Demolition Tab Has Few Interested: He Imes Eader

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keeps the government running

through Nov. 18, past the Oct. 1


start of the 2012 fiscal year, while
Congress tries to finish work on
a number of still-pending 2012
House bill included $1 billion in
relief funds that would go out to
communities before the Sept. 30
endof the2011federal fiscal year.
The disaster relief funding
was part of an overarching short-
term spending measure that
It doesnt do enough to fund mitigation efforts so this type of
flooding doesnt happen again. It doesnt do enough to help
local businesses reopen and protect American jobs.
Lou Barletta
R-Hazleton
WASHINGTON Republican
Reps. Lou Barletta and Tom Ma-
rino split Wednesday over a $3.7
billion disaster relief bill, a mea-
sure that was backed by House
GOP leaders but went down to
defeat 195-230.
Barletta, of Hazleton, voted
against the measure, saying he
favors a Senate bill that offers
nearly $7 billion in disaster relief
funding nationally.
Marino, of Lycoming Town-
ship, voted in favor, saying the
Area reps split as aid bill defeated
Tom Marino voted for the
measure while Lou Barletta
favors a Senate version.
By JONATHAN RISKIND
Times Leader Washington Bureau
See BILL, Page 12A
SPECIAL TEAMS
NOT SO SPECIAL
Despite returning the
opening kickoff of the
season for a touchdown,
Penn State has had a
terrible showing on spe-
cial teams, highlighted by
an unsightly 1-for-6 mark
on field
goals.
The sit-
uation
not only
has fans
scratch-
ing their heads, it has
Penn State coach Joe
Paterno wondering what
he can do to make the
Nittany Lions special
teams ... well, special.
Sports, 1B
SPORTS
SHOWCASE
AMERICAN LEAGUE
(GAME1)
YANKEES 4
RAYS 2
(GAME 2)
YANKEES 4
RAYS 2
TIGERS 6
ROYALS 3
NATIONAL LEAGUE
NATIONALS 7
PHILLIES 5
CARDINALS 6
METS 5
C M Y K
6 09815 10011
WILKES-BARRE, PA THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 50
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$
10
State is sixth worst for air
quality in the U.S., study says
NEWS, 3A
Pa. gets failing
pollution mark
Philadelphias quarterback
recovering from concussion
SPORTS, 1B
Vick may play,
but may not
INSIDE
A NEWS: Local 3A
Nation & World 5A
Obituaries 2A, 6A
Editorial 11A
B SPORTS: Scoreboard 2B
MLB 4B
Business 9B
C LIFE: Birthdays 3C
Movies/TV 6C
Crossword 7C
Funnies 8C
D CLASSIFIED
WEATHER
Abby Connors
Partly sunny, a shower.
High 72. Low 62.
Details, Page 10B
WILKES-BARRE Engineers
say recent flood waters damaged
the former Hotel Sterling beyond
repair and the historic structure
must be razed before it collapses,
and no local officials have dis-
agreed.
What remains a point of con-
tention is who should pay for the
job.
CityVest, the owner of the
building, has little to no money in
its coffers, ac-
cording to
county officials
who have seen
the non-profit
corporations fi-
nancials.
And the city
of Wilkes-Barre,
which paid for engineers to in-
spect the 113-year-old building a
week ago, doesnt have funds to
cover the estimated $1 million
demolition cost available either.
Butch Frati, the citys director
of operations, has said the city is
looking into whether any portion
of the demolition costs might be
covered by federal disaster funds,
given that the already deteriorat-
ing structure was further dam-
aged by flooding.
That application would have to
be made by CityVest, he said.
Alex Rogers, director of CityV-
est, could not be reached for com-
HOTEL STERL I NG The landmark must be demolished, but no one wants to pick up $1 million pricetag
Demolition tab has few interested
By STEVE MOCARSKY
[email protected]
CLARK VAN ORDEN/THE TIMES LEADER
Engineers say
the Sterling
Hotel at the
corner of North
River Street and
West Market
Street in Wilkes-
Barre has to be
demolished. Area
officials, howev-
er, disagree on
who should pay
for it.
Urban
See STERLING, Page 12A
A GOOD TIME, AND THATS NO BULL
AIMEE DILGER/THE TIMES LEADER
F
ood, fun, and freebies attracted area college students
Wednesday to the eighth annual Party on the Square in
downtown Wilkes-Barre. John Giustino tried to grab the me-
chanical bull by the horns during the party that ran from 5
p.m. to 9 p.m. on Public Square. Vendors had plenty to give away. Live
bands and a DJ provided the music at the event to promote the
downtown to students from Wilkes University, Kings College, Miser-
icordia University, Luzerne County Community College and Penn
State Wilkes-Barre.
Representatives of the Luzerne
County Convention and Visitors
Bureau came into county budget
hearings Wednesday afternoon
seeking an $80,000 county alloca-
tion for 2012, the
same amount re-
ceived this year.
They left with
instructions to
count on half
that amount.
Commissioners
also told themto
forget about add-
ing another em-
ployee to handle
online market-
ing and social
media.
The bureaus
request for 3-per-
cent manage-
ment raises was
also vetoed,
though commis-
sioners said
theyre hopingtofinda way tofund
pay increases for all non-union
workers because most havent had
one in years.
The same message was repeat-
edly delivered to other depart-
ments for more than six hours
Wednesdayas commissioners tried
towhittle downa $23.6milliongap
between projected revenue and
spending requests for 2012.
Commissioners started the bud-
get planning process Monday with
See BUDGET, Page 12A
It was a
tough day
for the
depart-
ments. We
cut bare
bones, and
weve still
got more
cuts to
make.
Maryanne
Petrilla
commissioner
COUNTY BUDGET
A steady
stream
of denials
delivered
Commissioners refuse requests
for funding as they try to close
$23.6 million budget gap.
By JENNIFER LEARN-ANDES
[email protected]
NEW YORK Facebook is at
it again. The social network is
tweaking the home pages of its
750 million users, much to the
chagrin of some very vocal folks.
The worlds largest online so-
cial network is expected to an-
nounce even more changes to-
day, when it holds its annual f8
conference in San Francisco for
developers whocreategames and
other applications for its site.
The gathering follows a trickle
of changes to Facebook in the
past few weeks. Some, such as
larger photo displays and a fea-
ture that makes it easier to group
friends into categories, were met
with approval or at least si-
lence, which in the age of social-
media oversharing could well be
considered an endorsement.
Then came Wednesday, when
many users woke up to find their
home pages altered, with what
Facebook calls top stories on
thetopof their pages, followedby
recent stories listed in chrono-
logical order. On the right side,
Facebook is getting a facelift, and many users just dont like it
AP FILE PHOTO
Facebook, the
online social
network
founded by
Mark Zucker-
berg, pic-
tured, is
tweaking the
home pages
of its 750
million users.
Some changes at the social
network already introduced
and more are promised.
By BARBARA ORTUTAY
AP Technology writer
See FACEBOOK, Page 12A
K
PAGE 2A THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
Burns, Richard
Davis, Margaret
Drake, Alma
Gillow, Joseph
Higdon, James
Homnack, Nancy
Jeffery, James Jr.
Lakowski, Frances
Lopasky, Joe
Meekes, Joseph
Muroski, Michael
Nemetz, Joan
Oravec, Joseph
Richards, Elwood
Rubinstein, Lois
Shotwell, Loren
Suriano, Joseph
Szafran, Linda
Usefara, John
Washinski, Jerry
OBITUARIES
Page 2A, 6A
AN INCORRECT PHOTO on
Page 2A of Wednesdays
editions accompanied the
story about
a suspect
charged
with robbing
a Citizens
Bank branch
in Kingston
on Tuesday.
The man
police ar-
rested, Jo-
seph Ostroski, 60, of Lehman
Township, is pictured.
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.
Ostroski
HARRISBURG No player
matched all five winning
numbers drawn in Wednes-
days Pennsylvania Cash 5
game so the jackpot will be
worth $500,000.
Lottery officials said 92
players matched four num-
bers and won $263 each and
4,095 players matched
three numbers and won $10
each.
LOTTERY
MIDDAY DRAWING
DAILY NUMBER 3-3-7
BIG FOUR 2-9-3-0
QUINTO 3-8-0-0-7
TREASURE HUNT
07-08-10-12-17
NIGHTLY DRAWING
DAILY NUMBER 2-2-9
BIG FOUR 7-2-7-3
QUINTO 8-6-9-7-2
CASH FIVE
01-03-10-27-32
POWERBALL
12-47-48-52-55
POWERBALL 13
POWER PLAY 4
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Issue No. 2011-265
J
ohn L. Usefara, 88, of Plymouth,
passed away Wednesday, Sep-
tember 21, 2011. Born in Plymouth,
he was a son of the late John and Lo-
retta Kelly Usefara. He was formerly
employed for many years as a union
carpenter. He was a member of All
Saints Parish, Plymouth, and
Knights of Columbus St. Vincents
Council 984.
He was preceded in death by his
sisters Anna Yachimovicz and Mary
Pitz; brothers, Frank and George
Usefara; and children, John III and
Loretta.
He was a loving husband, father
and grandfather, and will be dearly
missed by his wife of 63 years, the
former Eleanor Kopicki. He will be
sadly missed by all who knew and
loved him.
Surviving, besides his wife, Elea-
nor, are sons, Leonard and his wife,
Carol; Frank and his wife, Virginia;
John IV and his wife, Lena; Kevin
and his wife, Hannah; and Joseph
and his fiance, Danielle; sister
Catherine Kulesavage; as well as 17
grandchildren and many nieces and
nephews.
Funeral will be at 9a.m. Saturday
from the Kopicki Funeral Home,
263 Zerbey Ave., Kingston, with
Mass of ChristianBurial at 9:30a.m.
in All Saints Parish, 66 Willow St.,
Plymouth. Interment will be in the
St. Vincents Cemetery, Plymouth.
Friends maycall from5to8p.m. Fri-
day.
John L. Usefara
September 21, 2011
L
oren Shotwell, 41, of Plymouth,
passed away suddenly at his
home Sunday, September 18, 2011.
He was a son of Carl Sr., and the late
Zelma (Whiting) Shotwell.
He was a 1989 graduate of GAR
Memorial HighSchool. Lorenloved
watchingtheNewYorkYankees and
Dallas Cowboys.
Loren is a beloved son, brother
and uncle.
He was preceded in death by his
mother, Zelma, in 2003; brother,
William; maternal grandmother,
Zelma Whiting; and parental grand-
parents, Asa and Irene Shotwell.
Surviving are his father, Carl Sr.;
brothers, Carl Jr., Wilkes-Barre, and
Kenneth, Luzerne; sisters, Edna
Casey and Shirley Bankes, both of
Wilkes-Barre; maternal grandfa-
ther, WilliamWhiting; 15nieces and
nephews; as well as 12 great-nieces
and nephews.
Relatives and friends may call
from 6 to 7 p.m. today at the Yeo-
sock Funeral Home, 40 S. Main St.,
Plains Township. Funeral service
for Loren will be held at 7 p.m. to-
day, with The Rev. Gerald Lewis of-
ficiating.
Loren Shotwell
September 18, 2011
More Obituaries, Page 6A
James J. Jef-
fery Jr., 73, a
resident of
Sweet Valley
Road, Hunlock
Creek, passed
away at his
home Tuesday,
September 20,
2011. He was born August 16, 1938,
in Pittston, a son of the late James
and Bertha Duffy Jeffery.
He served in the U.S. Navy.
James was a retired employee of
the International Association of
Heat &Frost Insulators and Allied
Workers Local 38, Wilkes-Barre.
James is survived by his daugh-
ters, Deborah Douglass and her
husband, John, White Plains, N.Y.,
and Lynn Rosengrant and her hus-
band, Wendell, Hamlin; son, Thomas
Jeffery, Falls; step-son, Frank Cum-
mings, Dallas; seven grandchildren;
as well as a brother, William Jeffery,
and his wife, Betty, West Wyoming.
AFuneral Mass will be held at
10 a.m. Friday at the Clarke
Piatt Funeral Home, 6 Sunset Lake
Road, Hunlock Creek, with the Rev.
Joseph R. Kakareka officiating. Mili-
tary services will be held at 9:30 a.m.
Friday by the Shickshinny American
Legion Post 495 at the funeral home
and also by graveside. Friends may
call from 7 to 9 p.m. today at the fu-
neral home. Interment will be held in
Memorial Shrine Park, 8th Street,
Carverton.
James J. Jeffery Jr.
September 20, 2011
J
oseph Meekes, 86, of Kingston,
passed away Monday, Septem-
ber 19, 2011, in the Regional Hospi-
tal of Scranton. Born in Johnstown,
he was a son of the late Joseph and
Amelia Meekes.
He was a U.S. Army Veteran of
World War II. Prior to his retire-
ment, he was employed at Auto
Park Auto Top of East Orange, N.J.
Preceding him in death was a
step-son, Norman Mitchell.
Surviving are his wife of 50 years,
the former Dolores Morgan; daugh-
ter Lori Lynn Meekes Christian and
her husband, Robert, Wyoming;
grandson Devon Silva; step-chil-
dren, Renny Mitchell and his wife,
JoEllen, The Villages, Florida, and
Cindy Lee McKenny and her hus-
band, Ted, of White Haven; as well
as step-grandchildren, Norman and
Amanda.
A Blessing Service will be
held at 11 a.m. Saturday in the
Metcalfe and Shaver Funeral Home
Inc., 504 Wyoming Ave., Wyoming,
with the Rev. Leo J. McKernan, of
St. Monicas Parish, officiating. En-
tombment will be in the Memorial
Shrine Cemetery, Carverton.
Friends maycall from5to8p.m. Fri-
day.
Joseph Meekes
September 19, 2011
BUTLER TWP. State po-
lice at Hazleton said they ar-
rested Angel Ann Halchak, 35,
of Nanticoke, on evidence of
drunken driving after a traffic
stop on Interstate 81 at 7:40
p.m. Sunday.
Halchak showed signs of
being under the influence after
she was stopped when troopers
allegedly spotted her speeding
and carelessly driving, state
police said.
HANOVER TWP. Town-
ship police reported the follow-
ing:
John Blaker III, of Palmy-
ra, N.J., reported Monday his
work truck was struck by a golf
ball while it was parked at
Northeast Carthege Container
on Ferry Road.
POLICE BLOTTER
WILKES-BARRE Jeremy
Packard is a student of history
he holds undergraduate and
graduate degrees in the field
and believes political parties
have caused prob-
lems that are going
on at the local, state
and national levels.
He said an inde-
pendent voice is
needed to serve as a
checkandbalance onthe twoma-
jor parties andhe wants tobe that
voice onthe newLuzerne County
Council in January.
So the retired president of
Wyoming Seminary formally an-
nouncedonWednesdayhis inten-
tion to run in November for the
council. There are11seats, and11
Republicans, 11Democrats, three
Libertarians, two Independents
and one American Independent
Party candidate have filed paper-
work to appear on the Nov. 8 gen-
eral election ballot.
Packard, 73, of Kingston, said
the decision to have 11 seats on
the council was made by the Gov-
ernment Study Commission that
drafted the home rule charter to
give a majority to one party over
another. He said if that were to
happen, the countys residents
would lose.
We need to have independent
voices, Packard told a crowd of
nearly 30 gatheredinthe Founda-
tion Room at Genetti Hotel &
Conference Center in downtown
Wilkes-Barre. He said the first
council that is seated next year
will have a hand in making the
most important decision that
anybody will make in its first
year, and that is hiring the non-
elected county manager.
If political parties get involved
and start pushing council mem-
bers to support their choice, he
said the county may be in no bet-
ter shape than it has been in re-
cent years as dozens of electedof-
ficials, including judges and a
county commissioner, have been
indicted on corruption-related
charges.
Many in the audience liked
what they heard, including An-
drew Bigda of Forty Fort.
Bigda, a former county assist-
ant district attorney, is registered
as a Democrat but agreed with
Packard that an independent
voice is neededoncouncil tohelp
turn the county around.
I think highly of Jere Ri-
chard, Bigda said. I think that
the dangers he brings up are ap-
propriate. Were in this mess be-
cause of the old-school political
machine.
Packard was a lifelong Repub-
licanbut became disenfranchised
with whats been going on in re-
cent years. He said he got in-
volved with the crafting of the
Home Rule Charter, including
serving on the Home Rule Yes
steeringcommittee, becausegov-
ernment is an interest of his.
Packard said he knows more
about the charter and the way
its supposed to work than most
do, and he wants to bring that
knowledge andhis independence
to the council.
Ex-Sem boss eyes county council
Jeremy Packard wants to be
the independent voice that
balances the political parties.
By ANDREWM. SEDER
[email protected]
AIMEE DILGER/THE TIMES LEADER
Retired Wyoming Seminary president Jeremy Packard announces
his run for Luzerne County Council as an Independent.
Age: 73
Resides: Kingston
Political Party: Independent
Family: Married to wife Ingrid
Cronin. The couple have three
children. Packard also has two
children from a previous marriage.
Education: Graduated from the
Choate School in Wallingford,
Conn., in 1955; earned a bachelors
degree in history from Williams
College in Williamstown, Mass., in
1959 and a masters in history
from Columbia University in Man-
hattan, N.Y., in 1964.
Career: Served as president at
Wyoming Seminary from1990-
2007 before retiring. Hes current-
ly an adjunct, part-time history
faculty member at Misericordia
University.
Contact: www.packard-for-coun-
cil.com
JEREMY PACKARD
NANTICOKE The Greater
Nanticoke Area Trojans football
team and the players parents
will be accepting donations for
floods victims at the Nanticoke
vs. Meyers football game Friday
night.
Items needed are flashlights,
batteries, light bulbs, garden
hoses, Tylenol, Aleve, aspirin,
Neosporin, water, canned food
and buckets. Donations will
benefit flood victims in the
Nanticoke area.
RICE TWP. The Sons of the
American Legion Mountain
Post 781 are sponsoring a Flood
Relief Drive.
Items or cash donations can
be dropped off at the American
Legion Mountain Post on
Church Road in Mountain Top
between 1 and 9 p.m. today
through Friday and on Monday
and between noon and 9 p.m.
Saturday and Sunday. Monday
is the last day of the collection.
Items include: surgical masks,
latex gloves, large sponges,
scrub brushes, bleach, cleaners,
cleaners with bleach, disin-
fectant, hand sanitizer/wipes,
broom heads, small and large
mop heads, large black garbage
bags, broom sticks, garden
gloves or anything cleaning-
related.
Call 474-2161 or visit www.al-
post781.org for more informa-
tion.
LUZERNE/WYOMING
COUNTIES First National
Bank of Pennsylvania banking
offices are acting as collection
points for cleaning supplies that
will support American Red
Cross flood relief efforts.
Today through Friday, resi-
dents are invited to join bank
employees in collecting the
following items most needed by
the Red Cross in affected areas:
drinking water, bleach and rag
mops.
Local branches are located at
120 Highland Park Blvd.,
Wilkes-Barre Township; 46 S.
Mountain Blvd., Mountain Top;
35 E. Main St., Nanticoke; 1 S.
Church St., Hazleton; Ritten-
house Place, Route 309, Drums;
2378 State Route 118, Hunlock
Creek; and 74 E. Tioga St.,
Tunkhannock. Call 1-800-555-
5455 or visit fnb-online.com for
hours and other branches.
WEST PITTSTON Woodfor-
est National Bank is accepting
donations for the West Pittston
Library, which suffered a major
loss because of flooding.
The bank is collecting dona-
tions of fiction and non-fiction
books, childrens books, office
supplies and notebooks. Books
must be in readable condition.
Donations can be dropped off
at Woodforest National Bank
offices located inside Walmart
stores in Hazleton, Pittston and
Taylor. Call 655-9379 for more
information.
FLOOD DONATIONS
DUPONT The Dupont Lions
will hold its monthly food distri-
bution at 4 p.m. today at Sacred
Heart Church, Lackawanna Ave-
nue.
LUZERNE John Lohman, tax
collector, said the rebate period
for the 2001Wyoming Valley West
School District property taxes will
end Monday, after which taxes
will be accepted at face value.
The whole tax bill must be sent
along with the payment. For a
receipt, enclose a self-addressed.
stamped envelope. Office hours
are 6 to 8 p.m. on Mondays and
Thursdays, and1to 3 p.m. Sat-
urdays.
Office hours after Monday will
be 6 to 7 p.m. Mondays, and1to 2
p.m. Saturdays.
MUNICIPAL BRIEFS
PITTSTON -- The city in-
tends to formally submit its of-
ficial flood damage assessment
claims to Luzerne County by
the end of the business day to-
day.
City Manager Joe Moskovitz
avoided mentioning any figures
associated with cost but noted
some of the claims add up to
considerable amounts.
He acknowledged the citys
damage is far less than that of
neighboring municipalities Du-
ryea Borough and Jenkins
Township, but he said many
businesses and homes were se-
verely affected.
Pictures of the area around
Coopers Seafood Restaurant
on Kennedy Boulevard quickly
became some of the most
haunting images of the early
September flooding.
Todays assessment will in-
clude claims for emergency
worker overtime hours, equip-
ment used and lent to other
flood-affected communities
and damage to the citys infras-
tructure.
In other business, city fire-
fighter Walter Knowles was
awarded a medal for locating
and helping rescue Rusty Root
from a fire at the citys South
Main Street Apollo Apartment
complex.
After locating and treating
Root, Knowles was aided by
other firefighters in evacuating
him from the building. Root
survived for two months after
the fire but ultimately suc-
cumbed to injuries suffered
during the blaze.
Knowles, a nine-year veteran
with the fire department, re-
called the incident as the most
intense he had experienced in
his career.
He was joined by fellow fire-
fighters for a photograph be-
fore the start of Wednesday
nights regular council meet-
ing.
Mayor Jason Klush took the
opportunity to acknowledge
the hard work of the citys
emergency personnel as well as
all who came together in re-
sponse the flooding caused by
Tropical Storm Lee.
Klush noted seeing the river
rise as quickly as it did and
said he recalled with pride the
manner in which the citys
workers and volunteers were
able to react quickly and re-
sponsibly to the natural disas-
ter.
In other business, it was an-
nounced that the Pittston City
Library will be applying for
$500,000 in grants from the
U.S. Department of Agriculture
and $30,000 in grant funding
from the state Department of
Education.
Although the city owns the
library building, it charges no
rent to the library and takes no
control over its operations. The
librarys intentions to improve
and expand do however fall in
line with the citys overall reno-
vation and renewal plans.
The next regular meeting of
City Council is Oct. 18 at 7
p.m.
Pittston flood
figures on way
City will have considerable
tally of damage and costs for
Luzerne County officials.
By B. GARRET ROGAN
Times Leader Correspondent
C M Y K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 PAGE 3A
LOCAL
timesleader.com
SCRANTON
Panes nomination advances
Martin Pane, the acting U.S. marshal
in the Middle District of Pennsylvania,
moved a step closer to confirmation
Wednesday by the senate Judiciary
Committee.
U.S. Sen. Pat Toomey, R-Zionsville,
supported the confirmation and sent
Panes name to the committee.
Pane was nominated for the position
by President Barack Obama and also
has the support of U.S. Sen. Bob
Casey, D-Scranton.
Pane has been chief deputy marshal
since 2010 and held supervisory and
senior posts since 1988.
PLAINS TWP.
Spotlight child for gala
Sharon Harry, executive director of
Wyoming Valley Childrens Associ-
ation, announced that student Charles
Seiger, 4, will be the spotlight child at
the Harvest Moon Gala, which will
take place on Thursday, Oct. 6 at 6
p.m. at the Woodlands Inn & Resort in
Plains Township.
This fall food and wine fundraising
event will benefit the
WVCAs Early Equals
Excellence Program.
Tickets for the event
are $100 per person
and can be purchased
by calling Lori Kozel-
sky at 714-1246, ext.
310.
The Early Equals
Excellence program is designed for
children who demonstrate develop-
mental disabilities, and children who
are at risk for delays because of pover-
ty, behavior issues or language bar-
riers. All the proceeds for this event
will ensure that young children, ages
three to five, receive quality early
education to help them establish the
foundation for years of future learning.
Charles Seiger, the son of Charles
and Jennifer Seiger of Warrior Run,
was suspected to have Down syn-
drome the day after he was born and
was officially diagnosed four days
later.
Seiger first attended the WVCA
preschool about 18 months ago and
will continue there until he is at least
5. He has utilized their speech therapy
and occupational therapy services.
For more information log on to on
Wyoming Valley Childrens Association
or the Harvest Moon Gala, please visit
www.wvcakids.org/events or call 714-
1246.
WILKES-BARRE
La-Z-Boy donating furniture
The owner of seven La-Z-Boy Furni-
ture Galleries in the northeast region
is donating truckloads of furniture
including La-Z-Boy sofas, chairs, reclin-
ers, tables, lamps and accessories, to
regional flood victims
In conjunction with La-Z-Boy Inc.,
F.J. Hager Inc. is donating approxi-
mately $200,000 of new furniture to
area flood victims through the Salva-
tion Army. Transportation help is
being provided by Penske Truck Rent-
al.
Starting Friday La-Z-Boy trailers will
ship new furniture in trailer loads to
local Salvation Army operations
throughout affected flood areas.
The Salvation Army will store and
distribute the furniture in the coming
weeks to those who need it most.
On Monday at 1 p.m., La-Z-Boy
Furniture Galleries trailers will deliver
the donations earmarked for regional
flood victims to The Salvation Army
warehouse located on Hanover Street
in Sugar Notch.
WILKES-BARRE
Cleanup on River Common
RiverCommon.org will lead a clea-
nup of the River Common Park in
Wilkes-Barre.
Debris, silt and trash remain in the
park from the recent high water will
be removed. Volunteers are needed
today, 5:30p.m.- 7:30pm.; Saturday, 10
a.m. noon; Sunday, 1 p.m.-3 p.m.
Volunteers are asked to meet orga-
nizers at the Market Street Bridge
stairway to the River Common Park,
located directly across the street from
the Hotel Sterling (River Street).
Volunteers are encouraged to bring
flat shovels, industrial brooms, masks,
gloves, water-hose extensions and
power-washers.
As advised by public health officials,
volunteers are urged to get a tetanus
shot as instructed by their personal
physician.
I N B R I E F
Charles Seiger
WASHINGTON A Tunkhannock
pharmacy owner told a U.S. House
panel the merger of two giant phar-
macy benefit managers could force
community stores like his out of
business and result in higher pre-
scription drug costs for consumers.
Joe Lech, who owns five independ-
ent pharmacies in Northeastern
Pennsylvania, told House members
Tuesday a planned $29.1 billion
merger between Express Scripts and
Medco Health Solutions would re-
sult in a mega company in control
of more than 40 percent of all pre-
scription drug orders nationally.
Also testifying Tuesday before the
House Judiciary Committees sub-
committee on intellectual property,
competition and the Internet, were
the top executives from the two com-
panies that wish to merge.
They say the deal will result in
cheaper prescription drugs because
the combined company will be able
to squeeze discounts from pharma-
ceutical companies because it will
purchase drugs which it does on be-
half of employer drug benefit plans
at such a large volume.
Previous merger
The previous largest pharmacy
benefits company sprung from a
THE BUSI NESS OF HEALTH CARE
PETE G. WILCOX/THE TIMES LEADER
Pharmacy owner Joe Lech told a U.S. House committee on Tuesday that a planned merger between Express Scripts
and Medco Health Solutions could force community stores like his out of business.
Pharmacy merger criticized
Owner: Proposal would hurt small stores
By JONATHAN RISKIND
Times Leader Washington Bureau
See MERGER, Page 7A
I am very concerned that
this merger could reduce
patient access while ulti-
mately leading to higher
drugs costs due to the re-
duction in competition.
Joe Lech
Pharmacy owner
With all the rain that has fallen this
year, theWilkes-Barre/Scrantonareahas
a way to go before 2011becomes the wet-
test onrecord.
Alightrainfall earlierthisweekpushed
2011intoseventhplacewith45.22inches
of rainsinceJan.1, TomClark, chief mete-
orologist for WNEP-TV16, said Wednes-
day.
With100daysleftin2011, rainfall histo-
ry is likely to be re-
written -- Clark esti-
mates 2011 may fall
into second or third
place among the
wettest.
The wettest year
on record, Clark
said, occurred in
1948 with 53.72
inches of rain.
Id say there is a
chance, but we have
another 8 inches to
go, Clark said.
That might be
pushing it; it might
be a stretch.
Another storm is
intheforecast forto-
night intoFridaywiththepotential of1to
3inchesof rain, accordingtotheNational
Weather Service inBinghamton, N.Y.
If the forecast stays true, the Wilkes-
Barre/Scranton area may jump into
fourthplace for rainfall in2011.
Clark said there is a good chance most
of therainwill stayfarther east of Wilkes-
Barre/Scranton.
Were going to get more rain later on
inthe week, but its not goingtobe anex-
cessive rainfall, Clark said. A majority
of that rain will stay to the east of us. It
doesnt seem to be enough rain to raise
some flooding concerns.
The Susquehanna River in Wilkes-
Barre, which reached a record crest of
42.6 feet on Sept. 9, is expected to stay
well within its natural flood stage of 22
feet, according to the Middle Atlantic
River Forecast Center.
Weve had some heavy rainfall
events, Clark said about 2011. Of
course, we had Hurricane Irene come by
and we recently had Tropical Storm Lee
opening up that tropical connection.
Weve had a number of heavy rainfall
eventsandwehadawetspringontopof it
all.
There have been 44 days with periods
of heavy rain since February, NWS re-
cords say.
Normal rainfall for this time of year is
27.7 inches.
Tworainfall recordswerebrokeninAu-
gust.
Hurricane Irene dumped 3.23 inches
of rainonAug. 28, breakingtheoldrecord
of 2.1 inches set on that day in 1911. On
Aug. 6, 2.83 inches of rain was recorded,
topping the1945 recordof 1.79 inches.
Tropical StormLee, which caused the
river to rapidly rise on Sept. 7 through
Sept. 9, dumped 5 to 10 inches of rain
across Luzerne County.
More rain
will fall,
but record
may stand
2011 is now the 7th wettest on
record, but it has a ways to go to
top the all-time mark set in 1948.
By EDWARD LEWIS
[email protected]
Top 10 wettest
years on record,
according to Tom
Clark, chief meteo-
rologist for WNEP-
TV16.
1948: 53.72 inches
2003: 49.45
1996: 49
1990: 46.09
2006: 45.56
1927: 45.33
2011: (Jan. 1-Sept.
21): 45.22
1972: 45.19
1902: 45.05
1938: 45.03
T H E T O P 1 0
W E T T E S T
WYOMINGDependingonwhat the
state Department of Educationdoes, ar-
easchool districts couldbeforcedtouse
several of their snow make-up days be-
fore the temperature even dips below
freezing.
But WyomingAreahasthebiggest po-
tential loss: A bad state ruling could
wipeout all built-insnowdays, plus one.
Thedownpoursandwidespreadevac-
uations of lowlands prompted all Lu-
zerne County school districts to close
for at least the two heaviest days of rain.
A few remained closed a day or two
beyond that. But flood devastation for
many residents in Wyoming Areas
boundaries prompted
that district to remain
closed for five days af-
ter the storm subsid-
ed and the Susque-
hanna River receded.
Most district super-
intendents expect the
state Department of
Educationtoallowthemtowrite off the
two days of closure during the deluge
Gov. Tom Corbett had already declared
a state of emergency before the closings
occurred, and there is precedence for
such exemptions to the legal mandate
for 180 school days in a year.
Essentially, districts could then run
their calendars unaltered, having 178
school days instead.
But WyomingArealost thosefirst two
days plus fiveothers thefollowingweek.
Superintendent Ray Bernardi said the
district has asked the state to exempt
the district frommakingupanyof those
days, but concededthat maybeless like-
ly than getting a waiver for the first two
days.
If thestatedoesnt exempt thedistrict
for the five additional days, it would all
but wipeout sixsnowdays built intothe
calendar, less than a month into the
school year.
Bernardi said the district has one
snowday built intoApril 10, a vacation/
snowmake-up day. Otherwise, the plan
was to make up potential snow days in
June.
Thelast dayof classes is set for June1,
but graduation is slated for June 8. If
school is canceled because of snow, the
district would hold classes on the five
weekdays fromJune 4 through 8.
As of Wednesday afternoon, the state
had not made any decision on how
many, if any, days wouldbe waivedfrom
the180-day mandate for area districts.
We just have to wait and hope, Ber-
nardi said.
Flooding may wash away all of Wyoming Areas snow days
Unless state deems otherwise,
the district could lose all its
built-in days, plus one more.
By MARK GUYDISH
[email protected]
Bernardi
A new air quality study by a
Pennsylvania environmental
advocacy group found the com-
monwealth has the sixth-most
smog-ridden air in the nation.
The air quality in the Scran-
ton/Wilkes-Barre/Hazleton
region is not as bad as other
metropolitan areas around the
state and the country, but the
advent of natural gas drilling
could contribute to a worsen-
ing of air quality in the long
run, a spokeswoman for the en-
vironmental group said
Wednesday.
The report, titled Danger in
theAir: UnhealthyDays in2010
and 2011, was published by
Philadelphia-based citizens en-
vironmental advocacy organi-
zation PennEnvironment Re-
search and Policy Center.
It ranked American metro-
politan areas by the number of
days when the air quality ex-
ceeded the national health
standard for smog pollution set
by the federal Environmental
Protection Agency in 2008.
Overall, Pennsylvania cities
ranked sixth on the list, with
Scranton/W-B ranked mid-pack in nation as warning is issued on impact of gas drilling
Group: Pa.s air quality 6th worst
See SMOG, Page 7A
TIMES LEADER PHOTO BY GO LACKAWANNA
State Rep. Ken
Smith, D-Dun-
more, reacts
Wednesday to a
report as Mere-
dith Meisen-
heimer of Pen-
nEnvironment
Research and
Policy Center
looks on.
By MATT HUGHES
[email protected]
C M Y K
PAGE 4A THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
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K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 PAGE 5A
N A T I O N & W O R L D
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RENO, NEV.
Experts: Pilot likely out
T
he veteran aviator whose plane
slammed into a crowd of Nevada
air race spectators at 400 mph had no
chance to save his ill-fated flight after
likely losing consciousness from accel-
eration more abrupt and extreme than
even what most fighter pilots endure,
flying experts said.
Jimmy Leewards aircraft shot sky-
ward like a rocket Friday before plung-
ing into spectators at what appeared to
be full throttle. Federal investigators
continue to look for a cause of the
crash at the National Championship
Air Races that killed 11 people, in-
cluding Leeward, and injured dozens.
Hes not there. Hes unconscious,
said Ernie Christensen, a retired rear
admiral and former Vietnam fighter
pilot who commanded the Navys Top
Gun fighter school for a time in the
1980s.
LONDON
Libya air mission extended
Leaders of the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization authorized a 90-day ex-
tension of the alliances aerial mission
over Libya on Wednesday, raising the
prospect that U.S. and allied troops
could be involved in the North African
nation until Christmas.
But NATO Secretary-General Anders
Fogh Rasmussen stressed the alliance
could call home its forces at any time
if international authorities and the new
Libyan government determine that
NATOs help is no longer necessary.
NATO took over enforcement of a
no-fly zone over Libya in March, with
an initial deadline for the mission at
the end of June. A three-month exten-
sion was set to expire next week.
NEW YORK
Islam site opens to public
The developer of an Islamic cultural
center near ground zero says the big-
gest mistake on the project was not
involving the families of 9/11 victims
from the start.
We made incredible mistakes,
Sharif El-Gamal said.
The Park51 Islamic community cen-
ter at 51 Park Place, two blocks from
the World Trade Center site opened
to the public Wednesday night with a
photo exhibit of New York children
representing 160 ethnicities.
The project has drawn criticism from
opponents who say they dont want a
Muslim prayer space near the site of
the Sept. 11 terror attacks.
LOS ANGELES
Study: More dialysis needed
A major study challenges the way
diabetics and others with failing kid-
neys have been treated for half a centu-
ry, finding that three-times-a-week
dialysis to cleanse the blood of toxins
may not be enough.
Deaths, heart attacks and hospital-
izations were much higher on the day
after the two-day interval between
treatments each week than at other
times, the study found.
The president of the National Kidney
Foundation said she was very trou-
bled by the results published today in
the New England Journal of Medicine.
We could be doing a better job for
our dialysis patients and that might
mean doing it more often, said Dr.
Lynda Szczech, a Duke University
kidney specialist who had no role in
the study.
I N B R I E F
AP PHOTO
Its the end of the world for R.E.M.
Rock band R.E.M. with singer Michael
Stipe, left, and guitarist Peter Buck,
right, seen performing in Germany in
2008, on Wednesday announced it
has decided to call it a day as a band.
The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame group,
which also includes bassist Mike Mills,
came out of the indie-rock scene in
the Athens, Ga., region. Its credited
for helping launch college radio. Later,
the band became chart-topping rock-
ers, selling millions of albums with hits
like Its the End of the World as We
Know It (And I Feel Fine), Losing My
Religion and Everybody Hurts.
UNITED NATIONS A
top Palestinian official said
Wednesday that President
Mahmoud Abbas had no plans
to agree to a delayed vote on
his bid for membership in the
United Nations, rejecting
mounting pressure from the
United States and France.
The Palestinians plan to
submit their letter of applica-
tion on Friday when Abbas is
to speak to the U.N. General
Assembly, but he faced a
withering lack of support as
the world body opened its an-
nual meeting. President Ba-
rack Obama said there could
be no shortcuts in the quest
for Middle East peace, a
message that was echoed by
French President Nicolas Sar-
kozy.
We will not allow any po-
litical maneuvering on this is-
sue, Asaid Saeb Erekat, a se-
nior aide to Abbas and former
chief of negotiations.
Erekat said Abbas had
made that plain in discussions
with all parties involved over
the last three days of meet-
ings in the lead-up to the an-
nual UN global gathering of
presidents, heads of state and
ruling royalty.
Sarkozy proposed a one-
year timetable Wednesday for
Israel and the Palestinians to
reach a peace accord, part of a
concerted push with the Unit-
ed States to steer the Palesti-
nians away from an applica-
tion for U.N. membership.
Sarkozy spoke shortly after
Obama warned against action
on the Palestinian bid before
there was a peace agreement.
He said negotiations, not U.N.
declarations, were essential to
a lasting peace.
While Obama stopped short
of calling directly for the Pal-
estinians to drop their bid for
full membership an effort
the U.S. has vowed to veto in
the Security Council Sar-
kozy sounded a more compro-
mising tone.
Let us cease our endless
debates on the parameters
and let us begin negotiations
and adopt a precise and ambi-
tious timetable, Sarkozy told
the leaders and officials gath-
ered at the U.N.
U. N. MI DEAST CONTROVERSY U.S. has vowed to veto effort opposed by Israel
Palestinians to press statehood
AP PHOTO
President Barack Obama addresses the 66th session of the
U.N. General Assembly on Wednesday. Obama said there could
be no shortcuts in the quest for Middle East peace.
By TAREK EL-TABLAWY
and STEVEN R. HURST
Associated Press
PHILADELPHIA Gov. Tom
Corbett released $15 million
Wednesday to continue the con-
troversial Delaware River dredg-
ing project, which he contends
will create jobs and economic de-
velopment but opponents say
will damage the environment.
The funds will allow the Army
Corps of Engineers to begin dee-
pening a second segment of the
river next month from 40 feet to
45 feet, accord-
ing to Philadel-
phia port offi-
cials. The extra
depth will en-
surethecitycan
compete global-
ly by accommo-
dating bigger,
more modern
ships, they said.
Some envi-
ronmental
groups, along
with the states of NewJersey and
Delaware, have opposed the
dredging, arguing that it could
stir up toxic sediment, endanger
drinking water supplies and hurt
fisheries.
But a federal judge inDelaware
ruled last year that the project
couldgoforward, andthedigging
began in March 2010.
When its finished, the five-
year project will have cost about
$305 million and deepened a103-
mile stretch of the river. The fed-
eral government is supposed to
fund 65 percent of costs; so far,
Pennsylvania has spent $45 mil-
lion.
Delaware
dredging
to continue
Gov. Corbett allocates $15
million to begin deepening a
second segment of the river.
By KATHY MATHESON
Associated Press
Some envi-
ronmental
groups, along
with the
states of New
Jersey and
Delaware,
have opposed
the dredging.
TOKYO A powerful ty-
phoon slammed into Japan
on Wednesday, halting trains
and leaving 13 people dead or
missing in south-central re-
gions before grazing a crip-
pled nuclear plant and heap-
ing rain on the tsunami-rav-
aged northeast.
Officials at the Fukushima
Dai-ichi plant, where engi-
neers are still struggling with
small radiation leaks due to
tsunami damage, expressed
relief that Typhoon Rokes
driving winds and rain caused
no immediate problems there
other than a broken security
camera.
The worst seems to be
over, said Takeo Iwamoto,
spokesman for plant operator
Tokyo Electric Power Co., af-
ter the stormpassed just west
of the plant on its way north.
But the typhoon brought
new misery to the northeast-
ern region already slammed
by the March 11 earthquake
and tsunami, dumping up to
17 inches of rain in some ar-
eas.
Authorities warned of a
high risk of mudslides in that
region.
13 dead or missing after typhoon
AP PHOTO
Pedestrians make their way through strong winds and rains
from Typhoon Roke in Tokyo on Wednesday.
The storm dumps rain on
an area in Japan damaged
during the March tsunami.
The Associated Press
MUSCAT, Oman After more than
two years in Iranian custody, two Amer-
icans convicted as spies took their first
steps toward home Wednesday as they
bounded down the steps of a private jet
and into the arms of family for a joyful
reunion in the Gulf State of Oman.
The families called this the best day
of our lives and President Barack Oba-
ma said their release was wonderful
news.
In Washington, the release capped
complicated diplomatic maneuvers
over a week of confusing signals by
Irans leadership on the fate of Josh Fat-
tal andShaneBauer. Finally, a$1million
bail-for-freedomdeal was struckandthe
two were free.
Although the fate of the two gripped
America, it was on the periphery of the
larger showdowns between Washing-
tonandTehranthat includeIrans nucle-
ar program and its ambitions to widen
military and political influence in the
Middle East and beyond. But for a
moment at the United Nations at least
U.S. officials may be adding words of
thanks in addition to their calls for
alarm over Iran.
For Tehran, it was a chance to court
some goodwill after sending a message
of defiance with hard-line justice in the
July 2009 arrests of the Americans
along the Iran-Iraq border.
American hikers freed from Iran prison begin their trek home
AP FILE PHOTO
U.S. hikers Shane
Bauer, left, and Josh
Fattal attend their
trial in February in
Iran. The lawyer for
two Americans
jailed as spies says
a $1 million bail-for-
freedom deal was
approved by the
courts, clearing the
way for the release
of the men after
more than two years
in custody.
By SAEED AL-NAHDY and BRIAN MURPHY
Associated Press
FRAUDULENT POURING CLAIMED AT OKTOBERFEST
AP PHOTO
Y
oung people drink beer during the recent opening ceremony of Oktoberfest in Munich, Germany. A Munich
consumer watchdog group says Oktoberfest revelers are being shorted on beer at the famous Bavarian
beer festival. In a test of 100 standard Mass mugs conducted by the more-than century old Association
Against Fraudulent Pouring, not one was full, the organization said Wednesday, a news agency reported.
K
PAGE 6A THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
O B I T U A R I E S
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free obituaries, which have a
27-line limit, and paid obituaries,
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829-5537 or e-mail to tlo-
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or e-mail, please call to confirm.
Obituaries must be submitted by
9 p.m. Sunday through Thursday
and 7:30 p.m. Friday and Sat-
urday. Obituaries must be sent by
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1190 Sans Souci Highway (570) 823-5606
SERVING
BEREAVEMENT
LUNCHEONS DAILY
BARTNICKI Helen, funeral 10 a.m.
today in the Kiesinger Funeral
Services Inc., 255 McAlpine St.,
Duryea. Mass of Christian Burial
at 10:30 a.m. at Ss. Peter & Paul
Church, Avoca.
BAUR Regina, Mass of Christian
Burial 10:30 a.m. today in St.
Ignatius Church.
BOLD John, Mass of Christian
Burial 10 a.m. Saturday in the St.
Lawrence OToole Church, 620 S.
Main St., Old Forge.
BROODY George, funeral 11 a.m.
Friday from St. Marys Antiochian
Orthodox Church, 905 S. Main
ST., Wilkes-Barre. Calling hours 6
to 9 p.m. today in the Heller
Funeral Home, Nescopeck.
GLOFKA Dorothy, funeral 9 a.m.
today in the Bednarski & Thomas
Funeral Home, 27 Park Ave.,
Wilkes-Barre. Mass of Christian
Burial at 9:30 a.m. in Our Lady of
Fatima Parish, St. Marys Church
of the Immaculate Conception,
South Washington Street, Wilkes-
Barre.
GUILFORD Dora, funeral 11 a.m.
Friday in the Metcalfe and Shaver
Funeral Home Inc., 504 Wyoming
Ave., Wyoming. Friends may call 5
to 8 p.m. today.
HABERSKI Joseph, celebration of
life Memorial Mass 10 a.m. Sat-
urday in Our Lady of Hope
Church, 40 Park Ave., Wilkes-
Barre.
HILL Barbara, Memorial Mass 7
p.m. Monday in All Saints Church,
66 Willow St., Plymouth.
KALE Dorothy, funeral 10 a.m.
Friday from the Kopicki Funeral
Home, 263 Zerbey Ave., Kingston.
Mass of Christian Burial at 10:30
a.m. in St. Ignatius Church.
Friends may call 9 to 10 a.m.
Friday at the funeral home.
KOVALIK Bernard, funeral 9:30
a.m. Friday from the Wroblewski
Funeral Home Inc., 1442 Wyoming
Ave., Forty Fort. Mass of Christian
Burial at 10 a.m. in Holy Family
Parish, 574 Bennett St., Luzerne.
Family and friends may call 6 to 8
p.m. today at the funeral home,
where the Knights of Columbus,
Assumpta Council 3987, will
recite the rosary.
KUHAR Michael, funeral 9:30 a.m.
today in the Bednarski Funeral
Home, 168 Wyoming Ave., Wyom-
ing. Mass of Christian Burial at 10
a.m. in Holy Trinity Church,
Swoyersville.
LAZO John Sr., funeral 9 a.m.
Friday at the Simon S. Russin
Funeral Home, 136 Maffett St.,
Plains Township. Requiem Ser-
vices at 9:30 a.m. in Holy Resur-
rection Orthodox Cathedral,
Wilkes-Barre. Family and friends
may call 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
today. Parastas at 7:30 p.m. John
was born August 31, 1928. He was
83.
MARROW Carolyn, graveside
services 10 a.m. today in St.
Marys Cemetery, Hanover Town-
ship.
MRAS Michael, funeral 10:30 a.m.
Saturday from the Curtis L.
Swanson Funeral Home Inc.,
corner of routes 29 and 118, Pikes
Creek. Mass of Christian Burial at
11 a.m. from Our Lady of Mt.
Carmel Church, Lake Silkworth.
Friends may call 7 to 9 p.m.
Friday at the funeral home.
PETRO Dolores, funeral 9 a.m.
Friday from the George A. Strish
Inc. Funeral Home, 105 N. Main
St., Ashley. Mass of Christian
Burial at 9:30 a.m. from St.
Nicholas Church, South Washing-
ton Street, Wilkes-Barre. Friends
may call 5 to 8 p.m. today.
RAMEY Michael, funeral at 11 a.m.
Friday at the Harding-Litwin
Funeral Home, 123 W. Tioga St.,
Tunkhannock. Friends may call
from 6 to 8 p.m. today.
RUBENSTEIN Lois, funeral 11 a.m.
Friday from the E. Blake Collins
Funeral Home, 159 George Ave.,
Wilkes-Barre. Friends may call 5
to 8 p.m. today.
STOLARICK Susan, funeral 9:15
a.m. Friday from The Richard H.
Disque Funeral Home Inc., 672
Memorial Hwy., Dallas, and at 10 a.m.
at Our Lady of Mt. Carmel Church,
Hunlock Creek. Friends may call 2 to
4 and 7 to 9 p.m. today.
STURR Roy, celebration of life 11 a.m.
Oct. 1, in the Christ Community
Church, Kingston.
WALLACE James, funeral 1 p.m.
Saturday in the Betz-Jastremski
Funeral Home, 568 Bennett St.,
Luzerne.
WALSH Gerald, Memorial Mass 1:30
p.m. Saturday in the Holy Family
Parish, 828 Main St., Sugar Notch.
ZAMBER Daniel Sr., Mass of Christian
Burial 9 a.m. today in Ss. Peter & Paul
Catholic Church, 13 Hudson Road,
Plains Township.
ZIMOLZAK Edward, funeral Mass
9:30 a.m. today in the Holy Spirit
Parish, 150 Main St., Mocanaqua.
FUNERALS
RICHARD D. BURNS, 44, of
The Hideout, Lake Ariel, passed
away Monday, September19, 2011,
at home. Heis survivedbyhis wife,
Michele Kovach Burns. Born in Al-
bany, Ga., March30, 1967, he was a
son of Richard and step-mother
Colleen Burns of Madison Town-
ship, and Annmarie Buchholz of
American Fork, Utah. An avid
reader of science fiction books and
a fishermanwhoenjoyedridinghis
motorcycle, he will be dearly mis-
sed. He is also survived by his only
child, Sarah Burns of Moosic; a
brother, Kevin Burns of Madison
Township; and two sisters, Kelly
Burns of Madison Township and
Carrie Simpson and husband Rus-
sell, of American Fork, Utah.
Relatives and friends may pay
their respects from5 to 7 p.m. Sat-
urday at the Thomas P. Kearney
Funeral Home Inc., Old Forge.
Please visit www.KearneyFuneral-
Home.com for directions or to
leave a condolence.
NANCY BEKAMPIS HOM-
NACK, 71, passed away Thursday,
September 15, 2011, in Santa Ma-
ria, Calif. Born March 28, 1940, in
Wilkes-Barre, a daughter of the
late Natalie Bekampis, she gradu-
ated from GAR Memorial High
School, class of 1958. She is sur-
vivedbyher dearlybelovedson, Ja-
son. Nancy had a small circle of
friends in Wilkes-Barre who kept
in touch over the years.
She will be missed. God grant
her Eternal Memory.
MICHAEL J. MUROSKI, 75, of
Nanticoke, passed away suddenly
at his home Tuesday evening, Sep-
tember 20, 2011.
A full obituary will run in Sat-
urdays Times Leader. Funeral ar-
rangements are pending from the
S.J. Grontkowski Funeral Home,
530 W. Main St., Plymouth.
JOAND. GARDNERNEMETZ,
77, of the Glendale section of Pitt-
ston Township, died Tuesday, Sep-
tember 20, 2011, in Scranton. Born
in Wilkes-Barre January 20, 1934,
she was a daughter of the late
Nathan and Dorothy Landmesser
Gardner. Sisters, Kathleen, Shirley
and Beverly also preceded her in
death. Surviving are her husband,
The Rev. John Nemetz Jr.; chil-
dren, William Gardner, Daniel
Gardner and wife Diana, Laureen
Naylor and husband Daniel, John
Nemetz III, and Kathleen Shep-
herd and husband Randy; broth-
ers, Roger Gardner, Michael Mar-
kovich and Edward Markovich; 11
grandchildren; five great-grand-
children; and nieces and nephews.
Private funeral services will
be conducted Friday in the Tho-
mas P. Kearney Funeral Home
Inc., 517 N. MainSt., OldForge. In-
terment will follow in Fairview
Memorial Park, Elmhurst.
ELWOOD M. RICHARDS, 47,
of Pittston, passed away Wednes-
day, September 21, 2011, at the
Wilkes-Barre General Hospital.
Funeral arrangements are
pending Kiesinger Funeral Servic-
es Inc., 255 McAlpine St., Duryea.
M
argaret Jane Davis, 95, of Ed-
wardsville, passed away peace-
fully at her home Tuesday, Septem-
ber 20, 2011.
Margaret was born on July 6,
1916, in Kingston, a daughter of the
late John and Mabel Simoson-Dy-
mond Davis. Her siblings were Wil-
liam, Cora, Elsie, David, fraternal
twin Mera, Jack, Inez and Naomi.
Margaret was a member of the
Larksville United Methodist
Church and the Ephworth League.
In 1934, she graduated from Larks-
ville High School, and in 1936 met
Clarence Squinty Davis at a Larks-
ville United Methodist Church
event. They were wed in Larksville
on May 27, 1938. Over the next 70
years plus Margaret matured from
mother of eight to a grandmother
and great-grandmother. Her life-
time was filled with family, and her
home became an epicenter for three
generations.
Margaret enjoyed watching Penn
State football, cheering on her chil-
dren, grandchildren and great-
grandchildren in sporting events,
baking, and, most of all, openingher
home to all her family and their
friends.
Margaret was employed by the
Wyoming Valley West School Dis-
trict, fromwhichshe retiredin1984.
She was preceded in death by her
husband, Clarence Davis; her broth-
ers, William, David and Jack; her
sisters Cora, Elsie, Mera and Nao-
mi; and her son Gary Davis Sr.
Margaret is survived by her chil-
dren, Douglas, Hunlock Creek; Ro-
nald and wife Joann, Shickshinny;
Richard and wife Nola, Hunlock
Creek; Margaret Krupinski and
Lou, Hunlock Creek; Robert and
wife Ann, Larksville; Darlene Koon-
rad and husband Joe, Luzerne; and
Glenn and wife Sharon, Larksville;
her sister Inez Thorme; her sister-
in-law Beatrice Powell; as well as
two generations of grandchildren,
and several nieces and nephews.
The funeral service will be held
at 11 a.m. Saturday at the Edwards
andRussinFuneral Home, 717Main
St., Edwardsville, with Pastor Ron
Baker, of Larksville United Metho-
dist Church, officiating. Interment
will follow at the Denison Cemete-
ry, Swoyersville. Family and friends
may call at the funeral home from 9
a.m. until the time of service at 11
a.m. Saturday.
Her family would like to give spe-
cial thanks toErwines Home Health
and Hospice for quality care and for
creating a warm, comfortable envi-
ronment for Margaret and her fam-
ily.
Memorial gifts may be sent in
Margarets Honor to Erwines Home
Health and Hospice, 270 Pierce St.,
Ste. 101, Kingston, PA18704.
A special donation will be made
by her grandchildren in Margarets
memory to the Larksville United
Methodist Church, Wilson Street,
Larksville, PA18704.
Margaret Jane Davis
September 20, 2011
A
lma L. Drake, 88, of Forest Hill,
Md., passed away Sunday, Sep-
tember 4, 2011. Mrs. Drake was born
April 29, 1923, in Wilkes-Barre, a
daughter of the late NelsonE. andLy-
dia (nee Ayre) Nelson.
She was a 1941 graduate of Dallas
Borough High School and a former
member of Dallas United Methodist
Church until moving to Delta in
2004. She was a current member of
Churchville Presbyterian Church.
Mrs. Drake was preceded in death
by her husband, Frederick M. Drake,
in 2005.
She is survived by her children,
Virginia A. Cannon of Kingsville,
Md.; FrederickDrake Jr., of Tunkhan-
nock; Gale Drake of Livonia, N.Y.;
andGaryDrake of Forest Hill, Md.; as
well as eight grandchildren and four
great-grandchildren.
Services will be private.
Arrangements are by the family
owned Evans Funeral Chapel & Cre-
mation Services Bel Air, 3 Newport
Drive, Forest Hill, Md.
Memory tributes may be sent to
the family at www.evansfuneralcha-
pel.com.
Memorial contributions in Almas
name may be made to Harford Hos-
pice, 8003 Corporate Drive, No. G,
Nottingham, MD 21236-4984.
Alma L. Drake
September 4, 2011
L
ois C. Rubinstein, 78, of the Par-
sons section of Wilkes-Barre,
passed away Monday, September
19, 2011, at Riverstreet Manor,
Wilkes-Barre. She was born January
21, 1933, in Wilkes-Barre, a daugh-
ter of the late Harley and Elsie Rem-
ley.
Agraduateof JuliaRichmanHigh
School, New York, and St. Josephs
Hospital School of Nursing, Patter-
son, N.J., she was a registered nurse
at Bellevue Hospital from 1953 to
1963. She later was employed by
Wilkes-Barre General Hospital,
NPWHospital, andFirst Hospital of
Wyoming Valley until her retire-
ment in 1998.
Lois touched the lives of many
people, and she will be greatly mis-
sed by her family and friends.
In addition to her parents, she
was preceded in death by her hus-
band, Norman Rubinstein.
Surviving are her daughter, Anne
Amico, and her husband, David,
Collegeville; son, David Rubinstein,
and his wife, Pamela, Nanticoke;
andgrandchildren, Elyse, Claire, Jil-
lian and Benjamin.
Thefuneral will beheldat11a.m.
Friday fromthe E. Blake Collins Fu-
neral Home, 159 George Ave.,
Wilkes-Barre. Services will be con-
ducted by The Rev. K. Gene Carroll,
Ph.D. Interment will be in Oak
Lawn Cemetery, Hanover Town-
ship. Friends may call from 5 to 8
p.m. today.
In lieu of flowers, memorial con-
tributions may be made to The Na-
tional Kidney Foundation, 30 E.
33rd St., New York, NY10016; or to
The SPCA of Luzerne County, 524
E. MainSt., Wilkes-Barre, PA18702.
Condolences can be sent to the
family at: www.eblakecollins.com.
Lois C. Rubinstein
September 19, 2011
J
erry L. Washinski, of Wilkes-
Barre, passed away Tuesday, Sep-
tember 20, 2011, at Geisinger Wyom-
ing Valley Medical Center, Plains
Township. Born July 23, 1939, in Al-
den, he was a son of the late John and
Sophie Boyanowski Washinski.
Jerry was a 1957 graduate of New-
port Township High School and
servedinthe U.S. Air Force from1957
to 1961. He was employed as an envi-
ronmental control technician at Cer-
tainteed Corporation for 42 years, re-
tiring in 2001.
He was a member of St. Andrew
Parish, Wilkes-Barre, and the High
Ridge Hunting Club, Bradford Coun-
ty. Jerry was an avid hunter and fish-
erman and enjoyed gardening and
cooking.
He was preceded in death by a
brother, John.
Surviving are his wife, the former
Theresa Zaladonis, with whom he
was married 48 years on June1, 2011;
sons, Leonard and his wife, Cathy,
Brunswick, Ga.; Charles andhis wife,
Micah, Tampa, Fla.; and James, at
home; daughters, Marie Rebuck and
her husband, William, Hegins, and
Janet Washinski, Deltona, Fla.;
granddaughters, Ashley Washinski,
Hyattsville, Md.; Rebecca Rebuck,
Hegins; and Olivia and Alexia Wash-
inski, Tampa, Fla.; as well as a broth-
er, Joseph Washinski, and his wife,
Evelyn, Alden.
Funeral services will be held
at 10:30 a.m. Friday at the
Jendrzejewski Funeral Home, 21 N.
Meade St., Wilkes-Barre, witha Mass
of ChristianBurial at 11a.m. inSt. Pa-
tricks Church, Parrish Street,
Wilkes-Barre, withThe Rev. James E.
McGahagan, pastor, St. Andrew Par-
ish, to be Celebrant. Friends may call
from 6 to 9 p.m. this evening.
In lieu of flowers, donations may
be made to St. Andrew Parish, 316
Parrish St., Wilkes-Barre, PA 18702;
or a charity of the donors choice.
Jerry L. Washinski
September 20, 2011
Joseph Jo-
Jo Gillow, 78,
of Avoca and
formerly of Du-
ryea, passed
away Tuesday,
September 20,
2011, at the
Riverstreet
Manor Nursing Facility after a dif-
ficult battle with cancer. Born in
Duryea, he was a son of the late Jo-
sephandMargaret Gibbons Gillow
and step-son of the late Rose Cieri
Gillow.
He was a member of Nativity of
Our Lord Parish, Duryea, and a
1951 graduate of Duryea High
School.
JoJo held many jobs in his life-
time including mechanic for Kohn
Taxi, service manager for PennAu-
to, owner of Gillows Garage in
the Flats of Scranton, truck driv-
er, machinist and salesman for
Craft Oil Corporation, and owner/
operator of Meineke Discount
Muffler Shop in Wilkes-Barre.
Most of his life revolved around
automobiles, either fixing or rac-
ing them, including racing stock
cars on the local racing circuit. He
has raced at Moc-A-Tek Speedway,
Penn Can Speedway and 5-Mile
Point Speedway. He was racecar
driver of the year and served as a
past president of the Moc-A-Tek
Speedway.
Later in life, his greatest joy was
his first grandchild, Sara. She was
his pumpkin, and there wasnt
anything he wouldnt do for her.
Joe truly enjoyed being a grandfa-
ther to his three grandchildren and
being a father to his two girls.
In retirement he kept busy by go-
ing to the auction with his good
friend, DanBoich, as well as traveling
to Las Vegas, Florida and North Car-
olina. Joe could often be found going
out to lunchor dinner especially with
his pumpkin.
An infant daughter, several aunts,
uncles and cousins preceded him in
death.
His wife, the former Romaine Sa-
dowski, survives him. They were
married for 54 years. Daughters, Ro-
maine and husband Michael Astolfi,
and Jodi Lukowich and companion
Lowell Stoss; and three grandchil-
dren, Sara Lukowich, and Noelle and
Zachary Astolfi, also survive.
His family would like to thank Riv-
erstreet Manor for its outstanding
care and understanding, especially
Barb, Cathy, Ann, Lisa andAisha, and
the rest of the staff of station one.
Thanks alsogotoHospiceCommuni-
ty Care.
Funeral serviceswill be heldat10
a.m. Saturday fromthe Kiesinger Fu-
neral Services Inc., 255 McAlpine St.,
Duryea, with a Mass of Christian
Burial at10:30a.m. at SacredHeart of
Jesus Church, Duryea, with Fr. An-
drewSinnott officiating. Friends may
call from 5 to 8 p.m. Friday evening.
Interment will be held at a later date.
In lieu of flowers, memorial contri-
butions can be made to Riverstreet
Manor, Resident Council, 440 North
River Street, Wilkes-Barre, PA18702.
Online condolences may be made
to www.kiesingerfuneralservices-
.com.
Joseph JoJo Gillow
September 20, 2011
James Jim
Higdon, 64, of
Pittston,
passed away
peacefully
Tuesday after-
noon, Septem-
ber 20, 2011,
with his loving
family by his side. He lived in the
Pittston area for most of his life.
He was born March 27, 1947,
and was a son of the late Ernest B.
Tex Higdon and the late Ruth
Ruganis Higdon Pace.
Jim was preceded in death by
his wife, Donna Jennings Higdon;
brother Francis Higdon; sister
Ruth Selenski; and nephews, Da-
vid and Patrick Williams.
He leaves behind his son, James
Higdon, Wyoming; daughter, Donna
Higdon; brothers, Ernest E.B., Pitt-
ston; Paul and wife Janet, Nanticoke;
and Robert and wife Mary Ellen, Sha-
vertown; sisters Patricia Mikoliczyk,
West Wyoming; Cathy Falzone, Pitt-
ston; Barbara Niezgoda and husband
John, Lehman; Sally Wascavage and
husband, Joseph, Kingston; Sheila
Zambetti, Plymouth; Dolores DiDi
Kirkwood and husband David, Loui-
siana; and Mary K. Ash and husband
Harold, Exeter; as well as many niec-
es and nephews.
A memorial service will be held
at the convenience of the family.
Funeral arrangements are entrust-
ed to the Ruane & Regan Funeral
Home, 18 Kennedy St., Pittston.
James Higdon
September 20, 2011
Joe Lopas-
ky, of Willis,
Texas, lost his
courageous
battle with
cancer Tues-
day, Septem-
ber 20, 2011.
He crossed the
goal line for the last time as God
recruited himfor Heavens football
team.
Joe was born on September 16,
1941, in Cleveland, Ohio, a son to
JohnandAnna Lopasky. He was an
athletic standout at Lake-Lehman
High School in Lehman, lettering
four years in three sports, football,
basketball and baseball. He also
achieved the All-Scholastic award
in several sports at Lake-Lehman.
Joe continued his athletic suc-
cess at the University of Houston,
where he played both football and
baseball. His athletic career was
highlighted with scoring three
touchdowns during the first game
of his sophomore year against Bay-
lor, as well as scoring four touch-
downs in the Tangerine Bowl
against Miami of Ohioandwas vot-
ed MVP of the game.
Joewent ontoplaysemi-proball
for the Scranton Miners and was
recruitedby several NFLteams be-
fore his career ended with a knee
injury. After graduating from the
University of Houston, he taught
and coached football, baseball and
golf for Alief Hastings High
School. He ended his career as
Transportation Director for the
Alief School District.
Joe had a zest for life. He en-
joyed singing and strumming his gui-
tar for everyones enjoyment. After
retiring, his favorite pastime was
tending to his ranch and his cattle.
He was preceded in death by his
parents, JohnandAnna Lopasky; and
father-in-law, O.L. Bud Neelen.
Joe is survivedby his lovingwife of
36 years, Shirley Lopasky of Willis,
Texas; sons, Casey Joseph Lopasky
and wife Cari, of Kyle, Texas, and Co-
dy Lawrence Lopasky and wife
Jaime, of Katy, Texas; sister, Patricia
Brooks and husband, Ronald, of Leh-
man; brothers, Richard Lopasky and
wife, Bonny, of Spring Hill, Fla., and
Bill Lopasky of Lehman; mother-in-
law, Ardell Neelen, of Willis, Texas;
as well as many nieces and nephews,
and many wonderful friends.
Visitation will be held from 6 to 8
p.m. Friday at the Schmidt Funeral
Home Chapel in Katy, Texas. Mass
will be celebrated at 1:30 p.m. Satur-
day at St. Bartholomew Catholic
Church in Katy, Texas, with the Rev.
John Kha Tran, celebrant. Interment
will be held in Katy Magnolia Ceme-
tery.
Serving as pallbearers will be
Casey Lopasky, Cody Lopasky, Ri-
chard Lopasky, Mike Hoover, Ron
Brooks, and Phil Felton.
Those wishing to make memorial
gifts may do so to the American Can-
cer Society, P.O. Box 570127, Hous-
ton, TX77257; or to the University of
Houston Alumni Association, P.O.
Box 230345, Houston, TX 77223.
Funeral services held under the di-
rection of the Schmidt Funeral
Home, 1508 East Ave, Katy, Texas
77493. (281) 391-2424.
Joe Lopasky
September 20, 2011
Joseph Ora-
vec, 87, of
Wilkes-Barre
Township,
passed away
Tuesday, Sep-
tember 20,
2011, at the Lit-
tle Flower Ma-
nor in Wilkes-
Barre. He was born in Wilkes-
Barre Township on October 31,
1923, a son of the late Andrew and
Anna Fedor Oravec.
He attended Wilkes-Barre
Township High School. Mr. Ora-
vec was formerly employed by Mo-
tor Twins Ford and in the local
shoe industry, andhe was later em-
ployed as a nurses aide at the Val-
ley Crest Nursing Home prior to
his retirement. He was a member
of St. Marys Byzantine Catholic
Church, North Main Street in
Wilkes-Barre.
Joseph loved working on cars,
gardeningandrides inthe country,
and he loved his dog, Angel.
He was preceded in death by his
brothers, John and Andrew Oravec;
and by his sister, Mary Oravec.
Surviving are his wife of 46 years,
SusanHavrilosinOravec; nieces, Car-
ol Ann Oravec, Ohio, and Mary Kay
Oravec, Ohio; nephew Michael Ora-
vec and his wife, Sandy, Harrisburg;
as well as brothers-in-law, John Hav-
rilosin, Wilkes-Barre Township, and
Michael Havrilosin and his wife, Ma-
ry Margaret, Wilkes-Barre.
Funeral services will be held at
9:15 a.m. Saturday morning from the
Nat &Gawlas Funeral Home, 89Park
Ave., Wilkes-Barre, withDivineLitur-
gy to follow at 10 a.m. in St. Marys
Byzantine Catholic Church, 695 N.
MainSt., Wilkes-Barre. TheVeryRev.
James G. Hayer, pastor, will officiate.
Interment will be inthe ParishCeme-
tery, Dallas. Friends may call from 5
to 7 p.m. Friday at the funeral home.
Parastas Services will be held at 7
p.m. Friday evening.
Online condolences may be sent to
www.natandgawlasfuneralhome-
.com.
Joseph Oravec
September 20, 2011
LINDA JEAN SZAFRAN, 62, of
Ashley, passed away Tuesday, Sep-
tember 20, 2011, at the Wilkes-
Barre General Hospital. She was
born December 3, 1948, in Wilkes-
Barre, a daughter of Helen Stencik
of Wilkes-Barre and the late Stan-
ley Stencik. She was preceded in
deathbyher husband, EdwardSza-
fran. Surviving, in addition to her
mother, are her companion, Glen
Herbert; sons, Raymond Masi,
Wilkes-Barre, and Paul Masi,
Wilkes-Barre; daughter, Susette
Geissler, and her husband, Keith,
Dallas, Texas; grandchildren, Lor-
ianne Masi, Bear Creek, and Maya
Masi, Hackettstown, N.J.; sister,
Anna Sia, Marlton, N.J.
Relatives and friends may call
from 1 to 3 p.m. Friday at the Ma-
ple Hill Cemetery Chapel, 68 E. St.
Marys Road, Hanover Township.
Condolences can be sent to the
family at www.eblakecollins.com.
More Obituaries, Page 2A
JOSEPH V. SURIANO, 51, of
Pine Street, Pittston, died Sunday,
September 18, 2011, at home. Born
in Wilkes-Barre, he was a son of
Gerry Sudnick Suriano, Pittston,
and the late Frank Rocky Suria-
no. He was a life resident of Pitt-
stonandwas a graduate of Pittston
Area High School, class of 1978,
and Wilkes-Barre Vo-Tech. Joe will
be greatly missedby his family and
all who knew him. Surviving, be-
sides his mother, Gerry, are broth-
ers, Anthony Bananas Suriano and
wife Denise, Springbrook, and
Frank Suriano and wife Nancy,
Pittston; sisters, Debra Suriano
Gildea, Florida, and Michele Sur-
iano Kohowitz and husband Bud-
dy, Old Forge; and nieces, neph-
ews, aunts and uncles.
Funeral services will be pri-
vate and at the convenience of the
family from the Yeosock Funeral
home, 40 S. Main St., Plains Town-
ship.
FRANCES M. LAKOWSKI, 89,
formerly of Stanton Street, Wilkes-
Barre, a guest at Timber Ridge
Health Care Center, Plains Town-
ship, died Tuesday, September 20,
2011.
Funeral arrangements are
pending fromthe Yeosock Funeral
Home, 40S. MainSt., Plains Town-
ship.
C M Y K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 PAGE 7A
N E W S
7
1
2
0
4
1
We Bill Medicare, Medicaid, Blue Cross, Geisinger, Black Lung & most private insurances if qualied.
Expires 10/31/2011
Expires 10/31/2011
Coupon valid if ordered by10/31/2011 INSTALLATION
INCLUDEDWITH PRICE ANYWHERE IN NORTHEASTERN, PA
$21.7 billion merger in 2007
between CVS and Caremark.
George Paz, chairman and
CEO of Express Scripts, told
the lawmakers that pharmacy
benefit managers are success-
ful when our clients save mon-
ey through lower
employer and em-
ployee health premi-
ums and/or reduced
out-of-pocket costs
while at the same
time enhancing safe-
ty and more positive
medical outcomes.
Paz said a com-
bined Express
Scripts and Medco
will be well-posi-
tioned to protect
American families
from the rising cost
of prescription med-
icines. Paz main-
tained the marketplace would
remain highly competitive
post-merger and noted that it
will be up to the Federal Trade
Commission to review the
competitive effects of the
merger.
But Lech and other inde-
pendent pharmacists the Na-
tional Community Pharma-
cists Association is a major op-
ponent of the merger say the
merger is not in the best inter-
ests of consumers. Lech, a
member of the national associ-
ation, operates five pharma-
cies in Tunkhannock, Lacey-
ville, Nicholson, Dushore and
Canton.
During the recent flooding,
Lech said, it took him two
hours one morning to make it
to one of his stores a normal
half hour drive and he ar-
rived to find a man who had
been evacuated standing out-
side, in need of filling the 16
medications he took daily.
Thankfully, I was able to re-
fill his medications. But what
would happen in cases such as
this if pharmacies like mine
disappeared from the commu-
nities that rely on them? Un-
fortunately, pharmacy clos-
ings are happening on a regu-
lar basis, he said.
I am very concerned that
this merger could reduce pa-
tient access while
ultimately leading
to higher drugs
costs due to the
reduction in com-
petition.
Marino weighs in
Also concerned
about the pro-
posed merger is
Rep. Tom Marino,
R-Lycoming
Township, a mem-
ber of the judici-
ary committee.
Lechs stores are
in Wyoming Coun-
ty.
Marino is the author of a
bill, the Preserving Our Home-
town Independent Pharma-
cies Act, that seeks to allow in-
dependent pharmacies to
band together to form nego-
tiating pools in order to them-
selves negotiate with large
pharmacy benefit managers.
At a time when I am fight-
ing to give our independent
community pharmacies the
tools to better compete
against large corporations,
this merger raises a number of
serious questions and con-
cerns, Marino said in a state-
ment. Hometown pharma-
cies are already at a substan-
tial disadvantage when it
comes to negotiating with the
PBMs.
Other lawmakers also have
expressed concerns about the
merger.
MERGER
Continued from Page 3A
Also testifying
Tuesday before the
House Judiciary
Committees sub-
committee on in-
tellectual property,
competition and
the Internet, were
the top executives
from the two com-
panies that wish to
merge.
metropolitan areas in the state
experiencing unacceptably
high smog levels on 35 days.
It foundtwo Pennsylvania ci-
ties ranked in the top 20 large
metropolitan areas in terms of
smog; Philadelphia at fifth
with 29 smog days Pitts-
burgh at 19th with 13 smog
days. Five other medium-sized
metropolitan areas also ranked
in the top 30 in smog days, but
this area was not among them.
With three smog days in
2010, Scranton/Wilkes-Barre/
Hazleton ranked in 104th
place, about halfway down the
list of metropolitan areas the
survey examined. The survey
also found the region has al-
ready had three smog days
this year.
Actually, the environment
in Scranton isnt as bad as
many cities in Pennsylvania,
PennEnvironment spokeswo-
man Meredith Meisenheimer
said Wednesday. But we need
to make sure that every day is a
safe day to breathe.
Meisenheimer said smog
can exacerbate respiratory
problems in children and
adults, and contribute to ad-
verse health in at-risk popula-
tions. Therefore her group be-
lieves pollution levels should
never exceed government
health standards.
Also, her group is pressing
for the EPAtostrengthenclean
air protections in the federal
CleanAir Act, whichwouldcut
smog emissions by 25 percent.
Earlier in September, Presi-
dent Barack Obama rejected
newstandards proposedby the
EPA that would have reduced
emissions of smog-causing
chemicals, explaining it could
burden industry under trying
economic conditions.
According to the PennEnvi-
ronment study, smog levels ex-
ceeded the upgraded stan-
dards on five additional days in
2010.
Meisenheimer said air qual-
ity in Pennsylvania has im-
proved gradually over the
years, but the impact of natural
gas drilling in the Marcellus
Shale could worsen air quality
in the state.
Gas and oil drilling across
the country and our state also
contribute to smog forma-
tion, Meisenheimer said. We
know that oil and gas drilling
causes air pollution, so the last
thing we want to do is roll back
air pollution standards and let
it get worse.
We are now in the early
stages of the Marcellus Shale
era, state Rep. Ken Smith, D-
Dunmore, said Wednesday,
and Imnot saying thats a bad
thing, but we have these com-
panies here extracting our re-
sources, and we in return must
make sure we have the proper
oversight to make sure they do
not compromise our environ-
ment.
SMOG
Continued from Page 3A
WILKES-BARRE City Coun-
cil will vote tonight to approve a
contract with Panzitta Enterpris-
es to complete work on Phase II
of the nearly $15 million Coal
Street Park renovation project.
Council was tovote onthe mat-
ter on Sept. 8, but the meeting
was canceled due to the recent
flooding.
In a press conference on the
project on Sept. 6, Mayor Tom
Leighton said the work to be
done includes upgradingthe soft-
ball fields, redoing the rear park-
ing and resurfacing of the multi-
purpose field to accommodate
football, soccer, field hockey and
lacrosse.
Panzitta was the lowbidder for
the remaining work at $238,872.
New lighting and electrical in-
frastructure will be installed as
well as new fencing and netting
encircling the field. The playing
surface will be resurfaced and
leveled out.
Phase I of the project is nearly
complete and included new bas-
ketball courts, a newplayground,
pavilion and a splash pad. Both
phases of the project total nearly
$1 million in recreational im-
provements andwere fundedbya
federal appropriation.
Council will also vote today on
a change-order for the splash
pad, which was scheduled to
open in the summer but was de-
layed and the original sub-con-
tractor replaced. The change or-
der is for $6,500 and was needed
to pay for additional drawing,
said Marie McCormick, city ad-
ministrator.
Also, council will vote to ap-
prove, on first reading, the 2012
Action Plan for the Community
Development Block Grant Pro-
gram budget at nearly $2.2 mil-
lion.
McCormick said the city re-
ceived about $2 million in 2011
and could face losing as much as
$157,000 heading into 2012 due
to federal cuts.
The CDBG money that comes
to the city is used to pave streets,
get ridof blight andfor other pub-
lic services.
Coal St. Park contract on agenda
By BILL OBOYLE
[email protected]
City Council meets today at 7 p.m.
in council chambers, 4th floor, City
Hall. Public comment is welcome.
W H AT S N E X T
DALLAS TWP. Residents
inquired about ongoing work
near the Transco interstate
pipeline off Hildebrandt Road
and pipeline right-of-way clear-
ings along Sedlar
Lane at a meeting
Tuesday.
Resident Chuck
Borland wanted to
know whether the
state Department
of Environmental Protection
was watching the work being
completed by Williams Field
Services LLC.
Resident Kim Jacobs asked
what permits Williams has re-
ceived to do work and what the
company is allowed to do in the
township.
The company is clearing
right-of-ways for its 33-mile
pipeline project, five miles of
which will be located in the
township. The pipeline will end
at a site1,800 feet away fromthe
Dallas School District campus
and will be accessed through an
entrance off Lower Demunds
Road.
Solicitor Thomas Brennan
said Williams is performing
work the company is entitled to
do, as an agreement between
the township and Williams was
approved by the board in Au-
gust. That agreement contained
stipulations Williams must fol-
low for its pipeline project.
The company also received
land development approval
from the townships planning
commission, which requires
Williams to show proof of all
federal, state and local permits
for the construction.
Supervisor Frank Wagner
said he saw state DEP trucks
driving through the area, but he
wasnt sure if they were as-
signed to the Williams work.
The board announced there
will be a public hearing on Oct.
13 and a special meeting on Oct.
24 at 7:30 p.m. in the municipal
building to discuss a proposed
amendment to the zoning ordi-
nance related to natural gas ac-
tivities.
In other news, Brennan an-
nounced Pear Tree Lane, which
connects the Dallas School Dis-
trict campus with New Goss
Manor, will be closed starting
on Sept. 26.
Township officials met with
district administrators to ob-
serve the traffic pattern of the
four-way intersection near Pear
Tree Lane and deemed the area
to be dangerous to motorists.
Residents press for info on gas line work
Dallas Twp. is site of work
near the Transco interstate
natural gas pipeline.
By SARAH HITE
[email protected]
The board announced there will be a public hearing on Oct. 13 and
a special meeting on Oct. 24 at 7:30 p.m. in the municipal build-
ing to discuss a proposed amendment to the zoning ordinance
related to natural gas activities.
C M Y K
PAGE 8A THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
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EXETER -- Students and staff
in the Montgomery Avenue Ele-
mentary School are safe and all
appropriate precautions are be-
ing taken.
That was the message from
school officials to concerned par-
ents at Tuesdays meeting of the
Wyoming Area School Board.
About a dozen parents raised
questions about the safety of the
school, which took on a fewinch-
es of water inthelower level after
storm drains backed up into the
building during the flooding ear-
lier this month. The water de-
stroyed the maple gym floor and
the carpetinginlower-level class-
rooms.
The carpeting was removed
but the work on the gym floor is
awaiting completion of a bid
process, school officials said. In
the meantime, the lower level is
quarantined from the rest of the
school with a negative air system
similar to the one used in active
hospitals during mold and asbe-
stos abatement, according to ex-
perts from Quad 3 and occupa-
tional environmental and safety
consultants from J. Miller and
Sons Inc.
Tempers flared and question-
ing grew heated at times as par-
ents demanded to know how of-
ten the school is tested for mold
and bacteria, whether it is safe
for students to use a music room
that is in an area between the
flooded lower level and the first
floor, and whether air vented
from the negative air system
could cause concerns for chil-
dren on the playground.
Superintendent Ray Bernardi
and Facilities Director Dave Am-
ico as well as representatives
fromQuad 3 and J. Miller repeat-
edly assured parents that all ap-
propriatesteps arebeingtakento
ensure the safety of students and
staff. In response to the contin-
uedquestioning, boardmembers
suggested that air quality and
moldtestingbe done ona weekly
basis.
It costs $600 or $700 a test,
but Im not concerned about the
money, Im concerned about the
safety of the students, said
board member Frank Casarella.
Amico said he would also take
the additional precaution of clos-
ingthe music roomuntil air qual-
ity and mold testing is done. The
air vented from the negative air
system was intentionally direct-
ed away fromthe playground, he
said, and posed no risk.
Bernardi repeatedly said the
school is safe and every possible
precaution is being taken to en-
sure student and staff safety.
While it is early in the process,
Bernardi estimated it could cost
upto$300,000torepair damage to
Montgomery Avenue. He said he
has submitted an estimate to
Emergency Management and ex-
pects to receive government disas-
ter relief to mitigate the costs.
Wyoming Area officials stand behind schools safety
By JANINE UNGVARSKY
Times Leader Correspondent
YATESVILLE An old con-
troversy was the topic once
again Tuesday night at a Pitt-
ston Area School District
combined work session/
board meeting.
After board member Rob-
ert Linskey announced he
had resigned his position as
the boards representative to
the Luzerne County Tax
Committee because of his
time commitment as the
boards Intermediate Unit
representative, board mem-
ber Martin Quinn moved to
replace Linskey as the IUrep-
resentative.
Solicitor
Joseph Sa-
porito said it
was still his
position that
an appoint-
ment as IU
representa-
tive is for a
term of
three years,
and that any-
one appoint-
ed and then
replaced as the appointed
representative could chal-
lenge the decision to name a
new representative.
After Saporitos explana-
tion, the board voted 5-4 to
replace Linskey with board
member Anthony Guariglia.
The yes votes were cast by
Guariglia, Bruce Knick, Dr.
Ross Latona, Martin Quinn
and Mark Singer. Opposed
were Richard Gorzkowski,
Linskey, Marilyn Starna and
Terrance Best.
Immediately after the
vote, Guariglia resigned as
the boards representative to
the Wilkes-Barre Area Career
and Technical Center.
He was then replaced by
Knick with an 8-1 vote by the
board with Linskey opposed.
In other business, the
board heard a presentation
by Environmental Control
Systems to act as the dis-
tricts environmental con-
sultant and engineer.
Action on the proposed
contract was tabled subject
to board review.
Also, the AMVETS made a
presentation to student Jo-
seph Walsh for placing first
in the state in a citizen com-
petition and to Catherine
Dietrick as Educator of the
Year for the same project.
The boards next meeting
is Oct. 18.
Pittston Area
moves to
replace IU
representative
Board makes Anthony
Guariglia its new rep for
Intermediate Unit.
By WILLIAMBELL
Times Leader Correspondent
Guariglia
resigned as
representa-
tive to the
Wilkes-Barre
Area Career
and Technical
Center.
C M Y K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 PAGE 9A
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EQUIPMENT
WILKES-BARRE Since
about 2006, JohnStone andCath-
erine Tabit dated off and on.
Their relationship began with
a conversation at a local McDo-
nalds restaurant about fishing
and shooting BB guns, Stone tes-
tified Wednesday at his trial.
The relation-
shipendedwith
Tabits death in
October 2010,
allegedly at the
hands of Stone
using a 13-inch
hatchet.
Stone testi-
fied in his own
defense after prosecutors com-
pleted calling witnesses in their
case. Stones attorneys, Erik Din-
gle and Joseph Albert, will con-
tinue calling witnesses this
morning.
Stone said he and Tabit, 37,
were living together until August
2010, when she left him. He said
it was because he would not con-
tinue to buy her things.
Stone triedto rekindle the rela-
tionship, he said, but those at-
tempts were unsuccessful, until
Oct. 22, when Tabit agreed to
spend the weekend with Stone.
Stone, 59, saidhe andTabit got
pizza in Wilkes-Barre and went
shopping, and she stayed the
night.
Stone brought Tabit, 37, to her
Kingston home the next day and
returned to pick her up later that
night.
On their way back to Stones
North Canal Street home in
Shickshinny, Tabit made a phone
call to purchase crack cocaine,
Stone testified. They each
smoked some cocaine, Stone
said, and he went to watch the
movie The Rock while Tabit
played cards on the computer.
A conversation began, Stone
said, with Tabit asking to borrow
$2,000.
I was shocked. She never
asked for that much before,
Stone said, adding that Tabit
wanted to use the money for tat-
toos and marijuana.
Stone said he ignored Tabits
request, and Tabit went to make
dinner shrimp and beans.
Stone said he told Tabit to ask
one of her other boyfriends for
the money, and Tabit answered
with a slap to Stones face.
She said, You wanna fight
me? Stone said. I remember
(her) standing there and then
she was down.
The details of what occurred
after Tabit slapped him, Stone
said, are vague and he didnt re-
member exactly what happened,
only that he must have hit Tabit.
Tell me the next thing you re-
member, Albert asked Stone.
Getting cold from the water,
Stone replied, stating he intend-
ed to commit suicide by jumping
into the Susquehanna River but
then changed his mind.
Stone said he vaguely remem-
bers going to a neighbors house
and speaking to a 911 operator,
and that the next thing he recalls
is being at the state police bar-
racks in Shickshinny.
I remember bits and pieces,
he said.
Assistant District AttorneyJar-
rett Ferentino said what he didnt
understandis that Stonecouldre-
member what movie he was
watching, what was made for din-
ner and how many puffs of co-
caine he took, but that he
couldnt remember the grisly de-
tails to Tabits death.
Youexpect us tobelieve (all of
that) but nothing after you got
slapped? Ferentino said.
Stone testifies in own defense in womans slaying
By SHEENA DELAZIO
[email protected]
Stone
C M Y K
PAGE 10A THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
I am committed to removing all
of the barriers that would prevent
Americans from serving their
country
Leon Panetta
The defense secretary commented this week at a Pentagon news
conference after the U.S. military passed a historic milestone with the
repeal of the ban on gays serving openly in uniform.
Replace property tax
with expanded sales levy
B
udgeting for education is a recurring
nightmare in which school officials
guess at dollar figures in advance of
real data while also battling homeowners
who envision gross increases in property
taxation that most consider unfair and
unconstitutional. The resulting tug-of-war
wastes resources. But there is a solution;
get rid of the school property tax!
The Pennsylvania Coalition of Taxpayer
Associations (with 64 member groups
statewide) has been working for eight
years, supporting a plan to fully replace the
school property tax funding of education
with an equitable tax the current 6 per-
cent sales tax imposed on an expanded list
of goods and services, but not including
life necessities.
The PCTAs plan calls for fully funding
the schools and controlling costs. The
replacement tax would be phased in over a
two-year period to quickly lessen the bur-
den on homeowners and give school direc-
tors a clear and definitive picture of their
expected revenues.
With a formidable coalition supporting
the PCTA plan in the House, this year we
must demand that Harrisburg enact the
plan that fully replaces the property tax
and is fair to all consumers while provid-
ing equal revenue to educate every student
in the state.
Details of the plan are at www.ptcc.us.
Grace Griffin
Shavertown
Our unsung heroes
deserve our gratitude
M
ost communities in Luzerne County
are served by volunteer fire depart-
ments. The volunteers do far more
than fight fires and coordinate fundraisers
to maintain their departments. This was
evident during the two recent storms.
In the Back Mountain alone, countless
homes were saved because of the many
volunteers who worked around the clock
to pump water from basements. Many of
these same volunteers assisted in setting
up the evacuation centers for our neigh-
bors from the Wyoming Valley and then
assisted in cleanup operations.
These men and women volunteer their
time, and they do it with little recognition,
no pay and even without reimbursement
for their gas and other expenses. They
certainly deserve our appreciation.
And to all of the volunteers from the
American Red Cross, the Salvation Army,
the area churches, to those people cooking
meals for the flood victims, lending a hand
to their neighbors in cleanup and debris
removal efforts, and simply pitching in and
going about it because it is the right thing
to do, thank you for restoring our faith in
human nature!
As we read about heroism and offer
thanks to some people who were more
highly visible during the two recent nat-
ural disasters, let us not forget the real
unsung, unrecognized and unpaid heroes
who always are there to help and for all
of the right reasons.
Michelle T. Boice
Harveys Lake
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: [email protected]
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 THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 PAGE 11A
LIVING THROUGH the
Agnes Flood of 1972 was and
still is, in a word, humbling.
Just 21 years old and with
a bright future ahead, I was
living with my dad in an
apartment on West Main
Street, Plymouth, when the Susquehanna
River entered our home, as it did for an esti-
mated 25,000 others.
Still reeling from the death of my mother,
Elizabeth Kraszewski OBoyle, in May 1968,
my dad and I decided a couple of years later
to leave our home and all of its memories on
Reynolds Street high on a hill the river
would never reach and move into an apart-
ment.
It seemed like a good idea at the time.
Life was good for a while. And then we
heard the sirens. Men on bullhorns were
imploring everyone to get to high ground.
The river was rising. The levees were break-
ing. Our lives were changing forever.
We went to my Aunt Bettys house on East
Shawnee Avenue. We often visited there, but
now it was home. The river eventually reced-
ed, leaving behind mud, stink and devas-
tation. Everything we had was lost includ-
ing many sentimental, invaluable items such
as photographs, diplomas, recipes, letters, my
1960s record albums and baseball cards from
the 1950s and 60s.
It was fun at Aunt Bettys house, but it
wasnt really home. Home was gone. My dad
spent much of his time with his companion,
whose name ironically was Agnes, a lovely
woman who cared for my dad for many years.
We were given use of a mobile home and
parked it behind Aunt Bettys house. I still
remember them hauling it up Henderson
Street and resting it on cinder blocks. It was
quite the pad: a couple of bedrooms, a living
room, a kitchen and a bathroom. It was the
scene of several parties that we still talk about
today.
Here we were, my daddy and me, living in
a trailer and faced with the task of putting our
already broken lives back together. Never did
we miss 210 Reynolds St. as much as we did
in the aftermath of Hurricane Agnes.
If we had not moved off the hill, Id still
have all those pictures of my mom and our
family and all of those other things that were
washed downstream when the river raged
through Wyoming Valley.
Since then, family members have given me
some pictures that I treasure. And as for the
other stuff, well, my lettermans jacket from
1966 sure wouldnt fit me today, anyway.
But what I will never get back is that feel-
ing of security, the feeling of safety found in a
mothers arms. The feeling that no matter
what, everything will be okay.
Thats what I lost in June 1972. Thats what
many victims of Agnes lost. Thats what the
flooded-out people of 2011 have lost, too.
No matter how high they build the levees,
there can be no assurance that it wont hap-
pen again. We are forever at risk of losing our
homes, our belongings, our keepsakes.
We can cope with most of those losses. We
can replace some things. We can remember.
But we, at least I, cant feel like I did before
Agnes.
The experience of being a flood victim
encompasses much more than the loss of
material and sentimental items. More than
the tireless effort to clean up, rebuild and
remain to wait for the next river watch.
Its the loss of that feeling of being able to
go to bed without the worry of hearing those
sirens and those men on bullhorns.
The flood of 1972 humbled me, humbled us
all. It stripped away the carefree attitude.
Im older now. There are many more wor-
ries in my life and the lives of all flood vic-
tims.
But the summer of 1972 took away all of
my navet. The brown, muddy, smelly river
water clearly showed me the reality of loss.
And it left an ever-present dread every time
that damn river rises.
Bill OBoyle is a reporter for The Times Leader. He
can be reached via email, at boboyle@timeslead-
er.com, or by calling 970-7218.
Memories remain, but security was washed away
BILL OBOYLE
C O M M E N T A R Y
P
RESIDENT BARACK
Obamas plan to use
$1.5 trillion in newtax-
es to help eliminate
$3.2 trillion in debt over the
next decade makes a lot of
sense.
The Republican response
largely a pledge to block it in
Congress could make the pro-
posal dead on arrival. This lat-
est example of party-based gri-
dlock also increases the heat on
the congressional super-com-
mittee on debt to produce
something useful.
The Republican idea that ba-
lancing the budget and reduc-
ing the debt must come entirely
fromcuts andnot alsofromin-
creasing revenue, closing tax
loopholes and raising taxes on
the rich is irresponsible. It can
be based only on the fact that
the Republicans campaign con-
tributors are the rich, whom
they have pledged to protect
from taxes. This approach plac-
es the debt-cutting burden
squarely on the middle class
and the poor.
ThetrendsincePresident Ge-
orge W. Bushs tax cuts for the
rich and two unfunded wars in
Iraq and Afghanistan has been
for more of Americas wealth to
be concentrated near the top 1
percent of the population while
more Americans are forced to
live below the poverty line.
It is inconsistent with Amer-
ican ideals of fairness and jus-
tice that a Wall Street hedge-
fund manager pay 15 percent
taxonwhat heextracts fromthe
system because his income is
capital gains, while other work-
ingAmericans aretaxedamuch
higher percentage of their wag-
es and salaries.
The bipartisan committee on
reducingthedebt shouldignore
the partisan rhetoric and be
open to Obamas proposals. If
Republicans on or off the super-
committee are not willing to be
evenhandedinattackingthe na-
tions red ink, voters will strike
back hard at the polls next year
as they should.
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
OTHER OPINION: DEBT REDUCTION
Obamas plan:
Share the pain
F
ORMER Pennsylva-
nia Speaker of the
House John Perzel
could lose his
$85,000-a-year state pension
for overseeing a scheme to di-
vert tax money to computers
designed to help Republicans
win elections.
Disgraced former state po-
lice trooper Douglas Sversko,
of Lewisburg, might
keep his $34,000-a-
year pension even
after pleading guilty
Monday to charges
that he exposed
himself on a web-
cam to an undercov-
er agent he thought
was a 13-year-old girl. Whats
the difference?
Pennsylvanias rules on
state pension forfeiture draw
a distinction between those
people who misuse their pub-
lic offices to commit crimes
and those who happen to be
public employees who com-
mit crimes.
Sversko was suspended
without pay the day of his ar-
rest on Feb. 16. Then, at the
age of 43, Sverskowas allowed
to retire from his state police
job after his arrest.
Employed by the state po-
lice for 18 years, Sversko was
approved to receive a $2,901
monthly pension.
Those who forfeit their
rights to a pension still re-
ceive the amount they con-
tributed into the system.
Those, like Sversko, who get
to keep their entire pension,
will receive taxpayer-subsi-
dized retirement payments.
Convicted criminals should
not be eligible for publicly
supported pensions. It makes
no sense that a
person convicted
of a sex offense,
particularly one
involving the po-
tential exploita-
tion of children,
would be reward-
ed with publicly
enhancedretirement benefits.
Sversko is the first state
trooper to be arrested by the
Attorney Generals Office
Child Predator Unit since it
was created in 2005. We hope
this case spurs lawmakers to
reform the employee pension
forfeiture rules in Pennsylva-
nia.
The pension system should
give Sversko the money he
paid into the fund. But under
these obviously inappropriate
circumstances, taxpayers
should not have to subsidize
his early retirement.
The Daily Item
Sunbury
OTHER OPINION: STATE PENSIONS
Equity lacking
in forfeiture rules
Convicted
criminals should
not be eligible for
publicly supported
pensions.
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 THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
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Pu reS ilver,S terling,
Indu stria l & Coin S ilver
A ntiqu eJewelry(Brok en OK)
Dental Gold,Gold Filled
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meanwhile, theres something
called a ticker, a live feed of all
the ongoing activity that also ap-
pears in users news feeds. Its a
kind of Facebook inside Face-
book, if youwill.
By mid-morning, the words
new Facebook quickly became
one of the most discussed topics
onTwitter. Manycommentswere
negative, though some pointed
out that Facebook makes many
changes to its site and people
eventually get usedto it.
Thentherewerethejokes. John
Kovalic from Madison, Wis.,
poked fun at Netflixs recent pub-
lic relations fiasco, tweeting: On
the plus side, at least the new
Facebook isnt calling itself
Qwikface. (Netflix, for those
whomissedit, isfacingabigback-
lash from its subscribers because
it raised prices and renamed its
popular DVD-by-mail service
Qwikster.) Another online crit-
ic likened Facebook to a pop star
whos addicted to cosmetic sur-
gery.
For its part, Facebook has long
asserted that it makes changes to
keep users engaged, and that
those alterations are often based
on user requests. Other tweaks
derive from the companys study
of activity on Facebook and what
it thinks people will enjoy using.
Privacy advocates, meanwhile,
have contended that Facebook
changesitssiteinordertogetpeo-
ple to share as much as possible
about their habits, hobbies and
likes all to give advertisers a
better picture of who to target.
Inreality, itsalittleof both. The
way Facebook sees it, the more
people enjoy using the site, the
more time theyll spendthere.
Thelatestchangesaretailored
at making sure this news feed is
what you want to see, said Mike
Schroepfer, vicepresident of engi-
neering at Facebook.
And, so far, thats beengoodfor
business despite the grum-
blings of a vocal minority of Face-
book users. The company is ex-
pected to bring in $3.8 billion in
worldwide advertising this year
and $5.8 million in 2012, accord-
ing to researchfirmeMarketer.
Facebook is well-aware of per-
haps the biggest downside of be-
ing the worlds largest social net-
work: With so many users, pleas-
ing all of them is difficult.
Schroepfer said the tweaks to the
newsfeedaremeant toappeal toa
broad range of people, whether
they have 15 friends and log in
onceaweekor800andspendfour
hours a day onthe site.
We want to make sure we pro-
vide the right kind of basics to
make sure that the core of Face-
book is sharing and (seeing) the
right kindof things, he said.
Facebook, though clearly king
of social networks, isalsocompet-
ing with Twitter and Google Plus
for attention. As such, the race to
addnewfeatureshasthepotential
to confuse users, said Debra Aho
Williamson, principal analyst at
eMarketer.
FACEBOOK
Continued from Page 1A
ment on Wednesday.
But at least two Luzerne County offi-
cials dont believe federal funds should
be used for the demolition.
Because the building was reported as
being in danger of collapse before the
flood, it was a pre-existing condition,
said Commissioner Steve Urban.
Urban said the commissioners would
be willing to contribute to the cost of the
demolition but would not foot the entire
bill because the county is cash-strapped
and, ultimately, its the citys responsib-
ility.
We had a meeting with Mayor (Tom)
Leighton at the end of June to relate that
information to him and theres been no
response from him to the board of com-
missioners, Urban said.
He shouldhave lookedat the building
in April. Leightons been dragging his
feet in doing his job, Urban said.
Andy Reilly, director of the county Of-
fice of Community Development, said
the county has about $11 million in the
revolving loan fund, and a portion of that
could be used for demolition.
But county Controller Walter Griffith
doesnt think federal disaster funds or
county money should be used to demol-
ish a building that should have been
razedmonths ago. Andhe wrote tofeder-
al officials to drive home his concerns.
Griffith wrote that many people are
concerned that the reason for the decla-
ration of danger of the Hotel Sterling is
that the building is in a disaster area and
that funding would be made available to
CityVest to allow for the demolition at
taxpayers expense.
The CityVest report that was recently
completed and funded by the taxpayers
clearly stated the building was unsafe
and in need of demolition (and a) deter-
mination by the insurance underwriters
just as recent as a month ago has stated
the building should be demolished,
Griffith said.
Griffith said the city should have de-
molished the building and filed a lien
against CityVest. He said the county al-
ready supplied CityVest with $6 million
to preserve and market the building.
State Rep. Eddie Day Pashinski, D-
Wilkes-Barre, disagrees on federal fund-
ing.
We hada flood, andwhether that con-
tributed to moving more quickly on the
solution to that building or not, we still
have to pursue some kind of a safe solu-
tion to that structure. Theres time to go
after the owners legally if they cant com-
ply with what needs to be done, Pashin-
ski said.
He saidhe participatedina conference
call onMonday withLt. Gov. JimCawley
and other officials to discuss local flood-
related issues and the Hotel Sterling was
among the issues he raised.
I think if we canget any state or feder-
al dollars to assist, its worthwhile to pur-
sue, he said.
City spokesman Drew McLaughlin
said an Aug. 16 engineers report recom-
mended that the building be demolished
or rehabilitated within a certain time-
frame and, since then, Leighton has
beenworking withCityVest andcommu-
nicating with the Governors Office on
possible options.
STERLING
Continued from Page 1A
$134.5millioninspendingrequests
for 2012 but only $110.9 million in
expected revenue.
An updated dollar estimate on
the budget gap will be available
next week after managers enter
their revisedbudget requests inthe
countys computerized financial
program, said county Budget/Fi-
nance Chief Joan Pusateri.
County Assessment Director To-
ny Alu warned commissioners
Wednesday that he will need more
certifiedevaluators tostayontopof
new construction and property ad-
ditions, particularly if the real es-
tate market picks up.
Assessment standards recom-
mendonecertifiedevaluator for ev-
ery 10,000 properties.
Alusaidhe shouldhave about 16
evaluators to monitor the countys
168,000 properties, but he has
eight. Commissioners said they
cant provide any additional staff
and lowered his spending requests
in several areas.
I plan on reaching what youre
setting. Im just saying, sooner or
later , Alu said.
Thanks. Get us throughthis cri-
sis and well be good, said Com-
missioner Chairwoman Maryanne
Petrilla.
Sheriff John Gilligans requests
for more funding for overtime and
part-timedeputies wereshot down.
You cant have that, Petrilla
said.
Sheriff worker John Chesko said
thedepartment needs alittlecush-
ion incasethepriceof fuel increas-
es next year.
No cushion! the commission-
ers said in unison.
Commissioners Petrilla and Ste-
phen A. Urban said they will come
up with a balanced budget that
doesnt increase taxes. Commis-
sioner ThomasCooneysaiditspre-
mature to say whether he would
support a taxincrease if he thought
it was the only option.
It was a tough day for the de-
partments. We cut bare bones, and
weve still got more cuts to make.
Its certainly not over, Petrilla said
at the conclusion of the hearings
around 4 p.m.
Werenot goingtoraisetaxes, so
governments going to have to be
smaller. Thats thebottomline, Pe-
trilla said, noting she wont leave
the new home rule government
with a budget that contains pad-
ding.
Urban, acandidateforthecounty
council that will oversee the new
home rule government, com-
plained the outgoing board must
try to figure out howto fund a new
government structure that elimi-
nates many row officers but adds
some newpositions.
Were stuck with doing the
work, and were going to do the
work, Urban said.
Three other county council can-
didates -- Rick Morelli, Sal Licata
and James Bobeck -- attended por-
tions of Wednesdays budget hear-
ings.
Commissioners may also meet
againwithdepartmentsthat still re-
quire significant budget revisions.
Theproposedbudget will beadopt-
edinNovemberandfinalizedinDe-
cember. The new county council
members will have the option to
amend the budget after they take
office in January.
BUDGET
Continued from Page 1A
spending bills.
Many Democrats were upset because
the legislation offsets some of the addi-
tional emergency funding for communi-
ties in Northeast Pennsylvania and else-
where struckby recent storms andflood-
ing withspending cuts of $1.5 billionto a
federal loan program that aids car com-
panies making fuel-efficient vehicles.
Anumber of conservativeRepublicans
thought the legislation still was overly
costly.
Barletta said in a statement Wednes-
day after the vote that he had joined 76
Democrats who sent a letter to House
leadership saying that we support the
Senate version of the bill because it in-
cludes more funding for disaster relief.
Barletta noted Democratic Sen. Bob
Caseyof ScrantonandGOPSen. Pat Too-
meyof Zionsville support the Senate ver-
sion, which garnered enough support
from Republican senators to pass a 60-
vote procedural hurdle.
TheHousebill, does not doenoughto
rebuildthelives of peoplewholost every-
thingtheyown, Barlettasaid. It doesnt
do enough to fund mitigation efforts so
this type of flooding doesnt happen
again. It doesnt do enough to help local
businesses reopenandprotect American
jobs.
Barletta was one of 48 House Republi-
cans who voted against the bill. Just six
House Democrats voted in favor.
But Marino said in a statement after
the vote that he was embarrassed that
the House chose form over substance
and let politics get in the way of helping
the victims of these terrible disasters.
Passage of this measure would have
meant immediaterelief for floodvictims.
That help would have come as early as
the end of next week, Marino said.
He said the House bill provided $774
million by Sept. 30 to the Federal Emer-
gency Management Agency and $226
million to the Army Corps of Engineers.
This measure would have provided
timelyhelp, andthat is what is important
to me, getting resources to affected fam-
ilies, businesses and local governments
immediately, Marino said. This was a
good start.
The Senate disaster relief bill is $6.9
billion, including $804 million that
would go out before the end of the
month.
SenateMajorityLeader HarryReid, D-
Nev., has said he plans to wait for the
House to pass its disaster relief bill, and
then try to approve the Senate version in
place of the House-passed bill and send
that back to the House.
The loss inthe House of the GOPlead-
ership-backed measure puts House Re-
publicans in a more difficult negotiating
position as the end of the fiscal year ap-
proaches and congressional leaders try
to pass both a disaster relief package and
avert a potential government shutdown
that looms if the overarching temporary
spending legislation is not approved.
InformationfromtheAssociatedPress
was used in this story.
BILL
Continued from Page 1A
HAZLETON -- Mayor Joseph
Yannuzzi requested that City
Council allow proposed rental
ordinance 2011-13 to fail in order
to provide opportunity for the
Hazleton Area Landlords Asso-
ciation (HALO) and City Coun-
cil to amend the original ordi-
nance.
The proposed ordinance had
directed that landlords pay a
registration fee of $100 for a
multifamily dwelling and a $50
fee for a one- or two-family
dwelling. An annual occupancy
licensing fee of $25 would also
be levied on each owner after an
inspection of each unit.
Yannuzzi said he had recently
met with association officers
Justine Crego and Michael Gre-
co in response to recently voiced
concerns of the organization.
Although we went through
the document line by line, Yan-
nuzzi said, we werent able to
complete changes to the original
ordinance in time for tonights
meeting.
He said an amended property
rental ordinance would be pre-
sented to council at next
months meeting, after further
discussion between association
and city officials.
Resident Sylvia Thomas asked
that City Administrator Mary
Ellen Lieb provide specific finan-
cial information about revenue
that would be raised by the pro-
posed rental ordinance.
We working on those num-
bers, said Lieb.
In another matter, resident
Thomas commended police
chief Robert Ferdinand on an in-
creased police presence on Alter
Street.
Also, Yannuzzi said Hazleton
was assisting residents of Shick-
shinny by sponsoring a clothing
collection to be delivered to
flood victims from that area.
Yannuzzi said that he believed
that Hazleton would move for-
ward by retaining a spirit of
cooperation and willingness to
help others.
Hazleton mayor asks for time to amend proposed rental property regs
By GERI GIBBONS
Times Leader Correspondent
The next meeting of City Council
will be Oct. 19 at 5:30 pm.
W H AT S N E X T
C M Y K
SPORTS S E C T I O N B
THE TIMES LEADER THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011
timesleader.com
H
e could feel his self-certainty
buckle while his knees began to
quiver, as if someone took that
baseball bat he was holding and used it
to belt him in back of the legs.
He wondered why this strange feel-
ing of anxiety started to overtake him
like a tidal wave, just as Russ Canzler
was about to step into a big-league
batters box for the first time.
Wasnt this the moment hed been
fantasizing about since he was a boy?
The completion of the quest he began
as a baseball star for Hazleton Area
High School? The destination Canzler
always believed he would reach, even
when his old organization kept telling
him he was only halfway there?
Yet, when he entered a game for the
Tampa Bay Rays as a pinch hitter in
Boston last week, Canzler couldnt help
feeling frantic.
My heart was racing, Canzler said.
He knew he had nothing to fear.
The Tampa Bay organization gave
him the chance the Chicago Cubs
wouldnt, promoting Canzler to the
Triple-A level, and he ran with it.
My first year in Triple-A, Canzler
said, I kind of set my sights on prov-
ing I was worthy of all the at-bats they
were giving me.
He has nothing more to prove.
Not after hitting .314, hammering 18
homers, leading the International
League with 40 doubles and driving in
83 runs during his debut Triple-A sea-
son. Not after a year thats already
exceeded his wildest expectations,
where Canzler left behind his Double-A
days with the Cubs and was selected
most valuable player of both the Tri-
ple-A All-Star Game and the whole
International League while leading the
Durham Bulls to the IL playoffs.
Now he has joined a Rays team fight-
ing to make the American League
playoffs.
I would be lying to you to say I was
expecting that, Canzler, 25, said.
Tampa Bay isnt expecting much
from him right now.
His all-star game home run? That
grand slam he hit down in Lehigh
Valley with his first swing upon return-
ing to Pennsylvania as a professional
player? They dont mean much to a
team depending on veterans to reach
the major league postseason.
Canzler was a September call-up to a
red-hot Rays team ready to make a
playoff push, after whittling a 10-game
deficit to just two in the wildcard
standings during the past three weeks.
So Canzler didnt get on the field for
Tuesdays loss at Yankee Stadium, and
spends most of his time talking to Rays
veteran outfielder Johnny Damon and
watching from the bench as Tampa Bay
stars Evan Longoria and B.J. Upton try
carry the teams postseason hopes.
Its definitely tough, Canzler said.
Theres that competitor within you
that wants to be out on the field. At the
same time, I understand what my role
is here. Im extremely fortunate and
blessed to be in this position right now.
Im just grateful for the opportuni-
ty.
His chance to bat came in Fenway
Park, where Canzler overcame his
sudden case of the jitters when he
came back from a two-strike count to
work a walk.
It was awesome, Canzler said. To
do it in a historic ballpark like Fenway,
that was something Ill remember for
the rest of my life.
Hell remember how the magic of the
moment made his faith start to shake.
And Russ Canzler will know how much
getting through it made him feel like
he belongs.
PAUL SOKOLOSKI
O P I N I O N
Major League
nerves even
strike MVPs
Paul Sokoloski is a Times Leader sports
columnist.
any of those things. From there, we
have to get back to what we do posi-
tive.
Berwick has been fairly successful
running the ball except for the Dallas
game.
But in the two games Ive seen
against Crestwood and Dallas there
were two glaring weaknesses.
First, the passing game is out of
sync, as the quarterback and receivers
dont seem to be on the same page all
the time. Plus, there are too many
dropped passes to make it successful
on a consistent basis.
Then there is Berwicks overall
There have been
worse days in Ber-
wick football history.
Not many, but
there have been
times worse than
Saturdays 53-30 loss
at Dallas.
Heck, theres a possibility one can
come this Friday night as Wyoming
Valley West pays a visit to Crispin
Field. The Spartans are rolling and
the Dawgs have been reeling.
The next two weeks are huge,
Berwick coach Gary Campbell said.
We have Valley West, our rival, com-
ing into town and theyre riding high,
3-0. They have arguably one of the
best players in eastern Pennsylvania
(Eugene Lewis).
Well regroup. Im positive with
that. Thats something weve always
done.
The recovery needs to be hastened.
Valley West brings just as many weap-
ons, just as strong of a line and even
more overall speed than Dallas.
Number one, you have to identify
the problem whether its personnel,
whether its schematic, said Camp-
bell, whose team is 1-2. Whether its
Dawgs dealing with a tough road to recovery
JOHN ERZAR
H . S . F O O T B A L L N O T E S
See ERZAR, Page 3B
ATLANTA Just being among
the 30 players at the Tour Cham-
pionshipshouldbeenoughforGeoff
Ogilvy.
Only 16 days ago, Ogilvy was on
the verge of being eliminated from
the FedEx Cup playoffs. Needing a
par-birdie finish at the TPCBoston,
histeeshot onthe17thholefinished
inacrevicebehindarockandhehad
to take a penalty drop.
What followedis still hardtofath-
om.
Ogilvyrolledina20-footerforpar,
thenholeda6-foot birdieputt tonar-
rowly advance to the next playoff
event outsideChicago. Then, hefin-
ished alone in third at Cog Hill a
two-waytiefor thirdwouldnot have
been enough to book a trip to
East Lake.
I definitelywasnt thinkingof be-
ing here when I was in that hole,
Ogilvy saidWednesday. Sothe fact
that I amis pretty nice.
Heis No. 24amongthe30players
who reached the Tour Champion-
ship, andwhilemathematicallythey
all have a shot at the $10 million bo-
nus for winning the FedEx Cup, the
higher seeds have the greater odds.
WebbSimpsonisthetopseed, fol-
lowed by Dustin Johnson, Justin
Rose, Luke Donald and Matt Ku-
char. If any of themwin, they are as-
sured golfs richest prize.
Ogilvys hopes require a little
more math. It starts with him win-
ning, and the odds got even longer
themorehestudiedtheotherscena-
rios that must unfold.
Webb Simpson must finish 17th
or worse, which is probably not go-
ing to happen, you wouldnt think,
Today
1 p.m. to 6 p.m.
Golf Channel
Friday
1 p.m. to 6 p.m.
Golf Channel
Saturday
1 p.m. to 2 p.m.
Golf Channel
2 p.m. to 6 p.m.
NBC
Sunday
Noon to 1:30 p.m.
Golf Channel
1:30 p.m. to 6 p.m.
T V
C O V E R A G E
G O L F
Underdog Ogilvy still in contention
By DOUG FERGUSON
AP Golf Writer
See OGILVY, Page 3B
For thefirst timeall season, JoePaterno
walked into his weekly press conference
without a cane.
Another optiononfieldgoals, perhaps?
Paternos kickingdays endedin2008af-
ter an onside kick
demonstration led to
the Penn State coach
needing hip replace-
ment surgery. So
scratch that out as an
option to rescue the
NittanyLions woeful
special teams.
Despitereturningtheopeningkickoff of
theseasonforatouchdown, theLionshave
had a terrible showing on special teams,
highlightedbyanunsightly1-for-6markon
fieldgoals.
That nearly cost Penn State this past
week against Temple, as the Lions missed
all threefieldgoalsattemptsinthegameas
EvanLewissenta45-yarderwideandham-
mereda36-yarderviolentlyofftherightup-
P E N N S TAT E F O O T B A L L
Lions dealing
with serious
special teams
woes in 2011
Penn State has made just one field
goal so far this season and against
Temple had two kicks blocked.
By DEREK LEVARSE
[email protected]
See PSU, Page 3B
UP NEXT
Eastern
Michigan at
Penn State
Noon, Saturday
TV: ESPN2
WILKES-BARRE Its not necessar-
ily good to have a champion on the
ropes. Thats a lesson that the Delaware
Valley girls volleyball team learned
Wednesday against powerful Holy Re-
deemer.
The Warriors cruised
past the Royals in game
two, andsprintedout to
a 7-0leadingame three.
At that point, Holy Re-
deemers 80-matchwin-
ning streak against
Wyoming Valley Con-
ference opponents appeared in jeopardy.
But as it turned out, it only served to
inspire the four-time defending District
2 Class 2A champions.
With senior middle hitter Allie Gris-
wold leading the way, Holy Redeemer
(6-0) rallied to post a hard-fought 3-1vic-
H . S . G I R L S V O L L E Y B A L L
Royals respond
to challenge
from Warriors
See VOLLEYBALL, Page 6B
3
REDEEMER
1
DELAWARE
VALLEY
By VAN ROSE
For The Times Leader
Lining up a putt and a victory
AIMEE DILGER/THE TIMES LEADER
Holy Redeemer golfers Mariano Medico and Chase Makowski line up their putts during a match against
Pittston Area Wednesday afternoon at Fox Hill Country Club. Redeemer defeated Pittston Area 190-191 in
a match that went down to the fifth golfer. Roundup, Page 6B.
K
PAGE 2B THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
S P O R T S
Butler Drive. Players who are
interested in playing 12U travel ball
but are unable to attend the tryout
should call coach Tony Zancofsky
at 570-668-2299.
Wyoming Valley West Lady Spar-
tans Jr. Basketball League will be
holding registrations for girls
grades 3-6 that reside in the WVW
School District on: Monday, Sep-
tember 26 from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m.,
Wednesday, September 28 from 6
p.m. to 8 p.m., and Saturday,
October 1 from12 p.m. to 2 p.m. a
the Wyoming Valley West Middle
School Gym on Chester Street in
Kingston. The cost is $45 plus a
fundraiser. Applications for coach-
ing and team sponsors will be
accepted at these times. Please
contact Chris at 570-406-3181 or
Mike at 570-762-8038 for addition-
al information.
UPCOMING EVENTS
GAR Soccer Booster Club will be
hosting a Celebrity Bartender
Night at McCarthys Tavern on
Northampton Street in the Heights
WB from 7 p.m. to 11 p.m. on Sat-
urday, September 24. Please come
out and support GAR Soccer. We
have gift baskets 50/50, and many
other prizes to be given away.
Come out and have some fun while
supporting our soccer kids. If there
are any questions or concern,
please contact Maggie Height at
570-574-1329.
Northwest Boys Basketball 14th
Annual Golf Tournament will be
held at Mill Race Golf Course in
Benton Pa. on Saturday, Septem-
ber 24. Registration begins at 7:30
a.m. with tee of at 8:30 a.m. This is
an 18 hole event, even though the
course suffered damage due to
flooding. Four man scramble, $75
per golfer. Any questions please
call Lisa Mazonkey at 570-256-
3414.
The Wyoming Valley West Girls field
Hockey Teamwill be Playing for
the Cure on October 17 at the
Wyoming Valley West stadium in
Kingston. The game will begin at
4:15 against Lackawanna Trail. The
girls will be sporting their pink in
support of breast cancer. Donation
from basket raffles, 50-50 draw-
ing, collections at the gate and
proceeds from our concession
stand will all go to support the
cause. Administration will partici-
pate in a shout-out dressed in
goalie gear. Students, parents and
players will pay $1 to take a shot at
their favorite administrator
MEETINGS
Wyoming Valley Chapters of ASA
Umpires will hold their dinner
banquet Monday, September 26 at
6 p.m. at Konesfals Restaurant in
Edwardsville. Cost of this years
banquet is $10. Call Len Brussock
at 570-817-4503 or Dave Miller at
332-9105 if you plan to attend.
Wyoming Valley West High School
Soccer Booster Club will meet on
TODAY, September 20, at 7 p.m. at
Happys Pizza on Main Street in
Plymouth. Parents of all junior and
senior high soccer players are
welcome and encouraged to at-
tend.
REGISTRATIONS/TRYOUTS
18U College Showcase Teamis
seeking players for 2012 summer
events. We participate in high
exposure events. Athletes serious
about getting to the next level call
570-235-4685.
Dallas Youth Basketball Regis-
tration for our winter basketball
leagues will be held Friday Septem-
ber 23 at Wycallis Elementary
Cafeteria from 6 p.m to 9 p.m. All
girls and boys in grades 3rd
through 8th that reside in the
Dallas School District are welcome.
Any questions please call Scott at
570-675-1324.
Krunch Gold Fastpitch Softball is
seeking a left handed slap hitter
with great speed for fall 2011 and
summer 2012. Prospective player
should be a 2012 or later high
school graduate with good aca-
demic standings and strong out-
field skills. If you are looking for
college exposure, we are the team
to play for in Central, Pa. Very little
local play. Team travels to highly
attended events in Colorado,
Florida, New Jersey, North Car-
olina, and Philadelphia region. We
are also building a guest player list
for 2011-2012. If you would like to
showcase your skills to college
coaches as a Krunch guest player
please contact us. Our staff is
available for private tryouts by
appointment. All inquires will be
kept confidential. Contact coach
Steve Mumma at sonnyrrr@com-
cast.net or call 717-542-6578.
PA fusion Girls Travel Softball Team
will be holding tryouts for the 2012
season this Sunday, September 25
at 12 p.m. for 12U, 14U, and 16U. Age
groups tryouts will be held at the
Nanticoke Little League field. We
offer indoor winter training from
November to March included in
team registration. If you cant
make this date or have any ques-
tions call Mark at 570-902-5198.
The Valley Regional Warriors 12U
Travel Teamwill hold a tryout this
Saturday at 3 p.m. at the Freedom
Park softball complex in Drums.
The tryout will be held on Field 3
of the complex located at 413 W.
Bulletin Board items will not be
accepted over the telephone. Items
may be faxed to 831-7319, emailed to
[email protected] or 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
$
24
95
includes green fees & cart
Sat-Sun & Holidays
Monday-Friday
Golf 18 Holes
Golf 18 Holes
$
34
95
includes green fees & cart
Rated by Golf Digest
18 Golf Course Road, Sugarloaf, PA
(570)-384-4097
www.sugarloafgolfclub.com
Expires 12-1-11. Must present coupon.
One per person.
7
0
9
6
4
2
Call 570-489-5969 or 570-840-3939
R & S BUILDERS
FromTopTo Bottom
WE DO IT ALL
Remodeling Additions Kitchens
Plumbing, Electrical, Masonry
From Footers To Crown Molding
Established 1978
General Contractor
PA#036364
BASEBALL
Favorite Odds Underdog
American League
TWINS 8.5 Mariners
Rangers 8.5 AS
Angels 8.5 BLUE JAYS
INDIANS 9.0 White Sox
TIGERS 9.0 Orioles
YANKEES 9.0 Rays
National League
CARDS 9.0 Mets
PHILLIES 8.0 Nationals
ASTROS 9.0 Rockies
DODGERS 6.5 Giants
NFL
Favorite Points Underdog
Sunday
BENGALS 1.5 49ers
Patriots 9 BILLS
SAINTS [4] Texans
EAGLES NL Giants
BROWNS 3 Dolphins
TITANS 7 Broncos
Lions 3.5 VIKINGS
PANTHERS 3 Jaguars
CHARGERS 14.5 Chiefs
Jets 3.5 RAIDERS
Ravens 3.5 RAMS
BUCS 1 Falcons
Cards 3 SEAHAWKS
Packers 3.5 BEARS
Steelers 10.5 COLTS
Monday
COWBOYS NL Redskins
College Football
Favorite Points Underdog
CINCINNATI 7 NC State
Friday
BYU 3 C Florida
Saturday
OHIO ST 15 Colorado
DUKE 10 Tulane
SYRACUSE 3 Toledo
E CAROLINA 13 Uab
S FLORIDA 28 Utep
ILLINOIS 13 W Michigan
RUTGERS 5 Ohio U
PENN ST 28.5 E Michigan
MIAMI-FLORIDA 13 Kansas St
Smu 22 MEMPHIS
MARYLAND 9 Temple
MICHIGAN ST 22 C Michigan
Georgia 9.5 MISSISSIPPI
MIAMI-OHIO 6 Bowling Green
Army 3 BALL ST
Virginia Tech 19 MARSHALL
ALABAMA 13 Arkansas
WASHINGTON 3 California
Lsu 5 W VIRGINIA
MICHIGAN 10 San Diego
St GEORGIA TECH 5 N Carolina
Florida 16.5 KENTUCKY
Notre Dame 5.5 PITTSBURGH
CLEMSON PK Florida St
SAN JOSE ST [10] New Mexico St
Fresno St 6 IDAHO
Connecticut 10 BUFFALO
OREGON ST 3 Ucla
TEXAS TECH 20 Nevada
S CAROLINA 16 Vanderbilt
MISS ST 18 La Tech
BAYLOR 18 Rice
VIRGINIA 3 Southern Miss
TEXAS A&M 3 Oklahoma St
Nebraska 23 WYOMING
OKLAHOMA 20.5 Missouri
UTAH ST 6.5 Colorado
St BOISE ST 29.5 Tulsa
Oregon 14 ARIZONA
ARIZONA ST 2.5 Usc
AUBURN 32 Fla Atlantic
IOWA 18 UL-Monroe
TROY 12 Middle Tenn St
Indiana 7.5 NORTH TEXAS
FLORIDA INTL 17 UL-Lafayette
AME RI C A S L I NE
By Roxy Roxborough
CIRCULAR REPORT: On the NFL board, the Texans - Saints circle is for Houston
RB Arian Foster (questionable). On the college football board, the Florida State -
Clemson circle is for Florida State QB E.J. Manuel (questionable); the New Mexico
State - San Jose State circle is for New Mexico State QB Andrew Manley (doubtful).
For the latest odds & scores, check us out at www.americasline.com. NO LINE
REPORT: On the NFL board, there is no line on the Eagles - Giants game due to
Philadelphia QB Michael Vick (probable/questionable); there is no line on the
Cowboys - Redskins game due to Dallas QB Tony Romo (probable/questionable),
WR Dez Bryant (probable), WR Miles Austin (out), RB Felix Jones (probable).
BOXING REPORT: In the WBO welterweight title fight on November 12 in Las
Vegas, Nevada, Manny Pacquiao is -$800 vs. Juan Manuel Marquez +$550
A special Thursday afternoon live programtakes place at The Mo-
hegan Sun at Pocono Downs with a 1 p.m. post. If you are a fan of
young horses, then today is a great day for you with most of the card
sprinkledwithtwo-year olds (of all genders) inaction. Its the first leg
a new late closer, The Equinox Series, should be an exciting day of
horse racing action for sure.
BEST BET: Verdad (6th)
VALUE PLAY: Mcturesque (12th)
POST TIME 1:00 p.m.
All Races One Mile
First-$15,000 The Equinox Series
7 So Easy Baby A.McCarthy 1-7-3 Lives up to the name 2-1
1 Malinka M.Kakaley 6-5-3 Drops from PASS company 3-1
2 Fire In The Night G.Napolitano 4-5-2 Does retain Napolitano 5-1
3 Mcnickels Mcdimes J.Pavia 1-7-6 Pavia picks up Teague horses 7-2
5 Fast Talking Emma M.Simons 7-4-2 Slows down 6-1
6 Twoblisstwo D.Ingraham 4-3-4 Rough spot for maiden 12-1
4 Slaying The Field T.Buter 7-3-5 Carved up 10-1
Second-$9,700 Cond.Pace;maidens
1 Mr Govianni Fra M.Simons 2-6-4 Got needed start, ready now 4-1
3 Release The Terror M.Kakaley 4-2-4 Takes all the money with Matt 5-2
2 Stirling Advocate T.Buter 4-4-2 Been close 3-1
4 Live On A.McCarthy 5-6-3 Tends to tire at the end 9-2
5 Jedi Hanover J.Pavia 3-8-6 Been racing all over the map 6-1
8 Arts Bad Boy G.Napolitano 6-4-6 Not shown much 12-1
6 Chips Galore A.Napolitano 5-4-4 2nd time starter 10-1
7 JBs Beach Iscape T.Lancaster 3-3-4 Missed almost a month 15-1
Third-$15,000 The Equinox Series
5 Mcsauna A.McCarthy 6-1-3 McCarthy has live drives 2-1
2 Arodasi J.pavia 2-1-5 Pavia own-trains-reins 7-2
6 Heathers Delight T.Buter 1-6-7 Confidence booster in win 5-2
4 All These Things G.Napolitano 1-3-3 Canadian import 5-1
3 Campanile M.Kakaley 1-6-5 Stakes placed filly 10-1
1 Magic Starlight E.Neal 6-3-4 Eric Neal with rare PD steer 6-1
Fourth-$15,000 The Equinox Series
4 Catalyst J.Pavia 7-5-2 No Stormin Normand here 2-1
1A Blockbuster Hanover G.Napolitano 5-3-3 Better half of the entry 7-2
2 On The Podium M.Simons 1-3-5 Broke maiden with Simons up 5-2
6 Muscle Source D.Ingraham 2-2-3 Hit board 4 out of 5 times 6-1
3 Learn My Lesson T.Buter 5-1-6 Cantab Hall youngster 5-1
1 Act Out Hanover M.Kakaley 4-3-6 Still winless 7-2
2A Donatello A.McCarthy 3-7-5 Bad habits 5-2
5 The Big Thea Thea F.Fladen 3-6-7 Not so large 10-1
Fifth-$15,000 The Equinox Series
4 Sunset Magic M.Kakaley 5-3-1 Class of the field scores 2-1
6 Playwear Hanover G.Napolitano 6-3-1 Fights them off for the place 5-2
3 Pilgrims Honey J.Pavia 6-1-3 Well bred lady 7-2
5 Idonette F.Fladen 1-7-5 Comes from sharp barn 6-1
2 Marion Mon Ami A.McCarthy 2-6-8 Has to stay on feet 10-1
1 Transgressive M.Simons 4-1-3 Lacks late rally 5-1
1A Enfilade T.Buter 4-5-2 Fills out the entry 5-1
Sixth-$15,000 The Equinox Series
4 Verdad M.Kakaley 3-1-1 Chalk parade rolls on 5-2
8 E Z Noah T.Buter 2-1-6 Has speed to overcome post 4-1
1 Allstar Blues J.Pavia 3-3-2 Race is strong for second 3-1
6 No Foreign XChange B.Connor 5-1-6 Grabs a share 6-1
7 Mistys Delight A.McCarthy 4-3-2 Meadows invader 12-1
5 Ethan Hanover G.Napolitano 6-6-5 Done little since July 9-2
2 Powerful Pilot M.Simons 8-4-5 Out of boost 10-1
3 Nabber Again H.Parker 5-7-5 Fooling no one 15-1
Seventh-$9,700 Cond.Pace;n/w $4,200 last 5
6 Cheyenne Oxe M.Kakaley 7-3-5 Robinson barn the difference 3-1
1 Pantastic Guy A.Napolitano 2-7-9 Nice qualifier for this 7-2
3 Boiler Bob The QB A.McCarthy 5-4-3 Keeps roughing it 9-2
9 Mountain Rocket M.Romano 4-2-6 Matt having a good week 8-1
7 All Powerful G.Napolitano 3-1-4 New York shipper 15-1
4 Onthewingsofnangel T.Buter 1-7-6 New one from Ford 4-1
2 Predator DVM M.Signore 6-8-1 Best work done at the fairs 6-1
5 South Coast J.Pavia 5-5-5 Wrong part of town 10-1
8 Arizona Liar D.Ingraham 8-6-7 Beaten by 38 lengths last 3 20-1
Eighth-$15,000 The Equinox Series
3 Motley Fool J.Pavia 5-3-x Breaks the ice 5-2
7 Bullet Bob T.Buter 8-2-3 Drops down from Babic Final 9-2
6 Lindwood Player A.McCarthy 8-2-3 Versatile pacer 3-1
2 Fashion Boots G.Napolitano 2-6-1 Has missed some time 7-2
1 Terryang Fra M.Kakaley 7-3-7 Just looking for a flat mile 8-1
4 City Image D.Ingraham 2-1-2 Marks 11th start of the 2011 6-1
5 Who Dat Love B.Connor 5-3-8 No kisses in sight 12-1
Ninth-$9,700 Cond.Trot;n/w $4,000 last 5
1 Berndt Energy G.Napolitano 3-9-6 Jogger from the pole 3-1
3 Stogie Hanover A.McCarthy 7-3-9 Completes the exacta 7-2
5 Perfect Chance M.Simons 1-7-9 Dangerous player if on gait 4-1
2 Look Closer J.Parker 6-5-2 Jack Parker in for the drive 8-1
4 Marion Matilda G.Wasiluk 8-3-9 Lightly raced 5yr old 10-1
6 South Jersey Honey S.Reinsenweaver 7-3-6 Credit Winner mare 6-1
7 Maple Point M.Romano 7-5-3 Final qtrs are pedestrian 9-2
8 Wildfire Bo W.Mann 7-6-6 Back out of claimers 15-1
9 Detech Tn.Schadel 8-6-9 Well back 20-1
Tenth-$15,000 The Equinox Series
1 Slippery Sam G.Napolitano 1-1-1 Knows where winner circle is 5-2
4 Wahine T.Buter 4-1-1 Has the talent 7-2
6 Back To The West M.Kakaley 3-3-1 Been burning some money 3-1
2 Gotta Go Hanover J.Pavia 3-5-3 Superfecta player 9-2
3 Shady Breeze M.Simons 3-1-6 Homebred pacer 6-1
5 Eastwood Blue Chip A.Napolitano 7-9-4 Walloped last couple 12-1
7 Fly Away D.Ingraham 2-1-5 Clipped 8-1
Eleventh-$15,000 The Equinox Series
4 Delicious M.Kakaley 1-2-2 Eats up the competition 2-1
2 Keystone Tempo Tn.Schadel 1-2-4 Done well for team Schadel 3-1
1 Arent I Hanover J.Pavia 1-8-2 Was stout in Chester score 7-2
6 Pilgrims Elan M.Simons 4-3-3 Has shown some versatility 10-1
3 Alegrion F.Fladen 3-6-4 Frode making a few drives 5-1
5 Angevine T.Buter 4-4-5 Done by the half mile marker 6-1
Twelfth-$15,000 The Equinox Series
2 Mcturesque H.Parker 1-8-6 Parker gets nice mount 9-2
3 Simons Artist T.Curtin 3-2-1 In the picture 7-2
5 Bid Quick J.Pavia 1-3-3 Another Teague trainee 3-1
7 Prudence Jolt G.Napolitano 6-5-5 Not worthy of 5-2 on the ml 5-2
6 In Front Charlie A.McCarthy 9-1-1 Best work done at the Ocean 8-1
4 Newspeak M.Simons 6-7-6 No good news to report 12-1
1 Della Cruise M.Lancaster 4-2-7 Cant keep up 6-1
Thirteenth-$15,000 The Equinox Series
2 I Am Passionate M.Kakaley 8-1-6 Dominates 2-1
6 Lotta Dream J.Pavia 1-2-2 Crushed lesser 7-2
4 Love You Bye A.Napolitano 2-6-3 Quick off the wings 5-2
5 Little Native Girl T.Buter 2-4-4 Heavily raced 2yr old 5-1
3 Ashlees Wedding G.Napolitano 4-3-3 Maiden has banked cash 6-1
1 Quiken My Pulse A.McCarthy 1-5-4 One more race to go 10-1
Fourteenth-$9,700 Cond.Trot;maidens
7 Struttin Conway G.Napolitano 2-5-3 Completes late double 3-1
4 Lady Love Hanover A.Napolitano 4-2-2 Brother ANap takes over 4-1
2 Dreamnwillie M.Kakaley 2-4-3 Longtime maiden 7-2
5 Wisenheimer M.Simons 2-x-x Marks his debut 8-1
3 Alexanderthelindy A.McCarthy 3-8-4 Showing :31 last qtrs 9-2
1 Maxine The Mighty Z.Kaiser 2-4-5 Invades from Chester 6-1
8 Mr Orlando J.Groff 2-6-5 Groffs lone steer 10-1
9 Rocket Master H.Parker 6-6-6 Never in it 15-1
6 Stay All Day R.Petitto 5-6-5 See you tomorrow 20-1
On the Mark
By Mark Dudek
For the Times Leader
L O C A L
C A L E N D A R
Today's Games
H.S. FIELD HOCKEY
Elk Lake at Montrose
Tunkhannock at Hanover Area
GAR at Pittston Area
Northwest at Berwick
H.S. BOYS SOCCER
Hanover Area at Berwick, 3:30 p.m.
Wyoming Area at MMI Prep
GAR at Nanticoke
Meyers at Wyoming Seminary
Hazleton Area at Lehighton
H.S. GIRLS VOLLEYBALL
(4:15 p.m. unless noted)
Wyoming Area at MMI
Lake-Lehman at Nanticoke
GAR at Hanover Area
COLLEGE FIELD HOCKEY
Neumann at Kings, 7 p.m.
MEN'S GOLF
FDU-Florham at Kings, 1 p.m.
MEN'S SOCCER
Kings at Penn State-Altoona, 7 p.m.
WOMEN'S VOLLEYBALL
Wilkes at Marywood, 7 p.m.
W H A T S O N T V
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
8 p.m.
ESPN N.C. State at Cincinnati
GOLF
9 a.m.
TGC European PGA Tour, Austrian Open, first
round, at Atzenbrugg, Austria
1 p.m.
TGC PGA Tour, TOUR Championship, first
round, at Atlanta
2:30 a.m.
TGC LPGA, The Solheim Cup, first round, at
Dunsany, Ireland
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL
1:30 p.m.
SNY N.Y. Mets at St. Louis
7:00 p.m.
CSN Washington at Philadelphia
YES --- Tampa Bay at N.Y. Yankees
NHL
7:00 p.m.
NHL --- Preseason, Chicago at Pittsburgh
PREP FOOTBALL
7 p.m.
FSN Colerain (Ohio) at Middletown (Ohio)
SOCCER
11 p.m.
ESPN2 Womens national teams, exhibition,
U.S. vs. Canada, at Portland, Ore.
WNBA BASKETBALL
7 p.m.
ESPN2 Playoffs, conference finals, game 1, At-
lanta at Indiana
9 p.m.
ESPN2 Playoffs, conference finals, game 1,
Phoenix at Minnesota
Copyright 2011 World Features Syndicate, Inc.
T R A N S A C T I O N S
BASEBALL
American League
OAKLAND ATHLETICSAgreed to terms with
manager Bob Melvin on a three-year contract.
National League
ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKSFired minor league
field coordinator Chad Kreuter. Named Jeff Pico mi-
nor leaguefieldcoordinator andMel Stottlemyremi-
nor league pitching coordinator.
FOOTBALL
National Football League
GREEN BAY PACKERSSigned DL Johnny
Jones to the practice squad.
KANSASCITYCHIEFSPlaced RBJamaal Char-
les on season-ending injured reserve. Signed WR
Jeremy Horne from the practice squad. Signed OL
Lucas Patterson to the practice squad.
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTSPlaced C Dan Kop-
pen and DL Myron Pryor on injured reserve. Re-
signed DL Landon Cohen and DB Phillip Adams.
NEW YORK JETSSigned LB Matthias Berning
and WR Scotty McKnight to the practice squad.
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
CHICAGO BLACKHAWKSAssigned F Phillip
Danault and F Mark McNeill to their junior clubs.
COLUMBUSBLUEJACKETSSigned FR.J. Um-
berger to a five-year contract extension through the
2016-17 season. Released FWade MacLeod and F
Mike Thomas. Assigned F Michael Chaput to Sha-
winigan (QMJHL), F Boone Jenner to Oshawa
(OHL), F Dalton Smith to Ottawa (OHL), F Lukas
Sedlak to Chicoutimi (QMJHL), D Brandon Archi-
bald to Saginaw(OHL), DAustin Madaisky to Kam-
loops (WHL) and G Mathieu Corbeil to Saint John
(QMJHL).
DETROIT RED WINGSC Mike Modano an-
nounced his retirement.
COLLEGE
GEORGETOWNNamed Zach Samol mens as-
sociate head soccer coach.
JOHN JAYNamed Chris Weeks womens tennis
coach.
RUTGERSNamed Keith Cromwell mens assist-
ant lacrosse coach.
VIRGINIANamed Eric Baumgartner associate
athletics director for compliance.
H A R N E S S
R A C I N G
Pocono Downs Results
Tuesday Sep 20, 2011
First - $15,000 Trot 1:56.1
4-Justherighttouch (Ma Kakaley) 12.20 5.40 3.80
2-Tameka Seelster (Jo Pavia Jr) 2.80 2.20
6-Casanova Lindy (An Napolitano) 3.20
EXACTA (4-2) $55.60
TRIFECTA (4-2-6) $291.60
SUPERFECTA (4-2-6-7) $1,254.20
Second - $9,700 Pace 1:53.1
1-Hanks Kid (Ge Napolitano Jr) 19.20 5.40 5.00
7-Goggles Paisano (Ty Buter) 5.00 3.60
2-Premier Flash (An Napolitano) 3.00
EXACTA (1-7) $76.00
TRIFECTA (1-7-2) $262.40
SUPERFECTA (1-7-2-ALL) $332.20
DAILY DOUBLE (4-1) $79.60
Third - $9,800 Trot 1:56.4
5-Foxy Lady De Vie (Ge Napolitano Jr) 3.20 2.10
2.10
3-Peace Bridge (To Schadel) 3.20 2.20
2-Twocarlane (Ji Taggart Jr) 3.00
EXACTA (5-3) $10.00
TRIFECTA (5-3-2) $34.60
SUPERFECTA (5-3-2-1) $531.80
Fourth - $10,000 Pace 1:55.0
3-Bungleinthejungle (Ge Napolitano Jr) 6.20
4.40 2.20
1-Real Liberator (Ma Kakaley) 15.40 6.80
4-Steuben Jumpinjack (Mi Simons) 6.40
EXACTA (3-1) $47.40
TRIFECTA (3-1-4) $702.60
SUPERFECTA (3-1-4-ALL) $298.00
Fifth - $9,700 Trot 1:58.0
8-Like A Lexis (Ji Taggart Jr) 29.20 9.40 8.80
1-Wingbat (Ma Kakaley) 6.40 4.60
5-Thors Hammer (Mi Simons) 6.40
EXACTA (8-1) $195.20
TRIFECTA (8-1-5) $1,898.00
SUPERFECTA (8-1-ALL-ALL) $908.60
PICK 3 (5-3-8) $146.80
Sixth - $22,000 Pace 1:53.2
5-All Heart Gal (Mi Simons) 34.80 13.60 5.60
2-Ideal Nectarine (Ty Buter) 5.00 2.80
6-Phyleon (Ge Napolitano Jr) 2.10
EXACTA (5-2) $160.20
TRIFECTA (5-2-6) $1,084.80
SUPERFECTA (5-2-ALL-ALL) $257.40
Seventh - $12,000 Trot 1:57.2
3-Thekeptman (Ma Kakaley) 4.60 3.60 2.80
7-Fortissimo (Ty Buter) 4.60 3.00
8-Lord Burghley (An Napolitano) 5.60
EXACTA (3-7) $32.00
TRIFECTA (3-7-8) $169.60
SUPERFECTA (3-7-8-ALL) $206.60
Eighth - $14,000 Pace 1:53.4
3-Pandapocket (Mi Simons) 13.40 4.60 3.80
6-Expect Success (Ho Parker) 4.40 4.80
2-The Pan Flamingo (Ma Romano) 2.10 2.10
EXACTA (3-2) $20.40
EXACTA (3-6) $66.20
TRIFECTA (3-2-6) $115.20
TRIFECTA (3-6-2) $237.00
SUPERFECTA (3-2-6-9) $1,355.40
Ninth - $14,000 Pace 1:51.2
2-Drive All Night (An Napolitano) 4.40 3.00 2.20
5-Takeshigemichi (Ge Napolitano Jr) 2.60 2.60
1-Heart Of Rocknroll (Ho Parker) 3.40
EXACTA (2-5) $12.00
TRIFECTA (2-5-1) $60.20
SUPERFECTA (2-5-1-4) $178.40
PICK 4 (5-3-3-2 (3 Out of 4)) $12.20
Tenth - $24,000 Pace 1:52.1
7-B Lo Zero (An Napolitano) 4.60 3.40 2.20
8-Triple Major (Ho Parker) 7.60 2.80
6-Sleek Hunter (Ge Napolitano Jr) 2.10
EXACTA (7-8) $35.60
TRIFECTA (7-8-6) $59.40
SUPERFECTA (7-8-6-2) $439.60
Scratched: Mcsocks
Eleventh - $12,000 Trot 1:58.3
1-Sabana Hanover (Ma Romano) 50.00 13.60
3.80
9-Cassini Hall (Jo Pavia Jr) 6.20 3.40
4-Marion Monaco (Ma Kakaley) 2.40
EXACTA (1-9) $125.60
TRIFECTA (1-9-4) $890.40
SUPERFECTA (1-9-4-5) $3,370.80
Twelfth - $4,800 Pace 1:54.4
4-Universal Dream N (Ge Napolitano Jr) 6.60
3.80 3.20
8-Mr Socks (Jo Pavia Jr) 11.00 6.20
3-Cannae Rocky (To Schadel) 5.00
EXACTA (4-8) $96.00
TRIFECTA (4-8-3) $533.80
SUPERFECTA (4-8-3-6) $2,339.40
PICK 3 (7-1-4) $152.00
Thirteenth - $9,700 Trot 1:57.1
2-Lost In The Fog (Ma Romano) 10.20 4.00 3.20
4-Smooth Muscles (Ge Napolitano Jr) 2.60 2.10
3-Mms A Player (Jo Pavia Jr) 2.80
EXACTA (2-4) $42.60
TRIFECTA (2-4-3) $121.80
SUPERFECTA (2-4-3-6) $361.00
Scratched: Techaway
Fourteenth - $9,700 Pace 1:53.4
4-Quickpop (Ty Buter) 16.40 8.80 5.40
9-Out To Kill A (Ma Romano) 7.40 10.60
6-Powered By Zeus (Ma Kakaley) 3.20
EXACTA (4-9) $115.80
TRIFECTA (4-9-6) $396.00
SUPERFECTA (4-9-6-ALL) $449.40
Fifteenth - $9,700 Pace 1:56.2
2-Fox Valley Renoir (Jo Pavia Jr) 3.00 2.20 2.10
1-Jokin Man (Ty Buter) 3.60 2.60
6-Chester Hanover (Ma Romano) 2.80
EXACTA (2-1) $8.40
TRIFECTA (2-1-6) $34.60
SUPERFECTA (2-1-6-4) $109.00
Scratched: Upfront Countryboy
Sixteenth - $10,000 Pace 1:53.3
4-Martial Bliss (Ho Parker) 5.40 2.60 2.40
7-Saywhatuneedtosay (Mi Simons) 3.00 2.80
2-Patient Major (Jo Pavia Jr) 2.80
EXACTA (4-7) $22.60
TRIFECTA (4-7-2) $75.20
SUPERFECTA (4-7-2-3) $547.80
LATE DOUBLE (2-4) $7.80
Scratched: Prince Sail On
Total Handle-$352,774
F O O T B A L L
National Football League
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
East
W L T Pct
New England.................... 2 0 0 1.000
Buffalo............................... 2 0 0 1.000
N.Y. Jets ........................... 2 0 0 1.000
Miami ................................. 0 2 0 .000
South
W L T Pct
Houston ............................ 2 0 0 1.000
Jacksonville...................... 1 1 0 .500
Tennessee........................ 1 1 0 .500
Indianapolis ...................... 0 2 0 .000
North
W L T Pct
Baltimore............................. 1 1 0 .500
Cincinnati ............................ 1 1 0 .500
Cleveland............................ 1 1 0 .500
Pittsburgh............................ 1 1 0 .500
West
W L T Pct
Oakland............................... 1 1 0 .500
San Diego ........................... 1 1 0 .500
Denver................................. 1 1 0 .500
Kansas City......................... 0 2 0 .000
NATIONAL CONFERENCE
East
W L T Pct
Washington ...................... 2 0 0 1.000
Dallas ................................ 1 1 0 .500
Philadelphia...................... 1 1 0 .500
N.Y. Giants ....................... 1 1 0 .500
South
W L T Pct
New Orleans....................... 1 1 0 .500
Atlanta ................................. 1 1 0 .500
Tampa Bay.......................... 1 1 0 .500
Carolina............................... 0 2 0 .000
North
W L T Pct
Green Bay......................... 2 0 0 1.000
Detroit................................ 2 0 0 1.000
Chicago............................. 1 1 0 .500
Minnesota......................... 0 2 0 .000
West
W L T Pct
San Francisco..................... 1 1 0 .500
Arizona................................ 1 1 0 .500
St. Louis .............................. 0 2 0 .000
Seattle.................................. 0 2 0 .000
Sunday's Games
Houston at New Orleans, 1 p.m.
Denver at Tennessee, 1 p.m.
Detroit at Minnesota, 1 p.m.
San Francisco at Cincinnati, 1 p.m.
New England at Buffalo, 1 p.m.
N.Y. Giants at Philadelphia, 1 p.m.
Miami at Cleveland, 1 p.m.
Jacksonville at Carolina, 1 p.m.
Kansas City at San Diego, 4:05 p.m.
N.Y. Jets at Oakland, 4:05 p.m.
Baltimore at St. Louis, 4:05 p.m.
Arizona at Seattle, 4:15 p.m.
Green Bay at Chicago, 4:15 p.m.
Atlanta at Tampa Bay, 4:15 p.m.
Pittsburgh at Indianapolis, 8:20 p.m.
Monday's Games
Washington at Dallas, 8:30 p.m.
Canadian Football League
EAST DIVISION
W L T Pts PF PA
Winnipeg................................... 8 3 0 16 265 252
Montreal.................................... 6 5 0 12 340 276
Hamilton.................................... 5 6 0 10 296 308
Toronto ..................................... 2 9 0 4 226 320
WEST DIVISION
W L T Pts PF PA
Calgary ..................................... 7 4 0 14 288 290
Edmonton................................. 7 4 0 14 267 250
B.C. ........................................... 5 6 0 10 292 244
Saskatchewan.......................... 4 7 0 8 267 303
Friday's Games
Montreal at Edmonton, 9 p.m.
Saturday's Games
B.C. at Saskatchewan, 4 p.m.
Winnipeg at Toronto, 7 p.m.
Sunday's Games
Calgary at Hamilton, 1 p.m.
Friday, Sept. 30
Montreal at Winnipeg, 7:30 p.m.
Edmonton at B.C., 10:30 p.m.
Saturday, Oct. 1
Saskatchewan at Calgary, 4 p.m.
Hamilton at Toronto, 7 p.m.
B O X I N G
Fight Schedule
Sept. 23
At Buenos Aires, Argentina, Marcos Maidana vs.
Petr Petrov, 12, for Maidanas interim WBA World
junior welterweight title.
At Fantasy Springs Resortcasino, Indio, Calif., Vi-
cente Escobedo vs. Rocky Juarez, 10, junior light-
weights.
Sept. 24
At Club Chicago, Burbank, Ill., Roman Karmazin vs.
Osumanu Adama, 12, IBF middleweight title elim-
inator.
At Mexicali, Mexico, Jorge Arce vs. Simphiwe
Nongqayi, 12, for Arces WBO super bantamweight
title;Raul Martinez vs. Rodrigo Guerrero, 12, for the
vacant IBF super featherweight title.
At Mexico City, Adrian Hernandez vs. Gideon Buth-
elezi, 12, for Hernandezs WBC light flyweight title.
At Harrahs, Chester, Pa. Tony Ferrante vs. Tommy
Karpency, 10, light heavyweights.
Sept. 25
At Krasnodar, Russia, Dmitry Pirog vs. Gennady
Martirosyan, 12, for Pirogs WBO middleweight ti-
tle;Khabib Allakhverdiev vs. Nate Campbel, 10, ju-
nior welterweights.
Sept. 30
At The Hangar, Costa Mesa, Calif., Luis Ramos vs.
David Rodela, 10, junior welterweights.
At Santa Ynez, Calif. (SHO), Ajose Olusegun vs. Ali
Chebah, 12, WBC junior welterweight eliminator.
Oct. 1
At Neubrandenburg, Germany, Steve Cunningham
vs. Yoan Pablo Hernandez, 12, for Cunninghams
IBF cruiserweight title;Sebastian Sylvester vs.
Grzegorz Proksa, 12, for vacant European middle-
weight title;Karo Murat vs. Gabriel Campillo, 12,
light heavyweights.
At Atlantic City, N.J. (HBO), Sergio Martinez vs.
Darren Barker, 12, middleweights;Brian Vera vs.
Andy Lee, 10, middleweights.
At MGM Grand, Las Vegas, Toshiaki Nishioka vs.
Rafael Marquez, 12, for Nishiokas WBC junior
featherweight title;RomanGonzalez vs. Omar Soto,
12, for Gonzalezs WBA World light flyweight title-
;Jesus Soto Karass vs. Yoshihiro Kamegai, 10, wel-
terweights.
Oct. 6
At Chicago, Roman Karmazin vs. Osumanu Ada-
ma, 12, IBF middleweight title eliminator.
Oct. 7
At Texas Station Casino, Las Vegas (HBO), Sharif
Bogere vs. Francisco Contreras, 10 for Bogeres
NABO lightweight title.
Oct. 8
At Bacolod City, Philippines, Ramon Garcia Hirales
vs. Donnie Nietes, 12, for Hirales WBO junior fly-
weight title.
At Sheffield, England, Kell Brook vs. Rafal Jackiew-
icz, 12, WBA welterweight title eliminator.
Oct. 14
At Cagliari, Italy, Moruti Mthalane vs. Andrea Sarrit-
zu, 12, for Mthalanes IBF flyweight title.
At Buenos Aires, Argentina, Jonathan Barros vs.
Celestino Caballero, 12, for Barros WBA World
featherweight title.
Oct. 15
At Almaty, Kazakhstan, Gennady Golovkin vs. La-
juan Simon, 12, for Golovkins WBA World middle-
weight title.
At Liverpool, England, Nathan Cleverly vs. Tony
Bellew, 12, for Cleverlys WBOlight heavyweight ti-
tle;Piotr Wilczewski vs. James DeGale, 12, for Wilc-
zewskis European super middleweight title.
At Staples Center, Los Angeles (PPV), Bernard
Hopkins vs. Chad Dawson, 12, for Hopkins WBC
light heavyweight title;Antonio DeMarco vs. Jorge
Linares, 12, for the vacant WBC lightweight title-
;Kendall Holt vs. Danny Garcia, 12, for the vacant
WBO-NABO junior welterweight title;Paulie Malig-
naggi vs. Orlando Lora, 10, welterweights.
Oct. 19
At Newcastle, Australia, Anthony Mundine vs. Ri-
goberto Alvarez, 12, for the interimWBAWorld light
middleweight title.
Oct. 22
At the Theater at Madison Square Garden, New
York (HBO), Nonito Donaire vs. Omar Narvaez, 12,
for Donaires WBC-WBO bantamweight titles.
At the Theater at Madison Square Garden, New
York (HBO), Nonito Donaire vs. Omar Narvaez, 12,
for Donaires WBC-WBO bantamweight titles.
C M Y K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 PAGE 3B
S P O R T S
teamspeed, which is the worst
Ive seen in a long time. Theres
not one player who can match
up with any of Valley Wests
starting skill players.
There doesnt appear to be
enough time to fix the problems
by the time the Spartans arrive.
But the schedule is a bit easier
after Friday, so the opportunity
is there to make repairs and save
the season.
Two-point confusion
Dallas final points against
Berwick came on a two-point
conversion with 38 seconds
remaining that wasnt supposed
to be attempted.
Dallas coach Ted Jackson
instructed his backup quarter-
back to take the snap and kneel
down. When the quarterback
told the referee of his intentions,
somehoweverything got jum-
bled up and he believed Dallas
had to run a play.
So the backup called a run-
ning play that resulted in the
two points.
I apologize to the end of the
world, Jackson said. I would
never do anything like that be-
cause Ive been on the other side
of the fence. Coach Campbell
is a great guy. I would never do
that.
Why no touchdown
Crestwood running back Rog-
er Legg had a nice 9-yard run for
a touchdown in the third quarter
Friday against Pittston Area.
But instead of getting six
points, the ball was put back at
the 9-yard line and the score was
disallowed despite no penalty.
What happen was a Pittston
Area player, apparently shaken
up on the previous play, went
down on the field on the sideline
farthest fromthe home bleach-
ers. An official blewthe play
dead a split-second before the
snap.
Been a long time
Nanticokes Pat Hempel re-
turned a kickoff 84 yards for a
touchdown against Susquehan-
na, marking the first time in10
seasons a Trojan accomplished
the feat.
Don Walters was the last to do
so when he scored on an 80-yard
kick return in a Week 8 loss to
Scranton Prep in 2001. Walters
returned two kicks for TDs that
season and Jason Mitkowski
returned one.
Curry sighting
No, not coaching legend Ge-
orge Curry but his grandson C.J.
Curry.
C.J., a Berwick sophomore,
threwhis first varsity pass Sat-
urday against Dallas, completing
a 10-yard toss to fellowsopho-
more Jordan Stout.
Newkids on the block
Some freshmen have been
getting varsity time recently.
Pittston Areas Kyle Gattuso
rushed for a team-high 94 yards
in a 54-31loss to Crestwood. At
times, he looked like the fastest
guy on the field.
Wyoming Areas Jeff Skursky
has been seeing time at running
back and linebacker. Teammate
and fellowrookie Marty Mi-
chaels had an interception on
Friday against Lake-Lehman
near the end of the game.
Downright ugly
While scouring for scores
fromDistrict 11Class 4Ateams,
two results involving the Allen-
town city schools were disturb-
ing.
Allentown Dieruff lost 73-0 to
Whitehall. Even worse, Allen-
town Allen lost 76-0 to Bethle-
hemFreedom.
Keith Groller of The Morning
Call of Allentown takes a look at
the situation on the newspapers
website www.mcall.com. Its
worth checking out. Both pro-
grams are in dire situations with
under 40 players despite Allen
being the biggest Class 4A
school in District 11with a male
enrollment of 1,382 and Dieruff
with 807 boys, more than every
D2 school except for Hazleton
Area.
ERZAR
Continued from Page 1B
Teams are ranked based on performance and not how they would fare against each other. Number before each team
is last weeks ranking. NR means not ranked last week. District 4s Williamsport is including in the rankings since it
plays in the WVC.
1. (1) Valley View (3-0) Shut out Coughlin for the second time in last three meetings.
2. (2) Wyoming Valley West (3-0) Heads to Berwick to take on the struggling Dawgs.
3. (3) Dallas (3-0) Dominated Berwick at home, but is on the road the rest of the month.
4. (5) Delaware Valley (3-0) Has scored more and given up less points in all three games.
5. (6) Dunmore (3-0) Will likely be undefeated heading into Oct. 14 showdown with Lakeland
6. (7) Crestwood (3-0) Game with East Stroudsburg North could be tougher than envisioned.
7. (4) GAR (2-1) Was missing two key players in its 34-31 loss at Lakeland.
8. (NR) Lakeland (2-1) Defeating GAR could be big when it comes playoff time.
9. (8) West Scranton (1-1) After loss to Dunmore, runs into a hot Delaware Valley team.
10. (10) Abington Heights (2-1) Rebounded Saturday as expected after being smoked by Valley West.
11. (11) Old Forge (2-1) Honesdale presents a bit of a trap with rival Riverside looming.
12. (13) Lackawanna Trail (3-0) Will learn a lot about the Lions over the next two games.
13. (9) Williamsport (1-2) Two hard-luck losses could mean sitting home after Week 10.
14. (NR) Western Wayne (2-1) Is just a two-point loss to Hanover Area away from perfection.
15. (12) Coughlin (1-2) Losses have come against Valley View and Dallas.
Dropped out: Hanover Area (2-1); Pittston Area (2-1).
Given consideration: Hanover Area (2-1); Holy Cross (2-1); Pittston Area (2-1); Riverside (2-1); Scranton Prep (2-1);
Susquehanna (2-1); Wallenpaupack (3-0); Wyoming Area (1-1).
John Erzar
T I M E S L E A D E R D I S T R I C T 2 T O P 1 5
Nick OBrien
QB/RB Wyoming Area
OBrien ran for a career-high 218 yards and four
touchdowns as Wyoming Area returned to the field
after a two-week absence to defeat Lake-Lehman
43-10. OBrien carried the ball 21 times in the victory
as he increased his season rushing total to 354 yards.
The junior has been the Warriors leading rusher
since his freshman season. He also threw a 29-yard
touchdown pass that triggered a run of 33 consec-
utive points.
Given consideration
Eugene Lewis, QB, Valley West
Corey Moore, QB, GAR
Ryan Zapoticky, QB, Dallas
Past winners
Week One
Jordan Houseman, WR, Pittston Area
Week Two
Jim Roccograndi, RB, Dallas
-- John Erzar
T I M E S L E A D E R P L AY E R O F T H E W E E K
BERWICK (1-2)
Sept. 2.................at Crestwood (3-0), L 19-6
Sept. 12..........North Pocono (0-3), W 38-28
Sept. 17.................... at Dallas (3-0), L 53-20
Friday................Wyoming Valley West (3-0)
Sept. 30..............................Selinsgrove (0-3)
Oct. 7 .......................... at Tunkhannock (0-3)
Oct. 14............................at Williamsport (1-2)
Oct. 21...............................Pittston Area (2-1)
Oct. 28 .....................................Coughlin (1-2)
Nov. 4 .........................at Hazleton Area (1-2)
COUGHLIN (1-2)
Sept. 2...........................Dallas (3-0), L 28-14
Sept. 13...... at Tunkhannock (0-3), W 48-11
Sept. 17 .................Valley View (3-0), L 28-0
Friday .................................Williamsport (1-2)
Sept. 30........at Wyoming Valley West (3-0)
Oct. 8.................................Stroudsburg (3-0)
Oct. 14...........................at Pittston Area (2-1)
Oct. 21............................Hazleton Area (1-2)
Oct. 28 ...................................at Berwick (1-2)
Nov. 5...................................Crestwood (3-0)
CRESTWOOD (3-0)
Sept. 2.........................Berwick (1-2), W19-6
Sept. 9. at Pocono Mtn. West (0-3), W 21-6
Sept. 16............Pittston Area (2-1), W 54-31
Friday..........at East Stroudsburg North (1-2)
Oct. 1................................Tunkhannock (0-3)
Oct. 7..............................Hazleton Area (1-2)
Oct. 15......................................at Dallas (3-0)
Oct. 21...........at Wyoming Valley West (3-0)
Oct. 28 ...............................Williamsport (1-2)
Nov. 5...................................at Coughlin (1-2)
DALLAS (3-0)
Sept. 2.................at Coughlin (1-2), W 28-14
Sept. 10.........Scranton Prep (2-1), W 48-20
Sept. 17 ....................Berwick (1-2), W 53-20
Friday ............................at Pittston Area (2-1)
Sept. 30..........................at Williamsport (1-2)
Oct. 8 ................Wyoming Valley West (3-0)
Oct. 15..................................Crestwood (3-0)
Oct. 22.............Pocono Mountain East (1-2)
Oct. 28.........................at Tunkhannock (0-3)
Nov. 4..........................at Lake-Lehman (0-3)
GAR (2-1)
Sept. 2 ..............at Mid Valley (1-2), W 34-12
Sept. 12.................Old Forge (2-1), W 29-14
Sept. 16 ................at Lakeland (2-1), L 34-31
Friday .................................at Northwest (2-1)
Oct. 1............................Holy Redeemer (0-3)
Oct. 7...........................at Hanover Area (2-1)
Oct. 14.............................Lake-Lehman (0-3)
Oct. 22 ...........................Wyoming Area (1-1)
Oct. 28....................................Nanticoke (1-1)
Nov., 4....................................at Meyers (0-3)
HANOVER AREA (2-1)
Sept. 2.............Susquehanna (2-1), W15-12
Sept. 12 ..at Western Wayne (2-1), W 36-34
Sept. 16..............at Mid Valley (1-2), L 35-27
Friday .............................Wyoming Area (1-1)
Sept. 30 .............................at Northwest (2-1)
Oct. 7...............................................GAR (2-1)
Oct. 14........................................Meyers (0-3)
Oct. 22.....................at Holy Redeemer (0-3)
Oct. 28.........................at Lake-Lehman (0-3)
Nov. 4 .....................................Nanticoke (1-1)
HAZLETON AREA (1-2)
Sept. 3....at Abington Heights (2-1), L 28-14
Sept. 10.............Williamsport (1-2), W 32-21
Sept. 16 .....at Delaware Valley (3-0), L 44-7
Friday...............................Tunkhannock (0-3)
Sept. 30 ............................Pittston Area (2-1)
Oct. 7................................at Crestwood (3-0)
Oct. 14...........at Wyoming Valley West (3-0)
Oct. 21..................................at Coughlin (1-2)
Oct. 28 ..........East Stroudsburg South (0-3)
Nov. 4 ........................................Berwick (1-2)
HOLY REDEEMER (0-3)
Sept. 3....................Northwest (2-1), L 38-24
Sept. 12........at Susquehanna (2-1), L 32-22
Sept. 17 ................Holy Cross (2-1), L 49-24
Friday...........................at Lake-Lehman (0-3)
Oct. 1...........................................at GAR (2-1)
Oct. 8 ......................................Nanticoke (1-1)
Oct. 14........................at Wyoming Area (1-1)
Oct. 22.............................Hanover Area (2-1)
Oct. 29....................................at Meyers (0-3)
Nov. 5 .............................Tunkhannock (0-3)
LAKE-LEHMAN (0-3)
Sept. 2.................at Old Forge (2-1), L 21-15
Sept. 10.....Lackawanna Trail (3-0), L 48-28
Sept. 16...........Wyoming Area (1-1), L 43-10
Friday...........................Holy Redeemer (0-3)
Sept. 30..................................at Meyers (0-3)
Oct. 8 .....................................Northwest (2-1)
Oct. 14.........................................at GAR (2-1)
Oct. 21................................at Nanticoke (1-2)
Oct. 28.............................Hanover Area (2-1)
Nov. 4...........................................Dallas (3-0)
MEYERS (0-2)
Sept. 3...................Holy Cross (2-1), L 37-14
Sept. 12 .................at Dunmore (3-0), L 45-0
Sept. 17 ...at Lackawanna Trail (3-0), L 55-7
Friday..................................at Nanticoke (1-1)
Sept. 30 ..........................Lake-Lehman (0-3)
Oct. 7..............................Wyoming Area (1-1)
Oct. 14 .........................at Hanover Area (2-1)
Oct. 21................................at Northwest (2-1)
Oct. 29.........................Holy Redeemer (0-3)
Nov. 4..............................................GAR (2-1)
NANTICOKE (1-0)
Sept. 2....................Montrose (0-3), W 48-14
Sept. 9......Col-Montour Vo-Tech (1-1), can-
celled
Sept. 17..........at Susquehanna (2-1), L 26-7
Friday..........................................Meyers (0-3)
Sept. 30 .....................at Wyoming Area (1-1)
Oct. 8 .......................at Holy Redeemer (0-3)
Oct. 14 ...................................Northwest (2-1)
Oct. 21.............................Lake-Lehman (0-3)
Oct. 28.........................................at GAR (2-1)
Nov. 4 ..........................at Hanover Area (2-1)
NORTHWEST (2-1)
Sept. 3 ....at Holy Redeemer (0-3), W 38-24
Sept. 12................at Montrose (0-3), W 30-8
Sept. 16.................at Old Forge (2-1), L 35-8
Friday ..............................................GAR (2-1)
Sept. 30...........................Hanover Area (2-1)
Oct. 8...........................at Lake-Lehman (0-3)
Oct. 14................................at Nanticoke (1-2)
Oct. 21........................................Meyers (0-3)
Oct. 28 ...........................Wyoming Area (1-1)
Nov. 4......Columbia-Montour Vo-Tech (1-1)
PITTSTON AREA (2-1)
Sept. 2 ..........at Tunkhannock (0-3), W 45-6
Sept. 12 ...................Scranton (1-2), W 21-14
Sept. 16.............at Crestwood (3-0), L 54-31
Friday............................................Dallas (3-0)
Sept. 30......................at Hazleton Area (1-2)
Oct. 7..................................Williamsport (1-2)
Oct. 14......................................Coughlin (1-2)
Oct. 21....................................at Berwick (1-2)
Oct. 28..............Wyoming Valley West (3-0)
Nov. 4.........................at Wyoming Area (1-1)
TUNKHANNOCK (0-3)
Sept. 2 .................Pittston Area (2-1), L 45-6
Sept. 13.....................Coughlin (1-2), L 48-11
Sept. 17....at Abington Heights (2-1), L 35-6
Friday..........................at Hazleton Area (1-2)
Oct. 1................................at Crestwood (3-0)
Oct. 7 .........................................Berwick (1-2)
Oct. 14............Pocono Mountain West (0-3)
Oct. 21............................at Williamsport (1-2)
Oct. 28..........................................Dallas (3-0)
Nov. 5 ......................at Holy Redeemer (0-3)
WILLIAMSPORT (1-2)
Sept. 2 ..at Central Mountain (1-2), W 23-13
Sept. 10 .......at Hazleton Area (1-2), L 32-21
Sept. 16..........Stroudsburg (3-0), L 14-7 OT
Friday ...................................at Coughlin (1-2)
Sept. 30........................................Dallas (3-0)
Oct. 7.............................at Pittston Area (2-1)
Oct. 14........................................Berwick (1-2)
Oct. 21.............................Tunkhannock (0-3)
Oct. 28..............................at Crestwood (3-0)
Nov. 4 ...............Wyoming Valley West (3-0)
WYOMING AREA (1-1)
Sept. 2..........Western Wayne (2-1), L 40-34
Sept. 9......at West Scranton (1-1), canceled
Sept. 16 ......at Lake-Lehman (0-3), W 43-10
Friday...........................at Hanover Area (2-1)
Sept. 30..................................Nanticoke (1-1)
Oct. 7......................................at Meyers (0-3)
Oct. 14 .........................Holy Redeemer (0-3)
Oct. 22.........................................at GAR (2-1)
Oct. 28 ...............................at Northwest (2-1)
Nov. 4................................Pittston Area (2-1)
WYOMING VALLEY WEST (3-0)
Sept. 2........................at Scranton (1-2), 21-7
Sept. 12.......Abington Heights (2-1), W 51-0
Sept. 16.......Pleasant Valley (2-1), W 47-28
Friday .....................................at Berwick (1-2)
Sept. 30 ...................................Coughlin (1-2)
Oct. 8........................................at Dallas (3-0)
Oct. 14 ............................Hazleton Area (1-2)
Oct. 21..................................Crestwood (3-0)
Oct. 28 ..........................at Pittston Area (2-1)
Nov. 4.............................at Williamsport (1-2)
W V C F O O T B A L L S C H E D U L E S
D I S T R I C T
S T A N D I N G S
Teams qualify based on state points-per-game
average listed in final column. Points totals for
D11-4A were done by the Times Leader and are
unofficial.
CLASS 4A
District 2/4.............................. W L Pts. Avg.
Delaware Valley...................... 3 0 330 110.0
Wyoming Valley West............ 3 0 320 106.7
Wallenpaupack....................... 3 0 280 93.3
Hazleton Area......................... 1 2 110 36.7
Williamsport............................. 1 2 110 36.7
Scranton ................................... 1 2 100 33.3
District 11 ............................... W L Pts. Avg.
Nazareth .................................. 3 0 350 116.7
Stroudsburg............................. 3 0 300 100.0
Whitehall .................................. 3 0 300 100.0
Bethlehem Freedom.............. 3 0 290 96.7
Emmaus................................... 2 1 230 76.7
Easton...................................... 2 1 220 73.3
Parkland................................... 2 1 210 70.0
Bethlehem Liberty .................. 2 1 200 66.7
Pocono Mountain East .......... 1 2 110 36.7
Pleasant Valley ....................... 1 2 80 26.7
Allentown Allen ....................... 0 3 0 0
Allentown Dieruff .................... 0 3 0 0
East Stroudsburg South ........ 0 3 0 0
Northampton............................ 0 3 0 0
Pocono Mountain West ......... 0 3 0 0
Playoff format: Five D11 teams, two D2/4 teams
and the remaining team with the best points-per-
game average qualify.
Points format: Class 4A teams receive points
based on a defeated opponents classification: 4A,
100 points; 3A, 80; 2A, 60; A, 40. Teams also
receive 10 points per victory by a defeated
opponent.
CLASS 3A
District 2.................................. W L Pts. Avg.
Crestwood ............................... 3 0 350 116.7
Dallas ....................................... 3 0 340 113.3
Valley View.............................. 3 0 300 100.0
Pittston Area............................ 2 1 230 76.7
Abington Heights .................... 2 1 230 76.6
Scranton Prep ......................... 2 1 180 60.0
West Scranton......................... 1 1 80 40.0
Berwick..................................... 1 2 100 33.3
Coughlin................................... 1 2 100 33.3
Tunkhannock........................... 0 3 0 0
North Pocono.......................... 0 3 0 0
Honesdale ............................... 0 3 0 0
Playoff format: Four teams qualify.
Points format: Class 3A teams receive points
based on a defeated opponents classification: 4A,
120 points; 3A, 100; 2A, 80; A, 60. Teams also
receive 10 points per victory by a defeated
opponent.
CLASS 2A
District 2................................... W L Pts. Avg.
Hanover Area............................ 2 1 240 80.0
Lakeland.................................... 2 1 230 76.7
GAR........................................... 2 1 210 70.0
Western Wayne........................ 2 1 210 70.0
Susquehanna............................ 2 1 210 70.0
Wyoming Area.......................... 1 1 100 50.0
Nanticoke .................................. 1 1 100 50.0
Mid Valley.................................. 1 2 120 40.0
Meyers....................................... 0 3 0 0
Holy Redeemer ........................ 0 3 0 0
Montrose ................................... 0 3 0 0
Lake-Lehman............................ 0 3 0 0
Carbondale ............................... 0 3 0 0
Playoff format: Four teams qualify.
Points format: Class 2A teams receive points
based on a defeated opponents classification: 4A,
140 points; 3A, 120; 2A, 100; A, 80. Teams also
receive 10 points per victory by a defeated
opponent.
CLASS A
District 2.................................. W L Pts. Avg.
Dunmore.................................. 3 0 410 136.7
Lackawanna Trail .................... 3 0 360 120.0
Riverside.................................. 2 1 260 86.7
Old Forge................................. 2 1 240 80.0
Northwest................................. 2 1 240 80.0
Holy Cross............................... 2 1 240 80.0
Playoff format: Four teams qualify.
Points format: Class 2A teams receive points
based on a defeated opponents classification: 4A,
160 points; 3A, 140; 2A, 120; A, 100. Teams also
receive 10 points per victory by a defeated
opponent.
L A C K A W A N N A
C O N F E R E N C E
Division 1............. Division Overall PF PA
Delaware Valley ... 0 0 3 0 96 34
Valley View........... 0 0 3 0 111 15
Wallenpaupack..... 0 0 3 0 88 32
Abington Hts......... 0 0 2 1 63 71
Scranton Prep ...... 0 0 2 1 80 80
West Scranton...... 0 0 1 1 48 48
Scranton................ 0 0 1 2 69 56
North Pocono ....... 0 0 0 3 76 121
Division 2............. Division Overall PF PA
Dunmore ............... 0 0 3 0 112 34
Lakeland................ 0 0 2 1 86 73
Riverside............... 0 0 2 1 100 91
Western Wayne.... 0 0 2 1 128 76
Carbondale........... 0 0 0 3 30 126
Honesdale ............ 0 0 0 3 81 141
Division 3............. Division Overall PF PA
Lackawanna Trail . 0 0 3 0 146 47
Holy Cross ............ 0 0 2 1 115 74
Old Forge.............. 0 0 2 1 70 44
Susquehanna ....... 0 0 2 1 70 44
Mid Valley ............. 0 0 1 2 62 93
Montrose............... 0 0 0 3 28 132
Friday, Sept. 16
(7 p.m.)
Delaware Valley 44, Hazleton Area 7
East Stroudsburg North 54, Honesdale 42
Lackawanna Trail 55, Meyers 7
Lakeland 34, GAR 31
Mid Valley 34, Hanover Area 27
Old Forge 35, Northwest 8
Riverside 42, North Pocono 27
Scranton 48, East Stroudsburg South 14
Scranton Prep 34, Carbondale 12
Wallenpaupack 20, Pocono Mountain East 10
Western Wayne 54, Montrose 6
Saturday, Sept. 17
Abington Heights 35, Tunkhannock 6
Dunmore 26, West Scranton 13
Holy Cross 49, Holy Redeemer 24
Susquehanna 26, Nanticoke 7
Valley View 28, Coughlin 0
Friday's Games
(7 p.m.)
Abington Heights at Wallenpaupack
Dunmore at Montrose
Old Forge at Honesdale
Riverside at Lackawanna Trail
Scranton Prep at North Pocono
Valley View at Scranton
West Scranton at Delaware Valley
Western Wayne at Mid Valley
Saturday's Games
Carbondale at Holy Cross, 1 p.m.
Lakeland at Susquehanna, 1 p.m.
S T A T E
R A N K I N G S
From The Patriot-News of Harrisburg for the week
of Tuesday, Sept. 20, with schools district in paren-
theses, followed by the schools record and last
weeks ranking. NR means not ranked. Honorable
mention teams listed alphabetically.
CLASS 4A
Team (district) ..........................................Rec Pvs
1. Pittsburgh C.C. (7) ...................................3-0 1
2. North Allegheny (7) .................................3-0 2
3. LaSalle College HS (12) .........................2-1 4
4. Upper St. Clair (7)....................................2-1 3
5. Neshaminy (1)..........................................3-0 7
6. North Penn (1) ..........................................1-2 5
7. Council Rock South (1)...........................3-0 6
8. Woodland Hills (7) ...................................3-0 8
9. Downingtown East (1).............................3-0 9
10. Cumberland Valley (3) ..........................3-0 10
Teams to watch: Bethlehem Liberty (11) 2-1, Coa-
tesville (1) 3-0, Father Judge (12) 2-1, Gateway (7)
3-0, McDowell (10) 3-0, Nazareth(11) 3-0, Whitehall
(11) 3-0, Wyoming Valley West (2) 3-0.
CLASS 3A
Team (district) ..........................................Rec Pvs
1. Archbishop Wood (12) .............................2-1 1
2. Central Valley (7) ....................................3-0 2
3. Grove City (10).........................................3-0 4
4. Hopewell (7).............................................3-0 5
5. Montour (7) ...............................................2-1 6
6. Bishop McDevitt (3).................................1-2 3
7. Valley View (2)........................................3-0 7
8. Thomas Jefferson (7)..............................2-1 8
9. Susquehanna Twp. (3) ...........................3-0 9
10. Cathedral Prep (10)................................2-1 10
Teams to watch: Abington Heights (2) 2-1, Allen-
town C.C. (11) 1-2, Cardinal OHara (12) 2-1, Clear-
field (9) 3-0, Franklin Regional (7) 3-0, Greater
Johnstown (6) 3-0, West Allegheny (7) 2-1.
CLASS 2A
Team (district) ..........................................Rec Pvs
1. Aliquippa (7)..............................................3-0 1
2. Lancaster Catholic (3) .............................3-0 3
3. West Catholic (12) ...................................0-3 2
4. North Schuylkill (11) ................................3-0 4
5. Seton-LaSalle (7) ....................................3-0 5
6. Mount Carmel (4) ....................................3-0 6
7. Trinity (3)...................................................2-1 7
8. Lewisburg (4) ...........................................2-1 8
9. Greensburg C.C. (7) ...............................3-0 9
10. Beaver Falls (7) ......................................2-1 10
Teams towatch: Beaver Area (7) 3-0, Bloomsburg
(4) 2-0, Hickory (10) 3-0, Jeannette (7) 3-0, North-
ern Lehigh (11) 3-0, Pen Argyl (11) 3-0, South
Fayette (7) 2-1, Wilmington (10) 3-0.
CLASS 4A
Team (district) ..........................................Rec Pvs
1. Clairton (7) ................................................3-0 1
2. Southern Columbia (4) ...........................3-0 2
3. Rochester (7) ...........................................3-0 3
4. Dunmore (2)............................................3-0 4
5. Sto-Rox (7)...............................................3-0 5
6. Pius X (11) ................................................3-0 6
7. Bishop McCort (6) ...................................3-0 7
8. Mercyhurst Prep (10) ..............................3-0 8
9. Line Mountain (4) .....................................2-1 NR
10. Riverside (2) ..........................................2-1 NR
Teams to watch: Bishop Canevin (7) 3-0, Juniata
Valley (6) 3-0, Lackawanna Trail (2) 3-0, Mahanoy
Area (11) 3-0, Marian Catholic (11) 2-1, Monessen
(7) 3-0, North Star (5) 3-0, Sharpsville (10) 2-0.
W Y O M I N G
V A L L E Y
C O N F E R E N C E
Division 4A......................... W L PF PA CP
Wyoming Valley West ........ 3 0 119 35 26
Hazleton Area...................... 1 2 53 93 9
Williamsport ......................... 1 2 51 54 9
Division 3A.......................... W L PF PA CP
Crestwood............................ 3 0 94 43 25
Dallas.................................... 3 0 76 34 24
Pittston Area ........................ 2 1 97 74 17
Berwick ................................. 1 2 64 100 8
Coughlin ............................... 1 2 62 67 8
Tunkhannock ....................... 0 3 23 128 0
Division 2A-A..................... W L PF PA CP
Hanover Area....................... 2 1 78 80 14
Northwest (A) ....................... 2 1 76 67 14
GAR....................................... 2 1 94 60 13
Nanticoke.............................. 1 1 55 40 7
Wyoming Area..................... 1 1 77 50 7
Holy Redeemer.................... 0 3 70 119 0
Lake-Lehman....................... 0 3 45 112 0
Meyers.................................. 0 3 21 137 0
NOTE: CP is Championship Points toward the divi-
sional title.
Teams get nine points for defeating a Class 4A op-
ponent, eight for a Class 3A opponent, seven for a
Class 2A opponent and six for a Class A opponent.
The teamwith the most Championship Points is the
division winner.
Friday, Sept. 16
Crestwood 54, Pittston Area 31
Delaware Valley 44, Hazleton Area 7
Lakeland 34, GAR 31
Mid Valley 35, Hanover Area 27
Old Forge 35, Northwest 8
Stroudsburg 14, Williamsport 7 OT
Wyoming Area 43, Lake-Lehman 10
Wyoming Valley West 47, Pleasant Valley 28
Saturday, Sept. 17
Abington Heights 35, Tunkhannock 6
Dallas 53, Berwick 20
Susquehanna 26, Nanticoke 7
Holy Cross 49, Holy Redeemer 24
Lackawanna Trail 55, Meyers 7
Valley View 28, Coughlin 0
Friday's Games
(7 p.m.)
Crestwood at East Stroudsburg North
Dallas at Pittston Area
GAR at Northwest
Holy Redeemer at Lake-Lehman
Meyers at Nanticoke
Tunkhannock at Hazleton Area
Williamsport at Coughlin
Wyoming Valley West at Berwick
Wyoming Area at Hanover Area
Friday, Sept. 30
(7 p.m.)
Coughlin at Wyoming Valley West
Dallas at Williamsport
Hanover Area at Northwest
Lake-Lehman at Meyers
Nanticoke at Wyoming Area
Pittston Area at Hazleton Area
Selinsgrove at Berwick
Saturday, Oct. 1
Holy Redeemer at GAR, 7 p.m.
Tunkhannock at Crestwood, 7 p.m.
F O O T B A L L
B R O A D C A S T
S C H E D U L E
FRIDAY
ON THE INTERNET
7 p.m. www.northeastpafootball.com Dallas at
Pittston Area
7 p.m. www.NanticokeFootball.com Meyers at
Nanticoke
7 p.m. www.wyomingareafootball.org Wyoming
Area at Hanover Area
7 p.m. www.WVWSpartanFootball.com Wyom-
ing Valley West at Berwick
7 p.m. www.wrak.com Williamsport at Coughlin
ON THE RADIO
7 p.m. WILK (910, 980, 1300 AM; 103.1 FM )
Tunkhannock at Hazleton Area
7 p.m. WHLM (103.5 FM) Wyoming Valley West
at Berwick
ON TELEVISION
7 p.m. Service Electric Cable Wyoming Area at
Hanover Area
7 p.m. WYLN Tunkhannock at Hazleton Area
SATURDAY
ON THE RADIO
1 p.m. FOX Sports THE GAME (1340, 1400 AM)
Carbondale at Holy Cross
ON TELEVISION
9 a.m. WQMY Dallas at Pittston Area (tape
delayed)
9 p.m. PCN Cocalico at Manheim Central (tape
delayed)
right.
True freshmanSamFickentried
a 49-yarder at the end of the first
half, onlytohavehislow, line-drive
attempt swatteddownat the line.
PennStatesonlymadefieldgoal
of the season came from 43 yards
out against Alabama by Lewis.
Im very concerned about the
kicking game, obviously, Paterno
said. And we are trying to get bet-
ter at it. A couple of those kids do
verywellinpractice, andtheygetin
theballgameandgetalittleuptight
or I dont know what. Sometimes
yougotta expect some of that.
But it got worse on Saturday, as
theOwlsevenmanagedtoblockan
Anthony Fera punt.
That was just absolutecareless-
ness onthe part of one personwho
justhadnothadanyproblemsprior
tothat.
Ithinkwejustgotalittlebitnon-
chalant about it and that kid came
up andblockedit. I thought onthe
blocked field goal we might have
beenjust a little bit slow.
Onethingthat didnt helptheLi-
ons in this first month was the de-
layed introduction of Fera to the
field.
A full-time punter and kickoff
man last season, Fera was also a
candidate to take over on field
goals this season with the depar-
ture of CollinWagner.
Ferawasoriginallyrecruitedasa
placekicker out of high school in
Houston, Texas. But after redshirt-
ingin2009, hecouldntbeatoutthe
incumbent Wagner in2010.
Paterno banned Fera from pre-
season camp after the kicker
pickedupthe secondalcohol-relat-
ed charge of his Penn State career.
Fera was thenheldout of the open-
ing game and didnt reclaim his
spot at punter until thesecondhalf
against Alabama.
Fera has averaged 44.6 yards on
eight punts, a sizable bump from
backup Alex Butterworths 38.7-
yardaverage.
With Fera back in full capacity
andtheLionsdesperatetoimprove
on field goals, its not out of the
question the sophomore could get
a shot there as well.
Fera has got a chance to come
backnowandhopefully hell get in
thegroove,Paternosaid. Feradid
not practicewithusinpreseasonin
some places because of some off-
the-fieldantics. Sohesnowgetting
backinthe groove.
Hopefullyhellstarttoputsome
of that stuff behindhimandhell be
maybe more productive than hes
been. And maybe he can beat out
the kid thats ahead of him right
now(Lewis). I dont know.
The situation isnt as dire in the
return game, though coaches and
players both acknowledge there is
roomfor improvement.
TheLions rank53rdinthecoun-
try in kick returns (22.55 ypr)
thanks in large part to Chaz Po-
wells 95-yard score to open the In-
diana State game. In punt returns,
Penn State ranks 59th (7.69 ypr)
which is actually a bit improved
fromrecent years.
Powell andDevonSmithare the
topoptionsonkickoffswhileJustin
Brown and Smith often both line
up for punt returns. Senior Derek
Moye has also appeared there this
season.
For now, however, the focus re-
mains onfieldgoals andpunts.
Our kicking game needs to get
better, Paterno repeated. And
were working on it and hopefully
we canimprove. But the proof is in
the pudding.
PSU
Continued from Page 1B
he said, reading from a chart.
Dustin Johnson has to finish
sixth or worse. Justin and Luke
have to finish fourth or worse,
which isnt going to happen be-
cause Luke doesnt finish out of
thetopthreeanymore, doeshe?
Thats when he shifted to a
prize that might be just as mea-
ningful.
Id love to win this golf tour-
nament, Ogilvy said. That
would be nice because people
are forgetting this one of the
tours special golf tournaments
The Players Championship,
the Tour Championship, the
Tournament of Champions. Its
still the Tour Championship,
and it would be pretty special to
have a Tour Championship on
your mantle.
I guess Ill view it like that
and try to win, he said. And if
the right things happen, that
would be great.
TheFedExCupisfinishingup
itsfifthyear, andwhilesomepro-
motional bluster created more
skeptics than supporters in the
earlygoing, it ishardtofindfault
with what the playoffs have pro-
duced four straight tourna-
ments with the strongest fields,
withonly the best walking away
withthe $10 millionprize. Tiger
Woodshaswontwice, withVijay
Singh and Jim Furyk the other
cup champions.
I think the system has been
validated because its had the
biggest names in golf as its
champions, Kuchar said.
The leading five candidates
thisyearall areamongthetop20
in the world, including top-
ranked Donald.
There is reason for others to
hope, however, and all that re-
quires is a chat with Nick Wat-
ney.
A year ago, Watney narrowly
got intotheTour Championship
at No. 28 and was 12 shots be-
hind going into the weekend. In
the final hour, he was one shot
off the lead and had a legitimate
chancetowintheFedExCupun-
til a bogey on the16th hole.
I was thinking I had no
chance, Watney said. Kuchar
was leading the FedEx Cup, and
he was playing so consistently.
They said I had to win and he
had to finish worse than 25th or
something. There were somany
mathematical scenarios. It was
like the BCS.
His message for the guys
rankedtowardthebottomof the
FedEx Cup list was to think
about winningnot the FedEx
Cup, but a season-ending tour-
nament that still packs some
prestige.
OGILVY
Continued from Page 1B
C M Y K
PAGE 4B THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
S P O R T S
(570) 825-8508
Your Full Service Provider Offering the Latest in State-of-the-art Digital Cable, HDTV, Video on Demand, High Speed Internet and Telephone.
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7
1
0
3
8
2
NEW YORK Jorge Posada
came off the bench and helped
the Yankees to yet another
first-place finish with a go-
ahead single in the eighth
inning, and New York swept
the Tampa Bay Rays by identi-
cal 4-2 scores in a day-night
doubleheader Wednesday to
win the AL East.
Accomplishing most of their
regular-season goals with a
week to spare, the Yankees
earned their 16th playoff berth
in 17 seasons by winning the
day game behind Robinson
Canos tiebreaking, two-run
double in the eighth.
They didnt bother cele-
brating after that one Yan-
kees blase at its best but
vowed to let loose when they
ensured the division crown.
They made good on that prom-
ise, donning goggles and spray-
ing the bubbly in the club-
house.
For the Rays, it was a damag-
ing day as they missed a
chance to move up on Boston
in the AL wild-card race. The
Red Sox lost to Baltimore 6-4,
but still extended their lead
over Tampa Bay to 2
1
2 games.
The Los Angeles Angels also
are 2
1
2 games behind.
The Yankees clincher fell
into place after a 62-minute
rain delay. A month past his
40th birthday and his role
reduced, Posada pinch-hit with
the bases loaded and two outs
with the score 2-all. He hit a
hard, two-run single to right off
Brandon Gomes and pumped a
fist as he ran up the first-base
line.
Posadas hit propelled New
York to its 12th AL East title in
16 years and came about 50
minutes after the second-place
Red Sox blew a three-run lead
and lost.
Orioles 6, Red Sox 4
BOSTON The reeling
Boston Red Sox blew another
late lead and lost for the 14th
time in 18 games, beaten when
Vladimir Guerrero and the
Baltimore Orioles rallied for a
win .
Boston began the day with a
two-game edge over Tampa
Bay for the AL wild-card spot.
The Rays lost the opener of a
day-night doubleheader to the
New York Yankees 4-2.
Angels 7, Blue Jays 2
TORONTO Dan Harens
outing ended after he was hit
by a line drive on the final out
of the eighth inning, Peter
Bourjos and Vernon Wells
homered, and the Los Angeles
Angels beat the Toronto Blue
Jays 7-1 on Wednesday night.
White Sox 8, Indians 4
CLEVELAND Mark
Buehrle bounced back from a
poor outing and pitched six
effective innings, leading the
Chicago White Sox past the
Cleveland Indians.
Mariners 5, Twins 4
MINNEAPOLIS Ichiro
Suzuki stopped Kevin Sloweys
no-hitter with a two-out infield
single in the sixth inning and
added an RBI double in the
seventh, spurring the Seattle
Mariners to a victory in Minne-
sota, the 11th straight defeat
for the Twins.
Tigers 6, Royals 3
KANSAS CITY, Mo. Ra-
mon Santiago drove in the
go-ahead run in the eighth
inning, Don Kelly added a
two-run homer and the Detroit
Tigers beat the Kansas City
Royals.
A M E R I C A N L E A G U E R O U N D U P
Posadas hit lifts
Yanks to crown
The Associated Press
PHILADELPHIA Danny
Espinosa and Wilson Ramos
each hit two-run home runs to
help the Washington Nationals
beat Philadelphia 7-5 on
Wednesday, sending the NL
East-champion Phillies to their
season-worst fifth straight
loss.
The Phillies have been in a
funk since they clinched their
fifth straight division title on
Saturday. Theyve lost five
straight games for the first
time since May 22-27, 2010.
All of the losses have come at
home, where the Phillies are
tied for the major league lead
with 52 victories.
Diamondbacks 8, Pirates 5
PHOENIX Miguel Mon-
tero had a two-run homer
among his three hits and the
Arizona Diamondbacks jump-
ed on the Pittsburgh Pirates
early in a win that cut their
magic number for clinching
the NL West to two.
Cubs 7, Brewers 1
CHICAGO Matt Garza
pitched a six-hitter, Marlon
Byrd hit a three-run homer
and the Chicago Cubs pro-
longed Milwaukees drive to
clinch the NL Central, beating
the Brewers in the final game
at Wrigley Field this season.
Reds 2, Astros 0
CINCINNATI Bronson
Arroyo pitched a six-hitter and
the Cincinnati Reds wrapped
up their home schedule with a
win over the Houston Astros.
Padres 4, Rockies 0
DENVER Rookie Antho-
ny Bass pitched five solid
innings to help the San Diego
Padres complete a rare three-
game sweep of the Colorado
Rockies with a win in the last
game of the season at Coors
Field.
Marlins 4, Braves 0
MIAMI Struggling to
secure a postseason berth, the
Atlanta Braves were thwarted
by a playoff-caliber pitching
performance.
Javier Vazquez allowed only
two hits in seven innings
Wednesday against his former
team, and the Florida Marlins
played the spoilers role by
beating Atlanta 4-0.
Cardinals 6, Mets 5
ST. LOUIS David Freese
drove in five runs with a triple
and a three-run homer, and
the surging St. Louis Cardi-
nals beat the New York Mets.
The Cardinals have won
four straight and 12 of 14 to
move within 1
1
2 games of
Atlanta in the National
League wild-card race. St.
Louis, a season-high 17 over
.500 (86-69), has seven games
left and will go for a sweep of
the Mets on Thursday.
N AT I O N A L L E A G U E R O U N D U P
Nationals hand Phils
fifth straight defeat
The Associated Press
STANDINGS/STATS
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
x-New York.................................... 95 60 .613 7-3 W-4 50-27 45-33
Boston............................................ 88 68 .564 7
1
2 3-7 L-2 45-36 43-32
Tampa Bay..................................... 85 70 .548 10 2
1
2 4-6 L-3 42-33 43-37
Toronto........................................... 78 77 .503 17 9
1
2 6-4 L-2 41-39 37-38
Baltimore........................................ 65 90 .419 30 22
1
2 7-3 W-2 37-41 28-49
Central Division
W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Away
x-Detroit ...................................... 90 65 .581 7-3 W-1 45-29 45-36
Cleveland.................................... 76 78 .494 13
1
2 11 4-6 L-2 40-36 36-42
Chicago ...................................... 76 79 .490 14 11
1
2 3-7 W-2 33-42 43-37
Kansas City................................ 68 88 .436 22
1
2 20 8-2 L-1 40-41 28-47
Minnesota................................... 59 95 .383 30
1
2 28 0-10 L-11 30-47 29-48
West Division
W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Away
Texas............................................ 89 65 .578 8-2 W-3 49-29 40-36
Los Angeles................................. 85 70 .548 4
1
2 2
1
2 5-5 W-2 44-31 41-39
Oakland ........................................ 69 85 .448 20 18 4-6 L-2 42-37 27-48
Seattle........................................... 66 89 .426 23
1
2 21
1
2 5-5 W-3 38-43 28-46
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division
W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Away
x-Philadelphia.............................. 98 57 .632 4-6 L-5 52-28 46-29
Atlanta........................................... 88 68 .564 10
1
2 4-6 L-1 47-31 41-37
Washington.................................. 75 79 .487 22
1
2 12 8-2 W-4 42-35 33-44
New York...................................... 73 82 .471 25 14
1
2 2-8 L-2 31-44 42-38
Florida........................................... 71 85 .455 27
1
2 17 4-6 W-1 30-45 41-40
Central Division
W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Away
Milwaukee.................................. 91 65 .583 6-4 L-1 52-23 39-42
St. Louis ..................................... 86 69 .555 4
1
2 1
1
2 8-2 W-4 43-34 43-35
Cincinnati.................................... 76 80 .487 15 12 5-5 W-2 42-39 34-41
Chicago...................................... 69 87 .442 22 19 5-5 W-1 39-42 30-45
Pittsburgh................................... 69 87 .442 22 19 3-7 L-1 34-44 35-43
Houston...................................... 53 102 .342 37
1
2 34
1
2 4-6 L-2 28-46 25-56
West Division
W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Away
Arizona ......................................... 90 66 .577 5-5 W-1 47-28 43-38
San Francisco.............................. 83 71 .539 6 4 8-2 L-1 44-34 39-37
Los Angeles................................. 77 76 .503 11
1
2 9
1
2 6-4 W-4 41-38 36-38
Colorado....................................... 70 85 .452 19
1
2 17
1
2 2-8 L-7 38-43 32-42
San Diego..................................... 68 88 .436 22 20 6-4 W-3 32-43 36-45
x-clinched division
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Tuesday's Games
Cleveland 4, Chicago White Sox 3, 1st game
Chicago White Sox 5, Cleveland 4, 2nd game
N.Y. Yankees 5, Tampa Bay 0
L.A. Angels 10, Toronto 6
Baltimore 7, Boston 5
Kansas City 10, Detroit 2
Seattle 5, Minnesota 4
Texas 7, Oakland 2
Wednesday's Games
N.Y. Yankees 4, Tampa Bay 2, 1st game
Chicago White Sox 8, Cleveland 4
N.Y. Yankees 4, Tampa Bay 2, 2nd game
L.A. Angels 7, Toronto 2
Baltimore 6, Boston 4
Detroit 6, Kansas City 3
Seattle 5, Minnesota 4
Texas at Oakland, (n)
Thursday's Games
Seattle (Beavan 5-5) at Minnesota (Swarzak 3-7),
1:10 p.m.
Texas (C.Lewis 13-10) at Oakland (Cahill 11-14),
3:35 p.m.
Baltimore (Britton 10-10) at Detroit (Ja.Turner 0-1),
7:05 p.m.
Chicago White Sox (Humber 9-8) at Cleveland
(J.Gomez 4-2), 7:05 p.m.
Tampa Bay (Niemann11-7) at N.Y. Yankees (Colon
8-9), 7:05 p.m.
L.A. Angels (E.Santana 11-12) at Toronto (H.Alva-
rez 1-2), 7:07 p.m.
Friday's Games
Baltimore at Detroit, 7:05 p.m.
Boston at N.Y. Yankees, 7:05 p.m.
Minnesota at Cleveland, 7:05 p.m.
Toronto at Tampa Bay, 7:10 p.m.
Seattle at Texas, 8:05 p.m.
Kansas City at Chicago White Sox, 8:10 p.m.
Oakland at L.A. Angels, 10:05 p.m.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Tuesday's Games
Washington 4, Philadelphia 3, 10 innings, 1st game
Washington 3, Philadelphia 0, 2nd game
Atlanta 4, Florida 0
Cincinnati 6, Houston 4
Milwaukee 5, Chicago Cubs 1
St. Louis 11, N.Y. Mets 6
San Diego 2, Colorado 1
Pittsburgh 5, Arizona 3
L.A. Dodgers 2, San Francisco 1
Wednesday's Games
Cincinnati 2, Houston 0
Chicago Cubs 7, Milwaukee 1
San Diego 4, Colorado 0
Arizona 8, Pittsburgh 5
Washington 7, Philadelphia 5
Florida 4, Atlanta 0
St. Louis 6, N.Y. Mets 5
San Francisco at L.A. Dodgers, (n)
Thursday's Games
N.Y. Mets (Capuano11-12) at St. Louis (Westbrook
12-9), 1:45 p.m.
Washington (Peacock 1-0) at Philadelphia (Oswalt
8-9), 7:05 p.m.
Colorado (White 2-2) at Houston (Sosa 2-5), 8:05
p.m.
San Francisco (Bumgarner 12-12) at L.A. Dodgers
(Kuroda 12-16), 10:10 p.m.
Friday's Games
Atlanta at Washington, 7:05 p.m.
Cincinnati at Pittsburgh, 7:05 p.m.
Philadelphia at N.Y. Mets, 7:10 p.m.
Colorado at Houston, 8:05 p.m.
Florida at Milwaukee, 8:10 p.m.
Chicago Cubs at St. Louis, 8:15 p.m.
San Francisco at Arizona, 9:40 p.m.
L.A. Dodgers at San Diego, 10:05 p.m.
N L B O X E S
Nationals 7, Phillies 5
Washington Philadelphia
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Dsmnd ss 5 0 1 0 Rollins ss 5 0 0 0
Berndn rf 5 0 1 0 Victorn cf 4 0 0 0
Zmrmn 3b 4 0 0 0 Polanc 3b 4 0 0 0
Morse lf 4 1 2 0 Utley 2b 3 1 0 0
Bixler pr-lf 0 0 0 0 Mayrry 1b 4 3 3 2
Espinos 2b 4 2 1 2 Ibanez lf 4 1 2 1
Marrer 1b 4 2 2 0 BFrncs rf 4 0 3 1
Ankiel cf 4 1 0 0 Schndr c 4 0 1 0
WRams c 3 1 3 4 Worley p 2 0 1 1
Lannan p 1 0 0 0 Moss ph 1 0 0 0
Cora ph 1 0 0 0 Blanton p 0 0 0 0
Stmmn p 0 0 0 0 DeFrts p 0 0 0 0
JGoms ph 0 0 0 1 Bastrd p 0 0 0 0
Severin p 0 0 0 0 Schwm p 0 0 0 0
Coffey p 0 0 0 0 Gload ph 1 0 0 0
HRdrgz p 0 0 0 0
Totals 35 710 7 Totals 36 510 5
Washington ....................... 020 002 030 7
Philadelphia....................... 021 000 020 5
EW.Ramos (5), Bastardo(1). DPWashington1.
LOBWashington 8, Philadelphia 6.
2BBernadina (11), Marrero (5). HREspinosa
(21), W.Ramos (14), Mayberry (15). SBMayberry
(8). CSBixler (3). SLannan. SFJ.Gomes.
IP H R ER BB SO
Washington
Lannan W,10-13...... 5 8 3 3 1 3
Stammen H,1 .......... 2 1 0 0 0 1
Severino...................
1
3 1 2 2 1 1
Coffey H,10..............
2
3 0 0 0 0 1
H.Rodriguez S,1-4.. 1 0 0 0 0 1
Philadelphia
Worley L,11-3.......... 6 6 4 4 3 6
Blanton ..................... 1 1 0 0 0 1
De Fratus.................. 0 0 2 1 1 0
Bastardo................... 1 2 1 1 0 1
Schwimer ................. 1 1 0 0 0 0
De Fratus pitched to 2 batters in the 8th.
HBPby De Fratus (Espinosa).
Marlins 4, Braves 0
Atlanta Florida
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Bourn cf 4 0 0 0 Bonifac ss 4 0 1 0
Prado 3b-lf 4 0 1 0 Infante 2b 4 0 0 0
McCnn c 1 0 0 0 Dobbs 3b 4 0 0 0
Uggla 2b 4 0 0 0 Dmngz 3b 0 0 0 0
Fremn 1b 3 0 0 0 Stanton rf 4 2 2 0
Heywrd rf 4 0 1 0 Morrsn lf 4 1 2 1
JaWlsn ss 3 0 0 0 GSnchz 1b 3 0 2 1
Constnz lf 2 0 0 0 Petersn cf 2 0 0 1
Hinske ph 1 0 0 0 Hayes c 2 1 1 1
Varvar p 0 0 0 0 Vazquz p 2 0 0 0
D.Lowe p 2 0 0 0 JoBakr ph 1 0 0 0
Linernk p 0 0 0 0 Mujica p 0 0 0 0
C.Jones
ph-3b 1 0 0 0 LNunez p 0 0 0 0
Totals 29 0 2 0 Totals 30 4 8 4
Atlanta ................................ 000 000 000 0
Florida ................................ 010 011 01x 4
LOBAtlanta 6, Florida 5. 2BHeyward (18), Bo-
nifacio (24), Stanton (28), G.Sanchez (33). HR
Morrison(22), Hayes (5). SBBonifacio(39). SF
Petersen.
IP H R ER BB SO
Atlanta
D.Lowe L,9-16......... 6
1
3 6 3 3 2 3
Linebrink ..................
2
3 0 0 0 0 1
Varvaro..................... 1 2 1 1 0 1
Florida
Vazquez W,12-11... 7 2 0 0 1 6
Mujica H,17.............. 1 0 0 0 0 2
L.Nunez.................... 1 0 0 0 2 0
Cubs 7, Brewers 1
Milwaukee Chicago
ab r h bi ab r h bi
C.Hart rf 4 0 1 0 SCastro ss 3 1 2 1
Morgan cf 4 0 1 0 LeMahi 3b 5 1 2 2
Braun lf 4 0 0 0 RJhnsn rf 4 0 1 0
Fielder 1b 3 0 0 0 JeBakr 2b 3 1 1 0
RWeks 2b 3 0 0 0 DeWitt ph 1 0 0 0
Fiers p 0 0 0 0 Barney 2b 0 0 0 0
Counsll ph 1 0 0 0 Soto c 4 1 3 1
HrstnJr 3b 4 0 2 0 Byrd cf 4 1 1 3
YBtncr ss 4 1 1 0 ASorin lf 4 1 2 0
Kottars c 4 0 1 0 Campn lf 0 0 0 0
Wolf p 1 0 0 0 LaHair 1b 3 1 1 0
Loe p 0 0 0 0 Garza p 3 0 0 0
TGreen
ph-2b 1 0 0 0
Totals 33 1 6 0 Totals 34 713 7
Milwaukee.......................... 001 000 000 1
Chicago.............................. 001 023 10x 7
ES.Castro (28), LeMahieu (3). DPMilwaukee
1, Chicago 2. LOBMilwaukee 7, Chicago 7.
2BHairston Jr. (18), S.Castro (35), LeMahieu (2),
Soto(26), A.Soriano(27), LaHair (5). HRByrd(9).
SGarza.
IP H R ER BB SO
Milwaukee
Wolf L,13-10............ 6 10 6 6 1 5
Loe............................ 1 3 1 1 0 1
Fiers.......................... 1 0 0 0 2 0
Chicago
Garza W,9-10.......... 9 6 1 0 1 10
HBPby Garza (Wolf).
Diamondbacks 8, Pirates 5
Pittsburgh Arizona
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Presley lf 5 0 1 0 Blmqst ss 5 1 1 0
Ciriaco ss 3 0 0 0 Putz p 0 0 0 0
DMcCt p 0 0 0 0 A.Hill 2b 3 1 2 2
GJones ph 1 0 0 0 J.Upton rf 3 1 1 1
Meek p 0 0 0 0 MMntr c 4 2 3 2
Resop p 0 0 0 0 CYoung cf 4 1 2 1
Paul ph 1 0 0 0 Overay 1b 2 1 0 0
AMcCt cf 4 1 1 0 RRorts 3b 4 1 1 2
D.Lee 1b 4 1 3 2 GParra lf 4 0 1 0
Walker 2b 4 1 1 0 Miley p 1 0 0 0
Ludwck rf 4 1 1 1 Brrghs ph 1 0 0 0
BrWod 3b-ss 3 0 1 0 Owings p 0 0 0 0
PAlvrz ph-3b 1 0 1 0 Shaw p 0 0 0 0
Pagnzz c 3 0 0 0 Ziegler p 0 0 0 0
Jarmll ph-c 1 0 1 1 Patersn p 0 0 0 0
Ohlndrf p 1 0 0 0 Blum ph 1 0 0 0
JHughs p 0 0 0 0 JMcDnl ss 0 0 0 0
Moskos p 0 0 0 0
JHrrsn ph-3b 2 1 1 0
Doumit ph 1 0 0 0
dArnad ss 0 0 0 0
Totals 38 511 4 Totals 32 811 8
Pittsburgh .......................... 010 101 110 5
Arizona............................... 305 000 00x 8
DPPittsburgh 1. LOBPittsburgh 7, Arizona 5.
2BA.McCutchen (33), Br.Wood (9), Jaramillo (1),
J.Harrison (12), C.Young (37), R.Roberts (24).
HRD.Lee (7), Ludwick (13), M.Montero (18).
SBBloomquist (19), A.Hill (3), C.Young (21),
Overbay (2), G.Parra (14). CSA.Hill (4). SF
J.Upton.
IP H R ER BB SO
Pittsburgh
Ohlendorf L,1-3....... 2 7 7 7 2 1
J.Hughes.................. 1 2 1 1 1 1
Moskos..................... 1 1 0 0 0 0
D.McCutchen .......... 2 1 0 0 0 1
Meek......................... 1 0 0 0 0 1
Resop....................... 1 0 0 0 0 0
Arizona
Miley W,4-2.............. 5 5 2 2 1 3
Owings ..................... 1 2 1 1 0 0
Shaw......................... 1 1 1 1 0 1
Ziegler ......................
2
3 3 1 1 0 1
Paterson H,10..........
1
3 0 0 0 0 0
Putz S,43-47............ 1 0 0 0 0 3
Ohlendorf pitched to 4 batters in the 3rd.
HBPby Ohlendorf (A.Hill). WPShaw.
UmpiresHome, Mike Muchlinski;First, Brian Gor-
man;Second, Tony Randazzo;Third, Larry Vanov-
er.
T3:03. A25,296 (48,633).
Reds 2, Astros 0
Houston Cincinnati
ab r h bi ab r h bi
JSchafr cf 4 0 0 0 BPhllps 2b 4 1 3 0
Shuck rf 4 0 0 0 Renteri ss 3 0 0 0
JMrtnz lf 4 0 1 0 Janish ss 0 0 0 0
Ca.Lee 1b 4 0 1 0 Votto 1b 3 0 0 0
MDwns 2b 3 0 0 0 Heisey cf 3 0 1 1
CJhnsn 3b 3 0 2 0 Bruce rf 3 0 0 0
Barmes ss 3 0 0 0 Cairo 3b 4 1 1 1
Towles c 3 0 2 0 Sappelt lf 3 0 0 0
WRdrg p 2 0 0 0 Mesorc c 3 0 0 0
Bogsvc ph 1 0 0 0 Arroyo p 2 0 0 0
DCrpnt p 0 0 0 0
Totals 31 0 6 0 Totals 28 2 5 2
Houston.............................. 000 000 000 0
Cincinnati ........................... 110 000 00x 2
EC.Johnson (14), Renteria (13). DPCincinnati
3. LOBHouston 4, Cincinnati 7. 2BC.Johnson
(21), Towles (7). HRCairo (8). SBB.Phillips
(12). SRenteria.
IP H R ER BB SO
Houston
W.Rodriguez
L,11-11..................... 7 4 2 2 2 4
D.Carpenter............. 1 1 0 0 2 1
Cincinnati
Arroyo W,9-12......... 9 6 0 0 0 2
BalkD.Carpenter.
UmpiresHome, SamHolbrook;First, Paul Schrie-
ber;Second, Chad Fairchild;Third, Angel Campos.
T2:12. A20,875 (42,319).
Padres 4, Rockies 0
San Diego Colorado
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Maybin cf 5 1 1 0 EYong lf 4 0 2 0
Hermid rf 4 1 0 0 M.Ellis 2b 4 0 0 0
Denorfi lf 4 1 1 0 Fowler cf 4 0 2 0
Headly 3b 2 0 0 1 Tlwtzk ss 2 0 0 0
Grgrsn p 0 0 0 0 MtRynl p 0 0 0 0
Cnghm ph 1 0 0 0 Lndstr p 0 0 0 0
Qualls p 0 0 0 0 Nelson ph 1 0 1 0
Thtchr p 0 0 0 0 Belisle p 0 0 0 0
H.Bell p 0 0 0 0 GRynld p 0 0 0 0
LMrtnz c 2 1 1 0 Wggntn ph 1 0 0 0
AlGnzlz
ss-3b 3 0 1 1 S.Smith rf 4 0 0 0
Rizzo 1b 4 0 2 1 Pachec 1b 3 0 1 0
Parrino 2b 4 0 1 1 Kzmnff 3b 3 0 0 0
Bass p 2 0 0 0 Iannett c 2 0 0 0
Frieri p 0 0 0 0 A.Cook p 1 0 0 0
Bartlett ph-ss 2 0 2 0 Field ss 2 0 0 0
Totals 33 4 9 4 Totals 31 0 6 0
San Diego.......................... 400 000 000 4
Colorado ............................ 000 000 000 0
DPSan Diego 2, Colorado1. LOBSan Diego 7,
Colorado 5. 2BMaybin (22), Fowler (32). SB
E.Young (24), Iannetta (6). SFHeadley, Alb.Gon-
zalez.
IP H R ER BB SO
San Diego
Bass W,2-0 .............. 5 2 0 0 1 1
Frieri ......................... 1 1 0 0 0 1
Gregerson................ 1 1 0 0 0 0
Qualls ....................... 1 0 0 0 0 0
Thatcher ...................
1
3 2 0 0 0 0
H.Bell S,41-46.........
2
3 0 0 0 0 2
Colorado
A.Cook L,3-10 ......... 5 6 4 4 2 8
Mat.Reynolds........... 1 0 0 0 0 0
Lindstrom................. 1 1 0 0 0 1
Belisle....................... 1 0 0 0 1 1
G.Reynolds.............. 1 2 0 0 0 1
Bass pitched to 1 batter in the 6th.
Cardinals 6, Mets 5
New York St. Louis
ab r h bi ab r h bi
JosRys ss 4 1 1 0 Furcal ss 3 0 0 0
Pagan cf 4 1 0 0 Craig lf 4 0 1 1
DWrght 3b 4 1 1 0 Punto 2b 0 0 0 0
Duda rf 0 0 0 0 Pujols 1b 4 2 2 0
Satin ph-1b 2 0 1 2 Brkmn rf 3 2 1 0
Pridie ph 1 0 0 0 CPttrsn lf 0 0 0 0
Evans 1b-rf 4 0 0 0 Freese 3b 4 1 2 5
Harris lf 4 1 3 1 Descals 3b 0 0 0 0
RPauln c 3 0 0 0 Jay cf 4 0 0 0
Thole ph 1 0 0 0 Motte p 0 0 0 0
JuTrnr 2b 3 0 0 0 YMolin c 3 1 2 0
Schwnd p 2 1 1 0 Schmkr 2b 4 0 1 0
Pasccc ph 1 0 0 0 SRonsn rf 0 0 0 0
Batista p 0 0 0 0 JGarci p 3 0 0 0
DHerrr p 0 0 0 0 Chamrs cf 1 0 0 0
Beato p 0 0 0 0
Parnell p 0 0 0 0
Totals 33 5 7 3 Totals 33 6 9 6
New York ........................... 004 000 001 5
St. Louis............................. 210 000 30x 6
EFurcal (13), Freese (11). DPSt. Louis 3.
LOBNew York 2, St. Louis 6. 2BJos.Reyes
(30), Satin (1), Pujols (27), Schumaker (17).
3BFreese (1). HRHarris (2), Freese (10).
IP H R ER BB SO
New York
Schwinden............... 6 6 3 3 2 5
Batista H,7................
2
3 1 1 1 0 1
D.Herrera L,0-1....... 0 1 1 1 0 0
Beato BS,1-1 ...........
1
3 1 1 1 0 0
Parnell ...................... 1 0 0 0 0 1
St. Louis
J.Garcia W,13-7...... 7
2
3 6 4 0 0 5
Motte S,8-12............ 1
1
3 1 1 1 0 2
A L B O X E S
Yankees 4, Rays 2
First Game
Tampa Bay New York
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Jnnngs lf 5 1 1 2 Gardnr cf-lf 4 1 1 0
BUpton cf 5 0 2 0 Jeter ss 3 2 2 0
Longori 3b 5 0 1 0 Cano dh-2b 4 0 1 2
Joyce rf 3 0 2 0 AlRdrg 3b 4 0 1 1
Damon dh 3 0 0 0
Swisher
rf-1b 4 0 0 0
Ktchm 1b 3 0 1 0 MaRivr p 0 0 0 0
Loaton c 3 0 1 0 Posada 1b 2 0 0 0
EJhnsn 2b 2 1 1 0 Dickrsn pr-rf 0 0 0 0
SRdrgz
ph-2b 1 0 0 0 AnJons lf 2 0 0 0
Zobrist ph-2b 1 0 0 0
Grndrs
ph-cf 1 0 0 0
Brignc ss 4 0 0 0 ENunez 2b 3 1 2 1
Teixeir 1b 0 0 0 0
AuRmn c 2 0 0 0
ErChvz ph 1 0 0 0
RMartn c 0 0 0 0
Totals 35 2 9 2 Totals 30 4 7 4
Tampa Bay......................... 002 000 000 2
New York ........................... 100 000 03x 4
DPTampa Bay1. LOBTampa Bay10, NewYork
4. 2BKotchman (24), E.Johnson (7), Cano (46),
Al.Rodriguez (21). HRJennings (10), E.Nunez
(5). SBB.Upton (31), Gardner (46), E.Nunez 2
(21).
IP H R ER BB SO
Tampa Bay
Shields L,15-12....... 7
1
3 6 4 4 2 7
Howell....................... 0 1 0 0 0 0
B.Gomes..................
2
3 0 0 0 0 1
New York
Noesi ........................ 2
2
3 4 2 2 1 2
Valdes ...................... 1
1
3 1 0 0 1 3
Kontos ......................
2
3 1 0 0 0 0
Laffey........................
2
3 1 0 0 0 1
Wade........................ 1
1
3 1 0 0 0 1
Logan........................
2
3 1 0 0 0 0
Ayala W,2-2.............
2
3 0 0 0 0 2
Ma.Rivera S,44-49 . 1 0 0 0 0 1
Howell pitched to 1 batter in the 8th.
HBPby Logan (Kotchman), by Laffey (Joyce).
Yankees 4, Rays 2
Second Game
Tampa Bay New York
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Jnnngs lf 4 0 1 0 Gardnr lf 2 0 0 0
BUpton cf 4 0 2 0 Swisher ph 1 0 1 0
Longori 3b 2 0 0 0 Golson pr-rf 0 1 0 0
Zobrist 2b 4 0 0 0 Grndrs cf 4 1 1 0
Damon dh 4 0 0 0 Teixeir 1b 2 1 0 0
SRdrgz ss 3 1 2 1 Cano 2b 2 1 1 1
DJhnsn ph 1 0 0 0 JMontr dh 3 0 0 0
Ktchm 1b 4 0 2 0
Posada
ph-dh 1 0 1 2
Guyer rf 3 0 0 0 ErChvz 3b 3 0 0 0
Joyce ph 1 0 0 0 RMartn c 3 0 0 0
Shppch c 3 1 1 1 Dickrsn rf-lf 3 0 0 0
ENunez ss 3 0 0 0
Totals 33 2 8 2 Totals 27 4 4 3
Tampa Bay......................... 000 010 100 2
New York ........................... 010 100 02x 4
ECano (10). DPTampa Bay 1, New York 3.
LOBTampa Bay 6, New York 5. 2BSwisher
(28), Granderson (26). HRS.Rodriguez (8),
Shoppach (9), Cano (27).
IP H R ER BB SO
Tampa Bay
Hellickson ................ 7 2 2 2 4 3
McGee L,3-2............
2
3 1 1 1 0 1
J.Cruz....................... 0 0 1 1 1 0
C.Ramos.................. 0 0 0 0 1 0
B.Gomes..................
1
3 1 0 0 0 0
New York
Sabathia ................... 7
1
3 7 2 2 2 6
Robertson W,4-0 ....
2
3 0 0 0 0 0
R.Soriano S,2-4 ...... 1 1 0 0 0 1
J.Cruz pitched to 1 batter in the 8th.
C.Ramos pitched to 1 batter in the 8th.
WPHellickson.
UmpiresHome, Brian Knight;First, Fieldin Cul-
breth;Second, John Hirschbeck;Third, Wally Bell.
T3:00. A45,586 (50,291).
Angels 7, Blue Jays 2
Los Angeles Toronto
ab r h bi ab r h bi
MIzturs 2b 5 0 3 2 McCoy ss 4 0 0 0
Aybar ss 4 0 2 0 EThms lf 4 1 1 1
BAreu dh 5 0 0 0 Bautist rf 4 0 1 0
TrHntr rf 5 1 1 0 Loewen pr 0 1 0 0
Trumo 1b 5 1 1 0 Lind 1b 3 0 1 0
Callasp 3b 4 1 2 0 Encrnc 3b 4 0 1 0
V.Wells lf 5 1 2 4 KJhnsn 2b 3 0 2 1
Bourjos cf 4 3 3 1 Arencii c 4 0 0 0
Mathis c 4 0 0 0 Rasms cf 3 0 0 0
Cooper dh 3 0 0 0
Totals 41 714 7 Totals 32 2 6 2
Los Angeles....................... 001 012 030 7
Toronto............................... 000 001 001 2
EArencibia (6). DPLos Angeles 1. LOBLos
Angeles 9, Toronto 5. 2BAybar (33), Tor.Hunter
(22), Trumbo (31), K.Johnson 2 (3). 3BBourjos
(10). HRV.Wells (24), Bourjos (12), E.Thames
(11). SBM.Izturis (9), Bourjos (22).
IP H R ER BB SO
Los Angeles
Haren W,16-9.......... 8 4 1 1 2 4
Takahashi ................ 1 2 1 1 0 1
Toronto
McGowan L,0-1....... 5 5 2 2 0 8
Litsch........................ 1 3 2 2 1 1
L.Perez.....................
2
3 1 0 0 0 1
Camp........................
1
3 0 0 0 0 0
Janssen....................
2
3 4 3 3 0 1
C.Villanueva ............
1
3 0 0 0 1 0
Beck.......................... 1 1 0 0 0 2
WPMcGowan.
White Sox 8, Indians 4
Chicago Cleveland
ab r h bi ab r h bi
De Aza lf-rf 5 0 2 2 Fukdm rf 4 1 1 0
AlRmrz ss 5 1 1 1 Kipnis 2b 3 0 1 1
Przyns dh 4 0 1 0 CSantn 1b 4 1 1 1
Rios cf 4 1 1 1 Hafner dh 3 1 1 2
A.Dunn 1b 3 0 0 0 Duncan lf 3 0 0 0
Pierre pr-lf 0 1 0 0 Carrer cf 1 0 1 0
Viciedo rf-1b 3 2 1 0 Donald ss 3 0 1 0
Morel 3b 4 2 2 3 Chsnhll 3b 4 0 1 0
Flowrs c 4 0 1 1 Marson c 3 0 1 0
Bckhm 2b 3 1 0 0 Hannhn ph 1 0 0 0
Crowe cf-lf 3 1 0 0
Totals 35 8 9 8 Totals 32 4 8 4
Chicago.............................. 000 010 340 8
Cleveland........................... 000 002 020 4
DPChicago 1. LOBChicago 3, Cleveland 5.
2BPierzynski (29), Morel (18), Flowers (5), Fuku-
dome (12), Kipnis (9). HRAl.Ramirez (15), Rios
(12), Morel (9), Hafner (13). SBDe Aza (11). CS
Donald (2). SFKipnis.
IP H R ER BB SO
Chicago
Buehrle W,12-9....... 6 4 2 2 2 2
Crain H,22................ 1 1 1 1 1 0
Frasor .......................
1
3 2 1 1 0 0
Ohman......................
2
3 1 0 0 0 1
S.Santos................... 1 0 0 0 0 1
Cleveland
U.Jimenez L,4-3...... 7 6 4 4 2 7
Durbin....................... 1 3 4 4 1 1
Herrmann................. 1 0 0 0 0 0
Crain pitched to 1 batter in the 8th.
WPU.Jimenez.
Orioles 6, Red Sox 4
Baltimore Boston
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Andino 2b 5 1 1 0 Ellsury cf 4 0 1 0
Hardy ss 4 1 2 1 Aviles 3b 4 1 1 0
Markks rf 3 1 1 0 AdGnzl 1b 4 1 2 0
Guerrr dh 4 0 1 2 D.Ortiz dh 4 0 1 1
Wieters c 4 0 1 0 Pedroia 2b 4 1 1 0
AdJons cf 4 1 1 0 Reddck rf 4 0 0 0
MrRynl 1b 4 2 2 3 Crwfrd lf 4 1 3 2
C.Davis 3b 4 0 1 0 Scutaro ss 3 0 0 0
Angle lf 4 0 0 0 Varitek c 3 0 0 1
Lowrie ph 1 0 0 0
Totals 36 610 6 Totals 35 4 9 4
Baltimore............................ 010 001 220 6
Boston................................ 001 210 000 4
EAd.Gonzalez (4). DPBaltimore 1, Boston 1.
LOBBaltimore 4, Boston 5. 2BMarkakis (28),
Pedroia(37), C.Crawford(27). 3BC.Crawford(6).
HRMar.Reynolds 2(36). SBAndino(12), Angle
(10).
IP H R ER BB SO
Baltimore
Tom.Hunter ............. 6
2
3 9 4 4 1 4
Rapada W,2-0.........
2
3 0 0 0 0 1
Eyre H,3...................
2
3 0 0 0 0 0
Ji.Johnson S,9-14... 1 0 0 0 0 0
Boston
Beckett L,13-6......... 7
1
3 7 6 6 1 8
Aceves ..................... 1
2
3 3 0 0 0 1
Tigers 6, Royals 3
Detroit Kansas City
ab r h bi ab r h bi
AJcksn cf 4 2 1 0 AGordn lf 4 1 1 0
Kelly 1b 5 2 3 2 MeCarr cf 3 1 1 0
DYong lf 5 0 1 0 Butler dh 4 1 2 1
VMrtnz dh 5 0 2 3 Hosmer 1b 4 0 1 0
Avila c 5 0 2 0 Francr rf 4 0 1 1
JhPerlt ss 4 0 1 0 Mostks 3b 4 0 1 0
Dirks rf 2 0 2 0 Giavtll 2b 3 0 0 0
Raburn ph-rf 2 1 0 0 B.Pena ph 1 0 0 0
RSantg 2b 3 0 0 0 S.Perez c 4 0 2 0
MiCarr ph 1 0 1 1 AEscor ss 3 0 0 0
Worth pr-2b 0 1 0 0
Inge 3b 3 0 0 0
Totals 39 613 6 Totals 34 3 9 2
Detroit................................. 100 010 130 6
Kansas City ....................... 200 001 000 3
ERaburn (15), S.Perez (3). DPDetroit 2.
LOBDetroit 10, Kansas City 5. 2BKelly (7), Avi-
la (32), Mi.Cabrera (45), Me.Cabrera (43), Butler
(40), Francoeur (47). HRKelly (6). SBA.Jack-
son (21), A.Escobar (25). SInge.
IP H R ER BB SO
Detroit
Scherzer................... 5 5 2 2 1 5
Fister W,10-13 ........ 3 2 1 0 0 2
Valverde S,47-47.... 1 2 0 0 0 1
Kansas City
F.Paulino.................. 5 6 2 2 2 8
Collins.......................
2
3 1 0 0 0 1
L.Coleman ............... 1 1 1 1 0 0
Crow BS,7-7............
1
3 2 0 0 0 0
K.Herrera L,0-1....... 1 2 3 3 0 0
G.Holland................. 1 1 0 0 0 0
HBPby K.Herrera (Raburn). WPCrow. PB
Avila.
UmpiresHome, BruceDreckman;First, Gary Dar-
ling;Second, Paul Emmel;Third, Rob Drake.
T3:00. A28,776 (37,903).
Mariners 5, Twins 4
Seattle Minnesota
ab r h bi ab r h bi
ISuzuki rf 4 1 2 1 Span cf 3 0 0 0
Seager ss 4 1 1 1 Tosoni lf 2 0 1 0
Ackley 2b 4 0 1 1 Revere lf-cf 5 1 1 0
Carp lf-1b 4 0 1 0 Cuddyr dh 5 1 3 0
Smoak dh 3 0 1 0 Parmel 1b 4 0 3 1
W.Pena
pr-dh 1 1 0 0 LHughs pr 0 0 0 0
Olivo c 4 1 1 0 Valenci 3b 4 0 0 0
AKndy 1b 2 0 0 0 Plouffe ss 5 2 3 1
MSndrs cf 1 0 0 0 Dnklm 2b 5 0 2 1
Liddi 3b 4 0 0 0 Benson rf 4 0 1 1
TRonsn cf-lf 4 1 1 2 RRiver c 2 0 0 0
Tolbert ph 1 0 0 0
Butera c 0 0 0 0
Totals 35 5 8 5 Totals 40 414 4
Seattle ................................ 000 002 300 5
Minnesota.......................... 100 100 011 4
EPlouffe (11). DPSeattle 1. LOBSeattle 4,
Minnesota12. 2BI.Suzuki (22), Seager (12), Ack-
ley (14), Tosoni (3), Plouffe (16), Benson (6). SB
Dinkelman (2). SA.Kennedy.
IP H R ER BB SO
Seattle
Pineda...................... 4 6 2 2 2 2
Gray ..........................
2
3 2 0 0 1 0
C.Jimenez W,1-0.... 1
1
3 1 0 0 0 1
Kelley H,1 ................ 1 0 0 0 0 2
Wilhelmsen H,3....... 1 2 1 1 0 0
League S,36-41 ...... 1 3 1 1 0 0
Minnesota
Slowey L,0-7............ 6
2
3 6 5 5 0 6
Dumatrait..................
2
3 2 0 0 0 1
Al.Burnett .................
2
3 0 0 0 0 1
S.Baker..................... 1 0 0 0 0 1
WPPineda, Gray, C.Jimenez, Wilhelmsen.
UmpiresHome, Adrian Johnson;First, Clint Fa-
gan;Second, Gary Cederstrom;Third, Lance Barks-
dale.
T2:48. A36,263 (39,500).
Multiple outlets are reporting that
the Sept. 20 deadline set by the In-
ternational League to approve the
Scranton/Wilkes-Barre Yankees ac-
tion plan for the 2012 season has
passed without a decision.
The teams plan was expected to
be approved at the IL Board of Direc-
tors meeting in Albuquerque. The
Yankees will not play the 2012 season
at PNC Field in Moosic because of
renovations to the stadium.
Allentown (Lehigh Valley) and
Rochester, N.Y., appear to be fron-
trunners for hosting the Yankees.
The Ottawa Citizen reported Monday
that Ottawa was out apparently of
the equation, and several outlets re-
ported that the New York Mets are
blocking a potential season in Staten
Island, home of the Class A New
York-Penn League Yankees.
Last month, the Syracuse Post-
Standard reported that the Yankees
home games against the Syracuse
Chiefs would likely be played in Syra-
cuse, and maybe others.
I dont know if well get four,
eight, six (more). Its hard to say how
many, Chiefs GM John Simone said
to the Post-Standard. They have to
play somewhere. Unless they get an-
other city to take the team for 72
games, they will have to split it up.
The Yankees are expected to re-
turn to Moosic in 2013.
No decision on SWB
plans for 2012
The Times Leader staff
C M Y K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 PAGE 5B
N F L
Need a Roommate?
Place an ad and
find one here!
570-829-7130
150 Special Notices
WANTED
MALE SINGERS
(570) 696-3385
150 Special Notices
MONTY MONTY SA SAYS YS
Thank you so
much FLB. Spe-
cial thanks to Ed
and Sue. Great
to have you on
our side. Knock
off early today.
409 Autos under
$5000
FORD 93 TAURUS
Newly inspected,
new brakes, new
tires, air condition-
ing. 102K.
$1850 FIRM.
Call Vince after 5
570-258-2450
To place your
ad Call Toll Free
1-800-427-8649
GMC 96 JIMMY SLE
4WD, Hunter
Green, 4 door, CD,
168,000 miles.
$2,100 obo.
(570) 262-7550
412 Autos for Sale
MAZDA 3S `07
Sedan. 4 cylinder
2.3, auto, FWD, all
power, keyless
entry, cruise, a/c,
am/fm stereo/cd,
ABS. 55k miles.
Excellent condition.
Asking $11,600. Call
570-574-2141
442 RVs & Campers
SUNLINE SOLARIS `91
25 travel trailer A/C.
Bunk beds. New
fridge & hot water
heater. Excellent
condition. $3,900.
570-466-4995
451 Trucks/
SUVs/Vans
FORD `87 E150
Great work truck.
New inspection.
$2,000. Call any-
time before 8pm.
(570)690-8243
503 Accounting/
Finance
BUSINESS
MANAGEMENT
For Specialized
Trucking Company
Full Charge Book
Keeper. Manage-
ment Responsibili-
ties: 3 years Experi-
ence. Must work
well with others.
Start Immediately.
Send Resume Fax
570-288-0617
Or email
kingpaint1079@
aol.com
509 Building/
Construction/
Skilled Trades
CONSTRUCTION
MANAGER
Minimum 5 years
experience. Ability
to organize daily
quantities, materi-
als, job costs &
schedule/manage
utility crews. Health
insurance & 401K
benefits available.
Send resume to
jamestohara@aol.
com or fax
570-842-8205
PROJECT MANAGER
5 years PM experi-
ence, commercial/
residential. Estimat-
ing experience.
Sales ability. Com-
petitive Compensa-
tion Package.
e-mail resume to
employment@
ruckno.com or fax
to 570-718-0661
ROOFER
Part time flexible.
Repair large com-
mercial roof. Saw
tooth. Must be
experienced.
Larry
570-430-1565
542 Logistics/
Transportation
DELIVERY DRIVER
Full time. Benefits.
401 K.
No Phone Calls.
Apply in person
9am-4pm
Colours
50 Dana Street
542 Logistics/
Transportation
CDL-A DRIVER
Gas field/landscape
drivers plus some
hands on labor
required. Operate
dump trucks and
load equipment on
lowboy. Deliver to
job site. Must oper-
ate skid steer exca-
vator, hydro-seed
truck, etc. Will plow
in winter. Must have
clean driving record
and pass drug test.
Call Harvis
Interview Service @
542-5330. Leave
message. Will send
an application.
Or forward resume:
varsity.harvis@
gmail.com
Employer is
Varsity, Inc.
No walk-ins. EOE
Transportation
D DRIVERS RIVERS W WANTED ANTED
Class B CDL
Required, Tanker
Endorsement
Required, Tri-Axle
Experience
Required.
All Shifts Available
Work Available
in Williamsport
Areas
Fax resume to
570-288-2219 or
Call Rich @
570-357-8319
548 Medical/Health
NURSING
The Meadows
Nursing and
Rehabilitation
Center
POSITIONS AVAILABLE
CNAs
3-11 Part Time (5-9
days bi-weekly)
11-7 Part Time (2-4
days bi-weekly)
CNAs can apply on
line at:
https://home.eease.
com/recruit/?id=29
6360
Individualized
orientation program
GREAT starting
rates!!
Vacation, Holiday
and Personal Days
Tuition
Reimbursement
Health insurance
and Pension Plan
Child Day Care on
premises
Meadows Nursing
& Rehabilitation
Center
4 East Center Hill
Road
Dallas PA 18612
Email Meadow-
[email protected]
e.o.e.
551 Other
ROOFERS & LABORERS
Drivers license a
plus. Please call
824-6381
GET THE WORD OUT
with a Classified Ad.
570-829-7130
VAN DRIVER
Needed Monday
thru Friday- 6-61/2
hour days.
No weekends,
No holidays.
HOUSEKEEPER
Needed Part Time
Every other
Weekend, Every
other Holiday.
Apply within.
Keystone
Garden Estates
100 Narrows Rd
Route 11
Larksville, PA 18651
NO PHONE CALLS
PLEASE.
554 Production/
Operations
INDUSTRIAL
ELECTRICIAN I
MATERIAL HANDLER
Fabri-Kal Corpo-
ration, a major
thermoforming plas-
tics company has
full time benefitted
positions for:
Industrial
Electrician I and
Material Handler.
HS/GED required.
Electrician: 3
years experience
required. Conduit,
emt and ridged
pipe; Equipment
testing; AC/DC
motors and drives;
PLC systems.
Material Handler:
One year forklift
experience within
the past five years.
Current forklift certi-
fication preferred.
Availability for over-
time required. Drug
& Alcohol screening
and background
checks are condi-
tions of employ-
ment. Competitive
wage and benefits
package: Health
Insurance, Prescrip-
tion, Dental & Vision,
Disability, 401K,
Education, Paid
Leave. Apply on
site: Monday-Friday
8AM-5PM; or for-
ward resume to:
Fabri-Kal
Corporation
ATTN: Human
Resources
Valmont Industrial
Park
150 Lions Drive
Hazle Township,
PA 18202
FAX: 570-501-0817
EMAIL:
hrmail@hazleton.
f-k.com
www.f-k.com EOE
566 Sales/Retail/
Business
Development
RETAIL
SALES CLERK
Part time. Ability to
work flexible
schedule required.
Will train. Call
EFO Furniture
570-207-2975
10am-6pm
ARCHBALD
137 Cemetary St.
SA SATURDA TURDAY Y, SEPT 24 , SEPT 24
8:00-4:00 8:00-4:00
DIRECTIONS: 81 TO
RT. 6E TO EXIT 4
(SALEM RD.)
ARCHBALD. TURN
LEFT ON SALEM RD
TO LEFT ON
CEMETARY.
Entire contents of
home including fur-
niture, nice vintage
Mahogany lamp
tables, beautiful
Broyhill diningroom
set, country kitchen
set, two gorgeous
Antique bedroom
sets, glider & patio
furniture, glass-
ware, Waterford
Crystal, china sets,
paintings & wall
hangings, jewelry,
like new ladies
designer clothing,
holiday items &
much more!
CREDIT CARDS
ACCEPTED!
Sale by Cook &
Cook Estate
Liquidators
www.cookand
cookestate
liquidators.com
BEAR CREEK TOWNSHIP
366 Old East End
Blvd
Saturday 9/24
8-3
FIRST TIME YARD SALE
CLEANED OUT
2 HOUSES!
Jeep stroller, baby
swing, wooden high
chair, exersaucer,
many other assort-
ed childrens items
and toys. Home
decor including TV,
Home Interiors pic-
tures, giftware and
assorted house-
wares. Christmas
decorations. Much,
much, more. Most
items under $1.00
DALLAS
9 Idlewood Drive
8:30 - 4:00
Garage Sale:
Stainless steel
microwave, lawn
mower, hot air
furnace, toys,
household items
and more!
DALLAS
Irem Country Club
Pavilion
Sunday Sept. 25th
10 am to 5 pm
Arts, craft & col-
lectible show. More
then 50 vendors.
Baked goods,
super door prizes &
ample parking.
DALLAS
Klein Chiropractic
Parking Lot
Memorial Hwy
Sat., Sept 24, 9-3
Great buys at bar-
gain prices! Antique
trunks, antique child
bed. Across from
Dallas Agway.
HANOVER TOWNSHIP
Stark Holdings, Inc
Self Storage Units
110 West Saint
Marys Road
Saturday, Sept
24
11am - 3pm
Storage units for
Auction. Several
units available due
to non-payment.
Bidders must Sign-
In at the Main
Office
EDWARDSVILLE
133 Summit St.
Saturday Sept., 24
9am - 3pm
double stroller, car
seat, baby items,
infant to toddler
clothing, games
puzzles, books
housewares, etc.
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
EXETER
138 A&B Jean St
Saturday 8am-3pm
Crossbow, weights,
paint sprayer, beer
miser, crafts, dolls,
car ramps, house-
hold items & more.
KINGSTON
137 S. Maple Ave.
September 23 & 24
Friday and Sat
9am -3pm
Household items
KINGSTON
226 Reynolds St
Saturday, Sept. 24
9am-3pm
Artwork, tools, patio
furniture, china, mir-
rors, lamps, mini
fridge, golf bags,
womans bike,
wreaths & holiday
items, doll furniture
& much more!
KINGSTON
255 JOSEPH DRIVE
Fri, Sat. & Sun.
9am - 3pm
Antiques, Jewelry,
Collectibles, Music,
Clothing, Linens,
Cashmere Sweaters,
Yarn & LG Books.
LARKSVILLE
214 East State St
Saturday 8am-1pm
Sweeper, pictures,
bedding, tools, plus
size clothes, kids
clothes, Christmas
items all new. Too
many items to list!
LUZERNE
212 KELLY ST.
Sunday 25th 7-4
Everything must
GO! Garage/House
Sale; dishes,
furniture, tools, art!
MOUNTAIN TOP
1 Greystone Drive
8 a.m. - 3 p.m.
Rain or shine,
Undercover!
Antiques, VHS
player/movies, TVs,
Longaberger
baskets, inversion
table, bird feeder
pole system, smok-
er, bike rack/
accessories and
much more!
MOUNTAIN TOP
15 Yeager Road
Saturday, Sept-24
9am - ?
Nurses Scrubs,
Toys, Childrens
Clothing & Lots of
Crafts!
MOUNTAIN TOP
1544 Laurel Lakes
Drive
9/24, 8-2
Lots of baby and
toddler items;
monitors (angel
care), stroller, car
seat (converts to
booster seat),
infant car seat, crib
sets, exersaucer,
diaper genie, crib
tent, ride along car,
tricycle, large plas-
tic yard jungle gym
and barbie play-
house, lots more.
Household items;
teen comforter
sets, adult com-
forter sets, corner
computer stand,
picture frames,
motorcycle helmet,
portable dvd player,
girls ski boots (size
6 1/2) and more.
MOUNTAINTOP
14 Powell Street
Sat. 9/24 8am-4pm
Household items,
decor, yard stuff,
tools, holiday &
more! RAIN OR SHINE!
MOUNTAINTOP
2055, 2088 & 2326
Prospect Road
Saturday, Sept-24
8am-1pm
Books, crafts, elec-
tronics, exercise
bike, candles, tools,
bikes, housewares
and more. Some-
thing for everyone.
MOUNTAINTOP
24 Brook Lane
Briar Brook
Saturday 9am-1pm
Lots of new items!
Glassware, dishes,
jewelry & more!
MOUNTAINTOP
5 Terrace Dr.
Fri 9-1 Sat 7:30-1
We have a wide
variety of items and
everything must go!
OLD FORGE
St. Nicholas Church
320 Vine St.
Saturday, Sept. 24th
8 am to 4 pm
RAIN OR SHINE!
NO EARLY BIRDS
Ethnic food &
Bake sale.
PITTSTON
174 Johnson St.
Sat., Sept., 24
9am - 3pm
All contents of
home, furniture,
accessories, ladies
clothing. Low prices
PITTSTON
168 Elizabeth Street
(By St. Roccos
Church)
Saturday 9am-4pm
ENTIRE CONTENTS:
Living room, Set,
2 Bedroom Suites,
Bar & Bar Stools,
Dining Room &
Kitchen Sets. M.T.
Tables, Mirrors,
Lamps, Mikasa
China, Stereos, TV.,
Tools, Mower,
Costume Jewelry,
Loads of Kitchen
& More.
PLAINS
64 Skidmore St.
SAT. 9/24 9AM-3PM
SUN. 9/25 10AM-3PM
2 older bedroom
sets, costume jew-
elry, Byods Bears,
cedar wardrobe,
AnnaLee dolls, older
dolls, Besse Pease
prints, reverse
painting, Francis-
cian Ivy pattern din-
nerware, Lenox
Garden Meadow
dinnerware, knick
knacks (Fenton,
McCoy, Hull,
Belleek, Japan),
vaseline glass, old
cups & saucers,
kitchen wares, cur-
tains, bedding, out-
door yard decora-
tions, Nascar,
scanners, holiday
decorations. Too
much to list. Stop by
& check us out!!
PLAINS/HUDSON
15 East Bergh St
Friday & Saturday
Sept-23 & 24
9am-3pm
Entire contents of 9
room home plus 2
car garage. THIS
HOUSE IS LOADED
WITH COUNTRY
DECOR. Antiques,
oak fireplace man-
tle, book cases,
desk, corner cabi-
nets, couches,
rockers, country
shelving, maple
kitchen table &
chairs, vintage doll
collection, old toys,
Precious Moments,
Boyds Bears,
Nascar, Hess
Trucks, quilt rack,
linens, Christmas,
jewelry, Lenox,
braided rugs, adult
& childrens
clothes, toys, bikes,
fridge, tools & more!
FOLLOW THE BRIGHT
GREEN SIGNS!
SWOYERSVILLE
18 Brown St
Saturday, 9am-2pm
Furniture, house-
wares &much more!
SWOYERSVILLE
247 Slocum St
Fri 9/23, Sat 9/24 &
Sun 9/25
9am-?
Estate jewelry, mir-
rors, pictures plus
many many house-
hold items! If you
missed the rest -
come to the best!
NO EARLY BIRDS PLEASE
WILKES-BARRE
87 Academy Street
Friday & Saturday
9am - 3pm
Antiques, jewelry,
Holiday, treadmill
clothing, golf clubs .
SWOYERSVILLE
30 Maltby Ave
Saturday, Sept 24
8am - 4pm
3 families, dont
miss this sale!
WILKES-BARRE
524 Monument,
Corner of 10th &
Monument
Saturday, 9/24
9am - 3pm
Furniture, winter
coats, household
goods, childrens
clothing and much
more!
WILKES-BARRE
807 N. Washington St
Saturday 9am-2pm
Two kitchen sets,
drop down freezer,
computer desk, cof-
fee & end tables,
mens & womens
clothing, kitchen-
wares & more.
WILKES-BARRE
STREET STREET
SALE SALE
200 TO 315
WYOMING STREET
Saturday Sept. 24
8AM TO 1 PM
SOMETHING FOR
EVERYONE
WILKES-BARRE
TWP
133 Old Ashley Rd.
Thurs., Fri. & Sat.
9 am - 4 pm
Last big sale of the
season. many items
reduced.
WYOMING
First Baptist
Church
52 E. 8th St.
MASSIVE
RUMMAGE
SALE
Saturday,
September 24
8am -2pm
lots of clothing
household, TVs
computers, way
VENDORS WANTED
for
Car Cruise Show
Sunday, Oct. 9th
11am-5pm
Call 570-406-4432
or 570-313-0592
by Sept-30, 2011
912 Lots & Acreage
PLAINS TWP.
14 + ACRES
in an approved sub-
division. Easy acc-
ess to Rt 81 & PA
Tpke. 1/2 mile from
Mohegan Sun
Casino. $275,000.
772-260-0901
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
DALLAS
TWP
CONDO FOR LEASE:
$1,800. 2 bedroom/
2 Bath. Call Us to
discuss our great
Amenity & Mainte-
nance program!
Sell your own home!
Place an ad HERE
570-829-7130
KINGSTON
1 bedroom,
ALL UTILITIES
INCLUDED.
$520/month. No
pets, section 8 OK
Call 570-817-3332
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
FORTY FORT
1665 Wyoming Ave.
3rd floor 1 bed-
room, utilities
included. Off street
parking, security
deposit required.
NO PETS
$525/mo. available
immediately.
570-690-0564 or
570-823-7564
KINGSTON
795 Rutter Ave
Screened porch,
kitchen downstairs,
upstairs living room,
bedroom & bath-
room. $575/month
+ utilities. No pets.
570-417-6729
NANTICOKE
603 Hanover St
Above Dental Prac-
tice. 2nd floor, 1
bedroom. No pets.
$550 + security, util-
ities & lease. Pho-
tos available. Call
570-542-5330
WILKES-BARRE
2nd floor apt. 2 bed-
rooms. No pets. Off
street parking.
Washer/dryer hook
up, large yard
$450/month + utili-
ties & security
deposit.
570-650-1844
WILKES-BARRE
AVAILABLE NOW!
Two spacious, 5
room, 2 bedroom
apartments. 1st &
2nd floor. Rent +
utilities. Lease &
security. No pets.
$550 & $625
570-650-3008 or
570-881-8979
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
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WYOMING
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570-954-0727
944 Commercial
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947 Garages
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746 Garage Sales/
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746 Garage Sales/
Estate Sales/
Flea Markets
PHILADELPHIA Michael
Vick took a small step toward
returning from a concussion.
Vick took part in a morning
walkthrough on Wednesday, but
didnt practice in the afternoon.
There is a chance he will play
against the Giants (1-1) on Sun-
day.
Its hard to give you the fu-
ture because you have to do
things the right way and go
through the process, coach An-
dy Reid said.
Vick was injured in Philadel-
phias 35-31 loss to the Falcons
in Atlanta on Sunday night, and
was forced to leave the game in
the second half.
Head athletic trainer Rick
Burkholder said Vick doesnt
have a whole lot of concussion
symptoms, and would undergo
further testing, including seeing
an independent neurologist in
the next day or two.
Just because he doesnt have
symptoms today doesnt mean
he wont have symptoms tomor-
row, Burkholder said. You
cant predict.
Vick threw for a pair of touch-
downs for the Eagles (1-1), but
couldnt continue after getting
spun by a Falcons rusher into
one of his teammates, right tack-
le Todd Herremans. He was re-
placed by Mike Kafka. Vince
Young, who was signed to be the
backup, has missed the first two
games with a hamstring injury.
Hes close to returning.
N F L
AP PHOTO
Philadelphia Eagles quarter-
back Michael Vick holds a foot-
ball during practice in Philadel-
phia on Wednesday.
Vick still
might play
vs. Giants
By ROB MAADDI
AP Pro Football Writer
FLORHAM PARK, N.J.
Mark Sanchez was unsure what
all the fuss was about. The New
York Jets quarterbacks banged-
up right arm feels fine, and so
does his elbow.
So, hearing that his name was
on the teams injury report
Wednesday surprised him a bit.
They feel good, Sanchez said
of his arm and elbow. Our train-
ing staff, theyre the best.
They got me ready to roll. I
took every rep in practice, so I
feel good.
Sanchez hit his armon the hel-
met of Jacksonvilles Matt Roth
late in New Yorks 32-3 rout last
Sunday.
It was his last throw of the
game, a pass intended to try to
get Plaxico Burress a catch.
I just banged it a little bit on
the helmet, he said. You get
your throwing motion and mo-
mentum going at a helmet, and
then you hit something. It makes
it hurt a little more and it freaks
everybody out because its your
throwing shoulder and stuff, but
honestly, it feels great.
Coach Rex Ryan acknowl-
edged that Sanchez is fine and
the notation on the injury report
was purely a procedural thing.
All we do there is we recog-
nize that hes getting treatment,
Ryan said. He gets ice and all
that stuff.
QB Sanchez
feeling fine
for Week 3
By DENNIS WASZAK Jr.
AP Sports Writer
C M Y K
PAGE 6B THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
S P O R T S
tory over the previously unbea-
tenWarriors ina battle of a pair of
WVC titans.
The scores were 25-23, 15-25,
25-19, 25-16 to extend the Royals
streak to 81.
It definitely served as a wake-
upcall, saidGriswold, who turn-
ed in an overpowering perform-
ance with 27 kills. We knew we
hadtostepupingame three. De-
laware Valley is a hard-hitting
team and just did a great job of
hitting their spots.
The 5-foot-10 Griswold
stepped up in the final two
games. She hit with power and
accuracy and proved to be a main
factor.
Griswold was amazing, Holy
Redeemer coach Jack Kablick
said. She made a big difference.
Delaware Valley played good and
wedidnt haveananswer for their
hitters.
The Warriors (4-1) got solid
performances from 6-2 senior
middlehitter CarissaDubeand5-
11 sophomore outside hitter Tay-
lor Braunnagle.
Dube was dominant at the net,
notching eight kills and six ser-
vice points. The high-jumping
Braunnagle post 12 kills, includ-
ing several spikes that enabled
Delaware Valleytotake control of
game two.
Dube is an outstanding play-
er, Kablick said. We knew that
going in and we were prepared
for her. But No. 18 (Braunnagle)
took us by complete surprise. We
werent ready for her.
Delaware Valley had a chance
to win game one. The Warriors
took a 19-18 lead on a Dube kill
but couldnt seal the deal. The
Royals went on a 7-4 run to post
the 25-23 win.
The Warriors took a 14-5 lead
in game two on two straight kills
by Braunnagle, and stretched the
leadto17-6ona monster blockby
Cassidy Cohen, who wound up
with eight kills, two blocks and
four service points.
After fallingbehind7-0ingame
three, the Royals took control at
18-12 on a Griswold kill en route
to a 25-19 win. The Royals were
never seriously threatened in
game four.
I think the major difference
was their service play, said
Braunnagle. We didnt handle
their serves and they handled
ours well. We could have done
much better if we converted our
serves.
According to Dube, the Re-
deemer rally ingame two was the
turning point.
We just got downonourselves
when they came back, she said.
We did some things really well,
but there are some things that we
still have to improve on.
Biz Eaton dished out 32 assists
and notched 11 service points for
Redeemer, Sydney Kotch had 15
service points and four digs,
while Julia Wignot had six kills
and seven digs.
Wignot said the Royals were
shocked by losing game two.
Were not used to playing like
that, she said. But then we
started playing Redeemer volley-
ball.
MMI Prep 3, Berwick 2
Annika Wessel had19 kills and
29 digs as she helped pull the
Preppers past Berwick by scores
of 27-25, 25-20, 19-25, 29-27, 17-
15.
Kristen Young contributed
with 16 kills and 25 digs, Alyssa
Priano had 70 assists and Kayla
Karchner had nine kills and 24
digs in the win.
Berwicks Sarah Wilezynski
had six kills and seven digs, and
Bridget Orlando had eight kills
and 11 service points.
Wyoming Valley West 3,
Tunkhannock 2
Hilary Norris accounted for 13
service points and three kills as
Wyoming Valley West went on to
win by scores of 21-25, 25-19, 25-
21, 22-25, 15-13.
Anna McNattyhadsixkills and
six digs, Juliette Schmid had 10
service points and 25 digs, and
Jocelyn Amico had 21 assists.
In the losing effort for Tunk-
hannock Anna Decker had 12
kills and six blocks, while Brielle
Sherman had 26 assists.
Meyers 3, GAR 0
Kyle Wolsieffer had 14 points,
five aces and three kills in
Meyers 25-5, 25-11, 25-14 win.
Summer Barrouk added nine
points, four aces and a pair of
digs.
Jocelyn Vazquez had three
points, two aces and two kills for
GAR. Brittany Stephenson had
five aces, two digs and a kill.
Hazleton Area 3,
Pittston Area 0
The Cougars swept Pittston
Area 25-17, 25-15, 25-21.
Ali Slomba led Pittston Area
with eight points, seven digs, five
aces and three kills. Alexandra
Kochis added nine digs.
VOLLEYBALL
Continued fromPage 1B
Jay Dawsey and Chris Kon-
icki each scored goal and an
assist to lead Lake-Lehman to a
3-1 win over Wyoming Valley
West on Wednesday in a WVC
boys soccer matchup.
Chris Edkins scored one goal
as well with an assist by Zach
Manganella.
For Valley West Jeremy
Biagotti scored the lone goal
with an assist by Nick Singer.
Lake Lehman............................................... 1 2 3
Wyoming Valley West................................ 1 0 1
First half: 1.LL, Chris Konicki (Jay Dawsey),
30:01; 2. WVW, Jeremy Biagotti (Nick Singer),
37:39
Secondhalf: 3. Dawsey (Konicki), 37:58; 4. LL
Chris Edkins (Zach Manganella), 38:56
Shots: LL 13, WVW 11; Saves: LL 7 (John
Butchko), WVW9(Chris Jaworski); Corners: LL1,
WVW 3.
Coughlin 6,
Wyoming Seminary 2
Justin Okun collected two
goals and two assists as the
Crusaders put the game away
with three unanswered goals in
the second half.
Dave Marriggi added a goal
and two assists while Travis
Keil had a goal and an assist.
Wyoming Seminary................................. 2 0 2
Coughlin .................................................... 3 3 6
First half: 1. WS, Henry Cornell (PK) 28:59; 2.
COU, Joe Tona (Justin Okun) 12:43; 3. COU, Tra-
vis Keil 8:07; 4. WS, Cornell 1:53; 5. COU, Dave
Marriggi (Okun), 1:10
Second half: 6. COU, Okun (Marriggi) 21:14;
7. COU, Okun (Marriggi) 17:30; 8. COU, Bobby
Hawkins (Keil) 0:02
Shots: WS 5, COU 21; Saves: WS 9 (Frank
Henry), COU 1 (Ted Mykulyn); Corners: WS 1,
COU 9.
Dallas 5, Holy Redeemer 0
John Murray scored two
goals and added an assist as
the Mountaineers won without
allowing a shot.
A.J. Nardone finished with a
goal and an assist while Danny
Saba had two helpers.
Holy Redeemer ........................................ 0 0 0
Dallas......................................................... 1 4 5
First half: 1. DAL, Josh Shilanski (Danny Saba),
36:44
Second half: 2. DAL, John Murray (A.J. Nar-
done), 26:30; 3. DAL, Murray (Saba), 22:15; 4.
DAL, Nardone 12:34; 5. DAL, Dante DeAngelo
(Murray) 12:05
Shots: HR 0, DAL 21; Saves: HR 9 (Ian
McGrane), DAL 0 (Ryan Koslozski); Corners: HR
0, DAL 4.
H . S . B OY S S O C C E R R O U N D U P
Black Knights beat WVW
The Times Leader staff
Wilkes University will
officially name its football
stadium in honor of legend-
ary coach Rollie Schmidt on
Saturday.
The school will hold a
ceremony at 12:30 p.m. be-
fore the 1 p.m. kickoff be-
tween the Colonels and
Widener at the Ralston Ath-
letic Complex.
Schmidt, who coached the
program for 20 years,
helped lead Wilkes to a
historic 32-game winning
streak in his tenure.
A member of the Wilkes
Athletic Hall of Fame,
Schmidt also served as a
baseball and golf coach at
the school.
FIELD HOCKEY
Oneonta State 4,
Misericordia 3
The Red Dragons broke a
tie with less than three
minutes to play to hand the
Cougars a non-conference
loss.
Haley Ellis had a goal and
two assists for the Cougars
(1-5) and Hannah Harvey
and Samantha Sorokas both
added goals.
WOMENS TENNIS
Wilkes 9,
East Stroudsburg 0
The Lady Colonels
opened their season with a
sweep of Division II East
Stroudsburg.
Bekah Shanam, Alexis
Donner, Anna Mitchell, Ally
Kristofco and Melanie Nolt
all recorded wins at both
singles and doubles for
Wilkes.
Kings 7, Keystone 2
The Lady Monarchs (1-1)
earned their first win of the
season, taking down Keys-
tone on the road.
Sara Lynn, Emily Biffen,
Katlyn Rossowski and Va-
nessa Wagner all won in
both singles and doubles
competition for the Lady
Monarchs.
MENS GOLF
Misericordia wins tri-match
Led by Bucky Aepplis
1-over 73, Misericordia
earned wins over Wilkes
and Marywood at Mt. Lau-
rel Golf Club.
The Cougars finished with
a team score of 315, edging
Marywood (325) and the
Colonels (332).
Matt Kachurak of Wilkes
and Marywoods Paul Kania
finished tied for second at
75 while Misericordias Jor-
dan Wollenberg was fourth
at 77.
WOMENS SOCCER
Wilkes 4,
Baptist Bible 0
Katie Cocchi led the Lady
Colonels with a goal and
two assists as Wilkes won
its third straight non-confer-
ence game.
Jana Martin, Katy Fissel
and Ashley Thorpe also
scored for Wilkes.
L O C A L C O L L E G E R O U N D U P
Stadium ceremony
Saturday at Wilkes
The Times Leader staff Dallas edged Crestwood 3-2
on Wednesday in a girls tennis
match.
For the Mountaineers, Dana
Yu defeated Brittany Stanton
6-7, 6-0, 6-3, Melissa Tucker
defeated Melanie Kobela 4-6,
7-5, 6-2, and in doubles action
Chloe Alles and Talia Szatkow-
ski topped Jenn Snyder and
Melanie Snyder 6-2, 6-4.
For Crestwood in singles
Kristi Bowman defeated Bridget
Boyle 6-2, 6-63, and in doubles
Corey Gallagher and Mary Kate
Coulter defeated Grace Schaub
and Lindsey Kelly 5-7, 6-4, 6-2.
Wyoming Valley West 4, GAR1
Cathy Byrnes defeated Iudu-
ku AKA- Ezoue 6-1, 6-0 as
Wyoming Valley West went on
to defeat GAR 4-1in singles
action in tennis.
Christa Talpesh defeated
Josefa Ramero 6-0, 6-0, and
Lauran Monto defeated Raquel
Sosa 6-2, 6-0.
In doubles, Jillian Pajor and
Imani Mullins won by default.
GARs only win came when
Canessa Castillo and Dian Lo-
pez defeated Emily Coslett and
Erica Gavenonis 7-6 (7-5), 6-3.
Tunkhannock 3, MMI Prep 2
Jessica Murley defeated En-
glysh Handlong 6-3, 6-3 to lead
Tunkhannock to a win over
MMI.
In doubles Same Veety and
Casey Micholowski defeated
Antonia Diner and Megan Kost
3-6, 6-3, 6-1, and Marlena Chesn-
er and Becky Mills defeated
Gaby Becker and Megan Kost
6-0, 6-4.
For MMI Gabriella Lobitz
defeated Hope Murray 6-3, 6-1,
and Stephanie Pudish defeated
Carley Griffiths 6-0, 6-3.
Holy Redeemer 5,
Wyoming Area 0
Fallyn Boich defeated Valerie
Bott 6-0, 6-0 in singles action to
lead Holy Redeemer.
Nellie Chmil defeated Lisa
Chihorek 6-0, 6-0 and Emily
Suchocki defeated Emily Luka-
savage 6-1, 6-2.
In doubles Allison Muth and
Shaina Dougherty defeated
Brina Platt and Alex Romano
6-2, 6-2 and Trish Harenza and
Beth Chmil defeated Morgan
Bilbow 6-0, 6-2.
Coughlin 4, GAR 0
Jenna Latchko defeated Iduku
AKA-Ezoue 6-1, 6-1 ten route to
a Coughlin shutout.
Julie Barry defeated Josefa
Ramero 6-0, 6-2 and Summer
Lehtini won 6-0, 6-1.
In doubles Reba Shaffer and
Eryn Harvey defeated Vanessa
Castillo and Diane Lopez, and
game two was a default by GAR.
Wyoming Valley West 4,
Hanover Area 1
Cathy Byrnes defeated Mar-
sha Geiser 6-2, 6-0 in singles
action to lead Wyoming Valley
West to a victory.
Devin Ryman defeated Elise
House 6-0, 6-2, and Lana Monto
defeated Kati McManus 6-1, 6-1.
In doubles Danielle Patterson
and Nicole Henderson defeated
Alyssa Cunnard and Analiese
Reisinger 6-2, 6-0.
H . S . G I R L S T E N N I S R O U N D U P
Mountaineers earn narrow
3-2 victory vs. Crestwood
The Times Leader staff
Lindsay Hischak scored with
3:14 left in regulation to break
a tie and give Crestwood a
tense 2-1 win over Holy Re-
deemer on Wednesday in a
Wyoming Valley Conference
field hockey game.
Jess Newak tied the game up
in the second for the Comets
and also assisted on Hischaks
winner.
Marnie Kusakavitch had the
lone goal for the Royals.
Crestwoods Danielle De-
spirito and Redeemers El-
izabeth Nicholas finished with
three and seven saves, respec-
tively.
Holy Redeemer........................................... 1 0 1
Crestwood.................................................... 0 2 2
First half: 1. HR, Marnie Kusakavitch (Melanie
Kusakavitch), 21:43
Second half: 2. CRE, Jess Newak (Chandler
Ackers), 20:57; 3. CRE, Lindsay Hischak (Newak),
3:14
Shots: HR6, CRE11; Saves: HR7 (Elizabeth
Nicholas), CRE 3 (Danielle Despirito); Corners:
HR 8, CRE 7
Meyers 3, Honesdale 2
Meyers answered with three
goals after the break to rally
past Honesdale.
Kelly Mahalak broke a 2-2 tie
with just 1:01 remaining in
regulation off a feed from
Cathy Quinones to give the
Mohawks the victory.
Brianna DiMaggio and
Amanda Tredinnick each had a
goal and an assist for Meyers,
which trailed 1-0 after the first.
Honesdale................................................. 1 1 2
Meyers....................................................... 0 3 3
First half: 1. HON, Mary Martin (Elyssa Stanton)
16:10
Second half: 2. MEY, Brianna DiMaggio
(Amanda Tredinnick) 14:20; 3. MEY, Treddinnick
(DiMaggio) 10:41; 4. HON, Bailey Martin 9:40; 5.
MEY, Kelly Mahalak (Cathy Quinones) 1:01
Shots: HON11, MEY9; Saves: HON6(Nicole
Cush), MEY 8 (Rianna Daughtery-Smith); Cor-
ners: HON 6, MEY 4.
Dallas 7, Nanticoke 0
Seven different players
scored for the Mountaineers in
the shutout victory.
Evonna Ackourey, Jenny
Cave, Ashley Dunbar and Katy
Comitz each had a goal and an
assist for the Mountaineers.
Nanticoke .................................................. 0 0 0
Dallas......................................................... 2 5 7
First half: 1. DAL, Ashley Dunbar (Jenny Cave),
7:43; 2. DAL, Cave (Dunbar), 0:18.
Secondhalf: 3. DAL, Evonna Ackourey (Kirby
Szalkowski), 21:26; 4. DAL, VanessaParsons (Ka-
ty Comitz), 20:40; 5. DAL, Comitz (Ackourey),
17:59; 6. DAL, Kami McGee (Jess Missal), 10:59;
7. DAL, Kayla Thomas (Szalkowski), 0:06.
Shots: NAN0, DAL 27; Saves: NAN17 (Alexa
Gorski), DAL 1 (Sarah Stewart, Dana Jolley); Cor-
ners: NAN 0, DAL 15.
Coughlin 3,
Lackawanna Trail 0
Kaitlin Wood scored two
goals and had one assist as
Coughlin defeated Lackwanna
Trail at home.
Dana Hayward had one goal
while Madysen Jones and
Alyssa Monaghan had one
assist each.
Lackawanna Trail ........................................ 0 0 0
Coughlin....................................................... 0 3 3
Second half: 1. Dana Hayward (Kaitlin Wood),
28:29; 2. Wood (Madysen Jones), 10:50; 3. Wood
(Alyssa Monaghan), 10:23
Shots: LT8, COU14; Saves: LT11 (Courtney
Ditchey), COU 7 (Paige Tedick); Corners: LT 7,
COU 9.
Hazleton Area 4,
Abington Heights 0
Kayla and Serena Garzio
each scored a goal as Hazleton
Area defeated host Abington
Heights.
Also scoring for Hazleton
were Allison Machey and Lexi
Henchenski.
Hazleton Area..................................... 1 3 4
Abington Heighs................................. 0 0 0
First Half: 1. Haz, Kayla Garzio (UA), 27:40.
Second Half: 1. Haz, Lexi Henchenski (UA)
16:46, 2. Haz, Selena Garzio (UA) 5:35. 3. Haz,
Allison Machey (UA) 1:40.
Shots: Haz 19, AH 4. Goalie Saves: Abing-
ton (Claire Notarriani) 11, Hazleton 2 (Leeca
Baran).
Delaware Valley 2,
Wyoming Area 0
Kirsten Brockmann assisted
both goals as Delaware Valley
posted a shutout.
Christy Murphy and Grace
Farrell had the scores.
Wyoming Area.......................................... 0 0 0
Delaware Valley ....................................... 1 1 2
First half: 1. DV, ChristyFarrell (KirstenBrock-
mann), 22:44; Second half: 2. DV, Grace Farrell
(Brockmann), 17:53.
Shots: WA 10, DV 7; Saves: WA 5 (Nicole
Cumbo), DV 10 (Faith Torkileson); Corners: n/a.
Wyoming Valley West 4,
Lake-Lehman 0
Riki Stefanides had two
second-half goals, allowing the
Spartans to pull away for a
victory.
Nicole Sott had two assists,
also in the second half. Maura
Anistranski and Danielle Grega
had the other goals.
Wyoming Valley West............................. 1 3 4
Lake-Lehman............................................ 0 0 0
First half: 1. WVW, Maura Anistranski (Souni Da-
venport), 19:36; Secondhalf: 2. WVW, Riki Stefa-
nides (Kelcie Hromisin), 23:39; 3. WVW, Stefa-
nides (Nicole Sott), 10:48; 4. WVW, Danielle Gre-
ga (Sott), 5:35.
Shots: WVW 21, LL 2; Saves: WVW 1 (Kate
Smicherko), LL 17 (Nikki Sutliff); Corners: WVW
11, LL 4.
Comets field hockey triumphs
The Times Leader staff
Catherine Lombardo broke
the course record a 19:16 for
Pittston Area to as she finished
first in a six-way girls cross
country meet Wednesday.
Pittston won all three of its
meets defeating Berwick 22-25,
Valley West 22-35 and North-
west 15-50.
Other scores were Berwick
20, Wyoming Area 43; Valley
West 19, Wyoming Area 41.
In the boys cross country
meet Wyoming Valley Wests
Bennett Williams took first as
he finished with 17:26.
Valley West won all three its
meets defeating Pittston Area
21-38, Wyoming Area 15-50, and
GAR15-50
Other scores were Pittston
Area 25, Berwick 30; Northwest
15, Wyoming Area 50
Marisa Durako took first
place for Holy Redeemer at a
time of 19:20 meet at Hanover
Area in a six-way girls cross
country meet
Holy Redeemer defeated
Hanover Area 16-41, and Hazle-
ton Area 23-32 in their meets
Other scores included Hanov-
er Area 24, Seminary 31; Hazle-
ton Area 19, Coughlin 50
Mitch Ford took first for Holy
Redeemer in a six-way boys
cross country meet at a time of
17:36.
Holy Redeemer won all three
of its meets defeating Hanover
Area 15-48, Nanticoke 15-49, and
Hazleton Area 19-43.
Other scores included Hanov-
er Area 27, Coughlin 58; Semi-
nary 20, Nanticoke 43
At Pittston Area
Girls top 20 Runners
Catherine Lombardo, PA; 19:16; Alex Plant,
WVW; 19:54; Sara Badzwilka, WA; 20:06; Bianca
Bolton, PA; 20:16; Kaitlyan Kuctha, PA; 20:40;
Abby Bull, BER; 21:17; Julia Mericle, WVW; 21:18;
Krysten Lombardo, PA; 21:53; Emily Leighow,
BER; 22:06; Emily Tyler, WVW; 22:07; Mona Ni,
BER; 22:17; Karleigh Hartman, BER; 22:32; Olivia
Hanza, PA; 22:45; Amy Paddock, WVW; 23:00;
Alicia Stavytszky, NW; 23:05; Gena Montecalno,
BER; 23:06; Emily Seaman, PA; 23:06; Ashley
Menyonyny, PA; 23:37; Alison Gordner, BER;
24:02;
Boys Top 20 Runners
Bennett Williams, WVW; 17:26; Will Butkiewicz,
WVW; 17:28; Michael Lewis, NW; 17:33; Zachary
Briggs, NW; 17:54; Jeff Nelson, NW; 18:31; Tyler
Cummings, PA; 18:33; Jamie Connors, PA; 18:41;
Eryc Filipiak, WA; 18:44; Jeff Austyn, WVW; 18:52;
Andrew Guarilia, WA; 18:44; Tye Sotphen, WVW;
19:08; Domitni Shea, PA; 19:15; Nick Odiesewsky,
GAR; 19:28; Steve Barosn, WA; 19:28; Ryan May,
BER; 19:30; Kevin Laubach, BER; 19:30; Kevin
Yohey, BER; 19:31; Elliot Malshesky, BER; 19:32;
Nathan Cheek, WVW; 19:37; P.J. Endler, WVW;
19:41
At Hanover Area
Girls Top 20 Runners
Marisa Durako, HR; 19:20; Rachel Sowinski,
HR; 20:03; Nicole Buehrle, HAZ; 20:36; Cassie
Rupp, HAZ; 21:16; Brianna Ligotski, HR; 21:18;
Cassandra Gill, HR; 21:26; Angie Marchetti, HAZ;
21:29; Becki Marchetti, HAZ; 21:47; Alanna
Trombetta, SEM; 21:48; Paige Antall, HAN; 21:51;
Melissa Cruz, HR; 22:10; Mickie Kaminski, HAN;
22:14; Briana Pap, HAZ; 22:35; Nora Fazzi, COU;
22:45; Amy Viti, HAN; 22:59; Melissa Ortiz, HAN;
23:05; Emily Zaremba, HAZ; 23:07; Sally Mooney,
SEM; 23:54; Renata ODonnell, SEM; 23:55; Katie
Perrine, SAM; 24:01
Boys Top 20 Runners
Mitch Ford, HAN; 17:38; Jacob Fetterman,
HAZ; 17:40; Vinay Murthy, HR; 18:06; Pat Condo,
HR; 18:36; Mike Ambrulavage, HR; 18:42; Jimmy
Chimola, COU; 18:45; Frazie Sutphen, HR; 18:49;
Forest Hawkins, HAN; 18:58; Jeff Capaci, HR;
19:06; Andrew Myers, HAZ; 19:07; Chris Kabacnti,
HR; 19:07; Luke Scenzak, COU; 19:22; Tyler
Pecora, HAZ; 19:43; Ryan Josefacz, HAN; 19:50;
Josh Foust, HR; 19:58; Matt Williams, HAN; 19:59;
Kyle Skiner, HAZ; 19:59; Zack Mykulin, COU;
19:59; Carl Daubert, HAN; 20:00
BILL TARUTIS/FOR THE TIMES LEADER
Runners fromBerwick, GAR, Northwest, Pittston Area, Wyoming
Area, and Wyoming Valley West begin the boys six-school cross
country run at Pittston Area High School in Yatesville on Wednes-
day afternoon.
H . S . C R O S S C O U N T R Y
Pittston Area girls
set record in win
The Times Leader staff
Chase Makowski shot a1-
under 34 as Holy Redeemer and
PittstonArea neededto go to
five golfers to break a tie inthe
Royals 190-191victory on
Wednesday at Fox Hill Country
Club.
Mariano Medico shot an
even-par 35 while Wil Fulton
(40), Mike Boland(40) andEric
Jones (41) also scoredfor the
Royals.
Leading the Patriots were
BrandonMatthews (37), Ryan
Tracy (38), Matt Carroll (40),
CalvinOBoyle (40) andChris
Lynch(42).
Dallas168,
WyomingValleyWest170
AustinSmithmedaledwitha
37 to leadthe Mountaineers to a
narrowwinat IremCountry
Club (par 36).
JohnDougherty shot a 42 for
Dallas while James Flores shot
a 44 andRyanGeorgetti andJoe
Brojakowski bothfinishedat 45.
Scoring for the Spartans were
Chris McCue (41), ColinHarris
(42), EvanParillo (43) and
Chris Nixon44.
Crestwood169, MMI Prep190
Medalist Joe Hurnfireda
2-under par as Crestwood
pickedup the winat Valley
Country Club, par 35.
Jake Popowycz fireda 36,
Billy Bumbrowski a 43 and
Thomas Goyneda 48.
For MMI Jeff Lotz leadwitha
42 SamHarmanshot a 47,
Casey McCoy a 48, andEmily
Morrisona 54.
WyomingArea173,
Meyers189
Jake Wysocki (40), Nick
Rydzewski (41), Zack Mulhern
(45) andCourtney Melvin(47)
ledthe Warriors to victory at
Fox Hill Country Club (par 35).
Meyers scoredwithTony
Morrash(42), Will Amesbury
(42), DanConrad(44) andC.J.
Szafran(63).
Redeemer golf tops Patriots
The Times Leader staff
C M Y K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 PAGE 7B
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CHARLOTTE, N.C. NAS-
CAR tweaked two rules for next
months race at Talladega Super-
speedway, apparently in an effort
to limit the two-car tandem rac-
ing that has dominated at its two
fastest tracks.
The first change ordered
Wednesday was an increase in
the size of the restrictor plate
that will be used in the Oct. 23
race. Larger holes in the carbure-
tor plates should lead to an in-
crease of horsepower that could
make the cars 2 to 3 mph faster.
NASCAR also ordered an ad-
justment on the pop-off valve in
the cooling system that should
lower the maximum water tem-
perature in engines. A threat of
overheating could prevent cars
fromstaying hooked together for
too long.
Drivers discovered over the
last year that its faster to run at
Daytona and Talladega in two-
car tandems. That style has re-
placed the popular two- and
three-wide packs, and fans have
been lukewarm about the tan-
dem racing.
Now, two cars hook up bum-
per-to-bumper, one clearly push-
ing the other until the potential
for overheating forces them to
separate andthenswap. Its made
for recordleadchanges andexcit-
ing finishes, but is a totally differ-
ent style than the white-knuckle
pack racing fans loved.
Drivers, meanwhile, said its
impossible to see anything when
they are pushing another car and
Dale Earnhardt Jr., NASCARs
most popular driver, has repeat-
edly railed against tandem rac-
ing.
What kind of move can you
make in racing like this? he
asked in July. There aint no
moveyoucanmake. Youjust hold
it on the mat and try not to wreck
into each other.
NASCAR vice president of
competition Robin Pemberton
made no mention of tandem rac-
ing in explaining the changes.
After the last few superspeed-
way races, weve heard many
drivers express their desire to
open up the size of the restrictor
plate some and we thought the
time was right to do that, Pem-
berton said in a statement. We
anticipate these revisions in the
rules package for Talladega will
help continue to provide compet-
itive and exciting racing for the
fans.
The larger restrictor plate
could push speeds over 200 mph,
but the combination of the pop-
off valve change likely means the
cars wont be able to stay locked
together for as many laps. David
Reutimann crew chief Rodney
Childers thinks drivers might be
limited to a lap of pushing before
needing to swap.
Changing the plates will be
better, Childers said. It should
make it more racy, where you can
pull out and pass. If they are
wanting to make it where people
cant draft as long, its going to do
that. Probably only a half of a lap
or a lap is all youre going to get
out of it.
Chad Johnston, crew chief for
Martin Truex Jr., predicted that
drivers will have to swap posi-
tions more. That couldmakeit di-
cey, he said, because drivers will
have to swap while also avoiding
the two-car packs behind them.
The chances of something go-
ing wrong on a swap are going to
go up obviously, but hopefully it
will eliminate or lessen the two-
by-two racing, he said.
N A S C A R
Two rule changes should crack down on tandem racing at Talladega
By JENNA FRYER
AP Auto Racing Writer
C M Y K
PAGE 8B THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
C M Y K
T
o
d
a
y
The job market
Economists expect the Labor
Department to report a slight
drop in the number of people
who applied for unemployment
benefits last week. But therell
be little excitement if the fore-
casts are right. The number of
applicants reached the highest
level in three months in the
week ended Sept. 10. The
number must fall below
375,000 to indicate that em-
ployers are hiring enough to
send unemployment rate down.
Nikes take on the consumer
Nikes earnings are also an indica-
tor of consumers willingness to
spend on things that arent neces-
sities. The worlds largest maker
of athletic shoes and clothes has
had rising revenue around the
world in the last year. Its fiscal
first-quarter report will show
whether revenue was hurt by the
slowing global economy. Nike has
warned that rising prices for raw
materials could hurt profit margins.
Analysts still expect it to report an
earnings gain.
An economic reading
from FedEx
FedExs fiscal first-quarter earn-
ings report will reveal more than
how its doing. The package deliv-
ery company is seen as a good
barometer of the global economy
because the number of shipments
it handles rises and falls with busi-
ness activity. It generally issues
an economic forecast along with
its results. At least two financial
analysts have lowered their earn-
ings expectations for FedEx
because of the slower economy.
First-time applications for
unemployment benefits
Source: FactSet
Week
ending
Sept. 10
428k
Week
ending
Sept. 17
(-1%)
422k
estimate
Price-to-earnings ratio: 16
based on past 12 months results
Dividend: $0.52 Div. Yield: 0.7%
70
80
90
$100
1Q 11
Operating
EPS
1Q 12
est.
$1.20
$1.46
FDX $72.50
$82.91
11
Source: FactSet
Price-to-earnings ratio: 20
based on past 12 months results
Dividend: $1.24 Div. Yield: 1.4%
70
80
90
$100
1Q 11
Operating
EPS
1Q 12
est.
$1.14
$1.21
NKE $85.74
$78.37
11
Source: FactSet
Google books deal delayed
Lawyers for authors, publishers and
Google have bought themselves more
time in their New York copyright case
as they try to reach a new deal that
could create the worlds largest digital
library.
The lawyers told federal Judge Den-
ny Chin in Manhattan on Thursday
that they are still negotiating.
In March, the judge rejected a $125
million deal. That agreement had
drawn hundreds of objections from
Google rivals, consumer watchdogs,
academic experts, literary agents and
even foreign governments.
A lawyer for Google said the current
negotiations are making substantial
progress. Still, the judge agreed to a
court schedule that extends through
the next year, with no trial date set.
Google already has scanned more
than 15 million books for the project.
The lawsuit was filed in 2005.
Home sales signs mixed
The number of Americans who
bought previously occupied homes
rose in August. But sales were driven
by an increase in foreclosures, a sign
that home prices could fall further next
year and slow a housing recovery.
The National Association of Realtors
said Wednesday that home sales rose
7.7 percent last month to a seasonally
adjusted annual rate of 5.03 million
homes. Thats below the 6 million that
economists say is consistent with a
healthy housing market.
Last months pace was slightly ahead
of the 4.91 million sold in 2010, the
worst sales level in 13 years.
Homes at risk of foreclosure made
up 31 percent of sales. Thats up from
29 percent in July. Many are being
bought by investors.
I N B R I E F
$3.58 $2.66 $3.58
$4.06
07/17/08
BUSINESS S E C T I O N B
THE TIMES LEADER THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011
timesleader.com
DOW
11,124.84
283.82
NASDAQ
2,538.19
52.05
S&P
1,166.76
35.33
WALL STREET
52-WEEK
HIGH LOW NAME TKR LAST CHG
Stocks of Local Interest
98.01 74.58 AirProd APD 78.13 -4.05
30.70 22.84 AmWtrWks AWK 30.29 +.12
51.50 36.76 Amerigas APU 43.58 -.73
23.79 19.28 AquaAm WTR 20.95 -.61
38.02 26.00 ArchDan ADM 27.18 -.85
333.99 214.00 AutoZone AZO 322.79 -4.96
15.31 6.01 BkofAm BAC 6.38 -.52
32.50 18.77 BkNYMel BK 19.12 -1.09
17.49 5.59 BonTon BONT 5.80 -.32
52.95 34.33 CIGNA CI 43.62 -2.01
39.50 29.45 CVS Care CVS 35.33 -.48
71.77 57.55 CocaCola KO 69.28 -1.37
27.16 16.91 Comcast CMCSA 21.86 -.86
28.95 21.75 CmtyBkSy CBU 22.06 -1.27
42.50 17.01 CmtyHlt CYH 17.08 -.86
38.69 29.00 CoreMark CORE 31.18 -1.11
13.63 4.81 Entercom ETM 5.10 -.20
21.02 8.55 FairchldS FCS 12.64 -.48
9.84 6.29 FrontierCm FTR 6.37 -.41
18.71 13.09 Genpact G 15.61 -.16
13.74 7.00 HarteHnk HHS 7.98 -.21
55.00 46.98 Heinz HNZ 49.71 -.90
59.85 45.67 Hershey HSY 58.21 -1.08
36.30 29.80 Kraft KFT 34.13 -.39
27.45 18.07 Lowes LOW 19.18 -.74
95.00 69.23 M&T Bk MTB 68.29 -3.54
91.22 72.14 McDnlds MCD 87.52 -1.79
24.98 17.50 NBT Bcp NBTB 17.55 -.96
10.28 4.25 NexstarB NXST 6.45 +.08
65.19 42.70 PNC PNC 47.69 -2.50
29.61 24.10 PPL Corp PPL 28.98 -.29
20.25 13.16 PennMill PMIC 20.14 +.04
17.34 8.80 PenRE PEI 8.54 -.74
71.89 59.25 PepsiCo PEP 60.79 +.40
72.74 54.61 PhilipMor PM 66.80 -1.48
67.72 57.56 ProctGam PG 63.02 -1.06
67.52 44.54 Prudentl PRU 45.73 -3.25
17.11 10.92 SLM Cp SLM 12.67 -.50
60.00 38.00 SLM pfB SLMpB 42.50 -.60
44.65 23.60 SoUnCo SUG 41.38 -.41
12.45 6.40 Supvalu SVU 6.87 -.38
59.72 42.49 TJX TJX 56.49 -1.75
33.53 25.81 UGI Corp UGI 27.71 -1.03
38.95 31.58 VerizonCm VZ 35.84 -.57
57.90 48.31 WalMart WMT 51.32 -.97
42.20 36.77 WeisMk WMK 37.43 -.94
34.25 22.58 WellsFargo WFC 23.71 -.96
I GUESS I ALWAYS
considered Motorola
the middle-of-the-
road brand, as far as
Android-based smart-
phones go. The ubiq-
uitous Droid, the
Droid X, the Droid 2,
and all of the others all fine, top-
notch phones seemed to lack the
flair of Samsung, or the nice touches
that made HTC phones more appeal-
ing, in my opinion.
So, despite all the hype, I was some-
what skeptical of the Droid Bionic I
expected it to be just another evolu-
tion of the Droid product line.
I was wrong.
The design leaves no doubt that its
from the same lineage as the Droid X
and Droid 2 the shape and size all
clearly point to its origins. But there
was something different about it.
The gleaming finish and softly
equal aplomb.
The display
features a superi-
or 256 pixel-per-
inch density, and
was one of the
most clear Ive
seen to date. The
cameras (there
are two, one
forward facing,
one rear) were
excellent quality
the main cam-
era is an 8 Megapixel model with dual
flash it can also shoot HD video
as is now standard of most high-end
smartphones. The Bionic is $299.99
with a two-year contract. Otherwise,
its $589.99
come together to create an experience
that can be described simply, and in
one word: fast. There was no appre-
ciable lag with anything I tried to do
webpages, videos, apps, Flash pag-
es the phone handled them all with
curved corners lend an air of sophisti-
cation, for one. The choice of colors
and material, for another, give the
impression of quality.
But the real magic starts when you
hit the power button.
One thing I have always liked about
the Motorola-manufactured Android
phones is their boot animation. Once
you arrive at the Home page and
start using the phone, one thing be-
comes clear: This phone is something
special.
I would characterize it as one of the
most responsive smartphones Ive
seen to date the interface is slick,
smooth and easy to use. The Dual
Core processors, GeForce GPU, and
4G LTE transmission capability all
NICK DELORENZO
T E C H T A L K
Carrier: Verizon
Network: 4G LTE
Processor: Dual-Core
1GHZ Arm Cortex
A9Display: 4.3 Inch
540x960 resolution
256ppi
GPU: GeForce Tegra 2
Camera: 8MP HD 3264x2448 Primary,
VGA secondary
OS: Android 2.3 (Gingerbread)Storage:
16GB internal, 1GB RAM, 2GB Rom + Up to
32GB on card
Wireless: WI-FI, Bluetooth 2.0
Price: 299.99 (w/contract) $589.99 (w/o
contract)
MOTOROLA DROID BIONIC
FROM VERIZON
Nick DeLorenzo is director of Interactive
and New Media for The Times Leader. Write
him at [email protected].
Taking Motorolas Droid Bionic from Verizon for a test drive
WASHINGTON The Feder-
al Reserve has taken many un-
precedented steps in the past
three years to try to boost the
economy and counter the effects
of a financial crisis that triggered
a painful recession. Its kept the
short-term interest rate it con-
trols at a record low near zero
since December 2008.
And its bought about $2 tril-
lion in U.S. Treasurys and mort-
gage-backed securities to try to
hold down longer-term rates.
Thats caused the Feds portfolio
to hit nearly $2.9 trillion, from
less than $1 trillion in 2007.
Some steps the Fed has taken:
Dec. 15-16, 2008: The Fed
creates a target range for interest
rates and cuts its key federal
funds rate to between zero and
0.25 percent. Thats a record low.
Jan. 27-28-2009: The central
bank signals its prepared to buy
longer-term Treasuries and ex-
pand other programs.
March 17-18, 2009: The Fed
says it will start buying up to
$300 billion in government
bonds over six months. It also de-
cides to boost purchases of Fan-
nie Mae and Freddie Mac mort-
gage-backed securities and debt.
Aug. 27, 2010: ChairmanBen
Bernanke lists several options to
boost the economy, including the
purchase of additional govern-
ment bonds.
Nov. 3, 2010: The Fed an-
nounces it will buy $600 billion
more in Treasury bonds to try to
hold down longer-term rates.
June 22, 2011: The Fed con-
firms it will complete its purchas-
es of $600 billion in Treasury
bonds by the end of the month.
Aug. 9, 2011: It pledges to
keep its benchmark short-term
rate at nearly zerountil mid-2013.
Aug. 26, 2011: Bernanke pro-
poses no new steps to boost the
economy. But he signals that
Congress should do more to pro-
mote hiring and growth, or risk
delaying the economys return to
full health. He also says the Feds
September policy meeting will
last two days instead of one.
Sept. 21, 2011: The Fed an-
nounces that it will sell $400 bil-
lion of its shorter-term securities
to buy longer-term holdings to
try to lower Treasury yields fur-
ther. The Fedalsosays it will rein-
vest its holdings of mortgage-
backed securities.
Feds steps
to boost
economy
The Associated Press
P
LAINS TWP. -- The French love pizza. When you go to the grocery store in France, there is a freezer
stocked with frozen pizzas, trade adviser Romain Balluais said.
So why cant one of those pizza pies be manufactured here in Northeastern Pennsylvania?
That was the question Vincent Nardone and Joe Bevevino of Wilkes-Barre-based pizza maker Nardone
Bros. brought to the Where inthe World, Bringing the Worldto NortheasternPennsylvania trade showat
the Woodlands Inn on Wednesday.
Were in 40 states here, Bevevino said. With the national acceptance that weve had with our products,
because of our capability to adapt to fit certain markets, were looking to see if we cant expand into Europe.
The annual show brings companies
from seven counties in Northeastern
Pennsylvania together with trade advis-
ers specializing in 38 international mar-
kets. Thirty-twocompanies attendedthe
show Wednesday.
In the United States, Nardone Bros.
sells a lot of its products to school dis-
tricts, but Balluais, trade adviser for
France and Spain, said French schools
may not be interested. But other buyers,
including universities, large corporate
offices and stadiums might be, he ad-
vised the Nardone representatives.
In particular, Balluais found the com-
panys pizza in oven-able boxes particu-
larly intriguing.
Thats great; we dont have that I
think, Balluais said. Thats a great
product.
The trade advisers at the showare not
diplomats, but private contractors hired
by the state to provide guidance and as-
sistance to companies in developing
products that fit international markets
and coordinating meetings with poten-
tial buyers in other countries.
Cam Koons, of Deer Park Lumber in
Tunkhannock, said he traveled to China
after meeting with a trade adviser at last
years show.
We went over toChina andthey hada
taxi ready for us when we got off the air-
plane, because we dont knowhowto do
that; we dont speak the language, he
said. And from that trip we picked up a
lot of business and a lot of new custom-
ers, andit startedout at a trade showlike
this.
Throughout the week they are travel-
ing to 10 different regions around the
state to meet with Pennsylvania compa-
nies as part of Pennsylvania Internation-
al Business Week. The free programwas
funded by the state Department of Com-
munity and Economic Developments
Office of International Business Devel-
opment and sponsored locally by the
Northeastern Pennsylvania Alliance.
Wilfred H. Muskens, deputy secretary
for international business development
for DCED, said that international mar-
kets have become increasingly impor-
tant for Pennsylvania companies as do-
mestic sales have declined in many sec-
tors. Expanding abroad also allows com-
panies to ride out recessions more easily
by spreading their sales among multiple
markets.
In the past decade, Muskens said,
Pennsylvania has doubled the value of
products it exports, andDCEDs interna-
tional business development program
last year helped generate more than
$525 million in export sales, producing
$64 million in state tax revenues, at the
cost of a $6 million state investment in
the program.
A slice of world trade
PETE G. WILCOX/THE TIMES LEADER
Local business people meet with international trade representatives during the Where In The World trade show at the
Woodlands Inn & Resort in Plains Township on Wednesday to discuss local businesses dealing in international trade. The
event was organized by NEPA and Pennsylvania Center for Trade Development.
By MATT HUGHES [email protected]
C M Y K
PAGE 10B THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
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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 71/56
Average 71/51
Record High 92 in 1931
Record Low 32 in 1956
Yesterday 1
Month to date 69
Year to date 77
Last year to date 82
Normal year to date 100
*Index of fuel consumption, how far the days
mean temperature was below 65 degrees.
Precipitation
Yesterday 0.00
Month to date 6.52
Normal month to date 2.73
Year to date 45.22
Normal year to date 27.74
Susquehanna Stage Chg. Fld. Stg
Wilkes-Barre 4.38 -0.58 22.0
Towanda 2.53 -0.39 21.0
Lehigh
Bethlehem 2.86 0.54 16.0
Delaware
Port Jervis 4.42 -0.12 18.0
Todays high/
Tonights low
TODAYS SUMMARY
Highs: 71-76. Lows: 59-62. Cloudy with a
chance of rain today. Cloudy skies with
rain turning to showers tonight.
The Poconos
Highs: 71-79. Lows: 65-68. Cloudy with a
chance of rain today. Cloudy skies with
rain turning to showers tonight.
The Jersey Shore
Highs: 71-76. Lows: 54-58. Mostly cloudy
with a chance of rain today. Mostly
cloudy with a chance of showers tonight.
The Finger Lakes
Highs: 78-79. Lows: 66-68. Cloudy with a
chance of rain today. Cloudy skies with
rain turning to showers tonight.
Brandywine Valley
Highs: 76-80. Lows: 67-68. Cloudy with
rain and a few thunderstorms today.
Cloudy with a chance of rain tonight.
Delmarva/Ocean City
Anchorage 51/44/.06 54/43/sh 51/42/c
Atlanta 85/69/.00 80/67/t 77/63/t
Baltimore 74/57/.00 78/67/t 76/63/r
Boston 75/59/.00 73/63/r 71/64/sh
Buffalo 79/56/.00 71/56/c 67/54/sh
Charlotte 75/68/.43 83/65/t 80/61/t
Chicago 70/60/.00 62/50/c 61/51/c
Cleveland 72/61/.16 69/58/c 63/54/sh
Dallas 92/67/.00 80/60/t 83/61/s
Denver 68/38/.00 79/47/s 83/49/s
Detroit 78/63/.00 67/52/c 63/51/c
Honolulu 86/77/.00 88/73/s 87/72/s
Houston 93/66/.00 94/69/c 88/68/pc
Indianapolis 80/64/.00 67/50/c 64/50/pc
Las Vegas 99/73/.00 99/73/s 99/73/s
Los Angeles 69/62/.00 71/62/s 71/63/s
Miami 90/78/.17 90/79/t 91/79/t
Milwaukee 69/59/.00 58/46/c 56/49/c
Minneapolis 61/53/.05 55/39/c 62/43/c
Myrtle Beach 81/72/.00 82/72/t 81/70/t
Nashville 81/66/.16 82/58/c 74/51/t
New Orleans 89/72/.00 87/73/t 86/71/t
Norfolk 79/69/1.61 80/70/t 79/68/t
Oklahoma City 80/61/.00 72/52/pc 81/58/s
Omaha 70/52/.00 66/42/s 68/44/s
Orlando 90/76/.00 91/74/t 92/75/t
Phoenix 104/75/.00 105/76/s 105/78/s
Pittsburgh 80/55/.00 73/55/r 65/52/sh
Portland, Ore. 82/59/.00 80/61/pc 83/59/s
St. Louis 77/60/.00 67/50/pc 70/48/pc
Salt Lake City 80/53/.00 83/56/s 85/56/s
San Antonio 93/71/.00 93/70/c 90/68/pc
San Diego 71/63/.00 72/64/s 73/64/s
San Francisco 75/54/.00 77/56/s 75/55/s
Seattle 75/60/.00 71/58/r 76/57/pc
Tampa 92/77/.00 92/77/t 90/77/t
Tucson 94/68/.00 98/68/s 98/71/s
Washington, DC 75/64/.00 79/69/t 77/64/r
City Yesterday Today Tomorrow City Yesterday Today Tomorrow
Amsterdam 64/57/.00 59/50/pc 64/50/pc
Baghdad 99/77/.00 103/74/s 106/74/s
Beijing 81/48/.00 80/53/s 78/51/s
Berlin 68/48/.00 64/49/pc 61/47/pc
Buenos Aires 79/55/.00 69/48/pc 64/47/pc
Dublin 59/50/.00 59/48/c 60/51/pc
Frankfurt 70/45/.00 67/48/pc 65/47/pc
Hong Kong 86/73/.00 86/78/c 85/77/c
Jerusalem 90/64/.00 87/66/s 80/64/t
London 64/55/.00 64/51/pc 68/53/pc
Mexico City 77/57/.00 73/56/sh 71/54/t
Montreal 72/52/.00 72/58/t 70/57/c
Moscow 59/46/.00 62/51/sh 60/45/sh
Paris 68/59/.00 69/51/s 70/49/s
Rio de Janeiro 82/72/.00 80/66/pc 82/68/pc
Riyadh 102/73/.00 105/73/s 106/75/s
Rome 82/63/.00 83/61/s 82/63/pc
San Juan 89/75/.00 89/77/t 88/77/pc
Tokyo 81/64/.00 79/69/sh 78/67/sh
Warsaw 70/46/.00 70/53/sh 61/44/pc
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
79/67
Reading
78/64
Scranton
Wilkes-Barre
74/61
75/62
Harrisburg
78/63
Atlantic City
78/68
New York City
77/65
Syracuse
76/58
Pottsville
75/59
Albany
76/62
Binghamton
Towanda
73/58
74/59
State College
74/58
Poughkeepsie
75/62
80/60
62/50
79/47
89/63
55/39
71/62
72/55
70/48
83/50
71/58
77/65
67/52
80/67
90/79
94/69
88/73
51/41
54/43
79/69
Sun and Moon
Sunrise Sunset
Today 6:51a 7:01p
Tomorrow 6:52a 6:59p
Moonrise Moonset
Today 1:07a 3:55p
Tomorrow 2:14a 4:31p
New First Full Last
Sept. 27 Oct. 3 Oct. 11 Oct. 19
NASA continues
to estimate
when and where
the remains of
an old research
satellite will fall
to earth this
Friday. The latest
estimate is that
the satellite will
re-enter the
atmosphere
sometime during
the afternoon,
then break
apart. The pieces
are not expected
to be passing
over North
America at that
time. So there is
a slim chance to
none at all of
being able to see
it over our area.
Chances are it
will crash some-
where into an
ocean in a path
expected to be
about 500 miles
long. I'm hoping
the location can
be determined
to find out just
how big the
pieces were that
hit the earth.
- Tom Clark
NATIONAL FORECAST: A cold front extending through the East and into the Gulf Coast states will
produce plenty of rain and thunderstorms. An area of low pressure will also produce a few showers
over the northern Great Lakes. High pressure will provide dry weather from the northern and central
Plains through the Rockies and into much of the West.
Recorded at Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Intl Airport
Temperatures
Heating Degree Days*
Precipitation
TODAY
Partly sunny,
a shower
FRIDAY
More rain
70
62
SUNDAY
Partly
sunny
72
57
MONDAY
Cloudy
68
57
TUESDAY
Rain
possible
65
50
WEDNESDAY
Partly
sunny
70
50
SATURDAY
Partly
sunny
70
60
72

62

C M Y K
LIFE S E C T I O N C
THE TIMES LEADER THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011
timesleader.com
on S
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EVERY FLOOR In-Stock is
Se
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More deals added throughout the sale.
Get to your local store.
PLUS SPECIAL FINANCING AVAILABLE! PLUS SPECIAL FINANCING AVAILABLE! Must be picked up or delivered by Friday, September 30th!
First come, rst served. Product prices and
availability are subject to change without
notice. New orders only.
dea
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(570) 301-6908
211 Mundy St, Wilkes Barre, PA 18702
D
id you know, that
its National Punc-
tuation Day on
Saturday!
If you immediately
caught everything wrong
with that sentence (which
should have read, Did you
knowits National Punctua-
tion Day on Saturday?)
you might especially appre-
ciate this quasi-holiday.
If youve never heard of Na-
tional Punctuation Day, maybe
thats because in this, its eighth
year, the founders are trying to
draw more attention to what
they see as a national problem.
Widespread misuse of punc-
tuationhas becomeevident ona
plethora of business signs Em-
ployees Only instead of Em-
ployees Only; Todays specials
insteadof Todays specials and
in social media Does anyone
know the schedule for the cen-
ter city buss instead of center
city buses or Friends, I need
youre help instead of your
help. Even nationally recog-
nized clothing brand Old Navy
made a highly publicized mis-
take last month, printing a
whole collection of collegiate T-
shirts cheering on various
teams withLets Go! insteadof
Lets Go!
Why the lack of love for punc-
tuation? Is it laziness or just for-
getfulness of the basic rules we
learned way back when?
Sherri Yeninas, a fifth-grade
teacher at State Street Elemen-
tary in Larksville, thinks tech-
nology plays a part.
I dont know that punctua-
tion is no longer important, but
it might be that people dont
think about it as much in every-
day life because of texting and
Internet language, she said.
Though the abbreviated,
acronym-heavy online style of
writing is becoming increasing-
ly prevalent, this doesnt mean
schools arent stressing tradi-
tional writing.
Yeninas teaches Pennsylvania
System of School Assessment
writing as part of her curricu-
lum. She said punctuation plays
a big part not only in the testing
Save the apostrophes from extinc-
tion; dont throw them around
willy-nilly. Go easy on the commas,
too, but dont forget them when
warranted. And please reserve the
quotation marks for direct quotes
or works titles or at least sarcasm.
Apostrophe: Indicates the pos-
sessive case, as in womans coat or
mans hat, but dont forget that
certain words that do not become
plural by adding an s still take the
apostrophe in the same place, as
in womens coats. An apostrophe
also indicates plurals of acronyms
and symbols (several M.D.s). The
most common modern-day mis-
take? Apostrophes used to plural-
ize nouns, as in, She has several
notebooks or My teachers are
all nice this year.
Colon: Indicates a distinct divi-
sion in a sentence to show that
what follows is an elaboration or
summation of what comes before.
Example: We need to bring plenty
of camping supplies: food, water, a
tent and flashlights.
(If youd like to see a comma after
tent, dont be offended but read
on. The Oxford, or serial, comma is
a matter of style rather than hard-
and-fast rule. Journalists most
often omit serial commas; lawyers
rarely do. To quote Theodore
Bernstein: Grave issues of law
have hung on commas.
Comma: Indicates the briefest
pause of all punctuation marks.
One basic rule: Use a comma in a
compound sentence with two
subjects, two verbs and a conjunc-
tion: I like salt, but I dont like
pepper. Ditch the comma in I like
salt but dont like pepper.
Semicolon: Almost equal to a
full stop, it mainly separates claus-
es not linked by a conjunction:
Rudeness to the teacher will not
be tolerated; do not talk back.
Quotation marks: A sign read-
ing Fresh Fish can mean some-
things really fishy about the fish.
Hyphen: A hyphen can erase
ambiguity. A man-eating shark is
different from a man eating shark.
Source: www.nationalpunctua-
tionday.com; Theodore Bern-
steins The Careful Writer.
MARKS TO LIVE BY
If we use our noodles, well realize apostrophes dont pluralize.
Youre is a contraction that
means you are; your is the
possessive form of you.
A colon should follow IE, and
commas would come in handy
after exposed and change.
Punctuation a thing of the past?
By SARA POKORNY
[email protected]
See PUNCTUATION, Page 5C
D
ETROITNoquestion, looks matter. Pretty girls win
prom queen. Gorgeous women get promoted. Thats
why youll never catch some women in public without
makeup. The message, in general, from the cosmet-
ics industry is that youve got to look beautiful, you have
to be thin, you have to have this body type and that body type, says
Joyce Pearlman, a clinical social worker and therapist based in Hun-
tington Woods, Mich. If thats the message, you think you have to
have the most expensive things, and you think He wont love me un-
less Im a size 4 and I have a perfect face.
On average, U.S. women spend $10
billion on cosmetics, beauty supplies
and perfumes annually, according to
Hoovers Inc. And for some guys, a
woman with a perfect face or at
least one with impeccable makeup
opens the dialogue.
Pedro Villarreal, 31, prefers a wom-
an who puts some effort into her ap-
pearance. The quality analyst who
works in Dearborn, Mich., says a
woman in makeup definitely would
catch his interest much
faster than one not wear-
ing makeup.
Maybe its just be-
cause Im so used to see-
ing women in makeup,
the single Woodhaven,
Mich., man says. Awom-
an not wearing makeup
would be more notice-
able, but wearingmakeup
would get my attention.
Overdoing it also gets
his attention.
When I go to the gym,
and I see women in make-
up, thats weird, he says.
But, experts say, make-
up firms target flaws to
get people to buy their
products.
Paula Begoun, who has her own
beauty line called Paulas Choice and
calls herself the Cosmetics Cop, isnt
so sure about that. She says women
are less influencedthanstudies would
lead us to believe.
If I have a pimple, I dont need an
advertisement to tell me to cover it
up, Begoun says. I understand the
advertisement has to assert a nega-
tive, but lets say I have wrinkles
even if they tell me, I knowI got wrin-
kles.
Its far more important for a woman
toexpress confidence inher looks, Be-
goun says.
Michele Lockley, 34, says she has
had more dating success without
heavy makeup and that no one needs
it on a regular basis.
You can be pretty without it, says
Lockley of Redford, adding that her
boyfriend prefers her natural look.
Ive had the same foundation for a
year, says the nursing assistant. If
Im having a really bad day, and my
face is really, really red, Ill
wear a water-based sensi-
tive-skin foundation just to
lighten the red.
Then there are folks like
Rashida Williams, who
wear cosmetics almost ev-
ery day. A makeup artist
with more than 10 years
experience, Williams says
she wears makeup regular-
ly because it makes her feel
good and her goal is to
make her clients feel the
same way.
It enhances all of this
natural God-given beauty,
says the married mother of
one who lives in Romulus,
Mich.
When I dont have on makeup, I
can admit that I do not feel that pret-
ty, she says. I knowthat sounds silly,
but makeupallows me tofeel a lot bet-
ter about me.
While lookinggoodbolsters self-con-
fidence, Pearlman says makeup should
never trump quality interactions with
people. Sometimes cosmetics can put
up a barrier when it comes to intimacy
because women arent revealing their
true selves. That is, until the makeup
comes off at night.
Its got tobe some middle ground,
Pearlman says.
Middle ground key to cosmetics
By ERIN HILL PERRY Detroit Free Press
On average,
U.S. women
spend $10
billion on
cosmetics,
beauty
supplies and
perfumes
annually,
according to
Hoovers Inc.
MCT ILLUSTRATION
C M Y K
PAGE 2C THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
C O M M U N I T Y N E W S
LUZERNE COUNTY WANTS YOUR TIRES
Luzerne County residents drop off your used
Automobile, Motorcycle, Pick up Truck
or SUV Tires...FREE of charge!
Tires must be REMOVEDfromRIMS and FREE of LIQUIDS and HEAVY MUD
Saturday - October 1, 2011: BUTLER TOWNSHIP FIREHOUSE, 14 W. BUTLER DRIVE, DRUMS
9:00 AM TO 3:00 PM EACH DAY
Saturday - October 8, 2011: HANOVER AREA JR/SR HIGH SCHOOL, 1600 SANS SOUCI PARKWAY, HANOVER TWP.
Sponsored by the Luzerne County Commissioners and the Department of Environmental Protection.
COLLECTION IS NOT AVAILABLE TOTIRE DEALERS,
SERVICE STATIONS OPERATORS, REPAIR GARAGES ORTIRE SALES OUTLETS ANDRE-TRADERS.
PRE REGISTRATION IS A MUST - THERE IS A LIMIT OF 15 TIRES PER VEHICLE
TIRES WILL NOT BE ACCEPTED WITHOUT A PRE REGISTRATION NUMBER
PLEASE CALL 1-800-821-7654 TO PRE REGISTER
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HCG effectively sends signals to the brain to release fat
stores. For years, HCG was only available by injection.
Now, with its new advanced liquid formula, SimplePure
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Simply put the drops under your tongue and youll start to
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Please consult with your physician before taking any nutritional supplements. If you are on any medications, check with your doctor regarding dosage
adjustments. Individual results may vary. These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration.
This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease.
Coughlin High School
Class of 1961 reunion committee
will meet 6 p.m. Sept. 29 at Norms
Pizza and Eatery. Plans are being
made for the 50th anniversary
reunion to be held Oct. 8 at the
Genetti Hotel and Conference
Center. All classmates are invited.
Information is being sought on the
following classmates, Carol Donna
Anderson, Hedwig Duncan, Flo-
rence Evans, Geraldine Golenski,
Pamela Moseman and Dolores
Mrozinski. Anyone with information
can contact Louise at 610-518-
0484, or email [email protected].
Class of 1963 is holding its annual
dinner 6-10 p.m. Oct. 22 at the
American Legion, 54 Chestnut St.,
Georgetown section, Wilkes-Barre.
Spouses and guests are invited.
Cost is $21 per person. To make
reservations, or for more informa-
tion, call Marie Gerra Bombay at
256-3627, Peggy Grimalia Lyons at
823-8157 or Roseann Kossakowski
Smith at 820-2509 by Oct. 10.
Class of 1971 will hold a reunion
planning meeting 7 p.m. Tuesday at
Rodanos on Public Square, Wilkes-
Barre. All graduates interested in
helping are encouraged to attend.
G.A.R. Memorial High School
Class of 1952 has changed the
date of the reunion meeting that
was scheduled for Monday to 5
p.m. Tuesday at Bettellis Villa,
Kidder Street, Wilkes-Barre.
Hanover High School
Class of 1963 will meet 5 p.m. Oct.
4 at Happy Pizza, Main Street,
Plymouth, to discuss plans for the
50th anniversary reunion. All
classmates are encouraged to
attend.
Class of 1969 is having a 60th
Birthday Party 8-10 p.m. Oct. 1 at
Alexis Tavern, St. Marys Road and
South Main Street. There is no cost
for each member or honorary
classmates and guests. Dress is
casual and no pre-registration is
necessary. For more information,
contact Joe at 823-9074 or Karen
at 823-6877.
Marymount High School
Class of 1962 will meet 7 p.m. Oct.
5 at Norms Pizza and Eatery,
South Sherman Street, Wilkes-
Barre, to begin plans for the 50th
anniversary reunion. All local
graduates are encouraged to at-
tend and to bring any information
on other classmates.
St. Vincents High School
Alumni Association will meet 6
p.m. Tuesday at the Plymouth
American Legion, 33 Center Ave.,
Plymouth. Meeting room entrance
is on the right side of the parking
lot. Anyone who attended St. Vin-
cents is welcome.
West Side Central Catholic High
School
Class of 1960 will hold a network-
ing social meeting 5:30 p.m.
Wednesday at the Beer Deli, Welles
Street, Forty Fort. All classmates
are welcome. For more informa-
tion, contact Julie at rayjuli-
[email protected] or 639-1390, or
Jane at [email protected].
Wyoming Valley West High
Class of 1976 will hold its final
organizational meeting 7:30 p.m.
Oct. 6 at the East Mountain Inn,
Wilkes-Barre. There will be an
icebreaker celebration at Brews
Bros. West, Luzerne, on Nov. 1 1.
Classmates will be able to take a
tour of the Kingston High School
on Chester Street in the afternoon
on Nov. 12. The reunion dinner will
be held Nov. 12 at the East Moun-
tain Inn. Contact Michele Millington
at 868-5564, or email WVWclassof
[email protected].
Class of 1981 30th anniversary
reunion has been rescheduled to
2-9 p.m. Oct. 1 at Konefals Grove,
Chase Road, Jackson Township.
Anyone wishing a refund from the
earlier date should send a self-
addressed, stamped envelope to
Rose Pugh, 677 N. Walnut St.,
Luzerne, Pa. 18709. Anyone who
would like to attend on the new
date should send $45 to Rose
Pugh by Wednesday. Include phone
number and make checks payable
to WVW Class of 81. This informa-
tion should be passed along to
other classmates.
REUNIONS
1000 Dunham Drive
Dunmore, PA
570.346.2453
www.nawarhorse.com
*Demo models subject to change. Must be 21 years of age for VMAX, R1 or R6, all others 18 years of age, in the state of Florida, must be
21 to demo. All riders must wear long pants, shirt with sleeves , closed shoes, approved DOT helmet and have valid motorcycle license.
NORTH AMERICAN
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OUTDOOR CABANA
OPEN DAILY
$3 MARGARITAS EVERY DAY
WE ARE OPEN
All September Birthdays will
be honored throughout the
entire month of September.
ALL MONTH SPECIALS
1/2 lb. Lobster
Tail Dinner
$
19.99
or
Surf & Turf
$
25.95
Both served with FF & Cole Slaw
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C M Y K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 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
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Tues. & Thurs.
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Sun. Private Parties
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HAPPY BIRTHDAY!
Timothy and Erik Nickas, sons of Tom and Deanna Nickas, Laflin, are
celebrating their second birthdays today, Sept. 22. Timothy and Erik are
the grandsons of Vincent and Mary DeGiusto, Plains Township, and Tom
and Rose Mary Nickas, Stroudsburg. They are the great-grandsons of
Francis Coniglio, Stroudsburg. Timothy and Erik have three sisters, Am-
berle, 19, Rachel, 17, and Jeni, 12,and a brother, Tommy, 14.
Timothy and Erik Nickas
Jacob James Baron, son of
Jeffrey and Carol Baron, As-
ton, celebrated his 12th birth-
day Sept. 18. Jake is a grand-
son of Ronald and Carol Baron,
Alden, Newport Township;
Kathleen Donnelly, Philadel-
phia; and the late William Don-
nelly. He is a great-grandson of
Tozia Baron and Mae Gajda
Lafferty, both of Nanticoke; the
late Theodore Baron; and the
late Edward Gajda. Jake has a
brother, Sean, 14.
Jacob J. Baron
Patrick Joseph DePriest, son of
Sean and Nicole DePriest, is
celebrating is fifth birthday
today, Sept. 22. Patrick is a
grandson of Bonnie Lahart,
Wilkes-Barre; Thomas Lahart,
Kingston; and Edward and Mar-
garet DePriest, Exeter. He is a
great-grandson of Joseph Pu-
gliese, Wyoming. Patrick has a
sister, Leah, 7.
Patrick J. DePriest
Jayce Decker, son of Brett and
Charlene Decker, Hunlock Creek,
is celebrating his fifth birthday
today, Sept. 22. Jayce is a grand-
son of Agnes Klynowsky and the
late Robert Klynowsky, Weather-
ly, and Arden and Albert Decker,
Hunlock Creek.
Jayce Decker
Noah Richard Heck, son of
Rick and Sheila Heck, Plains
Township, is celebrating his
13th birthday today, Sept. 22.
Noah is a grandson of John
and Roseann Corrigan,
Wilkes-Barre, and Rose Heck,
Mountain Top. He has two
sisters, Samantha, 19, and
Alexandra, 17.
Noah R. Heck
Noah Garraoui, son of Bechir
Garraoui and Nabiha Garraoui,
is celebrating his sixth birth-
day today, Sept. 22. Noah is a
grandson of Ahmed and Aisha
Bey, Tunisia. He has a brother,
Adam, 8.
Noah Garraoui
Kolton Bradyn Shovlin, son of
Vic and Suzanne Shovlin, Wilkes-
Barre, is celebrating his second
birthday today, Sept. 22. Kolton
is a grandson of David and Mary
Ann Harkenreader, Laurel Run,
and Michael and Florena Shovlin,
Wilkes-Barre Township. He is a
great-grandson of Pauline Har-
kenreader and Elizabeth Disler,
Laurel Run; Martha Shovlin,
Wilkes-Barre Township; and
Victor and Ellen Hembold, Tunk-
hannock. Kolton has a brother,
Kaden, and a sister, Briee.
Kolton B. Shovlin
Michael John Stachowiak, son of
Megan and Mike Stachowiak,
Nanticoke, is celebrating his
fourth birthday today, Sept. 22.
Michael is a grandson of Bernard
and Kathleen Czeck, Mocanaqua,
and Mike and Janice Stachowiak,
Nanticoke. He has a brother,
Lucas, 6.
Michael J. Stachowiak
Loretta Lettie Troxell, daugh-
ter of Jason and Brooke Trox-
ell, Plymouth Township, is
celebrating her fourth birthday
today, Sept. 22. Lettie is a
granddaughter of David and
Molly Polons, Ashley. She is a
great-granddaughter of Donald
Stemrich, New York; the late
Loretta Stemrich; Edward
Polons, Ashley; and the late
Betty Polons. She has a broth-
er, Luke, 3 months.
Loretta Troxell
The Luzerne County Community College Foundation Inc. recently
received a donation to establish and endow the Donald A. Whitt 84
Memorial Scholarship. The scholarship donation was made by Linda
Gaines, MHEd., and her son, Daniel Whitt. Additional gifts were made
to the fund by friends and family. The scholarship will be awarded to a
qualified student enrolled in the plumbing, heating and air condition-
ing technology program at the college. Donald Whitt graduated from
the college in 1984 and led a distinguished career with IBM for 26
years. At the check presentation, from left: Mark Kobusky, assistant
professor, technology and coordinator, building maintenance/plumbing
and HVAC technology; Sandra Nicholas, executive director, LCCC Foun-
dation Inc.; Thomas P. Leary, president, LCCC; Daniel Whitt, Lagrange-
ville, N.Y.; Linda Gaines, Lagrangeville, N.Y.; and JoAnne Yuhas, re-
source development assistant, LCCC Foundation Inc.
Whitt family establishes LCCC scholarship
Pittston Area High School recently selected its Homecoming Court
for the 2011-2012 school year. The queen will be announced this Friday
during a pep rally at the school. She will be crowned during the half-
time ceremony at Friday evenings football game. Homecoming festiv-
ities will end on Saturday with a homecoming dance at the high school.
Members of the Homcoming Court, fromleft, are Nicollette Bradshaw,
Danielle Fereck, Kelly Keener, Kristi Naylor and Grace ONeill.
Pittston Area announces Homecoming Court
Andrew Mhley, a senior at MMI
Preparatory School, attended
the Penn-
sylvania
School for
Global
Entrepre-
neurship
(PSGE), a
former
Pennsylva-
nia Gover-
nors
School, at Lehigh University
this summer. The PSGE pro-
gram is a selective, resi-
dential program that accepts
the best and brightest of the
worlds high school students.
Participating students spend
five weeks focusing on topics
such as entrepreneurship,
finance, ethics, project man-
agement, cross-cultural
communications, team build-
ing, negotiations, and devel-
oping a marketing and busi-
ness plan. Sessions are facil-
itated by Lehigh faculty
members and entrepreneurs
and leaders of the local and
international business com-
munity. Mhley, the son of
Andrew and Theresa Mhley,
Hazleton, will speak to MMI
sophomores and juniors this
fall about his experience at
PSGE.
NAMES AND FACES
Mhley
C M Y K
PAGE 4C THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
C O M M U N I T Y N E W S
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Only Location Dedicated to Gluten Free Foods
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Homegrown, Farm Fresh Vegetables & Fruits in Season!
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Corner of Route 118 & 415 in Dallas (next to Subway)
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Come & Taste Gluten Free
Sabatinis Pizza!
Saturday, September 24 1-4 p.m.
along with other Gluten Free products
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The Greater
Pittston YMCA
2011
Annual Dinner and
Awards Reception
Change A Life Dinner
September 26, 2011 6:00 p.m.
In the Ballroom of
Mohegan Sun at Pocono Downs
All proceeds will benet the Greater Pittston YMCA.
We would like to request the pleasure
of your presence at the
1280 Highway 315 | Wilkes-Barre, PA
PETE T R DANCHAK
OF PNC BANK
2011 COPORORATE
LEADERSHIP AWARD
TH HHOMAS REILLY
THE SAM MILAZZO
VOLUNTEER OF THE YEAR
LOUIS CIAMPI JR.
2011 LEADERSHIP AWARD
KRYSTINA PRINCE
THE JAMES
& JEAN YATES
YOUTH LEADERSHIP AWARD
Awards Ceremony will begin at 7:00 p.m. for this years honorees:
Tickets - $75 | Table of 10 - $750
For reservations contact Craig Lukatch at 570.655.2255, ext. 101.
SPONSORED BY:
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Residential / Commercial
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lor a llmlLed Llme, Wesley vlllage ls offerlng
a dlscounL - new lndependenL llvlng
resldenLs recelve $200 off per monLh for
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resldenLs recelve $2S0 a monLh off for Lhree
monLhs.
lor more lnformaLlon, call (S70) 6SS-2891.
www.unlLedmeLhodlsLhomes.org
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W e Have ItAllForFall! GroupsW elcom e Open Daily9-5
BRACES ORCHARD
444 Brace Road, Orange 333-4236
through ourorcha rd W eekend s 12 - 5
FEATUR ING a la rge va rietyoffres h p icked a p p les ,
fres h P a s teurized Ap p le Cid er, Ca nd y, Ca ra m el Ap p les
a nd Ap p le Dum p lings , Cid erDonuts , Honeya nd P um p kins
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Dallas Middle School recently named Student Council Officers for the
2011-2012 school year. The Student Council, under the direction of ad-
viser Joan Rakowski, partners with several local and national orga-
nizations throughout the year to aid and assist those in need. Projects
for this fall include hosting the American Diabetes walk on Saturday and
holding a food drive to support the Back Mountain Food Pantry in No-
vember. The council also holds several school dances throughout the
school year, the first to be held on Sept. 30 in the middle school gym.
Participants, fromleft: Thomas Duffy, principal; Alexandra Rome; Char-
les Siegel; Anna Giacometti; Josh Frankevich; Jared Krawetz; Andrew
Chupka; Nathan Dix; Chase Feeney; Michelle Leonard; and Rakowski.
Student Council officers selected at middle school
C M Y K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 PAGE 5C
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celebate in the company of
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The staff at TM Supply is here to help you recover from our most recent natural disasters.
but in everyday life.
When you talk to someone,
youcanuse inflection, tone, facial
and body movements, she said.
You cant do that in writing. You
need to use punctuation to stress
those moments, just like you
would when youre talking to
someone.
No matter the reason for mis-
placed or missing commas, extra-
neous apostrophes which dont
make a word plural and abun-
dance of quotation marks, punc-
tuation faux pas are everywhere.
Former newspaper reporter
Jeff RubinfoundedNational Punc-
tuation Day, and this year educa-
tors across the nation are getting
involved. Some are challenging
students to hit the streets with
their smartphones and photo-
graph all the errors they can find.
The results will become part of
educational videos on YouTube.
Its sad to say, but writing
skills, punctuationskills, commu-
nicationskillsingeneral, havejust
deteriorated over the years, Ru-
binsaidinapressrelease. Yousee
it in newspapers, magazines and
even books misspelled words,
words used incorrectly. Its ex-
tremely frustrating. I want Na-
tional Punctuation Day to bring
this to the forefront of the Ameri-
can consciousness in a fun, silly
way.
We took to area streets to help
the cause and, just so you know,
we played fair and even photo-
graphed our own slips.
PUNCTUATION
Continued from Page 1C
Social-networking websites
present a minefield of punctua-
tion and other problems.
No ones advocating public exco-
riation, but these status updates
or comments that played fast
and loose with punctuation can
provide a few teaching moments:
If anyone in the Bay Area knows
where I can find Dogfish Head
Punkin Ale I am willing to pay its
weight in gold for it.
Thanks for the birthday wishes.
Its great turning 33.
(Say its so, Joe. Its with an apos-
trophe means ONLY it is or it
has, no exceptions. Its by itself
needs no apostrophe to indicate
possession.)
Getting through the work day then
heading to the Phillies game with my
two favorite Stephs! (No need to put
an apostrophe in Stephs.)
I guess everything is closed today
because of this stupid storm. (Why the
quotation marks?)
I just cant stand this head cold,
and I still have to go to my neph-
ews football game. (Two apos-
trophes are needed here.)
Hope your feeling better soon. (If
you mean you are, you need an
apostrophe in that contraction.)
FACEBOOK FAUX PAS
C M Y K
PAGE 6C THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
T E L E V I S I O N
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You must be 17 with ID or accompanied by a parent to attend R rated features.
Children under 6 may not attend R rated features after 6pm
NO PASSES
DRIVE
DRIVE(XD) (R)
11:55AM, 2:25PM, 4:55PM, 7:35PM, 10:10PM
APOLLO 18 (DIGITAL) (PG-13)
12:20PM, 2:55PM, 5:05PM, 7:45PM, 10:05PM
BAD TEACHER (DIGITAL) (R)
12:40PM, (6:45PM* EXCEPT 9/17)
BUCKY LARSON: BORN TO BE A STAR
(DIGITAL) (R)
12:35PM, 3:00PM, 5:25PM, 7:50PM, 10:15PM
CONTAGION (DIGITAL) (PG-13)
12:50PM, 2:10PM, 3:30PM, 4:50PM, 6:05PM,
7:30PM, 8:50PM, 10:10PM
CRAZY, STUPID, LOVE (DIGITAL) (PG-13)
3:35PM, (9:35PM* EXCEPT 9/17)
DEBT, THE (DIGITAL) (R)
12:30PM, 3:20PM, 6:55PM, 9:55PM
DRIVE (DIGITAL) (R)
1:10PM, 3:40PM, 6:15PM, 8:45PM
HELP, THE (DIGITAL) (PG-13)
12:25PM, 3:45PM, 7:10PM, 10:25PM
I DONT KNOW HOW SHE DOES IT
(DIGITAL) (PG-13)
12:15PM, 2:30PM, 4:50PM, 7:25PM, 9:40PM
LION KING, THE (2011) (3D) (G)
12:10PM, 2:25PM, 4:40PM, 7:05PM, 9:20PM
OUR IDIOT BROTHER (DIGITAL) (R)
1:05PM, 3:25PM, 5:50PM, 8:05PM, 10:20PM
RISE OF THE PLANET OF THE APES (DIGITAL)
(PG-13)
12:05PM, 2:35PM, 5:10PM, 7:55PM, 10:35PM
SARAHS KEY (DIGITAL) (PG-13)
1:55PM, 4:45PM, 7:15PM, 9:45PM
SHARK NIGHT (3D) (PG-13)
12:45PM, 3:05PM, 5:20PM, 7:40PM, 10:00PM
SMURFS, THE (3D) (PG)
1:35PM, 4:30PM, 7:00PM, 9:30PM
SPY KIDS: ALL THE TIME IN THE WORLD
(3D) (PG)
12:00PM, 2:15PM, 4:35PM, 6:50PM, 9:25PM
STRAW DOGS (DIGITAL) (R)
12:05PM, 2:40PM, 5:15PM, 8:00PM, 10:35PM
WARRIOR (DIGITAL) (PG-13)
1:00PM, 2:30PM, 4:10PM, 5:45PM, 7:20PM,
8:55PM, 10:30PM
*DOES NOT PLAY ON SATURDAY, 9/17.
SNEAK PREVIEW OF I DONT KNOW HOW SHE DOES IT WILL PLAY INSTEAD.
Dont just watch a movie, experience it!
All Stadium Seating and Dolby Surround Sound
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3 Hrs. Free Parking At Participating Park & Locks with Theatre Validation
Free Parking at Midtown Lot Leaving After 8pm and All Day Saturday & Sunday.
***$2.50 Additional Charge for 3D Attractions.***
No passes, rain checks, discount tickets accepted to these features
D-Box Motion Seats are the admission price plus an $8.00 surcharge
(Parenthesis Denotes Bargain Matinees)
All Showtimes Include Pre-Feature Content
Avoid the lines: Advance tickets available from Fandango.com
ALL FEATURES NOW PRESENTED IN DIGITAL FORMAT
FIRST MATINEE SHOW ALL SEATS $5.25
EXPERIENCE D/BOX MOTION ENHANCED
SEATING ON SELECT FEATURES
SPECIAL EVENTS
Mayweather vs Ortiz Fight Live
Saturday, September 17th
at 9:00pm Only
*Drive - R - 115 Min.
(1:15), (3:50), 7:15, 9:45
*I Dont KnowHowShe Does It - PG13
- 100 Min.
(1:30), (3:40), 7:30, 9:40
***The Lion King in 3D - G - 100 Min.
(1:10), (3:20), 7:10, 9:20
**StrawDogs - R - 120 Min.
(1:25), (4:00), 7:25, 10:00
Contagion - PG13 - 120 Min.
(1:15), (3:45), 7:15, 9:45
Warrior - PG13 - 150 Min.
(12:40), (3:40), 7:00, 10:00
Warrior DBOX - PG13 - 150 Min.
(12:40), (3:40), 7:00, 10:00
*Bucky Larson: Born To Be A Star - R -
110 Min.
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All in the
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YOUTV
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(:15) The Green Hor-
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Batman (Part 2 of 2)
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PREMIUM CHANNELS
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of a lush alien world. (CC)
Bored to
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Stargate (6:50) (PG-13, 94) Kurt Rus-
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Knight and Day (PG-13, 10) Tom
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(10:50)
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Planet 51 (5:30) (PG,
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You Again (7:10) (PG, 10) Kristen Bell,
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The Karate Kid (PG, 10) Jaden Smith, Jackie
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Easy A
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Black
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phy. A screenwriter has a psycho-
logical breakdown.
Remember Me (PG-13, 10) Robert Pat-
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of a rebellious young man.
The Twilight Saga: Eclipse (PG-13, 10)
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TV TALK
C M Y K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 PAGE 7C
D I V E R S I O N S
UNIVERSAL SUDOKU
MINUTE MAZE
W I T H O M A R S H A R I F & T A N N A H H I R S C H
CRYPTOQUOTE
GOREN BRIDGE
B Y M I C H E A L A R G I R I O N & J E F F K N U R E K
JUMBLE
B Y H O L I D A Y M A T H I S
HOROSCOPE
CROSSWORD
PREVIOUS 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 am
writing in response
to the letter you
printed from Re-
spectful in Ohio
(July 25). I am so
glad you addressed
the subject of proper
etiquette in cemeteries. The ceme-
tery where my family members
are buried has become a playground
for the neighbors in the area. When
I visit, I see people walking their
dogs on and off leashes even though
they are aware of the No Dogs
Allowed signs. Children are
bicycling, rollerblading and skate-
boarding, along with joggers
and walkers.
I come to the cemetery to visit
with my lost loved ones and tend
to their graves. I find it disgusting
and disturbing that these folks are
using our sacred place for their
personal pleasures. Abby, thank
you so much for your wisdom on
this matter.
Jean C. in Massachusetts
Dear Jean: Thank you for agreeing
with me. However, some readers
felt differently, believing that cem-
eteries are for the living as well as
the dead. My newspaper readers
comment:
Dear Abby: You should know that
there is a trend where groups of
dog walkers are taking over the care
of deteriorating cemeteries. In return
for cleaning up, restoring and main-
taining graveyards, dog walkers are
given permission to walk and run
their dogs there.
Some readers may find this practice
disrespectful, but it has resulted in
many cemeteries being restored to
the beauty and dignity its occupants
deserve.
Carla in Virginia
Dear Abby: When I read the letter
from Respectful, it took me back
a few years. As I was mowing in
the town cemetery, I went around
a gravestone into some tall grass
and my mower stalled. When I
turned it over to see what I had
hit, I found a pair of pantyhose
wrapped around the blade of the
mower. Apparently, cemeteries are
sometimes used as a lovers lane.
I agree with you about practicing
good behavior in places like these.
But Ill always laugh recalling what
happened to me. I wonder if the
lady who forgot her hose that night
caught a cold.
Groundskeeper
Dear Abby: Several years ago in
a nearby church cemetery, a young
couple and their 4-year-old were
putting flowers on a relatives grave.
The child got a bit antsy and climbed
on a headstone. The stone was loose
and tipped over onto the child and
killed him. No one should let children
play in a cemetery.
Jan in Sartell, Minn.
Dear Abby: I want children to play
on my grave. What could be better
than spending eternity listening to
the laughter of children? As for dogs,
unless you are going to diaper all
the pigeons, dogs are the least of
my worries!
Alanson in New Jersey
DEAR ABBY
A D V I C E
Readers differ on the role of cemeteries as places to pray and to play
To receive a collection of 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). It will
feel as though you are getting
reacquainted with the real you
after being out of touch for a
while. You never really aban-
doned yourself completely.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20). You
will let loose and enjoy yourself.
Your playfulness is so attractive
to people of all ages. Youll revel
in the attention you receive
from people of several different
generations.
GEMINI (May 21-June 21). You
may stray outside your realm of
expertise, but youll be amazed
at what you can do with very
little practice. Its because you
gravitate toward what matches
your natural talents and abilities.
CANCER (June 22-July 22). Youll
be inspired to make subtle
changes in your physiology.
Youll use your body to great
effect. With a stronger posture
and a greater physical presence,
youll command the kind of
respect you deserve.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). Youll learn
quickly and apply what you
discover right away. The problem
is, if you dont use this knowl-
edge over and over, youll forget
the steps.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Youll try
something new that seems sus-
piciously like something youve
tried a dozen times before. Alas,
snake oil sold in different pack-
aging is still snake oil.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). People
put on their best clothes when
they plan to see you at least
figuratively. But you can bet that
when they primp in the mirror,
they are thinking about what
youll see.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). What
you want to become good at,
you will become good at. You
have to apply yourself, though.
That is normally not a problem
for you, but today comes with
extra-fascinating temptations.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21).
Your philosophy will lead you to
other people who think along
similar lines. It will be as though
you are sending out a radio
signal that only certain other
receivers can hear.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19).
There will be a choice. Should
you be strong, or should you be
weak? It will be important for
you to take a dominant position
regardless of whether you are
actually feeling that way.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18).
Sometimes you wonder if the
exciting days are all behind you.
Well, this couldnt be further
from the truth. Your interesting
past will lead to an even more
interesting future.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). You
simply cannot make the sacri-
fices and compromises you were
once willing to make. It would be
unwise, inconvenient and possi-
bly physically impossible.
TODAYS BIRTHDAY (Sept. 22).
You claim your space and
expand your territory this year.
A partner will help you, working
and negotiating on your behalf.
Your bold move in October yields
results. January brings the start
of an exciting project that will
shape your year. Loving words
will be featured in the spring.
Taurus and Leo people adore
you. Your lucky numbers are: 6,
34, 20, 1 and 32.
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 PAGE 1D
MARKETPLACE
412 Autos for Sale
150 Special Notices
412 Autos for Sale
150 Special Notices
412 Autos for Sale
150 Special Notices
412 Autos for Sale
150 Special Notices
412 Autos for Sale
150 Special Notices
412 Autos for Sale
150 Special Notices
412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale
135 Legals/
Public Notices
412 Autos for Sale
135 Legals/
Public Notices
REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS
The County of Lackawanna Transit System
(COLTS) is seeking written proposals for
professional architectural, engineering
and related services required for the con-
struction of the Intermodal Transportation
Center Project and Martz Site Parking Lot
Facility in Scranton, PA.
Copies of the complete Request for Pro-
posals (RFP) will be available for download
by Monday, September 26, 2011 on the
Business Opportunities page of the
COLTS website (www.coltsbus.com). The
Business Opportunities page can be
found on the About COLTS pull down
menu on the COLTS website homepage.
A non-mandatory Pre-proposal confer-
ence will be held at the Project Site locat-
ed on the southwest corner of the inter-
section of Lackawanna Avenue and Cliff
Street in Scranton, PA, on Wednesday,
October 12, 2011 at 10:00AM. The site is
located across Lackawanna Avenue from
the existing Martz Bus Terminal. Prospec-
tive proposers are strongly encouraged to
attend and provide written questions prior
to this meeting; Include Scranton Inter-
modal Transportation Center in the sub-
ject line. Final written questions must be
submitted by Wednesday, October 19,
2011, 5:00 PM. Written responses will be
returned by Friday, October 21, 2011 5:00
PM. All questions shall be submitted by
email only to Michael Hartley, Construction
Manager at [email protected].
The Proposer will be required to comply
with all applicable Federal and State laws
and regulations including Disadvantaged
Business Enterprise and EEO regulations.
Furthermore, the project is subject to
financial assistance from the local jurisdic-
tions, the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania
and the Federal Transit Administration and
all applicable provisions of the laws and
regulations must be followed. COLTS
reserves the right to postpone, to accept
or reject any and all proposals, in whole or
in part, or to waive informalities as it
deems to be in its best interest.
The design and engineering services
required for the construction of the project
are expected to involve the following
tasks:
1. Preliminary Design Development
2. Final Design Development
3. Preparation of Construction Documents
4. Contract Procurement
5. Contract Administration and
Construction Services
One (1) Technical Proposal on a CD in PDF
format and one original (marked original)
and four (4) copies of the technical pro-
posal shall be submitted no later than
12:00 Noon, prevailing time Wednesday,
October 26, 2011. The Technical Proposal
must be submitted in a sealed container
and appropriately labeled COLTS
Scranton Intermodal Transportation Cen-
ter Project and Martz Site Parking Facility
Design. No Cost Proposals will be
received at this time and no costs shall be
included in the Technical Proposals. See
complete Request for Proposals for full
details. The proposals should be
addressed to:
Mr. Robert Fiume, Executive Director
County of Lackawanna Transit System,
800 North South Road,
Scranton, PA 18504.
Celebrations
Area Businesses To Help Make
Your Event a Huge Success!
To Advertise Call Tara 570-970-7374
CATERING
We specialize in
Italian/American Cuisine
Banquet facility at
West Wyoming Hose Co. #1
or well bring it to you!
570-407-2703
Rates start at $10.95pp
BEVERAGES
WYO. VALLEY BEVERAGE
Rt. 11 Edwardsville
COORS EXTRA GOLD
30 PACK CANS
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SELECTION AROUND!
$13.99
DUNDEE
BEVERAGE
Keyco Plaza
San Souci Parkway
WITHOUT A DOUBT
AREAS COLDEST BEER
OPEN EVERY DAY
EXCEPT CHRISTMAS
BEVERAGES
The Lesser
Evil DJ
Weddings
Parties
Dances
Karaoke
www.TheLesserEvilDJ.com
Check us out on Facebook!
(570) 954-1620 Nick
(570) 852-1251 Allen
DJ
PARTIES
Banquet room available
for Parties! Birthdays,
Sweet 16s, Baby Showers
& More! $200 for 4 hours.
CLUB 79
Bring your own food. Bartender Available.
825-8381 793-9390
Free Pool Wed & Fri 8-10
PARTIES
Fri, Sat & Sun@7pm
Presents:
JOHNNY PATTON
Damentis
Roman Holiday Sand Bar
Jam With A Country
Western Icon
WE DO PARTIES
The Snack Shack
750 Wilkes-Barre Twp Blvd
Wilkes-Barre
(570)-270-2929
Ofce Business
Birthday School
Fundraisers
Celebrations
Delivered to you
or At The Shack
Were Your
One Stop
Pumpkin Place...
Try our delicious Pumpkin Ice
Cream, Pumpkin Rice Pudding,
Pumpkin Sundaes, Pumpkin
Flurries, Pumpkin Shakes and
Pumpkin Whoopie Pies
BONNERCHEVROLET.COM
694 WYOMING AVE., KINGSTON 287-2117
$
38,900
*
Chevy Runs Deep
2011 CHEVY
TAHOE LS
STARTING AT
0% up to
60 mos.
+ $1000
ATTENTION:
GMC CARD HOLDERS
GMCARD TOP OFF PROGRAM
UP TO $3000 ADDITIONAL TO
SELECT GMCARD HOLDERS
WITH RECEIVED MAILER.
SEE DEALER
FOR DETAILS.
100
ANNOUNCEMENTS
110 Lost
ALL JUNK CARS
WANTED!!
CALL ANYTIME
FREE REMOVAL
CA$H PAID
ON THE SPOT
570.301.3602
ALL
JUNK
CAR &
TRUCKS
WANTED
Highest Prices
Paid!!!
FREE
REMOVAL
Call
Vito & Ginos
Anytime
288-8995
LOST CAT. Female,
all black - short
haired domestic.
Answers to Daisy.
Missing since 8/15
S. WB area.
570-824-4794
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
LOST. Hearing aids
in white leather
pouch on or around
August 22 Reward
Please call
570-954-6525
120 Found
All Junk
Cars &
Trucks
Wanted
Highest
Prices
Paid In
CA$H
FREE
PICKUP
570-574-1275
FOUND. Keys.
Pittston Park and
RIde on 9/18.
570-883-9404
FOUND. Single key
in CVS parking lot in
S. WB. Tag attached
with 3 initials.
Call to identify
570-332-4536
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
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE IS HEREBY
GIVEN that Letters
Testamentary have
been issued to Joan
D. Reed, Executor
of the Estate of
Daniel E. Rozanski,
Deceased, who
died on September
11, 2011, late of
Plains Township,
Pennsylvania. All
persons indebted to
the Estate are
required to make
payment and those
having any claims or
demands are to
present the same,
without delay to the
Executor in care of
the undersigned.
PAULA G.
BREGMAN, P.C.
1205 Wyoming Ave
Forty Fort, PA 18704
135 Legals/
Public Notices
NOTICE
NOTICE is hereby
given that Letters
Testamentary have
been granted in the
Estate of Kathleen
D. Reese, late of the
city of Nanticoke,
Luzerne County,
Pennsylvania, who
died August 16, 2011
to Charles A. Shea
III of 15 Public
Square, Suite 210,
Wilkes-Barre, Penn-
sylvania, 18701
All persons indebted
to said Estate are
requested to make
payment to the said
Executor and those
having claims or
demands to present
the same to said
Executor or his
attorney.
CHARLES A. SHEA
III, ESQUIRE
CAVERLY, SHEA,
PHILLIPS &
RODGERS, LLC
15 Public Square,
Suite 210
Wilkes-Barre, PA
18701
(570) 823-0101
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!
ESTATE NOTICE
NOTICE IS HEREBY
GIVEN that Letters
Testamentary have
been granted in the
Estate of Leo F.
Bator, late of
Edwardsville,
Luzerne County,
Pennsylvania, who
died on June 13,
2011. All persons
indebted to said
Estate are required
to make payment
without delay, and
those having claims
or demands to
present the same
without delay to the
Executrix, Donna
Lysiak, in care of
her attorney,
MICHAEL J.
BENDICK, ESQUIRE
400 Third Avenue
Suite 318
Kingston, PA 18704
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE IS HEREBY
GIVEN that Letters
Testamentary have
been issued to Paul
J. Lukas, Executor
of the Estate of
Leonard S. Lukas,
Deceased, who
died on August 24,
2011, late of Court-
dale Borough,
Pennsylvania. All
persons indebted to
the Estate are
required to make
payment and those
having any claims or
demands are to
present the same
without delay to the
Executor in care of
the undersigned.
PAULA G.
BREGMAN, P.C.
1205 Wyoming Ave
Forty Fort, PA
18704
135 Legals/
Public Notices
PUBLIC NOTICE
LUZERNE
COUNTY
CONVENTION
AND VISITORS
BUREAU
NOTICE IS HEREBY
GIVEN THAT A
MEETING OF THE
LUZERNE COUNTY
CONVENTION AND
VISITORS BUREAU
(LCCVB)
WILL BE HELD ON
MONDAY, SEPTEM-
BER 26, 2011
AT 11:00 A.M. IN
THE LCCVB MAIN
OFFICE,
56 PUBLIC
SQUARE, WILKES-
BARRE,
PA, FOR THE PUR-
POSE OF CON-
DUCTING
THE GENERAL
BUSINESS OF THE
AGENCY.
MERLE D. MACKIN
EXECUTIVE
DIRECTOR
The LCCVB Office is
a facility accessible
to persons with dis-
abilities. Please
notify Connie Mazur
at 570.819.1877 no
less than 48 hours
in advance if spe-
cial accommoda-
tions are required.
GET THE WORD OUT
with a Classified Ad.
570-829-7130
NOTICE:
NOTICE IS HEREBY
GIVEN that Letters
of Administration
were granted Sep-
tember 6, 2011 in
the Estate of Jason
C. Dahms,
deceased, late of
Kingston, Luzerne
County, Pennsylva-
nia, who died
August 28, 2011 all
persons indebted to
said Estate are
required to make
payment and those
having any claims or
demands to present
the same without
delay unto the
Administrator, Leo
Dahms, Jr. in care of
the undersigned.
Patrick J. Aregood,
Esq.
1218 South Main St.
Wilkes-Barre, PA
18706
NOTICE:
NOTICE IS HEREBY
GIVEN that Letters
Testamentary were
granted September
19, 2011 in the
Estate of Stanley A.
Marczak a/k/a Stan-
ley Marczak,
deceased, late of
Wilkes-Barre,
Luzerne County,
Pennsylvania, who
died September 6,
2011 all persons
indebted to said
Estate are required
to make payment
and those having
claims or demands
are to present the
same without delay
unto the Executor,
Joseph Marczak in
care of the under-
signed.
Patrick J. Aregood,
Esq.
1218 South Main St.
Wilkes-Barre, PA
18706
135 Legals/
Public Notices
ESTATE NOTICE
NOTICE IS HERE-
BY GIVEN that Let-
ters Testamentary
have been granted
in the Estate of
RONALD DUD-
KIEWICZ, late of
the Township of
Wilkes-Barre,
Luzerne County,
Pennsylvania, who
died July 14, 2011.
All persons indebt-
ed to said Estate
are requested to
make payment and
all those with claims
or demands are to
present the same
to the Executrix,
Lynn Marie Barajas,
in care of
her attorneys,
c/o Joseph R.
Lohin, Esquire
Mahler, Lohin &
Associates, LLC
Suite 501 Riverside
Commons
575 Pierce Street
Kingston, PA 18704
NOTICE OF
INCORPORATION
NOTICE IS HEREBY
GIVEN THAT Articles
of Incorporation
have been filed, with
the Department of
State of the Com-
monwealth of Penn-
sylvania at Harris-
burg, Pennsylvania
for the purpose of
business corpora-
tion to be organized
under the provisions
of the Pennsylvania
Business Corpora-
tion Law of 1988,
approved Decem-
ber 21, 1988, P.L.
1444, No. 177, as
amended. The
name of the corpo-
ration is:
STAR PITTSTON,
INC.
The Articles of
Incorporation were
filed on August 23,
2011. 400 Highway
315, Suite 220,
Pittston, PA 18640.
150 Special Notices
ADOPT: Adoring
couple longs to
adopt newborn.
Forever love,
secure future
awaits your baby.
Kim & Tim
800-407-4318
To place your
ad call...829-7130
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
ATTENTION FLOOD
VICTIMS: Call Mike
Kovach Plumbing,
Heating and Air
Conditioning for all
your needs. Spe-
cializing in furnace
repair and replace-
ment, water heater
installations, boil-
ers and A.C.
Licensed and
insured.
570-709-6437 or
570-709-6438
150 Special Notices
Couples spend
an average of
$4,000.00 on
their honey-
moom.
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Shopping for a
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MONTY MONTY SA SAYS YS
Thank you so
much FLB. Spe-
cial thanks to Ed
and Sue. Great
to have you on
our side. Knock
off early today.
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
WANTED
MALE SINGERS
(570) 696-3385
330 Child Care
DAYCARE
in my Kingston
home. Licensed.
Accepting
Lackawanna &
Luzerne CCC.
570-283-0336
360 Instruction &
Training
CAREGIVER
with 15 years expe-
rience is looking for
work. 570-871-5668
406 ATVs/Dune
Buggies
HAWK 2011 UTILITY ATV
NEW!! Full size
adult ATV. Strong 4
stroke motor. CVT
fully automatic
transmission with
reverse. Electric
start. Front & rear
luggage racks.
Long travel suspen-
sion. Disc brakes.
Dual stage head
lights. Perfect for
hunters & trail rid-
ers alike. BRAND NEW
& READY TO RIDE.
$1,695 takes it
away.
386-334-7448
Wilkes-Barre
HONDA`09 RECON
TRX 250CC/Electric
shift. Like New.
REDUCED
$3,650.
(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
409 Autos under
$5000
BMW 98 740 IL
White with beige
leather interior.
New tires, sunroof,
heated seats. 5 cd
player 106,000
miles .Asking
$5,995.
570-451-3259
570-604-0053
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
CADILLAC 03
DeVille. Excellent
shape, all leather.
$4650. BUICK 03
Century. Great
shape $3400
570-819-3140
570-709-5677
DODGE `95 DAKOTA
2WD V6. Regular
Cab/6Ft. 5 speed.
113,000 miles. Runs
like a champ. Needs
some work. $1,400.
570-814-1255
FORD 93 TAURUS
Newly inspected,
new brakes, new
tires, air condition-
ing. 102K.
$1850 FIRM.
Call Vince after 5
570-258-2450
GMC 96 JIMMY SLE
4WD, Hunter
Green, 4 door, CD,
168,000 miles.
$2,100 obo.
(570) 262-7550
HYUNDAI `02
ELANTRA
129,995 miles, man-
ual, front wheel
drive, 4 door, anti-
lock brakes, air con-
ditioning, air bags,
power locks, power
windows, power
mirrors, AM/FM
radio, CD player,
leather interior, sun
roof, rear windshield
wiper, tinted win-
dows, $3,500
570-654-8469
MERCURY `95 TRACER
Reliable transporta-
tion. Excellent fuel
mileage. Call for
details. $600 OBO
570-240-7539
409 Autos under
$5000
MERCURY `96 SABLE
New tires and
brakes. Needs
work. $1,000. Call
570-674-2630
Say it HERE
in the Classifieds!
570-829-7130
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/black &
tan leather, 7
speed, auto turbo,
330 HP,
Navigation, (AWD)
08 DODGE AVENGER
Blue, auto, V6,
69k miles
08 PONTIAC GRAND
PRIX SE
blue, auto V6
07 CHRYSLER 300
LTD AWD silver,
grey leather
06 PONTIAC G6
Silver, 4 door auto
06 DODGE STRATUS SXT
RED.
05 TOYOTA CAMRY
XLE silver, grey
leather, sunroof
05 VW NEW JETTA
gray, auto, 4 cyl
05 CHEVY MALIBU
Maxx White, grey
leather, sunroof
04 NISSAN ALTIMA SL
3.5 white, black
leather, sun roof
03 AUDI S8 QUATTRO
Mid blue/light grey
leather, Naviga-
tion, (AWD)
02 BUICK PARK AVE
Silver, V6
01 SATURN LS 300
Blue
01 VOLVO V70 STATION
WAGON, blue/grey,
leather, AWD
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 FORD ESCAPE XLT
green/tan lint 4x4
07 DODGE GRAND
CARAVAN SXT Blue
grey leather, 7
passenger mini van
06 CHEVY TRAILBLAZER
LS V6 4 X 4
06 MITSUBISHI
ENDEAVOR XLS,
Blue auto, V6, awd
06 HYUNDAI SANTA FE
GLS, green, auto,
V6, awd
06 PONTIAC
TORRANT
Black (AWD)
06 DODGE GRAND
CARAVAN ES, red,
4dr, entrtnmt cntr,
7 pass mini van
05 FORD F150 XLT
SUPER CREW TRUCK
Blue & tan, 4 dr. 4x4
05 GMC 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 FORD EXPEDITION
Eddie Bauer,
white & tan,
tan leather,
3rd seat, 4x4
04 FORD EXPEDITION
XLT, white,
3rd seat, 4x4
04 FORD EXPLORER
LTD pearl white,
black leather, 3rd
seat 4x4
04 MITSUBISHI
ENDEAVOR XLS
red, auto, V6, 4x4
3rd seat, 4x4
04 CHEVY SUBURBAN
LS, pewter silver,
3rd seat, 4x4
03 FORD WINDSTAR LX
green 4 door, 7
passenger mini van
02 CHEVY 2500 HD
Reg. Cab. pickup
truck, green,
auto, 4x4
01 FORD F150 XLT
Super Cab 4x4
truck, white & tan
00 CHEVY 1500
SILVERADO XCAB
2wd truck,
burgundy & tan
00 GRAND CARAVAN
SPORT, dark blue,
4 door, 7 pass
mini van
99 FORD F150 XLT
grey, reg cab,
73,000 miles,
4x4 truck
99 JEEP GRAND
CHEROKEE LAREDO,
grey, auto, 4x4
98 EXPLORER XLT
Blue grey leather,
sunroof, 4x4
97 DODGE RAM 1500
XCAB TRUCK
red, auto, 4 x 4
ACURA `02 RSX
142,000 miles,
5 speed, $5,600
570-239-9316
412 Autos for Sale
ACURA `06 TL
4 Door 3.2 VTEC 6
Cylinder engine
Auto with slapstick.
Navigation system.
57k miles. Black
with Camel Leather
interior. Heated
Seats. Sun Roof,
Excellent condition.
Satellite Radio, Fully
loaded. $18,000.
570-814-2501
AUDI `04 A6 QUATTRO
3.0 V6. Silver. New
tires & brakes. 130k
highway miles.
Leather interior.
Heated Seats.
$7,500 or best offer.
570-905-5544
AUDI `05 A4 1.8T
Cabriolet Convert-
ible S-Line. 52K
miles. Auto. All
options. Silver.
Leather interior.
New tires. Must
sell. $17,500 or best
offer 570-954-6060
AUDI `96 QUATTRO
A6 station wagon.
143k miles. 3rd row
seating. $2,800 or
best offer. Call
570-861-0202
09Jeep Patriot $11,995
09Escape xlt $11,995
08MARINER4X4$13,995
08 IMPALA LS $10,995
05EXPLORE3ROW $11,995
08RANGER50K$10,995
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. $8,999
or best offer. Call
570-814-3666
BMW 04 325 XI
White. Fully
loaded. 120k
miles. $10,500
or best offer.
570-454-3287
412 Autos for Sale
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 `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. $14,695.
570-466-2630
To place your
ad Call Toll Free
1-800-427-8649
BUICK `01 CENTURY
4 door. 6 Cylinder.
Power windows &
locks. 53K. Looks &
runs well. $4,800.
DEALER
570-868-3914
BUICK `03 LESABRE
35k miles, V-6.
Power steering,
brakes & windows.
A/C, Nice, clean car.
$7,300. Call
570-674-3185
BUICK `05 LESABRE
Garage kept. 1
owner. Local driv-
ing, very good
condition.
53,500 miles.
Asking $9,700
(570) 457-6414
leave message
CADILLAC `04
SEVILLE SLS
Beige. Fully loaded
Excellent condition.
Runs great. New
rotors, new brakes.
Just serviced.
108,000 miles. Ask-
ing $5,000.
OR BEST OFFER
(570) 709-8492
CHEVROLET `03
IMPALA
97,000 miles,
$3,300.
570-592-4522
570-592-4994
PAGE 2D THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
135 Legals/
Public Notices
135 Legals/
Public Notices
135 Legals/
Public Notices
135 Legals/
Public Notices
135 Legals/
Public Notices
150 Special Notices
135 Legals/
Public Notices
150 Special Notices
250 General Auction 250 General Auction
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
The Greater Wilkes-Barre Industrial Fund
invites Bids for the Re-Bid grading of Lot
28 in the Crestwood Industrial Park, the
former Poseidon Pools Manufacturing
Facility located at the intersection of
Crestwood Drive and Elmwood Road,
Wright Township, Luzerne County, Penn
sylvania.
Bids will be received for the
following Prime Contract:
1. Sitework Construction.
The Owner will receive bids until 2:00 p.m.
on Friday, October 7, 2011 at the Office of
the Greater Wilkes-Barre Industrial Fund,
2 Public Square, Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylva-
nia 18701, Attention: Mr. Thomas Williams,
Director of Real Estate Projects. Bids
received after that time will not be accept-
ed. All bids will be publicly opened at that
time.
All bids shall be enclosed in envelopes
(inner and outer) both of which shall be
sealed and clearly labeled with the words
"SEALED BID FOR CRESTWOOD INDUS-
TRIAL PARK - LOT 28 GRADING PHASE I
REBID, name of bidder and date and time
of bid opening, in order to guard against
premature opening of the bid. Facsimile
bids will not be considered.
Hard copies of the documents may be
obtained at the office of Quad Three
Group, Inc., 37 North Washington Street,
Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania 18701; Tele-
phone 570-829-4200, Extension 292,
Attention: Casey Monagan. Documents
may be obtained for a non-refundable cost
of $100.00, plus cost of shipping and han-
dling, payable to Quad Three Group, Inc.
No partial sets of documents shall be
obtainable. Digital copies of the bidding
documents are available at
www.questcdn.com. You may download
the digital plan documents for $20.00 by
inputting Quest project #1751552 on the
websites Project Search page. Please
contact QuestCDN.com at 952.233.1632
or [email protected] for assistance in
free membership registration, download-
ing and working with this digital project
information.
All bids shall remain firm for sixty (60) days
following opening of bids.
Each contractor and each sub-contractor
shall be licensed in the community where
the work will occur.
The Contract shall be written to retain 10%
for each request for payment. When the
Contract is 50% completed, one-half of
the amount retained shall be returned to
the Contractor. However, the Engineer
must approve the Application for Payment.
The Contractor must be making satisfac-
tory progress and there must be no spe-
cific cause for greater withholding.
The Owner-Contractor Agreement will be
the Standard Form of Agreement Between
Owner and Contractor, AIA Document
A101, 2007 edition.
The Owner requires that all Bids shall
comply with the bidding requirements
specified in the Instructions To Bidders.
Attention is called to the fact that not less
than the minimum prevailing salaries and
wages, as set forth in the Contract Docu-
ments must be paid on the project. The
Owner may, at its discretion waive infor-
malities in Bids, but is not obligated to do
so, nor does it represent that it will do so.
The Owner also reserves the right to
reject any and all Bids. Under no circum-
stances will the Owner waive any informal-
ity which, by such waiver, would give one
Bidder a substantial advantage or benefit
not enjoyed by all other Bidders.
Bonding companies for Performance and
Payment Bonds must be listed in the U.S.
Treasury Circular No. 570.
A Bid Bond made payable to the Greater
Wilkes-Barre Industrial Fund, in the
amount of 10% of each Base Bid shall
accompany each bid, executed by the
Contractor and a surety company licensed
to do business in the Commonwealth of
Pennsylvania, as a guarantee that, if the
bid is accepted, the bidder shall execute
the proposed contract and shall furnish
and pay for a Performance and Payment
Bond in the amount of 100% of the Con-
tract Price as security for the performance
of the Contract and payment of all costs
thereof, upon execution of Contract. If,
after thirty days the bidder shall fail to exe-
cute said Contract and Bond, the Bid Bond
shall be forfeited to the Owner as liquidat-
ed damages. The Bid Bond of all bidders,
except the three low bidders, will be
returned within ten (10) days after the
opening of the bids.
The Bid Bond of the three low bidders will
be returned within three days after the
executed Contracts and required bonds
have been approved by the Owner.
The successful Bidder will be required to
file a Stipulation Against Mechanic's Liens
prior to commencing work.
The Contractor must ensure that employ-
ees and applicants for employment are
not discriminated against because of their
race, age, color, religion, sex, national ori-
gin, handicap or family status, and that to
the greatest feasible utilize project are
businesses located in or owned in sub-
stantial part by project area residents.
The Office of the Greater Wilkes-Barre
Industrial Fund reserves the right to reject
any or all bids or potions thereof, and to
waive informalities in the bidding. Bids
may be held by the Office of the Greater
Wilkes-Barre Industrial Fund for a period
not to exceed thirty days from the date of
opening of bids for the purpose of review-
ing the bids, prior to awarding this
Contract.
The Office of the Greater Wilkes-Barre
Industrial Fund does not discriminate on
the basis of race, color, national origin,
sex, religion, age, family and handicapped
status in employment or the provision of
services.
The Bidding Documents and Forms of
Proposal may be examined at the follow-
ing site during regular business hours:
1. Quad Three Group, Inc., 37 North
Washington Street, Wilkes-Barre,
Pennsylvania 18701, telephone 570-
829-4200, facsimile 570-829-3732.
Pre-Bid Conference: A Pre-Bid Confer-
ence will be held at the site on Friday,
September 30, 2011 at 9:00 a.m. The
Pre-Bid Conference is not mandatory.
The Office of the Greater Wilkes-Barre
Industrial Fund, 2 Public Square, Wilkes-
Barre is a facility accessible to persons
with disabilities.
Thomas Williams
Director of Real Estate Projects
The Office of the Greater Wilkes-Barre
Industrial Fund is an
Equal Opportunity / Affirmative Action
Employer
PUBLIC MEETING
PENNSYLVANIADEPARTMENT
OF TRANSPORTATION
S.R. 2004, SECTION 390
RIVER STREET CORRIDOR, IMPROVEMENTS PROJECT,
LUZERNE COUNTY
PUBLIC MEETING #2
PLACE: Wilkes University, Henry Student Center
2nd Floor Ballroom
84 South Street
Wilkes-Barre, Pa 18766
DATE: October 6, 2011
TIME: 6:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m.
THE PURPOSE OF THIS MEETING IS TO PROVIDE PENNONI
ASSOCIATES AND THE PENNDOT STAFFAN OPPORTUNITY
TO PRESENT THE PROJECT TO THE PUBLIC. THERE WILL
BEAFORMALPRESENTATION WITHAQUESTIONAND
ANSWER PERIOD FOLLOWING THE PRESENTATION.
PRELIMINARY DESIGN PLANS WILLBEAVAILABLE FOR
REVIEW.
THE RIVER STREET CORRIDOR IMPROVEMENT PROJECT
IS ATRAFFIC CALMINGAND PEDESTRIAN SAFETY IM-
PROVEMENT PROJECTALONG RIVER STREET FROM THE
INTERSECTION WITH WEST ROSS STREET TO THE
INTERSECTION WITH WEST NORTH STREET (SR 0011).
ANADDITIONALGOALOF THIS PROJECT IS TO PROVIDE
CONTINUITYWITH THEADJOINING TWO (2) LANE
SECTIONS OF RIVER STREET. THIS MEETING IS ALSO
BEING HELD TO FULFILLTHE REQUIREMENTS OF
SECTION 106 OF THE NATIONALHISTORIC PRESERVATION
ACT (NHPA) 36 CFR 800.
THE PUBLIC MEETING LOCATION IS ACCESSIBLE TO
PERSONS HAVING DISABILITIES. ANY PERSONS HAVING
SPECIALNEEDS OR REQUIRING SPECIALAIDS ARE
REQUESTED TO CONTACT THE DEPARTMENTAT (570)
963-4334 PRIOR TO THE MEETING EVENT IN ORDER THAT
SPECIALDISABILITY NEEDS MAY BEACCOMMODATED.
Octagon
Family Restaurant
375 W Main St, Plymouth, PA 18651
570-779-2288
35 cent
WING SPECIAL
Saturday & Wednesday
* In house only, Minimum order of a dozen.
Home of the Original
O-Bar Pizza
7
1
2
0
2
0
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 SEPTEMBER 30
Harrys U Pull It
www.wegotused.com
LAW
DIRECTORY
Call 829-7130
To Place Your Ad
Dont Keep Your
Practice a Secret!
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
310 Attorney
Services
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
AUTO
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
462 Auto
Accessories
VENT SHADES
Weather Tech,
smoke color, fits 09
Ford Fusion, 4 door,
windows $39.
LASER radar detec-
tor, total band pro-
tection, brand new
in box, never used
$69. 570-636-3151
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
412 Autos for Sale
CADILLAC 06 STS
AWD, 6 cylinder, Sil-
ver, 55,000 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!
$16,500
570-881-2775
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
412 Autos for Sale
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
Line up a place to live
in classified!
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
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.
$17,500
SERIOUS INQUIRIES ONLY
(570) 696-0424
CHEVROLET `04
CORVETTE COUPE
Torch red with
black and red
interior. 9,700
miles, auto, HUD,
removable glass
roof, polished
wheels, memory
package, Bose
stereo and twilight
lighting, factory
body moldings,
traction control,
ABS, Garage kept
- Like New.
$25,900
(570) 609-5282
CHEVY `07 AVEO LT
Power window/door
locks. Keyless
entry. Sunroof. A/C.
Black with tan
leather interior.
22,000 original
miles. AM/FM/CD.
New tires.
$12,000
(570) 287-0815
412 Autos for Sale
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
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
CHEVY `95 CORVETTE
Yellow, auto, 67,300
miles. New tires &
brakes. Removable
top, leather. Air
power locks & win-
dows, new radio.
Good condition.
$12,000. 287-1820
CHEVY 01 CAVALIER
2 door. 4 cylinder.
Automatic. 79K.
Runs & looks well!
$3,800.
DEALER
570-868-3914
CHEVY 02 CAVALIER
2 door. 4 Cylinder.
Automatic. 31K.
A/C. Runs & looks
well! $4,800.
DEALER
570-868-3914
CHEVY 06 COBALT LT
Auto. Moonroof.
Alloys.
$8,995
560 Pierce St.
Kingston, PA
www.wyoming
valleymotors.com
570-714-9924
CHEVY 11 MALIBU LT
Moonroof.
7K miles.
$19,740
560 Pierce St.
Kingston, PA
www.wyoming
valleymotors.com
570-714-9924
CHEVY`01 MALIBU LS
Shinny midnight blue
metallic. Like new
with all power
opt i ons: sunroof ,
rear spoiler and alu-
minum wheels.
Very well main-
tained. $4,295.
(570) 313-5538
GET THE WORD OUT
with a Classified Ad.
570-829-7130
CHRYSLER 95
NEW YORKER
21K miles. Garage
kept - like new. Fully
loaded. Automatic.
Total power: steer-
ing, seats, windows.
Cruise & traction
control. Alarm sys-
tem & much more.
$6,700 negotiable
(570) 823-5236
DODGE `06 STRATUS
Only 55K. Brand
new tires, plugs,
wires, oil. Excellent
Condition. $6,995
(570) 562-1963
412 Autos for Sale
10 DODGE
CARAVAN SXT
32K, Power sliding
doors, Factory
warranty!
$17,799
09 DODGE
CALIBER SXT 2.0
Automatic, 24k
Factory Warranty!
$13,099
08 HONDA
RIDGELINE RTL
32K, Factory
Warranty, Leather
Sunroof. Wholesale
Price........ $23,599
08 CHRYSLER
SEBRING CONV.
Limited Edition,
45K, Leather, Heat-
ed Seats, 3.5
6 Cylinder $16,399
08 JEEP LIBERTY
SPORT 4X4
34K, Red
$15,799
08 SUBARU
Special Edition
42k, 5 speed, AWD.
Factory warranty.
$13,999
08 CHRYSLER
SEBRING CONV
4 cylinder, 40k
$12,299
08 CHEVY
SILVERADO 1500
4x4, Regular Cab,
63K, Factory War-
ranty $13,999
08 CHEVY IMPALA
LS 4 door, only
37K! 5 Yr. 100K fac-
tory warranty
$12,599
08 CHEVY IMPALA
LS 60k. Factory
warranty. $10,699
05 HONDA CRV EX
One owner, just
traded, 65k
$13,899
01 LINCOLN TOWN
CAR Executive 74K
$6,199
00 CHEVY VENTURE
Only 56L $4799
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 05 MAGNUM
Clean Car. Local
Trade-in.
$10,880
560 Pierce St.
Kingston, PA
www.wyoming
valleymotors.com
570-714-9924
EAGLE `95 TALON
Only 97,000 Miles.
Full custom body kit,
dark green metallic
with gray interior.
Dual exhaust, 4 coil
over adjustable
struts. All new
brakes, air intake
kit, strut brakes,
custom seats, cus-
tom white gauges, 2
pillar gauges, new
stereo, alarm, cus-
tom side view mir-
rors. 4 cylinder
automatic, runs
excellent. $8,500.
Call 570-876-1355
or 570-504-8540
(evenings)
412 Autos for Sale
FORD `04 MUSTANG
Mach I, 40th
ANNIVERSARY EDITION
V8, Auto, 1,400
miles, all options,
show room condi-
tion. Call for info.
Asking $24,995
Serious inquiries
only. 570-636-3151
FORD `07 MUSTANG
63,000 highway
miles, silver, runs
great, $11,500.
negotiable.
570-479-2482
FORD `08 ESCAPE
XLT. 56,800 miles.
Grey metallic with
grey cloth interior.
2WD. Auto. Power
windows & locks.
Dual air bags. A/C.
Alloy Wheels. Excel-
lent condition.
$14,500
Trades Welcome
570-328-5497
FORD `87 F150
116k, rebuilt trans-
mission, new radia-
tor. Runs great.
$1,250. Call
570-864-2339
FORD `90 MUSTANG GT
Must See. Sharp!
Black, new direc-
tional tires, excel-
lent inside / outside,
factory stock, very
clean, must see to
appreciate. 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
HONDA `03
ACCORD EX
6 CD changer.
Moonroof. Heated
seats. Power locks.
Black with beige
leather interior.
104,000 miles.
$8,600
(570) 474-9563
(570) 592-4394
HONDA `05 ACCORD
EXL. Titanium exteri-
or, grey leather inte-
rior. Dual Airbags.
ABS. Bucket Seats.
CD changer. Cruise.
Fog lights. GPS. All
power. A/C. 104k.
Sunroof / moonroof.
$10,900. Please Call
570-814-0949
HONDA `07 ACCORD
V6 EXL. 77K miles. 1
owner with mainte-
nance records.
Slate blue with
leather interior. Sun-
roof. Asking $12,500.
Call 570-239-2556
VITOS
&
GINOS
Wanted:
Junk
Cars &
Trucks
Highest
Prices
Paid!!
FREE PICKUP
288-8995
MAZDA `97 626
115,000 miles.
Needs some work.
$1,000
(570) 817-1524
412 Autos for Sale
HONDAS
08 Accords
Choose from 3. Low
miles. Factory war-
ranty. Starting at
$16,495
08 Civic LX
Blue. 20 K miles.
Factory warranty.
$15,800
08 Civic LX
Gray. 26K. 1 owner.
$14,400
04 Civic
4 door. Auto.
$8,495
04 Honda Pilot
4x4. Auto. AC.
$11,200
** ** ** ** ** **
10 Chevy Impala
LT
6 cylinder. Auto.
Leather. Low Miles.
02 Chrysler
Sebring
4 cylinder. Auto. Air.
$4,900
** ** ** ** ** **
MAFFEI AUTO
SALES
570-288-6227
JAGUAR `00 S TYPE
4 door sedan. Like
new condition. Bril-
liant blue exterior
with beige hides.
Car is fully equipped
with navigation sys-
tem, V-8, automatic,
climate control AC,
alarm system,
AM/FM 6 disc CD,
garage door open-
er. 42,000 original
miles. $9,750
Call (570) 288-6009
JAGUAR `01 SEDAN
S1 TYPE
12,000 MILES
Old ladies car. Like
new! leather interi-
or. Asking $10,900.
Located in Dal-
las.570-675-1185
JAGUAR `98 XK8
Convertible. 40k
miles. Great condi-
tion. Silver with black
interior. Garage
kept. Recently
inspected. V8/auto/
AC. AM/FM / 6 disc.
$12,000 or best
offer. 570-310-1287
Collect cash, not dust!
Clean out your
basement, garage
or attic and call the
Classified depart-
ment today at 570-
829-7130!
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
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.
50,000 miles,
Triple coated
Pearlized White.
Showroom
condition.
$16,900.
(570) 814-4926
(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 5,500 MILES.
$18,000
(570) 883-0143
MAZDA 3S `07
Sedan. 4 cylinder
2.3, auto, FWD, all
power, keyless
entry, cruise, a/c,
am/fm stereo/cd,
ABS. 55k miles.
Excellent condition.
Asking $11,600. Call
570-574-2141
412 Autos for Sale
MERCEDES `92 500 SEL
White with gray
leather interior, 17
custom chrome
wheels, 4 new tires,
new breaks front &
rear. Full tune-up, oil
change & filters
done. Body and
interior are perfect.
Car has all the
options. 133,850
miles. Original price:
$140,000 new. This
is the diplomat ver-
sion. No rust or
dings on this car -
Garage kept. Sell for
$9,500.
Call: 570-876-1355
or 570-504-8540
Evenings
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!
$10,995
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 99 SABLE
WAGON
Well kept, body in
great condition, no
rust, tires good,
mechanically sound,
needs battery. Only
72,560 miles.
Inspected until 10/11.
$3800 negotiable
Call 570-779-3816
MINI 08
COOPER
2 door, automatic,
leather, sky roof,
boost cd, fogs
$18,880
560 Pierce St.
Kingston, PA
www.wyoming
valleymotors.com
570-714-9924
Selling your
Camper?
Place an ad and
find a new owner.
570-829-7130
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
MITSUBISHI 02
Eclipse Convertible
Black interior &
exterior 120,000
miles, very good
condition in & out,
new tires, new
brakes. auto, clean
title, $6,300.
By owner.
570-991-5558
NISSAN `08 ALTIMA
2.5 S. Silver/black
interior. 41,800
miles. Excellent
condition. CD Play-
er. New tires.
$13,900
(570) 675-8835
NISSAN `08 SENTRA
58K miles. 4 cylin-
der, 6 speed manu-
al. Great condition.
All power. A/C.
Cruise. $11,500. Call
570-333-4379
after 6:30 pm
NISSAN `08 XTERRA
Grey, Mint condition.
35K miles. New, all-
season tires. Sirius
radio. 2 sets of
mats, including
cargo mats.
$18,400. Call
570-822-3494 or
570-498-0977
412 Autos for Sale
NISSAN `09 370Z
TOURING-MAG
BLACK
11,200 miles, auto-
matic, 2 door, anti-
lock brakes, air
conditioning, air
bags, power locks,
power windows,
power mirrors,
power seats, all
power, AM/FM
radio, CD changer,
keyless entry,
leather interior,
custom wheels,
$28,000. Call after
5:00 p.m.
570-403-5343
PONTIAC `04 VIBE
White. New manual
transmission &
clutch. Front wheel
drive. 165k highway
miles. Great on gas.
Good condition,
runs well. $4,500 or
best offer
570-331-4777
412 Autos for Sale
NISSAN 09 ALTIMA S
Auto. CD Player.
Cruise.
$13,995
560 Pierce St.
Kingston, PA
www.wyoming
valleymotors.com
570-714-9924
Say it HERE
in the Classifieds!
570-829-7130
PONTIAC `05
GRAND PRIX
Sedan. White. Great
condition. Sunroof,
tan leather interior.
Recently main-
tained. 70k miles.
$5,000. Call
570-954-7459
Sell your own home!
Place an ad HERE
570-829-7130
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 PAGE 3D
412 Autos for Sale
PONTIAC 04 SUNFIRE
2 door. Automatic.
42K. Sunroof.
Power windows.
AC. Runs & looks
great! $5,495.
DEALER
570-868-3914
PONTIAC 69 FIREBIRD 400
CONVERTIBLE
Blue/white top &
white interior.
Recent document-
ed frame-off
restoration. Over
$31,000 invested.
will sell $19,900.
570-335-3127
PORSCHE `85 944
Low mileage,
110,000 miles, 5
speed, 2 door, anti-
lock brakes, air con-
ditioning, power
windows, power
mirrors, AM/FM
radio, CD changer,
leather interior, rear
defroster, tinted
windows, custom
wheels, $8,000.
(570) 817-1803
ROWLANDS
Mountainside Auto, Inc.
Used car sales.
1157 S. Main Rd.
Dorrance
570-868-3914
SAAB `06 93
A E R O s p o r t .
Leather interior.
Heated seats. Sun-
roof. Good condi-
tion. $8,000. Seri-
ous inquiries only.
Call 570-760-8264
SATURN `02 SL1
Sedan. 1 owner.
17,500 miles. War-
ranty. $5,500.
R&K Auto
West Wyoming
(570) 693-9931
SUBARU `02 FORESTER
L. AWD. Red.
$2,850. Hail dam-
age. Runs great.
Auto, air, CD, cas-
sette, cruise, tilt. All
power. 174K miles.
Mechanical inspec-
tion welcomed. Call
570-561-9217
SUBARU `98
OUTBACK WAGON
155,000 miles.
Inspection good till
7/12. New Tires.
$4,500.
(570) 899-8725
SUBARU 06 FORESTER
ONLY!!
$10,880
560 Pierce St.
Kingston, PA
www.wyoming
valleymotors.com
570-714-9924
SUBURU 06 LEGACY
GT LIMITED SEDAN
4 door, black,
approximately
76,000 miles. 2.5
liter engine, auto.
asking $12,000.
570-510-3077
TOYOTA `05
COROLLA-S
Automatic, power
windows, locks, mir-
rors, air, cruise, key-
less entry. Ground
effects.
68,700 miles.
Asking $9,395
570-388-2829 or
570-905-4352
TOYOTA `10
Camry SE. 56,000
miles. Red, alloy
wheels, black cloth
interior. Will consid-
er trade. $14,200
(570) 793-9157
VOLKSWAGEN `04
Beetle - Convertible
GREAT ON GAS!
Blue. AM/FM cas-
sette. Air. Automat-
ic. Power roof, win-
dows, locks &
doors. Boot cover
for top. 22k. Excel-
lent condition.
Garage kept.
Newly Reduced
$14,000
570-479-7664
Leave Message
415 Autos-Antique
& Classic
CADILLAC `80
COUPE DEVILLE
Excellent condition,
$3,000 located in
Hazleton.
570-454-1945 or
561-573-4114
CHEVROLET `65
CORVETTE STINGRAY
Clean, sharp, runs
great! Must see.
$13,500. As is.
(570) 269-0042
LEAVE A MESSAGE - WE
WILL CALL YOU BACK.
CHEVROLET `71
MONTE CARLO
$2,000 or best offer
(570) 650-8687
CHEVROLET `76
PICKUP
Very Good
Condition!
Low miles!
$7500. FIRM
570-905-7389
Ask for Lee
CHEVY 30 HOTROD COUPE
$49,000
FORD 76 THUNDERBIRD
All original $12,000
MERCEDES 76 450 SL
$24,000
MERCEDES 29
Kit Car $9,000
(570) 655-4884
hell-of-adeal.com
415 Autos-Antique
& Classic
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
Chrysler 68 New Yorker
Sedan. 440 Engine.
Power Steering &
brakes. 34,500
original miles.
Always garaged.
$6,800
(570) 883-4443
DESOTO CUSTOM
49 4 DOOR SEDAN
3 on the tree with
fluid drive. This All
American 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
570-455-6589
FORD SALEEN 04
281 SC Coupe
1,000 miles
document. #380
Highly collectable.
$28,500
570-472-1854
LINCOLN `66
Continental Convertible
4 door. 67K miles. 1
owner since `69.
Good frame. Teal
green/white leather.
Restorable. $2,500
570-287-5775
570-332-1048
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 1975
Good interior &
interior. Runs
great! New tires.
Many new parts.
Moving, Must Sell.
$2,300 or
best offer
570-693-3263
Ask for Paul
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
STUDEBAKER 31
Rumble seat,
Coupe
Good condition.
Call for details
(570) 881-7545
415 Autos-Antique
& Classic
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
OLDSMOBILE
`68
DELMONT
Must Sell!
Appraised
for $9,200
All original
45,000 miles
350 Rocket
engine
Fender skirts
Always
garaged
Will sell for
$6,000
Serious
inquires only
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
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
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
CABELAS FISH
CAT PANTHER
9. Approximately 5
years old. Retails
$699, selling $350.
FIRM 570-288-9719
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
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
ROW BOAT 12
& TRAILER
Aluminum, new
tires, new wiring on
trailer, $699. neg.
570-479-7114
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.
427 Commercial
Trucks &
Equipment
CHEVY `04 DUMP TRUCK
36k miles. 96 Boss
power angle plow.
Hydraulic over elec-
tric dump box with
sides. Rubber coated
box & frame. Very
good condition.
$22,500 firm. Call
570-840-1838
CHEVY 08 3500
HD DUMP TRUCK
2WD, automatic.
Only 12,000 miles.
Vehicle in like
new condition.
$19,000.
570-288-4322
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
To place your
ad call...829-7130
BMW 07 K1200 GT
Low mileage. Many
extras. Clean.
$9,500
(570) 646-2645
DAELIM 2006
150 CCs. 4,700
miles. 70 MPG.
New battery & tires.
$1,500; negotiable.
Call 570-288-1246
or 570-328-6897
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 2011
HERITAGE SOFTTAIL
Black. 1,800 miles.
ABS brakes. Securi-
ty System Package.
$16,000 firm.
SERIOUS INQUIRIES ONLY
570-704-6023
HARLEY 73
Rat Rod.
$3,200
Or Best Offer.
(570) 510-7231
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 `03
NIGHTTRAIN
New rear tire. Very
good condition. 23K
miles. $8,500. Call
570-510-1429
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
03 Dyna Wide Glide
Excellent condition -
garage kept! Gold-
en Anniversary - sil-
ver/black. New
Tires. Extras.
19,000 miles.
Must Sell!
$10,000.
570-639-2539
HARLEY DAVIDSON 05
SCREAMING EAGLE
V-ROD
Orange & Black.
Used as a show
bike. Never abused.
480 miles. Excellent
condition. Asking
$15,000
570-876-4034
HARLEY DAVIDSON 05
V-ROD VRSCA
Blue pearl,
excellent condition,
3,100 miles, factory
alarm with extras.
$10,500.
or best offer.
Tony 570-237-1631
HARLEY DAVIDSON
08 SPORTSTER
XL 1200 Low Rider.
6,700 miles. Lots of
chrome & extras.
Perfect condition.
$7,000 or best offer
(570) 709-8773
HARLEY DAVIDSON
2006 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
$15,000
570-876-4034
HONDA `03 REBEL
250. Black with red
rebel decal. 65MPG.
Excellent condition.
1,800 miles. $1,750
or best offer. Call
570-262-6605
HONDA 2005 SHADOW
VLX600, White,
10,000 miles
& new back tire.
$3,000
(570) 262-3697 or
(570) 542-7213
439 Motorcycles
HARLEY DAVIDSON 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.
$7,995
570-905-9348
HYOSUNG `04 COMET
250. 157 Miles.
Excellent Condition.
$1,200. Call
570-256-7760
KAWASAKI 03
KLR 650. Green.
Excellent condition.
6K Miles. $3,000
(570) 287-0563
KAWASAKI 05
NINJA 500R. 3300
miles. Orange.
Garage kept. His &
hers helmets. Must
sell. $2400
570-760-3599
570-825-3711
Kawasaki` 93
ZX11D NINJA
LIKE NEW
8900 Original
miles. Original
owner. V@H
Exhaust and Com-
puter. New tires.
$3,800.
570-574-3584
MOTO GUZZI `03
1,100 cc. 1,900
miles. Full dress.
Shaft driven. Garage
kept. Excellent condi-
tion. $6000. Health
Problems. Call
570-654-7863
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
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 11 YZ 450
Brand New!
$6,900
(570) 388-2947
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. Reduced to
$5,500 negotiable.
570-453-3358
CHEROKEE 10
Travel trailer. 39 ft.,
4 slide outs, 3 bed-
rooms, 2 bath
rooms, microwave,
awning, tinted win-
dows, Brand new.
Have no pets or
smokers. Much
more!!!!!
$33,000
(cell) 682-888-2880
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
LAYTON 02
TRAVEL TRAILER
30 ft. Sleeps 9 - 3
bunk beds & 1
queen. Full kitchen.
Air conditioning/
heat. Tub/shower.
$6,900
(570) 696-1969
442 RVs & Campers
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. $2,595
386-334-7448
Wilkes-Barre
To place your
ad Call Toll Free
1-800-427-8649
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
PACE 99 ARROW VISION
Ford V10. Excellent
condition. 8,700
miles. 1 slide out. 2
awnings. 2 colored
TVs, generator,
back up camera, 2
air conditioners,
microwave/convec-
tion oven, side by
side refrigerator
with ice maker,
washer/dryer,
queen size bed.
$37,900 negotiable
(570) 288-4826
(570) 690-1464
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
SUNLINE SOLARIS `91
25 travel trailer A/C.
Bunk beds. New
fridge & hot water
heater. Excellent
condition. $3,900.
570-466-4995
SUNLITE CAMPER
22 ft. 3 rear bunks,
center bathroom,
kitchen, sofa bed.
Air, Fully self con-
tained. Sleeps 6.
New tires, fridge
awning. $4500.
215-322-9845
TRAVEL TRAILER 33 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 CXL
BARGAIN!!
AWD, Fully
loaded, 1 owner,
22,000 miles.
Small 6 cylinder.
New inspection.
Like new, inside
& out. $13,900.
(570) 540-0975
CADILLAC `99
ESCALADE
97k miles. Black
with beige leather
interior. 22 rims.
Runs great. $8,500
Call 570-861-0202
CHEVROLET `10
SILVERADO 1500
Extended Cab V71
Package 4x4. Bed-
liner. V-8. 5.3 Liter.
Red. Remote start.
Garage kept. 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
CHEVY `00 SILVERADO
1500. 4x4. 8 box.
Auto. A/C. 121K
miles. $5,995.
570-332-1121
451 Trucks/
SUVs/Vans
CHEVY `10 SILVERADO
4 Door Crew Cab
LTZ. 4 wheel drive.
Excellent condition,
low mileage.
$35,500. Call
570-655-2689
CHEVY `99 SILVERADO
Auto. V6 Vortec.
Standard cab. 8
bed with liner. Dark
Blue. 98,400 miles.
$6,899 or best offer
570-823-8196
CHEVY 02 AVALANCHE
4X4. 130K highway
miles. Cloth seats.
Hitch. No rust.
Mechanically excel-
lent. Roof rack. Gray
tones. $7,250
570-239-2037
CHEVY 03
TRAILBLAZER LTZ
4WD, V6, leather,
auto, moonroof
$10,740
560 Pierce St.
Kingston, PA
www.wyoming
valleymotors.com
570-714-9924
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
CHEVY 05
TRAILBLAZER LT
Leather. Sunroof.
Highway miles.
Like Brand New!
$6,995
Call For Details!
570-696-4377
CHEVY 07 HHR LT
Moonroof
$13,784
560 Pierce St.
Kingston, PA
www.wyoming
valleymotors.com
570-714-9924
CHEVY 90 CHEYENNE
2500 series. 8 ft
box with tool box.
Heavy duty ladder
rack. 150K miles.
Great work truck.
$1,500
570-406-5128
CHEVY 95 ASTRO
AWD. Good tires.
V6. Automatic.
149,000 miles.
Power everything.
Heavy duty tow
package. Runs
good. Just passed
inspection.
$2,000
(570) 855-8235
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
CHEVY 98
CHEYENNE 2500
2-wheel drive
1 owner! Local
new truck trade!
$3,495
Call For Details!
570-696-4377
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
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
FORD 00 TAURUS
STATION WAGON
3rd seat. Local
new car trade!
$3,995
Call For Details!
570-696-4377
FORD `04 EXPLORER
Eddie Bauer Edition
59,000 miles,
4 door, 3 row
seats, V6, all power
options, moon roof,
video screen
$12,999.
570-690-3995 or
570-287-0031
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 `06 RANGER
2WD, regular cab, 4
Cylinder, 5 speed,
CD/radio & cruise
control. 64K miles.
All maintenance
records available.
Truck is very clean!
$7,700
(570) 401-0684
FORD `90 TRUCK
17 box. Excellent
running condition.
Very Clean. $4,300.
Call 570-287-1246
JEEP `99 CHEROKEE
4WD, low miles,
new inspection,
new tires, runs
good, $4,500 OBO
(570) 752-5229
451 Trucks/
SUVs/Vans
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
FORD 02 F150
Extra Cab. 6
Cylinder, 5 speed.
Air. 2WD. $4,995
Call For Details!
570-696-4377
FORD 03 RANGER
$11,995
560 Pierce St.
Kingston, PA
www.wyoming
valleymotors.com
570-714-9924
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
FORD 05
ESCAPE XLT
Sunroof, leather,
Local New SUV
Trade!
$6,995
Call For Details!
570-696-4377
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
FORD 99 F150
4x4. Short box.
Auto. 4.6L. V8.
1 Owner!!
$4,495.
Call For Details!
570-696-4377
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
(570) 855-7197
(570) 328-3428
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 06 CRV SE
Leather &
Moonroof.
$18,745
560 Pierce St.
Kingston, PA
www.wyoming
valleymotors.com
570-714-9924
HUMMER 06 H3
Leather &
moonroof
$20,880
560 Pierce St.
Kingston, PA
www.wyoming
valleymotors.com
570-714-9924
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.
Trade ins accepted.
570-466-2771
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
451 Trucks/
SUVs/Vans
JEEP `96 GRAND
CHEROKEE LARADO
6 cylinder, 97k
miles, excellent
condition, Florida
Car. $3,995, 3
months warranty.
Call 570-417-4731
JEEP 07 CHEROKEE
Only 23,000 miles!
$19,750
560 Pierce St.
Kingston, PA
www.wyoming
valleymotors.com
570-714-9924
JEEP 07 PATRIOT
4WD - Alloys
$17,440
560 Pierce St.
Kingston, PA
www.wyoming
valleymotors.com
570-714-9924
JEEP 08 COMPASS
4 WD. Auto. CD.
$15,880
560 Pierce St.
Kingston, PA
www.wyoming
valleymotors.com
570-714-9924
JEEP 09 COMMANDER
AWD. Alloys.
$19,880
560 Pierce St.
Kingston, PA
www.wyoming
valleymotors.com
570-714-9924
LEXUS `06 GX 470
Cypress Pearl with
ivory leather interi-
or. Like new
condition, garage
kept. All service
records. All options
including premium
audio package, rear
climate control,
adjustable suspen-
sion, towing pack-
age, rear spoiler,
Lexus bug guard.
48,500 miles.
$26,950
(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
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
MAZDA 04
TRIBUTE LX
Automatic, V6
Sunroof, CD
1 owner
Extra Clean!
$4,995
Call For Details!
570-696-4377
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
MAZDA 03 MPV VAN
V6. CD Player.
1 owner vehicle!!
$3,495
Call For Details!
570-696-4377
MERCURY `07
MARINER
One owner. Luxury
4x4. garage kept.
Showroom condi-
tion, fully loaded,
every option
34,000 miles.
DRASTICALLY
REDUCED
$15,500
(570)825-5847
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
NISSAN `10 ROGUE SL
AWD. Gray. Sun-
roof. Bose stereo
system. Black
leather seats. 5,500
miles. $24,000
(570) 696-2777
451 Trucks/
SUVs/Vans
MITSUBISHI `11
OUTLANDER SPORT SE
AWD, Black interi-
or/exterior, start/
stop engine with
keyless entry, heat-
ed seats, 18 alloy
wheels, many extra
features. Only
4,800 miles. 10
year, 100,000 mile
warranty. $23,500.
Willing to negotiate.
Serious inquires
only - must sell,
going to law school.
(570) 793-6844
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 10
FRONTIER SE
6K miles! Auto-
matic. $19,950
560 Pierce St.
Kingston, PA
www.wyoming
valleymotors.com
570-714-9924
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
PONTIAC 02
MONTANA
V6. Nice
Inexpensive Van!
$2,995
Call For Details!
570-696-4377
SATURN `04 VUE
65K, Auto, Loaded.
Needs transmis-
sion/airbags. Book
value $10,000. Sell
$3,000 or best offer
(570) 829-2875
(570) 332-1252
SUZUKI `03 XL-7
85K. 4x4. Auto.
Nice, clean interior.
Runs good. New
battery & brakes. All
power. CD. $6,800
570-762-8034
570-696-5444
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.
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
VOLVO `08 XC90
Fully loaded, moon
roof, leather, heat-
ed seats, electric
locks, excellent
condition. New
tires, new brakes
and rotors. 52,000
miles highway
$26,500/ best offer.
570-779-4325
570-417-2010 till 5
457 Wanted to Buy
Auto
ALL
JUNK
CAR &
TRUCKS
WANTED
Highest Prices
Paid In Cash!!!
FREE
REMOVAL
Call V&G
Anytime
288-8995
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
PAGE 4D THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
24
Mos.
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
*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). 0% APR for 60 Months Plus $1500 includes Trade-In Assistance Rebate.
Photos of vehicles are for illustration purposes only. Coccia Ford is not responsible for any typographical errors. No Security Deposit Necessary. See dealer for details. Sale ends SEPTEMBER 30, 2011.
WWW.COCCIACARS.COM
*Tax and tags extra. Security deposit waived. All factory rebates applied
**Lease payments based on 24 month lease 21,000 allowable miles. First months payment,
$595 Bank Fee, and $2,500 down payment (cash or trade) due at delivery. Sale ends 9/30/11.
24
Mos.
3.7L V6, Auto., 17 Alum. Wheels,
Air, Cloth Seat, 40/20/40 Split Seat,
Sliding Rear Window, Decor Pkg.,
Chrome Step Bar, Cruise
Control, ABS, Floor Carpet,
Pwr. Equipment Group,
Limited Slip
NEW2011 FORDF-150 4X4
72
Mos.
3.7L V6, Auto., Air, Cloth Seat,
AM/FM/CD, Cruise Control,
40/20/40 Split Seat, XL
Plus Pkg.,
ABS, XL
Decor Group
FOOT BOX
Air, CD,
Safety Canopy, Side Impact Safety
Pkg., Pwr. Drivers Seat, Auto.,
PDL, PW, Fog Lamps, Privacy
Glass, 16 Alum. Wheels, Roof
Rack, Sirius Satellite Radio, Rear
Cargo Convenience Pkg., Keyless
Entry,
*Tax and tags extra. Security deposit waived. All factory rebates applied **Lease payments based on 24 month lease
21,000 allowable miles. First months payment, $595 Bank Fee, and $2,500 down payment (cash or trade) due at delivery. Sale ends 9/30/11.
24
Mos.
Auto., AM/FM/CD,
Alum. Wheels, Tilt, PDL, PW,
Safety Pkg., Side Impact Air Bags,
1st & 2nd Air Curtains, Anti-Theft
Sys., Sirius Satellite Radio, Pwr.
Seat, Keyless Entry, Message
Center,
*Tax and tags extra. Security deposit waived. All factory rebates applied **Lease payments based on 24 month lease
21,000 allowable miles. First months payment, $595 Bank Fee, and $2,500 down payment (cash or trade) due at delivery. Sale ends 9/30/11.
*Tax and tags extra. Security deposit waived. All factory rebates applied **Lease payments based on 24 month lease
21,000 allowable miles. First months payment, $595 Bank Fee, and $2,500 down payment (cash or trade) due at delivery. Sale ends 9/30/11.
*Tax and tags extra. Security deposit waived. All factory rebates applied
**Lease payments based on 24 month lease 21,000 allowable miles. First months payment,
$595 Bank Fee, and $2,500 down payment (cash or trade) due at delivery. Sale ends 9/30/11.
NEW2012 FORDESCAPE XLT 4X4
Auto., Air, Pwr. Mirrors, Advance
Trac with Electronic Stability Control, Side
Curtains, AM/FM/CD, Pwr. Door Locks,
Tilt Wheel, SYNC, Sport Appearance
Pkg., Rear Spoiler, Cruise Control,
15 Alum. Wheels,
Keyless Entry w/Keypad
NEW2012 FORDFIESTA SE
Automatic, Advanced Trac
with Electronic Stability Control,
Side Curtains, AM/FM/CD, Pwr.
Door Locks, Air, Remote Keyless
Entry, Tilt Wheel, Pwr. Mirrors
Auto., AM/FM/CD, 16 Alum. Wheels,
Tilt Wheel, PW, PDL, Safety Pkg., Side
Impact Air Bags, 1st & 2nd Air
Curtains, Anti-Theft Sys.,
Message Center, Cruise
Control, Keyless Entry
72
Mos.
NEW2012 FORDFIESTA
24
Mos.
M
O
S.
APR
PLUS
24
Mos.
24
Mos.
NEW2011 FORDF-150 SUPERCAB STX 4X4
M
O
S.
APR
PLUS
M
O
S.
APR
PLUS
OVER
40
40
TOCHOOSE
FROM
NEW2012 FORDFOCUS SEL
NEW2012 FORDFOCUS NEW2012 FORDFOCUS SE
NEW2012 FORDFOCUS SE
Auto., AM/FM/CD, Anti-Theft Sys., Side Curtain Air Bags,
PW, PL, 16 Steel Wheels, Tilt Wheel, AC, Instrument
Cluster, Message Center, Keyless Entry, Pwr. Side Mirrors,
Fog Lamps, MyKey
*Tax and tags extra. Security deposit waived. All factory rebates applied **Lease payments based on 24 month lease
21,000 allowable miles. First months payment, $595 Bank Fee, and $2,500 down payment (cash or trade) due at delivery. Sale ends 9/30/11.
*Tax and tags extra. Security deposit waived. All factory rebates applied **Lease payments based on 24 month lease
21,000 allowable miles. First months payment, $595 Bank Fee, and $2,500 down payment (cash or trade) due at delivery. Sale ends 9/30/11.
Auto., AM/FM/CD, Anti-Theft Sys., Side
Curtains Air Bags, 16 Steel Wheels, Tilt
Wheel, AC, Instrument Cluster, Message
Center, PL, PW, Keyless Entry, Pwr.
Side Mirrors, Fog Lamps, MyKey,
Convenience Pkg., Cruise
Control, Map Light,
Perimeter Alarm,
24
Mos.
SEL, Auto., AM/FM/CD, Anti-Theft Sys., Side Curtains
Air Bags, Tilt, AC, Instrument Cluster, Message
Center, PW, PL, Keyless Entry w/Keypad, Pwr. Side
Mirrors, Fog Lamps, MyKey, Convenience Pkg.,
Cruise Control, Perimeter Alarm,
Remote keyless Entry, AM/FM/CD, Pwr. Door
Locks, Air, Anti-Theft Sys., Side Curtain Air Bags,
Side Impact Air Bags, Message Center MyKey
72
Mos.
24
Mos. *Tax and tags extra. Security deposit waived. All factory rebates applied **Lease payments based on 24 month lease
21,000 allowable miles. First months payment, $595 Bank Fee, and $2,500 down payment (cash or trade) due at delivery. Sale ends 9/30/11.
NEW2012 FORDFUSION SE
M
O
S.
APR
PLUS
M
O
S.
APR
PLUS
NEW2012 FORDFUSION
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 PAGE 5D
412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale
/Ok /Ok/ /N/Ok//!/ON, v/5/! O0k /OC// 5/OwkOO/!Ou/ Ok /C0k/.CO/.
* See dea|er Ior warranty deta|s. Warranty Iromorgna| n-servce date. 2011 Acura. Acura and 1L are trademarks oI Honda Motor Co., Ltd.
503 Accounting/
Finance
BUSINESS
MANAGEMENT
For Specialized
Trucking Company
Full Charge Book
Keeper. Manage-
ment Responsibili-
ties: 3 years Experi-
ence. Must work
well with others.
Start Immediately.
Send Resume Fax
570-288-0617
Or email
kingpaint1079@
aol.com
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
506 Administrative/
Clerical
OFFICE CLERICAL
H. A. Berkheimer, a
local tax administra-
tor, is currently
seeking FT Office
Support Clerks for
our Scranton Office.
Duties include pro-
cessing tax forms,
answering taxpayer
inquiries on the
phone and in per-
son, and clerical
duties. Salary $9.04
/hour. Qualified can-
didates should pos-
sess strong data
entry skills, previous
clerical experience
and customer serv-
ice skills. We offer
paid training, a com-
prehensive benefits
package, and a
business casual
work environment.
Fax resume to:
610-863-1997
Or email: aderea@
hab-inc.com
No Phone Calls
Please. EOE
506 Administrative/
Clerical
RECEPTIONIST
Positive Results
Marketing, Inc., one
of the areas leading
advertising agen-
cies, is looking for a
dynamic individual
to work at its Main
Street, Old Forge
location as its
receptionist. Posi-
tion is full-time and
starting pay is $8.
per hour. First raise
guaranteed within
90 days and this
shall be commiser-
ate with clerical
/office skills. Fitness
membership, health
insurance and paid
vacation are some
of the benefits.
Please submit
your resume to
[email protected]
to be considered.
508 Beauty/
Cosmetology
STYLIST NEEDED
EXPERIENCED
Full or Part Time.
Flexible hours with
clientele but not
necessary.
Apply in Person
Hair Solutions
115 South Mountain
Blvd., Mountain Top
509 Building/
Construction/
Skilled Trades
CARPENTER & PAINTER
Part time. Local
work. Carpenter
with 10 years expe-
rience in commer-
cial work. May lead
to full time employ-
ment. Painter with
10 years experience
and also may lead
to full time work.
Call 570-675-5873
CONSTRUCTION
PAVE FOREMAN
Grade and Site
Foreman.
Operators: gadall,
excavator, grader,
dozer
Laborers: pipe,
paving, grading
QUARRY
Operators:
excavator, dozer
HAULING
Class B CDL triaxle
drivers
EQUIPMENT
Heavy Equipment-
Mechanic for Con-
struction and Quarry
Apply at:
American Asphalt
Paving Co.
500 Chase Road
Shavertown, PA
18708
Fax: 570-696-3486
jobs@amerasphalt.
com. EOE
509 Building/
Construction/
Skilled Trades
CONSTRUCTION
MANAGER
Minimum 5 years
experience. Ability
to organize daily
quantities, materi-
als, job costs &
schedule/manage
utility crews. Health
insurance & 401K
benefits available.
Send resume to
jamestohara@aol.
com or fax
570-842-8205
LABORERS &
CARPENTERS HELPERS
Construction
company seeking
qualified individuals.
Drivers license
required, vacation/
holidays, medical,
dental & 401K.
Applications taken
Monday-Friday,
8am-4pm.
A. Pickett
Construction
128 W. Vaughn St.
Kingston, PA 18704
570-283-2057
EOE
PROJECT MANAGER
5 years PM experi-
ence, commercial/
residential. Estimat-
ing experience.
Sales ability. Com-
petitive Compensa-
tion Package.
e-mail resume to
employment@
ruckno.com or fax
to 570-718-0661
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
ROOFER
Part time flexible.
Repair large com-
mercial roof. Saw
tooth. Must be
experienced.
Larry
570-430-1565
513 Childcare
NANNY/CHILDCARE
Back Mountain
area. Mature,
responsible non-
smoker with flexible
schedule. After
school care and
non-school days.
Ages 9 & 12. Reli-
able transportation
and valid drivers
license a must.
Must like dogs.
Send letter, refer-
ences and salary
requirements to:
The Times Leader
Box 2760
15 N. Main St.
Wilkes-Barre, PA
18711-0250
518 Customer
Support/Client Care
CUSTOMER SERVICE
JOBS!
No Resume?
No Problem!
Monster Match
assigns a
professional to
hand-match each
job seeker with
each employer!
This is a
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online and, for the
next 90-days, our
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match your profile
to employers who
are hiring right now!
CREATE YOUR
PROFILE NOW
BY PHONE OR
WEB FREE!
Call Today, Sunday,
or any day!
Use Job Code 14!
1-866-781-5627
or
www.
timesleader.com
NO RESUME NEEDED!
Call the automated
phone profiling
system or use our
convenient Online
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524 Engineering
ARCHITECTURE
& ENGINEERING
A/E team seeking
architect and elec-
trical, structural,
and civil engineers.
Experience with
PHFA, PDE, HUD,
PennDOT preferred.
Proficiency in Revit,
AutoCAD MEP,
and/or Civil 3D
required. EOE.
All responses will
be held in confi-
dence. Provide
resume and salary
requirements to
[email protected]
or: A+E Group
140 Maffet Street
Wilkes-Barre, PA
18705
527 Food Services/
Hospitality
PIZZA MAKER/
KITCHEN HELP
Full or part time.
Weekends a must.
Reply in confidence
to: Box 2755
C/O Times Leader
15 N Main Street
Wilkes-Barre, PA
18711
Let the Community
Know!
Place your Classified
Ad TODAY!
570-829-7130
533 Installation/
Maintenance/
Repair
ELECTRONICS
TECHNICIAN
Bridon American, a
market leader in
manufacturing of
steel wire rope, has
a full time position
available for an
Electronics Techni-
cian at our Exeter
location in a union-
ized environment.
Candidates should
have an Associates
Degree or equiva-
lent training as well
as experience with
DC Controls, Vari-
able Frequency and
PLCs.
The company offers
a competitive start-
ing wage, bonus
program, compre-
hensive benefit
package, and an
excellent health
insurance plan.
Candidate must be
able to work a 8
hour shift rotation. If
interested please
send a resume to,
or complete an
application at:
Bridon American
101 Stevens Lane,
Exeter, PA 18643
EOE M/F/D/V
Affirmative
Action Employer
ELECTRONICS TROU-
BLESHOOTER
Looking for full time
Electronics Trou-
bleshooter with
printed circuits and
schematic experi-
ence. Knowledge of
electrical, mechani-
cal and mainte-
nance of machinery.
Must have ability to
troubleshoot and
make necessary
repairs. Textile
knowledge a plus. A
comprehensive
benefit package.
Please send
resumes to:
American Silk Mills
75 Stark Street
Plains, PA 18705
533 Installation/
Maintenance/
Repair
MAINTENANCE
MECHANIC
Perform equipment
repairs/make
replacements accu-
rately, completely &
in a timely manner.
Handle preventa-
tive maintenance &
general trou-
bleshooting on vari-
ous mechanical and
electrical equip-
ment, production
tasks including
changeovers and
inspections.
Follow all current
GMPs
Effectively work
with supervisors,
operators, and
other mechanics to
ensure timely and
accurate work.
Electrical skills
including wiring
motors and con-
trols, PLC trou-
bleshooting and
electrical equipment
repair.
Knowledge of
pneumatic and
hydraulic equipment
systems.
Ability to work in a
manufacturing envi-
ronment and able to
lift 50+lbs.
Critical Thinking &
Problem Solving
skills.
High School Diplo-
ma/GED Required.
E-Mail resume and
cover letter to info@
LionBrewery.com
Find Your Ideal
Employee! Place an
ad and end the
search!
570-829-7130
ask for an employ-
ment specialist
SIDING OR SIDING OR
WINDOW WINDOW
INST INSTALLER ALLER
5+ years experi-
ence; must have
own tools, must
be proficient in
using a metal
brake to bend
coil; Background
check and Refer-
ences required;
Must be reliable;
Must possess
strong customer
relationship.
Contact #
(330) 351-9034
Email:
binghamton @
windowworld.inc.
com
533 Installation/
Maintenance/
Repair
TRUCK MECHANIC
EXPERIENCED
Full time. Must
have own tools / PA
Class 8 Inspection
license a plus. We
offer top wages
and benefits pack-
age. Call for inter-
view and ask for
Paul or Kevin.
Falzone Towing
Service, Inc.
271 N Sherman St
Wilkes-Barre, PA
570-823-2100
538 Janitorial/
Cleaning
HOUSEKEEPER/
COMPANION
Benton area.
Call 724-771-1341
Collect cash, not dust!
Clean out your
basement, garage
or attic and call the
Classified depart-
ment today at 570-
829-7130!
542 Logistics/
Transportation
CDL TRIAXLE
TRUCK DRIVER
Full time position for
driver with current
medical card and
good driving record.
Class A a must.
Deliveries of materi-
als and equipment.
Apply in person.
EOE.
Green Valley
Landscaping, Inc.
52 Reese Street
Plains, PA
CDL-A DRIVER
Gas field/landscape
drivers plus some
hands on labor
required. Operate
dump trucks and
load equipment on
lowboy. Deliver to
job site. Must oper-
ate skid steer exca-
vator, hydro-seed
truck, etc. Will plow
in winter. Must have
clean driving record
and pass drug test.
Call Harvis
Interview Service @
542-5330. Leave
message. Will send
an application.
Or forward resume:
varsity.harvis@
gmail.com
Employer is
Varsity, Inc.
No walk-ins. EOE
DELIVERY DRIVER
Full time. Benefits.
401 K.
No Phone Calls.
Apply in person
9am-4pm
Colours
50 Dana Street
542 Logistics/
Transportation
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.
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
542 Logistics/
Transportation
DRIVERS NEEDED:
Maxum Petroleum
is currently seeking
Transport Drivers
(CDL Class A) with
Hazmat and Tanker
for our Scranton,
PA location. Not an
over the road truck-
ing company.
We offer a full ben-
efit package avail-
able the first of the
month following 30
days of employ-
ment including 401K
company match.
We offer DOT road-
side and annual
achievable safety
bonus programs
based on your safe-
ty performance.
Paid holidays, sick
days and vacation
days are provided
as well. EOE
Requirements:
Class A Commercial
Drivers License,
HAZMAT & Tanker
endorsements,
Must have two
years verifiable
experience and
clean driving
record, Positive
Attitude/Willing to
Work
Apply online at
http://www.
maxumpetroleum.
com/careers.aspx
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
LOOKING TO GROW
DRIVERS WANTED!
CDL Class A
Local and OTR
Routes
Home daily
Benefit package
includes:
paid holiday and
vacation; health,
vision, and dental
coverage; 401K
with company
match.
Candidates must
be 23 years of
age with at least
2 years tractor
trailer experience.
Drivers paid by
percentage.
Applications can
be filled out online
at www.cds
transportation.com
or emailed to
dchapin@cds
transportation.com
or you can apply
in person at
CDS
Transportation
Diane Chapin
One Passan Drive
Wilkes Barre Pa
18702
570-654-6738
542 Logistics/
Transportation
Transportation
D DRIVERS RIVERS W WANTED ANTED
Class B CDL
Required, Tanker
Endorsement
Required, Tri-Axle
Experience
Required.
All Shifts Available
Work Available
in Williamsport
Areas
Fax resume to
570-288-2219 or
Call Rich @
570-357-8319
Looking for Work?
Tell Employers with
a Classified Ad.
570-829-7130
545 Marketing/
Product
EXPERIENCED
MARKETER
For long standing
home health agency.
Must be familiar with
medical community
and possess ener-
getic, dynamic, and
outgoing personality.
3-5 years in market-
ing a must. Gener-
ous salary with
bonus structure.
Great earning poten-
tial. Medical benefits
& mileage reim-
bursement provided.
Send resume to: c/o
The Times Leader
Box 2770
15 N. Main St
Wilkes-Barre, PA
18711-0250
548 Medical/Health
DENTAL OFFICE
ADMINISTRATOR
Due to retirement,
well soon have a
full time administra-
tor opening in our
Nanticoke office. 3+
years minimum den-
tal office admin
experience
required. Including
insurances, sched-
uling, AR/AP and
other office duties.
Call Brian Phillips @
Harvis Svc for info @
542-5330 or for-
ward resume to
Harvis Inc., Attn: Dr.
Walting II, Family
Dentistry, 75 Rock-
view Ave., Shick-
shinny, PA 18655 or
dwaltingdentistry.
[email protected].
Please no walk ins
or calls to the office.
Optician/Manager &
Optical Sales
Associates
Seeking full-time
optician to manage
busy optical center.
Also seeking full-
time/part-time opti-
cal sales associ-
ates. Great salary,
commissions, bene-
fits, and 401k. Call
1-800-248-2255
EOE
PAGE 6D THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 PAGE 7D
548 Medical/Health
HEALTHCARE
A Leader in the
Receivables Man-
agement Industry
has multiple posi-
tions available:
Data Entry
Cash Application
A/R
Representatives
Professional
Coding
Medical office
experience pre-
ferred. Ability to
work independently
a PLUS.
Fax resume to
570-208-5556.
NURSING
The Meadows
Nursing and
Rehabilitation
Center
POSITIONS AVAILABLE
CNAs
3-11 Part Time (5-9
days bi-weekly)
11-7 Part Time (2-4
days bi-weekly)
CNAs can apply on
line at:
https://home.eease.
com/recruit/?id=296
360
Individualized
orientation program
GREAT starting
rates!!
Vacation, Holiday
and Personal Days
Tuition
Reimbursement
Health insurance
and Pension Plan
Child Day Care on
premises
Meadows Nursing
& Rehabilitation
Center
4 East Center Hill
Road
Dallas PA 18612
Email Meadow-
[email protected]
e.o.e.
RN & LPN OPENINGS
Full Time
11-7pm shift
Part Time 7-3 / 3-11
pm and 3-8 pm
CNA PER DIEM
all shifts
Lakeside Nursing
Center
245 Old Lake Road
Dallas, PA 18612
(570) 639-1885
E.O.E
551 Other
HOT JOBS:
IT Help Desk,
General Laborers,
Customer Service,
Admin Assistants,
Carpenters,
Plumbers,
Maintenance,
Workers, Pickers/
Packers, Machine
Operators, And
Stock Clerks. www.
expresspros.com
570.208.7000
Paid Holiday &
Vacation
Part Time Driver/
Greenhouse Person
Clean driving
record. Reliable.
Ketler Florist &
Greenhouses
1205 S. Main St.
Hanover Twp.
ROOFERS & LABORERS
Drivers license a
plus. Please call
824-6381
SHINGLE ROOFING
CREW OR
EXPERIENCED SHINGLERS
WANTED
570-819-4356
or 239-4491
VAN DRIVER
Needed Monday
thru Friday- 6-61/2
hour days.
No weekends,
No holidays.
HOUSEKEEPER
Needed Part Time
Every other
Weekend, Every
other Holiday.
Apply within.
Keystone
Garden Estates
100 Narrows Rd
Route 11
Larksville, PA 18651
NO PHONE CALLS
PLEASE.
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
VENDING
ATTENDANT
Stock/Clean
Machines
On-site location
Monday-Saturday
7AM-Noon
pajobs@
afvusa.com
554 Production/
Operations
IMMEDIATE OPENING
USM Aerostruc-
tures, Corp in
Wyoming PA has an
immediate opening
for:
Designer CATIA,
Solid Works /
Auto CAD
Experience in
Mechanical Design
sheet Metal Parts
Aerospace CNC
Vertical/
Horizontal/Lathe
Setup/Operator,
Ability to calculate
and factor feed
rates using the
latest tooling
technology
Press brake
machine opera-
tor needed. Set
the machine up and
run it. This includes
changing tooling
and programming
basic bend patterns
based on the blue
print
Send resume via e-
mail only: r.delvalle@
usmaero.net
554 Production/
Operations
INDUSTRIAL
ELECTRICIAN I
MATERIAL HANDLER
Fabri-Kal Corpo-
ration, a major
thermoforming plas-
tics company has
full time benefitted
positions for:
Industrial
Electrician I and
Material Handler.
HS/GED required.
Electrician: 3
years experience
required. Conduit,
emt and ridged
pipe; Equipment
testing; AC/DC
motors and drives;
PLC systems.
Material Handler:
One year forklift
experience within
the past five years.
Current forklift certi-
fication preferred.
Availability for over-
time required. Drug
& Alcohol screening
and background
checks are condi-
tions of employ-
ment. Competitive
wage and benefits
package: Health
Insurance, Prescrip-
tion, Dental & Vision,
Disability, 401K,
Education, Paid
Leave. Apply on
site: Monday-Friday
8AM-5PM; or for-
ward resume to:
Fabri-Kal
Corporation
ATTN: Human
Resources
Valmont Industrial
Park
150 Lions Drive
Hazle Township,
PA 18202
FAX: 570-501-0817
EMAIL:
hrmail@hazleton.
f-k.com
www.f-k.com EOE
LABORATORY
TECHNICIAN
A growing textile
manufacturing com-
pany is seeking to fill
an immediate posi-
tion for a laboratory
technician. This
entry level position
includes responsi-
bilities of running the
textile testing
machines. The ideal
candidate would be
organized, detailed
oriented, energetic
and a team player.
Color matching
skills and computer
skills are required.
Basic knowledge of
textile is a plus but
not necessary. A
comprehensive
benefit package,
which includes
401K.
Send resumes to:
American Silk Mills
75 Stark Street
Plains, PA 18705
PRODUCTION
OPERATORS
Local beverage
manufacturer seeks
highly motivated,
goal driven qualified
candidates. Need to
be self-motivated
with strong commu-
nication skills. Must
be able to work
comfortably in a
fast-paced change
over environment.
Experience in a fast-
paced manufactur-
ing environment a
plus. Mechanical
knowledge a plus.
Bottling and/or can-
ning experience a
plus. High School
diploma or equiva-
lent/GED required.
Must be willing to
work any shift
(includes shift differ-
entials) and OT.
Competitive wage
and benefits upon
qualification. E.O.E.
Submit resume with
references to:
c/o Times Leader
Box 2765
15 N. Main Street
Wilkes-Barre, PA
18711-0250
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
566 Sales/Retail/
Business
Development
GROCERY CLERKS
Gerritys Supermar-
kets is now hiring
Full Time Grocery
Clerks. Must be
dependable and self
motivated. Experi-
ence preferred.
Apply at:
801 Wyoming Ave,
West Pittston or
www.gerritys.com
E.O.E
RETAIL
SALES CLERK
Part time. Ability to
work flexible
schedule required.
Will train. Call
EFO Furniture
570-207-2975
10am-6pm
600
FINANCIAL
610 Business
Opportunities
LIQUOR LICENSE
$19,500. CALL JOHN
570-357-3055
610 Business
Opportunities
Ice Cream Parlor/Deli
Busy West Side
Shopping Center.
Soft & Hard Ice
Cream, soups,
sandwiches,
hotdogs. Interior &
exterior furniture
included. All equip-
ment, inventory &
supplies & LLC
included. $39,900
No Real Estate
570-287-2552
NE PA TAX &
ACCOUNTING PRACTICE
FOR SALE. Serious
Inquiries Send Let-
ter Of Interest to
Box 2740
C/O Times Leader
15 N Main St.,
Wilkes-Barre, Pa
18711
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
Frigidaire 12000
BTU Window unit
$170. 570-599-0102
AIR CONDITIONER,
8,000 BTU, $30.
12,000 BTU, $40.
570-592-7723
708 Antiques &
Collectibles
$ ANTIQUES BUYING $
Old Toys, model kits,
Bikes, dolls, guns,
Mining Items, trains
&Musical Instruments,
Hess. 474-9544
COMIC BOOKS -
Gen 13-1, X-files,
Spiderman & many
others, $1 each.
NEON SIGN - Elec-
tric, Camel sign, 30
years old, $150.
RECORDS - LPS,
78S, 45S From
40S, 50S, 60S &
70S. $1 each.
570-829-2411
CUCKOO CLOCK
small, working $35.
Hess in box 2010
$22. 570-735-1589
JACKO ANTIQUES
134 Route 11,
Larksville
(Next to Woodys
Fireplace & Pro-Fix)
Oak Icebox.
Mahogany Stack
Bookcase, Oak
Stack Bookcase.
Lionel & American
Flyer Trains, Coins.
We do upholstery,
furniture repair,
chair caning, re-glu-
ing, cloth & rush
seats. We also buy
Gold, Silver & Coins.
570-855-7197 or
570-328-3428
MILLER BEER col-
lectors tin
$20. Music Box
from SF music box
company $20.
Italian plate Colos-
seum $20. Antique
lampshade, pink
$20. 570-760-4830
WEAREVER antique
new cookie gun and
pastry decorator
complete, with
accessories in box
$5. 570-735-6638
YEARBOOKS:
Coughlin H.S. 26,
28, 32, 34, 43-44,
46, 49, 51-55, 61,
63, 67, 86-88, 94;
GAR H.S. 34-37, 42-
47, 55-56, 61, 72-
73, 80, 84, 05, 06,
Meyers H.S.: 60,
74-77, Wyoming
Valley West H.S. 68-
69, 71, 73, 78, 84,
85, 86, 87, 88, 90,
93; Old Forge H.S.
66, 72, 74; Kingston
H.S. 38-45, 49, 64;
Plymouth H.S. 29-
33, 35, 37, 38-39,
46-48, 53-55,
Hanover H.S. 51-
52, 54; Berwick H.S.
52-53, 56-58, 60,
67, 68-69; Lehman
H.S. 73-76, 78, 80;
Westmoreland H.S.
52-54; Nanticoke
Area H.S. 76;
Luzerne H.S. 51-52,
56-57; West Pittston
H.S. Annual 26-28,
31-32, 54, 59-60,
66; Bishop Hoban
H.S. 72-75; West
Side Central
Catholic H.S. 65, 75,
80-81, 84; Pittston
H.S. 63; St. Marys
H.S. 29; Northwest
H.S. 73, 76, 77, 78;
Lake Lehman H.S.
74, 76, 78
Call 570-825-4721
710 Appliances
A P P L I A N C E
PA R T S E T C .
Used appliances.
Parts for all brands.
223 George Ave.
Wilkes-Barre
570-820-8162
710 Appliances
DISHWASHER Ken-
more needs heat
element $5.
570-283-0636
MICROWAVE GE
sensor oven white
$40. 570-474-6028
MICROWAVE OVEN
Amana, $25. Coro-
na kerosene
portable heater
$30. NEW 15 white
wall tire & rim for 78
Chrysler Lebaron
(Fr78-15) $45. firm
Sears Kenmore 5.0
cu. ft. chest freezer
2 years old, excel-
lent condition $100.
firm.570-824-7807
or 570-545-7006
PENN STATE foot-
ball players on pro-
fessional teams 200
cards for $15. 570-
313-5214/313-5213
REFRIGERATOR
G.E. new, white
$250. Black electric
Frigidaire stove
$150. 283-9085
REFRIGERATOR
Haier, 1/7 cu. ft.
Great for college
student $25.
570-868-5450
REFRIGERATOR, lit-
tle, Budweiser, can
fit on counter, $40.
Must sell. 674-5624
REFRIGERATOR/FR
EEZER works great,
good for a garage
or extra storage.
$40. 570-446-8672
Retired Repairman
top loading
Whirlpool & Ken-
more Washers, Gas
& Electric Dryers.
570-833-2965
570-460-0658
STOVE, GE Space-
maker, 27 drop-in
electric stove, self
cleaning excellent
condition $299.
570-735-4979
WATER COOLER,
white, cold water
dispenser only $30.
570-779-4176
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
BABY safety locks
for cabinets full box
$5. Box 12 month
clothes, great con-
dition $12. 815-6772
CLOTHING, New-
born-12 months,
girl, new with tags.
$5 each or less.
Crib Mattress, $40.
570-825-0569
EXPEDITION JOG-
GING stroller, new
condition $75. 6
570-655-3197.
HIGH CHAIR Fisher
Price Space Saver
excellent condition-
$25. Graco Pack &
Play, excellent con-
dition, Safari Friends
Theme, 2 extra
padded sheets
included $40. Zanz-
ibar bouncer seat -
two reclining posi-
tions, detachable
toys, 5 songs, 3
soothing sounds.
$25. 570-288-7905
716 Building
Materials
BATHROOM CABI-
NET, white sink,
chrome faucet,
32hx49wx23d
$75. 570-696-0187
BATHROOM SINK
SET: Gerber white
porcelain bathroom
sink with mirror and
medicine cabinet.
Matching set. $80.
570-331-8183
CEDAR SHINGLES-
unpainted, various
widths. Approxi-
mate coverage:
10X6. Call after
6pm. $60.288-8314
LIGHT BULBS Halo-
gen 20 watt gu10&c
new in boxes total
of 30 bulbs all for
$10. 570-735-6638
LIGHTS emergency
power failure light, 2
lights on each unit,
hang & plug in $40.
each. 570-636-3151
SINK, white with
facets $40.
570-270-9059
STORM DOOR made
by Forever Doors.
left hand opening
36x80 brackets,
door closures, hard-
ware included $80.
firm. 570-814-4315
WINDOW, 40 3/4 X
40 3/4. Crane out,
used over sink,
great condition.
$50. 570-825-3269
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
MEMORIAL SHRINE
LOTS FOR SALE
6 lots available at
Memorial Shrine
Cemetery. $2,400.
Call 717-774-1520
SERIOUS INQUIRES ONLY
720 Cemetery
Plots/Lots
CEMETERY PLOTS
(3) together.
Maple Lawn
Section of
Dennison
Cemetery.
Section ML.
$450 each.
570-822-1850
FOREST HILLS
CEMETERY
Carbondale,
Philadelphia suburb
near the old Nabis-
co & Neshaminy
Mall. 2 graves +
concrete vault with
possibility of double
deck. Estimated
Value $7,000. Ask-
ing $5,000. Call
570-477-0899 or
570-328-3847
MEMORIAL SHRINE
CEMETERY
6 Plots Available
May be Separated
Rose Lawn Section
$450 each
570-654-1596
726 Clothing
BOYS CLOTHES-
size large 12-14
mostly name brands
30 items $35. Boys
winter coats size
10-12 Nike, Old
Navy, JCPenny ski
coat $10. each or all
for $25. Boys
school uniform
pants, polos sizes
12-14 20 items for
$25. Mens Sneak-
ers DC skate shoe-
brand new size 10.5
$20. 570-237-1583
CLOTHING Jr. girls 6
pair jeans size 13/14
$15. 11 pieces size
15/16 $12. 13 pieces
size 15 $16. 11
pieces size 12/13
$13. Girls sizes 10
thru 12/14 35 pieces
+ winter coat $30.
23 pieces sizes 14-
14 1/2 $20. 22
pieces + winter coat
size 14/16 & 16 $20.
All Like New.
570-474-6028
COAT Ladies black
Persian lamb coat
with fur collar $35.
Moving, must sell.
570-313-5214 or
570-313-5213
GOWN, Jessica
McClintock size
9/10, 2 piece laven-
der color, satin fab-
ric, full skirt with
netting, fitted
bodice spaghetti
straps, matching
wrap, pro cleaned.
$20. 570-814-9845.
GOWNS: Light blue
& silver size 12, gor-
geous,hand made,
strapless, lace-up
corset back $150.
Dark blue & black
semi-formal, size
12, spaghetti straps,
size 12, $75. Both
worn once, perfect
condition 406-1846
HOSPITAL SLACKS
& TOPS $25. for all.
570-829-2599
JACKET leather, xl
black $50. Black
Har l ey Davi dson
boots size 8 $60.
Orange Harley
Davidson jacket
$70. Black leather
vest size L $40.
Harley Davidson
helmet, medium
$40. 570-262-1136
JACKET: fox fur
short detachable
light brown, buttery
soft leather sleeves.
medium never worn
$450. 446-8686
JACKETS
3 leather jackets,
black boys size 14
genuine italian
stone $25 each.
570-868-6018
PROM GOWNS
black size 10 $75.
Sizes 10, 1 lime
green, 1) watermel-
on color $75. each.
All worn once,
excellent condition.
570-239-6011
SEMI/ PROM dress,
Davids Bridal
metallic blue/ grey,
tea length bubble,
strapless size 4
$10. Dollys Bou-
tique, beautiful
Sherri Hill short vio-
let & pink, bow at
waist, can be worn
strapless, size 3/4.
$20. Unique tiffany
terra cotta color
with beading, lay-
ered, lace, vintage
looking, strapless,
Prom Excitement.
size 12, $20. Short
gold, sequin bodice,
full tulle sparkly bot-
tom from DavidS
Bridal, size 4, $10.
BCBG black short,
sequins on top,
flowy, size 4 $15.
BCBG red, short
pleated criss
crossed top, can be
worn strapless, size
4 $15. 7 dance
dresses sizes small,
medium & large, $5.
each . JACKET new
in wrapper Nintendo
Gamecub Bomber-
man Jetters and A
Series of Unfortu-
nate Events $10.
570-696-3528
Line up a place to live
in classified!
SHOES 4 pairs of
brand new in box
womens Hush Pup-
pies size 9 with 1-
3/4 to 2-3/4 heel, in
different popular
colors $10. per pair.
570-868-5450
730 Computer
Equipment &
Software
COMPUTER,
includes tower,
monitor, mouse &
keyboard. Excellent
Condition. $80.
570-824-7354
DESKS, Computer.
Corner, $65, Large
2 drawers, $100.
Must sell. 674-5624
730 Computer
Equipment &
Software
LAPTOPS Dell Lati-
tude d600, very
good condition, win-
dows 7.1gb ram.
dvdrw, ac adapter,
wireless mouse,
case included $140
LENOVO S10, excel-
lent condition, 10
screen, windows 7,
ac adapter, mini-
mouse included.
$120 . 905-2985
732 Exercise
Equipment
CROSS BOW by
Weider with lat pull
down, like new. $40.
570-655-4124
GYM Home Weider
$150.
570-829-2599
HOME GYM: Impex
Powerhouse Elite
2000 $100.
570-696-4362
ROWING MACHINE
Concept 2 $100.
Nordic trac $50.
Exercise bike free.
Must pick up.
570-825-0178
TREADMILL Edge
500 Manual, can be
folded. Also has a
console - needs two
batteries, to meas-
ure your calories,
distance. $50.
570-788-6694
TREADMILL electric
Weslo. $75.
570-603-0630
TREADMILL Weslo
electric, $40.
570-760-4830
WEIGHT BENCH,
large, hardly used,
$125. Must sell.
570-674-5624
736 Firewood
FIREWOOD, 100%
OAK, split and
delivered by the
cord. September
Only. $140.00
(570)704-9609
742 Furnaces &
Heaters
EDEN PURE quartz
infrared electric
portable heater as
more than $350.
Sell for $200.
570- 788-6654.
FURNACE Gas,
American, forced air
150,000 BTU com-
plete with motor &
thermostat, runs
well, very good con-
dition. $250.
570-696-1847
HEATER Corona 22-
dkb portable,
kerosene excellent
condition, used very
little. Operating
booklet included
$50. 570-829-4776
HEATER Kerosene
$25.
570-760-4830
HEATERS: vent free
20,000 btu gas wall
heater natural gas
or propane new in
box with warranty.
has thermostat &
blower $190. Vent
free 30,000 btu gas
wall heater natural
gas or propane new
in box with warranty
thermostat & blow-
er $220.
570-675-0005
SPACE HEATER,
natural gas wall
mount vent free 14-
30,000 BTU. Auto
thermostat. Excel-
lent condition. $100.
OIL TANK upright
275 gaLLON, very
good condition $75.
call 570 288-9843
744 Furniture &
Accessories
BAR & BACKBAR,
ideal for home rec
room. Good condi-
tion. $100 for both.
570-287-9701
BEDROOM SET 6
piece, dresser, mir-
ror, chest, full or
queen size head-
board, two night
stands, black mar-
ble with gold trim
finish. $275.
570-814-5477
BEDROOM SET two
piece single bed
and chifforobe light
oak complete.
$250. 905-5602
BEDROOM SET
Vougham Basseett.
Cherry. 6 items:
queen/full head-
board, footboard,
night stand, chest,
dresser, tri-fold mir-
ror. Very good con-
dition. $500.
570-763-9874
BEDROOM SET, 6
piece, dresser, mir-
ror, chest, head-
board, 2 night
stands. $250.
570-814-5477
BOOKSHELF
60x12x29 cherry fin-
ish wood, 4 shelves
with sliding glass
each 12 h. $25.
570-819-2174
BUFFET & HUTCH
combo by Kathy Ire-
land, hutch has light
& glass doors, light
tan wood, black
hardware, 2 shelves
2 doors in buffet, 2
shelves in hutch.
Like new, must go.
$950. 474-6153
BUFFET, 3 drawers,
matching glass front
hutch, 2 shelves,
67L x 57W. $45.
Call 570-814-9845.
CHAIRS (3) tan
naugahyde on swiv-
el castors, new con-
dition $100. Air mat-
tress, queen size
with pump $30.
570-696-2008
COUCH - excellent
condition! Must
see. Perfect for
family room, com-
fortable. $175.
(570) 446-8672
744 Furniture &
Accessories
COUCH full, blue &
beige, excellent
condition, like new
must sell $50.
570-457-9304
DINING ROOM
HUTCH 72hx51w
dark wood $75.
Kitchen table, 4
chairs, dark wood,
glass top 47x47
$100. Oblong coffee
table with glass top
60l-36w driftwood
on bottom $75. 2
light brown
dressers one with
mirror $25. each. 2
metal wardrobes
63lx24w $15. each.
Heavy duty steel
frame white glider
with cushions $25.
Heat surge Amish
fireplace, remote,
used twice $150.
570-603-0630
DINING TABLE solid
wood $25. Coffee
table $10. 696-3368
DINNING ROOM
SET, Maple, table &
6 commander
chairs. Excellent
condition. $200.
570-675-6578
after 5:00PM
ENTERTAINMENT
CENTER Bassett,
oak, 6 pieces, light-
ed glass shelves,
end table $450.
570-696-2212
ENTERTAINMENT
center solid oak
leaded glass door, 3
shelves, 2 bottom
drawers, all solid,
brass handles 26
TV opening, like new
$125. negotiable.
570-592-4858
ENTERTAINMENT
CENTER, Riverside,
41wx75 1/2lx21
1/4 d. Oak finish, 2
sliding top doors, 2
smaller doors under
Paid $899 + tax
new. Sacrifice for
$200 plus free 32
Toshiba TV. LOVE-
SEAT Ashley Furni-
ture, excellent con-
dition 68wx38
lx29h, microfiber
cover, cranberry
color, 1 year old, 2
large contrast pil-
lows $100.
570-333-4321
ENTERTAINMENT
CENTER, Sauder
54 H x 50 W x 21
D. Left side glass
door with 2 shelves,
2 drawers under-
neath, right side 2
door bottom under
the section for TV.
$50. Sony 27 Tri-
natron color TV $50.
570-829-4776
FILE CABINET, (3)
three drawer legal
size with hanging
file folders $50.
570-270-9059
FURNI SH FURNI SH
FOR LESS FOR LESS
* NELSON *
* FURNITURE *
* WAREHOUSE *
Recliners from $299
Lift Chairs from $699
New and Used
Living Room
Dinettes, Bedroom
210 Division St
Kingston
Call 570-288-3607
HEAD/FOOTBOARD
FRAMES cherry
wood, 4 poster, king
size 2 - 6 drawer
dressers, medium
color, excellent con-
dition, $395.
570-636-1798
HEADBOARD, oak
twin, $50. Oak night
stand $50.
570-825-0569
KITCHEN HUTCH
green metal with
wicker basket draw-
ers, excellent condi-
tion. Asking $100
570-239-6011
KITCHEN ISLAND
white, 36L x 20W
3 enclosed shelves.
2 large open
shelves, 1 pull out
door. Gold & Ivory
side chair basket
weave sides $130.
570-288-4852
KITCHEN TABLE
SET table is light
solid wood with four
matching chairs,
backs of chairs and
legs of table can be
painted any color.
Very nice set, very
good condition.
$95. 570-262-9162
KITCHEN TABLE
small, 4 Windsor
chairs $125.
570-829-2599
KITCHEN TABLE
wooden, oak chairs
to match great con-
dition $150.
570- 208-3888
LAMPS (2) parlor
stand up, grey metal
& black. $25 each.
570-740-1246
LOFT BED IKEA sil-
ver metal frame
only, 73h x 55w x
77l. Ladder att-
ached/ room under
for desk, futon, etc.
Very good condition.
$75. 570-947-6531
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
MIRROR. Large
frameless. 36x42.
$50. 570-740-1246
PATIO SET 39
round resin tan col-
ored table, used
one summer $20.
570-868-5275 or
570-301-8515
ROCKING CHAIR
Boston $100.
570-847-336
SLEEPER SOFA full
size, tan with flower
pattern. $150 or
best offer.
570-868-5924
TV: Flat screen
Sanyo. 27 Perfect
condition. $45.
570-606-6624
744 Furniture &
Accessories
WINGBACK chair
old tapestry, tan-
green-blue $75.
China Cabinet &
Buffet $125. for both
50s vintage old
pigeon hole deskl
$50. TABLES maple,
2 step tables $20.,
coffee table $15.,
cobblers bench
$20., side table with
large drawer $25.,
maple magazine
holder $10. Antique
childs rocker $50.
Noritaki China serv-
ice for 12 wheat pat-
tern $25. Electric
hospital bed FREE
570-654-6584
750 Jewelry
ENGAGEMENT RING
1/2 carat princess
cut diamond soli-
taire set in 14K
white gold. List
price of $1,495, Pur-
chased from
Littmann Jewelers
for $900, willing to
sacrifice at $700.
Call 570-814-3383
752 Landscaping &
Gardening
ARE YOU TIRED
OF BEING
RAKED?
Call Joe, 570-
823-8465 for all
your landscaping
and cleanup needs.
See our ad in Call an
Expert Section.
GARDEN TRESTLE
5hx3w black,
wrought iron $25.
570-824-0591
LAWN MOWER -
TroyBilt. 21. 6.5 HP.
Easy Start mulcher.
2 years old, just
serviced, runs &
looks perfect. Not
self propelled. Can
add bag for rear dis-
charge or side dis-
charge. $100. OBO
570-283-9452
LAWNMOWER elec-
tric Black & Decker,
mulcher, bag under
warranty $95. 2
handle shovel $12.
Hand push lawn
mower $10. Lawn
spreader $12. Elec-
tric hedge clippers
$15. Circular saw
$12. Pitch fork one
end point/other flat
$13. Home & Gar-
den sprayer $12.
570-822-5623
LAWNMOWER Toro
self-propelled, no
bag, 6.5 hp good
running condition
$125. 570-655-3197
Patrick & Debs
Lawn Care
See our ad under
Call An Expert
1162 Landscape &
Garden
756 Medical
Equipment
HOSPITAL BED,
good condition.
everything works.
Asking $800 OBO.
570-779-3965
570-991-2364
POWER CHAIR
Jazzy Select,
$500. Walker - $25.
570-829-2411
SNOWBLOWER
ATTACHMENT 42
for the FASTATTACH
lawn tractor
includes chains &
weights cost $1100.
sell for $300. Used
one season.
570-563-3081
758 Miscellaneous
All Junk
Cars &
Trucks
Wanted
Highest
Prices
Paid In
CA$H
FREE
PICKUP
570-574-1275
ANTIQUE CEDAR
CHEST $200.
Whirlpool refrigera-
tor, $250. Air condi-
tioner $50.
570-963-1401
AQUARIUM. 20 gal.
all attachments,
$15. Dayton electric
buffer/polisher, $25,
Craftsman, Sears
lawnmower rear
wheel drive, 6.5 hp,
electric start, excel-
lent, $125. Snow
thrower, White, 5.5
hp, $40. 4 dining
room chairs, wood
and fabric seat. $15
for set. 654-5169
ATTACHE, leather,
combination lock,
new, $25. 696-2008
BACKPACK Bill-
abong $20. Twilight
book collection $20.
2 cassette decks
both $30. Dell Com-
puter monitor $20.
570-760-4830
BEDLINER: 89
Chevy S10 truck
bedliner, standard
6 cab $25. Four
barrel carb running
from running Chevy
motor $50. 5 used
storm windows
29x53.5 $50. all.
570-740-1246
after 5pm.
BOOKS 2 boxes
hardcover & paper-
back, King, Grishom
etc $25. a box.
570-474-6028
CANES & WALKING
STICKS. Over 25
available. $4-$5
each. Many differ-
ent sizes, shapes &
heights! All handles
are different!
570-735-2081
CAR CARGO Lug-
gage/Rack Carrier,
$30. 570-270-9059
758 Miscellaneous
BOOKS: Enhance
your library with the
following books: An
Invitation to the
White House Hillary
Rodham Clinton.
Going Rogue
Sarah Palin. Jack &
Jackie, a Perfect
Marriage. Mem-
oirs of Barbara
Bush. Living Histo-
ry Hillary Rodham
Clinton. My Turn,
Memoirs of Nancy
Reagan. $10 each,
All for $40.
570-655 9474
CANISTER SET
Phalzgraft 3 pieces
ceramic, nature
wood design, excel-
lent condition, $20.
Rocky VCR Movies
1 - 5 box set, excel-
lent condition $25 .
570-239-6011
CHAIN LINK dog
pen, $75. Must sell.
570-674-5624
CHEVY COVER for
chevy S10 pickup 6
box, all hardware
$50. 570-655-0546
CHURCH ORGAN.
older model works
great sounds, ask-
ing $125. 283-0636
COFFEE MAKER
Bunn automatic,
two burner, stain-
less $95. 847-3368
COFFEE MAKER
Drip coffee maker
with extra glass
carafe, & toaster -
hunter green all for
$10.868-5275/301
8515
CUCKOO CLOCK
German Cuckoo
clock with colorful
birds $80. CAR
RAMPS good condi-
tion $35. CREEPER
for under car, good
condition $25.
570-696-1030
DIRT BIKE boys 20
Redline $45. Tech
Deck skateboards &
ramps, over 25
pieces $20.
570-237-1583
DRYER 3 months
old, still under war-
ranty $300. Caloric
gas stove in excel-
lent working condi-
tion. $175.328-5926
FIBERGLAS TRUCK
CAP 8ft. Good Con-
dition. $25.
570-823-6829
FISHTANK 40 gal-
lon, stand, lid, filter.
$100. 570-299-9155
GARAGE DOOR
OPENER Sears
Craftsman 1/2 hp
chain drive with
remote & control
box. Good condi-
tion. $55. 763-9874
GLASS DOOR. 4
way glass door for
bath tub. $25
570-331-8183
GRILL/GAS small,
good condition $15.
neg. 570-510-7763
HUNTING KNIFE
Maxium 9.5 Per-
fect for hunting or
fishing all stainless
steel $15.332-7933
KEG TAP SYSTEM,
$45. Floor Jack,
ATD 7300, heavy
duty, $45. Jack
Stands (2), $10.
Circular Saw, Skil-
saw, $20. 693-0535
GET THE WORD OUT
with a Classified Ad.
570-829-7130
POTTERY hand
painted Italian, quite
a few pieces $35.
for all. 829-2599
RELIGIOUS ITEMS -
Hand made
Rosaries, $5. Pope
John Paul II Memori-
blia. 570-829-2411
SAFE DEPOSIT BOX,
heavy duty $50.
Heater Tower, elec-
tric, portable, $20.
570-825-5847
SAUSAGE STUFFER
antique, enterprise
large size, good
condition $75. mini
bikE 4 hp, old
school, runs good
$175.570-655-3197.
SUMP PUMP 1/3
electric utility pump,
brand new $93. with
tax sell for $65.
570-822-5623
TEXTBOOKS
Life As We Know It,
ISBN 0743476867
Survival In
Auschwitz ISBN
9780684826806
Writing a Research
Paper ISBN 1877
653667. Great Tra-
ditions in Ethics
ISBN 0534081304
All books $2.00
each 696-3528
TIRES 225/70/R16
Baja M&S 75% tread
left. Very good con-
dition.$125.
570-855-3113
TIRES P205 65R 15
snow tires 90%
tread $160.
570-472-3632
TIRES, (2), 205/70/
R15, $30 each. Air
Compressor, $150.
Oil Heater, $25. Boy
Bike, 26X1.95, $60.
All items like new.
570-357-4827
VACUUM BAGS
Electrolux generic
$1. each. 2
Swifter wet jet mop
$5. 570- 868-6018
WARMER counter
top warmer 44hx
28dx36w, lighted
inside slide doors
front & back, very
good condition
$695. 570-636-3151
WHEELS AND TIRES
(4) five spoke for
Ford Windstar
p21565r16 $325.
570-696-2212
762 Musical
Instruments
FLUTE: Jupiter
Carnegie XL silver
beginner flute with
gold keys. Plays
beautifully. $300.
570-406-1846
762 Musical
Instruments
BAND RENTAL
PROGRAM reason-
able quarterly
affordable rates.
Rent with option to
buy. Flutes, Clar-
inets, Sax, Drum,
Trumpets, Violin.
Private lessons
offered.
Andrea Bogusko
Music Co
Rte 309 W-B Twp
near Blackman St.
570-829-3679
GUITAR-Carlo
Robelli 6-string
acoustic soft case
picks and strings.
$150. or best offer.
570-855-3113
PIANO Baldwin Con-
sole medium oak
matching bench.
Tuned & delivered.
$800. Mt. Top 570-
898-1278
PIANO: Circa 1902
Ludwig & Co mis-
sion style upright
piano, in very good
condition. $500 or
best offer.
Call 570-674-1964
764 Musical
Lessons/Services
GUITAR Washburn,
electric blue $135.
570-735-1589
766 Office
Equipment
COMPUTER DESK
49x23 good condi-
tion $75. Chair $25.
Printer Stand
23.5x21, good con-
dition $40. 2 Draw-
er File Cabinet on
wheels, good condi-
tion $30. Four shelf
wood book case,
good condition $75.
2 Drawer File Cabi-
net, oak finish 16x17
$25. 2 Drawer File
Cabinet 15.5x16
$25. Or $275 for all.
570-655-4124
770 Photo
Equipment
CAMERA German
AGFA SLR lens
1:28/50 wide angle
3.4/35, telephoto
4.0/135. Asking
$349. 570-287-
7684 after 5pm
MANFROTTO
Mono-Pod model
681B, excellent con-
dition $50. or best
offer. MINOLTA
Maxxum 8000i
35mm film camera,
2 lenses, off camera
flash unit very good
condition $275. or
best offer 570-788-
2388 after 5 pm
772 Pools & Spas
DIVING BOARD, 12,
wood laminate,
commercial grade
for inground pool,
includes fittings &
anchors, $125.
SLIDING BOARD, 6,
Fiberglass for
inground pool,
includes fittings,
$250.
Buyer must remove.
570-388-6837
POOL, above
ground, 21 pool
with filter & covers.
$999 or best offer.
570-592-4685
774 Restaurant
Equipment
Hobart
Slicers
Mixers, Meat
Grinders,
Food Cutters,
reconditioned. Call
for brochure M-F
9-5. 610-972-9084
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
BINOCULARS Yukon
8X25 Rambler
Series nitrogen filled
waterproof fogproof
compact, powerfull
new in unopened
box. $69. 675-0005
BOWLING BALL- 16
lbs., brand new,
green/navy/gold.
beautiful pearl color.
$15. 570-829-2695
CAMPING COTS (2)
metal frame (2)
$25. each. Metal
hammock frame
$20. 570-824-0591
CONCEALED
FIREARM
PERMIT
covering 33
states. Class 10/4,
2011, Clarks Sum-
mit Fire Hall.
Reservations
724-376-6336
CROSS BOW LEG-
END exercise
machine, very good
condition, sacrifice
$200.570-788-2388
GOLF BAG, Wilson
Youth, with Putter,
Wedge, 1, 7, 9, 5
Irons. $50.
570-270-9059
GOLF CART. Enzo,
gas with roof. Box in
rear for equipment.
Excellent condition.
$650. 388-6863
PAGE 8D THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
412 Autos for Sale
412 Autos for Sale
412 Autos for Sale
412 Autos for Sale
412 Autos for Sale
412 Autos for Sale
412 Autos for Sale
522 Education/
Training
412 Autos for Sale
522 Education/
Training
533 Installation/
Maintenance/
Repair
554 Production/
Operations
536 IT/Software
Development
468 Auto Parts
533 Installation/
Maintenance/
Repair
554 Production/
Operations
536 IT/Software
Development
468 Auto Parts
533 Installation/
Maintenance/
Repair
522 Education/
Training
522 Education/
Training
Wilkes-Barre Area School District
is now accepting applications for
DIRECTOR of
TRANSPORTATION
Responsible for the organization, administration
and supervision of the Districts Transportation
System in accordance with state law and School
District Policy.
Requirements:
College Degree Preferred
Ability to evaluate and schedule bus routes
Language skills and mathematical skills
Personal computer and spread sheet skills
Ability to establish and maintain effective
working relationships.
Applications are to be submitted no later
than September 28, 2011
T0: Dr. Jeffrey T. Namey, Superintendent
Wilkes-Barre Area School District
730 S. Main St., Wilkes-Barre, PA 18711
An equal opportunity employer M/FH/V
A Benson Family Dealership
HOURS:
Monday Thru Thursday
8:00am - 8:00pm
Friday & Saturday
8:00am - 5:00pm
A Benson Family Dealership
*Tax and Tags Extra.
JUST TRADED SPECIALS
LOADED WITH LOCAL TRADES
$
23,995
All The Toys, Factory Warranty
2011 FORD ESCAPE
XLT 4X4
2011 JEEP GRAND
CHEROKEE LAREDO 4X4
$
27,995
All New Body Style,
Preferred Equipment
2010 FORD FOCUS SE
$
14,995
One Owner, Perfectly Maintained
2010 CHRYSLER SEBRING
TOURING CONV
$
18,995
27K Pampered Miles,
Tons of Warranty
2007 INFINITY
FX 35 AWD
$
22,995
Just Traded, Low Miles,
All the Toys!
2007 JEEP GRAND
CHEROKEE LAREDO 4X4
$
14,995
Leather, Moonroof, Local Trade
$
26,995
One Owner, New GMCTrade,
Moonroof, AWD
2007 GMC YUKON
DENALI XL
$
20,995
Local One Owner, Only 46K
Miles, Extra Clean!
2009 CHEVY
EQUINOX LT AWD
2011 HYUNDAI
SONATA LIMITED
$
25,995
Turbo Engine, Leather, Moonroof,
One Owner, 17K Miles
2010 JEEP WRANGLER
X 4DR 4X4
$
24,995
Sport Pkg, White Beauty,
Factory Warranty
2010 DODGE GRAND
CARAVAN SXTS
$
18,995
Choose From 3, Tons Of Warranty
$
13,995
24K Miles, Sport Red,
Rear Spoiler
2009 PONTIAC
G5 COUPE
From
SERVICE TECHNICIAN
APPLY IN PERSON:
229 Mundy Street
Wilkes-Barre
OR EMAIL RESUME ALL REPLIES WILL BE HELD
IN STRICT CONFIDENCE:
[email protected]
KEN POLLOCK NISSAN
Great Working Conditions
Team Environment
Excellent Compensation
Benets Package
High Volume Service Dealership
Must be Experienced, Seasoned Professional
with PA Inspection & Emission Licenses,
ASE Certied, Dealership Experience a plus.
WVONMO VALLEV
415 Kidder Street
Wilkes-Barre, PA 18702
570.822.8870
[email protected]
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 DALLAS SCHOOL DISTRICT - EOE
www.dallassd.com
SPECIAL EDUCATION AIDES
In District: Personal Care Assistants
Out of District: Personal Care Assistant
Wyoming Area Secondary Center
Rate of pay dependent on higher education
experience, no benefits
Assistant Middle School
Boys Basketball Coach
7th grade Boys
Basketball Coach
For clearance information and to download a
district application, refer to our district web
sites Employment page. Application packets
must be received by the deadline date. Please
submit a letter of interest, resume, district
application, references, letters of recommenda-
tion, Act 34, 151 and 114 clearances and any
other supporting materials to:
Mr. Frank Galicki, Superintendent
Dallas School District
PO Box 2000
Dallas, PA 18612
DEADLINE:
October 3, 2011
or until the positions are filled
ASSISTANT PRINCIPAL
Bear Creek Community Charter School, a pro-
gressive K-8 public school that offers parents a
choice in public education, is currently seeking
an experienced professional for the career posi-
tion of Assistant Principal. This is a full-time,
twelve month position.
The successful candidate will actively partici-
pate in facilitating an environment that pro-
motes academic excellence, environmental
stewardship, and accountability among all
stakeholder groups. Applicants should possess
a minimum of three years classroom teaching
experience and a graduate degree in an appro-
priate field of study. Pennsylvania Principal
certification or the ability to obtain certification
within one year of hire is required.
Bear Creek Community Charter School is offer-
ing a competitive starting salary, comprehensive
benefit package, performance-based annual
bonus, and a rewarding work environment. Bear
Creek Community Charter School is an Equal
Opportunity Employer. For more information
visit www.bearcreekschool.com
Interested candidates should submit a resume
and cover letter to:
Bear Creek Community Charter School
Attention: Human Resources
2000 Bear Creek Boulevard
Wilkes-Barre, PA 18702
Dynamically growing Sheet Metal &
Assembly Manufacturer has immediate
multiple openings on all three shifts
for the following positions:
Welding
Press Brake
Spot Welding
Assembly
General Laborer
Looking for Skilled Machine Workers
Excellent wages & benefits
MANUFACTURING
FULL TIME
Apply in Person At:
1170 Lower Demunds Road
Dallas, PA 18612
A Drug-Free Workplace
Product Technical
Service Representative
Well established, local manufacturer is seeking a
Product Technical Service Representative. This
position provides responsive and attentive service
on all product warranty and service issues. Basic
computer knowledge and customer service skills
needed as well as the ability to comprehend and
discuss technical information. This position is on
steady day shift, Monday through Friday and is
not an I.T. position. We offer competitive rates
and benefits and are located only 15 minutes from
Wilkes-Barre or Scranton.
Send resume to [email protected] or
apply in person at:
401 Bridge Street
Old Forge, PA 18518
An Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action/Drug
Free Workplace Employer
BUYING JUNK
VEHICLES
$300 AND UP
$125 EXTRA IF DRIVEN,
DRAGGED OR PUSHED IN!
NOBODY Pays More
570-760-2035
Monday thru Saturday 6am-9pm Happy Trails!
776 Sporting Goods
GOLF CLUBS set
Genertic, great con-
dition $50.815-6772
PING PONG TABLE
$25.
570-825-5847
ROLLER BLADES
2Xs inline size 1,2,3
& 4,5,6, blue/black
black carrying bag
$10. Ice Skates, girls
white, Gold Medal,
sizes 1 & 6, like new
condition, black car-
rying bag $10. each
Both very good con-
dition 696-3528
SKIS Killingtonsk-
2s,Technical ski-
boots size 12 and
colt tech comp
poles. $150.
570-855-3113
780 Televisions/
Accessories
TELEVISION,
$19, $100. 13, $60.
570-357-4827
TELEVISION, 24
Daewood. In excel-
lent condition. $25
OBO. 570-696-1703
To place your
ad call...829-7130
TELEVISION: GE.
28 works good,
needs remote $80.
570-740-1246
TV 19: Emerson HD
color, flat screen
$125. Good working
condition. 819-2174
TV 20 Phillips color
with remote.
$15. 570-868-5450
TV COLOR
19 $15.
570-510-7763
780 Televisions/
Accessories
TV- 27 Currie
Mathews, new with
remote. $130.
570-299-9155
TV: 42 LCD. Sony
Bravia & Sony DVD
player. Like New.
$300. 570-310-1287
TVS 2 color , 13 inch
Sayno, & Insigna,
$20. 570-899-7384
782 Tickets
PENN STATE
TICKETS
October 15, 2011
vs. Purdue
Section NA -
seat backs. (2)
at $75 each.
570-675-5046
after 6 PM
TICKETS: (2) Penn
State Vs Eastern
Michigan Football
tickets 9/24 Section
EHU, cushion seats
& yellow parking
pass included $110.
570-655-0211
784 Tools
CHIPPER/SPREAD-
ER Craftsman 6.5
hp, good condition
$100. 708-2232
SNOWTHROWER
Simplicity 10 HP 36
chute 5 speed for-
ward/2 speed
reverse, excellent
condition, not in
flood) $550. Ryobi
cordless drill, flash-
light, 2 batteries &
charger $30.
570-655-9472
784 Tools
TORQUE WRENCH
Craftsman $10.
570-474-6028
786 Toys & Games
AIR HOCKEY TABLE
$450 new sell $275.
new condition. Cash
only. 570-474-2397
BIKE Womans vin-
tage bike, collegate
3, 26 $50.
570-654-2657
DOLL CRADLE
Homemade $20.
570-829-2599
DOLLS, BRATZ col-
lection, 4 boys, 13
girls, two cases,
plus accessory
items, great condi-
tion. $45. 696-2008
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
788 Stereo/TV/
Electronics
SCANNER Radio
Shack 200 channel
hand held scanner.
excellent condition.
batteries, ac
adapter included.
Police/fire frequen-
cies already pro-
grammed in. Paid
$115. sell $75 .
570-905-2985
796 Wanted to Buy
Merchandise
NEED CASH?
We Buy:
Gold & Gold coins,
Silver, Platinum,
old bills, Watches,
Costume Jewelry,
Diamonds, Gold
Filled, Sterling Sil-
ver Flatware,
Scrap Jewelry,
Military items, old
Tin & Iron Toys,
Canadian coins &
paper money,
most foreign
money (paper/coin).
Visit our new loca-
tion @ 134 Rt. 11,
Larksville
next to WOODYS
FIRE PLACE
& PRO FIX.
We make house calls!
Buyer & seller of
antiques! We also
do upholstering.
570-855-7197
570-328-3428
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
Find Something?
Lose Something?
Get it back where it
belongs
with a Lost/Found ad!
570-829-7130
WANTED
JEWELRY
WILKES BARREGOLD
570- 48GOLD8
( 570- 484- 6538)
Highest Cash Pay
Outs Guaranteed
Mon- Sat
10am - 6pm
Cl osed Sundays
1092 Highway 315 Blvd
( Pl aza 315)
315N . 3 mi l es af t er
Mot orwol d
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
CATS & KI TTENS
12 weeks & up.
All shots, neutered,
tested,microchipped
VALLEY CAT RESCUE
824-4172, 9-9 only
KITTEN, FREE to
good home. Orange
& white bottle fed
male. Very friendly.
Good with other
cats. Indoor kitten.
Call 570-822-9479
KITTENS FREE 5
female kittens. 6
weeks old. 3 Cali-
cos, 1 black & 1 tor-
toise shell. All are
healthy. Very playful
& loving.
570-852-9850
KITTENS free to
good home, 6
weeks old.
570-288-9813
KITTENS: 3
adorable kittens
found outside my
home. Approximate
6 weeks old, eating
& using litterbox.
Adapting very nicely
to indoor life. 1
black & white, short
hair, 2 black &
white, medium hair.
570-287-3876
KITTENS: Free to
good home. Please
call
570-779-4173
815 Dogs
PAWS
TO CONSIDER....
ENHANCE
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
gadzoo.com
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.
COCKAPOO pups.
Black, well social-
ized. Shots are cur-
rent. $175 each.
570-765-1846
DOBERMAN PINSCHER
Puppies AKC, red &
rust, ready now, for
appointment call
Coopers
Dobermans
570-542-5158
PUPPIES
570-453-6900
570-389-7877
ROTTWEILER PUPS
German lines.
2 male & 3 females.
Ready to go 9/30.
$650 firm.
570-592-5515
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
Y0RKIE MIX PUPS.
MINI POODLE MIX
PUPS All males,
shots are current.
$125 each.
570-765-1122
AKC DOBERMAN
PINCHER PUPPIES
Ready October 22,
Taking deposits now
Call 570-436-5083
845 Pet Supplies
BIRD CAGE:
Small $10.
570-288-4852
PARAKEET CAGE
with stand, excel-
lent condition $15.
570-457-9304
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.
906 Homes for Sale
AVOCA
314 Packer St.
Remodeled 3 bed-
room with 2 baths,
master bedroom
and laundry on 1st
floor. New siding
and shingles. New
kitchen. For more
info and photos
visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-3174
$99,900
Call Tom
570-262-7716
AVOCA
Saturday, Oct-1
11AM-1PM
912 Vine Street
Over 3,500 square
feet of living space
with large detached
2 car garage and
office Vinyl Siding,
Newer windows,
Spacious Rooms.
MUST BE SEEN!
$159,900.
MLS #10-3956
Call Pat McHale
570-613-9080
BACK MOUNTAIN
1215 Mountain Rd.
Well maintained
ranch home set on
2 acres with apple
trees on property.
This home offers 3
bedrooms, sunroom
& enclosed porch.
Lower level with
brick fireplace. 2
car garage.
$172,500
MLS# 11-2436
Call Geri
570-696-0888
BEAR CREEK
Meadow Run Road
Enjoy the exclusive
privacy of this 6.1
acre, 3 bedroom, 2
bath home with
vaulted ceilings and
open floor plan. Ele-
gant formal living
room, large airy
family room and
dining room and
gorgeous 3 season
room opening to
large deck with hot
tub. Modern eat in
kitchen with island,
gas fireplace,
upstairs and wood
burning stove
downstairs. This
stunning property
boasts a relaxing
pond and walking
trail. Sit back
and savor
the view
MLS 11-3462
$443,900
Sandy Rovinski
Ext. 26
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
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. $259,000
Maria Huggler
CLASSIC
PROPERTIES
570-587-7000
BERWICK
319 East 10th St
Remodeled
4 bedroom,
2 bath, 2 car
garage, large lot
(No Flood Zone)
Columbia County.
Low Taxes!
$105,000,
570-204-6550
c-investments.com
BERWICK
HANDYPERSON SPECIAL
1145 6th Avenue
Lots of potential!
$36,500
Can see online
c-investments.com
570-204-6550
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 PAGE 9D
STAYCATIONS
BUS TRIPS, SHOWS, LAST MINUTE DEALS & MORE
CONTACT TARA AT 970-7374 [email protected]
Visit NEWYORK CITY
RADIOCITY MUSIC HALL
Saturday, 11/12 - 1pm show
Saturday, 11/19 - 1pm show
Saturday, 11/26 - 1pm show
Monday, 11/28 - 2pm show
Wednesday, 11/30 - 2pm show
Saturday, 12/3 - 2pm show
Wednesday, 12/7 - 2pm show
Saturday, 12/10 - 2pm show
Wednesday, 12/14 - 2pm show
Saturday, 12/17 - 2pm show
Wednesday, 12/21 - 2pm show
Wednesday, 12/28 - 1pm show
1-800-432-8069
Royal Travel & Tours
Limited tickets to
Visit our website or
call today!
NYCTrip.com
570-714-4692
NY GIANTS FOOTBALL TICKETS
9/19 - Rams
10/16 - Bills
10/30 - Dolphins
11/20 - Eagles
12/4 - Packers
12/18 - Redskins
1/1 - Cowboys
1-800-432-8069
Do we have SENIOR Deals!!!!
BLACK LAKE, NY
(315) 375-8962 www.blacklake4sh.com
[email protected]
$50 o Promotion Available Now!
Fall Fishing is the best of the year!
Come relax & enjoy great
shing &Tranquility
at its nest.
Housekeeping cottages
on the water with all the
amenities of home.
300 Market St., Kingston, PA 18704
288-TRIP (288-8747) [email protected]
October 15-22, 2011
8 shows +
$1,025 pp/
double occupancy
Call for details!
Just Great Tours
570-829-5756
Branson,
Missouri
COOKIES TRAVELERS
570-815-8330
NYC San Gennario Festival 9/24 - $40
**FOOTBALL**
Steelers vs. Titans 10/8 & 10/9 $389 lower; $359 upper
Steelers vs. Jaguars 10/15 & 10/16 $389 lower; $359 upper
PSU vs. Purdue 10/15 $139 lower Or Bus &Tailgate $50
PSU vs. Illinois 10/29 $129 Or Bus &Tailgate $50
PSU vs. Nebraska 11/12 Bus &Tailgate $50
RADIOCITY CHRISTMAS SPECTACULAR
12/2, 12/4, 12/9, 12/11, 12/16 & 12/17
Call for Pricing!
COOKIESTRAVELERS.COM
Eastern Caribbean
January 27-Feb 6, 2012
Royal Caribbeans
EXPLORER OF THE SEAS
departs Bayonne, NJ,
no air needed
Paul McCartneys
Ocean Kingdom NYC Ballet
Sat. Sept. 24 Matinee Performance w/
ExclusiveMeet a Dancer Backstage Tour!
$180 per person
Call for details
570-820-8450
Labadee ~ San Juan ~
St. Maarten ~ St. Thomas
239 Spring Street, Wilkes-Barre, PA 18702
BROADWAY SHOWBUS TRIPS
CALL ROSEANN@655-4247
TORESERVE YOUR SEATS
**RADIOCITY XMAS SHOW**
Mon. Nov. 28th $85 2pm show
Wed. Dec. 14th $90 2pm show
2nd Mezz seating
JERSEY BOYS
Wed. Nov 9
$150 for Front Mezz seating
WICKED
Wed. Nov. 9
$159 Orchestra Seats
10/05/11 Sailing from
NYC only $593
Includes all port taxes!!!!
Seniors only, per person,
two sharing an inside cabin
STUCKER TOURS
655-8458
www.stuckertours.com
ATLANTIC CITY OVERNITE 11/13
HILTON ACCOM., $10 FOOD, $40 SLOTPLAY $99
MACKINAC ISLAND, MI 9/24-30
DELUXE ACCOM. GRAND HOTEL, 9 MEALS INCL. 2
ELEGANT 5-COURSE DINNERS, FORD MUSEUM,
CARRIAGE TOUR, FRANKENMUTH TOUR $1,149
FINGER LAKES WINE TOUR 10/16-17
CRUISE & LUNCHEON, WINE TASTING $199
RADIO CITY XMAS SHOW 11/28 $92
NEW YEARS EVE ATLANTIC CITY
MOONLITER BUS SAT., 12/31 ONLY $49
PLACE
YOUR AD
HERE
CARNIVAL
MIRACLE
Visit: GrandTurks, Half Moon Cay &Nassau
Call Now!!!!
906 Homes for Sale
BLAKESLEE
Quiet Country
Living
Impressive, well-
cared for, 4 Bed
Colonial on a beau-
tiful 2 Acre home
site, just 20 minutes
to W-B. Lots of
storage with a huge
basement and 3 Car
Garage. Enjoy
country living at its
best. Call Betty
570-643-4842
570-643-2100
DALLAS
123 Orchard East
Exceptionally well
maintained 2 bed-
room 1 3/4 bath. 1st
floor condo. Patio
off each bedroom. 1
car stall for parking.
Access to golf
course and 2 pools.
MLS 11-3395
$109,900
Jay A. Crossin
Ext. 23
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
DALLAS
23 Rice Court
If you've reached
the top, live there in
this stunning 3,900
sq. ft., 4 bedroom, 4
bath home in a
great neighborhood.
Offers formal living
room, dining room,
2 family rooms, flori-
da room, and
kitchen any true
chef would adore.
Picture perfect con-
dition. The base-
ment is heated by a
separate system.
SELLER PROVIDING
HOME WARRANTY.
MLS#11-1005
$349,900
Call Barbara Metcalf
570-696-0883
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!
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
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
DALLAS
NEW CONSTRUCTION
2,400 sq feet
$329,000
OPEN HOUSE
SUNDAYS, 11-1
patrickdeats.com
570-696-1041
906 Homes for Sale
DALLAS
NEWBERRY ESTATES
$109,000
2 bedroom, 2 bath
unit in move in con-
dition. Lease pur-
chase available.
$1,400/month with
$4,800 assist at
closing. Call
Nancy Eckert
570-696-0882
or Terry Eckert
570-696-0843
DALLAS
PRICE REDUCED!
Clean & neat 3-4
bedroom cape cod.
2 car garage. Deck
& porches. Gas
heat. 85 x 115 lot.
$110,000. Call
Besecker Realty
570-675-3611
DALLAS SCHOOL
DISTRICT
100% Financing
Wooded and private
Bi-Level in Dallas
School District. This
home features 1 Car
Garage, 3
Bedrooms, 1 3/4
Bath and nice
updates. Plenty of
room on your pri-
vate 2 acre lot.100%
USDA Financing
Eligible. Call for
details.
REDUCED PRICE
$166,000
Call Cindy King
570-690-2689
www.cindykingre.com
570-675-4400
DALLAS
SHORT SALE!
Charming 3 Bed-
room Cape Cod
with 1 Car Garage in
great neighborhood.
Close to Park/Rec
Center. Dallas
School District.
Priced as Short
Sale, subject to
bank approval.
Call Cindy
570-690-2689
www.cindykingre.com
570-675-4400
DALLAS
800SF ranch featur-
ing 2 bedrooms, liv-
ing room, kitchen,
one bath & laundry
room. Perfect for
the person who
travels; updated
kitchen, bath, car-
peting, drywall.
MLS#10-3628
Reduced to
$79,900
Maribeth Jones
570-696-6565
DALLAS
FRANKLIN TWP.
Orange Road
Lush setting on
almost 5 acres bor-
dered by magnifi-
cent stone walls.
Fish pond, large
garage, barn, sepa-
rate offices for stor-
age or in-house
business, home with
9 rooms, 4 bed-
rooms, 3 baths, 2
half baths all on 3
floors. 4400SF in
total. Home needs
TLC! MLS#11-1628
Reduced to
$299,000
Maribeth Jones
570-696-6565
DRUMS
226 S. Hunter Hwy
26x40, 2 bedroom 1
bath ranch on a
103x200 lot. Fully
landscaped with
double lot paved
driveway. Call
570-788-6798
906 Homes for Sale
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
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
DUPONT
Looking for a large
home? Here it is! 6
bedrooms with
first floor master
bedroom and
modern bath. Very
large modern
kitchen. Living
room, dining room,
family room,
enclosed porch,
air conditioning,
paved drive with
parking area.
MLS 11-2385
$163,000
Besecker
Realty
570-675-3611
DURYEA
1140 SPRING ST.
Large 3 bedroom
home with new
roof, replacement
windows, hardwood
floors. Great loca-
tion! For more infor-
mation and photos
visit: www.
atlasrealtyinc.com.
MLS 11-2636
$119,900.
Call Tom
570-262-7716
DURYEA
1219 SOUTH ST.
Renovated 1/2 dou-
ble with 3 bed-
rooms in nice
neighborhood. Own
for what it takes to
rent. All new win-
dows. For more info
and photos visit:
www.
atlasrealtyinc.com
MLS 11-2523
$54,900
Call Phil
570-313-1229
906 Homes for Sale
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
DURYEA
302 Cherry St.
Dont miss out on
this charming 2
story which boasts
Pride of Ownership.
Move in condition
with many updates.
Modern eat in
kitchen, dining room
is open to living
room, 2 bedrooms,
1 3/4 baths. As a
bonus enjoy the
view from your
large upper floor liv-
ing area with gas
fireplace and sliding
doors that lead to a
spacious balcony.
Beautiful manicured
corner lot.
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-3512
$129,900
Call Terry
570-885-3041
Angie
570-885-4896
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
DURYEA
38 Huckleberry
Lane
Blueberry Hills
4 BEDROOMS, 2.5
baths, family room
with fireplace, 2 car
garage, large yard.
Master bath with
separate jetted tub,
kitchen with stain-
less steel appli-
ances and island,
lighted deck. For
more info and pho-
tos visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com.
MLS 11-3071
$329,000
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
906 Homes for Sale
DURYEA
548 ADAMS ST.
Charming, well
maintained 3 bed-
room, 1 bath home
located on a quiet
street near Blue-
berry Hills develop-
ment. Features
modern kitchen
with breakfast bar,
formal dining room,
family room with
gas stove, hard-
wood floors in bed-
rooms, deck,
fenced yard and
shed. MLS#11-2947
$112,500
Karen Ryan
283-9100 x14
DURYEA
805-807 Main St.
Multi-Family. Large
side by side double
with separate utili-
ties. 3 bedrooms
each side with
newer carpet,
replacement win-
dows and newer
roof. For more info
and photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com.
MLS 11-3054
$89,900
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
DURYEA
PRICE REDUCED!
314 Bennett Street
Refashioned 3 or 4
bedroom, two full
modern baths. Two
story, 2300sf, with
level yard with love-
ly new landscaping
and 1 car garage.
New EVERYTHING
in this charming
must see property.
Custom blinds
throughout the
home. Great neigh-
borhood with Park
beyond the back-
yard. MLS# 11-3776
$ 174,900
Call Patti
570-328-1752
Liberty Realty
& Appraisal
Services LLC
906 Homes for Sale
DURYEA
REDUCED
411 JONES ST.
Beautiful 2 story
English Tudor with
exquisite gardens,
surrounding beauti-
ful in ground pool,
private fenced yard
with a home with
too many amenities
to list. Enjoy the
summer here!
Screened in porch
and foyer that just
adds to the great
living space
of the home
For more info
and photos:
visit:www.
atlasrealtyinc.com
MLS 11-2720
$234,900
Call Phil
570-313-1229
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
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
EDWARDSVILLE
93 Washington St.
Looking for a large
home? You found it!
This home was gut-
ted down to studs
in 1990 and family
room addition
added in 93. Vinyl
sided and vinyl win-
dows. 3 bedrooms,
2 full baths. Oak
kitchen, tile, gas
fireplace in family
room and gas hot
water heat. Pull
down attic for stor-
age. Nice home just
needing your own
personal touch!
MLS 11-3324
$85,000
Mark R. Mason
570-331-0982
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
906 Homes for Sale
EDWARDSVILLE
Sunday, Oct-2
10am-12pm
145 Short Street
Meticulously main-
tained ranch on lot
100x140. 6 rooms,
3 bedrooms, 1 full
bath on main level.
Finished lower level
with family room,
full bath, laundry
room, craft room &
storage. MOVE IN
CONDITION.
New Low Price
$94,900.
MLS #11-2541
Call Pat McHale
570-613-9080
Looking for that
special place
called home?
Classified will address
Your needs.
Open the door
with classified!
EXETER
128 JEAN ST.
Nice bi-level home
on quiet street.
Updated exterior.
Large family room,
extra deep lot. 2
car garage,
enclosed rear
porch and covered
patio. For more
information and
photos visit: www.
atlasrealtyinc.com
MLS 11-2850
$189,900
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
EXETER
164 E. First Street
$134,900
for an ALL BRICK,
ranch with finished
basement. Fea-
tures include hard-
wood floors, plaster
walls, finished
basement rooms
and car port.
MLS #10-4363
Call Pat McHale
570-613-9080
906 Homes for Sale
EXETER
180 E. First Street
$134,900 for a 5
room ranch, with
spacious yard,
enclosed porch and
Central Air.
5 Rooms, 3 Bed-
rooms and full Bath.
MLS #10-4365
Call Pat McHale
570-613-9080
EXETER
213 SUS QUEHANNA AVE
One of a kind prop-
erty could be used
as a single family
home or two unit.
Wyoming Area
schools.
$125,000
MLS#11-2811
Call John
570-714-6124
SMITH HOURIGAN GROUP
EXETER
OPEN HOUSE
Sunday 12pm-5pm
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 (30 year
loan, $8,750 down,
$887/month, 30
years @ 4.5%)
Owner financing
available.
570-654-1490
Need a Roommate?
Place an ad and
find one here!
570-829-7130
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
906 Homes for Sale
FORTY FORT
18 E. Pettebone St
Well Designed CAPE
COD. 3 Bedroom, 1
3/4 baths with fin-
ished lower level.
Second floor has
spacious Master
Bedroom, walk in
closet, 3/4 bath
adjoining all purpose
room. Detached 2
car garage. nice
tree Lined Street.
Priced to sell.
MLS 10-3951
$169,500
Joan Evans
Real Estate
570-824-5763
FORTY FORT
300 River Street
For Rent or Sale
A unique architec-
tural design high-
lights this 3 bed-
room with first floor
family room. Built-
ins. Great curb
appeal and loaded
with character. Gas
heat. Newer roof.
Nice lot. Many
extras. Rent for
$600 per month,
Conventional financ-
ing: $4,995 dn.,
4.25% int., 30 yrs.,
$520 month. List
#11-1275
$99,900.
Ask for Bob Kopec
Humford Realty
570-822-5126
FORTY FORT
83 Slocum St
This 3 bedroom, 2
bath home includes
Living room, dining
room, den, kitchen
& sunroom on the
1st floor. New neu-
tral carpeting, gas
heat, central air, 3
car garage and
nice yard MLS #10-
1762 Call Rhea
570-696-6677
$ 136,500
FORTY FORT
REDUCED!
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
$124,900
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
906 Homes for Sale
FORY FORT
Great Walnut street
location. 8 rooms, 4
bedrooms. wall to
wall carpet. Gas
heat. 2 car garage.
Deck & enclosed
porch. MLS 11-2833
$111,000
Besecker Realty
570-675-3611
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
53 Countrywood
Estates
Townhouse, easy-
to-love lifestyle. This
is Townhouse living
at its BEST. 5
rooms, 2 bedroom,
2 1/2 bath, modern
kitchen, inviting sun
room & deck, dining
area, Living Room,
central air, attached
garage, private
drive. MLS 10-1238
$129,900
Joan Evans
Real Estate
570-824-5763
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
HANOVER TWP.
20 Dexter St.
Nice starter home
with shed. Move-in
ready. Fenced yard.
Security system.
New roof in 2006.
MLS #11-3023
$39,000
Mary Donovan
570-696-0729
Tracy Zarola
570-696-0723
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
Say it HERE
in the Classifieds!
570-829-7130
PAGE 10D THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
796 Wanted to Buy
Merchandise
796 Wanted to Buy
Merchandise
39 Prospect St Nanticoke
570-735-1487
WE PAY
THE MOST
INCASH
BUYING
11am
to 11pm
906 Homes for Sale
HANOVER TWP.
PRICE REDUCED!
290-292
Lee Park Ave
Very nice all brick
double block with
front and back
porches. Beautiful
yard with mature
plantings; 3 bed-
rooms, 1 bath on
each side. Out of
the flood zone!
MLS#11-1988
$129,900
Christine Pieczynski
570-696-6569
HANOVER TWP.
5 Raymond Drive
Practically new 8
year old Bi-level
with 4 bedrooms, 1
and 3/4 baths,
garage, fenced
yard, private dead
end street. For
more info and pho-
tos visit: www.
atlasrealtyinc.com
MLS 11-3422
$179,000
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
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 information
and photos visit
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS #11-622
$119,000
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
HANOVER TWP.
HANOVER GREEN
Excellent condition
& location. 3 bed-
room, new kitchen,
appliances included,
1 1/2 bath with sepa-
rate tub & shower.
Living room, dining
room, with new car-
pet. Large family
room with hard-
wood floors under
new carpeting. 2
enclosed patios.
Laundry room with
washer/dryer
included. Central
AC, gas heat, pull
down floored attic.
2 sheds. New roof.
Vinyl siding. Win-
dows. Inground
pool. Garage. 65 x
100 lot. Much more!
Asking $209,000
570-824-7196
NO REALTORS
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!
HANOVER TWP.
LIBERTY HILLS
209 Constitution
Avenue
Fantastic view from
the deck and patio
of this 4 bedroom,
2.5 bath vinyl sided
2 story home. Four
years young with so
many extras. A
dream home!
MLS# 11-2429
$299,900
Call Florence
570-715-7737
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
Reduced to
$44,000
Call Ruth at
570-696-1195 or
570-696-5411
SMITH HOURIGAN GROUP
906 Homes for Sale
HANOVER TWP.
Price Reduced -
Motivated Seller!
19 Garrahan Street
Attractive 2-story in
great neighbor-
hood. Newer roof,
newer 2nd floor
replacement win-
dows, newer split
A/C system, large
eat-in kitchen, bed-
room pine flooring,
walk-up attic & a
mostly fenced yard.
REDUCED
$59,900
MLS#11-1754
Call Steve Shemo
(570) 288-1401
(570) 793-9449
Collect cash, not dust!
Clean out your
basement, garage
or attic and call the
Classified depart-
ment today at 570-
829-7130!
HANOVER TWP.
SALE BY OWNER
12 Oaklawn Ave.
Out Of Flood Zone!
Pristine 3 story
home with garage,
full basement, beau-
tiful woodwork. Car-
peted & painted
throughout. Newer
Roof, including all
appliances, gas
heat, rooms with
many features. Great
Neighbors. No work
for you, move right
in! $120,000. Call
570-823-8710
HANOVER TWP.
Updated single
home with 3 bed-
rooms & newly
remodeled kitchen.
Nice neighborhood.
New roof. Carport
with off street park-
ing. Some furnish-
ings, furniture,
appliances includ-
ed. Fenced yard.
Low taxes.
Owner moving.
$38,200 negotiable.
(570) 823-0508
HARDING
310 Lockville Rd.
SERENITY
Enjoy the serenity
of country living in
this beautiful two
story home on 2.23
acres. Great for
entertaining inside
and out. 3 car
attached garage
with full walk up
attic PLUS another
2 car detached
garage. WOW! A
MUST SEE! For
more info and pho-
tos visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS#11-831
$267,000
Call Nancy
570-237-0752
Melissa
570-237-6384
HARDING
605 Apple Tree
Road
White split stone
Ranch with 1500 sq.
ft. of living space. 2
bedrooms, 1.5
baths, propane gas
fireplace with stone
mantel. Custom
kitchen with oak
cabinets with pull
outs. Granite count-
er tops and island,
plaster walls, mod-
ern tile bath, open
floor plan. 2nd
kitchen in lower
level. Electric heat,
wood/coal burner in
basement. Central
air, 2 stoves, 2
dishwashers, 2
microwaves, 2
fridges, front load
washer and dryer
included. Attached
2 car garage and
detached 3 car
garage. Home in
near perfect
condition.
For moe info and
photos view:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-2968
$229,900
Call Lu Ann
570-602-9280
906 Homes for Sale
HARDING
Route 92
Picture Perfect
View. If you are
looking for excep-
tional value in a rural
property, then dont
pass up this 4 bed-
room, 2 bath home.
Beautiful Landscap-
ing. Includes river-
front property. 1/2
mile from public
boat launch. Not in
Flood Zone.
$150,000
MLS 11-2996
Call Arlene Warunek
570-650-4169
Smith Hourigan
Group
(570) 696-1195
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
HAZLETON
714 E. Samuels Ave
TERRACE Living at a
great price!!! 4 bed-
rooms, 2 1/2 baths.
Many UPGRADED
features: Newer
Central Air, Newer
Roof, Complete
Security System,and
Epoxy Overlay
Flooring in Garage,
all add to the com-
fort of this home.
Newer paint,car-
pets and custom
window treatments
make it move in
ready. Call Karen for
a personal showing.
$164,900
Century 21 Select
Group - Hazleton
570-582-4938
HUGHESTOWN
SUNDAY, SEPT- 25
1:00pm-2:30pm
97 Center Street
Looking for a sold
home with off street
parking & detached
garage? Look at
this one. Great
neighborhood and
tremendous poten-
tial. $64,900
MLS #09-4385
Call Pat McHale
570-613-9080
Looking to buy a
home?
Place an ad here
and let the
sellers know!
570-829-7130
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
$89,900
Call Karen
Coldwell Banker
Rundle Real Estate
570-474-2340
906 Homes for Sale
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.
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
Job Seekers are
looking here!
Where's your ad?
570-829-7130 and
ask for an employ-
ment specialist
JENKINS TWP.
BACK ON THE
MARKET
23 Mead St.
Newly remodeled 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 information
and photos visit
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
$84,900
MLS 10-3684
Call Bill
570-362-4158
JENKINS TWP.
NEW LISTING!
10 Miller Street
3 bedrooms, 1 bath
brick front ranch on
105 x 158 lot. Home
features new car-
pet, paint, bath-
room vanity top, fix-
tures, oak trim, car-
port, full unfinished
basement. Move
right in!
MLS#11-2891
$129,900
Eric Feifer
(570) 283-9100 x29
KINGSTON
129 S. Dawes Ave.
4 bedroom, 1 bath,
large enclosed
porch with brick
fireplace. Full con-
crete basement
with 9ft ceiling. Lots
of storage, 2 car
garage on double
lot in a very desir-
able neighborhood.
Close to schools
and park and recre-
ation. Walking dis-
tance to downtown
Wilkes-Barre. Great
family neighbor-
hood. Carpet
allowance will be
considered. For
mor info and photos
visit: www.atlas
realty.inc.com
$129,900
MLS #11-1434
Call Tom
570-262-7716
906 Homes for Sale
KINGSTON
171 Third Ave
So close to so
much, traditionally
appointed 3 bed-
room, 3 bath town-
home with warm
tones & wall to wall
cleanliness. Modern
kitchen with lots of
cabinets & plenty of
closet space
throughout, enjoy
the privacy of deck
& patio with fenced
yard. MLS 11-2841
$123,000
Call Arlene Warunek
570-650-4169
Smith Hourigan
Group
(570) 696-1195
KINGSTON
58 S. Welles Ave
Large charmer had
been extensively
renovated in the last
few years. Tons of
closets, walk-up
attic and a lower
level bonus recre-
ation room. Great
location, just a short
walk to Kirby Park.
MLS 11-3386
$129,000
Call Betty at
Century 21
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-287-1196
ext 3559
or 570-714-612
Find Something?
Lose Something?
Get it back where it
belongs
with a Lost/Found ad!
570-829-7130
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. For
more info and pho-
tos visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-2278
$139,900
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
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. For
more info and pho-
tos visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-2278
$139,900
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
KINGSTON
83 E. Vaughn St
Yes, its really true,
$120,000. From the
Room size entrance
foyer to every room
in the house, you
find PERFECTION.
Living Room, Dining
Room/Family Room,
Large Kitchen, But-
ler-style work area,
3 bedrooms, 1 1/2
bath, lovely
enclosed screened-
in porch. Off street
parking. Choice
location. 11-2155
$120,000
Joan Evans
Real Estate
570-824-5763
KINGSTON
Completely remod-
eled, mint, turn key
condition, 3 bed-
rooms, 1.5 baths,
large closets, with
hardwoods, carpet
& tile floors, new
kitchen and baths,
gas heat, shed,
large yard.
$134,900, seller will
pay closing costs,
$5000 down and
monthly payments
are $995/month.
Financing available.
WALSH
REAL ESTATE
570-654-1490
906 Homes for Sale
KINGSTON
OPEN HOUSE
Sunday 12pm-5pm
46 Zerby Ave
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.
$134,900 (30 year
loan @ 4.5% with
5% down; $6,750
down, $684/month)
WALSH
REAL ESTATE
570-654-1490
KINGSTON
REDUCED
167 N. Dawes Ave.
Move in condition 2
story home. 3 bed-
rooms, 2 baths,
hardwood floors,
ceramic throughout.
Finished lower level,
security system
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-1673
$154,900
Call Tom
570-262-7716
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
KINGSTON
REDUCED!!
177 Third Ave.
Neat as a pin! 3
bedroom, 2.5
baths, end unit
townhome with nice
fenced yard. Bright
Spacious kitchen,
main level family
room, deck w/
retractable awning.
Gas heat/central
air, pull down attic
for storage and 1
car garage. Very
affordable town-
home in great cen-
tral location!
MLS 11-1282
$134,500
Mark R. Mason
570-331-0982
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
KINGSTON
Stately brick 2-story
featuring formal liv-
ing room with fire-
place, formal dining
room, modern cher-
ry kitchen, knotty
pine study, spacious
family room, sun-
room, computer
room, TV room, 4
bedrooms, 5 baths.
Finished basement.
Hardwood floors in
living room, dining
room, bedrooms &
study. Lovely fenced
yard, 1 car garage.
Well built steel con-
structed home in a
great location!
$339,000
MLS#11-2250
Call Ruthie
(570) 714-6110
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-287-1196
LAFLIN
5 Fairfield Drive
Motivated seller!
Move right in just in
time to entertain for
the holidays in this
3 bedroom 2.5 bath
home in a private
setting. Prepare for
the festivities in this
spacious gourmet
kitchen with stain-
less steel appli-
ances and Subzero
refrigerator. Your
guests can enjoy
the spectacular
view of the West
mountains. Must
see to appreciate
all of the amenities
this home has
to offer.
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-1686
$314,900
Call Keri
570-885-5082
906 Homes for Sale
LAKE NUANGOLA
Lance Street
Very comfortable
2 bedroom home in
move in condition.
Great sun room,
large yard, 1 car
garage. Deeded
lake access.
$135,000
Call Kathie
MLS # 11-2899
(570) 288-6654
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
LUZERNE
4 bed, 1 1/2 bath.
WOW - Talk about
Charm! Stained
glass windows,
HUGE rooms, beau-
tiful woodwork and
wood floors plus
storage. Nice 162
sq ft enclosed
porch, 1886 sq ft.
Massive storage
unit outback, can be
converted to a mul-
tiple car garage.
Endless possibilities
here. Just needs the
right person to love
it back to life. MLS
11-3282. $139,900.
Call/text for Details.
Donna Cain
570-947-3824
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
MOOSIC
Furnished home.
Greenwood Section
3 Bedroom ranch,
well maintained.
Furniture and appli-
ances included.
Beautiful neighbor-
hood & yard.
$145,000 negotiable
Call 570-430-7017
MOUNTAIN TOP
257 Main Road S
2 bedroom Ranch.
Large rear yard.
Hardwood floors!
Large eat-in
kitchen. Large living
room with hard-
wood and family
room with carpet.
New roof in 2011!
Ideal starter home.
MLS#11-1966
$119,000
Call Jim Graham at
570-715-9323
MOUNTAIN TOP
35 Patriot Circle
Interior unit with
oak laminate on 1st
floor. Rear deck
faces the woods!
MLS#11-1986
$106,000
Call Jim Graham at
570-715-9323
906 Homes for Sale
MOUNTAIN TOP
460 S. Mtn
Blvd.
NEW PRICE
$221,900
Crestwood
School District
Large well cared
for home! 4 bed-
rooms, tons of
storage.Cozy fam-
ily room with
masonry, fireplace
with gas insert. 4
zone efficient gas,
how water base-
board heat!
Hardwood floors,
huge kitchen with
center island.
Large private
yard, backs up to
woods. Large L
shaped deck over-
looking an 18x36,
solar heated, in-
ground pool, and
pool house with
bar! Replacement
windows, archi-
tectural shingle
roof. Convenient
to Rt 309, 80 & 81,
move in ready!
MLS# 11-382
Call Michael Pinko
(570) 899-3865
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-474-6307
MOUNTAIN TOP
66 Patriot Circle
This 3 bedroom, 1.5
bath TOWN HOUSE is
in excellent move in
condition in a very
quiet subdivision
close to town. It is
being offered fully
furnished, decorat-
ed and appointed.
This TOWN HOUSE is
in the desirable
Crestwood School
District and is close
to shopping,
restaurants, fitness
centers and more!
Preview this home
www.66patriotcircle.com
or call for details.
(267) 253-9754
MOUNTAIN TOP
72 Fieldstone Way
Stunning 4 bed-
room 2 story! 2
story family room
fireplace. Granite
kitchen, stainless
steel appliances,
new sprinkler sys-
tem, dining room
and living room
hardwood, 2.5
bath. Nice yard.
MLS#11-492
$348,000
Call Jim Graham at
570-715-9323
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
MOUNTAIN TOP
NEW LISTING
Nestled on just
under an acre just
minutes from 81S
this colonial offers
2194 sq. ft. of living
area plus a finished
basement. Enjoy
your summer
evenings on the
wrap around porch
or take a quick dip in
the above ground
pool with tier deck.
The covered pavil-
ion is ideal for pic-
nics or gatherings
And when the winter
winds blow cuddle
in front of the gas
fireplace and enjoy
a quiet night. Price
to sell, $185,900
Ann Marie Chopick
570-760-6769
(570) 288-6654
MOUNTAINTOP
129 Timberwood Dr.
4-5 bedrooms, 2.5
baths. 4,500 above
ground sq. ft.
Whirlpool tub, mas-
ter suite (approx
650 sq. ft.) 2 story
grand foyer with oak
staircase, hard-
wood floors, formal
dining room. Great
room has cathedral
ceiling and fire-
place. Library, deck,
3 car garage,
security system.
$595,000
More info at:
forsalebyowner.com
List # 20712604
570-474-2993
906 Homes for Sale
MOUNTAINTOP
29 Valley View Dr.
Raised ranch on
corner lot. Spacious
two car garage
leads to finished
lower level. Modern
kitchen & bath, tile
floors. MLS#11-2500
$199,900
Call Julio Caprari:
570-592-3966
MOUNTAINTOP
OPEN HOUSE
MOVING SALE
Saturday 9/24
from 3 to 4 pm
Sunday 9/25
from 11am-2pm
Modern bi-level, 3
bedroom, 1.5 bath,
tile kitchen and bath
floor. New appli-
ances, gas hot
water furnace and
architectural roof.
Family room, 3-sea-
son room and deck.
2 car garage, large
yard. Move-in con-
dition. Convenient
location. Reduced
to $225,000 OBO.
Call (570) 403-6252
or (570) 823-7540.
Let the Community
Know!
Place your Classified
Ad TODAY!
570-829-7130
MOUNTAIN TOP
130 CHURCH ROAD
The feel of a true
colonial home with
double entry doors
off the foyer into the
living room and din-
ing room. Spacious
kitchen breakfast
area, family room
leading to a fenced
rear yard. 3-season
room with cathedral
ceiling. Hardwood
floors, fireplace,
recently remodeled
2.5 bath and 2-car
garage. Located on
3.77 acres, all the
privacy of country
living yet conve-
niently located.
MLS#11-2600
$187,500
Jill Jones 696-6550
NANTICOKE
25 Shea Street
NEW LISTING
SUNDAY - SEPT. 25
1PM - 3PM
25 SHEA ST
(left on prospect, L
on State, L on Shea)
CAPE ANN: Large
& Bright, 3 bed-
rooms, eat-in
kitchen, Carrara
Glass Bathroom,
Finished Lower
Level, Family Room
(knotty pine) with
BAR. Oil heat, very
large lot. Estate.
View the mountains
from the front
porch. #11-2970
$99,000
Go To The Top... Call
JANE KOPP
REAL ESTATE
570-288-7481
NANTICOKE
414 E. Grove Street
3 bedroom, 1 bath,
2 story with off
street parking,
backyard, new oil
furnace, windows,
wiring, kitchen,
bath, flooring &
paint. Excellent
condition. $88,500.
Sellers pays 1st
year property tax.
Call Bill Remey @
570-714-6123
906 Homes for Sale
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.
NEW PRICE!
$56,900
MLS# 11-2202
Call Michael Pinko
(570) 899-3865
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-474-6307
P
E
N
D
I
N
G
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. For more
info and photos
visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-2425
$59,900
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
Need to rent that
Vacation property?
Place an ad and
get started!
570-829-7130
NANTICOKE
VERY CUTE HOME
2 bedrooms, 1
bath room, off-
street parking,
well maintained,
natural woodwork,
hardwood floors,
new carpet,
kitchen floor, drop
in stove, large
deck, new heating
system.
$33,000.
570-902-5244
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
PRICED TO SELL!
Brick ranch with
large living room, 3
bedrooms, sun
room, deck, full
basement, sheds
and garage on 0.54
acres in Noxen.
$139,500.
Jeannie Brady
ERA BRADY
ASSOCIATES
570-836-3848
NOXEN
SPACIOUS
COLONIAL
Totally updated
home with extra
large living room, 4
suites, family room
and screen porch
conveniently locat-
ed on Main St.
Noxen. $187,000.
Jeannie Brady
ERA BRADY
ASSOCIATES
570-836-3848
Wanna make your
car go fast? Place
an ad in Classified!
570-829-7130.
Wanna make your
car go fast? Place
an ad in Classified!
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!
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 PAGE 11D
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5
Add to route
140 S Grant Street,
Wilkes-Barre
GARAGE & YARD
SALES
The listed Garage Sales below can
be located on our new, interactive
Garage Sale map at timesleader.com.
Create your route and print out
your own turn-by-turn directions
to each local sale.
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SPONSORED BY:
ARCHBALD
137 Cemetary St.
SA SATURDA TURDAY Y, SEPT 24 , SEPT 24
8:00-4:00 8:00-4:00
DIRECTIONS: 81 TO
RT. 6E TO EXIT 4
(SALEM RD.)
ARCHBALD. TURN
LEFT ON SALEM RD
TO LEFT ON
CEMETARY.
Entire contents of
home including fur-
niture, nice vintage
Mahogany lamp
tables, beautiful
Broyhill diningroom
set, country kitchen
set, two gorgeous
Antique bedroom
sets, glider & patio
furniture, glass-
ware, Waterford
Crystal, china sets,
paintings & wall
hangings, jewelry,
like new ladies
designer clothing,
holiday items &
much more!
CREDIT CARDS
ACCEPTED!
Sale by Cook &
Cook Estate
Liquidators
www.cookand
cookestate
liquidators.com
BEAR CREEK TOWNSHIP
366 Old East End
Blvd
Saturday 9/24
8-3
FIRST TIME YARD SALE
CLEANED OUT
2 HOUSES!
Jeep stroller, baby
swing, wooden high
chair, exersaucer,
many other assort-
ed childrens items
and toys. Home
decor including TV,
Home Interiors pic-
tures, giftware and
assorted house-
wares. Christmas
decorations. Much,
much, more. Most
items under $1.00
DALLAS
12 Robbins Road
Haddonfield Hills
THUR 9/22 & FRI 9/23
8am - noon
kitchen appliances,
glassware, vcr, dvd
players, much more
DALLAS
9 Idlewood Drive
8:30 - 4:00
Garage Sale:
Stainless steel
microwave, lawn
mower, hot air
furnace, toys,
household items
and more!
DALLAS
Irem Country Club
Pavilion
Sunday Sept. 25th
10 am to 5 pm
Arts, craft & col-
lectible show. More
then 50 vendors.
Baked goods,
super door prizes &
ample parking.
DALLAS
Klein Chiropractic
Parking Lot
Memorial Hwy
Sat., Sept 24, 9-3
Great buys at bar-
gain prices! Antique
trunks, antique child
bed. Across from
Dallas Agway.
EDWARDSVILLE
133 Summit St.
Saturday Sept., 24
9am - 3pm
double stroller, car
seat, baby items,
infant to toddler
clothing, games
puzzles, books
housewares, etc.
EXETER
138 A&B Jean St
Saturday 8am-3pm
Crossbow, weights,
paint sprayer, beer
miser, crafts, dolls,
car ramps, house-
hold items & more.
HANOVER TOWNSHIP
Stark Holdings, Inc
Self Storage Units
110 West Saint
Marys Road
Saturday, Sept 24
11am - 3pm
Storage units for
Auction. Several
units available due
to non-payment.
Bidders must Sign-
In at the Main Office
KINGSTON
137 S. Maple Ave.
September 23 & 24
Friday and Sat
9am -3pm
Household items
KINGSTON
226 Reynolds St
Saturday, Sept. 24
9am-3pm
Artwork, tools, patio
furniture, china, mir-
rors, lamps, mini
fridge, golf bags,
womans bike,
wreaths & holiday
items, doll furniture
& much more!
KINGSTON
255 JOSEPH DRIVE
Fri, Sat. & Sun.
9am - 3pm
Antiques, Jewelry,
Collectibles, Music,
Clothing, Linens,
Cashmere Sweaters,
Yarn & LG Books.
Need a Roommate?
Place an ad and
find one here!
570-829-7130
KINGSTON
57 S Goodwin Ave.
WESTMOOR
CHURCH OF CHRIST
Saturday 9am-12pm
Everything 1/2
price! Something
for everybody!
KINGSTON
586 Charles Ave
Saturday- Sept 24th
10:00 am- 4:00 pm
Antiques, clothes,
furniture, kitchen-
ware,tools, toys,
much more.
NO EARLY BIRDS!
KINGSTON
664 Charles Ave
Saturday 8am-2pm
Ladies clothes,
purses, shoes, holi-
day, rugs, FREE
table & more.
LARKSVILLE
214 East State St
Saturday 8am-1pm
Sweeper, pictures,
bedding, tools, plus
size clothes, kids
clothes, Christmas
items all new. Too
many items to list!
LUZERNE
212 KELLY ST.
Sunday 25th 7-4
Everything must
GO! Garage/House
Sale; dishes,
furniture, tools, art!
MOUNTAIN TOP
1 Greystone Drive
8 a.m. - 3 p.m.
Rain or shine,
Undercover!
Antiques, VHS
player/movies, TVs,
Longaberger
baskets, inversion
table, bird feeder
pole system, smok-
er, bike rack/
accessories and
much more!
MOUNTAIN TOP
15 Yeager Road
Saturday, Sept-24
9am - ?
Nurses Scrubs,
Toys, Childrens
Clothing & Lots of
Crafts!
Wanna make your
car go fast? Place
an ad in Classified!
570-829-7130.
MOUNTAIN TOP
1544 Laurel Lakes
Drive
9/24, 8-2
Lots of baby and
toddler items;
monitors (angel
care), stroller, car
seat (converts to
booster seat),
infant car seat, crib
sets, exersaucer,
diaper genie, crib
tent, ride along car,
tricycle, large plas-
tic yard jungle gym
and barbie play-
house, lots more.
Household items;
teen comforter
sets, adult com-
forter sets, corner
computer stand,
picture frames,
motorcycle helmet,
portable dvd player,
girls ski boots (size
6 1/2) and more.
MOUNTAINTOP
14 Powell Street
Sat. 9/24 8am-4pm
Household items,
decor, yard stuff,
tools, holiday &
more! RAIN OR SHINE!
MOUNTAINTOP
2055, 2088 & 2326
Prospect Road
Saturday, Sept-24
8am-1pm
Books, crafts, elec-
tronics, exercise
bike, candles, tools,
bikes, housewares
and more. Some-
thing for everyone.
MOUNTAINTOP
24 Brook Lane
Briar Brook
Saturday 9am-1pm
Lots of new items!
Glassware, dishes,
jewelry & more!
MOUNTAINTOP
349 Church Road
Saturday, 9/24
9am - 3pm
Households, com-
pound bow, hunting
clothes, toys, some-
thing for everyone.
MOUNTAINTOP
5 Terrace Dr.
Fri 9-1 Sat 7:30-1
We have a wide
variety of items and
everything must go!
WILKES-BARRE
87 Academy Street
Friday & Saturday
9am - 3pm
Antiques, jewelry,
Holiday, treadmill
clothing, golf clubs .
OLD FORGE
St. Nicholas Church
320 Vine St.
Saturday, Sept. 24th
8 am to 4 pm
RAIN OR SHINE!
NO EARLY BIRDS
Ethnic food &
Bake sale.
PITTSTON
168 Elizabeth Street
(By St. Roccos
Church)
Saturday 9am-4pm
ENTIRE CONTENTS:
Living room, Set,
2 Bedroom Suites,
Bar & Bar Stools,
Dining Room &
Kitchen Sets. M.T.
Tables, Mirrors,
Lamps, Mikasa
China, Stereos, TV.,
Tools, Mower,
Costume Jewelry,
Loads of Kitchen
& More.
PITTSTON
174 Johnson St.
Sat., Sept., 24
9am - 3pm
All contents of
home, furniture,
accessories, ladies
clothing. Low prices
PLAINS
110 W. Carey St
Friday & Saturday
9am - 3pm
Ladies Clothing -
Size M & L, Jeans -
Size 8-10; 118 die
cast model cars and
motorcycles in origi-
nal boxes, house-
hold furniture, baby
stroller, swing, play
pen & much more!
PLAINS
26 Penny Lane
Thur, Fri, Sat & Sun
10am-3pm
Handmade glasses,
toys, ping pong
table, treadmill,
Total Gym, moun-
tain bike & more!
SWOYERSVILLE
18 Brown St
Saturday, 9am-2pm
Furniture, house-
wares &much more!
WILKES-BARRE
STREET STREET
SALE SALE
200 TO 315
WYOMING STREET
Saturday Sept. 24
8AM TO 1 PM
SOMETHING FOR
EVERYONE
PLAINS
64 Skidmore St.
SAT. 9/24 9AM-3PM
SUN. 9/25 10AM-3PM
2 older bedroom
sets, costume jew-
elry, Byods Bears,
cedar wardrobe,
AnnaLee dolls, older
dolls, Besse Pease
prints, reverse
painting, Francis-
cian Ivy pattern din-
nerware, Lenox
Garden Meadow
dinnerware, knick
knacks (Fenton,
McCoy, Hull,
Belleek, Japan),
vaseline glass, old
cups & saucers,
kitchen wares, cur-
tains, bedding, out-
door yard decora-
tions, Nascar,
scanners, holiday
decorations. Too
much to list. Stop by
& check us out!!
PLAINS/HUDSON
15 East Bergh St
Friday & Saturday
Sept-23 & 24
9am-3pm
Entire contents of 9
room home plus 2
car garage. THIS
HOUSE IS LOADED
WITH COUNTRY
DECOR. Antiques,
oak fireplace man-
tle, book cases,
desk, corner cabi-
nets, couches,
rockers, country
shelving, maple
kitchen table &
chairs, vintage doll
collection, old toys,
Precious Moments,
Boyds Bears,
Nascar, Hess
Trucks, quilt rack,
linens, Christmas,
jewelry, Lenox,
braided rugs, adult
& childrens
clothes, toys, bikes,
fridge, tools & more!
FOLLOW THE BRIGHT
GREEN SIGNS!
SWOYERSVILLE
247 Slocum St
Fri 9/23, Sat 9/24 &
Sun 9/25
9am-?
Estate jewelry, mir-
rors, pictures plus
many many house-
hold items! If you
missed the rest -
come to the best!
NO EARLY BIRDS PLEASE
SWOYERSVILLE
30 Maltby Ave
Saturday, Sept 24
8am - 4pm
3 families, dont
miss this sale!
VENDORS WANTED
for
Car Cruise Show
Sunday, Oct. 9th
11am-5pm
Call 570-406-4432
or 570-313-0592
by Sept-30, 2011
WILKES-BARRE
524 Monument,
Corner of 10th &
Monument
Saturday, 9/24
9am - 3pm
Furniture, winter
coats, household
goods, childrens
clothing and much
more!
WILKES-BARRE
807 N. Washington St
Saturday 9am-2pm
Two kitchen sets,
drop down freezer,
computer desk, cof-
fee & end tables,
mens & womens
clothing, kitchen-
wares & more.
WILKES-BARRE
TWP
133 Old Ashley Rd.
Thurs., Fri. & Sat.
9 am - 4 pm
Last big sale of the
season. many items
reduced.
WYOMING
First Baptist
Church
52 E. 8th St.
MASSIVE
RUMMAGE
SALE
Saturday,
September 24
8am -2pm
lots of clothing
household, TVs
computers, way
too much to list.
BUYING
US/FOREIGN/
CANADIAN
COINS &
CURRENCY
HIGHEST
PREMIUMS FOR
SILVER DOLLARS
& BETTER COINS
GOLD &
SILVER
JEWELRY &
INGOTS
STERLING SILVER
Old Postcards &
Local Photos,
Lead Soldiers &
Old Toys, Mining
& Military Stuff,
Old Crocks, Jugs
Local Advertising
STAMPS
PAYING
RECORD
HONEST
CA$H
PRICES
Over 35 years, a
respected coin
dealer.
HERITAGE
GALLERIES
DALLAS, PA
Across from
Dallas Agway
on Rt. 415
Look for blue
& white signs
NEW HOURS
TUES-FRI, 10-6
SAT, 10-5
570-674-2646
906 Homes for Sale
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
(570) 288-6654
PENN LAKE
HOME FOR SALE
Crestwood School
District. Stunning
Cape Cod (architec-
turally designed).
Three bedrooms, 2
1/2 baths 2 car
garage on one acre.
Features include:
large front porch,
deck, beautiful
kitchen with corian
countertops, break-
fast nook & island.
Stainless steel
appliances; hard-
floors, formal dining
room with wainscot-
ing. Two story vault-
ed family room with
fireplace; first floor
master bedroom/
bath with jacuzzi,
walk in shower &
vanity dressing area
built in; abundant
closets, den on first
floor plus laundry;
second story has 2
additional bedrooms
& bath. Full base-
ment. Please call or
email for details.
Dee Fields,
Associate Broker
570-788-7511
[email protected]
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!
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 10-2463
$89,900
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
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
906 Homes for Sale
PITTSTON
Sunday, Sep-18
1:30PM to 3:00PM
151 Broad Street
Stately 2 Story,
features 8 Rooms,
4 bedrooms,
1 3/4 baths & 2 Car
Detached Garage.
NEW kitchen with
maple cabinetry, tile
back splash, island;
pantry closet &
more. New 1st floor
Bath. New 2nd
Floor Laundry Area.
BRAND NEW Oil-
fueled Furnace &
Wiring. REFINISHED
Hardwood flooring
$129,900
MLS#10-2922
Call Pat
570-613-9080
PITTSTON
175 Oak Street
3 bedrooms, 1.5
baths, 1st floor
laundry room, 3
season porch,
fenced yard and off
street parking.
MLS#11-1974
PRICE REDUCED!
$89,000
Call Patti
570-328-1752
Liberty Realty
& Appraisal
Services LLC
PITTSTON
ALSO AVAILABLE
FOR RENT!
Call for details!
404 N. Main St.
This is a treasure!
Move-in condition.
6 Rooms, 3 Bed-
rooms and Full bath
on second floor.
Newer furnace,
water heater
& good electrical
service. $47,900.
MLS# 06-2951
Call Pat
570-613-9080
PITTSTON
51 Plank St.
4 bedroom Victori-
an home complete-
ly remodeled with
new kitchen &
baths. New Berber
carpet, modern
stainless steel
appliances in
kitchen. Private
yard, wrap around
porch, corner lot
with off street park-
ing. For more info
and photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com.
MLS 11-2864
$99,900
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
It's that time again!
Rent out your
apartment
with the Classifieds
570-829-7130
PITTSTON
64 Thistle St
Great family home
with 3 bedrooms,
family room off semi
modern kitchen.
Nice woodworking,
newer roof, and
upgraded electrical
& over sized 1 car
garage.
MLS 11-2306
$89,900
Call Nancy
Answini
570-237-5999
JOSEPH P.
GILROY
REAL ESTATE
570-288-1444
PITTSTON
82 Parsonage St
MOVE-IN CONDI-
TION! Good starter
home. 2 bedrooms,
2 1/2 baths.
Replacement win-
dows. Newer roof.
Freshly painted.
New carpet. Base-
ment with two lev-
els. Parking in front
of home. Priced to
sell! MLS 11-2508
$39,900
Joan Evans
Real Estate
570-824-5763
906 Homes for Sale
PITTSTON
87 Jenkins Court
For Sale, but owner
will consider rental
or rent with option
to buy! Quiet loca-
tion. 63x65 lot, with
plenty of room for
off street parking.
Home features
newer drywall and
composite flooring
in living room and
dining room. Pic-
ture perfect home
has 2 large bed-
rooms, modern
kitchen and bath
and NEW furnace.
NEW PRICE!
$109,900
Pat McHale
570-613-9080
PITTSTON
REDUCED!
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
$59,000
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
PITTSTON TWP.
10 Norman St.
Brick 2 story home
with 4 bedrooms, 3
baths, large family
room with fireplace.
Lower level rec
room, large drive-
way for plenty of
parking. Just off the
by-pass with easy
access to all major
highways. For more
info and photos
visit: www.
atlasrealtyinc.com.
MLS 11-2887
$172,900
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
Looking for that
special place
called home?
Classified will address
Your needs.
Open the door
with classified!
PITTSTON TWP.
993 Sunrise Dr.
Horizon Estates
Fabulous end unit
townhome provides
luxurious, carefree
living. 3 bedrooms,
2.5 baths with 1st
floor master suite.
Ultra kitchen with
granite and stain-
less appliances.
Dining room with
built in cabinet. 2
story living room
with gas fireplace
and hardwood. 2
car garage, mainte-
nance free deck,
nice yard that can
be fenced. Low
HOA fee for snow
removal and grass
cutting. For more
info and photos
visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-3488
$289,900
Call Terry
570-885-3041
Angie
570-885-4896
PITTSTON TWP.
REDUCED
122 PARNELL ST.
Beautiful bi-level
home on corner lot.
7 rooms, 3 bed-
rooms, newer roof
and windows.
Fenced in yardFor
more info and phtos
visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.om
MLS 11-2749
$199,900
Call Tom
570-262-7716
Find homes for
your kittens!
Place an ad here!
570-829-7130
Wanna make your
car go fast? Place
an ad in Classified!
570-829-7130.
PLACE YOUR CLASSIFIED AD 24/7 BY VISITING THE TIMESLEADER.COM OR CALLING 800-273-7130
R
Sponsored by:
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APP ONLY WITH
THE TIMES LEADER!
Text NEPAGS to 52732 for our FREE Garage Sale App.
Download our map to your mobile phone and start shopping!
Customize your map by city or sale date for the
best deals in Northeast PA.
timesleader.com
THE
ONE
AND
ONLY.
PAGE 12D THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
906 Homes for Sale
PITTSTON TWP.
STAUFFER POINT
42 Grandview Drive
NEW PRICE
better than 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 & kitchen,
granite countertops
and crown molding
in kitchen, with sep-
arate eating area,
lst floor laundry,
heated sunroom
with spectacular
view, 2 additional
bedrooms, full bath
and loft on the 2nd
floor, 2 car garage,
gas heat and cen-
tral air, priced to sell
$274,500 MLS 11-
2324
call Lu-Ann
602-9280
additional photos
and information can
be found on our
web site, www.
atlasrealtyinc.com
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 TWP.
Sunday, Sept. 25
11 am-1 pm
HIGH & DRY
20 Fairlawn Drive
STAUFFER
HEIGHTS RANCH,
containing 2,300
sq. ft. finished
space on lot
100x90. Unique
1960s home has
bedrooms on main
level & living area
below. Features
large, eat in
kitchen. Side
entrance to main
level room creates
possibility for in
home office.
New Price
$115,000.
MLS #10-4198
Call Pat McHale
570-613-9080
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
PLAINS
KEYSTONE SECTION
9 Ridgewood Road
TOTAL BEAUTY
1 ACRE- PRIVACY
Beautiful ranch 2
bedrooms, 1 bath,
attic for storage,
washer, dryer & 2
air conditioners
included. New
Roof & Furnace
Furnished or unfur-
nished.
Low Taxes! New
price $118,500
570-885-1512
PLAINS
PENDING
17 N. Beech Road
(N. on Main St.,
Plains, turn right in
Birchwood Hills and
onto Beech Rd,
House on right)
Lovely updated
Ranch home with 3
bedrooms, 1 bath. 1
car garage in the
very desirable
Birchwood Hills
development. Elec-
tric heat, newer
roof, great curb
appeal. Huge
fenced in back yard
with new shed,
plenty of closets
and storage.
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-3003
$139,900
Call Keri Best
570-885-5082
906 Homes for Sale
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
1 Willow St.
Attractive bi-level
on corner lot with
private fend in yard.
3-4 bedrooms and
1.5 baths. Finished
lower level, office
and laundry room
MLS 11-2674
$104,900
Jay A. Crossin
Ext. 23
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
PLYMOUTH
161-63 Orchard St
Well cared for dou-
ble block 6/3/1 on
each side. Live in
one side and let a
tenant pay your
mortgage.
$59,900
MLS #11-2174
Call Pat McHale
570-613-9080
PLYMOUTH
6 Mooney Road
Mobile home on
permanent founda-
tion with basement
& built-in garage.
Two parking areas,
rear patio. Pleasant
road off the beaten
path. 11-3372
$36,000
Call Betty at
Century 21
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-287-1196
ext 3559
or 570-714-612
Find Something?
Lose Something?
Get it back where it
belongs
with a Lost/Found ad!
570-829-7130
PLYMOUTH
Dont miss this spa-
cious 2 story, with a
17 x 11 Living room,
formal dining room,
eat in kitchen plus
bath on the first
floor & 2 bedrooms
& bath on 2nd floor.
Extras include an
enclosed patio and
a detached garage.
Reasonably priced
at REDUCED!
$34,900.
MLS 11-2653
Ann Marie Chopick
570-760-6769
570-288-6654
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
$59,900
Call Karen
Coldwell Banker
Rundle Real Estate
570-474-2340
906 Homes for Sale
PRINGLE
Sunday, Oct-2
12:30pm-2:00pm
Broad Street
HIGH & DRY
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
Looking for that
special place
called home?
Classified will address
Your needs.
Open the door
with classified!
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
SHAVERTOWN
200 Woodbine Road
Distinctive 2 story.
Outstanding outside
and in. Beautiful
brick paver drive-
way and walkway
lead into a grand
foyer with oak stair-
case. Hardwoods
and marble floors
throughout. Retreat
to a full finished
basement with
stone fireplace, wet
bar and full bath.
Deck, patio and
sprinkler system.
MLS 11-1463
$429,900
Call Arlene Warunek
570-650-4169
Smith Hourigan
Group
(570) 696-1195
SHAVERTOWN
4 Genoa Lane
There is much
attention to detail in
this magnificent 2
story, 4 bedroom, 2
full bath all brick
home on double
corner lot. Large
family room with
brick fireplace, all
oak kitchen with
breakfast area,
master suite, solid
oak staircase to
name a few.
MLS #11-3268
$525,000
Jay A. Crossin
Ext. 23
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-07770
SHAVERTOWN
58 Longdale Ave
New Construction
1,980 SF. 2 story, 3
bedroom, 2.5 bath,
large kitchen, laun-
dry room, living
room, family room,
dining room, 2 car
garage, front porch
& rear deck. Large
70x225 flat lot.
$245,000
Call (570) 674-5173
906 Homes for Sale
SHAVERTOWN
Exquisite 4 bed-
room 2 story.
Formal living room
with floor to ceiling
brick fireplace.
Formal dining room.
Beautiful eat in
kitchen with cherry
cabinetry, granite
counters & stainless
steel appliances.
Stunning custom
staircase. Master
suite with ash hard-
wood floors, his &
her closets & pri-
vate balcony.
Master bath with
cherry vanity &
granite counters.
Spacious 24x28
family room with
entertainment unit &
bar. Office with built-
ins. Sunroom. 3 car
garage. Completely
updated and well
maintained. This
home is convenient-
ly located on 2.5
park like acres just
minutes from the
Cross Valley. Call for
your appointment
today! $519,000.
MLS#11-2008
Call Ruthie
(570) 714-6110
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-287-1196
SHICKSHINNY
17 Main Road
REDUCED
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
$210,000
Five Mountains
Realty
570-542-2141
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
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
570 Grassy Pond Rd
Nice Country Bi-
Level on 40 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
$319,900
Five Mountains
Realty
570-542-2141
906 Homes for Sale
SWOYERSVILLE
120 Barber St.
Nice Ranch home,
great neighbor-
hood.
MLS 11-3365
$109,000
Call David
Krolikowski
570-288--0770
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
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
Estate. Nice brick
front ranch home on
a corner lot. 1 car
attached garage,
circle driveway,
central air. 2 bed-
rooms, 1 full bath
with 2 showers, Full
basement with
brand new water
proofing system
that includes a war-
ranty. Great loca-
tion. MLS 11-2127
$115,500
Call/text for Details.
Donna Cain
570-947-3824
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
WANAMIE
PRICE REDUCED!
950 Center St.
Unique property.
Well maintained - 2
story 10 year old
set on 3.56 acres.
Privacy galore, pole
barn 30x56 heated
for storage of
equipment, cars or
boats. A must see
property. GEO Ther-
mal Heating Sys-
tem.Only 10 minutes
from interstate 81 &
15 minutes to turn-
pike. MLS#10-3802
$249,900
Call Geri
570-696-0888
Let the Community
Know!
Place your Classified
Ad TODAY!
570-829-7130
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
$64,900
Call Karen
Coldwell Banker
Rundle Real Estate
570-474-2340
906 Homes for Sale
WEST HAZLETON
100 Warren St
16,000 sq. ft. com-
mercial building with
warehouse / offices.
Great location. 1
block west of Route
93. Approx. 3 miles
from 80/81 intersec-
tion. Many possibili-
ties for this proper-
ty--storage lockers;
flea market; game/
entertainment cen-
ter; laundromat;
auto garage.
$119,000
Call Karen at
Century 21 Select
Group - Hazleton
570-582-4938
WEST PITTSTON
2 FAMILY HOME
3 bedroom, bath,
kitchen, living, din-
ing room each side.
Recently remod-
eled. Quiet neigh-
borhood. Did not
receive any water
damage at all. No
Realtors, please.
$87,500
570-945-7423
Leave A Message
WEST PITTSTON
225 Race Street
Completely reno-
vated 2 story home.
New kitchen with all
new appliances,
new bathrooms,
new windows, new
flooring throughout.
Priced under
appraised value!
Seller is husband of
Licensed Agent
MLS # 11-3078
$140,000
(570) 288-1444
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
WEST PITTSTON
322 SALEM ST.
REDUCED
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
$49,900
Charlie VM 101
WEST PITTSTON
OPEN HOUSE OPEN HOUSE
SUN. 12-5
232 North Street
Completely remod-
eled two story home
with, 2 bedroom &
1.5 baths. New
kitchen, bath, car-
pet, tile, hardwoods,
all appliances,
including washer &
dryer in upstairs
bath. This is an awe-
some home with
lots of extra ameni-
ties, large closet
space, driveway,
nice yard and neigh-
borhood. $139,900
with $5,000 down,
financing at 4.5% 30
yrs, monthly pay-
ment of $875.
(Owner financing
available also.)
Call Bob at
570-654-1490
WEST WYOMING
292 W. 3rd St.
Charming Ranch in
great location with
7 rooms, 3 bed-
rooms, finished
basement, sun-
room, central air.
Newer roof and
windows, hardwood
floors. For more
info and photos
visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-2946
REDUCED
$119,900
Call Tom
570-262-7716
906 Homes for Sale
WEST WYOMING
438 Tripp St
OPEN HOUSE
Sunday 12pm-5pm
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 (30 year
loan @ 4.5% with 5%
down; $7,750 down,
$785/month)
570-654-1490
WILKES-BARE
Nice home, great
price. 3 bedrooms, 1
bath, wood floors,
off street parking,
Approx 1312sq ft.
Currently rented out
for $550 monthly,
no lease. Keep it as
an investment or
make this your new
home. MLS 11-3207
$46,000
Call/text for Details.
Donna Cain
570-947-3824
WILKES-BARRE
100 Darling St
Nice tow bedroom
single, gas heat,
enclosed porch,
fenced yard. Close
to downtown & col-
leges. Affordable at
$42,500. Call
Town & Country
Real Estate Co.
570-735-8932
570-542-5708
WILKES-BARRE
100 Solomon St.
Beautiful split level
in quiet neighbor-
hood. 3 bedrooms,
1.5 baths, rec room
w/wet bar and fam-
ily room w/access
to laundry room.
Pristine hardwood
floors throughout
main level. Large
fenced yard and
screened porch.
Priced to sell!
MLS 11-3354
$122,500
Debbie McGuire
570-332-4413
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
WILKES-BARRE
122 Oak Street
Very nice oak
kitchen with tile
floor! Fenced in
yard. 3 nice size
bedrooms. Large
living room and
large dining room +
2 modern baths
with tile & pedestal
sink! Nice neighbor-
hood! Built-in win-
dow seats in middle
bedroom. Rear
shed - 4 window air
conditioners.
MLS#11-2481
$119,500
Call Jim Graham at
570-715-9323
WILKES-BARRE
129 & 131 Matson Ave
Double Block, 6
rooms + bath on
each side. $79,000
Call 570-826-1743
WILKES-BARRE
134 Brown Street
Nicely remodeled,
spacious 2-story
with attached
garage on corner
lot. Modern, eat-in
kitchen with stain-
less steel appli-
ances; large lower
level Theatre Room
and additional rec
room with dry bar
and 5th bedroom.
Newer roof, mostly
newer replacement
windows & gas fur-
nace. MLS# 11-1817
Owner says
'just sell it'!
REDUCED $99,900
Call Steve Shemo
(570) 288-1401
(570) 793-9449
906 Homes for Sale
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
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
WILKES-BARRE
164 Madison Street
Spotless 3 bed-
room, 1.5 bath
home with hard-
wood floors, stained
glass, and modern
kitchen in move-in
condition. 11-2831
$79,900
Marilyn K Snyder
Real Estate
570-825-2468
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
WILKES-BARRE
241 Dana Street
Spacious 3 bed-
room, 1.5 baths with
textured ceilings,
updated kitchen, all
appliances including
dishwasher, tiled
bath with whirlpool
tub, 2nd floor laun-
dry room. Replace-
ment windows.
Drastic Reduction
$60,000
MLS# 11-88
Call Arlene Warunek
570-650-4169
Smith Hourigan
Group
(570) 696-1195
WILKES-BARRE
26-28-30
Blackman Street
Nice investment tri-
plex conveniently
located on bus
route close to
schools. Grosses
over $3,000/month!
Separate gas, elec-
tric & water; park-
ing for 10+ cars.
MLS#11-423
Call Steve Shemo
(570) 288-1401
(570) 793-9449
WILKES-BARRE
35 Murray St.
Large well kept 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
906 Homes for Sale
WILKES-BARRE
382 Parrish Street
3 bedroom, 1 1/2
baths with natural
woodwork and
stained glass win-
dows throughout.
MLS 10-4382
$45,000
Marilyn K Snyder
Real Estate
570-825-2468
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
$69,900
Jay A. Crossin
570-288-0770
Ext. 23
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
WILKES-BARRE
49 Hillard St.
Great 3 bedroom
home with large
modern kitchen.
Ductless air condi-
tioning on 1st floor.
Laundry on 2nd
floor. Nice deck and
fenced in yard. Off
street parking for 2
cards via rear alley
MLS 11-2896
$85,000
Call Shelby
Watchilla
570-762-6969
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!
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
62 Schuler Street
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. $79,900
MLS 10-4349
Marilyn K Snyder
Real Estate
570-825-2468
WILKES-BARRE
64 West River St
Beautifully restored
1890 Queen Anne
with working eleva-
tor located in
Wilkes-Barres His-
toric District. Built by
Fred Kirby. Close to
Riverfront Parks and
Downtown shops
and restaurants.
This architectural
gem has six bed-
rooms & 5 baths
and a modern
kitchen with granite
counters and Stain-
less Steel appli-
ances. Original 2-
story carriage
house for two cars.
Hot tub included.
MLS 11-2316
$349,900
Marilyn K Snyder
Real Estate
570-825-2468
906 Homes for Sale
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
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
Ann Marie Chopick
570-288-6654
570-760-6769
WILKES-BARRE
DOUBLE LOT IN
WILKES-BARRE CITY
Extra large duplex
with a total of 7 bed-
rooms, 2 baths,
hardwood floors,
fireplace, screened
porch, full basement
and 2 car garage.
$58,000.
Jeannie Brady
ERA BRADY
ASSOCIATES
570-836-3848
WILKES-BARRE
Great price! 3 bed-
room, 1 1/2 bath,
needs some love.
High ceilings, open
floor plan down-
stairs, extra room
upstairs for closet,
office, storage,
whatever you need.
Subject to short
sale, bank approval.
$37,900
MLS 11-3134
Call/text for Details.
Donna Cain
570-947-3824
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
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
WILKES-BARRE
REDUCED
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
$79,900
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
Wanna make your
car go fast? Place
an ad in Classified!
570-829-7130.
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!
Need a Roommate?
Place an ad and
find one here!
570-829-7130
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 PAGE 13D
906 Homes for Sale 906 Homes for Sale 906 Homes for Sale
906 Homes for Sale 906 Homes for Sale 906 Homes for Sale 906 Homes for Sale
342-4115 www.nasserrealestate.com 587-5155
Nasser
REAL ESTATE INC.
Since 1950
SOUTH SCRANTON $84,900
Duplex in the Minooka Section, set on a 50x150 lot. Spacious owners
unit plus a 2 car garage. MLS#11-2878
SCRANTON $69,900
3 bedroom ranch in Tripp Park. Features include eat-in kitchen with
built-ins, appliances. Roof and mechanics are in good condition.
MLS#11-3966
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
WILKES-BARRE
REDUCED
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
$79,900
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
WILKES-BARRE SOUTH
2 story Brick, Stuc-
co & Wood home.
Gas baseboard
heat. 3 bedrooms, 1
1/2 bath. Beautiful
hardwood floors.
Semi-modern
kitchen. Lower-level
family room with
fireplace. New,
lower price! 11-2987
$79,900
BESECKER
REALTY
570-675-3611
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
To settle Estate
314 HORTON STREET
SATURDAY, SEPT 24
1PM TO 3PM
Wonderful Family
Home, 6 rooms (3
bedrooms), 1 1/2
baths, two-story,
Living room with
built-in Bookcase,
formal Dining Room
with entrance to
delightful porch.
Eat-in kitchen. Pri-
vate lot, detached
garage. A must see
home. MLS 11-2721
Asking $75,000
GO TO THE TOP...
CALL
JANE KOPP
REAL ESTATE
570-288-7481
WILKES-BARRE TOWNSHIP
Double block, 3
bedrooms. Sun-
room, kitchen, din-
ing room & parlor.
Oil heat, baseboard,
water. Driveway &
garage. 50x150 foot
lot fenced in.
$25,000 + closing.
Call 570-822-2382
WILKES-BARRE
McLean St.
Large home featur-
ing 2200SF of living
space Hardwood
floors on first, new
carpeting on sec-
ond. Modern eat-in
kitchen with laundry,
3 to 4 bedrooms,
fenced rear yard,
gas heat.
MLS#11-2659
$86,500
Maribeth Jones
570-696-6565
WILKES-BARRE
MINERS MILLS SECTION
Business commer-
cial zoning (previ-
ous dental office) &
gracious attached
home with updated
roof, furnace, water
heater and kitchen.
Hardwood and pine
floors, 3 bedrooms,
large living room
and formal dining
room, 1-car garage
& carport. MLS#11-
1009 Reduced to
$102,000
Maribeth Jones
570-696-6565
906 Homes for Sale
WYOMING
26 Bubblo St.
Absolutely beautiful
renovation. This 3
bedroom, 1 bath
Cape Cod has it all.
New roof and
kitchen with stain-
less appliances,
bath, flooring, doors
windows 1st floor
laundry, paint inside
and out. High effi-
ciency hot air fur-
nace and central
air. Extremely effi-
cient home, newly
insulated through-
out. Nice deck and
newly landscaped
yard to enjoy. Noth-
ing to do but move
your stuff right in
MLS 11-3318
$134,900
Mark R. Mason
570-331-0982
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
WYOMING
364 Susquehanna
Avenue
Are you waiting for
the Perfect Ranch?
This home has Per-
fect Everything! 3
bedrooms, 2 NEW
baths, new win-
dows, new roof,
modern kitchen with
Granite Counter-
tops. Hardwood
floors, New Rennai
Tankless Hot Water
System, Spacious
Deck with Hot Tub,
MLS 10-3671
$162,000.
Joan Evans
Real Estate
570-824-5763
WYOMING
For Sale by Owner.
Double Block, easily
convertible to sin-
gle. Kitchen, living
room, 3 bedrooms
& bath each side.
New 2 car garage.
66x100 lot. Asking
$160,000. Call
570-693-2408
WYOMING
Price Reduced -
Motivated Seller!!
Nicely maintained
2-story traditional in
great neighbor-
hood. Modern oak
kitchen, open layout
in family room/den
with new floors,
above ground pool
in fenced rear yard.
1-car detached
garage with work-
shop area, all on a
nice wide lot.
MLS#11-2428
$142,900
Call Steve Shemo
(570) 288-1401
(570) 793-9449
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
$149,900
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
VM 101
Collect cash, not dust!
Clean out your
basement, garage
or attic and call the
Classified depart-
ment today at 570-
829-7130!
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
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
DUPONT
INVESTMENT
OPPORTUNITY
Single family home
with a separate
building containing
a 1 bedroom apart-
ment and 5 car
garage all on 1 lot.
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-2828
Priced to sell at
$85,000
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
DURYEA
REDUCED!!!!
921 Main St.
Over 2,000 S/F of
commercial space +
2 partially furnished
apartments,
garage, and off
street parking.
Great convenient
location. For more
info and photos
visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS #11-1965
$167,500
Call Tom
570-282-7716
EDWARDSVILLE
89-91 Hillside St.
Out of the flood
plain, this double
has potential.
Newer roof and
some windows
have been
replaced. Property
includes a large
extra lot.
MLS 11-3463
$87,000
Call Roger Nenni
Ext. 32
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
5770-288-0770
Looking for that
special place
called home?
Classified will address
Your needs.
Open the door
with classified!
HAZELTON
Spacious double
with 6 rooms, 3
bedrooms, 1 bath
each, semi-modern
kitchens & baths,
separate heat and
electric, fenced
yard. Plenty of stor-
age with walk up
basement. $34,500
MLS 11-1637
Ann Marie Chopick
570-760-6769
570-288-6654
909 Income &
Commercial
Properties
KINGSTON
Wellness Center /
professional
offices. Lease
Space Available.
Brick and stucco
facade offered on
building exterior
while interior fea-
tures built-in offices
with natural wood-
work and glass.
Modern style lofts
allow for bonus inte-
rior space and
warehouse space is
offered as Built to
Suit.
--SPACES AVAIL-
ABLE: 1200 SF, 1400
SF, 4300 SF
(Warehouse space,
also offered as built
to suit)
--Custom Leases
from $8.00-$12.00/
square feet based
on terms.
--Price/ square foot
negotiable depend-
ing on options. (ASK
ABOUT OUR FREE
RENT)
--Property ideal for
a medical, business,
or professional
offices.
--100+ Parking
Spaces. Call Cindy
570-690-2689
www.cindykingre.com
570-675-4400
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
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
PITTSTON
35 High St.
Nice duplex in great
location, fully occu-
pied with leases.
Good investment
property. Separate
utilities, newer fur-
naces, gas and oil.
Notice needed to
show. For more info
and photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-3222
$89,900
Call Tom
570-262-7716
Looking to buy a
home?
Place an ad here
and let the
sellers know!
570-829-7130
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.
Asking $945,000
Contact Judy Rice
570-714-9230
MLS# 10-1110
909 Income &
Commercial
Properties
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
PLAINS
COMMERCIAL PROPERTY
15 South River St.
Not in Flood Zone
For Sale By Owner
4,536 sq. ft., high
traffic area, across
from Rite-Aid, gas
heat. For more info,
call 570-820-5953
PLYMOUTH
155 E Walnut St.
Good investment
property knocking
on your door. Don't
miss out, come and
see for yourself.
Also included in the
sale of the property
is the lot behind the
home. Lot size is
25X75, known as
147 Cherry St.
$82,000
MLS# 10-2666
Call Karen
Coldwell Banker
Rundle Real Estate
570-474-2340
SCRANTON
Well maintained
Duplex, separate
utilities, 1st floor has
an enclosed 3 sea-
son patio plus fin-
ished basement
with summer
kitchen. Move in
condition with
fenced yard.
$76,500
Ann Marie Chopick
570-760-6769
570-288-6654
Job Seekers are
looking here!
Where's your ad?
570-829-7130 and
ask for an employ-
ment specialist
SHAVERTOWN
Woodridge II
1195 Lantern Hill Rd
Prime residential
2.86 acre wooded
lot with plenty of
privacy. Gently
sloping.
MLS#11-1601
Call Joe Moore
570-288-1401
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
909 Income &
Commercial
Properties
WILKES-BARRE
101 Old River Road
Duplex - Todays
Buy, Tomorrows
Security Do you
appreciate the gen-
tle formality of
beamed ceilings,
French style doors
with beveled glass
& beautiful wood-
work? Each unit: 2
bedrooms, bath, liv-
ing room, dining
room, gas heat.
Spacious rooms.
Separate utilities. 2
car detached
garage. 10-0920
$89,900.
Joan Evans
Real Estate
570-824-5763
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
WILKES-BARRE
495-497 Grant St
Nice double block in
good condition with
2 bedrooms on
each side. New vinyl
siding. Bathrooms
recently remodeled.
Roof is 2 years old.
Fully rented. Ten-
ants pay all utilities.
MLS 11-580.
$55,500
Call Darren Snyder
Marilyn K Snyder
Real Estate
570-825-2468
WILKES-BARRE
84 Madison Street
Price Reduced
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.
$75,000
MLS# 11-1095
Call Jeff Cook
Realty World
Bank Capital
570-235-1183
WILKES-BARRE
PRICE REDUCED
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.
Lease Purchase
Option Available.
Price Reduced
$145,000
MLS# 10-3225
Call Jeff Cook
Realty World
Bank Capital
570-235-1183
WYOMING
PRICE REDUCED!
285 Wyoming Ave.
First floor currently
used as a shop,
could be offices,
etc. Prime location,
corner lot, full base-
ment. 2nd floor is 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
$169,900
Call Charlie
VM 101
912 Lots & Acreage
DALLAS
Located in Top
Rated Dallas
Schools
2 Acres $39,500
5 Acres $69,900
We challenge any-
one to find similar
acreage in this
desirable of a
location at these
prices. Costs to
develop land make
this irreplaceable
inventory at these
prices and gives
the next owner
instant equity at
our expense. Call
owner.
570-245-6288
912 Lots & Acreage
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
Find Something?
Lose Something?
Get it back where it
belongs
with a Lost/Found ad!
570-829-7130
EXETER
Ida Acres, Wyoming
Area School District.
6 lots remain, start-
ing at $38,000. Pri-
vate setting. Under-
ground utilities.
570-947-4819
GOULDSBORO
902 Layman Lane
Wooded lot in Big
Bass Lake. Current
perc on file. Priced
below cost, seller
says bring all offers.
MLS#10-3564. Low
price $10,000
Thomas Bourgeois
516-507-9403
CLASSIC
PROPERTIES
570-842-9988
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
LOCKVILLE RD
2.3 ACRES
Sacrifice $37,000.
Not perked.
570-760-0049
HARVEYS LAKE
SELLER SAYS
SELL!
Land with
Lake View
90' x 125' Lot with
View of the Lake.
Sewer Permit
Required. $19,000
MLS# 10-2523
Call Cindy
570-690-2689
www.cindykingre.com
570-675-4400
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
912 Lots & Acreage
LAFLIN
Lot#9
Pinewood Dr
BUILD YOUR
DREAM HOME
on one of the last
available lots in
desirable Laflin.
Convenient location
near highways, air-
port, casino &
shopping.
DIRECTIONS Rt 315
to laflin Rd; make
left off Laflin Rd onto
Pinewood Dr. Lot is
on corner of
Pinewood Dr. and
Hickorywood Dr.
MLS 11-3411
$34,900
atlas realtyinc.com
Call Keri Best
570-885-5082
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
LEHMAN
New Listing!
Market Street
OVERLOOKING THE
HUNTSVILLE GOLF
COURSE. Own and
build your own
dream house over-
looking the 10th
green at the presti-
gious Huntsville Golf
Course. Picturesque
setting in the Back
Mountain area of
Lehman. Near Penn
State College,
Lehman. Accessed
by Market St.,
downtown Lehman
corner off Rt. 118 or
passed the
Huntsville dam. Dri-
veway in place, sep-
tic approved. All on
over 1 acre of prime
10th green view
land. MLS#11-2860
$107,000
Bob Cook
570-696-6555
MOUNTAIN TOP
130 CHURCH RD
Looking for land to
build your dream
home on? 5.23
acres awaits! This
wooded parcel
offers 600+ feet of
road frontage. Pub-
lic water. Public
sewer available.
This parcel can also
be perk tested for
on-lot system.
MLS#11-2898
$46,900
Jill Jones 696-6550
912 Lots & Acreage
MOUNTAIN TOP
333 Oakmont Lane
Owner had property
surveyed.Copies
available upon
request. Property
was partially
cleared for a home
2-3 years ago
MLS 11-3300
$39,900
John Shelley
570-288-0770
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
MOUNTAIN TOP
487(Lot#3)
Mountain Blvd. S
Vacant commercial
land. Not yet
assessed for taxes.
Map on property
available with set-
backs, etc. High
traffic area. All utili-
ties available.
Call for appointment
$49,900
MLS#11-1004
Call Vieve Zaroda
(570) 474-6307
Ext. 2772
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-474-6307
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
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
Need to rent that
Vacation property?
Place an ad and
get started!
570-829-7130
NEW PRICING!!!
EARTH
CONSERVANCY
LAND FOR SALE
*61 +/- Acres
Nuangola
$99,000
*46 +/- Acres
Hanover Twp.,
$79,000
*Highway
Commercial
KOZ Hanover Twp.
3 +/- Acres
11 +/- Acres
*Wilkes-Barre Twp.
32 +/- Acres
Zoned R-3
See additional Land
for Sale at
www.earth
conservancy.org
570-823-3445
912 Lots & Acreage
NEWPORT TOWNSHIP
1 mile south of
L.C.C.C. 2 lots
available.
100 frontage
x 228 deep.
Modular home
with basement
accepted.
Each lot $17,000.
Call
570-714-1296
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
PLAINS TWP.
14 + ACRES
in an approved sub-
division. Easy acc-
ess to Rt 81 & PA
Tpke. 1/2 mile from
Mohegan Sun
Casino. $275,000.
772-260-0901
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
SUGAR NOTCH
273 Broadhead Ave
Wooded building
lot. All utilities - gas
electric, sewer &
cable TV. Call for
appointment
$19,900
MLS# 10-2967
Call Vieve Zaroda
(570) 474-6307
Ext. 2772
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-474-6307
Motorcycle for sale?
Let them see it here
in the Classifieds!
570-829-7130
Purebred Animals?
Sell them here with a
classified ad!
570-829-7130
Find homes for
your kittens!
Place an ad here!
570-829-7130
Find a
newcar
online
at
timesleader.com
ONLYONE LEADER. ONL NNL NNL NNNL NNLYONE NNNNNNNNNNNNNNN LEA LE LLLE LE LE LLE LE EE LE DER D .
timesleader.com
Purebred Animals?
Sell them here with a
classified ad!
570-829-7130
Wanna make your
car go fast? Place
an ad in Classified!
570-829-7130.
Wanna make your
car go fast? Place
an ad in Classified!
570-829-7130.
Say it HERE
in the Classifieds!
570-829-7130
PAGE 14D THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
944 Commercial
Properties
FORTY FORT...PRIME
FEATURES:
HI N DRY!
High Trafc, C1 Zoned.
Commercial or Professional
PLENTY OF PARKING
NEW EXTERIOR:
CULTERED STONE
DRIVET, (STUCCO LOOK)
2-TONE
NEW ROOF - 4/11
2 Modern ofces; 1 new 09
CENTRAL AIR (optional)
FLOOD-FREE WYOMING AVE.
Call
(570) 288-2195
912 Lots & Acreage
SWEET VALLEY
Mooretown Road
Well and septic
already on site.
Build your home on
this beautiful 2.2
acre lot. 2 car
garage on site with
fruit trees, flowers,
grape vines and
dog run. From Dal-
las take Rt. 118 to
right on Rt. 29 N,
left on Mooretown
Road for about 1/2
mile, see sign
on left.
MLS 11-2779
$59,200
Call Patty Lunski
570-735-7494
Ext. 304
ANTONIK AND
ASSOCIATES,
INC.
570-735-7494
WILKES-BARRE
PARTLY CLEARED
VACANT LOTS:
Lot #13,
E Thomas St
Approximately
0.57 acre
MLS #11-2616
$32,000
Lot #18,
E Thomas St
Approximately
0.73 acre
MLS #11-2615
$35,000
Call Jeff Cook
Realty World
Bank Capital
570-235-1183
915 Manufactured
Homes
ASHLEY PARK
Laurel Run & San
Souci Parks, Like
new, several to
choose from,
Financing&Warranty,
MobileOneSales.net
Call (570)250-2890
HAZLETON
Beautiful double
wide ranch. 3 bed-
room, 2 bath, living
room, dining room,
family room with
gas fireplace. New
roof. Deck. Shed.
Only 10 years old.
Must sell due to
divorce. Reduced to
$55,000
(570) 453-1642
HUNLOCK CREEK
Move in ready &
affordable 2 bed-
room located in
quiet, country set-
ting. $14,000.
Financing available
with minimum
down.
570-477-2845
HUNLOCK CREEK
Quiet country set-
ting. Lots available.
$295 per month.
Includes water,
sewer & trash. Call
Bud 570-477-2845
PITTSTON
Stay in area, out of
flood zone. 3
bedrooms, 2
baths, 10 year old
double wide, all
window treatments,
w/w carpet, central
air, kitchen appli-
ances, porch furni-
ture, electric grill,
3/4 furnished plus
much more, over-
sized shed & older
land Rover included
all under $64,000
Call Office
570-655-2050
SPRINGBROOK
2 bedroom. Clean.
Needs no work.
Remodeled
throughout. Owner
financing. $14,000.
570-851-6128 or
610-767-9456
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
918 Miscellaneous
for Sale
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
[email protected]
Lets sit down and
talk, make a plan,
and help you get
moving into a
home.
Dee Fields,
Associate Broker
927 Vacation
Locations
POCONO TIMESHARE
Worldwide priv-
eleges. 1 bedroom.
Furnished. 40% off.
Call 845-536-3376
930 Wanted to Buy
Real Estate
DALLAS
WANTED TO BUY
5 or more acres in
the Dallas School
District. Not to be
divided - to build
our dream home.
570-510-5226
570-675-9340
WE BUY HOMES
Any Situation
570-956-2385
938 Apartments/
Furnished
WILKES-BARRE
1 bedroom. Fully fur-
nished. Off-street
parking. Everything
included! $500/
month + security &
references. Ready
Now! 570-328-5063
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
ASHLEY
Modern 2nd floor,
2 bedrooms. All
appliances, off
street parking. No
pets. $500 + utili-
ties. 570-820-9606
ASHLEY
Single 1 bedroom
apartment. Off
street parking.
Washer dryer
hookup. Appliances.
Bus stop at the
door. $550. Water
Included.
570-954-1992
BACK MOUNTAIN
Sunny, spacious 1
bedroom. Modern
kitchen. Large din-
ing room. Large liv-
ing room. Private
entrance. Off street
parking. Nice views.
Lawn privileges.
Deep well water. No
pets. No smoking.
References please.
$575, heat included.
570-477-5010
DALLAS
(Franklin Township)
1st floor, 2 bedroom.
1 bath. Washer
dryer hookup. Car-
port. $595 + utilities,
lease & security.
Call after 6.
570-220-6533
DALLAS
1 bedroom, near
Misericordia. Lease,
security, references
required. Absolutely
no pets/no smok-
ing. $495/month +
some utilities
570-298-2478 or
570-417-0144
DALLAS
1st floor apartment.
Off street parking.
Heat & Hot water
included. No pets.
Available October 1.
$600 / month. Call
570-675-5873
DALLAS
2 bedroom. 2 story.
1.5 bath. Fridge &
stove. Laundry
hook up. Private
entrance. Deck. Off
street parking for 2
cars. No pets. 1
year lease. Credit
check & references
required.
$660/month.
570-696-0842
Leave message.
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
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!
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
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
Main Street. Small 1
& 2 bedroom apts.
$450 month + secu-
rity. No pets.
570-406-2366
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
EXETER
Senior Apartments
222 SCHOOLEY AVE.
EXETER, PA
Accepting appli-
cations for 1 bed-
room apartments.
Quality apart-
ments for ages
62 and older.
Income limits
apply. Rent only
$437 month.
*Utilities Included
*Laundry Facilities
*On Site
Management
*Private parking
Call for appointment
570-654-5733
Monday - Friday
8am-12pm. Equal
Housing Opportunity
EXETER
Two Apartments
1 BEDROOM. $425.
Newly remodeled,
off street parking.
2 BEDROOM. $525.
Newly remodeled,
off street parking.
570-602-0758
FORTY FORT
103 River St
2nd floor, 1 bed-
room, living room,
appliances. Parking.
$550, heat & water
included. Tenant
pays electric. Pet
Friendly. Call
570-814-9700
FORTY FORT
1665 Wyoming Ave.
3rd floor 1 bed-
room, utilities
included. Off street
parking, security
deposit required.
NO PETS
$525/mo. available
immediately.
570-690-0564 or
570-823-7564
FORTY FORT
2ND FLOOR
Kitchen with appli-
ances, new cup-
boards, new vinyl
flooring. Large living
room, 2 bedrooms,
all rooms are large.
New bathroom.
Washer/dryer. Wall
to Wall carpeting.
Lighted off street
parking. Gas heat.
Utilities by tenant.
Security, lease &
references. No
pets. $650/month.
570-714-9331
FORTY FORT
2nd floor, 4 rooms,
wall to wall carpet,
heat, hot water,
public water, sewer
& recycling fees
included. Stove,
fridge & dishwasher
furnished. Laundry
room with hook-ups
for washer & dryer.
Good location, off
street parking, No
pets. 1 year lease &
security, $675. Call
570-655-0530
FORTY FORT
All utilities included.
Clean 4 room 2nd
floor. Appliances.
Covered parking.
Non smoking, no
pets. Starting at
$635/month.
570-714-2017
FORTY FORT
AMERICA REALTY
RENTALS
OUT OF
FLOOD
ZONE!
Wilkes-Barre
Near
General
Hospital
Over 2
Generations Of
Managed
Service
ALL UNITS
NO PETS OR
SMOKING,
1 BEDROOMS
$465 & UP. 2
YEAR LEASES/
SAME RENTS/
Employment
Verification
Required.
288-1422
FORTY FORT
Available October 1
1st floor, very well
maintained spa-
cious 2 bedroom, 2
bath apartment in
great neighborhood.
Large living / dining
area. Extra large
eat-in kitchen with
washer/dryer hook-
up. Hardwood floors
throughout. Front
porch, screened
back porch. Excel-
lent storage, central
air. Off street park-
ing. $950 + utilities.
Call 570-510-4778
from 9am-5pm for
an appointment
FORTY FORT
Large, modern 2
bedroom, 2nd floor
apartment. Eat in
kitchen with all
appliances. Spa-
cious living room,
bath, a/c units, laun-
dry, off street park-
ing. Great location.
No pets or smoking.
$575 + utilities. Call
570-714-9234
FORTY FORT
Newly renovated,
great neighbor-
hood. 2nd floor.
Non smoking. Oak
floors, new carpet
in master bedroom.
new windows, 4
paddle fans, bath
with shower. Stove
& fridge. Off street
parking, coin- op
laundry. $600 +
gas, electric &
water. References
required, no pets
570-779-4609 or
570-407-3991
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
GLEN LYON
1 bedroom 2nd floor
apartment available
with new carpet.
Building has been
remodeled & securi-
ty system installed.
OSP. Stove & refrig-
erator included. No
pets. Security
deposit & credit
check required.
$450/month
Call Judi
570-474-6307 or
570-715-7736
SMITH HOURIGAN GROUP
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. All
remodeled. Ceram-
ic & hardwood
floors. Fire place.
$475/month + utili-
ties. No pets.
Call (570) 332-2477
HANOVER TWP.
Out of flood zone.
Beautiful 2nd floor,
3 bedroom. Wall to
wall carpet, large
living room &
kitchen, 2nd floor
porch with spectac-
ular views, washer/
dryer hookup.
Garbage & sewer
included. $650/
month + utilities &
security. No pets
(570) 592-4133
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
JENKINS TOWNSHIP
Nice 2nd floor 5
room apartment.
Gas range included,
gas heat, ceiling
fans, knotty pine
enclosed porch, off
street parking,
fenced yard. $400 +
utilities, security &
references. Non
smoking.Call after 5
570-655-1907 or
570-814-2297
JENKINS TWP.
3rd floor, 1 bed-
room. All utilities
included. Refrigera-
tor & stove. No
pets. Available end
of September $600
month. call
570-655-0539
KINGSTON
$500/month -
everything included.
Unique apartment -
No pets/smoking.
Call (570) 814-3859
KINGSTON
1 bedroom,
ALL UTILITIES
INCLUDED.
$520/month. No
pets, section 8 OK
Call 570-817-3332
KINGSTON
131 S. Maple Ave.
4 room apartment -
2nd floor. Heat &
hot water included.
Coin Laundry. Off
street parking. No
pets/smoking. $695
570-288-5600
or 570-479-0486
KINGSTON
1st floor 5 rooms, 2
bedroom, with hard-
wood floors, mod-
ern bath, gas heat &
parking. Lease,
security, no pets.
Anne Marie Chopick
570-760-6769
570-288-6654
KINGSTON
2 bedroom, 1 bath.
$600. Water includ-
ed. New tile, car-
pet, dishwasher,
garbage disposal,
Washer/Dryer
hookup - Large yard
Double Security
Facebook us at
BOVO Rentals
570-328-9984
KINGSTON
2 bedroom, 2nd
floor. Nice area.
Stove & fridge.
$600 per month +
utilities. No pets or
smoking.
Call (570) 332-8765
KINGSTON
2 bedroom, large
rooms with closets.
Plenty of storage.
Laundry with wash-
er & Dryer. . $650 /
month. Call
570-332-3222
KINGSTON
2nd floor large effi-
ciency apartment.
All utilities paid by
landlord. Free use of
washer/dryer. No
smoking. No pets.
1st months rent,
security & 1 year
lease. $525/month.
570-331-7016 Days
or 288-6764 Night
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
KINGSTON
795 Rutter Ave
Screened porch,
kitchen downstairs,
upstairs living room,
bedroom & bath-
room. $575/month
+ utilities. No pets.
570-417-6729
KINGSTON
Newly remodeled 1
bedroom, central
heat & air, off-street
parking, wall to wall,
washer/dryer hook-
up, No pets. $450
Call 570-288-9507
KINGSTON
Nice first floor
apartment. 2 bed-
room. Stove, fridge,
washer & dryer.
Lots of storage
space. $675. Heat
included. Call
570-333-4567
KINGSTON
Penn St.
6 rooms, 3 bed-
rooms, 1.5 baths.
Fully carpeted. 4
closets. Gas heat.
Washer/dryer hook
up. Parking. Yard.
No section 8. No
pets. $725 + utilities.
570-714-1530
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
APT APT RENT RENTALS ALS
KINGSTON
1 BEDROOM
2 BEDROOM
3 BEDROOM
WILKES-BARRE
1st & 2nd floor
2 BEDROOMS
WYOMING
1 BEDROOM
All Apartments
Include:
APPLIANCES
CARPETING
SEWER
OFF ST PARKING
MAINTENANCE
Lease & Credit
Check Required
Call 899-3407
Tina Randazzo
Property Mgr
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
LARKSVILLE
3 bedroom, 1 bath.
$775. With discount.
All new hardwood
floors and tile. New
cabinets / bath-
room. Dishwasher,
garbage disposal.
Washer/dryer hook-
up. Off street park-
ing. Facebook us at
BOVO Rentals
570-328-9984
LARKSVILLE
NEWLY REMODELED!
3 rooms & bath.
Heat, hot water,
electricity, stove,
refrigerator & off
street parking
included.
$535/month + $535
security. 1 year
lease. No pets.
570-779-2258
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
1st floor. 1 bedroom.
Stove, refrigerator,
washer/dryer hook
up included. Off
street parking.
$475/month
+ security.
Call (570) 466-3603
LUZERNE
41 Mill Street
1st floor, 2 bed-
room, large bath
with shower, stove,
refrigerator and
dishwasher, wash-
er/dryer hookup,
1 car attached
garage. Fieldstone
working fireplace.
Non Smoking.
Too many extras to
mention, call for
more details.
$720 + utilities.
570-288-3438
Midtowne
Apartments
100 E. 6th
Street,
Wyoming PA
18644
Housing for
Extremely Low &
Very Low Income
Elderly,
Handicapped &
disabled.
570-693-4256
ALL UTILITIES
INCLUDED
Rents based on
income.
Managed by EEI
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
MINERS MILLS
Cozy 1 bedroom,
3rd floor apartment.
Heat, hot water,
stove & fridge includ-
ed. $430 / month.
Call 570-472-3681
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 Opportuni-
ty. 570-474-5010
TTY711
This institution is an
equal opportunity
provider and
employer.
Immediate Opennings!
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
MOUNTAINTOP
1 bedroom with full
kitchen. Remodeled
recently, first floor,
ample parking. Hot
water, sewer &
garbage included.
On Rt 309 - close
to all amenities! No
pets. Non smoking.
$650/month + secu-
rity & references.
570-239-3827
NANTICOKE
1 bedroom, 1st floor,
newly renovated
apartment. New
wall to wall. Modern
kitchen with stove &
fridge. Washer
dryer hookup. Large
front porch, no
smoking or pets,
water & sewer by
landlord. $475 + util-
ities, security, lease
credit and back-
ground check. Call
570-239-8728
NANTICOKE
2 bedroom, 1st
floor. Large eat in
kitchen, fridge,
electric stove, large
living room, w/w
carpeting, master
bedroom with cus-
tom built in furni-
ture. Ample closet
space. Front/back
porches, off street
parking, laundry
room available. No
pets, smoking,
water, sewer,
garbage paid.
$600/mo + gas,
electric, security,
lease, credit, back-
ground check.
Call (570)696-3596
NANTICOKE
2nd Floor apart-
ment for a tenant
who wants the
best. Bedroom, liv-
ing room, kitchen &
bath. Brand new.
Washer/dryer hook-
up, air conditioned.
No smoking or
pets. 2 year lease,
all utilities by ten-
ant. Sewer &
garbage included.
Security, first & last
months rent
required. $440.00
570-735-5185
NANTICOKE
603 Hanover St
Above Dental Prac-
tice. 2nd floor, 1
bedroom. No pets.
$550 + security, util-
ities & lease. Photos
available. Call
570-542-5330
NANTICOKE
Modern 3 room,
wall to wall carpet,
washer/dryer
hookup, fridge &
range. Water
sewer, garbage &
off street parking
included. $430/mo.
No pets. Call
570-735-3479
NANTICOKE
Spacious 2 bedroom
apartment. Living
room, kitchen,
pantry, washer/
dryer. No pets.
Sewer & trash
included.
$495/mos.
570-262-5399
PITTSTON
2 bedroom, 2nd
floor, bath, kitchen,
living room. Heat &
water included.
$575/ month. 1st
month & security.
No pets
570-451-1038
PITTSTON
GORGEOUS LOFT
STYLE. One large
bedroom, full bath-
room & shower.
Large closet.
Stove, refrigerator,
dishwasher. Off
street parking.
Motion lights.
Bar/booth style
area. Deck for
socializing. Clean
& neat. Gas heat.
$600/month +
security. Call Steve
570-563-1261
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
PITTSTON
Modern 2 bedroom,
2nd floor. Includes
appliances. Laundry
hookup. Heated
garage, off street
parking. Heat,
sewer, water &
garbage included.
$695/mos. + securi-
ty & lease. No
smoking/pets.
570-430-0123
PITTSTON
Recently remodeled
1 bedroom. Kitchen,
living room & laun-
dry on 1st floor. Off
street parking. Gas
heat. $500 + utilities
Call 570-299-9030
PITTSTON TWP.
Large 3 bedroom in
great location. No
pets. Non smoking.
Off-street parking.
Includes water &
sewer. $800 + elec-
tric, security & last
month.
570-237-6000
PITTSTON-
HUGHESTOWN
Completely remod-
eled, modern 1 bed-
room apt. Lots of
closet space, with
new tile floor and
carpets. Includes
stove, refrigerator,
washer, dryer, gas
heat, nice yard and
neighborhood, no
pets. $600/month
$1000 deposit.
570-479-6722
PLAINS
2 bedroom 1st floor.
Small pets ok.
Large fenced in
yard. $590/month.
Includes water &
sewer.
Call (570) 574-6261
PLAINS
Large, modern 2
bedroom 2nd floor.
Living room with
hardwood. Eat in
kitchen with all
appliances. Conve-
nient location. No
pets. No smoking.
$550 + utilities. Call
570-714-9234
PLAINS TWP.
50 Chamberlain St.
FLOOD SPECIAL
2nd floor. 4 rooms.
heat & water
included. short term
lease available.
$500 month.
Call 570-814-1957
Looking for that
special place
called home?
Classified will address
Your needs.
Open the door
with classified!
SHEATOWN
NANTICOKE AREA
2nd floor apart-
ments for rent.
Available
immediately.
Call 570-333-4627
WEST PITTSTON
1 bedroom, newly
remodeled, fridge &
stove, off street
parking, $400 plus
utilities. Small pets
welcome. Call
570-357-1138
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
570-283-1800 M-F
570-388-6422 all
other times
WEST PITTSTON
2nd floor 1 bed-
room. Kitchen with
appliances and attic
storage. Heat,
water & sewer
included. Quiet
neighborhood, out
of flood zone. 1 year
lease. No pets. $540
+ first, last & securi-
ty. Credit check &
references required.
570-466-1545
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
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*
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
WILKES-BARRE /
KINGSTON
Efficiency 1 & 2
bedrooms. Includes
all utilities, parking,
laundry. No pets.
From $390.
Lease, security
& references.
570-970-0847
WILKES-BARRE
123 GEORGE AVE
2nd floor, 2 bed-
room. Stove, dish-
washer, washer/
dryer hook up. $550
per month + utilities
& security.
460 SCOTT ST
1st floor, 1 bedroom.
Stove, refrigerator,
washer/dryer
hookup. $450 per
month + utilities &
security.
No pets, lease,
credit check,
references.
570-472-9494
WILKES-BARRE
2 & 3 bedroom, 1
bath apartments
near General Hospi-
tal $525 & $575 +
utilities, first, last &
security. No pets.
570-821-0463
570-417-3427
WILKES-BARRE
264 Academy St
1.5 bedrooms,
newly renovated
building. Washer &
dryer available..
$600/per month
includes heat, hot
water and parking.
646-712-1286
570-328-9896
570-855-4744
WILKES-BARRE
2nd floor apt. 2 bed-
rooms. No pets. Off
street parking.
Washer/dryer hook
up, large yard
$450/month + utili-
ties & security
deposit.
570-650-1844
Collect cash, not dust!
Clean out your
basement, garage
or attic and call the
Classified depart-
ment today at 570-
829-7130!
WILKES-BARRE
AVAILABLE NOW!
Two spacious, 5
room, 2 bedroom
apartments. 1st &
2nd floor. Rent +
utilities. Lease &
security. No pets.
$550 & $625
570-650-3008 or
570-881-8979
WILKES-BARRE
Available Oct 1st.
Out of flood area. 1
bedroom. 2nd floor.
Living room, mod-
ern kitchen & bath.
Enclosed back
porch. Washer/
dryer hook up. Heat
& hot water includ-
ed. References
security & lease.
$595/month
Call (570) 822-4302
WILKES-BARRE
Heights Section
51 N. Fulton St.
1 bedroom Bi-Level.
Eat in kitchen with
appliances. Shared
yard. Wood floors.
Water included.
Tenant pays $400 +
electric, gas, securi-
ty. Pets considered.
Call (570) 814-1356
WILKES-BARRE
HEIGHTS
Townhouse type
apartments. 2
bedrooms, Stove ,
Fridge, washer/
dryer hookup. Off-
street parking. Utili-
ties by tenant. No
Pets. $495/month
570-825-8355
6 to 8 pm ONLY
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
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.
570-793-6294
WILKES-BARRE
Mayflower area,
2nd Floor, 1 bed-
room with appli-
ances. Nice apart-
ment in attractive
home. Sunny win-
dows & decorative
accents. Off street
parking. No pets, no
smoking. Includes
hot water. $400 +
utilities.
570-824-4743
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
WILKES-BARRE SOUTH
SECURE BUILDINGS
1 & 2 bedroom
apartments.
Starting at $440
and up. References
required. Section 8 ok.
570-332-5723
WILKES-BARRE SOUTH
TWO APARTMENTS
Recently renovated
2 & 4 bedroom
apartments avail-
able. Off street
parking. Serious
inquiries only. $600-
$800 + utilities
570-242-3327
WILKES-BARRE
South Welles St.
2 Bedrooms, 2nd
floor. New bath.
Washer/dryer
hookup. Heat, hot
water, sewer &
garbage included.
$595 + security,
pets negotiable.
Call 570-589-9767
WILKES-BARRE
2nd floor apartment
available in Historic
District of Wilkes-
Barre. 1 bedroom,
Living room, full
bath, Kitchen (stove
& fridge included),
dining / computer
area. Front & rear
entrances, Off
street parking. 1
year lease, $525
month includes
water. Application &
proof of income
required. Call Holly
570-821-7022
EILEEN R.
MELONE REAL
ESTATE
570-821-7022
WILKES-BARRE
1 bedroom
water included
2 bedroom
water included
4 bedroom
half double
1 bedroom effi-
ciency water
included
2 bedroom sin-
gle family
HANOVER
4 bedroom
large affordable
2 bedroom
NANTICOKE
2 bedroom
large, water
included
PITTSTON
Large 1
bedroom water
included
OLD FORGE
2 bedroom
exceptional
water included
Plains
1 bedroom
water included
McDermott &
McDermott
Real Estate
Inc. Property
Management
570-821-1650
(direct line)
Mon-Fri. 8-7pm
Sat. 8-noon
WYOMING
1 bedroom apart-
ment. Wall to wall
carpet. Appliances
furnished. Coin op
laundry. Heat, water
& sewer included.
$550/month. Call
570-687-6216 or
570-954-0727
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
WYOMING
2ND FLOOR APT
Available immedi-
ately, 2 bedrooms,
refrigerator and
stove provided,
$650.00/per month,
Heat paid. Call
570-351-4651
WYOMING
ONE BEDROOM AND
AN EFFICIENCY
For lease, available
immediately, Wash-
er-Dryer-Stove-
Refrigerator, off-
street parking, no
pets, Non Smoking,
$425.$325/per
month, plus utilities,
First Month + Secu-
rity/security deposit.
Call (570) 885-0843
after 9:00 a.m. to
set an appointment
or email:
ccamark49@
verizon.net.
WYOMING
TOWNHOUSE
Carpet, tile bath,
appliances, washer
/ dryer hookup,
sewer, parking by
front door. $600 +
Utilities, Security &
Lease. No smoking,
no pets.
Call 570-693-0695
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
ZION GROVE
Newer log home in
gated community.
Cathedral ceiling in
living room &
kitchen. Propane
free standing stove.
Master suite with
loft. Guest suite
with separate
entrance. Large rec
room over 2 car
garage. 3 bed-
rooms/3 baths. 5
miles from Hum-
boldt Ind. Park. 1
year lease required.
$1,400/mo.
Call Debbie
570-474-6307 or
570-715-7746
SMITH HOURIGAN GROUP
944 Commercial
Properties
DOLPHIN PLAZA
Rte. 315
1,700 - 2,000 SF
Office / Retail
4,500 SF Office
Showroom,
Warehouse
Loading Dock
Call 570-829-1206
FORTY FORT
1188 Wyoming Ave
This unique 2,800
Sq Ft. interior (Circa
1879), features 10
ceilings, large dis-
tinctive chandeliers
as well as two fire-
places. Three french
door entrances con-
tribute to the interi-
ors light, bright
atmosphere. Other
features include:
40 car, lighted
parking area
Handicapped
accessible entrance
Central A/C
Hardwood floors
A large carpeted
open floor space.
This buildings curb
appeal is second
to none.
The signage is per-
fectly positioned on
the 179 ft. front
Over 15,000
vehicles pass daily
570-706-5308
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
FORTY FORT
Fully furnished Doc-
tors office. Approx-
imately 2200
square feet. Avail-
able immediately.
Contact Colleen
570-283-0524
MEDICAL,
PROFESSIONAL, RETAIL
OFFICE SPACE
Medical / profes-
sional space - over
2,000 sq ft. Retail
space, move in con-
dition, over 2,000
sq. ft. Located in S.
Wilkes-Barre. Cor-
ner of Carey Ave &
Hanover St.
Between Myers
High & Geisinger
South Hospital
Call 570-824-0693
OFFICE BUILDING
FOR RENT
Thinking of starting
a business? Look-
ing to relocate?
Have you consid-
ered a "Co-op" with
another small busi-
ness?
$675 per month
rent plus utilities
Modern office build-
ing, 4 offices, con-
ference room,
reception area, sup-
ply room, kitchen
and full-bath. Handi-
cap access and off
street parking. Or
propose a lease/
option to purchase
and negotiate your
terms.
Dee Fields,
Associate Broker
570-788-7511
[email protected]
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 PAGE 15D
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
SAINT JOHN
Apartments
419 N. Main St., Wilkes-Barre
Secured Senior Building for 62 & older.
1 bedroom apartments currently available
for $501. per month INCLUDES ALL
UTILITIES.
YOU regulate heat & air conditioning
Laundry Room Access
Community Room/Fully equipped kitchen
for special events
Exercise Equipment
24 Hour Emergency Maintenance
Garage & off street parking
Computer / Library area
Curbside public transportation
570-970-6694
Equal Housing Opportunity
IN THE HEART OF WILKES-BARRE
Immediate Occupancy!!
Efficiencies available
@30% of income
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! Curbside Public Transportation
Please call 570-825-8594
D/TTY 800-654-5984
CEDAR
VILLAGE
Apartment
Homes
Ask About Our
Summer Specials!
$250 Off 1st Months Rent,
& $250 Off Security
Deposit With Good Credit.
1 bedroom starting @ $690
F e a t u r i n g :
Washer & Dryer
Central Air
Fitness Center
Swimming Pool
Easy Access to
I-81
Mon Fri. 9 5
44 Eagle Court
Wilkes-Barre, PA
18706 (Off Route 309)
570-823-8400
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
[email protected]
Bear Creek Township
C
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a
s
i
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CALL
AN EXPERT
Professional Services Directory
CALL
AN EXPERT
1006 A/C &
Refrigeration
Services
FURNACES,
WATER HEATERS
HEAT PUMPS,
INSTALLATION &
CLEANING
IMMEDIATE INSTALLATION
Licensed & Insured
COMPLETE
HEATING SERVICES
570-817-5944
1015 Appliance
Service
KIRBY
VACUUMS
WHOLESALE
PRICES
Sales, service,
supplies.
Over 30 years
experience
570-709-7222
1024 Building &
Remodeling
1st. Quality
Construction Co.
Roofing, siding,
gutters, insulation,
decks, additions,
windows, doors,
masonry &
concrete.
Insured & Bonded.
Senior Citizens Discount!
State Lic. # PA057320
570-299-7241
570-606-8438
ALL OLDERHOMES
SPECIALIST
825-4268.
Remodel / Repair
Kitchen
& Baths
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
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.
Special rates if
affected by flood
(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
STORM OR FLOOD
DAMAGE??
HUGHES
Construction
ROOFING, Home
Renovating.
Garages,
Kitchens, Baths,
Siding and More!
Licensed and
Insured.
FREE
ESTIMATES!!
570-388-0149
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
Say it HERE
in the Classifieds!
570-829-7130
1039 Chimney
Service
CAVUTO
CHIMNEY
SERVICE
& Gutter Cleaning
Free Estimates
Insured
570-709-2479
CELLAR RESURFACING
Chimney construc-
tion, hauling, small
demolition, stucco,
porches, sidewalks.
Insured. Licensed.
I Return All Calls!
570-457-5849
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
570-840-0873
1048 Computer
Repairs
CB COMPUTER CARE
Virus, Spyware,
Malware & Worm
Removal. General
maintenance. Free
Pick up & delivery
local area.
570-814-2365
1054 Concrete &
Masonry
A+ MASONRY
Affordable Rates
Free Estimates
Brick, Block,
Concrete, Stone,
Retaining Walls,
Basements, Porch-
es, Patios, Side-
walks & Steps.
20% SENIOR DISCOUNT
No Job Too Smal l !
Lic. & insured.
570-647-9669
570-468-3988
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
Wi l l i ams & Franks I nc
Masonry contrac-
tors. Chimney,
stucco & concrete.
570-466-2916
1057Construction &
Building
Bob Brislin
Masonry
& Construction
All phases of con-
struction, basement
waterproofing,
kitchens & bath-
room remodeling.
PA 029323
(570) 780-7339
Bob Brislin
Masonry
& Construction
All phases of con-
struction, basement
waterproofing,
kitchens & bath-
room remodeling.
PA 029323
(570) 780-7339
*No job too small
*Quality Guaranteed
*Free estimates
*Insured & Bonded
*Specialist in doors,
baseboard, flooring,
molding, trim &
closets. PA056630
CREATIVE
CARPENTRY
AARON GERLACH
570-807-7465
Say it HERE
in the Classifieds!
570-829-7130
1057Construction &
Building
D&D
Property Maintenance
Landscaping, snow
plowing, light &
heavy excavation
work.
570-332-8640
GARAGE DOOR
Sales, service,
installation &
repair.
FULLY INSURED
HIC# 065008
CALL JOE
570-606-7489
570-735-8551
PEI ENTERPRISES, INC.
Resi denti al & Commerci al
Building, Remodel-
ing, Maintenance,
Management, Land-
scaping & Preserva-
tion. PALic#079784
(570) 496-0277
WWW.PEI ENTERPRI SESI NC.COM
PHILLIPS
CONSTRUCTION
33 yrs experience
Complete
Construction Services
Roofing, siding, win-
dows, additions,
decks, etc.
Licensed & Insured.
570-788-2283
FREE ESTIMATES
1078 Dry Wall
MARK ANDERSON
DRYWALL COMPANY
SINCE 1987
Hanging & finishing.
Swirreled & Tex-
tured ceilings.
Water damage &
Plaster Repair
570-760-2367
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
GRULA ELECTRIC LLC
Licensed, Insured,
No job too small.
570-829-4077
SLEBODA ELECTRIC
Master electrician
Licensed & Insured
Service Changes &
Replacements.
Generator Installs.
8 6 8 - 4 4 6 9
1093 Excavating
All Types Of
Excavating,
Demolition &
Concrete Work.
FLOOD CLEAN UP
Large & Small Jobs
FREE ESTIMATES
(570) 760-1497
Excavating, Grad-
ing, drainage, tree
removal, lot clear-
ing, snow plowing,
stone / soil delivery.
No job too small
Reasonable Rates
570-574-1862
GOT A FLOOD MESS?
We can help.
Triaxle dump trucks,
heavy equipment &
demolition services
available. Call
BONNERS TRUCKING
& EXCAVATING
570-454-1458
1105 Floor Covering
Installation
CARPET REPAIR &
INSTALLATION
Vinyl & wood.
Certified, Insured.
570-283-1341
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
Say it HERE
in the Classifieds!
570-829-7130
1129 Gutter
Repair & Cleaning
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
FLOOD CLEAN UP,
hardwood floors, tile
vct, drywall / finish-
ing, painting, power
washing. Free Est.
Dependable & Reli-
able. 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
DEPENDABLE
HANDY MAN
Home repairs &
improvements.
Luzerne Co. 30
Years Experience
Dave 570-479-8076
DO IT ALL HANDYMAN
Painting, drywall,
plumbing & all types
of interior & exterior
home repairs.
570-829-5318
LICENSED GENERAL
CONTRACTOR
Plumbing, heating
electrical, painting,
roofs, siding, rough
& finished carpentry
- no job too big or
small. Free Esti-
mates. Call anytime.
570-852-9281
REYNOLDS
Handyman Service
Power washing,
landscaping, tree
removal, grass cut-
ting, home repairs,
plumbing, sheet
rock, painting, fall
clean ups.
Insured & Licensed
570-751-6140
The Handier
Man
We fix everything!
Plumbing,
Electrical &
Carpentry.
Retired Mr. Fix It.
Emergencies
23/7
299-9142
1135 Hauling &
Trucking
A A C L E A N I N G
A1 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
A.S.A.P Hauling
Estate Cleanouts,
Attics, Cellars,
Garages, were
cheaper than
dumpsters!.
Free Estimates,
Same Day!
570-822-4582
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
CASTAWAY
HAULING JUNK
REMOVAL
823-3788 / 817-0395
1135 Hauling &
Trucking
AFFORDABLE
JUNK REMOVAL
Cleanups/Cleanouts
Large or Small Jobs
FREE ESTIMATES
(570) 817-4238
All Junk
Cars &
Trucks
Wanted
Highest
Prices
Paid In
CA$H
FREE
PICKUP
570-574-1275
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
WILL HAUL ANYTHING
Clean cellars,
attics, yards &
metal removal.
Call John
570-735-3330
1147 Home
Restoration
BASEMENT
PUMP-OUT
Insured Contractor.
Reasonable Rates.
Fast Service. Call
570-250-2890
1162 Landscaping/
Garden
ARE YOU TIRED
OF BEING
RAKED?
Specializing In
Trimming and
Shaping of Bush-
es, Shrubs, Trees.
Also, Bed
Cleanup, Edging,
Mulch and Stone.
Call Joe.
570-823-8465 570-823-8465
Meticulous and
Affordable.
F Free ree E Estimates stimates
BRUSH UP TO 4
HIGH, MOWING,
EDGING, TRIMMING
SHRUBS, HEDGES,
TREES, MULCHING,
LAWN CARE, GUT-
TERS, FALL CLEAN
UP. FULLY INSURED.
FREE ESTIMATES
570-829-3261
TOLL FREE
1-855-829-3261
Patrick & Deb Patrick & Debs s
Landscaping Landscaping
Landscaping, basic
handy man, clean-
ing, moving & free
salvage pick up.
AVAILABLE FOR
FALL CLEAN UPS!
Call 570-793-4773
1183 Masonry
New Chimneys/
Repairs
Sidewalks, Steps,
Concrete
Free Estimates
Fully Insured
570-674-7588
CHOPYAK
MASONRY
Wanna make your
car go fast? Place
an ad in Classified!
570-829-7130.
1189 Miscellaneous
Service
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
All phases.
Complete int/ext
paint &renovations
Since 1990 Since 1990
Free Estimates
Licensed-Insured
570-283-5714
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
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
Fall & 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
1228 Plumbing &
Heating
STUCKER
PLUMBING & HEATING
Plumbing, Heating,
electrical, furnaces
& hot water heaters
570-655-8458
VMF -Service Now!
We fix Furnaces, Hot
Water Heaters, Boil-
ers & handle Plumb-
ing, Heating, Air
Conditioning, Refrig-
eration. 24 Hour
Service. Licensed &
Insured. 30+ Years
Experience. Call
570-343-2035
1234 Pressure
Washing
BEE CLEAN
Power Wash & Landscaping
Seasonal Services,
Rain Gutter Clean-
ing, Snow Removal
& More.
(570) 457-1840
Pressure Washing
/Painting/Repair
Call JJ Murphy
570-714-3637
1249 Remodeling &
Repairs
D & 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!!!
Refinish your bath
tub for as low as
$299 for jobs
scheduled by
Oct-14. Includes
non skid, SAVE $110!
Call Perma Glaze
1-800-292-6502
RUSSELLS
Property Maintenance
LICENSED & INSURED
Carpentry, dry-
wall, painting,
flooring & power
washing & more.
FREE ESTIMATES
570-406-3339
1252 Roofing &
Siding
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
*24 Hour Emer-
gency Calls*
Jim Harden
570-288-6709
New Roofs &
Repairs, Shingles,
Rubber, Slate,
Gutters, Chimney
Repairs. Credit
Cards accepted.
FREE ESTIMATES!
Licensed-Insured
EMERGENCIES
SUMMER
ROOFING
Special $1.29 s/f
Licensed, insured,
fast service
570-735-0846
1327 Waterproofing
`DEFELICE CONSTRUCTION`
Storm Damage,
Roofs,Waterproofing.
Licensed \ Insured
Owner Operated, 20
yrs, senior discount
570-458-6274
1336 Window
Cleaning
Professional
Window Cleaning
& More.
Gutters, carpet,
pressure washing.
Residential/com-
mercial. Ins./bond-
ed. Free est.
570-283-9840
944 Commercial
Properties
OFFICE OR STORE
NANTICOKE
1280 sq ft. 3 phase
power, central air
conditioning. Handi-
cap accessible rest
room. All utilities by
tenant. Garbage
included. $900 per
month for a 5 year
lease.
570-735-5064.
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
OFFICE RENTAL
Kingston. First
Floor. Off Street
Parking. Some
Furnishing Included
Available 9/1/11.
Call 287-3331 or
email danielle@
bianepa.com
OFFICE SPACE
239 Schuyler Ave, Kingston
2,050 sf. 2nd floor.
Modern, four sep-
arate offices, large
reception area,
break room, con-
ference room, pri-
vate bathroom.
$695/mos + utilities
Call 570-706-5628
OFFICE SPACE
NEW PROFESSIONAL SPACE
Pittston Township
Facing Pittston
By Pass
Reception area,
conference room,
handicapped bath
room, private
offices, off street
parking. Up to 2300
sq. ft. available.
Call 570-654-5030
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
944 Commercial
Properties
PITTSTON
COOPERS CO-OP
Lease Space
Available, Light
manufacturing,
warehouse,
office, includes
all utilities with
free parking.
I will save
you money!
PROFESSIONAL
COMMERCIAL SPACE
West Pittston
Village Shop
918 Exeter Ave
Route 92
1500 sq. ft. &
2,000 sq. ft.
OUT OF FLOOD ZONE
693-1354 ext 1
FORTY FORT
AMERICA REALTY
SHOP/ OFFI CE
RENTALS
2 GENERATIONS
OF STANDARDS
UNDER WAY -
MANAGED UNITS
DIKE PROTECTED
SOON TO BE
AVAILABLE
EUROPEAN
STYLE RETAIL
SHOPS OR
OFFICES
Leases Starting
At $550.
Busy Rte 11
Location
Applications Being
Entertained
570-288-1422
315 PLAZA
900 & 2400 SF
Dental Office -
direct visibility to
Route 315 between
Leggios & Pic-A-
Deli. 750 & 1750 SF
also available. Near
81 & Cross Valley.
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
944 Commercial
Properties
READY-TO-GO
CLASS A OFFICE
SPACES AT
AFFORDABLE
PRICING
Please visit our
website
marklebuilding.com
or better yet, stop
by for a visit with
the on-site Building
Manager. Offices
ready to go, from
460 to 5000 sq ft.
Available, conven-
ient parking. Call
570-579-0009
947 Garages
COMMERCIAL
GARAGE SPACE
Kingston. 1,250 sf.
Excellent for
mechanic or ship-
ping & receiving.
Separate over
head and entrance
doors. Gas Heat.
Easy Access.
$450 + security &
references.
570-706-5628
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
950 Half Doubles
ASHLEY
2 bedroom. Wall/
wall carpet. Yard.
Off-street parking.
$525 + utilities.
Security, lease. No
Pets. Section 8
approved.
Call (570) 288-7753
EDWARDSVILLE
Half double, wall to
wall carpeting,
washer / dryer
hookup, off street
parking. $525 +
security. No pets.
570-288-6773
EDWARDSVILLE
V Very nice 4 room, ery nice 4 room,
vi nyl si ded hal f vi nyl si ded hal f
doubl e. Al l new doubl e. Al l new
wall to wall car wall to wall car- -
peti ng. Al l wi n peti ng. Al l wi n- -
dows thermal dows thermal
pane -90% are pane -90% are
brand new brand new. Large . Large
spacious updated spacious updated
ki tchen. Bath ki tchen. Bath
updated. All win updated. All win- -
dows have new dows have new
mini blinds & new mini blinds & new
curtain rods. Steel curtain rods. Steel
insulated front & insulated front &
rear doors wi th rear doors wi th
dead bolts + storm dead bolts + storm
doors. Economical doors. Economical
gas heat. Y gas heat. Your our
own dri veway own dri veway. .
Short distance to Short distance to
bus stop & shop bus stop & shop- -
pi ng. Lease. No pi ng. Lease. No
pets. $550/month pets. $550/month
+ utilities. + utilities.
570-650-3803 570-650-3803
FORTY FORT
26 BEDFORD ST.
1ST FLOOR
1 bedroom. $550
month. Off street
parking. Washer &
dryer included. Fire-
place in living room,
Tenant pays gas &
electric.
570-287-5090
HANOVER TOWNSHIP
2 bedroom. $490
/month + utilities &
security. Back
yard & off street
parking. No pets.
570-262-1021
HANOVER TOWNSHIP
3 bedroom, living
room, dining room,
kitchen. Off street
parking. Stove,
fridge, washer &
dryer. Gas heat.
Modernized. No
dogs. $625 + utili-
ties. 570-417-5441
950 Half Doubles
HANOVER TOWNSHIP
3 Regina St
Newly renovated 3
bedroom, 1 bath. All
appliances inc. Off
street parking. $750
+ utilities. Sewage &
trash included. 1st
month + security.
Credit & back-
ground check. Call
570-765-4474
Sell your own home!
Place an ad HERE
570-829-7130
HANOVER TWP.
Completely remod-
eled 2 bedroom, 1
bath, wall to wall
carpet. Stove,
washer/dryer hook
up. Off street park-
ing. $750/month +
first, last & security.
Includes water,
sewer & trash. No
pets. No smoking.
References & credit
check.
570-824-3223
269-519-2634
Leave Message
950 Half Doubles
KINGSTON
Half Double- 5 bed-
room, 1 Bath $875
with discount. All new
carpet, dishwasher,
garbage disposal,
appliances, Large
Kitchen, new cabi-
nets, Washer/dryer
hookup, Double
Security. Facebook
us @ BOVO Rentals
570-328-9984
Say it HERE
in the Classifieds!
570-829-7130
KINGST KINGSTON ON
LUZERNE AREA
3 bedrooms,
2 bathrooms,
WARMING FIRE-
PLACE, nice neigh-
borhood, off street,
stove,refrigerator,
dishwasher, garage
storage. NO PETS,
$585 per month
plus utilities. Call
732-892-0996
[email protected]
950 Half Doubles
OLD FORGE
146 North Main St.
Half Double. 6
rooms. Refurbished
- new paint, kitchen
& stove, bath tub,
carpets & vinyl floor.
Extra clean. Large
private yard. Cellar.
$700 + utilities. Call
570-687-1953
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
PARSONS
2 or 3 bedroom,
w/w carpet, stove,
fridge incl. Off street
parking, oil heat.
w/d hookup, quiet
area. No Pets. All
utilities by tenant
except sewer and
recycling. $600/mo
plus security
570-709-1868
950 Half Doubles
PITTSTON
PARSONAGE STREET
3 bedroom, 1.5
bath, living room,
dining room, eat-in
kitchen. Washer/
dryer hook-up. Wall
to wall carpet. Full
basement. $650 per
month + utilities &
security deposit. Off
street parking.
Call (570) 406-8741
PLAINS
2 bedroom. $530
per month + utilities.
1 month deposit
required. No Pets.
570-262-6893
To place your
ad call...829-7130
PLAINS
2 bedrooms, mod-
ern half double.
New wall to wall
carpet. Nice neigh-
borhood. No pets.
$550/ month + utili-
ties. (570) 592-7723
(570) 606-9149
950 Half Doubles
PLAINS PLAINS
Available immedi-
ately, 3 bedrooms, 1
bath room, wash-
er/dryer hookup,
off-street parking,
no pets, No Smok-
ers, $500.00 +
Security/per month,
plus utilities.
570-239-6586
Looking for that
special place
called home?
Classified will address
Your needs.
Open the door
with classified!
PLYMOUTH
3 bedrooms. Newly
remodeled with
yard & large patio.
Washer & dryer
hookup, wall to wall
carpeting, $650 +
utilities, 1st month
rent & deposit
required. Section 8
O.K. 570-779-3965
950 Half Doubles
WEST PITTSTON
913 WYOMING AVE
1/2 double. 3 bed-
rooms, 2 baths, fin-
ished basement,
walk up attic, wash-
er/dryer hookup. Off
street parking with
carport. Close to
shopping center &
high school. No
smoking. $700
month + security.
Pets negotiable.
570-237-5394
WEST WYOMING
Small 2 bedroom, 1
bath, off street
parking. Gas heat.
Non-smokers.
ABSOLUTELY
NO PETS!
$575/per month,
plus security
Call (570)609-5300
953Houses for Rent
ASHLEY
Available immedi-
ately, 4 bedrooms, 2
bath rooms, off-
street parking, no
pets, No Smokers,
$575 + Security/per
month, plus utilities.
Call 570-239-6586
DALLAS
2 bedroom. Off
street parking.
$600/month + first
month & security.
Call (570) 690-0233
after 6pm
DALLAS
Restored Dallas Cen-
tury Home. Excellent
location. 3 bedroom,
1.5 bath with appli-
ances. 2 car garage.
Security & refer-
ences. $1,500/month
+ utilities. No smok-
ing. No Pets. Not
Section 8 Approved.
570-261-5161
PAGE 16D THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
STORM
DAMAGE?
Roong Siding Structural Repairs
and Replacement Drywall
Interior Damage
We Will Work With Your
Insurance Company!
MICHAEL DOMBROSKI CONSTRUCTION
570-406-5128 / 570-406-9682
25 Years Experience
Prompt Reliable Professional
ALL TYPES OF REMODELING
PA#031715 Fully Insured
412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale
412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale
7
0
2
7
0
0
197 West End Road, Wilkes-Barre, PA 18706
825-7577
YOMING VALLEY
AUTO SALES INC. AA
SERVICED, INSPECTED, & WARRANTIED
FINANCING AVAILABLE
www.WyomingValleyAutos.com
MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM
30
TH
ANNIVERSARY SALE!
07 COBALT60K....................
$
7,995
07 AVEO84K............................
$
6,995
03 VW JETTAGL .............
$
6,595
04 SATURN VUE..........
$
5,475
00 VW BEETLE74K......
$
5,250
03 FOCUS...............................
$
4,995
02 WINDSTAR85K..........
$
4,995
00 IMPREZAAWD.............
$
4,995
04 CAVALIER.....................
$
4,450
99 ALTIMA.............................
$
3,495
You r Frie n d In
The Ca r B u s in e s s
P a rtia lL is ting !
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
3 M on th P ow e rtra in W a rra n ty
OVER 50 VEH ICL ES IN S TOCK !
2003 C HEV Y M O NTE C A RLO SS
Only 75K M iles,Leather,S unroof ..............$9,995
2004 C HEV Y M O NTE C A RLO SS
Only 68K M iles ...............................$9,995
2002 O LDS BRA V A DA SUV
A llW heelD rive,Leather,99K M iles ............$8,995
2002 DO DG E STRA TUS 4DR SEDA N
Only 85K M iles ...............................$5,995
2001 O LDS INTRIG UE
S unroof,Only 80K M iles ......................$5,495
1999 PO NTIA C G RA ND A M 4DR SDN
Only 80K M iles ...............................$4,995
1995 JEEP G RA ND C HERO KEE 4X4
Excellent C ondition ...........................$3,495
953Houses for Rent
HARVEYS LAKE
2 bedroom home in
quiet neighborhood,
$650/month + utili-
ties, security/lease.
570-477-3882
HARVEYS LAKE
2 bedroom Stone
House. All kitchen
appliances. Use of
dock. 1 year lease.
Renters insurance.
No smoking.
$1,400/month + utili-
ties. (570) 696-5417
HARVEYS LAKE
Lakefront
3 bedroom, 1 bath.
Fully furnished.
$1,000 monthly, +
utilities. Call
570-283-2022
HARVEYS LAKE
Living room, din-
ing room, home
office/family room,
3 bedrooms, 2 full
baths, screened
porch. Fresh
paint, new wall/
wall carpet. Appli-
ances plus wash-
er/dryer hookup.
Garbage, water,
sewer, snowplow-
ing included. No
Pets. Non-Smok-
ing. Security, ref-
erences & credit
report. 1st & last
months rent.
$1,025 monthly.
570-639-5761
HUNLOCK CREEK
Exceptional 2 story
18 acre wooded pri-
vate setting. 4 bed-
rooms, 3.5 baths, 2
car attached
garage, large deck,
full basement. Pets
considered. Utilities
by tenant. Showing
by appointment.
$1,500/month
Call Dale for details
570-256-3343
Five Mountains
Realty
570-542-2141
Wanna make a
speedy sale? Place
your ad today 570-
829-7130.
KINGSTON
Executive Home
well maintained.
Newly remodeled.
Front porch,
foyer entrance,
hardwood floors,
living room, dining
room, 4 bedrooms,
2 fireplaces, 2.5
baths, granite
kitchen, sun room,
basement with
plenty of storage,
no pets, no smok-
ing. $1,500/month
570-472-1110
Nice Area
953Houses for Rent
MOUNTAIN TOP
316 Cedar Manor Dr
(Bow Creek Manor)
4 bedroom, 3 1/2
bath 2 story on
almost 1 acre. Mas-
ter bedroom suite.
Two family rooms.
Two fireplaces.
Office/den. Large
deck overlooking a
private wooded
yard. 3 car garage.
Rent for $1,800 per
month with the
option to buy.
MLS #11-3286
Please Call
Bob Kopec
Humford Realty
570-822-5126
MOUNTAIN TOP
Rent to Own - Lease
Option Purchase 5
bedroom 2 bath 3
story older home.
Completely remod-
eled in + out! $1500
month with $500
month applied
toward purchase.
$245K up to 5 yrs.
[email protected]
Collect cash, not dust!
Clean out your
basement, garage
or attic and call the
Classified depart-
ment today at 570-
829-7130!
MOUNTAINTOP
3 bedrooms, 1 bath.
Positively no smok-
ing in or on property.
No pets.
570-474-6821
MOUNTAINTOP
3 bedrooms, 2
baths, large eat in
kitchen. Garage.
Huge deck over-
looks woods.
Washer/dryer, dish-
washer, fridge,
sewer & water
included. Credit
check. $1,200 +
security, No pets,
no smoking. Proof
of income required.
Call (570) 709-1288
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
NOXEN
3 bedroom, 1 1/2
bath, & big yard.
$950/ month +
security & 1st
month, No pets.
Ask for Bob or Jean
570-477-3599
953Houses for Rent
PLYMOUTH
417 E. Main St
Ready November 1
2 story, 3 bedroom
house for rent. New
Kitchen with stove,
dishwasher, washer
dryer hookup. Small
back yard and deck.
$675 + utilities &
security. Call
570-270-3139
WEST PITTSTON
Completely remod-
eled 2 story, 2 bed-
room home with
new kitchen, 1.5
bath rooms, all new
stainless steel appli-
ances, including
refrigerator, stove,
dishwasher, washer
and dryer, new car-
pet tile and hard-
wood, paved drive-
way, electric heat,
nice yard and
neighborhood. No
pets $1200. month
$2000 security.
570-479-6722
WILKES-BARRE
2 bedroom, wall to
wall carpeting, small
backyard, washer &
dryer hookup, no
pets. $525 + securi-
ty & utilities. Call
570-822-7657
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
WILKES-BARRE
64 Terrace Street
Single Family Home
5 bedrooms. Fully
furnished. Every-
thing from A-Z.
Ready to move in.
$800/month
Call (570) 200-5678
WILKES-BARRE
Adorable 2 bed-
room. Huge base-
ment. Off street
parking. Large back
yard. No pets. $585
+ references, secu-
rity & utilities.
570-766-1881
WILKES-BARRE
Clean, 2 bedroom,
duplex. Stove,
hookups, parking,
yard. No pets/no
smoking.
$495 + utilities.
Call 570-868-4444
WILKES-BARRE
Riverside Dr.
Stately brick, 4
bedroom, 2 bath &
2 half bath home.
Hardwood floors,
spacious rooms,
beautiful patio,
all appliances
included. $1,600/
month + utilities.
MLS#11-2579
570-696-3801
Call Margy
570-696-0891
953Houses for Rent
DO YOU HAVE
A HOUSE YOU
WOULD BE
INTERESTED IN
LEASING?
I have immediate
qualified renters
looking for Homes
or Townhomes to
lease. Please email
me at:
[email protected]
asap for details and
areas, including
Drums, Conyngham
or Mountaintop
areas.
Dee Fields,
Associate Broker
570-788-7511
LEWITH & FREEMAN RE, INC
959 Mobile Homes
DORRANCE TWP
MOUNTAIN TOP
Trailer rental. 2 bed-
room, 2 baths. $400
+ utilities & security.
Call 570-855-2405
PITTSTON
QUIET COVE MOBILE
HOME PARK
3 bedrooms, 1 bath,
living room, eat-in
kitchen, new car-
peting. Good condi-
tion. Includes wash-
er & dryer. $600
per month + utilities
& security deposit.
OPTION TO BUY!
Call (570) 406-8741
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!
SHAVERTOWN
Many mobile home
lots available at
Echo Valley Estates.
Bring your new or
used mobile home
in, never worry
about flooding again.
Cleanest & most
beautiful mobile
home park in the
area. Please con-
tact the office to set
up an appointment
to view available
lots. 570-200-5046
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
WYOMING
Sleeping room.
Private entrance &
bath. Non smoking,
drug free. Subject
to background
check. $100 weekly
+ $200 security.
570-239-3997
Leave Message!
965 Roommate
Wanted
WILKES-BARRE
Wanted to share 3
bedroom apart-
ment. Non smoker.
$275/month, all util-
ities included.
570-793-7856
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
974 Wanted to Rent
Real Estate
MOUNTAIN TOP AREA
LOOKING TO LEASE
2 CAR GARAGE
FOR STORING
VEHICLES AND
WORK AREA.
Call 570-899-1896
Anonymous Tip Line
1-888-796-5519
Luzerne County Sheriffs Ofce
WENEED
YOURHELP!
Selling
Your Car?
Well run your ad until
the vehicle is sold.
Call Classied
829-7130
ad until
s sold.
eedd
00

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