister set + spice
rack duck design $5
570-696 3368
VACUUM portable
Pronto 2 in 1 Elec-
trolux with charger
& stand $20. 570-
735-8730 or 570-
332-8094
WARMER Creators
brand counter top
warmer for pop-
corn, nachos etc.
44hx28dx36w,
lighted inside slide
doors front & back,
very good condition
$795. 570-636-3151
760 Monuments &
Lots
GRAVE LOT
Near baby land at
Memorial Shine in
Carverton.
$400. Call
570-287-6327
762 Musical
Instruments
ACCORDION
Excelsior white,
marbilized, multi
grand $650. Stand-
ing microphone
$150. 735-0289
DRUM SET WJM
percussion 5 piece
set complete with
cymbals, throne,
metallic blue, slight-
ly used. $229. Radio
Shack MD-1121 syn-
thesizer with stand
like new $125.
570-574-4781
ORGAN old reed
organ Mason &
Hamlin $150 or best
offer. 570-822-1227
PIANO: Kimbell con-
sole, excellent con-
dition with padded
bench, recently
tuned. $350.
570-497-9940
TRUMPET.
Yamaha, hard case
$675.
KEYBOARD $125.
call 570-675-9481
WINTER PIANO in
really good condi-
tion. Recently
tuned. Asking $100.
Call 570-288-5491
766 Office
Equipment
PRINTER scanner,
copier, printer, Lex-
marx used once call
for more info $25.
570-288-2224
770 Photo
Equipment
MANFROTTO
MONO-POD model
681B excellent con-
dition $50.00 or
best offer 570788-
2388 after 5:00 PM
772 Pools & Spas
HOT TUB COVER
brand new 84x84
blue vinyl with latest
insulation installed.
Light weight, great
buy. $345. Firm.
570-574-4854
POOL FILTERS Intex,
(disposable) type A,
brand new $6.
each. Filter for Intex
blowup pool $15.
570-696-4020
774 Restaurant
Equipment
RESTAURANT
CHAIRS $10 each.
570-825-5847
RESTAURANT
EQUIPMENT
Bev Air 2 door
refrigerator/ sand-
wich prep table,
Model SP48-12,
$1300. For details
Call 570-498-3616
RESTAURANT
EQUIPMENT
SOMERSET TURN
OVER MACHINE -
Model # SPM45,
$500; ALSO, Bunn
Pour Over Coffee
Machine, Model #
STF15, $225
For more info, call
570-498-3616
RESTAURANT
EQUIPMENT
Somerset Dough
Sheeter, Model
CAR-100. Only
1 available. $1,500
Call for more info
570-498-3616
776 Sporting Goods
BACK PACK. Hiking,
navy canvas, $40,
570-675-4383
BASKETBALL
HOOP; Great condi-
tion, asking $90.
Call 570-331-8183
BIKE, 26 girls bike.
Rode only 5 times.
Paid $120. Asking
$90. 570-883-0568
or 570-239-2699
BIKE, black beach
cruiser. $15.
570-235-6137
BIKE, girls Schwinn,
26 $65.
(570) 654-2657
BOOTS: Burton
snow board boots,
size 9. Excellent
Condition $60. Call
Mark at 570-301-
3484 or Allison 570-
631-6635.
CLEATS: mens
Under Armour base-
ball cleats, size 11,
almost new $20
Ladies softball
cleats, size 9 $15.
570-760-4830
CROSS BOW LEG-
END exercise
machine, very good
condition, sacrifice
$200.570-788-2388
DRYER, electric. 3
months old. $250
570-883-0568
or 570-239-2699
GOLF CART. Pull
along. $25
570-675-4383
776 Sporting Goods
GOLF CLUB travel
case. $10.
570-675-7024
GOLF CLUBS:
youth, complete -
5,6,7,8,9, SW, driv-
er, 3 wood hybrid,
putter, stand up
bag. $75.
570.262.0716
GOLF. Hybrids, Tay-
lor Made R7 Draw.
Senior/Ladies Flex
22,25,28, $30 each.
WEDGE Titleist
Vokey. 58, $35.
CHIPPER, Maxfli,
42, $10
570-735-4824
PING PONG TABLE
$75.
570-825-5847
SUN TENT good for
beach or yard, 2
people, side win-
dows, open front.
$10 Firm.
570-255-6056
778 Stereos/
Accessories
KARAOKE SYSTEM
13 color TV, CD and
G player AM/FM
tuner & dual cas-
sette $75.
570-675-3328
780 Televisions/
Accessories
TELEVISION: GE.
28 works good,
needs remote $90.
570-740-1246
TV 21 color , works
great, white $25.
570-829-4776
TV 32 Sony tv/
stand & remote
100. or best offer.
570-417-3251
TV Daewoo 13 with
remote, works
great, $35.
570-899-7384
782 Tickets
Baseball Tickets
16 Tickets for SWB
Yankees against LV
Iron Pigs. August 1st
game. Includes Lux-
ury Box, Suite 11
with food & drink.
$500 or best offer.
(570) 332-2252
TICKETS: 2 Phillies
Tickets, August 28,
2011, Phillies vs
Florida, 1:35 pm
Sec 310 Row 5
Seats 13 & 14 $60.
570-498-4556
U2 TICKETS
MEADOWLANDS
Stadium, NJ
Wednesday
July 20th 4 Tick-
ets $445. Row 4
Section lower level
113, seats
11,12,13,14 Cash
only 570-954-2749
784 Tools
KENT, 15 floor buff-
ing & rug scrubbing
machine, heavy
duty 1740 RPM with
3 brushes. 40
Heavy duty cord.
Excellent condition.
$250. 570.881.1822
LAWN EDGER
Craftsman, runs
great, 4 cycle $75.
BANDSAW Crafts-
man 10 with table
mount, extra blades
& manual, like new!
$100. 878-2849
SAW, Skill circular,
$25. 570-735-8730
or 570-332-8094
SAW: Black& Deck-
er table saw used
very little $250. or
best offer. 417-3251
SAW: Craftsman 10
radial arm saw free
standing new condi-
tion $75 firm call
570-655-3197.
786 Toys & Games
LITTLE TIKES End-
less Adventures
Fold N Store picnic
table, ages 2-8.
$50. 570-696-4020
PINBALL: Pinball
two player electron-
ic $95.00
570-814-3673
POKER TABLE.
Portable Oak. Sits 8
players. $200
570-735-8730 or
570-332-8094
POOL TABLES:
2 Slate top pool
tables, disassem-
bled, $200 each or
best offer. Call
570-262-1615 or
570-215-0215
TRAIN SET: Lionel
Dodge Motorsport
Set LIO11933 O27
Gauge. Brand New,
$125. 570-574-4781
TV TEDDY + 6
videos $18. Girls
Disney princess var-
ious items for $10.
570-696 3368
788 Stereo/TV/
Electronics
RECEIVER Direct Tv
Digital receiver with
remote brand new
$40. 570-288-2224
SONY 5 piece
speaker & base unit
$25. 570-824-7807
/ 570-545-7006
790 Swimming
Pools/Hot Tubs
SWIMMING POOL.
21 x 54 deep.
GREAT condition,
new cover, newer
pump and filter.
Complete with all
chems and vacuum.
Lots of extras plus
custom fit. Pressure
treated deck. $800.
570-654-3767 leave
message.
794 Video Game
Systems/Games
NINTENDO DSI
black, like new
$75. Rockband II
with all instruments
for Xbox 360, like
new $60. 407-2775
NINTENDO DSI,
Light Blue, perfect
screen, hardly used,
has multiple games.
$115. 570-822-2948
PLAYSTATION 2
GAME SYSTEM.
Playstation 2, Gui-
tar Hero World Tour
Complete With
Game & Wireless
Guitar & 5 Games
For Playstation 2
$125. 288-7533
Line up a place to live
in classified!
796 Wanted to Buy
Merchandise
BUYING SPORT CARDS
Pay Cash for
baseball, football,
basketball, hockey
& non-sports. Sets,
singles & wax.
570-212-0398
The Vi deo
Game St or e
28 S. Main W.B.
Open Mon- Sat,
12pm 6pm
570-822-9929 /
570-941-9908
$$ CASH PAID $$
VI DE O GAME S &
S YS TE MS
Highest $$ Paid
Guaranteed
Buying all video
games &
systems. PS1 & 2,
Xbox, Nintendo,
Atari, Coleco,
Sega, Mattel,
Gameboy,
Vectrex etc.
DVDs, VHS & CDs
& Pre 90s toys,
The Video
Game Store
1150 S. Main
Scranton
Mon - Sat,
12pm 6pm
570-822-9929
VITOS
&
GINOS
Wanted:
Junk
Cars &
Trucks
Highest
Prices
Paid!!
FREE
PICKUP
288-8995
WANTED
JEWELRY
WILKES BARREGOLD
( 570) 991- 7448
( 570) 48GOLD8
1092 Highway 315 Blvd
( Pl aza 315)
315N . 3 mi l es af t er
Mot orwol d
Mon- Sat
10am - 8pm
Cl osed Sundays
Highest Cash Pay
Outs Guaranteed
We Pay At Least
78% of the London
Fix Market Price
for All Gold Jewelry
Visit us at
WilkesBarreGold.com
Or email us at
wilkesbarregold@
yahoo.com
800
PETS & ANIMALS
810 Cats
CAT - Young Mom &
Kittens (2 tortoise-
shell females, 1 gray
tiger female & 1 light
gray male). Aban-
don in flood waters.
Free to good home.
(570) 239-8040
810 Cats
CATS & KI TTENS
12 weeks & up.
Shots, neutered,
VALLEY CAT RESCUE
824-4172, 9-9 only.
CATS. FREE.
URGENT. Loveable,
friendly, spayed,
shots. Will trans-
port. All colors. Can-
not keep.
570-299-7146
KITTEN, male,
orange, 3 months
old, very friendly,
checked by Vet.
Free to good home.
570-696-1620
570-945-3581
KITTENS - FREE.
Ranging from 8-12
weeks. Males &
Females. Long &
Short Hair. Vary in
color. 570-704-7214
Please leave a mes-
sage.
KITTENS 6 beautiful
& playful kittens
available for FREE to
GOOD HOME only!
call 570-332-5705
KITTENS, fluffy
angora kittens. Free
to good home.
(570) 270-3811
KITTENS. Free to
good home 6 weeks
old, litter trained and
eating solid food.
570-735-2243
815 Dogs
PAWS
TO CONSIDER....
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YOUR PET
CLASSIFIED
AD ONLINE
Call 829-7130
Place your pet ad
and provide us your
email address
This will create a
seller account
online and login
information will be
emailed to you from
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The World of Pets
Unleashed
You can then use
your account to
enhance your online
ad. Post up to 6
captioned photos
of your pet
Expand your text to
include more
information, include
your contact
information such
as e-mail, address
phone number and
or website.
AKC Cocker Spaniel
Pups - chocolate &
black. Vet checked,
inoculated.
(570) 343-7386
Akita, Doberman
Bernese Mt Dog,
English Bull Dog,
Great Pyrenees,
Golden, Shephard,
Roty, SIberian, Bas-
set, Boxer, 22 more
breeds. CATS.
570-650-3327
AUSTRALIAN
SHEPHERD PUPS
Beautiful pups, 1
AKC litter, 1 non reg-
istered litter. Ready
now. $200-$500.
570-925-2951
BRAZILIAN MASTIFF
PUPPIES
Fila. The ultimate
family guard dog! 4
males, 3 females.
Ready to go! $600
570-328-2569
CHIHUAHUA PUPPIES
Lots of color.
Adorable lap dogs.
Vet certified.
Females- $375,
Males- $350. No
papers. Will hold
with deposit. Ready
7/24. Please Call
570-648-8613
Grand Opening!
Chihuahuas, Poms,
Dachshunds,
Beagles, Shih Tzus,
Bostons, Maltese,
Rotties, Yorkies,
Westies, Labs,
Huskies & more!
570-453-6900 or
570-389-7877
IRISH SETTER
PUPPIES
Extraordinary com-
panions/hunters
610-378-0121
or 610-488-9273
ITALIAN CANE CORSO
Mastiff Puppies
Registered and
ready to go! Parents
on premises. Blue.
Vet Checked
570-617-4880
NEWFOUNDLAND/LAB
Cross puppies.
Great water dogs.
Vet Certified. Will
hold with deposit.
Ready 7/31. $500.
Call 570-648-8613
Olde English Bulldogge
Puppies. CKC regis-
tered. Vet checked.
Parents on premis-
es. Ready for good
home. 570-637-0749
PITT BULL PUPPIES
Born May 10, 2011
3 males, 3 females.
Brown & white;
gray & white; tan &
white; black &
white; white & tan
with black ears.
Females $175 OBO
Males $150 OBO
(570) 606-7240
(570) 357-2173
815 Dogs
SHIH-TZU PUPPIES
Parents on premises
Shots Current.
$500 -Shih-Tzus
$400 -Shih-Tzu mixs
570-401-1838
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
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A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
Standard Poodle
Puppies. Pure
bred. Vet checked.
First shots & de-
wormed. Males &
Females $250.
Family Raised.
570-954-5903
Weimaraner AKC Puppies
Grand Champion
Sire; Champion
mother + grandpar-
ents. Hunting, obe-
dience, agility, show
potential. Excep-
tional quality pups
for approved
homes. For informa-
tion: (267) 664-4941
845 Pet Supplies
CAGE, large
steel/wicker. $40.
SNAKE TANK, 10
gallon. $15.
570-235-6137
FISH TANK. 29 gal-
lon includes stand &
everything needed
for a start up. Ask-
ing $100. 762-1015
FISH TANK: 45 gal-
lon with all acces-
sories $50.
570-287-8107
900
REAL ESTATE
FOR SALE
906 Homes for Sale
Having trouble
paying your mort-
gage? Falling
behind on your
payments? You
may get mail from
people who promise
to forestall your
foreclosure for a fee
in advance. Report
them to the Federal
Trade Commission,
the nations con-
sumer protection
agency. Call 1-877-
FTC-HELP or click
on ftc.gov. A mes-
sage from The
Times Leader and
the FTC.
ASHLEY
82 Manhattan St
Great house in a
great neighbor-
hood, just waiting
for a new owner!!
3 bedrooms, hard-
wood floors, built-
ins, 4 season sun-
room, 1 &1/2 bath,
covered deck,
stone bar-b-que
& a fenced yard.
Family of 5 lived
comfortably in this
home. Contractor
owned and nicely
cared for. A lot
of house for
the money.
MLS 11-225
$68,000
Ask for Holly
EILEEN R.
MELONE REAL
ESTATE
570-821-7022
AVOCA
REDUCED!
314 Packer St.
Newly remodeled 3
bedroom home with
1st floor master, 1.5
baths, detached
garage, all new sid-
ing , windows, shin-
gles, water heater,
kitchen and bath-
rooms. A must
see house! For
more info and pho-
tos visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com
$109,900
MLS 11-73
Call Tom
570-262-7716
BACK MOUNTAIN
133 Frangorma Dr
Bright & open floor
plan. 5 year old 2
story. 9' ceiling 1st
floor. Custom
kitchen with stain-
less steel appli-
ances. Family room
with 14' ceiling &
fireplace. Conve-
nient location.
MLS# 11-2572
$359,000
Call Geri
570-696-0888
570-696-3801
LEWITH & FREEMAN
570-288-9371
906 Homes for Sale
BACK MOUNTAIN
912 Lewis Road
Remodeled kitchen,
hardwood floors,
master bedroom
with French doors
out to deck, lower
level finished w/tiled
bath. Private 1 acre
lot. MLS# 11-2057
$165,000
Call Geri
570-696-0888
570-696-3801
LEWITH & FREEMAN
BEAR CREEK
241 Laurie Lane
Privacy within
walking distance of
swim/rec area in
historic Bear Creek
Village. This 3,954
s.f., 5 bedroom,
3 1/2 bath home
offers living room
with fireplace,
hardwood floors,
family room with
stone fireplace &
vaulted ceiling;
dining; granite
kitchen with break-
fast room; studio
with cathedral ceil-
ing, 2nd kitchen
& greenhouse.
Paneled rec room
in lower level.
All this plus a
lake view.
$390,000
MLS# 11-1646
Call Joe Moore
570-288-1401
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
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on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
BEAR CREEK
2992 Laurel Run Rd
Stunning jewel
snuggled on 1 acre
lot bordering state
game lands. Rec
room can be
re-converted to
garage. Stylish 4
bedroom, 3 bath
modern home can
be heated for only
$700/year. Entertain
or relax in our 600
S/F + family room
featuring a coal
stove, built in
aquarium, and full
wet bar. State of
the art alarm sys-
tem. Enjoy serenity
on the patio or the
10x17 deck and only
minutes from town.
Sold AS-IS
MLS 11-555
$164,900
Call Sandy
Rovinski
570-288-0770
Ext. 25
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
BEAR CREEK
475 East Ave.
Top to bottom re-do
for this beautiful 3
bedroom, 1.75 bath,
2 story home locat-
ed in the Meadow
Run Lake communi-
ty of Bear Creek.
Tranquil setting,
modern interior all
re-done, granite
countertops in the
kitchen, exterior
with new landscap-
ing and stone patio
with lake frontage
to name a few!
MLS 11-1643
$329,900
Call Jay A.
Crossin
570-288-0770
Ext. 23
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
BEAR CREEK
6650 Bear Creek Blvd
Well maintained
custom built 2 story
nestled on 2 private
acres with circular
driveway - Large
kitchen with center
island, master
bedroom with 2
walk-in closets,
family room with
fireplace, custom
built wine cellar - A
Must See property!
$299,900
MLS# 10-4312
Call Geri
570-696-0888
570-696-3801
LEWITH & FREEMAN
746 Garage Sales/
Estate Sales/
Flea Markets
Need a Roommate?
Place an ad and
find one here!
570-829-7130
Motorcycle for sale?
Let them see it here
in the Classifieds!
570-829-7130
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com TUESDAY, JULY 19, 2011 PAGE 9D
906 Homes for Sale
BEAR CREEK
A A RARE FIND RARE FIND
This contemporary
2 story is rare find
for the price. Enter
in through French
doors into a dramat-
ic entrance foyer
with wood floors
and staircase. Off
the foyer is
an office,
G r e a t
r o o m
w i t h
s t o n e
fireplace &
wet bar lead-
ing onto rear deck.
Just off the great
room is a custom
kitchen with maple
cabinets, granite
tops, island and
desk area. The 1st
floor master bed-
room offers a full tile
bath with Jacuzzi
and walk in tile
shower, plus spa-
cious walk in closet.
Three additional
bedrooms and 2 full
baths Plus an over-
sized 3 car garage
all nestled on 2+
acres just off Route
115. $389,900
Ann Marie Chopick
570-760-6769
BELL REAL ESTATE
570-288-6654
P
E
N
D
IN
G
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new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
BEAR CREEK
VILLAGE
333 Beaupland
10-1770
Living room has
awesome woodland
views and you will
enjoy the steam/
sauna. Lake and
tennis rights avail-
able with Associa-
tion membership.
(membership
optional). Minutes
from the Pocono's
and 2 hours to
Philadelphia or New
York. $299,000
Maria Huggler
CLASSIC
PROPERTIES
570-587-7000
BLAKESLEE
NEW PRICE
37 Chestnut Road
(Old Farm Estates)
Custom built solid
brick 4 bedroom,
3.5 baths Colonial
style home with an
open floor plan on
1+ acre lot in the
Poconos. A few of
the amenities
include central A/C.
2 Master bedrooms
each with bath
room and fireplace,
ultramodern
kitchen, hardwood
floors throughout,
cathedral ceiling
and 2 car garage.
MLS #11-653
$435,000
Call Kim
570-466-3338
DALLAS
(Franklin Twp.)
Orange Road
Lush setting on
almost 5 acres with
magnificent stone
walls, fish pond,
house, garage,
barn and separate
offices with storage
area. 4,400 SF with
9 rooms, 4 bed-
rooms and 3 full
baths, 2 half baths
on 3 floors.
Reduced to
$379,000
MLS# 11-1628
Maribeth Jones
570-696-6565
906 Homes for Sale
DALLAS
119 Midland Drive
Custom Built Ranch
Home -The ranch
home is IN
DEMAND! This one
offers everything
you are looking for!
Plenty of space for
in-law quarters, 4
bedrooms, cherry
kitchen, sunroom,
recreation room
with 12 seat oak
bar. This home
includes an
attached 2 car
garage plus a
detached custom
garage that can fit
up to 12 cars or
boat storage, only 5
miles to beautiful
Harveys Lake - 1 yr
Home Warranty.
All this on 4 ACRES
of serenity in the
heart of Dallas
$419,000
MLS #11-155
Call Tracy Zarola
570-696-0723
LEWITH & FREEMAN
DALLAS
20 Fox Hollow Drive
Well maintained
two story with
fully finished lower
level awaits its
new family. 4 bed-
room, 3.5 bath,
2 fireplaces. One
year home warranty
included. Wonderful
neighborhood.
Double lot.
$310,000
MLS #11-1806
Call Tracy Zarola
570-696-0723
LEWITH & FREEMAN
DALLAS
20 OAK DRIVE
WOW! This home
offers replacement
windows, newer hot
water heater, gas
fireplace, hardwood
floors, sun porch,
large fenced rear
yard, flagstone
patio, heated in-
ground pool, fin-
ished lower level,
located in the
Lehman School Dis-
trict. Just minutes
from Harveys Lake,
why not join the
Beach Club this
summer! It is a
MUST SEE HOME!
MLS#11-1258
$159,500
Bob Cook 696-6555
Jill Jones 696-6550
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
DALLAS
211 Hillside One
Enjoy the comforts
& amenities of living
in a beautifully
maintained town-
house, 3/4 Bed-
rooms, family room
with fireplace out to
deck. Bright & airy
kitchen, finished
lower level, Tennis,
Golf & Swimming
are yours to enjoy
& relax. Mainte-
nance free living.
PRICE REDUCED!
$210,000
MLS# 10-1221
Call Geri
570-696-0888
570-696-3801
LEWITH & FREEMAN
DALLAS
25 Walnut Lane
2 story contempo-
rary with lodgy
appeal. Sets on 9+
acres. Home fea-
tures ultra modern
kitchen, family room
& living room with
field stone fire-
place. Master bed-
room with master
bath. In ground pool
with deck, 1st floor
laundry, gazebo, 2
car garage. Zoning
agricultural for new
buyers various
types of use.
MLS# 11-1789
$ 350,000
Call Lynda
(570) 696-5418
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-696-1195
906 Homes for Sale
DALLAS
3 Crestview Dr.
NEW LISTING!
Well-constructed
and maintained
sprawling multi-
level with 5,428
square feet of living
space. Living room
& dining room with
hardwood floors
& gas fireplace;
eat-in kitchen with
island; florida room.
5 bedrooms, 4
baths; 2 half-baths.
Lower level rec
room with wet bar
& fireplace. leads
to heated in-ground
pool. Beautifully
landscaped 2
acre lot.
$575,000
MLS# 11-1798
Call Joe Moore
570-288-1401
DALLAS
400 Shrine View
Elegant & classic
stone & wood
frame traditional in
superb location
overlooking adja-
cent Irem Temple
Country Club golf
course. Living room
with beamed ceiling
& fireplace; large
formal dining room;
cherry paneled sun-
room; 4 bedrooms
with 3 full baths &
2 powder rooms.
Oversized in-ground
pool. Paved,
circular drive.
$550,000
MLS# 11-939
Call Joe Moore
570-288-1401
Looking for that
special place
called home?
Classified will address
Your needs.
Open the door
with classified!
DALLAS
6 Morris Circle
Best BuyNot the
store, but this ele-
gant home in Over-
brook Estates, Dal-
las. Recently
reduced! Three fin-
ished floors with
over 5,000SF from
the grand two-story
foyer and hardwood
staircase to the fin-
ished lower level
with gym, game
room, guest bed-
room and bath.
Your purchase will
be an investment in
luxury! One year
new 20x42 Skovish
Brothers in-ground
kidney shaped pool.
Cherry kitchen with
upgraded appli-
ances. 5 bedrooms,
5 baths, first floor
den. A must see!
MLS#11-1067
$599,000
Maribeth Jones
696-6565
DALLAS DALLAS
67 Country Club Rd
Ranch, 3 bed-
rooms, 2 bath-
rooms, double car
attached garage,
fireplace, forced air
furnace, central air,
finished basement,
1/2 acre, 1/2 bath in
laundry room,
screened-in porch,
private well, shop
area. Walking dis-
tance to MU.
Move in condition!
Negotiable Price!
$150,000
Call (570)
675-0544 for a
private showing
DALLAS
705 The Greens
Impressive, 4,000
sq. ft., 3 bedroom,
5 1/2 bath condo
features large living
room/dining room
with gas fireplace.,
vaulted ceilings
and 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# 11-872
Call Joe Moore
570-288-1401
906 Homes for Sale
DALLAS
Nice 2 bedroom
ranch in Great
Neighborhood!
Large Living Room,
sunny eat-in kitchen
& oversized bath.
Perfect place to
start out or down-
size to.
REDUCED PRICE
$50,000
MLS# 10-4624
Five Mountains
Realty
570-542-2141
DALLAS
Private setting, con-
temporary home
with 3 bedrooms, 2
1/2 baths, attached
garage, living room,
dining room, mod-
ern eat in kitchen,
fireplace in family
room,large deck.
MLS 11-210,
$259,000
Call Susan Pall @
(570) 696-0876
LEWITH & FREEMAN
DALLAS
REDUCED PRICE!
Secluded on a hill
but part of High
Point Acres. 2 story
Colonial, 4 bed-
rooms, 2.5 baths.
Large family room
with fireplace and
sliding door to
screened porch. 2
car garage. Central
AC. Wooded lot.
$265,000.
11-1077
Besecker Realty
570-675-3611
DRUMS
Sand Springs
12 Sand Hollow Rd.
Nearly new 3 bed-
room, 2.5 bath
town home. Huge
Master with 2 clos-
ets full bath. 1 car
attached garage,
wooded lot, end
unit. Cul-de-sac.
Great golf
community.
MLS 11-2411
$172,000
Call Connie
Eileen R. Melone
Real Estate
570-821-7022
DURYEA
122 Lackawanna Ave
Just a few more
finishing touches
will complete the
renovations. This
home has a new
kitchen, new
drywall & new
carpeting.
$59,000
MLS #11-1502
Call Tracy Zarola
570-696-0723
LEWITH & FREEMAN
Collect cash, not dust!
Clean out your
basement, garage
or attic and call the
Classified depart-
ment today at 570-
829-7130!
EDWARDSVILLE
9 Williams St.
Large 4 bedroom
home with nice rear
deck, replacement
windows, off street
parking. Possible
apartment in sepa-
rate entrance.
Loads of potential.
For more info and
pictures visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-2091
$69,900
Call Tom
570-262-7716
906 Homes for Sale
EXETER
Sunday 1pm-3pm
362 Susquehanna Ave
Completely remod-
eled, spectacular, 2
story Victorian
home, with 3 bed-
rooms and 1.5
baths, new rear
deck, full front
porch, tiled baths
and kitchen, granite
countertops, all
Cherry hardwood
floors throughout,
all new stainless
steel appliances
and lighting, new oil
furnace, washer
dryer in first floor
bath. Great neigh-
borhood, nice yard.
$174,900
Owner financing
available.
570-654-1490
FACTORYVILLE
Gorgeous 4 bed-
room colonial, Din-
ing room, family
room, hardwood
floors, central air
and vac, Jacuzzi. On
over 0.5 acre. Move
in ready. $264,800
Shari Philmeck
ERA BRADY
ASSOCIATES
570-836-3848
FALLS
REDUCED!
RR1, Box 297
MAJESTIC VIEW!
3 bedroom brick
Ranch home nes-
tled on approxi-
mately an acre of
well groomed river-
front land with
breathtaking scenic
views, cascading
tree lines and the
legendary cliffs of
Falls. Beautiful bird
and wildlife to daz-
zle the eye and
excellent fishing
and hunting for your
enjoyment. Living
room w/fireplace,
family room, full
heated basement,
riverfront deck,
central A/C and
much more. A one
of a a kind find.
Must see!
MLS #10-3751
$182,000
Call Debbie
McGuire
570-332-4413
Crossin Real
Estate
570-288-0770
Need to rent that
Vacation property?
Place an ad and
get started!
570-829-7130
FORTY FORT
1301 Murray St.
Very nice duplex,
fully rented with
good return in great
neighborhood. For
more information
and photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-2149
$129,900
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
FORTY FORT
GREAT DEAL!
NEW PRICE
1509 Wyoming
Ave.
Freshly painted
and insulated,
immaculate and
sitting on almost
half an acre this
3 bedroom 1.5
bath home can
be yours. Fea-
tures include a
modern kitchen,
central A/C.
laundry room,
office and free
standing fire-
place. All appli-
ances included.
Just move right
in! For more
details and pho-
tos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-604
$177,900
Call Kim
570-466-3338
P
E
N
D
I
N
G
906 Homes for Sale
GOULDSBORO
This is a must see
large mobile. Only
five years old with
master bath
Jacuzzi. This is
located in the Beau-
tiful Community of
Indian Country quiet
and peaceful. This
home backs up to
State Game lands.
Also the outdoor
pool is across the
street. The property
is on one half acre
of land. The price is
$99,900. includes
all furnishing which
is in great shape all
you have to do is
move right in. To
see all the picture of
the rooms go to
www.HomesIn
ThePoconos.com
and go to feature
listings.
Thomas Bourgeois
516-507-9403
Classic Properties
570-842-9988
HANOVER TOWNSHIP
599 Shawnee St
This Duplex will let
you live in one unit
and rent out the
other to help with
the mortgage pay-
ment. It was once a
single family home
and can most likely
be converted back.
Desirable location.
This is an estate and
there is no sellers
disclosure. 11-1223
$69,500
Call Karen
Coldwell Banker
Rundle Real Estate
570-474-2340
To place your
ad call...829-7130
HANOVER TOWNSHIP
710 Church Street
Exceptionally well
care for home in
move in condition.
Everything is new,
roof, siding, win-
dows, porches,
kitchen and baths.
MLS 11-2309
$129,000
Jay A. Crossin
CROSSIN
REAL ESTATE
570-288-0770
ext. 23
HANOVER TOWNSHIP
Reduced!
Bi-Level. 1,750 sq ft.
3 bedrooms, 2
baths, 1 car garage.
New carpeting,
paint, etc. Large lot.
Asking $99,900.
Deremer Realty
570-477-1149
HANOVER TWP
86 Allenberry Dr.
FOR SALE BY OWNER
Bright 1,700 sq ft 3
story townhome
with great wooded
views. Deck &
patio. 2 bedroom, 2
bath with finished
lower level. Nicely
landscaped yard.
Move in condition.
$121,900
570-574-3192
HANOVER TWP.
146-148 Regal St
Newer kitchens
Large baths
Tenant occupied
3 bedroom each
side.
Call for appointment
$74,900
MLS# 10-4598
Call Vieve Zaroda
(570) 474-6307
Ext. 2772
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-474-6307
HANOVER TWP.
2 story in good
condition with 3
bedrooms, 1 full
bath, eat-in
kitchen, 2 car
garage, fenced
yard & new
gas heat.
MLS # 10-4324
$49,900
Call Ruth at
570-696-1195 or
570-696-5411
SMITH HOURIGAN GROUP
906 Homes for Sale
HANOVER TWP.
26 Spring Street
Corner lot with
semi fenced yard.
Hardwood floors
Lots of updates
including windows
Detached garage
Paved parking
for two cars
$79,900
MLS# 10-4482
Call Vieve Zaroda
(570) 474-6307
Ext. 2772
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-474-6307
HANOVER TWP.
275 Phillips Street
Well kept 2
bedroom ranch with
new kitchen, fenced
yard, one car
garage.
$79,900
MLS #11-638
Call Tracy Zarola
570-696-0723
LEWITH & FREEMAN
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
HANOVER TWP.
PRICE REDUCED!
290-292
Lee Park Ave.
Very nice all brick
double block has
front and back
porches. Beautiful
yard with mature
plantings, 3 bed-
rooms, 1 bath,
detached 1 car
garage in back of
the home.
MLS#11-1988
$134,000
Christine Pieczynski
696-6569
HANOVER TWP.
8 Diamond Ave.
Loads of space in
this modernized tra-
ditional home. 3rd
floor is a large bed-
room with walk-in
closet. Modern
kitchen, family room
addition, deck over-
looking large corner
lot. Not just a
starter home but a
home to stay
in and grow! For
more informaton
and photos visit
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS #11-622
$122,900
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
HANOVER TWP.
Large windows
accent this bright
spacious 2 bed-
room, 2 bath
townhouse in a
quiet setting of
Hanover Township.
Motivated sellers!
All reasonable
offers considered.
$98,000
MLS# 10-2685
Call Arlene Warunek
570-650-4169
Smith Hourigan
Group
(570) 696-1195
HANOVER TWP.
PRICE REDUCED!
103 Claymont Ave.
Just starting out or
looking to down-
size? This is the
home for you! This
3 bedroom home
offers a finished
lower level with
coal stove, large
fenced rear yard,
spacious
kitchen/dining area.
Worth a look!
MLS#11-1793
$124,900
Jill Jones 696-6550
906 Homes for Sale
HARDING
105 Circle Drive
Well maintained
Bi-Level on nicely
landscaped corner
lot. Finished lower
level with gas
fireplace & sliding
doors to private
patio. Totally fenced
yard, 1 car garage.
$149,900
MLS# 11-1271
Call Cathy
(570) 696-5422
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-696-1195
HARDING
310 Lockville Rd.
SERENITY
Enjoy the serenity
of country living in
this beautiful 2
story home on 2.23
acres surrounded
by nature the prop-
erty has its own
private driveway.
Great entertaining
inside & out! 3 car
garage plus 2 car
detached. A MUST
SEE! MLS#11-831
$279,900
call Nancy
570-237-0752
HARDING
LARGE SPLIT LEVEL
ON 2.8 ACRES
3 bedrooms,
3 baths. $135,000.
570-760-0049
HARVEYS LAKE
13 Carpenter Road
Make it your own!
The potential has
not yet been fully
realized with this
home. Some reno-
vations were start-
ed, now bring your
hammer and finish
it up. This home is
on a large lot locat-
ed just a short walk
from the lake and
beach area.
MLS#11-1442
464,900
Jill Jones 696-6550
Looking to buy a
home?
Place an ad here
and let the
sellers know!
570-829-7130
HARVEYS LAKE
143B GROVE ST.,
Like to entertain?
This floor plan lends
itself to that with a
large kitchen, formal
dining and living
rooms. A car enthu-
siast? This garage
will hold 4 cars
comfortable. Enjoy a
hot tub, this workout
room has one and
French doors open-
ing to the rear yard.
Spacious bed-
rooms, wood burn-
ing fireplace. The list
goes on and on! Did
I mention you are
just of a mile from
the lake?!
MLS#11-1994
$249,900
Jill Jones 696-6550
HARVEYS LAKE
Pole 131
Lakeside Drive
Lake front home
with 2-story livable
boathouse! Year
round home offers
fireplace, cathedral
ceiling, cedar panel-
ing. Boat house has
a patio for grilling,
open dock space as
well as enclosed
area for your boat.
2nd floor is a studio
style kitchenette/
living room, full bath
plus a deck. Take a
look! MLS#11-1379
PRICE REDUCED!
$384,900
Bob Cook 262-2665
Jill Jones 696-6550
906 Homes for Sale
HARVEYS LAKE
Pole 165
Lakeside Drive
A truly unique
home! 7,300 sq.ft.
of living on 3 floors
with 168' of lake
frontage with
boathouse.
Expansive living
room; dining room,
front room all with
fireplaces.
Coffered ceiling;
modern oak kitchen
with breakfast
room; Florida room;
study & 3 room &
bath suite. 5
bedrooms & 4
baths on 2nd.
Lounge, bedroom,
bath, exercise room
& loft on 3rd floor.
In-ground pool & 2-
story pool house.
AC on 3rd floor.
$1,149,000
MLS# 10-1268
Call Joe Moore
570-288-1401
HARVEYS LAKE
Ridge Ave
Modern 2 story
home on 1 acre.
Duplex. Excellent
starter home,
retirement home,
or investment
property. Public
sewer,deep well.
$99,900
Negotiable
MUST SELL TO
SETTLE ESTATE!
570-287-5775
or 570-332-1048
HARVEYS LAKE
POLE 265
LAKESIDE DRIVE
44 of lakefront!
This home offers
recently remodeled
kitchen with Cherry
cabinetry, granite
counters. Hard-
wood floors through
the kitchen and din-
ing area. Stone fire-
place, enclosed
porch to enjoy the
lake view! The
boathouse has a
second level patio,
storage area, plus
dock space. A must
see! MLS#11-2018
$369,900
Bob Cook
570-262-2665
HUGHESTOWN
169 Rock St.
3 bedroom, 2
story home with
many updates
including newer
furnace and
some new win-
dows. Large
concrete front
and rear porch-
es, large private
yard. For more
info and photos
visit us at:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-1786
$89,900
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
P
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HUNLOCK CREEK
Main Road
Country Living
At Its Best.
Well Maintained
farmhouse on 6+
acres. Garage,
stream. Easy
access to Route 11.
Affordable at
REDUCED TO
$159,500
Call Jim
Towne & Country
Real Estate Co.
570-735-8932 or
570-542-5708
Job Seekers are
looking here!
Where's your ad?
570-829-7130 and
ask for an employ-
ment specialist
HUNLOCK CREEK
New construction,
3 bedroom, 2 bath
tan brick ranch on
1 acre. Features
include pella
windows, oak hard-
wood floors, car-
peted bedrooms,
tiled kitchen &
baths, maple
kitchen cabinets,
hanstone counter-
tops, propane fire-
place, walk up attic,
tray ceiling in living
room & attached
2 car garage.
$279,900
MLS# 10-4527
Five Mountains
Realty
570-542-2141
906 Homes for Sale
INVESTORS SPECIAL
4 bedrooms, 1.5
baths. Priced to sell
at $17,000.
KELLER WILLIAMS
REAL ESTATE,
610-867-8888
Call Tai DeSa at
570-406-0857
JENKINS TOWNSHIP
2 Owen Street
This 2 story, 3 bed-
room, 1 1/2 bath
home is in the
desired location of
Jenkins Township.
Sellers were in
process of updating
the home so a little
TLC can go a long
way. Nice yard.
Motivated sellers.
MLS 11-2191
$95,000
Call Karen
Coldwell Banker
Rundle Real Estate
570-474-2340
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
JENKINS TWP
1717 River Road
Compact 2
story home with
3 bedrooms, 1st
floor bath with
laundry, large
kitchen. Parking
in rear with
alley access.
$39,900
MLS 11-99
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
S
O
L
D
JENKINS TWP.
(Eagle View)
Home/Lot Package
Beautiful custom
built home with a
stunning river view
overlooking the
Susquehanna River
and surrounding
area. Custom built
with many ameni-
ties included. A few
of the amenities
may include central
A/C, master bed-
room with master
bath, ultramodern
kitchen, hardwood
floors, cathedral
ceiling, and a 2 car
garage. There are
are many other
floor plans to
choose from or
bring your own!
For more details &
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-2642
$375,000
Call Kim
570-466-3338
JENKINS TWP.
23 Mead St.
Newly remod-
eled 2 story on
a corner lot with
fenced in yard
and 2 car
garage. 4 bed-
rooms, 1 bath,
1,660 sq. ft. For
more informa-
tion and photos
visit www.atlas
realtyinc.com
$89,900
MLS 10-3684
Call Bill
570-362-4158
P
E
N
D
I
N
G
JENKINS TWP.
250 Susquehan-
nock Drive
Immaculate Cape
Cod home features
1st floor master
suite with office and
3/4 bath. 2nd floor
has 2 large bed-
rooms with walk in
closets and adjoin-
ing bath. 1st floor
laundry and 1/2
bath, modern
kitchen with bam-
boo floors, living
room with stone
fireplace. 2 tier
deck overlooks
above ground pool,
ready for summer
fun! For more infor-
mation and photos,
please visit
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS #11-657
$299,000
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
Motorcycle for sale?
Let them see it here
in the Classifieds!
570-829-7130
GET THE WORD OUT
with a Classified Ad.
570-829-7130
Find Your Ideal
Employee! Place an
ad and end the
search!
570-829-7130
ask for an employ-
ment specialist
PAGE 10D TUESDAY, JULY 19, 2011 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
906 Homes for Sale
JENKINS TWP.
297 Susquehannock
Drive
Settle into summer
with this great 2
story home on quiet
cul de-sac with pri-
vate back yard and
above ground pool.
Deck with awning
overlooking yard! 4
bedrooms, 2.5 bath
home in Pittston
Area School District
with family room,
eat in kitchen, cen-
tral a/c and garage.
Full unfinished
basement
MLS 11-2432
$259,900
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
JENKINS TWP./
INKERMAN
45 Main St.
Own this home for
less than $400 a
month! Large 3
bedroom home with
formal dining room,
off street parking
and large yard. For
more information
and photos, log
onto www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS#09-2449
$64,900
Call Charles
KINGSTON
121 W. Vaughn St.
Well cared for 3
bedroom, 1 bath
home on nice
street. Brand new
drywall and trim in
front 2 rooms. Vinyl
windows, gas heat
and newer 200
amp electric serv-
ice. Great location
with park just a few
doors away!
MLS 11-1380
REDUCED
$99,000
Mark R. Mason
570-331-0982
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
KINGSTON
125 3rd Ave
Well kept 2 story
with 3 bedrooms
and 1.5 baths situat-
ed on a nice street
in Kingston. Newer
roof, furnace, water
heater, electric
service. Replace-
ment windows
throughout. Base-
ment has high ceil-
ings, ideal for re-fin-
ishing or workshop!
MLS 11-2167
$144,000
Jay A. Crossin
CROSSIN
REAL ESTATE
570-288-0770
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
KINGSTON
167 N. Dawes Ave.
Move in condition 2
story home. 3 bed-
rooms, 2 baths,
hardwood floors,
ceramic throughout.
Finished lower level,
security system
MLS 11-1673
$159,900
Call Tom
570-262-7716
KINGSTON
40 N. Landon St.
Residential area,
4 bedroom plus 2 in
attic totaling 6. 1 1/2
baths. Half block
from schools. All
new rugs and
appliances, laundry
room, two car
garage, off street
parking, $139,900.
Call 570-829-0847
906 Homes for Sale
KINGSTON
46 Zerby Ave
Sunday
2pm-5pm
Lease with option
to buy, completely
remodeled, mint,
turn key condition,
3 bedrooms, 1.5
baths, large
closets, with
hardwoods, carpet
& tile floors, new
kitchen and baths,
gas heat, shed,
large yard.
$134,000, seller
will pay closing
costs, $5000 down
and monthly
payments are
$995/month.
WALSH
REAL ESTATE
570-654-1490
KINGSTON
510 Gibson Ave
PRICE REDUCED!
Well constructed
all brick 2 story
tudor on a beautiful
landscaped corner
lot. Includes hard-
wood floors, double
crown moldings,
ultra-modern
kitchen, built ins,
woodburning fire-
place, rear stair-
case, patio with
pergola, sprinkler
system, waterfall
and pond. Heated
garage. Impeccable
condition inside
and out.
$349,900
MLS# 10-3870
Call Cathy
(570) 696-5422
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-696-1195
KINGSTON
549 Charles Ave.
A quality home in a
superior location!
Features: large
living room; formal
dining room with
parquet flooring;
oak kitchen with
breakfast area; 1st
floor master
bedroom & bath
suite; bedroom/
sitting room; knotty
pine den; half-bath.
2nd floor: 2
bedrooms & bath.
Finished room in
lower level with
new carpeting &
wetbar. Central air.
2-car garage. In-
ground concrete
pool with jacuzzi.
$324,900
MLS# 10-1633
Call Joe Moore
570-288-1401
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
KINGSTON
621 Gibson Avenue
BY OWNER.
Brick Cape Cod on
a quiet street. 3
bedroom, family
room, 2 bath, living
room with fireplace,
two car garage with
loads of storage,
partially finished
basement.
$185,900
Call (570) 333-5212
No Brokers Please.
KINGSTON
663 Westmoreland
Avenue
Charming 2-1/2
story with 3 bed-
rooms on 2nd + a
4th (12x24) on 3rd,
full bath upstairs,
half bath with laun-
dry on 1st floor, lots
of closet space, fin-
ished walk-out
basement and much
more! MLS 11-2340
$214,900
Jay A. Crossin
CROSSIN
REAL ESTATE
570-288-0770
ext. 23
906 Homes for Sale
KINGSTON
76 N. Dawes Ave.
Very well main-
tained 2 bedroom
home with updated
kitchen with granite
counter. Large sun-
room over looking
private back yard.
Attached garage,
large unfinished
basement.
MLS 11-2278
$139,900
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
KINGSTON
Chester St Duplex
Clean, modern,
recently remodeled
with Tile, Pergo,
new carpeting &
paint throughout.
2.5 car detached
garage. Off street
parking for 7 cars
total. Top: 2 bed-
rooms, 1 bath, sun-
room. Bottom: 1
bedroom, 1 bath,
formal dining room.
$119,000. Owner
financing possible.
570-301-7221
KINGSTON
Rutter Ave.
End Unit Townhouse
Owner Relocating.
1st floor open plan
with living room,
dining area &
kitchen, plus pow-
der room. Lower
level finished with
3rd bedroom, laun-
dry room & storage
area. 2 bedrooms &
2 baths on the 2nd
floor. MLS # 11-1267
$279,500
Call Ruth 570-696-
1195 / 570-696-5411
SMITH HOURIGAN GROUP
KINGSTON TWP.
PRICE REDUCED
8 Circle Drive
Only one lucky
family will be
able to make
this home their
own! Beautifully
kept Ranch with
2 car garage,
new bath, par-
tially finished
basement, 3
season room,
almost 1 acre in
Dallas School
District. Home
Warrancy includ-
ed. For more
information and
photos visit our
website at
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS #11-370
$174,900
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
VM 101
S
O
L
D
KINGSTON
TWP.
PRIVACY & SERENITY!
This 40 acre
estate features:
living room with fire-
place & hardwood
floor; family room
with vaulted ceiling
& fireplace; 1st floor
master bedroom &
bath with jetted tub
& stall shower; pan-
eled den; dining
room with stone
floor & skylight; 3
additional bedrooms
& 2 baths. Central
A/C, 3 out buildings.
MLS#11-2101
$725,000
Call Joe Moore
Nancy Judd
570-288-1401
906 Homes for Sale
LAFLIN
3 Main Street
Historic 120+ year
old home, many
original details, new
roof, updated elec-
trical and a huge
garage. Currently a
gift shop. Corner lot,
newly paved park-
ing area. $170,000
MLS 11-2115. Call
Betty at
Century 21
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-287-1196
ext 3559
or 570-714-6127
LAFLIN
44 Fordham Rd
Oakwood Park
Over 5,000 sf of
gracious living in
this completely
redone all brick
home. Two first
floor guest suites.
New hardwood, tile
and granite floors
throughout. 5 bed-
rooms, 4 full baths
and 3 half baths.
Lovely master suite.
Five zoned heat. All
this on private large
lot with in ground
pool and great
views.
See virtual tour on
www. l ewi t h- f r eeman. c om
MLS#11-1085
$599,000
Call Marcie at
(570) 714-9267
LEWITH & FREEMAN
LAFLIN
5 Fairfield Drive
Dont travel to a
resort. Live in your
vacation destination
in the 3 bedroom,
2.5 bath home with
gourmet kitchen
and fabulous views.
Enjoy the heated in-
ground pool with
cabana, built-in
BBQ and fire pit in
this private,
tranquil setting. For
more info and pho-
tos visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-1686
$319,900
Call Keri
570-885-5082
LAFLIN
7 Hickorywood Dr.
Wonderful 4 bed-
room Ranch with
sweeping views of
the valley. Master
bedroom with walk-
in closet and bath,
ultra modern eat-in
kitchen with granite
counters and cherry
cabinets with large
island and stainless
steel appliances.
2 car garage, full
unfinished base-
ment with
walk-out to yard.
For more informa-
tion and photos visit
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS #10-4060
PRICE REDUCED
$267,500
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
Looking for that
special place
called home?
Classified will address
Your needs.
Open the door
with classified!
LAFLIN
SUBURBAN OASIS!
Two story 4 bed-
rooms with 3.5
baths. Fully finished
lower level with
home theater. 2 car
garage. Central air.
Eat-in kitchen.
Price: $379,000
Please call
(570) 466-8956
906 Homes for Sale
LARKSVILLE
11 Michael Dr.
You'll be impressed
the moment
you enter this
well-maintained
home, conveniently
located. This lovely
home features
eat-in kitchen, 3
bedrooms, formal
dining room,
3-season porch,
large deck. The
expansive lower
level family room
features large bar.
1 year warranty
included. This home
is priced to sell!
PRICE REDUCED
$169,900
MLS# 10-4639
Barbara Young
Call 570-466-6940
COLDWELL BANKER,
RUNDLE REAL ESTATE
570-474-2340
Ext. 55
LARKSVILLE
111 Falcon Drive
Brand 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 all
replaced. Modern
kitchen with granite
island, tile floors,
maple cabinets.
Fireplace in family
room, large closets,
modern baths.
Stamped concrete
patio. For more
information and
photos visit
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS #11-1166
$279,900
Call Tom
570-262-7716
Collect cash, not dust!
Clean out your
basement, garage
or attic and call the
Classified depart-
ment today at 570-
829-7130!
LARKSVILLE
2340 Mountain Rd
Architecturally built
split level on one
acre lot with stun-
ning Wyoming Val-
ley views. Great
room with fireplace,
formal dining room,
eat-in kitchen.
Potential 3 bed-
rooms, 2 baths,
detached 2-car
garage. Green-
house, fish pond,
raised gardens,
beautifully mani-
cured 1 acre lot.
REDUCED to
$299,000
MLS# 11-1079
Maribeth Jones
570-696-6565
LEHMAN
Immaculate inside
and out! 3 bedroom
1.5 bath raised
ranch on approx 9
scenic acres.
Central air, 6 car
garage with 6
garage door open-
ers, 2 out buildings,
paved driveway,
inground pool with
gas & solar heat
with 12X18' cabana,
many fruit trees
and more.
$410,000
MLS# 11-1629
Five Mountains
Realty
570-542-2141
LUZERNE
864 Charles Street
Home For Sal e by
Owner/Bui l der
All brick home with
12 inch concrete
walls with rebar on
both faces and
foundation. Two 2-
bedroom apart-
ments. All appli-
ances. Central Air.
Fireplace. Off street
parking. Must See!
(570) 338-2451
(570) 301-9110
906 Homes for Sale
MESHOPPEN
Novak Road
Lovely, nearly com-
pleted, renovated
Victorian farmhouse
sits high on 7.81
acres featuring
panoramic pastoral
views, high ceilings,
original woodwork,
gutted, rewired,
insulated and sheet-
rocked, newer roof,
vinyl siding, kitchen
and baths. Gas
rights negotiable.
Lots of potential
with TLC. Elk Lake
School District.
$165,000
MLS# 11-525 Call
570-696-2468
MOUNTAIN TOP
122 Kestrel Road
Move in condition
located in Forest
Pointe, this 2-story
home with an open
floor plan has 8
rooms, 4 bedrooms
and 3 baths, a duel
sided stone fire-
place separates the
family room and liv-
ing room. Enjoy
your summer on the
spacious deck and
in the 16x34 in-
ground swimming
pool Make an
appointment today!
MLS#11-1822
PRICE REDUCED
$289,500
Karen Altavilla
570-283-9100 x28
MOUNTAIN TOP
3071 Ablerdeen Rd
Immaculate home
on nearly 1 acre.
Beautifully land-
scaped. In ground
pool with solar heat.
Custom cherry
kitchen. Fantastic
mountain view! 1
mile to golf course.
Minutes to Rt. 80.
Motivated sellers!
MLS 11-1483
$225,000
Linda Cuono
570-715-7743
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-474-6307
MOUNTAIN TOP
460 S. Mtn
Blvd.
NEW PRICE!
Large well cared
for home! 4 bed-
rooms, lots of
storage. Enjoy
your summer in
your own 18x36,
In-ground, Solar
Heated Pool,
complete with
diving board and
slide. Pool house
with bar and room
for a poker table!
Large L-shaped
deck. Don't worry
about the price of
gas, enjoy a stay-
cation all summer
long! Family room
with gas fireplace.
4 zone, efficient,
gas hot water,
baseboard heat.
Hardwood floors.
Huge eat-in
kitchen with large,
movable island.
Large, private
yard. Replace-
ment windows.
Home warranty
included.
$222,900
MLS# 11-382
Call Michael Pinko
(570) 899-3865
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-474-6307
MOUNTAINTOP
7 STREAM VIEW COURT
NOT A DRIVE BY!
Wonderful post &
beam construction
and beautiful wood
throughout! 3 large
bedrooms features
master suite on 1st
floor. Wrap around
deck overlooks
shaded babbling
brook on a 3/4 Acre
lot. Quiet cul de
sac Crestwood
Schools. Just 2 min.
to the triangle in Mt.
Top. MLS# 11-1984
$239,000
Call Pat 715-9337
LEWITH & FREEMAN
REAL ESTATE
906 Homes for Sale
MOUNTAINTOP
OWNERS WILL
CONSIDER
LEASE/PURCHASE.
Pristine. Spacious.
Beautifully appoint-
ed. 2 Story. 4,000
sf. Hardwood
floors, gourmet
kitchen, fireplace,
large bedrooms,
jacuzzi, 4 walk-in
closets, 4 linen
closets. Spacious
finished walkout
basement. Man
Cave completely
furnished included
with right offer.
PLUS MORE!!
MLS#11-511
Dee Fields,
Associate Broker
570-788-7511
LEWITH & FREEMAN RE, INC
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
NANTICOKE
129 Welles St
Lovely 2 story, 3
bedroom single
family home. Large
master bedroom
suite with walk in
closet and addition-
al closet and full
time bath. Wall to
wall carpeting
throughout. Addi-
tional 1 1/2 tile
baths. Modern
Kitchen with all
appliances including
laundry. Very large
dining / living room
area and extra first
floor room for office
or den. Nice back-
yard and deck.
Friendly neighbor-
hood. Immaculate
move-in condition.
Dont miss this
one! Asking
$137,500.
Please call
570-650-3358
for more info and
for an appoint to
see this beauty!
No Realtors
NANTICOKE
316 Pine Street
Magnificent beauti-
fully renovated for-
mer church is a
"one of a kind" resi-
dence! Ultra mod-
ern kitchen with
furiture quality cabi-
netry. Spectacular
gathering room.
Stone, stained
glass,tile and fabu-
lous wood elements
come together to
make an exquisite
overall master-
piece. Gorgeous
master bedroom
suite features an
unbelievable beauti-
ful master bath.
Panoramic views
from bell tower inti-
mate seating area!
Full finished lower
level with two walk
out ground level
exits would easily
host an in-home
business. A steal at
$289,000.
MLS# 11-1624
Call Pat 715-9337
LEWITH & FREEMAN
REAL ESTATE
NANTICOKE
Honey Pot Section
207 Garfield St
Nice double block
in Honey Pot sec-
tion of Nanticoke.
2 car garage, cov-
ered patio, off
street parking.
Each side has 3
Bedrooms. 1 side
has updated
kitchen and 1.5
baths. Used as
single family, can
be 2 units by
removing doors.
$59,900
MLS# 11-2202
Call Michael Pinko
(570) 899-3865
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-474-6307
NANTICOKE
Rear 395 E.
Washington St.
2 family home with
2 bedrooms each
side, separate utili-
ties, great income
earning potential.
One side occupied,
one available
for rent.
MLS 11-2425
$59,900
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
906 Homes for Sale
NANTICOKE
REDUCED
OPEN HOUSE
SUNDAY, JULY 24
11AM - 1PM
8PM
25 West
Washington St.
Move right into this
very nice 3 bed-
room 1 bath home.
Lots of natural
woodwork and a
beautiful stained
glass window.
Kitchen appliances
and wall to wall car-
peting approxi-
mately 1 year old.
Home also has a
one car detached
garage.
$79,900
MLS 11-347
Call John
570-704-6846
Antonik & Associ-
ates, Inc.
570-735-7494
NEW COLUMBUS
19 Academy St
Peaceful living with
easy drive to town.
Beautifully main-
tained 3Bedroom
Ranch on 1.5 acres,
2 car garage, gas
fireplace, hard-
woods, large
deck... Lots to see.
Call today for a pri-
vate showing.
MLS 10-3480
$138,700
Five Mountains
Realty
570-542-2141
NOXEN
Country living on 1
acre outside of
Noxen. 3 Bedroom
mobile home -
excellent condition -
separate garage, 2
covered porches.
Newer roof. Owner
says SELL! $90,000
Shari Philmeck
ERA BRADY
ASSOCIATES
570-836-3848
PARDEESVILLE
SINGLE FAMILY
BUILT IN 2005
CORNER LOT
738 Pardeesville
Road
CORNER LOT
2.5 baths, 2 story
with attached
garage. Oil fur-
nace with central
air. 90x140 corner
lot. Kitchen with
center cooking
island, dining
room, raised ceil-
ing with glass door
entry & hardwood
floor. Carpeting
thru out home.
Tiled kitchen &
bath. Kitchen appl-
iances included.
GREAT PRICE!
$219,900
(570) 233-1993
PARDESVILLE
The charming cape
is just minutes from
Route 309 in Hazle
Township and fea-
tures a 1st floor
bedroom with mas-
ter bath, semi-mod-
ern kitchen with
dining area, spa-
cious Living room
plus a 1 car
detached garage.
100% Vendee
Financing
REDUCED!!
$37,900
Ann Marie Chopick
570-760-6769
BELL REAL ESTATE
(570) 288-6654
Sell your own home!
Place an ad HERE
570-829-7130
PITTSTON
10 Garfield St.
Looking for a
Ranch??? Check
out this double wide
with attached 2 car
garage on a perma-
nent foundation.
Large master bed-
room suite with
large living room,
family room with
fireplace, 2 full
baths, laundry
room, formal dining
room, vaulted ceil-
ings throughout and
MORE!
MOS 10-2463
$89,900
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
906 Homes for Sale
PITTSTON
12 George Street
Two story single
with 7 rooms,
3 bedrooms,
1.5 baths, new
windows, modern
kitchen, some
appliances includ-
ed, electric service,
some carpeting and
hardwood floors.
Call Rita for details
$68,900
570-954-6699
Walsh
Real Estate
570-654-1490
PITTSTON
136 Butler Street
Lots of room and
character in this 2
unit fixer upper.
Nice yard. Walk up
attics and enclosed
porches. Property
being sold in ''as
is'' condition.
MLS# 11-3302
$29,900
Call Patti
570-328-1752
Liberty Realty
& Appraisal
Services LLC
PITTSTON
149 Butler St.
Well maintained, 2
story, 3 bedrooms,
1 1/2 baths. Large
eat-in kitchen, 1st
floor laundry room,
beautiful woodwork,
off street parking.
$134,900
(570) 655-1255
PITTSTON
150 Carroll St.
Modern 3 bedroom
home with large
yard, off street
parking with car-
port, 1st floor laun-
dry, new flooring,
great condition.
Move right in! For
more info and pho-
tos please visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com.
MLS 11-1685
$89,900
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
PITTSTON
16 Defoe St.
Lovely 2 story, 3
bedrooms, 1.5
bath home that
features open
floor plan with
cathedral ceiling
family room.
Pristine hard-
wood floors. 3
season sun
room leads to
patio, in ground
pool and mani-
cured vinyl
fenced yard.
$169,000
MLS 11-141
Call Terry
570-885-3041
or Angie
570-885-4896
S
O
L
D
GET THE WORD OUT
with a Classified Ad.
570-829-7130
PITTSTON
44 Lambert St
Beautiful, cozy
home. Upstairs
laundry, lots of clos-
et space.Tastefully
renovations. extra
large driveway.low
maintenance.ther-
mostats in each
room. all measure-
ments approximate.
MLS 11-2210
$89,900
David Krolikowski
CROSSIN
REAL ESTATE
570-288-0770
PITTSTON
8 Butler St.
Grand old home
making its debut!
Perched o a cor-
ner lot, home fea-
tures original
woodwork, nice
size rooms, 2nd
floor balcony, 2
kitchens and walk
up attic. Home
needs updating
but has loads
of potential!
MLS #11-731
$49,900
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
S
O
L
D
906 Homes for Sale
PITTSTON
88 Maple Lane
Spacious 4 bed-
room, 2.5 bath
Cape Cod with
great open floor
plan, hardwood
floors, first floor
master bedroom
and bath. Screened
porch off kitchen
and lower covered
deck from walkout
basement. Walk-in
attic, oversize one
car garage. All in a
quiet desirable
neighborhood. For
more information
and pictures go to:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-2243
$159,000
Angie 885-4896
Terry - 885-3041
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
PITTSTON
89 Lambert St
This pleasant brick 3
bedroom on a wide
lot, sits nicely back
from the street.
Recently remod-
eled. MLS 11-1080
$88,000. Call Betty
at Century 21
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-287-1196
ext 3559
or 570-714-6127
PITTSTON
95 William St.
1/2 double home
with more square
footage than most
single family
homes. 4 bed-
rooms, 1.5 baths,
ultra modern
kitchen and remod-
eled baths. Super
clean. For more
information and
photos visit
www.atlas
realtyinc. com
MLS 11-2120
$63,000
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
PITTSTON
Duplex. Aluminum
siding, oil heat, semi
- modern kitchens,
long term tenant. On
a spacious 50 x
150 lot. Motivated
Seller. $44,900
Anne Marie Chopick
570-760-6769
GEORGE T. BELL
REAL ESTATE
570-288-6654
PITTSTON TWP.
120 Parnell St.
Classic Ranch in
great location. 3
bedroom, 3
baths, high qual-
ity throughout. 3
season porch
over looking pri-
vate rear yard.
Owners says
sell and lowers
price to
$219,900. For
more informa-
tion and photos
please visit our
website at
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS #10-2817
Call Charlie for
your private
showing.
VM 101
P
E
N
D
I
N
G
We Need Your Help!
Anonymous Tip Line
1-888-796-5519
Luzerne County Sheriffs Ofce
Need a Roommate?
Place an ad and
find one here!
570-829-7130
GET THE WORD OUT
with a Classified Ad.
570-829-7130
To place your
ad Call Toll Free
1-800-427-8649
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com TUESDAY, JULY 19, 2011 PAGE 11D
906 Homes for Sale 906 Homes for Sale 906 Homes for Sale 906 Homes for Sale
OFFICENTERS - Pierce St., Kingston
Professional Ofce Rentals
Full Service Leases Custom Design Renovations Various Size Suites Available
Medical, Legal, Commercial Utilities Parking Janitorial
Full Time Maintenance Staff Available
For Rental Information Call: 1-570-287-1161
906 Homes for Sale
PITTSTON TWP.
PRICE REDUCED
40 Gain St.
Be the first
occupants of
this newly con-
structed Ranch
home on a low
traffic street. All
you could ask
for is already
here, 3 bed-
rooms, 2 baths,
hardwood and
tile floors with
granite and
stainless steel
kitchen, gas
fireplace, cen-
tral air, 2 car
garage and rear
patio and full
basement. For
more informa-
tion and photos,
log onto
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS #10-3676
$219,900
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
S
O
L
D
PITTSTON TWP.
STAUFFER POINT
42 Grandview Drive
Just like new end
unit condo, with 1st
floor master bed-
room and bath, Liv-
ing room with gas
fireplace, hardwood
floors in living ,din-
ing room and
kitchen, granite
countertops and
crown molding in
kitchen, w separate
eating area, lst floor
laundry, heated sun-
room with spectac-
ular view, 2 addi-
tional bedrooms, full
bath and loft on the
2nd floor , 2 car
garage, gas heat
and central air,
priced to sell
$277,000 MLS 11-
2324
call Lu-Ann
602-9280
additional photos
and information can
be found on our
web site, www.
atlasrealtyinc.com
PLAINS
1610 Westminster Rd
DRASTIC
REDUCTION
Gorgeous estate
like property with
log home plus 2
story garage on 1
acres with many
outdoor features.
Garage. For more
info and photos
visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS# 11-319
$300,000
Call Charles
Need a Roommate?
Place an ad and
find one here!
570-829-7130
PLAINS
17 CEDAR RD
Birchwood Hills
Charming, well
maintained home
on oversized lot. 40
ft. deck overlooks
beautiful, private
fenced yard with
mature shrubs,
flower gardens and
in-ground pool. 4-
bedrooms, 2.5
baths, security, fire
and sprinkler sys-
tem. Two zoned
gas heat and cen-
tral air.
Agent owned.
See pictures on
www. l ewi t h- f r eeman. c om
MLS#11-2239
$265,000
Call Marcie at
(570) 714-9267
LEWITH & FREEMAN
906 Homes for Sale
PLAINS
433 N. Main St,
REDUCED! Large
home in advanced
stage of remodel
ready for drywall
and your choice of
extras to be
installed. Studded
out for vaulted
master suite with 2
closets,separate
tub/shower and 2
more bedrooms,
even an upstairs
laundry planned!
Large foyer &
kitchen, formal Din-
ing Room. Ready
for new furnace/
water heater. Can
lights, outlets
already placed!
Large lot with room
for garage/deck/
pool. MLS# 10-4611
Price Reduced to
$89,500!
Call Amy Lowthert
at (570)406-7815
COLDWELL BANKER
RUNDLE REAL ESTATE
PLAINS TOWNHOME
Completely remod-
eled In quiet plains
neighborhood.
2 bedroom, 1.5
bath. with finished
basement/3rd bed-
room. Hardwood
floors, central air,
electric heat,
new roof &
appliances.
$118,000
Motivated Seller!
(570) 592-4356
PLYMOUTH
139 SHAWNEE AVE W
Lovely home in
good condition. 4
bedroom, 1.5 bath,
spacious living
room, formal dining
room, Florida room
w/stone fireplace &
oak walls. Ceramic
tile baths, lots of
closet space, secu-
rity system & 2 car
garage. Perfect for
a growing family!
Nice neighborhood.
MLS#10-3020
$127,000
Call Debra at
(570) 288-9371
LEWITH & FREEMAN
PLYMOUTH
Spacious 1791 sq. ft.
1/2 double with
wrap around porch,
shed & garage.
Semi modern
kitchen and bath. 3
bedrooms with gas
heat and plenty of
storage.
Anne Marie Chopick
570-760-6769
GEORGE T. BELL
REAL ESTATE
570-288-6654
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
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in classified
is the best way
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Youre in bussiness
with classified!
PRINGLE
372 Hoyt Street
This two story home
has 4 bedrooms
with space to grow.
First floor has gas
heat and second
floor has electric
heat. Off street
parking for one in
back of home.
MLS 11-640
$62,900
Call Karen
Coldwell Banker
Rundle Real Estate
570-474-2340
906 Homes for Sale
PRINGLE
50 Broad Street.
Solid, meticulous,
1500 S.F., brick
ranch, containing 6
rooms, 3 bedrooms
and 1 full bath on
the main level and
full bath in base-
ment, situated on
1.03 Acres. NEW
kitchen with granite
counter tops, wood
cabinetry, new
stove, dishwasher,
microwave, tiled
floors. Bath has
new tile floor and
tub surround, dou-
ble vanity and mir-
rors. Lower level
has summer
kitchen, full bath
and large, dry-
walled area. Over-
size, 2 car garage/
workshop and
shed. Property has
been subdivided
into 4 lots. Call Pat
for the details.
$249,900.
Pat McHale
(570) 613-9080
SCRANTON
1504 Euclid Ave
Charming 3 bed-
room, 2 1/2 bath,
oversized 2 car
garage built in 2004
in the beautiful
Tripps Park Devel-
opment in Scranton.
Modern eat-in
kitchen with maple
cabinets, tiled floor,
center island and
French doors lead-
ing out to large deck
overlooking the
fenced yard. New
hardwood floors in
the family room.
Formal living and
dining rooms. Mas-
ter bedroom with
master bath and
walk-in closet. 2nd
floor laundry
MLS 11-1841
$259,000
Marilyn K Snyder
Real Estate
570-825-2468
SHADOWBROOK
MOUNTAIN
3 bedroom bi-level
with family room, 2
car garage and
much more. Just 3
miles from Tunkhan-
nock. $220,000
Shari Philmeck
ERA BRADY
ASSOCIATES
570-836-3848
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
SHAVERTOWN
1195 Sutton Road
Attractive, well-
maintained saltbox
on 2 private acres
boasts fireplaces in
living room, family
room & master
bedroom. Formal
dining room. Large
Florida room with
skylights & wet bar.
Oak kitchen opens
to family room. 4
bedrooms & 3 1/2
baths. Finished
lower level.
Carriage barn
$449,000
MLS# 10-3394
Call Joe Moore
570-288-1401
906 Homes for Sale
SHAVERTOWN
12 Windy Drive
New construction in
the exclusive
Slocum Estates.
Stone & Stucco
exterior. All the
finest appoint-
ments: office or 5th
bedroom, hard-
wood floors, crown
moldings, 9' ceil-
ings 1st & 2nd floor.
Buy now select
cabinetry & flooring.
MLS #11-1987
$499,000
Call Geri
570-696-0888
570-696-3801
LEWITH & FREEMAN
SHAVERTOWN
138 Wakefield Road
Inviting contempo-
rary with breathtak-
ing sunsets fea-
tures an open floor
plan, ultra kitchen,
hardwoods
throughout, two-
sided gas FP, spa-
like master bath,
very generous
room sizes, 5 bed-
rooms, 4 baths, fin-
ished walk-out
lower level.
$532,000
MLS #11-952
Call Tracy Zarola
570-696-0723
LEWITH & FREEMAN
SHAVERTOWN
142 Cedar Ave
4 bedroom cape
cod with family
room addition. Fin-
ished basement. 2
bath. 1 car
garage. 120 x 240
lot. $130,000.
Besecker Realty
570-675-3611
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
SHAVERTOWN
2542 CHASE ROAD,
New kitchen, new
windows and doors
and siding. All that
is needed is a new
owner! This 3 bed-
room ranch offers a
country feel, just off
the beaten path
while still in a con-
venient location.
Lower level has
recreation room,
bath plus room for
storage. Move right
in! MLS#11-2009
$139,900
Jill Jones or Bob
Cook 696-6550
SHAVERTOWN
57 Sara Drive
Bright and open
floor plan. This 6
year old home
offers premium fin-
ishes throughout.
Beautiful kitchen
with granite tops.
Finished Lower
Level with French
doors out to patio.
Set on private 1.16
acre lot.
MLS# 11-1991
$432,000
Call Geri
570-696-0888
570-696-3801
LEWITH & FREEMAN
906 Homes for Sale
SHAVERTOWN
91 GATES ROAD,
Great 3 bedroom
ranch home on over
2 acres of land!
This home offers an
oversized garage
with carport in rear.
A large tiled sun-
room to enjoy year
round. Master bed-
room with bath.
First floor laundry.
Schedule your
appointment today!
MLS#11-1911
$157,900
Jill Jones 696-6550
SHAVERTOWN
S P A C I O U S
3 bedrooms, 2 bath,
Ritz Craft, set up on
large corner lot in
Echo Valley Estates.
$49,900.
570-696-2108 or
570-885-5000
SHAVERTOWN
380 Lantern Hill Rd
Stunning describes
this impressive 2
story with views
from every room.
Architectural design
which features
gourmet kitchen
with granite tops.
Office with built-ins.
Finished lower level
with 2nd kitchen.
Family room with
French doors out to
rear yard. 4 car
garage. $ 775,000
MLS# 11-1241
Call Geri
570-696-0888
570-696-3801
LEWITH & FREEMAN
Looking for that
special place
called home?
Classified will address
Your needs.
Open the door
with classified!
SHICKSHINNY
17 Main Road
Lovely Country set-
ting for the cute Bi-
Level on 5.34 acres.
Property features 4
Bedrooms, 1.75
baths, living room,
kitchen, family room
& laundry room.
Plus 2 car attached
garage, 30' X 35'
detached garage
and 14' X 28' shed.
MLS 11-1335
$229,000
Five Mountains
Realty
570-542-2141
SHICKSHINNY
52 Cherokee Dr
Great ranch home
situated on 1+ acre
lot with Shickshinny
Lake rights. Dock
area to launch boat.
This 4 bedroom
home has an open
floor plan with hard-
wood floors and a
stone fireplace.
Home warranty is
included. Heat is
GEO Thermal with
airduct. MLS 10-3213
$228,900
Call Karen
Coldwell Banker
Rundle Real Estate
570-474-2340
SHICKSHINNY
Completely
remodeled 3 bed-
room, 1.75 bath
brick & aluminum
ranch on over 4
acres with Pond.
New stainless steel
appliances, 2 car
attached 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
$179,900
MLS# 10-4716
Five Mountains
Realty
570-542-2141
906 Homes for Sale
SHICKSHINNY
DRASTICALLY
REDUCED!
OWNER SAYS
SELL NOW!!!
A spectacular sun-
lit great room with
floor to ceiling
stone fireplace and
vaulted ceiling adds
to the charm of this
11 year young, 2400
sq ft. 2.5 bath 2
story situated on
almost an acre of
tranquility with
fenced AG pool,
rocking chair porch
and a mountain
view. There is a
large living room,
new kitchen w/din-
ing area and a
master suite com-
plete with laundry
room, walk in clos-
et, and master bath
with jetted tub.
MLS #10-906
REDUCED TO
$157,000
Dont delay, call
Pat today at
570-714-6114 or
570-287-1196
CENTURY 21 SMITH
HOURIGAN GROUP
Collect cash, not dust!
Clean out your
basement, garage
or attic and call the
Classified depart-
ment today at 570-
829-7130!
SPRING BROOK TWP
6 Williams St.
Great value for the
price on quiet
street which is
closed to all main
roads is a must
see. Also comes
with home
warranty.
MLS 10-3210
$157,900
Thomas Bourgeois
516-507-9403
CLASSIC
PROPERTIES
570-842-9988
SWEET VALLEY
23 Wesland Avenue
Immaculate 2 story
home in nice area
with kitchen, living
room, dining room,
family room, laundry
& 3/4 bath on 1st
floor. 4 Bedrooms,
full bath & walk-in
closet on 2nd floor.
Plus new roof, 2 tier
deck, 2 car garage,
paved driveway &
above ground pool.
MLS 11-1526
$230,000
Five Mountains
Realty
570-542-2141
SWEET VALLEY
4 Oliver Road
Located in the back
part of Oliver Road
in a very private part
of North Lake in
Sweet Valley. Yearn-
ing to be restored,
lake front cape cod
in a very tranquil
setting was formerly
used as a summer
home. MLS 11-2113
$110,000
Jay Crossin
CROSSIN
REAL ESTATE
570-288-0770
ext. 23
SWEET VALLEY
570 Grassy Pond Rd
Nice Country Bi-
Level on 9.55 acres
with 3 bedrooms,
1.5 baths, kitchen,
living room, family
room, office & laun-
dry room. Plus
attached oversized
2 car garage with
workshop, rear
deck & 3 sheds.
MLS 11-1094
$229,900
Five Mountains
Realty
570-542-2141
SWEET VALLEY
Enjoy easy summer
living in 2 bedroom
adorable cottage
with lake rights on
North Lake. Motivat-
ed seller. $79,900
Shari Philmeck
ERA BRADY
ASSOCIATES
570-836-3848
906 Homes for Sale
SWEET VALLEY
HUNLOCK CREEK
COUNTRY COTTAGE
Beautiful 1.14 acres
with stream. 3 bed-
rooms, 1.5 baths,
hardwood floors,
fireplace, wrap-
around porch, sun-
room, deck
& carport,
* BREATHTAKING *
Asking: $145,000
Call (570) 477-3677
SWOYERSVILLE
171 Oliver St.
Very well main-
tained 2 story
home. 3 bedrooms
and a bath with gas
heat. Front room
was former store
front which would
make a nice size
family room/den!
Many possibilities
MLS 11-1451
$74,000
Mark R. Mason
570-331-0982
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
SWOYERSVILLE
2 story home fea-
turing 4000 sq ft.
5 bedrooms with
master suite. 4
baths. 2 story open
foyer & 2 car
garage. 15x30
kitchen with break-
fast bar. LR, DR,
office and finished
basement. Gas
heat & central air.
Pool, deck, patio
and nice yard
$272,000
(570) 881-7996
BY APPOINTMENT ONLY.
Say it HERE
in the Classifieds!
570-829-7130
THORNHURST
A Great home in a
Great Community
Thornhurst Country
Club Es Clubhouse
Golf with all day play
for only $10, tennis
courts and outdoor
pool. This home
backs up to PA
State Game lands.
This home is an
Easy commute to
Wilkes-Barre and
Scranton close to all
major highways.
This is a must see
custom made home
with Three Baths
and 4 Bedroom. For
more information go
to HomesInThe
Poconos.com
$165,000
Thomas Bourgeois
516-507-9403
Classic Properties
570-842-9988
ext 1412
TRUCKSVILLE
Seller will contribute
toward closing
costs on this 1997
Yeagley built home.
Home is on a large,
private lot but con-
venient to every-
thing. Bonus room
in lower level. Built-
in 2 car garage.
$147,500
MLS# 10-4348
Call Betty
(570) 510-1736
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-287-1196
TUNKHANNOCK
Almost new Colonial
at Lake Carey. 4
bedrooms. 2 baths,
deeded lake rights.
Large rooms, hard-
wood floors, front
porch with view of
lake. Garage. Treed
lot. Pull down stairs
to attic. Oil forced
air heat. View pho-
tos on
lakehouse.com
$329,500
Call 570-836-9877
for a showing
WANAMIE
950 Center St.
Unique Property.
Well maintained 2
story. 10 years old.
Privacy galore.
3.5 acres. Pole
Barn 30 x 56 for
storage of equip-
ment, cars or
boats. A must
see property.
$289,000
MLS# 10-3799
Call Geri
570-696-0888
570-696-3801
LEWITH & FREEMAN
570-288-9371
906 Homes for Sale
WAPWALLOPEN
359 Pond Hill
Mountain Road
This 4 bedroom
home features a
great yard with over
2 acres of property.
Situated across
from a playground.
Needs some TLC
but come take a
look, you wouldnt
want to miss out.
There is also a pond
at the far end of the
property that is
used by all sur-
rounding neighbors.
This is an estate
and is being sold as
is. No sellers prop-
erty disclosure. Will
entertain offers in
order to settle
estate. MLS 11-962
$69,900
Call Karen
Coldwell Banker
Rundle Real Estate
570-474-2340
WEST PITTSTON
322 SALEM ST.
Great 1/2 double
located in nice
West Pittston loca-
tion. 3 bedrooms,
new carpet. Vertical
blinds with all appli-
ances. Screened in
porch and yard. For
more information
and photos visit
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS#10-1535
$59,000
Charlie VM 101
WEST PITTSTON
329 Wyoming Ave.
If a 3-4 bedroom
move in ready
property featuring
large living room
and dining room
with hardwood
floors, spacious
modern tiled
kitchen, spectacular
bath w/walk in
shower and jetted
tub, 1st floor laun-
dry and 3/4 bath,
roomy master bed-
room with double
closets might be
what youre looking
for - visit the Open
House or call PAT
for an appointment
MLS 11-2424
$179,900
Pat Gazenski
570-954-9038
CENTURY 21
SMITH
HOURIGAN
GROUP
570-287-1196
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
WEST PITTSTON
610 Fourth Street
Stately 4 bedroom
home, new ultra
modern kitchen, 1-
3/4 baths, off street
parking 1 car.
Fenced yard, new
windows, paint &
carpet. Just move
in! MLS#11-986
$127,000
Call Lynda
(570) 696-5418
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-696-1195
WEST PITTSTON
NEW LISTING
101 Boston Ave.
Quality home in
great location
w/custom features
throughout. Wont
last long.
$257,900.
Call Joe or Donna,
613-9080
906 Homes for Sale
WEST WYOMING
119 Lincoln Ave.
Perfectly remodeled
cape in toy town!
Nothing to do but
move in! Newer
kitchen, bath, win-
dows, carpet, elec-
tric service and gas
hot air furnace.
Currently 2 bed-
room, 1 bath with a
dining room that
could be converted
back to a 3rd bed-
room. Low taxes!!
Great home for
empty nesters, first
time buyers!
MLS 11-1630
$105,000
Call Mark R.
Mason
570-331-0982
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
WEST WYOMING
438 Tripp St
SUNDAY
1:00PM-3:00PM
Completely remod-
eled home with
everything new.
New kitchen, baths,
bedrooms, tile
floors, hardwoods,
granite countertops,
all new stainless
steel appliances,
refrigerator, stove,
microwave, dish-
washer, free stand-
ing shower, tub for
two, huge deck,
large yard, excellent
neighborhood
$154,900 (835.00 /
30years/ 5%)
570-654-1490
WEST WYOMING
NEW LISTING Cozy
cape cod with semi-
modern kitchen and
bath. 2 bedrooms
on 1st floor with
additional 3rd bed-
room on 2nd floor
ready to be com-
plete. Fenced yard
and drive. Needs
updating but a great
buy at $40,500
Ann Marie Chopick
570-760-6769
BELL REAL ESTATE
(570) 288-6654
P
E
N
D
I
N
G
WEST WYOMING
REDUCED!!!
536 W. Eighth
St.
Nice starter
home with 7
rooms, 3 bed-
rooms, 1.25
baths. 1 car
garage and car-
port. Home has
plenty of park-
ing in rear with
shed and great
yard. MLS #536
$85,000
Call Tom
570-262-7716
P
E
N
D
I
N
G
WEST WYOMING
Toy Town Section
148 Stites Street
INCREDIBLE
BUY
$71,000
On corner lot with
2 car garage.
2 bedrooms, 1 bath,
walk up attic & full
heated basement,
hardwood floors
with three season
room. Freshly paint-
ed & move in condi-
tion. 570-446-3254
WILKES-BARRE
108 Custer St.
Move-in condition -
New replacement
windows, furnace &
water heater - New
deck & front porch
- A must see prop-
erty - Don't Delay!
MLS#11-2201
$72,500
Call Geri
570-696-0888
570-696-3801
LEWITH & FREEMAN
Looking to buy a
home?
Place an ad here
and let the
sellers know!
570-829-7130
WILKES-BARRE
129 & 131 Matson Ave
Double Block, 6
rooms + bath on
each side. $79,000
Call 570-826-1743
906 Homes for Sale
WILKES-BARRE
134 Stanton Street
Nicely kept 3 bed-
rooms, 1 bath
home. Fantastic
price, also included
is a home warranty
with a service plus
package. Dont
miss out. 10-3827
$44,000
Call Karen
Coldwell Banker
Rundle Real Estate
570-474-2340
WILKES-BARRE
1400 N. Washington St
Nice 2 story in need
of some TLC with
low taxes, near the
casino. Roof is 5 yrs
young. Newer water
heater (installed
'09), replacement
windows through-
out, 100 AMP elec-
tric, tiled bath, wall-
to-wall carpeting
entire 1st floor.
MLS 11-2383
$58,900
Donald Crossin
CROSSIN
REAL ESTATE
570-288-0770
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
WILKES-BARRE
156 Sherman Street
HANDYMAN SPE-
CIAL. Extra Large
duplex with 7 bed-
rooms, 2 baths, fire-
place, screened
porch, full basement
and 2 car garage on
double lot in Wilkes-
Barre City. $59,500
ERA BRADY
ASSOCIATES
570-836-3848
WILKES-BARRE
178 High Street
Three unit property
in good condition
with first floor com-
mercial store front
with many possibili-
ties. The second
floor is a two bed-
room apartment
and the third floor is
a 1 bedroom apart-
ment. Additional lot
included with sale
for future growth
and parking. MLS
10-3120. $63,500.
Marilyn K Snyder
Real Estate
570-825-2468
WILKES-BARRE
186 Old RIver Road
Off street parking
and single car
garage with a
shared driveway.
This 4 bedroom,
one bath home in a
convenient location
just needs
a little TLC.
MLS 11-1552
REDUCED!
$41,000
Michelle T. Boice
570-639-5393
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
WILKES-BARRE
231 Poplar St.
Nice 3 bedroom
home in move-in
condition.
Hardwood floors in
living & dining
room. Upgraded
appliances including
stainless double
oven, refrigerator &
dishwasher. Great
storage space
in full basement
& walk-up attic.
REDUCED PRICE
$75,000
MLS# 10-4456
Barbara Young
Call 570-466-6940
COLDWELL BANKER,
RUNDLE REAL ESTATE
570-474-2340
Ext. 55
Boat? Car? Truck?
Motorcycle? Air-
plane? Whatever it
is, sell it with a
Classified ad.
570-829-7130
Looking for that
special place
called home?
Classified will address
Your needs.
Open the door
with classified!
Purebred Animals?
Sell them here with a
classified ad!
570-829-7130
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
Looking to buy a
home?
Place an ad here
and let the
sellers know!
570-829-7130
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
Find Your Ideal
Employee! Place an
ad and end the
search!
570-829-7130
ask for an employ-
ment specialist
PAGE 12D TUESDAY, JULY 19, 2011 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
906 Homes for Sale
WILKES-BARRE
254 N. Penna. Ave
Not a drive-by. This
clean, 3-4 bedroom
has a newly added
1st floor laundry
room and powder
room. All new floor
coverings, replace-
ment windows.
Interior freshly
painted, updated
electric, etc. Ready
to move in. Off
street parking for 2
cars and a large,
fenced-in back yard
w/storage shed.
Across street
from playground.
MLS 11-1713
REDUCED!
$44,500
Call Michelle T.
Boice
570-639-5393
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
WILKES-BARRE
29 Amber Lane
Remodeled 2 bed-
room Ranch home
with new carpeting,
large sun porch,
new roof. Move
right in! For more
info and photos
please visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-749
$89,900
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
WILKES-BARRE
35 Hillard Street
Great neighborhood
surrounds this
updated 2 story
home with orignal
woodwork. 3 bed-
room, 1 bath, 1,500
sq. ft. oak eat-in
kitchen, hardwood
floors, stained glass
windows, large
room sizes, fenced
yard, deck. Zoned
R1 Single Family
Zone
$59,000
MLS #11-599
Call Tracy Zarola
570-696-0723
LEWITH & FREEMAN
WILKES-BARRE
35 Murray St.
Large well kept 6
bedroom home in
quiet neighborhood.
Off street parking,
good size back
yard. Owner very
motivated to sell.
MLS 10-3668
$79,900
Call Don Crossin
570-288-0770
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
WILKES-BARRE
382 Parrish St
3 Bedroom 1 1/2
baths with natural
woodwork and
stained glass win-
dows throughout.
MLS 10-4382
$49,900
Marilyn K Snyder
Real Estate
570-825-2468
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
WILKES-BARRE
39 W. Chestnut St.
Lots of room in this
single with 3 floors
of living space. 3
bedrooms, 1 bath
with hardwood
floors throughout,
natural woodwork,
all windows have
been 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
Jay A. Crossin
570-288-0770
Ext. 23
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
906 Homes for Sale
WILKES-BARRE
46 Bradford St.
Well maintained 3
bedroom home with
off street parking
and large side yard,
newer roof, vinyl
siding, porches,
windows, furnace,
hot water heat, and
electrical panel. All
the big ticket items
have been replaced
for you. Home is
ready to move
right in!
MLS 11-510
$78,000
Call Terry
Solomon August
570-735-7494
Ext. 301
Antonik & Associ-
ates Real Estate
570-735-7494
Need to rent that
Vacation property?
Place an ad and
get started!
570-829-7130
WILKES-BARRE
62 Schuler St
3 bedroom, 1 3/4
bath in very good
condition. Hard-
wood floors
throughout, updat-
ed kitchen and
baths, natural
woodwork, over-
sized yard on a dou-
ble lot. Off street
parking.
MLS 10-4349
$79,900
Marilyn K Snyder
Real Estate
570-825-2468
WILKES-BARRE
73 Richard Street
3 Bedroom, 1 Bath
Traditional in Very
Good Condition.
Open Layout. Off
Street Parking, Yard
& Shed. Many
Updates.
Asking $47,900
Call 570-762-1537
for showing
WILKES-BARRE
74 Frederick St
This very nice 2
story, 3 bedroom, 1
bath home has a
large eat in kitchen
for family gather-
ings. A great walk
up attic for storage
and the home is in
move-in condition.
MLS 11-1612
$63,900
Call Karen
Coldwell Banker
Rundle Real Estate
570-474-2340
WILKES-BARRE
76 Moyallen Street
An absolute must
see. Charming
home with many
updates. Move-in
condition on two
lots. Granite and
stainless kitchen,
hardwood floors,
and many great
architectural fea-
tures. Perfect for
anyone looking for
affordable gracious
living. See pictures
www. l ewi t h- f r eeman. c om
MLS#11-1889
$84,000
Call Marcie at
(570) 714-9267
LEWITH & FREEMAN
WILKES-BARRE
84 Madison Street
Nice duplex.
Renovated 2nd
floor. Great invest-
ment or convert
back to single.
3 bedroom, 1 bath
on 1st Floor.
2 bedroom, 1 bath
2nd floor. Detached
garage.
Price Reduced!!
$75,000
MLS# 11-1095
Call Jeff Cook
Realty World
Bank Capital
570-235-1183
WILKES-BARRE
9 Stark Street
Well cared for 3
story home with 5
bedrooms. Move in
condition. Come
take a look. You
dont want to miss
out on this one.
MLS 10-3911
$69,900
Call Karen
Coldwell Banker
Rundle Real Estate
570-474-2340
906 Homes for Sale
WILKES-BARRE
Centrally located
this charming 3
bedroom, 1 Bath 2
story, with hard-
wood floors, eat in
kitchen, fenced
yard. Is an ideal
starter home. Good
potential at $18,900
Anne Marie Chopick
570-760-6769
GEORGE T. BELL
REAL ESTATE
570-288-6654
P
E
N
D
I
N
G
WILKES-BARRE
Centrally located,
this triplex is fully
occupied and has 2
bedrooms in each
unit. Nicely main-
tained with one long
term tenant on 3rd
floor and off street
parking. An annual
income of $17,520
makes it an attrac-
tive buy. $99,000
MLS 11-825
Anne Marie Chopick
GEORGE T. BELL
REAL ESTATE
570-288-6654
570-760-6769
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
WILKES-BARRE
FREE
informational
workshop on
how to
qualify for a
Habitat
house
Saturday
July 23
10:30 am to
12:30 pm
at Boscovs
downtown
Wilkes-Barre
Affordable newly
built 3 bedroom
home. 20-year
no-interest mort-
gage. Must meet
Wyoming Valley
Habitat for
Humanity eligibil-
ity requirements.
Inquire at
570-820-8002
WILKES-BARRE
Large, stately brick
home in Historic Dis-
trict. Large eat-in
kitchen, dining room
2 fireplaces, 5 full
baths & 2 half baths.
Huge master with
office. Large 3rd
floor bedroom. 2
story attic. Custom
woodwork & hard-
wood floors.Leaded
glass, large closets
with built-ins. Needs
some updates. With
large income apt.
with separate
entrance. Call for
appointment.
ASKING $350,000
Call 570-825-3608
or 570-706-5917
WILKES-BARRE
Miners Mills Section
Gracious home with
updated roof, fur-
nace and kitchen.
Three bedrooms,
spacious living
room, large dining
room, updated eat-
in kitchen, hard-
wood and pine
floors, offices
attached (was den-
tist). Separate 1-car
garage and carport.
Reduced for you!
$119,000
MLS# 11-1010
Maribeth Jones
570-696-6565
WILKES-BARRE
NOW REDUCED!
191 Andover St.
Lovely single family
3 bedroom home
with 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. Crossin
570-288-0770
Ext. 23
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
906 Homes for Sale
WYOMING
5 Windy Hill Lane
Well built, all brick
rancher with spa-
cious unique 2 car
built-in garage, 4
season room, huge
2nd floor family
room, hardwood
floors throughout,
private rear stone
patio & yard. Large
basement, 200 amp
electric.
MLS# 11-1664
Call Lynda
(570) 696-5418
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-696-1195
YATESVILLE
PRICE REDUCED
12 Reid st.
Spacious Bi-level
home in semi-pri-
vate location with
private back yard. 3
season room. Gas
fireplace in lower
level family room. 4
bedrooms, garage.
For more informtion
and photos visit
wwww.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 10-4740
$154,900
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
VM 101
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
YATESVILLE
REDUCED!
61 Pittston Ave.
Stately brick Ranch
in private location.
Large room sizes,
fireplace, central
A/C. Includes
extra lot. For more
information and
photos visit
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS #10-3512
PRICE REDUCED
$189,900
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
VM 101
THINKING OF SELLING?
FREE MARKET
ANALYSIS!
For a confidential
evaluation of
your home.
CALL TODAY!
570 696-2468.
Veterans
Bring your VA
Entitlement
Certificate
And If You Qualify, I
Can Help You Find
And Purchase A
Home In Luzerne
County!
Right now there are
hundreds of homes
listed in our MLS in
this county that
may qualify for
100% VA financing.
Give me a call at
788-7511 or email
me at
deefieldsabroker@gmail.com
Lets sit down and
talk, make a plan,
and help you get
moving into a
home.
Dee Fields,
Associate Broker
570-788-7511
LEWITH & FREEMAN RE, INC
909 Income &
Commercial
Properties
AVOCA
25 St. Marys St.
3,443 sq. ft.
masonry commer-
cial building with
warehouse/office
and 2 apartments
with separate elec-
tric and heat. Per-
fect for contractors
or anyone with stor-
age needs. For
more information
and photos log onto
www.atlas
realtyinc.com.
Reduced to
$89,000
MLS #10-3872
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
VM 101
BACK MOUNTAIN
Great Investment
Opportunity Prime
Location On Rt.118 -
Turn Key Gas Sta-
tion W/Convenient
Mart. 2 Fuel Pumps,
(1) Diesel.
MLS # 11-1809
$299,000.
Call Geri
570-696-0888
570-696-3801
LEWITH & FREEMAN
DALLAS
678 Lehman
Outlet Road
Unusual Opportunity
in Back Mountain.
Ranch Home
zoned Residential
attached to
Commercial
Building (formerly
print shop) with
separate utilities on
over 2 beautiful
acres in Lake Twp.
with plenty of
parking. So many
possibility's. Can be
purchased as
residential home.
Call for more
details. Property
Type:RC:
Residential with
Commercial
Function
$165,000
MLS #11-42
570-242-2795
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
DURYEA
REDUCED
921 Main St.
Over 2,000 S/F of
commercial space +
2 partially furnished
apartments,
garage, and off
street parking.
Great convenient
location.
MLS #11-1965
$229,000
Call Tom
570-282-7716
EDWARDSVILLE
62-67 Thomas St
This would make an
awesome family
compound. No
shortage of parking
on this unique prop-
erty. One single
home, one duplex
and an extra lot all
included. Homes
are right on the
Edwardsville/Larksvi
lle border.
$129,900
11-252
Call Betty
(570) 510-1736
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-287-1196
909 Income &
Commercial
Properties
FORTY FORT
138-148 Welles St.
DRASTIC PRICE
REDUCTION!
Be part of the
Welles Street
Revitalization! 2
buildings with
offices & ware-
house/garage
areas. Zoned M-1.
Office space for
lease. Call agent for
more details. 138-
142 Approx 9784
sq. ft. & 144-146
approx 5,800 sq ft.
$335,000
Contact Judy Rice
714-9230
MLS# 11-4293
KINGSTON
6 unit apartment
building. Each has
1 bath, bedroom,
Parlor & Kitchen,
Centrally located,
all electric, good
condition. Gross
income $28,000,
net $20,000. All
offers considered.
$114,900
570-829-0847
KINGSTON
7 Hoyt St
Nice duplex zoned
commercial, can be
used for offices as
well as residential.
All separate utilities.
Keep apt. space or
convert to commer-
cial office space.
Adjacent lot for sale
by same owner.
MLS 11-2176
$85,900
Jay A. Crossen
CROSSEN
REAL ESTATE
570-288-0770
ext. 23
KINGSTON
Wyoming Avenue
Highly visible office
building w/ample off
street parking.
Executive office on
1st level. Potential
for 2 tenants in
lower level.
PRICE REDUCED
$414,900
MLS #11-995
Call Tracy Zarola
570-696-0723
LEWITH & FREEMAN
NANTICOKE
423 E. Church St.
Great 2 family in
move in condition
on both sides, Sep-
arate utilities, 6
rooms each. 3 car
detached garage in
super neighbor-
hood. Walking dis-
tance to college.
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-1608
$127,500
Call Tom
570-262-7716
Looking for that
special place
called home?
Classified will address
Your needs.
Open the door
with classified!
PITTSTON
118 Glendale Road
Well established 8
unit Mobile Home
Park (Glen Meadow
Mobile Home Park)
in quiet country like
location, zoned
commercial and
located right off
Interstate 81. Con-
venient to shopping
center, movie the-
ater. Great income
opportunity! Park is
priced to sell.
Owner financing is
available with a
substantial down
payment. For more
details and photos
visit www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-1530
$210,000
Call Kim
570-466-3338
909 Income &
Commercial
Properties
PITTSTON
Township Blvd.
MAKE AN OFFER!
Ideal location
between Wilkes-
Barre & Scranton.
Ample parking with
room for additional
spaces. Perfect for
medical or profes-
sional offices. Con-
tact agent to show.
Contact Judy Rice
570-714-9230
MLS# 10-1110
Collect cash, not dust!
Clean out your
basement, garage
or attic and call the
Classified depart-
ment today at 570-
829-7130!
PLAINS
107-109 E. Carey St.
High traffic, high
potential location
with enough space
for 2 second floor
apartments. A
stones throw away
from the casino.
Large front win-
dows for showroom
display. Basement
& sub-basement for
additional storage
or workspace.
PRICE REDUCED
$110,000
MLS# 10-1919
Call Stanley
(570) 817-0111
Coldwell Banker
Rundle Real Estate
570-474-2340
WEST WYOMING
331 Holden St
10-847
Many possibilities
for this building. 40 +
parking spaces, 5
offices, 3 baths and
warehouse.
$425,000
Maria Huggler
CLASSIC
PROPERTIES
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 a
nice investment
with all separate
utilities and nice
rents. Large fenced
yard, priced to sell.
Dont wait too long.
Call today to
schedule a tour.
MLS 11-1453
REDUCED!!
$84,900
Mark R. Mason
570-331-0982
CROSS REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
WILKES-BARRE
819 North
Washington St.
2020 Sq. Ft,
Commercial build-
ing on corner lot
with parking. Prime
location. Lower
level street
entrance. Close to
major highways.
PRICE REDUCED
$147,000
MLS# 10-3225
Call Jeff Cook
Realty World
Bank Capital
570-235-1183
WYOMING
14 West Sixth St.
Former upholestry
shop. 1st floor in
need of a lot of
TLC. 2nd floor
apartment in good
condition & rented
with no lease. Stor-
age area. Off street
parking available.
PRICE REDUCED!
$65,000
Contact Judy Rice
714-9230
MLS# 11-572
909 Income &
Commercial
Properties
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 3
bedroom apartment
plus 3 car garage
and parking for
6 cars. For more
information and
photos go to
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS #10-4339
$172,400
Call Charlie
VM 101
Commercial
Building for
Sale
414 Front Street,
Nanticoke
(Hanover Section)
Opening a new
business?
Relocating
your business?
Call me today for a
personal tour -
reduced to
$99,900!!
Modern Office
building featuring 4
offices, conference
room, reception
room, supply room,
kitchen, garage, full
basement, A/C,
handicap ramp &
off street parking.
Call Dee Fields Today!
deefieldsabroker@gmail.com
570-788-7511
LEWITH & FREEMAN RE, INC
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
912 Lots & Acreage
COURTDALE
175x130 sloping lot
with some trees.
Public sewer, water,
gas. $9,500. Quick
sale to settle Estate.
570-287-5775
or 570-332-1048
DRUMS
Lot 7 Maple Dr.
Private yet conven-
ient location just
minutes from inter-
states. You can fish
in your own back
yard in the
Nescopeck Creek
or use the nearby
state game lands.
Perfect for your
vacation cabin or
possible year round
home! MLS#11-1492
$19,900
Jill Jones 696-6550
DURYEA
44.59 ACRES
Industrial Site. Rail
served with all
utilities. KOZ
approved. For more
information and
photos visit
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
$2,395,000
MLS#10-669
Call Charlie
GOULDSBORO
A great place for a
hunting Cabin or
Camper, short walk
to state games
lands. This lot
comes with electric
septic and well so
just drop off your
camper and you are
all set to go. Only
$20,000. Visit
www.HomesIn
ThePoconos.com
Thomas Bourgeois
516-507-9403
Classic Properties
570-842-9988
HARDING
2.3 ACRES
Assesed $42,000
Sacrifice $38,000.
570-760-0049
912 Lots & Acreage
JENKINS TWP.
Hospital St.
Eagle View
Great residential lot
overlooking the
Susquehanna River
for a stunning view
of the river and sur-
rounding area. Build
your dream home
on 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
$125,000
Call Kim
570-466-3338
Looking to buy a
home?
Place an ad here
and let the
sellers know!
570-829-7130
MOUNTAIN TOP
Crestwood Schools!
126 Acres for Sale!
Mostly wooded with
approx. 970 ft on
Rt. 437 in
Dennison Twp.
$459,000
Call Jim Graham at
570-715-9323
570-474-9801
LEWITH & FREEMAN
MOUNTAIN TOP
Several building lots
ready to build on!
ALL public utilities!
Priced from
$32,000 to
$48,000! Use your
own Builder! Call
Jim Graham at
570-715-9323
570-474-9801
LEWITH & FREEMAN
NEWPORT TOWNSHIP
2 LOTS - 1 mile south
of L.C.C.C. Estab-
lished residential
development,
underground utili-
ties including gas.
1 - Frontage 120x
265 deep $38,000.
2 - Frontage 210x
158deep $38,000
Call 570-714-1296
PLAINS TOWNSHIP
8.65 acres on end
of cul-de-sac in
Laurelbrook Estates
10 minutes from
Blakeslee and
Wilkes-Barre on Rt.
115. Perc certficate
available.
MLS 11-53
$127,000
Marilyn K Snyder
Real Estate
570-825-2468
POTENTIAL RESIDENTIAL
BUILDING SITES
ESTATE SALE
Dallas Heights
Lot 4 $35,000;
Lot 5 $28,000;
Lot 6 $45,000,
or all 3 lots for
$89,000.
Frontage 220x120.
Call 757-350-1245
PRICES REDUCED
EARTH
CONSERVANCY
LAND FOR SALE
46+/- Acres
Hanover Twp.,
$89,000
28+/- Acres
Fairview Twp.,
$85,000
32+/- Acres
Wilkes-Barre Twp.
REDUCED!
61+/- Acres
Nuangola
$118,000
JUST SOLD!
10+/- Acres
Hanover Twp.
See additional Land
for Sale at
www.earth
conservancy.org
570-823-3445
SHAVERTOWN
1195 Lantern
Hill Road
Prime residential
wooded lot with
plenty of privacy.
Gently sloping.
$150,000
MLS# 11-1601
Call Joe Moore
570-288-1401
SHAVERTOWN
LAND
Harford Ave.
4 buildable residen-
tial lots for sale indi-
vidually or take all
4! Buyer to confirm
water and sewer
with zoning officer.
Directions: R. on
E. Franklin, R. on
Lawn to L. on
Harford.
$22,500 per lot
Mark Mason
570-331-0982
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
912 Lots & Acreage
TOBYHANNAH
This is a Contempo-
rary Home located
in an Amenity Filled
Community. Locat-
ed near two bus
stops going to NYC.
It is in move in con-
dition so bring your
furniture and move
right in. Investors
this could be a great
rental property. Low
heating cost with
fireplace in Living
room. Bring all
offers owner is anx-
ious. Visit
www.HomesIn
ThePoconos.com
Thomas Bourgeois
516-507-9403
Classic Properties
570-842-9988
WEST PITTSTON
Wyoming Ave
60x150 level lot
Great Location
Priced to sell
Call Bernie
888-244-2714
Rothstein
Realtors
570-288-7594
WILKES-BARRE
1 Kidder & Walnut
Buildable 1.5 acre
lot in Wilkes-Barre
Township. Utilities
available. Lot is
located in a
residential area.
$39,500
MLS 11-583
Call Judy Rice
570-714-9230
930 Wanted to Buy
Real Estate
WE BUY HOMES
Any Situation
570-956-2385
Find Something?
Lose Something?
Get it back where it
belongs
with a Lost/Found ad!
570-829-7130
938 Apartments/
Furnished
PITTSTON
FURNISHED FURNISHED
1 bedroom apart-
ment, with patio,
kitchen with appli-
ances, refrigerator
with ice maker,
washer & dryer,
microwave, trash
compactor,
garbage disposal,
air, carpeting, furni-
ture, off street
parking, no pets,
Year lease, $600 +
security. Heat,
water, sanitation
and refuse incl.
570-883-7458 or
202-425-7388
PLYMOUTH
FURNISHED
APARTMENT FOR RENT
utilities all paid
Call
570-881-0636
WILKES-BARRE
FULLY FURNISHED
1 BEDROOM APT.
Short or long term
Excellent
Neighborhood
Priv. Tenant Parking
$595 includes all
utilities. No pets.
(570) 822-9697
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
ASHLEY
Available Immediately
Modern 2nd floor 2
bedroom apart-
ment. Off street
parking. Washer
dryer hookup. Appli-
ances. Bus stop at
the door. $550.
Water Included.
570-954-1992
AVOCA
Spacious 2 bed-
room, 2nd floor. No
pets. $485 / month
+ security. Call
570-328-3773
BACK MOUNTAIN
3 large 1 bedroom
apts, 3 kitchens
with appliances, 3
baths. Apts. have
access to one
another. No lease.
$795 for all 3 apts
($265 per apt.)
Convenient to all
colleges and gas
drilling areas.
Call for more info
570-696-1866
Find A NewFriend
In The Times Leader Classied
To place an ad call 829-7130
Find Your Ideal
Employee! Place an
ad and end the
search!
570-829-7130
ask for an employ-
ment specialist
Wanna make your
car go fast? Place
an ad in Classified!
570-829-7130.
Find homes for
your kittens!
Place an ad here!
570-829-7130
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com TUESDAY, JULY 19, 2011 PAGE 13D
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished 941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
2
9
6
2
3
1
NEWPORT TWP.
PRIME APARTMENTS STILL AVAILABLE!
ST. STANISLAUS APARTMENTS
143-145 Old Newport Rd., Newport Twp.
Affordable, Accessible 1, 2 & 3
Bedroom Apartments
Income Eligibility* Required.
Rents: $455-$656 plus electric
(*Maximum Incomes vary according to household size)
High Efciency Heat/Air Conditioning
Newer Appliances Laundry Rooms
Community Room Private Parking
Rent Includes Water, Sewer & Refuse
For more info or to apply, please call:
570-733-2010
TDD: 800-654-5984
Apply Today!
Great, Convenient
Location!
IN THE HEART OF WILKES-BARRE
Immediate Occupancy!!
MARTIN D. POPKY APARTMENTS
61 E. Northampton St.
Wilkes-Barre, PA 18701
Affordable Senior Apartments
Income Eligibility Required
Utilities Included! Low cable rates;
New appliances; laundry on site;
Activities!
Curb side Public Transportation
Please call 570-825-8594
TDD/TTY 800-654-5984
CEDAR
VILLAGE
Apartment
Homes
Ask About Our
Holiday 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)
570-823-8400
cedarvillage@
affiliatedmgmt.com
EAST
MOUNTAIN
APARTMENTS
The good life...
close at hand
Regions Best
Address
1 & 2 Bedroom Apts.
822-4444
www.EastMountainApt.com
1, 2 & 3 Bedroom Apts.
288-6300
www.GatewayManorApt.com
M ond a y - Frid a y 9 -5
Sa tu rd a y 1 0-2
W IL KE SW OOD
822-27 1 1
w w w .liv ea tw ilk esw ood .com
1 Bedroom Sta rting
a t$675.00
Includes gas heat,
w ater,sew er & trash
C onvenient to allm ajor
highw ays & public
transportation
Fitness center & pool
P atio/B alconies
P et friendly*
O nline rentalpaym ents
Flexible lease term s
APARTM E NTS
*RestrictionsAp p ly
962 Rooms 962 Rooms
Rooms starting at
Daily $39.99 + tax
Weekly $179.99 + tax
WiFi
HBO
Available Upon Request:
Microwave & Refrigerator
(570) 823-8027
www.casinocountrysideinn.com
info@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
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
DALLAS TWP
CONDO FOR LEASE:
$1,800. 2 bedroom/
2 Bath. Call Us to
discuss our great
Amenity & Mainte-
nance program!
Call 570-674-5278
Dallas, Pa.
MEADOWS
APARTMENTS
220 Lake St.
Housing for the
elderly & mobility
impaired; all utilities
included. Federally
subsidized program.
Extremely low
income persons
encouraged to
apply. Income less
than $12,250.
570-675-6936,
8 am-4 pm, Mon-Fri.
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
HANDICAP ACCESSIBLE
DUPONT
Large completely
remodeled 2 bed-
room. Stove &
fridge included.
Private interior
attic & basement
access. Washer/
dryer hookup. Nice
yard. $650. No
pets. Call
570-479-6722
EDWARDSVILLE
2 apartments. Spa-
cious. Each with 2
bedrooms, 2nd
floor, off street
parking. Washer/
dryer hook up &
dishwasher, refrig-
erator. $450/$600
month + 1 year lease
/security, refer-
ences & utilities. No
pets. Non Smoking.
Not approved for
Section 8. Call Rudy
at 570-288-6626
EDWARDSVILLE
Spacious freshly
painted 2 bed-
rooms, 1 bath. Con-
venient location.
Refrigerator & stove
provided, washer
/dryer hookup, no
pets, no smoking.
$510/month
Section 8 Accepted
Call 570-357-3628
EXETER
Newly remodeled.
2nd floor, 2 bed-
room, all appli-
ances, laundry hook
up, off street park-
ing. No Pets. $575/
month + utilities.
Call (570) 417-4311
or (570) 696-3936
EXETER
SENIOR APARTMENTS
222 Schooley Ave.
Exeter, PA
Accepting applica-
tions for 1 bedroom
apartments. Quality
1 bedroom apart-
ments for ages 62
and older. Income
limits apply. Rent
only $437 month.
* Utilities Included
* Laundry Facilities
* On Site
Management
*Private parking
Call for appointment
570-654-5733
Monday - Friday
8am-12pm. Equal
Housing Opportunity
1-2
BEDROOM
RENTALS
FORTY FORT.
PROFESSIONALLY
MANAGED,
EMPLOYMENT\
VERIFICATION/
APPLICATION
MANDATORY. No
pets/smoking/
lease. All modern
appliances, servic-
es. Details upon
request. Begin at
$550 + utilities.
Call For Availability
AMERICA REALTY
570-288-1422
Sell your own home!
Place an ad HERE
570-829-7130
HANOVER TOWNSHIP
West End Road
Clean & bright 3
bedroom apart-
ments. Heat, water,
garbage & sewer
included with appli-
ances. Off street
parking. No pets,
non smoking, not
section 8 approved.
References, securi-
ty, first and last
months rent.
$725/month
570-852-0252
570-675-1589
HANOVER TWP.
1 bedroom, first
floor, off street
parking, stove &
fridge included.
No Pets.
$390/month
plus utilities
NEWLY
REMODELED.
(570) 357-1138
HANOVER TWP.
Kornkrest, 1 bed-
room, heat, hot
water, stove &
fridge included.
Security & lease.
$550/month. Call
570-825-0146
HANOVER TWP.
Lee Park
2nd floor, living
room, eat in
kitchen, 2 bedroom,
wall to wall, rear
porch, washer &
dryer. Water,
garbage & sewer
included. No pets.
$440/month + 1st,
last, security,
& references.
570-606-3256
HARVEYS LAKE
1 bedroom, LAKE
FRONT apartments.
Wall to wall, appli-
ances, lake rights,
off street parking.
No Pets. Lease,
security &
references.
570-639-5920
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
KINGSTON - E. Bennett
1st Floor - 5 Rooms
Ideal location. Clean
Modern Fresh Paint
Carpeted Gas Heat
NOSmoking-NOPets
$500/month + utilities
Lease, References,
Security. Ready Now
570-696-1847
KINGSTON
1 bedroom, all appli-
ances. $450 + utili-
ties & security.
Available now. Call
570-829-0847
KINGSTON
121 Butler St
Newly renovated 2
bedroom, 2nd floor
apartment. AC,
appliances including
washer/dryer &
storage.
$900/month + utili-
ties, security, lease.
570-283-3969
KINGSTON
1BR FOR LEASE
223 Zerby Ave.
Available 08/01, 1
bedroom, 1 bath-
room, refrigerator
and stove provided,
no pets, $475/per
month, water and
sewer paid, $475/
security deposit.
Call (570) 472-5943
KINGSTON
1st floor, newly
remodeled, off-
street parking,
washer/dryer
hookup, yard. 1 or 2
bedroom. Lease.
$525/month, plus
utilities & security.
Not Section 8
approved.
570-954-3637.
KINGSTON
72 E. 72 E. W Walnut alnut St. St.
2nd floor, located in
quiet neighborhood.
Kitchen, living
room, dining room,
sun room, bath-
room. 2 large and 1
small bedroom, lots
of closets, built in
linen, built in hutch,
hardwood and car-
peted floors, fire-
place, storage
room, yard, w/d
hookup and new
stove. Heat and hot
water incl.
1 yr. lease + security
$900/month
570-406-1411
KINGSTON
AVAILABLE NOW!
2nd Floor, 1 Bed,
1 Bath, modern
kitchen, living room,
washer & dryer.
Next to the Post
Office, off street
parking, $500 +
utilities, water &
sewer included, 1
year lease, security
& references. No
Pets. No Smoking.
Call 570-822-9821
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
KINGSTON
E. WALNUT ST.
Light, bright, 1st
floor, 2 bedrooms,
elevator, carpet-
ed, Security
system. Garage.
Extra storage &
cable TV included.
Laundry facilities.
Heat & hot water
furnished. Fine
neighborhood.
Convenient to bus
& stores. No
pets. References.
Security. Lease.
No smokers
please. $840.
570-287-0900
KINGSTON
Large 2 bedroom.
Remodeled. Stove
fridge & dishwasher.
Washer/ dryer
hookup. $675; heat
included. Call
570-814-0843 or
570-696-3090
KINGSTON
Modern spacious 2
bedroom, 1 bath, 1st
floor, off street
parking, all appli-
ances, laundry in
unit, air, screened
porch. No pets - No
smoking. $750 +
utilities. 714-9234
KINGSTON
Rutter Ave.
REDUCED!
1 bedroom 1st floor,
large living room,
neutral decor.
Gas heat, water
included. Off street
parking. No pets.
$410 plus security
& lease.
570-793-6294
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
KINGSTON
SDK GREEN
ACRES HOMES
11 Holiday Drive
Kingston
A Place To
Call Home
Spacious 1, 2 & 3
Bedroom Apts
3 Bedroom
Townhomes
Gas heat included
FREE
24hr on-site Gym
Community Room
Swimming Pool
Maintenance FREE
Controlled Access
Patio/Balcony
and much more...
Call Today
or stop by
for a tour!
570-288-9019
LARKSVILLE
NEWLY REMODELED!
First floor. 3 rooms
and bath. Heat, hot
water, garbage,
sewer included. Off
street parking. Bus
stop at door.
$475/month + $475
security & 1 year
lease. No pets
570-779-2258
after 12pm
LUZERNE
1 bedroom, wall to
wall, off-street
parking, coin
laundry, water,
sewer & garbage
included. $495/
month + security
& lease. HUD
accepted. Call
570-687-6216 or
570-954-0727
LUZERNE
Available August 1
2nd floor, 1 bed-
room & bath. Heat,
hot water & sewer
included. AC, wash-
er & dryer included.
Newly painted. No
pets, non smoking.
Security, lease &
references required.
$575/month. Call
(570) 288-4253
Leave message
MOCANAQUA
3 bedroom 1/2
double, large
modern bathroom
and kitchen.
Pergo floors
throughout,
large yard.
$650/per month,
plus utilities,
security and
lease.
(570) 417-0137
MOUNTAIN TOP
1 Bedroom apart-
ments for elderly,
disabled. Rents
based on 30% of
ADJ gross income.
Handicap Accessi-
ble. Equal Housing
Opportunity. TTY711
or 570-474-5010
This institution is an
equal opportunity
provider &
employer.
Mountain Top
1st floor. 1 or 2
bedrooms. Laundry,
facilities, porch.
No pets.
$600/month + utili-
ties, security, lease
& credit check.
(570) 868-6503
MOUNTAIN TOP
WOODBRYN
1 & 2 Bedroom.
No pets.
Rents based
on income start
at $405 & $440.
Handicap
Accessible.
Equal Housing
Opportunity.
Call 570-474-5010
TTY711
This institution is an
equal opportunity
provider and
employer.
NANTICOKE
2 bedroom, wall to
wall carpet, off-
street parking, $495
per month+ utilities,
security, lease.
HUD accepted. Call
570-687-6216
or 570-954-0727
NANTICOKE
REMODELED
2 bedrooms, 1 bath
room, stove provid-
ed, off-street park-
ing. Remodeled.
New kitchen/bath-
room floors & car-
peting, fresh paint,
yard & deck includ-
ed. $450/per
month, plus utilities.
Call (570) 916-2043
NANTICOKE
Studio or 2 bed-
rooms, 2nd floor,
heat, water
garbage, sewage
included. no pets.
$350-$525 + secu-
rity. 570-735-3350
NANTICOKE
Very clean. modern.
2 bedroom. Heat,
hot water, stove,
fridge, washer/
dryer, 2 air condi-
tioners included.
Large rooms. Clos-
ets. Off street park-
ing. Security.
$675/month
(570) 736-3125
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
PITTSTON
1 bedroom, 1 bath.
Heat, water and
sewer included. No
Yard. NO PETS.
$650 per month
570-443-0770
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
PITTSTON
1ST FLOOR MODERN
2 bedrooms, no
pets, Newly painted
with carpet and tile.
$525/per month.
Call (570) 357-1383
PITTSTON
2 bedroom, bath,
kitchen, living room.
Heat & water
included. $560/
month. 1st month &
security. No pets
570-451-1038
PITTSTON
2 bedroom. All
appliances included.
All utilities paid;
electricity by tenant.
Everything brand
new. Off street park-
ing. $750 + security
& references
570-969-9268
PITTSTON
3 bedroom. Off
street parking, on
site laundry.
Enclosed porch.
Tenant pays elec-
tric, sewage &
trash. $650 +
utilities. Security
required. Call
(570) 881-1747
PITTSTON
Modern 1st floor, 1
bedroom, wall to
wall carpet, newly
painted, washer/
dryer hook-up, pri-
vate drive. Water,
sewer & garbage
included. No pets.
No smoking.
$400 + security.
570-883-9384
PITTSTON
Modern air condi-
tioned 2 bedroom,
1st floor. Appliances
included. Laundry
hookup. Enclosed
porch, heated
garage, off street
parking. Heat,
sewer, water &
garbage included.
No pets. $695/mos.
Security & lease.
570-430-0123
PLAINS
3 YEAR NEW - ONE
FLOOR APARTMENT
32 Helen Street
For lease, available
immediately, 2 bed-
rooms, 1 bathroom,
all appliances pro-
vided, washer/dryer
on premises, off-
street parking, no
pets, Three year old
single story apart-
ment. Ideal for sen-
ior citizen or those
with limited mobility.
Convenient to public
transportation. All
Maintenance Includ-
ed. Modern, Central
Air, Very Efficient,
$775/per month,
Sewer Paid, $775/
security deposit.
Call (570) 417-8142
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
PLAINS
Spacious two story
3 bedroom apt.
P r o f e s s i o n a l l y
cleaned & painted.
New carpeting,
hardwood floors,
ceiling fans. Eat-in
kitchen with stove
/fridge/dishwasher,
washer/ dryer hook-
ups. Off Street Park-
ing, Nice area.
$700 plus utilities.
S e c u r i t y / l e a s e .
Sorry no smoking or
pets. References
required.
Call (570) 824-9507
PLYMOUTH
1 bedroom apart-
ment, $495/month
+ security & elec-
tric. Available Now!
Call 570-829-0847
PLYMOUTH
3 bedroom half dou-
ble. Very quiet street.
Off street parking.
Pets negotiable.
Washer/dryer hook-
up. Fridge, stove
water included. $595
Call 570-239-9840
PLYMOUTH
Orchard St.
1 bedroom, ground
floor, stove, fridge,
w/d, large porch,
no smoking or pets.
Sewer included.
$375/per month,
plus security,
& lease. Credit
check required.
(570)779-3472
S. WILKES-BARRE
3 bedroom, 1.5
baths, small yard,
front porch, off
street parking.
$465/month
security required.
Tenant pays
all utilities.
570-332-5723
Job Seekers are
looking here!
Where's your ad?
570-829-7130 and
ask for an employ-
ment specialist
WEST PITTSTON
159 Elm St.
2 bedroom Town-
house w/full base-
ment. 1.5 baths, off
street parking.
$600/per month
+ utilities & security.
No Pets
570-283-1300 M-F
570-388-6422 all
other times
WEST PITTSTON
1st floor, wall to wall,
3 rooms, 1 bedroom,
$435 + utilities. No
pets. No smoking.
Includes washer.
570-335-3157
West Pittston, Pa.
GARDEN VILLAGE
APARTMENTS
221 Fremont St.
Housing for the
elderly & mobility
impaired; all utilities
included. Federally
subsidized
program. Extremely
low income persons
encouraged to
apply. Income less
than $12,250.
570-655-6555,
8 am-4 pm,
Monday-Friday.
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
HANDICAP ACCESSIBLE
WEST WYOMING
AVAILABLE NOW!!
2nd floor 1 bed-
room, nice kitchen
with appliances,
$450 month plus
utilities and security
deposit. No animals.
No smoking. Call
570-693-1000
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
WILKES-BARRE
Mayflower
Crossing
Apartments
570.822.3968
2, 3 & 4
Bedrooms
- Light & bright
open floor plans
- All major
appliances included
- Pets welcome*
- Close to everything
- 24 hour emergency
maintenance
- Short term
leases available
Call TODAY For
AVAILABILITY!!
www.mayflower
crossing.com
Certain Restrictions
Apply*
WILKES-BARRE
179 Charles St
3 extra large, extra
clean bedrooms.
Heat & hot water
included. No pets.
$755/month + 1
month rent & secu-
rity. Section 8 okay.
SERIOUS INQUIRES ONLY.
Call after 5pm
570-793-7856
570-793-4987
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
WILKES-BARRE
2 bedroom, washer
dryer hookup, off
street parking, $425
+ security & utilities.
570-822-7657
WILKES-BARRE
2 BEDROOMS / 1 BATH
WATER / SEWER /
TRASH INCLUDED,
Newly renovated.
Washer/dryer
On-Site, Parking,
Secure Building,
$625/per month.
Call (570) 899-8034
Wilkes-Barre
260 Carey Ave
Small 1 bedroom,
ground level, 1st
floor. Heat & hot
water included.
Newly remodeled.
$520/month. Call
Jim 570-288-3375
For pictures visit
www. dr eamr ent al s . net
Wilkes-Barre
Apartments
Available
SAI NT JOHN
APARTMENTS
419 N. Main St
Wilkes Barre
Spacious
1 bedroom.
Secured Senior
Building.
Applicants must
be over age 62 &
be income
qualified.
Rent start at $501
per month.
Includes ALL
utilities.
570-970-6694
Opportunity
Equal
Housing
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
WILKES-BARRE
APARTMENTS
FOR RENT!
425 S. Franklin St.
For lease. Available
immediately, wash-
er/ dryer on premis-
es, no pets. We
have studio & 1 bed-
room apts. On site
parking. Fridge &
stove provided.
24/7 security cam-
era presence and all
doors electronically
locked. Studio -
$450; 1 bedroom -
$550. Water &
sewer paid. One
month / security
deposit. Call
570-793-6377 or
570-208-9301 after
10:00 a.m. to sched-
ule an appointment.
Or email
shlomo_voola
@yahoo.com
wilkesliving.com
WILKES-BARRE
HISTORIC
WHEELMAN
439 S. Franklin St.
1 bedroom, hard-
wood floors. A/C,
marble bath. Secu-
rity system. Laun-
dry. $625
570-821-5599
WILKES-BARRE
LAFAYETTE GARDENS
SAVE MONEY THIS YEAR!
113 Edison St.
Quiet neighborhood.
2 bedroom apart-
ments available for
immediate occu-
pancy. Heat & hot
water included. $625
Call Aileen at
570-822-7944
Formerly The
Travel Lodge
497 Kidder St.,
Wilkes-Barre
Rooms Starting
at:
Daily $44.99 +
tax
Weekly $189.99
+ tax
Microwave,
Refrigerator,
WiFi, HBO
570-823-8881
www.Wilkes
BarreLodge.com
WILKES-BARRE WILKES-BARRE
LODGE LODGE
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
WILKES-BARRE
Luxury apartment.
$1,050/month.
Newly renovated
building. State of art
green heating
system. Brazilian
cherry floors, gran-
ite counters, w/d,
microwave, dish-
washer - all Maytag
appliances.
Enclosed porch.
1,300 square feet.
Call for private
showing.
212-580-8519
WILKES-BARRE
Maffett St
Just off Old River
Road. 7 room, 3
bedroom, 2nd floor
duplex. Off street
parking, deck in
rear. Ample closet /
storage. Neutral
decor. Appliances
included. $625 +
utilities, security &
lease. No pets.
570-237-1719
WILKES-BARRE
NICE! 1 bedroom
2nd floor. Heat, hot
water, TV, parking,
porch, oak kitchen.
Lots of storage!
$525/mo/lease.
Call (570) 825-3004
Wilkes-Barre
ONE AND TWO
BEDROOM UNITS
For lease, available
immediately, 1 bath-
room, refrigerator
and stove provided,
washer/dryer
hookup, Washer
and Dryer in one
unit. 2nd floor.
$500.00/per month,
plus utilities,
references/
security deposit.
570-735-4074
Leave message
WILKES-BARRE
RENOVATED
1 BEDROOM
216 Carlisle St.
Available immedi-
ately, 1 bedroom, 1
bathroom, refrigera-
tor and stove pro-
vided, HEAT, HOT
WATER, SEWER
INCLUDED. New
carpets, new stove,
cabinets, floors
(kitchen and bath-
room), fresh paint,
new ceiling fans. ,
$600/per month,
$600/security
deposit. Call
(215) 565-6761 or
email
Alexander
vending@gmail.com.
WILKES-BARRE
SOUTH
116 Simpson St.
2 bedroom 2nd
floor, w/w, eat in
kitchen w/appli-
ances. Washer
incl. Dryer
hookup. Off street
parking, no pets,
no smoking.
Water included.
Tenant pays elec-
tric and gas heat.
$450 plus security
570-814-1356
WILKES-BARRE SOUTH
SECURE BUILDINGS
1 & 2 bedroom
apartments.
Starting at $440
and up. References
required. Section 8 ok.
570-332-5723
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
WILKES-BARRE
Totally gorgeous 2
bedroom, 2 bath.
Newly renovated
and waiting for the
sophisticated ten-
ant. Located in the
Historic District of
Central Wilkes-
Barre is a stunning
buIlding. $1200/mo
plus security.
No Pets.
Call Eileen
570-821-7022
EILEEN R.
MELONE REAL
ESTATE
570-821-7022
WILKES-BARRE
Very Large apart-
ment located in
desirable neighbor-
hood. Within walk-
ing distance to
Wilkes & Kings.
Spacious 3 bed-
room, 2 bathroom
includes a private
balcony/deck over-
looking an in-
ground pool, off-
street parking,
hardwood floors,
washer/dryer
hookup and a room
that could be used
as a small 4th bed-
room. No pets.
$1,650/month +
security deposit
Email: cshovlin@fcla
wpc.com or call
(570) 718-1444 and
ask for Chris.
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
WILKES-BARRE
WILKES UNIVERSITY CAMPUS
Studio, 1, 2, or 3
bedroom. Starting
at $400. All utilities
included. 826-1934
Wilkes-Barre
2 bedroom
single,
exceptional
1 bedroom,
water included
2 bedroom,
water included
3 bedroom
single family
exceptional
Hanover
4 bedroom,
large affordable
Duryea
2 bedroom,
affordable, water
included
Nanticoke
2 bedroom,
large, water
included
Pittston
Large 1
bedroom water
included
Plymouth
3 bedroom half
double
Old Forge
2 bedroom
exceptional
water included
McDermott &
McDermott
Real Estate
Inc. Property
Management
570-821-1650
(direct line)
Mon-Fri. 8-7pm
Sat. 8-noon
WYOMING
BLANDINA
APARTMENTS
Deluxe 1 & 2 bed-
room. Wall to Wall
carpet. Some utili-
ties by tenant. No
pets. Non-smoking.
Elderly community.
Quiet, safe. Off
street parking. Call
570-693-2850
WYOMING
Recently remodeled
2nd floor, 2 bed-
room. New carpet-
ing & Kitchen. Off
street parking. $500
+ utilities. No pets.
Call 570-714-7272
WYOMING-1ST FLOOR
2 bedroom. Large
living room. Sun-
porch. Stove,
fridge, washer
dryer hookup. Very
quiet building on
quiet street.
Includes heat,
water, sewer &
annual trash. Avail-
able 8/1. Security,
references & credit
check. No pets. No
smoking. $685 /
month. Call
570-609-5133
944 Commercial
Properties
COMMERCIAL
422 North Main
Street, Pittston
Flexible commer-
cial/office space on
Main Street.
Includes 4 separate
offices, large room
which could be used
as a conference
room and a rest-
room. Very high
traffic area. Locat-
ed in a strip mall
that is fully occu-
pied. Parking avail-
able. For more
details and pictures,
visit www.atlasreal-
tyinc.com. MLS 11-
1832. $750/month +
utilities.
Call Kim at
570-466-3338.
DOLPHIN PLAZA
Rte. 315
2,000 SF
Office / Retail
2,000 SF
Restaurant/Deli with
drive thru window
4,500 SF Office
Showroom,
Warehouse
Loading Dock
4 Acres touching
I81 will build to suit.
Call 570-829-1206
FORTY FORT
Free standing build-
ing. Would be great
for any commercial
use. 1900 sq. ft. on
the ground floor
with an additional
800 sq. ft in finished
lower level. Excel-
lent location, only 1
block from North
Cross Valley
Expressway and
one block from
Wyoming Ave (route
11) Take advantage
of this prime loca-
tion for just $995
per month!
570-262-1131
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
PITTSTON
328 Kennedy Blvd.
Modern medical
space, labor &
industry approved,
ADA throughout, 2
doctor offices plus
4 exam rooms, xray
and reception and
breakrooms. Could
be used for any
business purpose.
Will remodel to suit.
For lease
$2,200/MO.
Also available for
sale
MLS #11-751
Call Charlie
VM 101
PITTSTON
COOPERS CO-OP
Lease Space
Available, Light
manufacturing,
warehouse,
office, includes
all utilities with
free parking.
I will save
you money!
PLAINS TWP
7 PETHICK DRIVE
OFF RTE. 315
1200 & 700 SF
Office Furnished.
570-760-1513
RETAIL
SPACE
(start $650.)
FORTY FORT
WYOMING AVE.
RETAIL SPACE
IDEAL FOR SMALL
BUSINESS, REPAIR
SHOP, ETC. HIGH
TRAFFIC, Profes-
sionally Managed.
AMERICA REALTY
570-288-1422
STOREFRONT
500 square feet.
560 Carey Ave,
Wilkes-Barre, Busy
location. $500 +
utilities. Call
570-655-4915
315 PLAZA
1750 & 3200 SF
Retail / Office
Space Available
570-829-1206
WAREHOUSE/LIGHT
MANUFACTURING
OFFICE SPACE
PITTSTON
Main St.
12,000 sq. ft. build-
ing in downtown
location. Ware-
house with light
manufacturing.
Building with some
office space. Entire
building for lease or
will sub-divide.
MLS #10-1074
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
VM 101
950 Half Doubles
FORTY FORT
1/2 DOUBLE
80 Yates Street
2 bedrooms. Off-
street parking, no
pets. $900/per
month, + utilities.
570-287-5090
FORTY FORT
Listed is a beautiful
half double in a very
desirable residential
environment. Only 5
minutes from the
Cross Valley. In
close proximity to all
public amenities
including employ-
ment, shopping &
schools. 1st floor
features a spacious
dining room and a
living room with
french doors lead-
ing to a sunroom.
Kitchen includes all
appliances, or bring
your own! In addi-
tion, theres a laun-
dry room & a pow-
der room to the rear
of the kitchen. 3
bedrooms & a full
bath on the 2nd
floor with lots of
storage on the 3rd
floor. Nice hedge-
lined yard with flag-
stone patio & off
street parking for 2
cars. 1 outside, and
one in the garage!
New sidewalks, new
roof, vinyl siding,
windows & a recent
driveway. $700 /
month + utilities. No
smoking, no pets.
Security & refer-
ences required. Not
Section 8 approved.
Call 570-287-2157
After 3pm
FREELAND
Large 1/2 double. 5
bedrooms. Water
and sewer included
$750 per month
570-443-0770
GLEN LYON
3 bedrooms, wall to
wall carpeting,
laundry room, yard.
$500 + utilities,
security & refer-
ences. No Pets
Call 570-592-3100
KINGSTON
$740/month
New bath, kitchen,
living room, dining,
2 1/2 bedroom. Full
attic storage.
Water, sewer, recy-
cling included. Gas
fireplace. Lease +
security. New floor-
ing & ceiling fans.
Washer/dryer
hookup. Call after
6pm 570-479-0131
KINGSTON
LARGE MODERN
1/2 DOUBLE
3 bedrooms, near
shopping, schools,
parks. cook top
stove, refrigerator,
dishwasher, micro-
wave, washer &
dryer included.
Flooring is new,
upgraded carpeting,
drapes, freezer, 2nd
refrigerator offered.
Yard. Off street
parking. Owner
pays sewer, recy-
clables. $850 + utili-
ties, credit check &
references re-
quired. After 5pm
570-899-3407
KINGSTON
NEWLY RENOVATED
1st floor. 3 bed-
rooms, 1.5 baths,
new carpet, wash-
er/dryer hook-up,
dishwasher. $650 +
utilities. Call
570-814-3838
NANTICOKE
3 bedroom half dou-
ble. New carpet &
kitchen cabinets.
$600 + utilities. no
pets. Call
570-855-2790
NANTICOKE
4 bedrooms, refrig-
erator, stove and
washer provided,
Gas steam heat,
$750/per month, +
$750/security
deposit. Call
570-736-6068
NANTICOKE
Kosciuszko Street
Nice, 2 bedroom
$570/month +
utilities & security.
No pets. Call
570-474-6477
PITTSTON
3 bedroom, 1 1/2
bath. Private park-
ing. yard. Washer /
dryer hookup. Cable
& Satellite ready.
Front & back porch.
Non smoking. $650
+ utilities, first, last,
Security, References
Call 570-239-4293
PITTSTON
8 - 8 1/2 FRONT ST
6 rooms, 3 bed-
rooms, 1 bathroom,
washer/dryer hook
up. Completely
done over with wall
to wall carpet,
blinds and new
shades. Great loca-
tion - close to down-
town area, church,
bus stop & school!
Tenant must have
own appliances.
Back yard and front
patio porch. No
pets. No smoking.
Reference & securi-
ty deposit. 1 year
lease. Available
8/1/11. $650.
(570) 654-4793
PITTSTON TOWNSHIP
2 bedroom in
Great Location,
Off-Street Parking.
All appliances
included. No Pets/
No Smoking. $600 +
electric, security &
last months rent.
570-237-6000
Need a Roommate?
Place an ad and
find one here!
570-829-7130
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
PAGE 14D TUESDAY, JULY 19, 2011 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
1006 A/C &
Refrigeration
Services
STRISH A/C
Ductless / Central
Air Conditioning
Free Estimates
Licensed & Insured
570-332-0715
1015 Appliance
Service
LEN HOSEY
Appliance Service
Washer/Dryer
Range/Dishwasher.
Whirlpool, Maytag,
Kitchenaid & Roper
287-7973
1024 Building &
Remodeling
1st. Quality
Construction Co.
Roofing, siding,
gutters, insulation,
decks, additions,
windows, doors,
masonry &
concrete.
Insured & Bonded.
State Lic. # PA057320
570-606-8438
ALL OLDERHOMES
SPECIALIST
825-4268.
Remodel / Repair
Masonry, stucco,
& concrete
Call the
Building
Industry
Association of
NEPA to find a
qualified mem-
ber for your
next project.
call 287-3331
or go to
www.bianepa.com
DAVE JOHNSON
Expert Bathroom
Remodeling, Whole
House Renovations,
Interior & Exterior
Carpentry. Kitchens
and Basements
Licensed &Insured
570-819-0681
NICHOLS CONSTRUCTION
All Types Of Work
New or Remodeling
Licensed & Insured
Free Estimates
570-406-6044
Northeast
Contracting Group
Decks, Sunrooms,
Additions, Garages,
Roofs, Concrete
sidewalks & Drive-
ways, etc.
(570) 338-2269
Roofing & Siding.
Kitchens & Baths.
Painting. All types
of construction.
Free Estimates. 35
years experience.
570-831-5510
570-332-5141
ROOFING, SIDING,
DECKS, WINDOWS
For All of Your
Remodeling Needs.
Will Beat Any Price
25 Yrs. Experience
References. Insured
Free Estimates
570-899-4713
1039 Chimney
Service
A-1 ABLE CHIMNEY
Rebuild & Repair
Chimneys. All
types of Masonry.
Liners Installed,
Brick & Block,
Roofs & Gutters.
Licensed &
Insured
570-735-2257
CAVUTO
CHIMNEY
SERVICE
& Gutter Cleaning
Free Estimates
Insured
570-709-2479
Chimney Construction
CONCRETE & STUCCO
Chimneys rebuilt &
repaired. Block,
sidewalks, walls &
steps. Estimates
free. 570-457-5849
Licensed. & insured
Line up a place to live
in classified!
1039 Chimney
Service
CHIMNEY REPAIRS
Parging. Stucco.
Stainless Liners.
Cleanings. Custom
Sheet Metal Shop.
570-383-0644
1-800-943-1515
Call Now!
CHRIS MOLESKY
CHIMNEY SPECIALIST
New, repair, rebuild,
liners installed.
Inspections. Con-
crete & metal caps.
Licensed & Insured
570-328-6257
COZY HEARTH
CHIMNEY
Chimney Cleaning,
Rebuilding, Repair,
Stainless Steel Lin-
ing, Parging, Stuc-
co, Caps, Etc.
Free Estimates
Licensed & Insured
1-888-680-7990
1042 Cleaning &
Maintainence
A+ CLEANING BY VERA
Homes, apartments
& offices. Day,
evenings &
weekends.
570-309-8128 or
570-709-3370
HOME HEALTH AIDE
& HOUSEKEEPING
Driving, house-
keeping & com-
panionship. Rea Rea- -
sonable rates sonable rates
& excellent & excellent
references. references.
Current Criminal
Background Check
(570) 639-2704
LOOKING FOR
someone Reliable &
Dependable to
clean your home?
SAME PERSON
EVERY TIME!
570-793-0776 or
570-814-2685
RELAX THIS SUMMER
Let Us Do The
Cleaning!!!
Christophers
Cleaning Service
Call Today
570-299-9512
or email us at:
nepacleaning@
gmail.com
Residential & Commercial
CLEANING BY LISA
Pet Services also
available, including
pick up & drop off.
570-690-4640 or
570-696-4792
1054 Concrete &
Masonry
Affordable General
Masonry & Concrete
NO JOB TOO BIG
OR TOO SMALL!
Masonry /Concrete
Work. Licensed &
insured. Free est.
John 570-573-0018
Joe 570-579-8109
D. Pugh
Concrete
All phases of
masonry &
concrete. Small
jobs welcome.
Senior discount,
Free estimates
Licensed & Insured
288-1701/655-3505
1057Construction &
Building
GARAGE DOOR
Sales, service,
installation &
repair.
FULLY INSURED
HIC# 065008
CALL JOE
570-606-7489
570-735-8551
H-D Contracting
Flooring, siding,
decks & much
more. Both large
and small jobs.
Free Estimates.
Call Salvatore
570-881-2191
Find Your Ideal
Employee! Place an
ad and end the
search!
570-829-7130
ask for an employ-
ment specialist
1069 Decks
DECK STAINING &
PRESSURE WASHING
Interior/Exterior
Painting.
Experienced,
Reliable & Honest.
570-899-5759
1078 Dry Wall
MIKE SCIBEK DRYWALL
Hanging & finishing,
design ceilings.
Free estimates.
Licensed & Insured.
570-328-1230
MIRRA DRYWALL
Hanging & Finishing
Drywall Repair
Textured Ceilings
Licensed & Insured
Free Estimates
(570) 675-3378
1084 Electrical
GETZIE ELECTRIC
Licensed & Insured.
100 & 200 amp
service upgrades.
No job too small!
570-947-2818
GRULA ELECTRIC LLC
Licensed, Insured,
No job too small.
570-829-4077
SLEBODA ELECTRIC
Master electrician
Licensed & Insured
Bucket truck to 40
8 6 8 - 4 4 6 9
1093 Excavating
EXCAVATING & MODULAR HOMES
6-9 ARBORVITAE
Tree Planting Available
Driveways,
concrete pads & all
types of Excavating!
(570) 332-0077
1105 Floor Covering
Installation
CARPET REPAIR &
INSTALLATION
Vinyl & wood.
Certified, Insured.
570-283-1341
NORTHEAST FLOORING
SYSTEMS, INC
Installing
& Refinishing
Hardwood floors.
We install laminate
flooring too!
570-561-2079
1129 Gutter
Repair & Cleaning
GUTTER 2 GO, INC.
PA#067136- Fully
Licensed & Insured.
We install custom
seamless rain
gutters & leaf
protection systems.
CALL US TODAY ABOUT
OUR 10% OFF WHOLE
HOUSE DISCOUNT!
570-561-2328
GUTTER CLEANING
Window Cleaning.
Regulars, storms,
etc. Pressure
washing, decks,
docks, houses,Free
estimates. Insured.
(570) 288-6794
1132 Handyman
Services
All in a Call
Painting, Grass Cut-
ting, floor mainte-
nance, basements /
attics cleaned. Free
Estimates. Depend-
able & Reliable.
Package deals
available. Call
570-239-4790 or
570-388-3039
Call Johnnie
Need help with a
project or small
jobs done?
Evenings & week-
ends. References.
570-855-3823
DO IT ALL HANDYMAN
Painting, drywall,
plumbing & all types
of home repairs,
also office cleaning
available.
570-829-5318
Say it HERE
in the Classifieds!
570-829-7130
1132 Handyman
Services
ALL
MAINTENANCE
WE FIX IT
Electrical,
Plumbing,
Handymen,
Painting
Carpet Repair
& Installation
All Types
Of Repairs
570-814-9365
Licensed Contractor
Free Estimates. No
job too big or small!
10% off with this ad.
Great prices. Call
now. 570-852-9281
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 Always hauling,
cleaning attics, cellar,
garage, one piece or
whole Estate, also
available 10 &20 yard
dumpsters.655-0695
592-1813or287-8302
AAA CLEANING
A1 GENERAL HAULING
Cleaning attics,
cellars, garages.
Demolitions, Roofing
&Tree Removal.
FreeEst. 779-0918or
542-5821; 814-8299
AAA Bob & Rays
Hauling: Friendly &
Courteous. We take
anything & every-
thing. Attic to base-
ment. Garage, yard,
free estimates. Call
570-655-7458 or
570-905-4820
AFFORDABLE
JUNK REMOVAL
Cleanups/Cleanouts
Large or Small Jobs
FREE ESTIMATES
(570) 817-4238
ALL KINDS OF
HAULING & JUNK
REMOVAL
TREE/SHRUB TREE/SHRUB
REMOV REMOVAL AL
Estate Cleanout Estate Cleanout
Free Estimates
24 HOUR
SERVICE
SMALL AND
LARGE JOBS!
570-823-1811
570-239-0484
CASTAWAY
HAULING JUNK
REMOVAL
823-3788 / 817-0395
Mikes $5 & Up
We do cleanups -
basements,
garages, etc. Yard
waste removal,
small deliveries, cut
grass & more.
Same day service.
793- 8057 826- 1883
S & S TOWING
& GARBAGE
REMOVAL
Free estimates.
Clean out attics,
basements, estates
We buy junk cars
too! 570-472-2392
WILL HAUL ANYTHING
Clean cellars,
attics, yards &
metal removal.
Call John
570-735-3330
1162 Landscaping/
Garden
EARTHTONES HARDS CAPE
Walkways, Paver
Patios, Retaining
Walls. Repairs
Welcome. Creative,
Reliable & Honest.
570-899-5759
MOWING, TRIMMING
EDGING, SHRUBS
& HEDGES. TREE
PRUNING. TILLING.
LAWN CARE.
MULCHING.
FULLY INSURED.
CALL & SAVE 10%
OFF LAST BILL.
FREE ESTIMATES
570-814-0327
Patrick & Deb Patrick & Debs s
Landscaping Landscaping
Landscaping, basic
handy man, house
cleaning & help
moving. We even
do inside painting.
Any salvageable
items can be picked
up for free.
Free estimates.
Call 570-793-4232
Or 570-793-4773
Rainbow
Landscaping
& Lawn Service
Spring & Fall
Cleanups. Trimming,
mulching, complete
landscape installa-
tion. Lic. & Insured.
Call 570-674-2418
Reynolds
Landscaping
&
Power Washing
570-751-6140
JOHNS
Picture Perfect
LANDSCAPING
Bobcat : Grading
Excavator : Digging
Shrub/Tree Trimming,
Install or Removal
Be safe, not sorry.
Edging/Mulch/Stone
Lawns, Tilling & more
Hauling / Removal
Handyman, all types.
Fencing / Deck Wash
Blinds/Closets & more!
Reasonable & Reliable
570-735-1883
TOP SOIL
SCREENED & BLENDED
Delivery Available
Hunlock Sand
& Gravel
570-336-0411
1186 Miscellaneous
WINDOWS
INSTALLED FREE
with small investment
* Limited time only *
570-855-6127
1189 Miscellaneous
Service
Assisting the Elderly &
Disabled in their homes.
See ad in Elderly
Care Section 350
VITOS
&
GINOS
Wanted:
Junk
Cars &
Trucks
Highest
Prices
Paid!!
FREE PICKUP
288-8995
VITOS
&
GINOS
Wanted:
Junk
Cars &
Trucks
Highest
Prices
Paid!!
FREE PICKUP
288-8995
Find homes for
your kittens!
Place an ad here!
570-829-7130
1195 Movers
BestDarnMovers
Moving Helpers
Call for Free Quote.
We make moving easy.
BDMhel pers. com
570-852-9243
1204 Painting &
Wallpaper
A & N PAINTING
Airplane Quality at
Submarine Prices!
Interior/Exterior,
pressure washing,
decks & siding.
Commercial/Resi-
dential. Over 17
years experience!
Free estimates.
Licensed & Insured
570-820-7832
A + CLASSICAL
Int./Ext. Experts!
Aluminum, Wood
& Deck Staining
Free Estimates
Licensed-Insured
30 Years
Experience
Locally Owned
Sinced 1990
570-283-5714
A&A Painting
Single Home $1,100
Double - $2,300 &up
Free Estimates.
Call Bob
570-212-0266
A.B.C. Professional
Painting
36 Yrs Experience
We Specialize In
New Construction
Residential
Repaints
Comm./Industrial
All Insurance
Claims
Apartments
Interior/Exterior
Spray,Brush, Rolls
WallpaperRemoval
Cabinet Refinish-
ing
Drywall/Finishing
Power Washing
Deck Specialist
Handy Man
FREE ESTIMATES
Larry Neer
570-606-9638
DAVID WAYNE
PAINTING
Call about Interior &
Exterior Specials,
Drywall & Wallpaper
570-762-6889
JASON SIMMS PAINTING
Interior/Exterior
Power Washing
Free Estimates
21 Yrs. Experience
Insured
(570) 947-2777
M. PARALI S PAI NTI NG
Int/ Ext. painting,
Power washing.
Professional work
at affordable rates.
Free estimates.
570-288-0733
Serra Painting
Book Now For
Summer & Save. All
Work Guaranteed
Satisfaction.
30 Yrs. Experience
Powerwash & Paint
Vinyl, Wood, Stucco
Aluminum.
Free Estimates
You Cant Lose!
570-822-3943
WITKOSKY PAINTING
Interior
Exterior,
Free estimates,
30 yrs experience
570-826-1719 or
570-288-4311
1213 Paving &
Excavating
EDWARDS ALL COUNTY
PAVING & SEAL COATING
3 Generations
of Experience.
Celebrating 76
Years of Pride
& Tradition!
Licensed and
Insured.
Call Today
For Your
Free Estimate
570-474-6329
Lic.# PA021520
Wanna make your
car go fast? Place
an ad in Classified!
570-829-7130.
1213 Paving &
Excavating
Mountain Top
PAVING & SEAL
COATING
Patching, Sealing,
Residential/Comm
Licensed & Insured
PA013253
570-868-8375
1234 Pressure
Washing
RUSSELLS
PROPERTY MAINTENANCE
Licensed & insured.
30+ yrs experience.
POWER WASHING,
PAINTING, CARPENTRY
& ALL HOME REPAIR.
Free Est.
570-406-3339
1249 Remodeling &
Repairs
D & D
REMODELING
From decks and
kitchens to roofs,
and baths, etc.
WE DO
IT ALL!!!!!!!
CALL US FOR CALL US FOR
ALL OF YOUR ALL OF YOUR
INTERIOR AND INTERIOR AND
EXTERIOR EXTERIOR
REMODELING REMODELING
NEEDS NEEDS
570-406-9387
Licensed/Insured
YOUVE TRIED
THE REST NOW
CALL THE
BEST!!!
1252 Roofing &
Siding
J&F ROOFING
SPECIALISTS
All types of roofing.
Repairs & Installation
25 Years Experience
Licensed / Insured
Free Estimates
Reliable Service
570-855-4259
J.R.V. ROOFING
570-824-6381
Roof Repairs & New
Roofs. Shingle, Slate,
Hot Built Up, Rubber,
Gutters & Chimney
Repairs. Year Round.
Licensed/Insured
FREE Estimates
Jim Harden
570-288-6709
New Roofs &
Repairs, Shingles,
Rubber, Slate,
Gutters, Chimney
Repairs. Credit
Cards accepted.
FREE ESTIMATES!
Licensed-Insured
EMERGENCIES
Mister V Mister V
Constr Construction uction
Year Round
Roof Specialist
Specializing In
All Types of
Roofs, Siding,
Chimneys
& Roof Repairs
Low Prices
Free Estimates
Licensed
& Insured
28 Years
Experience
570-829-5133
SUMMER
ROOFING
Special $1.29 s/f
Licensed, insured,
fast service
570-735-0846
1336 Window
Cleaning
Professional
Window Cleaning
& More.
Gutters, carpet,
pressure washing.
Residential/com-
mercial. Ins./bond-
ed. Free est.
570-283-9840
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
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in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
950 Half Doubles
PLAINS
2 bedroom. No
pets. References &
security deposit
$500/mos + utilities
Call (570) 430-1308
PLYMOUTH
CHURCH ST
3 bedrooms, 1.5
baths, fenced yard,
off street parking.
$600 per month.
908-565-0840
Looking for that
special place
called home?
Classified will address
Your needs.
Open the door
with classified!
PRINGLE
2 bedroom, 1.5
bath, front & back
porch, off street
parking. Washer,
dryer, stove &
fridge included.
Heat, water, sewer
& garbage included.
$625/month
+ security.
Call after 4pm
(570) 852-3954
WEST PITTSTON
2 or 3 bedroom, 1.5
bath, new tile
kitchen, large yard,
Off street parking.
$700/month+utilities
570-237-2076
WEST PITTSTON
4 Nassau St.
HALF DOUBLE
3 bedrooms, 2
baths, living room,
kitchen, dining
room, off street
parking, quiet neigh-
borhood-Wyoming
Area School District.
NO PETS NO
SMOKERS, $625/
+ utilities & security
Call Mike
570-760-1418
WEST WYOMING
Half double. 2 bed-
rooms, freshly
painted, new car-
peting, off street
parking, big back
yard, no smoking.
Finished basement.
Available August 1.
$600 + utilities &
security. Call
570-855-3008
WILKES-BARRE
2 Half Doubles
Both located in nice
neighborhoods. Off
street parking.
Large back yards.
No pets. Security &
all utilities by ten-
ant. 3 bedrooms,
1 bath, huge attic.
$625/month. Also,
Adorable 2 bed-
room. $550/month
570-766-1881
Wilkes-Barre
Convenient to
Kings, Wilkes and
downtown. 3 bed-
room attached
home. Wall to wall
carpeting, stove,
refrigerator, wash-
er/dryer & dish-
washer. Parking
available. $690 plus
utilities. Call Jim
570-288-3375
For pictures visit
www. dr eamr ent al s . net
WILKES-BARRE
HEIGHTS SECTION
1 Month Free!
Sunny 3 bedroom, 1
bath, painted, some
carpeting, yard,
washer/dryer, fridge
& stove, basement.
No Pets. Non
Smokers. Credit
check/references.
$535/month + 1 1/2
mos security
(201) 232-8328
953Houses for Rent
DALLAS
Spacious floor plan.
Hardwood floors
throughout. Recent-
ly remodeled
kitchen & master
bath. Sunroom
heated. Overlooking
a beautiful waterfall.
$1,500/month
+ utilities
Call Geri
570-696-0888
570-696-3801
LEWITH & FREEMAN
DALLAS TOWNHOME
Living room, dining
room, modern gal-
ley kitchen. All appli-
ances included. 2
bedrooms, 1.5
baths, deck, off
street parking. No
pets. $750/month +
utilities. Call Kevin
(570) 696-5420
EDWARDSVILLE
2 bedroom, 1 bath,
2 car garage,
newer appliances
including washer/
dryer. No pets. No
smoking.
Utilities by tenant.
$625/month
+ security.
570-704-6457
FORTY FORT
277 River Street
3 bedroom, 2 bath.
$1,200/month. Land
lord pays all utilities.
Available August 1st
570-690-2721
953Houses for Rent
FORTY FORT
Listed is a beautiful
one bedroom, sin-
gle story home with
off street parking in
a very desirable
residential environ-
ment. Only 5 min-
utes from the Cross
Valley. In close prox-
imity to all public
amenities including
employment, shop-
ping & schools. This
home features a liv-
ing room, dining
room, full bath, eat
in kitchen and a
large laundry/ stor-
age room. All appli-
ances included.
Enjoy the front
porch overlooking
your large front yard
or relax on the patio
and pick vegetables
from your garden.
No pets or smoking.
Not approved for
Section 8. $600 +
utilities. Security
deposit & refer-
ences required.
Call 570-287-2157
after 3pm
FORTY FORT
Modern, 6 room, 3
bedroom house for
rent. Freshly paint-
ed. Available imme-
diately. No pets.
$550/month. Refer-
ences & security
deposit required.
(570) 704-6562
(570) 287-2405
HANOVER
TOWNSHIP
COZY HOUSE
FOR RENT
263 Rear Lynd-
wood Ave. Avail-
able 8/1/11. 2 bed-
rooms, 2 bath-
rooms, refrigera-
tor, stove and
washer provided,
no pets, Newly
renovated, tile and
hardwood through-
out, new kitchen
cabinets, large
family room, walk-
in attic and base-
ment storage. Bath
room/shower on
each floor. Quiet
neighborhood,
small yard with pri-
vate patio. $725/
per month/
Garbage, Sewer,
$1st/last/security/
security deposit.
Call 570-817-0129
to set an appoint-
ment or email
jjanick68@
hotmail.com
HANOVER TOWNSHIP
Lyndwood Section
Single home, 1 bed-
room, large living
room, totally
remodeled, gas
heat, off street
parking. Includes
fridge & stove. No
Pets. No Smoking.
$625/month + secu-
rity 570-793-5333
HARVEYS LAKE
Single family home
with built in 2 car
garage. All remod-
eled, new appli-
ances, granite
counters, new floor-
ing, large deck. Two
bedrooms, and two
full baths. Country
setting. No pets.
$995 a month plus
utilities. Call Betty at
Century 21
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-287-1196
ext 3559
or 570-714-6127
HARVEYS LAKE
Stonehurst Cot-
tages
Weekly & monthly
rentals. Lake priv-
ilidges with private
beach & docks.
$525-$825/week.
Call Garrity Realty
(570) 639-1891
KINGSTON
54 Krych St.
Single: 3 bed-
room, 1.5 bath,
gas heat, wall to
wall, kitchen with
stove & refrigera-
tor. Quiet street.
No pets. Not Sec-
tion 8 approved.
$675/mo.
570-288-6009
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
LARKSVILLE
TOWNHOUSE
1 bedroom, all appli-
ances, ample park-
ing $525 month +
security & refer
ences.
570-406-9387
LUZERNE
6 rooms, useable
loft, full basement,
backyard, appli-
ances provided.
$575/month + utili-
ties. 1 month secu-
rity at time of sign-
ing. Section 8 ok.
Call (570) 592-5764
ask for Steve
MOUNTAIN TOP
CUTE & COZY
2 bedroom single
home, located in
Rice Twp. Electric,
water & sewer
included. Tenant
pays oil heat &
propane for cook-
ing. Only minutes
from I81 & Route
309. Fully insulated,
new windows, large
yard, deck. Avail-
able August 1st. 1st,
& last months rent +
security required.
$675 month.
570-474-0388
953Houses for Rent
MOUNTAINTOP
Private setting, 3
bedroom, 2 bath
home. Hardwood
floors, area rugs,
large kitchen, dish-
washer, stove &
fridge. Office & sec-
ond floor bonus
areas. Laundry
hook up in base-
ment. Sewer, water
& lawn mainte-
nance included.
No Smoking.
$1,100/month +
security, lease &
background check.
570-678-5850
NANTICOKE
2 bedrooms, 2
bath single home.
Freshly painted,
hardwood floors,
dishwasher, w/d
hookup, porch. No
pets or smoking.
$565/per month,
plus utilities, Call
466-6334
NANTICOKE
Desirable
Lexington Village
Nanticoke, PA
Many ranch style
homes. 2 bedrooms
2 Free Months With
A 2 Year Lease
$795 + electric
SQUARE FOOT RE
MANAGEMENT
866-873-0478
Pittston
Desirable 3 bed-
room home. Drive-
way, patio, gas heat
$750 + utilities,
first, last & security.
570-883-4443
WILKES-BARRE
3 bedroom. New
rugs. Fresh paint.
Refrigerator, stove,
yard. $525 / month.
Sewage included.
No pets. Refer-
ences & Security
required. Call
570-283-3887
WILKES-BARRE
HOUSE FOR RENT
Wilkes-Barre TWP
For lease, available
immediately, 3 bed-
rooms, 1 bath room,
all appliances pro-
vided, washer/dryer
on premises, off-
street parking, no
pets, 2-3 bedroom
fresh paint and new
flooring thoughout
garbage pickup
included large yard,
$600/per month,
plus utilities, $600./
security deposit.
Call 570-864-2493
before 6:00 p.m. to
set an appointment
WILKES-BARRE
MONARCH RENTALS
3 bedrooms,
all appliances
provided.
Call 570-822-7039
WILKES-BARRE NORTH
3 bedroom Town-
house, yard. Permit
parking. Section 8
welcomed. $595
+ utilities & security.
570-735-2285
To place your
ad Call Toll Free
1-800-427-8649
WYOMING
For rent or sale.
Nice neighborhood.
New garage. $850/
month. Call Tom
570-693-2408
962 Rooms
KINGSTON HOUSE
Nice, clean
furnished room,
starting at $315.
Efficiency at $435
month furnished
with all utilities
included. Off
street parking.
570-718-0331
WEST WYOMING
Room for rent.
$350. Washer/
dryer. 845-616-1461
WILKES-BARRE
Furnished rooms for
rent. Close to down-
town. $85/week +
security. Everything
included. Call
570-704-8288
968 Storage
PITTSTON
Prefect for contrac-
tor. Approx 40x40.
Concrete floor.
Ground level for
loading & unload-
ing. Private secure
entrance.
$495/month
with lease.
570-883-4443
971 Vacation &
Resort Properties
FOR SALE OR RENT!
Adults Only Campground
Fleetwood Cimarron
5th wheel. 36.5C.
88 model. In good
condition. Located
in beautiful 150 acre
tree farm in Maine.
Swimming pools,
hiking trails, ponds,
rec halls, potlucks &
activities. Dogs wel-
come. Beautiful site
rental with huge
maple tree in front &
bubbling brook in
back. For Rent:
$350/weekly
$1,000/monthly
For Sale:
$6,500
(570) 762-3747
HARVEYS LAKE
STONEHURST
COTTAGES
Weekly & monthly
rentals. Lake privi-
leges with private
beach & docks.
$525-$825/week.
Call Garrity Realty
(570) 639-1891
971 Vacation &
Resort Properties
HARVEYS LAKE
Summer Rental.
Boat slip avail-
able. Weeks in
August still avail-
able! Accepting
applications for
college students
for September.
Free wireless
internet & cable TV
570-639-5041
for details.
Collect cash, not dust!
Clean out your
basement, garage
or attic and call the
Classified depart-
ment today at 570-
829-7130!
Find homes for
your kittens!
Place an ad here!
570-829-7130

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