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PENS 3, ICECAPS 2

In the third period of


Tuesdays Game 5 be-
tween the Wilkes-Barre/
Scranton Penguins and
St. Johns IceCaps, Simon
Despres inadvertently hit
his goaltender, Brad
Thiessen, in the face with
his stick. Two OT periods
later, Despres hit the back
of the St. Johns net. 1B
DEVILS POSSESS
SERIES WITH WIN
Bryce Salvador, David
Clarkson and Ilya Ko-
valchuk
scored to
lift New
Jersey to a
3-1 Game 5
win over
Philadelphia on Tues-
day, sending the Devils
into the Eastern Confer-
ence Finals. 1B
SPORTS
SHOWCASE
AMERICAN LEAGUE
YANKEES 5
RAYS 3
IL BASEBALL
CLIPPERS1
SWB YANKS 0
GAME1
SWB YANKS 4
CLIPPERS 3
GAME 2
7
5
5
2
2
2
$
20
VOUCHER
FOR ONLY
$
10
C M Y K
6 09815 10011
WILKES-BARRE, PA WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 2012 50
timesleader.com
The Times Leader
Wild Things author Maurice
Sendak dies at age 83.
NATION & WORLD, 5A
A different view
of childhood
Churchs annual food
festival begins today.
TASTE, 1C
A taste for all
things Greek
INSIDE
A NEWS
Obituaries 2A, 8A
Local 3A
Nation & World 5A
Editorials 11A
B SPORTS: 1B
BUSINESS: 7B
Weather 8B
C TASTE: 1C
Birthdays 4C
Television 8C
Crossword/Horoscope 9C
D CLASSIFIED
WEATHER
Adrienne Wren. Partial
clearing, showers. High 73,
low 56. Details, Page 8B
SCRANTON Afederal judge
on Tuesday ordered a Holy Re-
deemer football coach charged
with producing child pornogra-
phy to remain incarcerated
pending a hearing Thursday to
determine whether he will be
entitled to bail.
Joseph Ostrowski, 28, was ar-
rested Monday by agents with
the FBI. A criminal complaint
says Ostrowski enticed a minor
to performsexually explicit con-
duct, which he
then transmit-
ted via some
sort of elec-
tronic device.
He also is
charged with
using an elec-
tronic device
to transmit a threat to ruin a per-
sons reputation with the intent
of extorting money or things of
other value from them, accord-
ing to the complaint.
The complaint, whichinitially
was filed under seal, was re-
leased Tuesday. It does not spec-
ify what type of device such as
a computer or cellphone Os-
trowski allegedly used to trans-
mit the image or images or his
hometown. It also does not iden-
tify the person whom Ostrowski
allegedly enticed or the person
whom he allegedly threatened.
An affidavit in support of the
complaint, which contains more
detail, remainedsealedTuesday.
Ostrowski was arraigned on
the charges Tuesday before U.S.
District Judge Thomas Blewitt,
who ordered himheld pending a
detention hearing set for 3 p.m.
Thursday. Apreliminaryhearing
is set 9:30 a.m. May 23.
Ostrowskis attorneys, Frank
Nocito and Philip Gelso, de-
clined to comment on the case.
Ostrowski has been suspend-
ed from his post at Holy Re-
deemer, where he was the head
coach of the varsity football
team. Scranton Diocese Spokes-
manBill Genellosaidinanemail
that Ostrowskis only job at the
high school was football coach.
He alsosaidper diocesanpol-
icy, a backgroundcheckwas con-
ducted. Mr. Ostrowski had the
Complaint: Ostrowski enticed minor, transmitted threat
By TERRIE MORGAN-BESECKER
and MARK GUYDISH
[email protected]
[email protected]
See OSTROWSKI, Page 12A
Ostrowski
The greater Wilkes-Barre/
Scranton region has experienced
a 39 percent decline in manufac-
turing jobs over the past decade,
but the industry is still a larger
part of the employment market
here than in all but 15 of the 100
largest metropolitan areas na-
tionwide.
And while the sector still em-
ploys one out of every10 workers
locally, well ahead of the national
rate, manufacturing wages are
among the lowest in the nation, a
status explained by the type of
manufacturing done here. The
report finds more than one-third
of manufacturingworkers nation-
ally engaged in moderately high
tech or very high-tech work,
with its accompanying high sala-
ries. In this area only about 16
percent of jobs fit those defini-
tions.
The details are includedina re-
port released today by the Brook-
ings Institution Metropolitan
Policy Program that compares
the state of manufacturing in the
nations top 100 metro areas by
population.
Penny Cannella, president of
the regions economic develop-
ment conduit Penns Northeast,
said the reports findings do not
surprise her but noted while
manufacturing jobs have fallen
over the past fewyears, the indus-
try is by no means losing its grip
on the region.
Walter Niziolek, senior vice
president of global manufactur-
ing for Exeter-based electric
scooter maker Pride Mobility,
said manufacturing is still strong
but technology and the economy
have played roles in limiting
AVERAGE MANUFACTURING
WAGES, LOCAL VS. NATIONAL
$56,745
$55,936
$44,958
$36,709
80
77
96
96
Very high-tech manufacturing
Moderately high-tech manufacturing
All manufacturing
All jobs
Scranton/Wilkes-Barre metro area
National average
Scranton/Wilkes-Barre national ranking
$0 $40,000 $80,000
Source: Brookings Metropolitan Policy Program
Mark Guydish/The Times Leader
Factory
jobs drop
39% in
decade
Manufacturing still bigger
part of job market than in all
but 15 largest metro areas.
By ANDREWM. SEDER
[email protected]
See JOBS, Page 12A
Aforensic audit of invoices submit-
tedbyattorneyAngelaStevensreveals
she overbilled the county nearly
$60,000 for legal work, but she does
not owe Luzerne County any money
because the overcharges have already
beenrepaid.
The audit, performed by Howard
Silverstone of Forensic Resolutions
Inc. of New Jersey, determined Ste-
vens is actually
owed about
$20,000 because of
certain credits she
is due. Her attor-
ney, MarkRaspanti,
toldcountyofficials
she will not seek to
collect themoney.
Theaudit,whichwaspaidforbySte-
vens, confirmed findings of a Times
LeaderinvestigationthatrevealedSte-
vens duplicated charges in bills she
submitted for representing parents in
Children and Youth cases from June
2010toFebruary2012.
Silverstone concluded errors were
made, but he found no evidence to in-
dicate Stevens attempted to inten-
tionallyconcealinformationfromthe
county. Heblamedpartof theproblem
on the manner in which bills were
processed in her office, but explana-
tions for other billing issues he identi-
fiedareless clear.
Stevens contracted with Silver-
stonesfirmtoconductaforensicaudit
todetermineif thefindings of aTimes
Leader investigation reported in Feb-
ruarywereaccurate.
The newspaper cited evidence that
showed Stevens repeatedly charged
thecountytravel timeforeachindivid-
ual fee petition she delivered to the
Audit: County overbilled $60,000
Stevens did not
attempt to
intentionally
conceal
information,
says accountant
who did audit.
By TERRIE MORGAN-BESECKER
[email protected]
See STEVENS, Page 2A
Stevens
H
ARRISBURG Aldona Smith
stood in the center of the state
Capitol buildingrotundaandde-
liveredamessagethatreverberatedloud
andclear.
Do not meddle with
Medicaid!the94-year-old
Wilkes-Barre resident
pleaded.
While she may have
been preaching to the
choir of about 500 nurs-
ing home employees and
advocates surrounding
herandapplauding, herremarksweredi-
rected at legislators and Gov. Tom Cor-
bett, whose 2012-13 budget proposal in-
cludes a 4 percent cut to Medicaid
Area woman takes on Pa. Medicaid cuts
DON CAREY/THE TIMES LEADER
Aldona Smith, 94, of Wilkes-Barre, beams Tuesday as she gets a round of applause froma large group of nursing
home workers who gathered in Harrisburg to ask legislators to restore a 4 percent cut in Medicaid funding.
Twisting arms
By STEVE MOCARSKY
[email protected]
DON CAREY/THE TIMES LEADER
94 year old Aldona Smith speaks to a large group of nursing home workers
that gathered at the Rotunda in the capitol Harrisburg to ask legislators to
restore the 4 percent Medicaid cut in the proposed state budget.
See SMITH, Page 12A
IN-
SIDE: Bud-
get plan
would
restore
millions,
6A.
K
PAGE 2A WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 2012 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
Alba, Mary
Arnold, Thomas
Bethel, Willard
Coyle, Marlene
DiRisio, Joseph
Forster, David
Francik, Patricia
Gaines, Leon
Hoover, Floyd
Koznetski, Joseph
Matta, Florence
Mittner, Michele
Puscavage, Paul Sr.
Ruduski, Mary
Ruz, Alan
Schuette, Douglas
Shambe, Loretta
Valentine, Eugene
Vosburg, Julie
OBITUARIES
Page 2A, 8A
AN INCORRECT PHONE
number was published in a
health brief for Allied Services
Integrated Health Systems
free arthritis screenings on
Page 1C in Tuesdays Times
Leader. The correct phone
number is 1-888-734-2272.
BUILDING
TRUST
The Times Leader strives to
correct errors, clarify stories
and update them promptly.
Corrections will appear in this
spot. If you have information
to help us correct an inaccu-
racy or cover an issue more
thoroughly, call the newsroom
at 829-7242.
HARRISBURG No player
matched all five winning
numbers drawn in Tuesdays
Pennsylvania Cash 5
game, so the jackpot will be
worth $225,000.
Lottery officials said 46
players matched four num-
bers and won $306.50 each.
LOTTERY
MIDDAY DRAWING
DAILY NUMBER 2-3-8
BIG 4 7-0-8-5
QUINTO 7-5-8-6-7
8-0-2-2-6 DOUBLE
DRAW
TREASURE HUNT
2-10-12-22-23
NIGHTLY DRAWING
DAILY NUMBER 4-6-0
BIG 4 3-7-9-7
QUINTO 6-2-1-5-5
CASH 5
18-27-28-32-33
MEGA MILLIONS
02-06-08-18-51
MEGA BALL 19
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ALLISON UHRIN
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MICHAEL PRAZMA
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Published daily by:
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Issue No. 2012-130
L
oretta Shambe of Dupont passed
away Sunday, May 6, 2012, in
Wesley Village, Jenkins Township.
Born on December 1, 1915, in Du-
pont, she was a daughter of the late
Martin and Barbara Juszczyk.
Loretta is survived by daughter,
Rosalie Shambe, Wilkes-Barre;
grandson Anthony Conyers; grand-
daughter, Lisa Borick, and her hus-
band, Chris; great-grandsons, Sa-
muel and John Borick.
She is preceded in death by her
husband, John Shambe; daughter,
Carol Surma; grandson Samuel
John Blaze Surma; three sisters and
five brothers.
The funeral will be at the conve-
nience of the family from the Mam-
ary-Durkin Funeral Service, 59 Par-
rish St., Wilkes-Barre.
Loretta Shambe
May 6, 2012
M
ary J. Alba, 90, of West Pittston,
passed away Saturday, May 5,
2012, at her daughters homeinDale
City, Va., where she resided for the
past year.
BorninPittstononNovember18,
1921, she was a daughter of the late
Sam and Rosalie (Capizi) Ferrara.
She attended Pittston City
Schools and was employed in the
garment industry with Josephine
Fashions inPittston, until her retire-
ment in 1986.
She was a lifelong member of Im-
maculate Conception Roman Ca-
tholic Church in West Pittston.
Mary was preceded in death by
her parents, two sisters, and four
brothers.
Surviving her is only daughter,
Charlotte, and her husband Craig
Mosser, Dale City, Va. Also surviv-
ing are grandchildren, John Martin
and his wife, Heather, Ashburn, Va.,
Susan Lee Tantau and her husband
Blake, Bristow, Va., Jason Mosser
and Chris Mosser, Woodbridge, Va.,
Amanda Mosser Seay and her hus-
band Thomas, Dale City, Va. Also
surviving are four great-grandchil-
dren, Jordan Mikols Martin, John
Wilson Martin, Jake Martin Tantau,
and William Blake Tantau.
Funeral services are entrusted
toGrazianoFuneral Home Inc., Pitt-
ston Township. Viewing hours will
be held Thursday from5 to 7 p.m. in
the funeral home. Funeral services
will begin at the funeral home on
Friday at 9 a.m. AMass of Christian
Burial will be held from Corpus
Christi Parish (Immaculate Con-
ception Church) West Pittston, at
9:30 a.m. on Friday. Interment ser-
vices will followat Mt. Olivet Ceme-
tery, Carverton.
In lieu of flowers, memorial con-
tributions may be made in Marys
name to Capital Caring, 2900 Teles-
tar Court, Falls Church, Va.
This hospice service cared lov-
ingly for Mary and her family the
past two weeks. Youmay submit on-
line condolences as well as find di-
rections to the funeral home by vis-
iting www.grazianofuneralhome-
.com.
Mary J. Alba
May 5, 2012
E
ugene J. (Geno) Valentine, 91, a
native of GlenLyon, andformer-
ly of Redford and Detroit, Mich.,
passed away Saturday morning,
May 5, 2012, at the home of his son
and daughter-in-lawin Morganville,
N.J.
Born on April 9, 1921, in Glen
Lyon, hewas asonof thelateAchille
and Agnes Berrardi Valentine. He
attended the Newport Township
schools.
He and his late wife, the former
Delia L. Pavia, a native of Plains
Township, resided in Detroit from
1954 to 1975 and later Redford,
Mich., until moving to live with
their son and daughter-in-law, Leo-
nard and Maggie Valentine, in De-
cember 2008.
He served with the U.S. Army
during World War II, stationed at
Fort Knox, Ky.
Mr. Valentine hadbeenemployed
by the Ford Motor Company as a
quality-control inspector at the Wix-
om, Mich., assembly plant, retiring
in 1991 after 33 years of service.
He was a member of St. Marys of
Redford Church, Detroit, Mich., for
many years; and was a member of
the United Auto Workers Union.
He was an avid sports fan and es-
pecially liked watching football,
baseball and basketball.
He was preceded in death by his
wife of 64 years, Delia L. Pavia Val-
entine, on June 7, 2009; brothers,
Londo and Greno (Chick) Valen-
tine; and sister Florence Pavia.
Surviving are sons, Eugene Val-
entine, Bloomfield Hills, Mich.; Le-
onard Valentine and his wife, Mag-
gie, with whom he resided in Mor-
ganville, N.J.; grandchildren, Antho-
ny Valentine (Katie), Christina
Johnson (Nick), Julianne Valentine,
Jane Valentine, Gina Crouch
(Matt), Jaclyn Denton (Blake), Leo
and Steven Valentine; great-grand-
daughter, Hannah Jane Valentine;
great-grandsons, Christian Denton,
Phineas Crouch and Bradley Den-
ton; sister Ida Valentine, Nanticoke;
and many nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will begin
Saturday at 9:30 a.m. fromDa-
vis-Dinelli Funeral Home, 170 E.
BroadSt., Nanticoke, witha Mass of
Christian Burial at 10 a.m. in St.
Faustina Kowalska Parish/St. Ma-
rys Church, 1030 S. Hanover St.,
Nanticoke, with the Rev. James
Nash as celebrant. Interment will
followinItalianIndependent Ceme-
tery, Glen Lyon. Visitation will be
Saturday from 8:30 to 9:30 a.m. at
the funeral home.
Contributions in his memory
may be made tothe AmericanHeart
Association., 613 Baltimore Drive,
Suite 3, Wilkes-Barre, PA18702.
Eugene J. Valentine
May 5, 2012
P
atricia (Chutch) McCarthy
Francik, 75, of Plains, passed
away peacefully May 7, 2012, sur-
rounded by her loving family at
home. Born in Wilkes-Barre on
March 21, 1937, she was the daugh-
ter of the late Eugene and Eleanor
Kelly McCarthy. She attended
Wilkes-Barre Area Schools. She is
preceded in death by her husband,
Albert Francik, who died June 9,
2009; brothers, Jackie, Frances, Eu-
gene Jr., Edward, Joseph, and Tho-
mas; sisters, Dolores, Eleanor Cas-
tellino.
Family always came first to Patri-
cia throughout her life. She will for-
ever be remembered as a loving
mother, grandmother, great grand-
mother, sister, aunt and friend. She
will be deeply missed by all those
who knew and loved her. She also
enjoyed camping with family and
friends.
Surviving are daughter, Colleen
Williams and husband, John, Du-
pont; grandchildren, Jeffrey Wil-
liams and fiance Amie, John Mi-
chael Williams, LisaKrantzandhus-
band David; great grandchildren,
David and Alexis Krantz; sister, El-
izabeth Monk, Naples, Fla.; Helena
Chalker, Plains; Catherine Burns,
Swoyersville; and numerous nieces,
nephews and friends.
She was an active member of
American Legion, Pittston, where
she was a10-year member of the La-
dies Auxiliary, Polish Club, Plains;
Lithuanian Club, Inkerman; and
Italian Citizens Club, Hudson.
Friends may call Thursday from
4 to 7 p.m. at the Yeosock Funeral
Home, 40 S. Main St., Plains.
In lieu of flowers, the family asks
that donations be made to Hospice
Community Care in Patricias name
or charity of donors choice. Patri-
cias family wishes to extend their
heartfelt thanks andgratitude tothe
nurses andstaff of Hospice Commu-
nity Care for the kind and compas-
sionatecaretheybestoweduponPa-
tricia during her time of illness.
Patricia Francik
May 7, 2012
Julie Vosburg,
53, passed away
Monday, May 7,
2012, surrounded
by her loving
family and
friends after a
courageous 4-
year battle with
metastatic breast cancer.
Alifelong resident of Moosic, Julie
was a daughter of Julius andRoseMa-
rie Janesko. She was a member of Ho-
ly Mother of Sorrows PNCC in Du-
pont andagraduateof RiversideHigh
School.
Julie was a beautiful, loving moth-
er, daughter, sister, grandmother,
aunt and friend. Her greatest joy in
life was her family, who she was de-
voted to and loved dearly. Always
courageous, she was an inspiration to
everyone who met her, and put every-
ones needs above her own. She lived
life tothe fullest andrefusedtolet her
disease define her life. Julie enjoyed
volunteering with Living Beyond
Breast Cancer at their conferences
and never missed one since her ill-
ness. She will be greatly missed by all
the lives she has touched.
Julies family would like to thank
Fox Chase Cancer Center, Dr. Patel
and Dr. Goldstein for their compas-
sionate care of Julie throughout her
illness. The family would also like to
thank Father Zbigniew Dawid for his
continued prayers, support and
comfort to Julie and her family.
Surviving are three sons, Gary
Jr., his wife Nicole, Doylestown;
Scott and his companion, Megan,
Perkasie; and Christopher and his
wife, Cherry, Dickson City. Also
surviving are her sisters, Janet
Thomas and husband John, Ben-
ton; Jackie Conforti and husband
Angelo, OldForge; granddaughter,
Brynn Vosburg, who she adored;
nieces and nephews, Michael Woz-
niak, Tiffany Gray, Tara and Jerry
Walsh; godchildren, Angelo Jr. and
Gianna Conforti who she loved
dearly and thought of as her own;
her best friend, Linda Polt; aunts,
an uncle, cousins, many friends
and her dog, Bella.
Funeral services will be held
Friday at 9:30 a.m. from Kiesinger
Funeral Services Inc., 255 McAl-
pine St., Duryea, with Mass at 10
a.m. in Holy Mother of Sorrows
PNNC, 212 Wyoming Ave., Du-
pont.
Interment will be at Holy Moth-
er of Sorrows Cemetery. Visitation
will be held on Thursday May10th
from2to4p.m. and7to9p.m. The
family requests memorial dona-
tions be made in memory of Julie
to Holy Mother of Sorrows PNCC.
Online condolences may be
made to www.kiesingerfuneralser-
vices.com.
Julie Vosburg
May 7, 2012
T
homas Richard Arnold, Ph.D.,
78, of Wilkes-Barre, died Satur-
day, May 5, 2012, in the Hospice
Care of the VNA.
Born August 5, 1933 in Wilkes-
Barre, he was a son of the late Harry
M. and Margaret C. Mellet Arnold.
A graduate of E.L. Meyers High
School, he attended Ithaca College
before studying for his Bachelor of
Arts in Economics from Kings Col-
lege. He earnedhis Masters of Art in
Economics from the University of
Notre Dame and Ph.D. in Econom-
ics fromtheMaxwell School at Syra-
cuse University.
Tom worked in Washington,
D.C., for a fewyears as aneconomist
for the EasternConference of Team-
sters before returning to Wilkes-
Barre. In 1960, he began a 40-year
career teachingeconomics at Kings
College, taking brief hiatuses to
complete his doctorate and post-
doctoral studies at the University of
Chicago.
At Kings, he served as depart-
ment chair, was namedthe Herve A.
LeBlanc Distinguished Service Pro-
fessor for three years andearnedthe
Christi Regis Award for 20 years of
service to the college.
Tom had a life-long love for mu-
sic, whichledto his founding of The
Troubadours while in high school.
He was a member of Delta Epsilon
Sigma, Kings College Chapter, and
the Pennsylvania Economic Associ-
ation, which he served as President
in 1995 to 1996.
His sister, Peggy Ann, preceded
him in death.
He will be greatly missed by his
wife, the former Justine Pendel; sis-
ters-in-law, Mary Pendel and Louise
andher husband, Daniel Shea, of Ar-
lington, Va.; six nieces and neph-
ews; many great-nieces and great-
nephews; and friends.
A celebration of Toms Life will
be held Monday with visitation be-
ginning at 9:30 a.m., followedby Fu-
neral Mass at 10:30 a.m. in the
Church of Saint Mary of the Immac-
ulate Conception, 130 S. Washing-
ton St., in Wilkes-Barre.
Toms family expresses their
thanks and appreciation to the nurs-
ing staff at Hospice Care of the VNA
for the care, concern and treatment
they administered. Memorial dona-
tions arepreferredandmaybemade
to Hospice Care of the VNA, 486
Northampton Street, Edwardsville,
18704-4599. Arrangements are by
McLaughlins The Family Funeral
Service. Permanent messages and
memories can be shared with Toms
familyat www.celebratehislife.com.
Thomas R. Arnold
May 5, 2012
More Obituaries, Page 8A
M
ichele Ann Mittner, 36, of
Greenwich Township, Berks
County, diedMay5, 2012, as there-
sult of an automobile accident.
Born in Erie, she was the daugh-
ter of GretchenM. (Besler); wifeof
Rodney D. Barrell, Kutztown, and
the late Edward W. Mittner. She
was a member of St. Pauls United
Church of Christ Church, Kutz-
town. Michele was a1994graduate
of KutztownArea HighSchool and
earned a Bachelor of Social Work
fromCollege Misericordia, Dallas,
in 2004. She was employed by Sig-
nature Family Services, Blandon,
for the past six months, last work-
ingApril 13, 2012. Prior tothat, she
was an Aftercare Counselor for the
Caron Foundation, Wernersville,
for four years and an Adolescent
Counselor for Mercy Hospital,
Wilkes-Barre. Michele always
found time to play with her son,
Ryan, anything from baseball and
basketball to building Lego pro-
jects, and just simply going for
walks together. She worked hard
to be a kind and thoughtful person
who would help anyone in need.
Survivors are her mother and
stepfather; son, RyanM. TarretoII,
at home; sister, Lindsay G.
(Straub), wife of Micah J. George,
and nephew Dexter J. George, all
of Mohrsville; half-brother, Mi-
chael Mittner, Erie; maternal
grandmother, Dolores (Wedzik),
wife of Thomas Finch, Harbor-
creek, Erie Co.; paternal grand-
mother, Clara (Milina) Mittner,
Erie; step-grandmother, Helen M.
(Ketner) Barrell, Kutztown, and
stepbrothers, Kyle S., husband of
Kelley (Zaffuto) Barrell, Kutz-
town, and Michael D., husband of
Karissa (Kutz) Barrell, Lansdale,
Montgomery County. She is also
survived by many aunts, uncles
and cousins.
Memorial services will be held
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. from the
Ludwick Funeral Home, 333
Greenwich Street, Kutztown, with
the Rev. John W. Davies officiat-
ing. Interment will be private at
the convenience of the family.
Friends may call Thursday 5:30 to
7:30 p.m. in the funeral home.
The family requests contribu-
tions be made to the Michele A.
Mittner Memorial Fund for Son
Ryan M. Tarreto II, c/o Ludwick
Funeral Homes Inc., P.O. Box 292,
Kutztown, PA 19530-0292. Online
condolences may be recorded at
www.ludwickfh.com.
Michele Ann
Mittner
May 5, 2012
courthouse, even though the pet-
itions were delivered in a single
trip.
The newspaper also questioned
excessive charges for certain days,
including instances in which Ste-
vens claimedtohave workedmore
than 24 hours in a single day. Ste-
venspreviouslyadmittedshemade
mistakes, but maintained the er-
rors were causedby anoversight.
Stevens was among18attorneys
whowere paid$55per hour by the
county torepresent parents whose
children are in the custody of Chil-
dren and Youth Services. The au-
dit, which reviewed only Stevens
bills, confirmed she overcharged
the county for time she spent on
cases, as well as time spent prepar-
ing anddelivering her bills.
According to Silverstone, Ste-
vens chargedatotal of $212,629for
work she performed over the 21-
month period. Silverstone deter-
minedthat amount includeddupli-
catebillsthattotaled1,073.5hours,
or $59,042.50
The most significant overbilling
involvedthepreparationanddeliv-
ery of fee petitions. Silverstone
identified1,619 billing entries that
included duplicate charges total-
ing just less than 1,001 hours, or
$55,049.50.
Silverstone also identified 126
bills inwhichStevens overcharged
for the number of hours of case-
work, which includes such things
as meetingwithclients andattend-
ing court hearings. That equaled
72.6 hours, or $3,993.
Silverstone concluded Stevens
does not have to pay any money to
the county, however, because of
credits she is due for checks she re-
ceived, but never cashed, and for
work she performed for which she
has not beenpaid.
Silverstone determined Stevens
was due a credit of $59,576, which
included $28,255 for work for
which she was not paid, and
$31,321fortwochecksshereceived
fromthe county, but never cashed.
Thosecheckshavesincebeenvoid-
ed.
HisanalysisdeterminedStevens
was owed $153,586.77 (the
$212,629.27billedlessovercharges
of$59,042.50). Thetotalamountof
county money Stevens actually re-
ceived and deposited into her
firms account was $132,953.22,
leaving a balance of $20,633.55
that is owedto her.
In a letter to county officials,
Raspanti saidshewill not seekpay-
ment of that money. He also noted
she has also spent about $37,000
for the Silverstone audit.
The audit concluded that, al-
thoughtherewereduplicatecharg-
es, the invoices appear to correctly
portray the services Stevens per-
formed and there was no evidence
that Stevens or her staff intention-
ally concealed information from
the county.
As to what caused the billing er-
rors, Silverstone pointed to an ac-
counting issue that may have con-
tributed to some of the billing is-
sues.
Regarding cases that included
excessive casework hours, Silver-
stone noted he found several in-
stances in which Stevens billed for
11 hours or more on a single day,
and 44 instances in which more
than11hours were charged for bill
preparationanddelivery.
He said that was partly because
employees in Stevens office
workedonthe cases, inadditionto
her. Whenthe informationwas en-
teredintothebillingsystem, it was
entered under her name only,
which indicated she performed all
the work when in fact it was done
by several people.
Thereport doesnot clearlyartic-
ulate possible explanations for
overcharges for other casework
STEVENS
Continued fromPage 1A
See STEVENS, Page 9A
C M Y K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 2012 PAGE 3A
LOCAL
timesleader.com
FORTY FORT Elementary science
has come a long way since the days of the
baking soda-and-vinegar volcano.
Students at Wyoming Seminary Lower
Schools Science Research Night on Tues-
day showed their parents and classmates
howtotrackacitys carbonfootprint using
Apple iPads, programbattery-powered ro-
bots and engineer a better Gameboy.
Call it science fair 2.0.
The event gave the elementary schools
students the opportunity to showoff what
theyd learned hands-on through group
science projects, and the 13 members of
the schools eighth-grade Science Re-
search Group a chance to exhibit what
theyd learned through individual experi-
ments.
Its a presentation-portfolio way, which
for a science curriculum is an important
way, to collaborate in groups and demon-
strate mastery of material through teach-
ing, said Jill Carrick, chair of the schools
science department.
Many displays and experiments made
use of the latest technology to enhance
learning.
Seventh-graders LiamGilroy and Julien
Simons, both of Kingston, explained how
they plotted forested zones in urban areas
on iPads using Google maps technology
and cross-referenced that information
against known pollution levels.
We learnedthat cities witha lot of trees
have cleaner air, and also that most major
cities have extremely polluted air, Liam
said.
Josiah Cottle of Center Moreland, Av-
ery Conynghamof Shavertown and two of
their seventh-grade classmates built and
programmed a Lego NXTMindstorms ro-
bot they named Clyde, who replies to
sound input by moving.
I hadnoidea what I was doingfromthe
beginning, but I learned a lot about sen-
sors, Avery said. Hands-onexperience is
like the best way to learn.
Others showed an interest in bringing
old-school technology up to date.
Morgan Ravenscroft, an eighth-grade
Science Research Group member, studied
the sound output method and hardware of
the original Nintendo Gameboy and
thought he could improve the devices au-
dio quality.
He soldered a 1/8-inch headphone jack
into one device and an RCA jack into an-
other, and found he was able to do just
that.
I had always liked taking things apart,
hesaid. AndI hadnt withaGameboy, and
I thought I could make the sound jack bet-
ter.
Eighth-grader Satyasaran Sreeharike-
san of Wilkes-Barre earned a perfect score
to take home the top prize at the regional
Pennsylvania Junior Academy of Sciences
regional conference for an experiment he
designed and conducted to determine the
effect of color on memory loss.
He showed his classmates black and
white images projected on four different
color backgrounds in a controlled setting
and tested their recall.
He learned something he hadnt expect-
ed that students recalled images with a
blue background more readily than others
but trial and error is what science is all
about. Satyasaransaidhe later learnedthe
color blue light has a stimulating effect on
the brain that works even through closed
eyelids.
I learned it after, he said. Because I
wanted to research my conclusion and
find out why.
Students show off what theyve learned
AIMEE DILGER/THE TIMES LEADER
Alex Cuddy extracts the iron from Total Cereal using a magnet after heating and boiling it as part of Wyoming Seminary Low-
er Schools Science Research Night on Tuesday.
Science fair 2.0
By MATT HUGHES
[email protected]
SCRANTON
Medical expert for Musto
A federal judge on Tuesday ap-
pointed a medical
expert to determine
whether retired
state Sen. Raphael
Musto is medically
fit to stand trial on
corruption charges.
Federal prosecu-
tors in April asked
that a medical expert be appointed
to examine Musto based on a report
by a physician submitted by Mustos
attorneys that says he is so ill with
liver disease that the rigors of a trial
could kill him.
Judge A. Richard Caputo on Tues-
day appointed Dr. K. Rajender Red-
dy, a gastroenterologist at the Uni-
versity of Pennsylvanias medical
school, to review Mustos medical
records and examine Musto if neces-
sary to determine whether his liver
disease has impeded his ability to
prepare for his defense or withstand
the rigors of trial.
Reddy will charge $500 per hour
for the review.
Musto was indicted by a grand
jury in November 2010 on charges of
honest services fraud, corrupt receipt
of a reward for official action and
false statements. Prosecutors allege
Musto accepted money and gifts
from a local businessman -- identified
by Mustos attorneys as real estate
developer Robert Mericle -- for using
his influence as a senator to assist
Mericles projects.
He was originally scheduled to
stand trial in November 2011, but the
trial was twice continued due to
health reasons.
WILKES-BARRE
Grant will prep teachers
Wilkes University has received a
$548,000 grant from the state De-
partment of Education to prepare
teachers to become qualified to teach
middle school science, mathematics,
social studies or English/language
arts/reading.
Four courses, or 12 graduate cred-
its, will be offered tuition-free to
eligible Pennsylvania teachers start-
ing this summer. Coursework is
conducted complete-
ly online.
Beginning in fall
2013, Pennsylvania
will require all mid-
dle level teachers to be certified in
grades four through eight. Educators
must complete a program of study
and pass the corresponding test to
obtain the certification to teach
middle school. Testing alone will not
satisfy the certification requirement.
The Wilkes program is planning to
meet this new requirement and pre-
pare teachers for the Praxis II tests
for certification in these content
areas.
This is the second supplemental
grant Wilkes has been awarded through
the PDE Eligible Partnerships Postsec-
ondary Grant Program. Previous
awards, totaling more than $4 million,
have benefited more than 350 teachers.
Classes start June 4. For an eligi-
bility application, contact Kelly
Clisham at Kelly.clish-
[email protected], call 800-WILKES-U,
ext. 4241, or contact program direc-
tor Mary Kropiewnicki at mary.kro-
[email protected].
WILKES-BARRE TWP
Idols to stop at Mohegan
American Idol Live returns this
summer for another tour to show-
case this seasons talented top 10
finalists. The tour stops at Mohegan
Sun Arena in Wilkes-Barre Township
on Sept. 6 at 7 p.m.
The tour will give fans the opportu-
nity to be up close and personal with
Idol finalists Colton Dixon, DeAndre
Brackensick, Elise Testone, Erika Van
Pelt, Heejun Han, Hollie Cavanagh,
Jessica Sanchez, Joshua Ledet, Phillip
Phillips and Skylar Laine.
The American Idol season finale
will air on FOX May 23, but the fan
favorites will continue on with the
2012 live tour. Past tours have fea-
tured stars such as Kelly Clarkson,
Carrie Underwood, David Cook, Kris
Allen, Adam Lambert, Lee DeWyze,
Scotty McCreery and others.
Tickets are $29.50, $45 and $65,
and go on sale Friday at 10 a.m. via
the Pennstar Box Office at Mohegan
Sun Arena, online at www.Amer-
icanIdol.com, www.ticketmaster.com
and www.aeglive.com, or charge by
phone at (800) 745-3000.
N E W S I N B R I E F
Musto
NANTICOKEWhenRotar-
ian Paul OMalia asked Greater
Nanticoke Area High School
students if they knowsomeone
who does drugs or where to get
them, nearly every hand in the
auditorium went up Tuesday.
The teens familiarity with
drug abuse is why a Luzerne
County Correctional Facility
inmate was brought to school
to explain how drugs derailed
her life. She told the students
she hoped they would learn
from her mistakes by making
better decisions.
Its not worth it, Shannon,
31, said about her lifetime
struggle with drugs that land-
ed her in jail. As soon as I took
that first pill, it was all over.
The presentation by the in-
mate, identified only as Shan-
non, was part of the Straight-
Up Drug and Alcohol Aware-
ness Programsponsoredby the
Greater Nanticoke Area Rotary
Club and its Interact Club at
the school.
OMalia, district governor of
the Rotary Clubs, and founder
of Straight Up, told students
Inmate shares cautionary tale about drugs at GNA
By SHEENA DELAZIO
[email protected]
See DRUGS, Page 9A
BILL TARUTIS/FOR THE TIMES LEADER
LCCF inmate Shannon, left, is seen with Irene Carey, GNA
Rotary Club president; GNA Interact Club VP Tyler Fisher;
club President Jake Bevan; and Principal John Gorham.
A majority of Luzerne Coun-
ty Council rejected a controver-
sial proposed detective con-
tract Tuesday, whichmeans the
pay and benefits package will
be decided through binding ar-
bitration.
County Manager Robert
Lawton recommended passage
of the proposed contract.
Council members Rick Mo-
relli, Stephen A. Urban, Ste-
phen J. Urban, Edward Bromin-
ski, Harry Haas and Rick Wil-
liams voted against the propos-
al.
Minorityapproval votes were
cast by Jim Bobeck, Tim
McGinley, Elaine Maddon Cur-
ry, Linda McClosky Houck and
Eugene Kelleher.
Council members who sup-
ported the proposal said they
feared the county would end up
paying more through arbitra-
tion. Several also said they re-
spectedtheprofessional county
managers opinion.
Some of the opposing coun-
cil members said they appre-
ciate Lawtons work, but be-
lieve the proposal doesnt pro-
vide enough concessions.
Detectives would give up pay
raises this year and receive 2
percent hikes the remaining
four years of the contract.
Length-of-service bonuses
and other perks would be re-
duced for detectives hired in
the future, but not existing
ones.
The expired contracts mix of
raises, bonuses, overtime and
other benefits allowed three of
the 10 detectives to each be
paid more than $105,000 last
year.
Lawton said the proposal
could save $250,000 to
$617,000 a year if detectives
could be enticed to leave
through the offering of added
health care extensions and ex-
panded unused leave buy-back
options.
However, council members
who oppose the plan pointed
out savings hinge on detectives
leaving, and theres no guaran-
tee any will go.
Several citizens urged coun-
cil to vote no.
Haas said he came to the
meeting expecting to vote yes
but decided the proposal didnt
provide enough savings. He
said he wrestled with the deci-
sion because the outcome of ar-
bitration is unknown.
Binding arbitration is an op-
tion for unions unable to strike.
The arbitration board consists
County
detective
contract
rejected
Councils vote means pay
and benefits package will go
to binding arbitration.
By JENNIFER LEARN-ANDES
[email protected]
See DETECTIVE, Page 4A
WILKES-BARRE Two city tax-
payers association members again
brought up two contentious issues se-
curity systems at officials homes and
public access to spending records.
Frank Sorick, president of the associ-
ation, and Linda Urban, parliamentar-
ian, grilled council on difficulties in get-
ting documents fromthe city and on the
security systems installed in the homes
of Mayor Tom Leighton and former ad-
ministrator J.J. Murphy.
Urban said taxpayers demand full
payment from Leighton and Murphy
for the systems $14,789.05.
The taxpayers of Wilkes-Barre do not
reside in either of (their) homes. There-
fore, we are not liable for the cost of the
purchases, nor do we benefit from said
purchases, Urban said.
She said residents/taxpayers
shouldnt unknowingly be forced to fi-
nance the purchases.
CityAdministrator MarieMcCormick
said the issue was brought up in the past
and an independent investigation by law
enforcement found the purchases were
allowable and legal.
Council members Tony George and
Maureen Lavelle said after the meeting
that they asked about the expenses and
were told the same thing that they
were properly done and allowed by the
city charter.
Sorick expressed frustration over de-
lays heandother taxpayers haveencoun-
tered when trying to get documents
from the city clerks office. Sorick asked
council to explain the citys policy on
credit card usage and the need to submit
receipts.
Council Chairman Mike Merritt said
after the meeting that council always
tries to get answers to public concerns.
Sometimes we have to rely on the ad-
ministration for answers, he said.
Sometimes the answers are immediate-
ly available. But we ask the administra-
tion to get the answers as soon as pos-
sible.
George asked if council obtained bills
andreceipts fromLAGTowing, the citys
towingcontractor. TimHenry, cityattor-
ney, said the request was made, but Leo
A. Glodzik, owner of the company, has
not produced the receipts.
He will comply, Henrysaid. He said
he is compiling themand will turn them
over to the city soon.
One topic that did not come up was
the citys plan to lease its parking assets.
Murray Ufberg, authority solicitor, said
that Desman Associates, a parking con-
sulting firm based in Chicago, has been
retained for $5,000 to prepare the Re-
quest for Qualifications. Ufberg said the
RFQs will goout next week the author-
ity board meets Tuesday at noon.
W-B security system bills again decried
Groups representatives demand reimbursement
By BILL OBOYLE
[email protected]
C M Y K
PAGE 4A WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 2012 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
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of a county and union representa-
tive and a neutral representative
selected by those two. Many be-
lieve arbitration favors unions.
Maddon Curry said she will be
pleased if arbitration results in
concessions equal to or greater
than those in the rejected propos-
al. I will be very happy to be
wrong. I just hope I am wrong,
she said.
Council also debated how to
proceed with revising the pro-
posed administrative code,
which is a lengthy blueprint for
executive branch operations re-
quired by the home rule charter.
Some citizens urged council to
give Lawton an opportunity to
submit a revised proposal before
council members tinkered with
the wording. Council members
agreedtoallowLawtontosubmit
proposed amendments but creat-
ed a council subcommittee to
start revising the document.
DETECTIVE
Continued from Page 3A
WASHINGTON Six-term
Indiana Sen. Richard Lugar was
routed by the right flank of his
own Republican Party on Tues-
day night, and North Carolina
voters decided overwhelmingly
to strengthen their states gay
marriage ban a conservative
show of enthusiasm and
strength six months before the
nation chooses between Demo-
cratic President Barack Obama
and GOP foe Mitt Romney.
Romney swept three Republi-
can primaries, moving ever clos-
er to sealing his nomination.
I have no regrets about run-
ning for re-election, even if do-
ing so can be a very daunting
task, the 80-year-old Lugar said
as he conceded to the tea party-
backed GOP opponent who end-
ed his nearly four-decade career
in the Senate. Lugars foe, state
Treasurer Richard Mourdock,
had painted the Republican sen-
ator as too moderate for the con-
servative state.
North Carolinians voted to
amend their state constitution
to define marriage as between
one man and one woman, effec-
tively outlawing gay unions.
Also Tuesday, Democrats
were picking a nominee to chal-
lenge Republican Wisconsin
Gov. Scott Walker in a June re-
call election.
The contests overshadowed
Romneys continued progress
toward the GOP presidential
nomination. He won the GOP
presidential primaries in Indi-
ana, North Carolina and West
Virginia, drawing close to the
1,144 delegates he needs to
clinch the nomination. He was
likely to win 100 or so delegates
of the 288 he still needed.
Even Romney, the former
Massachusetts governor, was es-
sentially ignoring the primaries.
He spent the day campaigning in
Michigan, where he castigated
Obama as an old-school liberal
whose policies would take the
country backward.
The outcomes of Tuesdays
far-flung voting gave clues about
the state of the electorate and
highlighted the political mine-
fields facing both Republican
and Democratic candidates
with the presidential contest
well under way.
In the biggest race of the
night, Lugar lost to state Trea-
surer Mourdock, who will face
Democratic Rep. Joe Donnelly
in the November general elec-
tion.
Lugar loses; N.C. passes gay nuptials ban
By KASIE HUNT
and TOMLoBIANCO
Associated Press
K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 2012 PAGE 5A
N A T I O N & W O R L D
7
5
3
6
9
3
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ATLANTA
Zimmerman gets more time
G
eorge Zimmerman has waived his
right to a speedy trial, arguing to a
Florida court Tuesday that he needs
more time to prepare. The move means
it could be October at the earliest
and likely much later before the
start of his second-degree murder trial.
Zimmerman turned himself in to
authorities on April 11, charged in the
killing of Trayvon Martin, an unarmed
black teenager who was walking in
Zimmermans neighborhood, and
whom Zimmerman considered to be
suspicious.
Zimmerman, 28, was released from
jail after posting $150,000 bond. He
admits he shot Martin, 17, but claims
he did so in self-defense. He has plead-
ed not guilty in court documents, mak-
ing his appearance unnecessary at a
Tuesday arraignment hearing.
WASHINGTON
Report: Schools key to fat
Fighting obesity will require changes
everywhere Americans live, work, play
and learn, says a major new report that
outlines dozens of options from
building more walkable neighborhoods
to zoning limits on fast-food restau-
rants to selling healthier snacks in
sports arenas.
But schools should be a national
focus because thats where children
spend most of their day, eat a lot of
their daily calories and should be
better taught how to eat healthy and
stay fit, the influential Institute of
Medicine said Tuesday.
Among the most controversial of the
recommendations: Communities could
consider a tax on sugary sodas and
offering price breaks for healthier bev-
erage choices.
That prompted outrage from the
American Beverage Association.
The new report offers a roadmap of
the most promising strategies to fight
obesity and argues that the solu-
tions cant be implemented piecemeal.
DAMASCUS, SYRIA
Annan warns of civil war
International envoy Kofi Annan gave
a bleak assessment of the crisis in Syria
on Tuesday, saying violence remains at
unacceptable levels and warning that
his peace plan is the countrys last
chance to avert a disastrous civil war.
Annan insisted there is still hope and
said the presence of U.N. observers has
had a calming effect on the crisis, in
which at least 9,000 people have been
killed since March 2011.
There is a profound concern that
the country could otherwise descend
into full civil war and the implications
of that are frightening, Annan told
reporters in Geneva after briefing a
closed-door session of the U.N. Securi-
ty Council in New York by videoconfer-
ence. The observation mission, he said,
is the only remaining chance to stabi-
lize the country.
CARLISLE, PA.
Trailer full of beer stolen
Somebody is a few thousand limes
away from one big party.
Police in Pennsylvania are searching
for a missing beer trailer loaded with
about 1,800 cases of Corona.
Carlisle police said the trailer was
stolen from a distributor sometime
between Friday and Monday. Corona is
a popular Mexican beer, and Saturday
marked Cinco de Mayo.
Anyone with information on the
trailers whereabouts is asked to call
the Carlisle police. The missing trailer
is registered to Metcalf Trucking and
has Maine tags.
I N B R I E F
AP PHOTO
Protesting slave labor in Brazil
Rea Inu Bake, from the Indian tribe
Hunikui, takes part in a protest Tues-
day against slave labor in Brasilia,
Brazil. The nations lower house is
expected to vote on a constitutional
amendment that would punish land-
holders found to be using slave labor.
The bill would allow the government
to confiscate all property of those
found to be using slave labor, among
other penalties.
WASHINGTON The CIA had al-
Qaida fooled from the beginning.
Last month, U.S. intelligence learned
that al-Qaidas Yemen branch hoped to
launcha spectacular attack using a new,
nearly undetectable bomb aboard an
airliner boundfor America, officials say.
But the man the terrorists were
counting on to carry out the attack was
actually working for the CIA and Saudi
intelligence, U.S. and Yemeni officials
told The Associated Press on Tuesday.
The dramatic sting operation thwart-
ed the attack before it had a chance to
succeed.
It was the latest
misfire for al-Qaida,
which has repeatedly
comeclosetodetonat-
ing a bomb aboard an
airliner. For the Unit-
edState, it was a victo-
ry that delivered the
bomb intact to U.S. intelligence.
The officials spoke to the AP on con-
ditionof anonymity. The cooperationof
the would-be bomber was first reported
Tuesday by The Los Angeles Times.
The FBI is still analyzing the explo-
sive, which was intended to be con-
cealed in a passengers underwear. Offi-
cials said it was an upgrade over the
bomb that failed to detonate on board
an airplane over Detroit on Christmas
2009. This newbombcontainednomet-
al and used a chemical lead azide
that was to be a detonator in a nearly
successful 2010 plot to attack cargo
planes, officials said.
Security procedures at U.S. airports
remained unchanged Tuesday, a reflec-
tionof boththe U.S. confidence inits se-
curity systems and a recognition that
the government cant realistically ex-
pect travelers to endure much more. In-
creased costs and delays to airlines and
shipping companies could have a global
economic impact, too.
John Brennan, President Barack Oba-
mas counterterrorism adviser, said
Tuesday the discovery shows al-Qaida
remains a threat to U.S. security a year
after bin Ladens assassination. And he
attributed the breakthrough to very
close cooperation with our internation-
al partners.
Were continuing to investigate who
might have been associated with the
construction of it as well as plans to car-
ry out an attack, he said. And so were
confident that this device and any indi-
vidual that might have beendesignedto
use it are nolonger a threat tothe Amer-
ican people.
Officials: Bomber CIA informant
No plans yet to change airport security
The Associated Press
Brennan
HARRISBURG The alleged
victims of the Penn State child sex-
ual abuse scandal are finding there
isnt much in their pasts that the
defense isnt trying to find out. Jer-
ry Sanduskys defense team wants
to know their
IQs, how well
theydidinschool
and even their
medical histo-
ries.
In a series of
discovery re-
quests made to
the Attorney
Generals Office in recent months,
Sandusky lawyer Joe Amendola
has sought school transcripts,
medical records going back to
birth, Internet search histories,
Facebook account details, employ-
ment-related documents and cell-
phone and Twitter records.
Prosecutors have turned over
some records, dont have others
and argued that many requests are
not proper under state lawa de-
termination that will ultimately be
uptothepresidingjudge, JohnCle-
land.
Lawyers for Sanduskys alleged
victims are critical of Amendolas
tactics, withoneaccusinghimof a
despicable act of cowardice.
Thequestionof howmuchinfor-
mation the defense is entitled to
will bethesubject of apretrial hear-
ing today.
Credibility of witnesses and the
reliability of their recall will likely
be pivotal issues in Sanduskys up-
coming criminal trial, with allega-
tions that go back in some cases
well over a decade.
On Monday, prosecutors said
they had misdated by a year one of
theallegedcrimes, anencounter in
which an assistant coach said he
saw Sandusky attack a naked boy
in the shower.
That disclosure prompted law-
yers in a parallel criminal case
that of two Penn State administra-
tors accused of not reporting sus-
pected abuse to say the charge
should be dismissed because the
statute of limitations has expired.
Meanwhile, for Penn State foot-
ball assistant Mike McQueary filed
a notice of a lawsuit basedonwhis-
tleblower protections Tuesday in
Centre County. The filing was first
reported by the Centre Daily
Times.
McQuearywasagraduateassist-
ant adecadeago, whenhereported
witnessingthe allegedshower inci-
dent incident to Joe Paterno.
Sandusky
defense
exploring
accusers
Lawyer seeking school,
medical records, Internet,
cellphone, Twitter info.
By MARK SCOLFORO
Associated Press
Sandusky
WASHINGTON The po-
litical battle over President
Barack Obamas plan to keep
student loan interest rates
from skyrocketing escalated
as Senate Republicans
blocked a Democratic pro-
posal to tax wealthier earners
to pay for it.
Republicans stopped the
effort with a filibuster, even
as some in the GOP view this
as a politically risky move at a
time when middle-class fam-
ilies continue to struggle to
afford college. Rates for 7 mil-
lion new undergraduate stu-
dent loans are set to double to
6.8 percent on July 1 if Con-
gress fails to act.
The vote was 52-45, failing
to reach the 60-vote thresh-
old needed to overcome the
GOP filibuster. All Republi-
cans voting opposed the ef-
fort, except Sen. Olympia
Snowe of Maine, who voted
present. Democrats voted to
advance the proposal.
Sen. Mitch McConnell of
Kentucky, the Republican
leader, said the standoff
could be resolved easily if
Obama would negotiate an al-
ternative plan. Republicans
back a House-passed propos-
al that would gut a public
health and prevention fund in
Obamas health care law to
pay the costs of keeping gov-
ernment-backed student loan
rates low a non-starter for
Senate Democrats.
Democrats have tapped the
public health fund in the past
but oppose the GOP plan to
eliminate it entirely to pay
the $6 billion costs of extend-
ing lowloan rates for another
year.
The GOP proposal was on-
ly narrowly approved in the
House as dozens of Republi-
cans voted against it, many
because they do not believe
the federal government
should be in the loan busi-
ness.
GOP blocks proposal to keep student loan rates low
By LISA MASCARO
Tribune Washington Bureau
NEWYORKMaurice Sendak didnt
think of himself as a childrens author,
but as anauthor who toldthe truthabout
childhood.
I like interesting people and kids are
really interesting people, he explained
to The Associated Press last fall. And if
you didnt paint them in little blue, pink
and yellow, its even more interesting.
Sendak, who died early Tuesday in
Danbury, Conn., at age 83, four days after
suffering a stroke, revolutionized chil-
drens books and how we think about
childhood simply by leaving in what so
many writers before had excluded. Dick
and Jane were no match for his naughty
Max. Monstrous creatures were devised
from his studio, but no more frightening
than the grownups in his stories or the
cloud of the Holocaust that darkened his
every page.
Fromtheir earliest years children live
on familiar terms with disrupting emo-
tions fear and anxiety are an intrinsic
part of their everyday lives, they contin-
ually cope with frustrations as best they
can, he said upon receiving the Calde-
cott Medal in 1964 for Where the Wild
Things Are, his signature book. And it
is through fantasy that children achieve
catharsis. It is the best means they have
for taming wild things.
He received the Hans Christian Ander-
son award in 1970 and a Laura Ingalls
Wilder medal in1983. President Bill Clin-
ton awarded Sendak a National Medal of
the Arts in 1996 and in 2009 President
Obama read Where the Wild Things
Are for the Easter Egg Roll.
Communities attempted to ban him,
but his books sold millions of copies and
his most curmudgeonly persona became
as much a part of his legend as Where
the Wild Things Are, a hit movie in
2009. His stories were less about the kids
he knew never had them, he was hap-
py to say than the kid he used to be.
The son of Polish immigrants, he was
born in1928 in a Jewish neighborhood in
Brooklyn. He was an outsider at birth, as
Christians nearby would remind him,
throwingdirt androcks as he left Hebrew
school. The kidnapping and murder of
Charles Lindberghs baby son terrified
him for years.
Wild Things author Maurice Sendak dies
AP FILE PHOTOS
Childrens book author Maurice Sendak is interviewed in September 2011 at his home in Ridgefield, Conn. He died Tuesday.
A different view
By HILLEL ITALIE
AP National Writer
Sendak checks proofs of art for a ma-
jor advertising campaign in 1988.
C M Y K
PAGE 6A WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 2012 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
N E W S
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HARRISBURG Pennsyl-
vanias state-supported univer-
sities, struggling public
schools, equine industry, hos-
pitals, nursing homes and peo-
ple who depend on county-run
social services all would bene-
fit from a state Senate Repub-
lican budget plan that divvies
up about $900 million in newly
anticipated tax revenue.
The $27.7 billion spending
proposal, which would avoid
many of the cuts proposed by
Gov. Tom Corbett, won unani-
mous approval from the Sen-
ate Appropriations Committee
on Tuesday, the first such bi-
partisan vote in recent memo-
ry. It was scheduled for a vote
today by the full Senate.
Meanwhile, lawmakers say
theyve secured commitments
from the presidents of 18 state-
supported universities, includ-
ing Penn State, Temple and
Pitt, to keep 2012-13 tuition in-
creases at or below the rate of
inflation if lawmakers wipe
out Corbetts proposal to cut
20 percent $230 million
combined from their annual
share of taxpayer aid.
Overall, the Senates propos-
al for the 2012-13 fiscal year is
almost 2 percent above the
$27.2 billion in Corbetts Feb-
ruary proposal, as well as the
amount approved for spending
this year. Still, with federal
stimulus money expired and
the state still recovering from
recession, it would spend less
than the three previous fiscal
years.
It would maintain Corbetts
proposal to provide a $275 mil-
lion business tax cut, elimi-
nate a $150 million temporary
cash assistance program for
poor adults and leave intact
the lions share of cuts in pub-
lic school aid that Republicans
approved in the current bud-
get.
Democrats, who tried un-
successfully in the Appropri-
ations Committee to insert an-
other nearly $250 million to
undo cuts to child care, social
services and the cash assist-
ance program, nevertheless
voted for the bill.
Theres still significant
numbers of people who still
need the state to help them
and were still going to advo-
cate for them, said Philadel-
phia Sen. Vincent Hughes, the
committees ranking Demo-
crat. Clearly, theres a whole
category of folks who are suf-
fering in the commonwealth of
Pennsylvania because of their
issues, because of the reces-
sion were having, and weve
got to figure out how to re-
spond to it.
The Corbett administration,
which issued a much more
conservative proposal in Feb-
ruary, was cool to the Senates
proposal, suggesting that it
would set a reckless spending
course given the expected
growth of costs for public em-
ployee pensions, debt pay-
ments and other mandated ex-
penses.
The bill also will need ap-
proval from the Republican-
controlled House of Represen-
tatives, where lawmakers are
just beginning to scrutinize
the Senates product. A
spokesman for the House Re-
publican leadership said they
shared the same priorities of
first restoring money to educa-
tion and social services.
With Democrats outvoted in
both chambers, the end ap-
pears near for the cash assist-
ance program, which advo-
cates say is the sole income
source for 68,000 people strug-
gling to get back on their feet
from disability, domestic vio-
lence or addiction.
Eliminating General Assist-
ance will immediately in-
crease homelessness and the
need for other, more costly ser-
vices, warned Michael Froeh-
lich, a staff lawyer for Commu-
nity Legal Services in Philadel-
phia.
Joan L. Benso, president and
CEO of the Harrisburg-based
Pennsylvania Partnerships for
Children, said the Senates
budget bill makes some impor-
tant improvement in aid for
early childhood education, but
she also pointed out that mil-
lions of dollars in cuts senators
are proposing would gut a pro-
gram that helps child-care op-
erators provide high-quality
education programs.
The Republican bill would
restore $84 million for county-
run human services leaving
intact a 10 percent cut of $84
million and it would restore
$100 million for public
schools, half of it for a block
grant program that aids full-
day kindergarten and half for a
yet-to-be-determined group of
distressed public schools.
Tens of millions would go to
undo proposed cuts by Corbett
to hospitals and nursing
homes for the cost of caring for
Medicaid enrollees, although
hospitals and nursing homes
would still have to absorb a 2
percent cut in Medicaid reim-
bursements.
But Ivonne Bucher, Pennsyl-
vania state director of the
AARP, complained that the
Senate hadnt added any mon-
ey to help seniors get the kind
of long-term care that would
help them stay in their homes
or community homes at a low-
er price than it costs to move
into a nursing home.
The Senates budget plan al-
so would scuttle a plan by Cor-
bett to transfer $72 million to
other programs including
agricultural fairs and the Uni-
versity of Pennsylvanias veter-
inary school from a pot of
casino gambling money that is
divvied up by the horse racing
industry, and it would undo
Corbetts attempt to cap the
amount of sales-tax money
that retailers are allowed to
keep if they turn over the reve-
nue to the state on time.
Pa. budget bill advances
Senate GOP plan would
restore millions for schools,
colleges and social services.
By MARC LEVY
Associated Press
HARRISBURG A Pennsyl-
vania House panel stamped its
approval Tuesday on proposed
mandatory prison terms for fe-
lons who possess firearms, while
an annual gun-rights rally at the
Capitol drew a smaller-than-usu-
al crowd.
The House Judiciary Commit-
tee voted 21-3 to send to the
House floor a bill to set a mini-
mumfive-year prison termfor fe-
lons caught possessing firearms
andtoimpose minimums of upto
25 years for repeat violent offend-
ers under the states three
strikes law. Thereis currentlyno
mandatory minimum sentence.
The bills sponsor, Republican
Rep. Todd Stephens, shrugged
off one panelists concerns about
minimum sentences exacerbat-
ing the problem of prison crowd-
ing. He said the people covered
by the bill are repeat offenders.
These are the guys that we build
prisons for, said Stephens.
Stephens admitted some of-
fenders could avoid the mini-
mum sentence through plea bar-
gains if they cooperate with pros-
ecutors, but said the threat alone
is extra leverage for prosecutors.
The legislation is supported by
the gun-violence prevention
groupCeaseFirePA, whichcalls it
a step in the right direction, as
well as Rep. Daryl Metcalfe, one
of the Legislatures most outspo-
ken gun-rights advocates.
If a criminal uses a gun, they
ought to have the hammer of jus-
tice brought down on their head
pretty severely, said Metcalfe, R-
Butler, who helped organize
Tuesdays Capitol rally.
Only about 150 people attend-
ed the relatively low-key event.
They applauded lawmakers who
took turns criticizing the states
instant-checksystemfor prospec-
tive gun buyers and other re-
quirements they viewas obstruc-
tions to their Second Amend-
ment right to bear arms.
Gun-rights rally
in Pa. attracts
small turnout
By PETER JACKSON
Associated Press
C M Y K
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WEST PITTSTON Accus-
tomed to helping others, the Sal-
vation Army on Luzerne Avenue
found itself in need in Septem-
ber after 8 feet of Susquehanna
River water ruined cartons of
food, clothing and Christmas
toys purchased for children in
need.
With its mission of helping in-
dividuals and families for the ho-
liday season jeopardized, Maj.
Sheryl Hershey said two of her
most loyal supporters once again
offered help.
Michael and Sandy Insalaco,
brothers who made their marks
in the business world, donated
space in a building on Main
Street in Pittston for the Salva-
tion Army to use.
They are always there when
we need them, Hershey said of
the Insalaco brothers. Because
of them, we were able to get
ready for the holidays and ser-
vice our families.
The Salvation Army will hon-
or Michael andSandyInsalacoat
a dinner Thursday 100 Years
of Doing the Most Good at St.
Anthony Church, 28 Memorial
St., Exeter. Hershey said the
brothers were chosen for the
award for all their work within
the community as well as their
work with The Salvation Army.
Michael Insalaco is the Advi-
sory Council chair and is con-
stantly doing and providing all
he can to The Salvation Army
and the programs we offer, Her-
sheysaid. SandyInsalacoalsois
constantly providing and doing
all he can for The Salvation Ar-
my. He has given of his time by
arranging for a number of dona-
tions for The Salvation Army,
like the use of the building dur-
ing the flood of 2011.
Hershey said the recognition
is well-deserved. We are very
honoredtohave themas a part of
our family and very honored to
be able to present themwith the
Community Service Award, she
said.
The SalvationArmy openedin
Pittston on Feb. 29, 1912. It
moved to its current West Pitt-
ston location in 1949.
Hershey said more than 3,500
individuals, 825 families and
3,500 children are being served
at the West Pittston location.
She said the number of people in
need grows each year.
We lost everything in Sep-
tember, Hershey said. Luckily
the Salvation Army has good in-
surance. But we needed help fast
andMichael andSandy provided
us space to assure our families
were taken care of for the holi-
days. We had to buy food, cloth-
ing and toys all the childrens
toys that we had just purchased
were ruined.
The dinner is one of several
events planned through the
weekend to celebrate the found-
ing of a Pittston area Salvation
Army office 100 years ago.
Army to honor its cavalry
AIMEE DILGER/THE TIMES LEADER
Maj. Sheryl Hershey is excited to be celebrating the West Pitt-
stons Salvation Armys 100 Years of Doing the Most Good.
Events are scheduled
through the weekend to
celebrate 100 years of a
Salvation Army presence
in the Pittston area.
Today: 6 p.m., outdoor
concert (weather permit-
ting) by the Music Pro-
grams of The Salvation
Army; refreshments will
follow.
Thursday: 6 p.m., com-
munity dinner, St. Antho-
nys Church in Exeter;
honoring Michael and
Sandy Insalaco.
Friday: 4-8 p.m., block
party/ open house.
Games, food, items to
purchase, tours of the
renovated facility.
Saturday: 1-4 p.m., block
party/ open house contin-
ues.
Sunday: 11 a.m., special
Mothers Day church service.
All are welcome.
Tickets for the dinner are
available by contacting
Maj. Sheryl Hershey,
commanding officer in
West Pittston, at 655-
5947 or via email at
www.salvationarmy-
usaeast.org. Luzerne
County President Judge
Thomas Burke will be the
featured speaker.
CELEBRATING
A CENTURY
By BILL OBOYLE
[email protected]
HANOVER TWP. A man ac-
cused of driving a stolen all-terrain
vehicle with an exotic animal in
March waived his right to a pre-
liminary hearing before District
Judge Joseph Halesey on Tuesday.
Jeffrey Arnott Jr., 24, of Preston
Street, Ashley, waived charges of
receiving stolen property and
flight to avoid apprehension to
Luzerne County Court.
Ashley police withdrew three
counts of disorderly conduct, two
counts of resisting arrest and one
count each of harassment and
public drunkenness against Arnott
Jr.
Police allege Arnott was driving
a stolen ATV with a Java Macaque
monkey named Tyler on the back
in the Careys Patch section of the
borough on March 19. Arnott
abandoned the ATV and ran into
woods near the Huber Breaker.
The monkey ran off in another
direction and was captured by its
owner, Jeffrey Arnott Sr.
Arnott Sr. was cited by the
Pennsylvania Game Commission
with possessing an exotic animal
without a permit. A summary trial
is scheduled on May 22.
The monkey was taken to an
animal sanctuary in Snyder Coun-
ty.
COURT BRIEF
K
PAGE 8A WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 2012 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
O B I T U A R I E S
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In Loving Memory
ANN MARIE
BUTTON
August 7, 1935 - May 9, 2011
An enormous void remains
in my life since the day you left.
If I had a single ower
for every time I think about you,
I could walk forever in my garden.
Love, Charlie
You are sadly missed by
your husband, family , friends,
and countless members
of the community.
LEON GAINES, 87, of Wilkes-
Barre, passed away Monday, May
7, 2012. Born in Wilkes-Barre, he
was a sonof the late Paul andKath-
erine Gottlieb and had attended
Coughlin High School. He was a
World War II veteran, having
served in the U.S. Navy. Leon lived
in New York City for several years
where he worked as a model and
actor. He was preceded in death by
several brothers and sisters. Sur-
viving are brothers, Julian Got-
tlieb, Elmira, N.Y., and Walter Got-
tlieb, Wilkes-Barre; numerous
nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be
held Friday at 11 a.m. from
the Bednarski & Thomas Funeral
Home, 27 Park Ave., Wilkes-Barre.
Friends maycall Friday9a.m. until
the time of service.
JOSEPH J. KOZNETSKI, 79, of
Pensacola, Fla., and Bethlehem,
Pa., passed away Monday, May 7,
2012, in his home in Bethlehem.
Funeral arrangements are
pending fromthe George A. Strish
Inc. Funeral Home, 105 N. Main
St., Ashley.
FLORENCET. MATTA, 84, for-
merly of Frederick Street, Wilkes-
Barre, died Monday, May 7, 2012,
at Wilkes-Barre General Hospital.
Funeral arrangements are
pending fromthe George A. Strish
Inc. Funeral Home, 105 N. Main
Street, Ashley.
MARY RUDUSKI, formerly of
Hanover Section of Nanticoke,
passed away Monday, May 7, 2012,
at Brandywine Hospital, Coates-
ville, Pa.
Funeral arrangements are
pending from the Earl W. Lohman
Funeral Home Inc., 14 W. Green
St., Nanticoke.
ALAN D. RUZ, 52, of Stanton
Street, Wilkes-Barre, passed into
Eternal Life Tuesday, May 8, 2012,
in Commonwealth Hospice at
Saint Lukes Villa, Wilkes-Barre.
He was born May 23, 1959 in Ne-
wark, N.J., to the late Albert J. and
Ana D. Ruz. In addition to his par-
ents, he was preceded in death by
several aunts and uncles. He is sur-
vived by his sister, Carolyn A. Ruz,
Cranford, N.J.; aunt, Rosa Rodri-
guez of Madrid, Spain; and numer-
ous cousins. Alan was well loved
by his neighbors on Stanton
Street, and is remembered for his
generosity and warm heart.
Memorial Funeral Mass will be
conducted Friday at 9 a.m. in Our
Lady of Hope Parish, 40 Park Ave.,
Wilkes-Barre with the Rev. John S.
Terry, pastor, officiating. Inter-
ment will be private andat the con-
venience of the family in New Jer-
sey.
BRAUN Catherine, funeral 9:15
a.m. today in the Lehman Family
Funeral Service Inc., 403 Berwick
St., White Haven. Mass of Chris-
tian Burial at 9:30 a.m. in St.
Patricks Church, White Haven.
Friends may call 8:30 to 9:15 a.m.
today in the funeral home.
BRODY Elizabeth, celebration of
life 9 a.m. Friday in McLaughlins,
142 S. Washington St., Wilkes-
Barre. Services at 10 a.m. in St.
Marys Antiochian Orthodox
Church, Wilkes-Barre. Friends
may call 4 to 8 p.m. Thursday in
the funeral home.
CLEMONS Regina, Mass of Chris-
tian Burial 9:30 a.m. today in St.
Judes Catholic Church, Mountain
Top. Those wishing to attend are
asked to go directly to the
church.
COYLE Marlene, Mass of Christian
Burial 11 a.m. Thursday in St. Leo
the Great Church, 33 Manhattan
St., Ashley. Family will greet
friends 10 a.m. until Mass time in
the vestibule of the church.
FEDEROWICZ Matilda, Memorial
Mass 11 a.m. May 19 in All Saints
Parish, Plymouth.
FILIPPINI Ann, funeral 9 a.m.
Thursday in the Yeosock Funeral
Home, 40 S. Main St., Plains
Township. Mass of Christian
Burial at 9:30 a.m. in Ss. Peter &
Paul Church. Friends may call 4
to 8 p.m. today.
FRANCE Joann, funeral 9 a.m.
today in the Nat & Gawlas Funeral
Home, 89 Park Ave, Wilkes-Barre.
Mass of Christian Burial at 10 a.m.
in St. Frances Cabrini Church,
Carverton.
GOLDEN Nellie, funeral 9:30 a.m.
Thursday in the Simon S. Russin
Funeral Home, 136 Maffett St.,
Plains Township. Requiem Ser-
vices and Divine Liturgy 10 a.m. in
Ss. Peter & Paul Ukrainian Cathol-
ic Church, Wilkes-Barre. Friends
may call 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9
p.m. today in the funeral home.
Parastas at 7:30 p.m.
HAMPSEY Ronald, funeral 11 a.m.
today in the Sheldon Funeral
Home, Main Street, Laceyville.
HENNING Betty, memorial ser-
vices 1 p.m. May 19 in the Russell
Hill United Methodist Church,
Route 6, Tunkhannock.
JONES Martha, visitation 3 to 5
p.m. today in the Trinity Presby-
terian Church, 105 Irem Road,
Dallas.
LEYDEN Veronica, funeral 10 a.m.
today in the George A. Strish Inc.
Funeral Home, 105 N. Main St.,
Ashley. Mass of Christian Burial
at 10:30 a.m. in St. Andrew Parish,
Wilkes-Barre. Family and friends
may call 9 to 10 a.m. today.
MCGEEVER James, celebration of
life 3 p.m. Sunday in the grove at
McGeevers Pond.
MILLER Stella, funeral 10 a.m.
today in the Peter J. Adonizio
Funeral Home, 251 William St.,
Pittston.
PACE Lucy, Memorial Mass 9:30
a.m. today in St. Joseph Marello
Parish (St. Roccos R.C. Church),
Pittston.
PUSCAVAGE Paul Sr., funeral 8
p.m. today in the Metcalfe and
Shaver Funeral home Inc., 504
Wyoming Ave., Wyoming. Friends
may call 5 to 8 p.m. today.
RODGERS Keith, funeral 9:30
a.m. today in the Metcalfe and
Shaver Funeral Home Inc., 504
Wyoming Ave., Wyoming. Mass of
Christian Burial at 10 a.m. in Our
Lady of Sorrows Church of St.
Monicas Parish, West Wyoming.
RORICK Betty, Memorial Liturgy 11
a.m. Saturday in St. Pauls Luth-
eran Church, 474 Yalick Road,
Dallas.
SMITH Lewis, memorial service
4:30 p.m. today in Kiesinger Funeral
Services Inc., 255 McAlpine St.,
Duryea. Friends may call 3 p.m. until
time of service today.
STANZIALE William, funeral 11 a.m.
Thursday in St. Luke Lutheran
Church, Bloomsburg. Friends may call
6 to 8 p.m. today in the Dean W.
Kriner Inc., Funeral Home & Crema-
tion Service, 325 Market St., Blooms-
burg.
STINE Ann, Mass of Christian Burial 11
a.m. Saturday in Grace Church, King-
ston.
STRUCKE Ann Marie, funeral 9:30
a.m. today in Kiesinger Funeral Ser-
vices Inc., 255 McAlpine St., Duryea.
Mass of Christian Burial at 10 a.m. in
Sacred Heart of Jesus Church, Du-
pont.
TANSLEY Judith, Mass of Christian
Burial 10 a.m. today in St. Anns
Basilica, St. Anns St., West Scranton.
Relatives and friends may pay re-
spects 9:30 to 10 a.m. today in the
church.
WHITMAN Diane, funeral 9:15 a.m.
today in Kearney Funeral Home Inc.,
173 E. Green St., Nanticoke. Mass of
Christian Burial at 10 a.m. in St.
Aloysius Church, Wilkes-Barre.
FUNERALS
More Obituaries, Page 2A
F
loyd E. Hoover, 93, formerly of
Idetown, died Sunday, May 6,
2012, at WillowRidgeCenter of Hat-
boro, surrounded by his family.
Floydwas the belovedhusbandof
thelateHelen(Boice) Hoover for 63
years.
Born in Idetown, he was a son of
the late Elmer and Mable (Ide)
Hoover.
Before his retirement, Floyd was
a fork-lift operator for the American
Store Warehouse, Forty Fort, for 38
years. He was a member of the Cen-
tral Pennsylvania Teamsters Union
Local 401.
Floyd enjoyed spending time
working in his garage. He was
known in the community as the go-
to guy to fix lawn mowers.
Floyd was a sports fan. He spent
many Sundays watching NASCAR.
For many years he enjoyed riding
his 1949 Harley-Davidson. Floyd
was a member of the Black Dia-
mond Motorcycle Club. He was es-
pecially proud of the restoration of
his 1936 REO Flying Cloud four-
door sedan.
Floyd is survived by his daughter,
Patsy Long; son-in-law, Dean Long;
three granddaughters, Tricia Long
and her friend, Bob Shaw; Trayci
Parish and her husband, Michael;
Terianne Taggart and her husband,
Michael; three great-grandchildren,
Joshua Long, Logan Parish and Ella
Rose Parish. He also is survived by
his brother, Lester Hoover, and his
wife, Virginia, Idetown; sister, Roxie
Haines, and her husband, the Rev.
David Haines, Quakertown.
Floyd will be deeply missed by
his family and by all who came to
know him at Willow Ridge Center,
particularly his roommate, Arnold
Frank.
Mr. Hooversfuneral will be held
Thursday at 11 a.m. from the Curtis
L. Swanson Funeral Home Inc., cor-
ner of Routes 29 &118, Pikes Creek,
with the Rev. David Haines officiat-
ing. Relatives and friends will be re-
ceived by the family on Thursday
from9:30 a.m. to the time of the ser-
vice at 11a.m. Interment will follow
at Chapel Lawn Memorial Park,
Dallas.
In lieu of flowers, memorial con-
tributions can be made to the resi-
dent activity fund at the Willow
Ridge Center, 3485 Davisville Road,
Hatboro, PA 19040-4220. Online
condolences may be placed at
clswansonfuneralhome.com.
Floyd E. Hoover
May 6, 2012

Paul, we knew you could not live


without your best friend, Dodger.
Its only one month since Dodger
passed and we knew in our hearts
that he was calling you home. He
missed you and you missed him.
Now you both are together for eter-
nity.
Do not shed tears of pain or sor-
row. Shed tears of joy and laughter
because now Im reunited with my
best pal, Dodger.
Paul Puscavage Sr., 46, of Du-
pont, passed away Monday, May 7,
2012, in his home.
Born in Wilkes-Barre, he was a
son of Jacob Puscavage of Edwards-
ville, and the late Beverly Owen
Puscavage.
He was a graduate of Wyoming
Area, class of 1986.
Paul served in the 109th National
Guard, West Pittston. For many
years he was employed at the Com-
mission on Economic Opportunity
and System Source. He was a mem-
ber of the VFW Post 4909, Dupont,
and the Polish American Citizens
Club, Dupont.
Preceding him in death was his
best friend and companion, his dog,
Dodger. They were friends til the
end.
Surviving are his son, Paul Pus-
cavage Jr., Forty-Fort; grandchil-
dren, Marisa Puscavage, Trevor
Winslow and Skyler Jesso; sisters,
Beverly Daniels, Jenkins; Lisa Ce-
rase, Inkerman; brothers, JacobPus-
cavage III, Wilkes-Barre; Keith Pus-
cavage, Edwardsville; several nieces
and nephews.
Funeral services will be held
this evening at 8 p.m. in the
Metcalfe and Shaver Funeral home
Inc., 504 Wyoming Ave., Wyoming,
with the Rev. Jeffery Klansek of the
First Baptist Church of Wyoming of-
ficiating. Interment will be at the
convenience of the family. Friends
may call this evening from 5 to 8
p.m.
Paul Puscavage Sr.
May 7, 2012
D
ouglas R. Schuette, 60, of
Drums, peacefully entered into
eternal rest Tuesday, May 8, 2012, at
his residence, after succumbing to
the end stages of metastatic colon
cancer.
Born on November 15, 1951, in
Brooklyn, N.Y., he was a son of Irm-
gard Bush and the late Herbert
Schuette.
Douglas was raised in Morris
County, N.J. He proudly volun-
teered with the Portland Hook and
Ladder Fire Company, Portland,
Pa., for 20 years.
Doug was a well known Mr. Fix-It
and was talented at getting even the
oldest machines to run. He worked
for many years with Garabed
Plumbing in Hackettstown, N.J.,
andthenusedhis MacGyver like tal-
ents for Bergen Machine.
He was a member of the NRAand
of St. Pauls Lutheran Church,
Mountain Top.
Douglas was a devoted father,
spouse, and friend. He was dedicat-
ed to always being there for friends
and community and would take the
shirt off his back for you.
Douglas was preceded in death,
in addition to his father, by his wife
Mary B. Schuette, whom he was
happily married to for 38 years; and
his sister, Carol.
He is survivedbyhis mother, Irm-
gard; sister, Donna, Powell, Wyo.;
son Robert and his wife, Erica, Ban-
gor, Pa.; daughter, Patricia, and her
husband, Christopher Ryan; grand-
sons, Alan and Ian, Levittown; son
Seanandhis wife, Amy Kinsley; and
granddaughter, Ariel, Levittown.
The funeral service will be held
on Saturday at 10:30 a.m. in St.
Pauls Lutheran Church, 316 S.
Mountain Blvd., Mountain Top,
with the Rev. Michele Kaufman offi-
ciating. Interment will be at the con-
venienceof thefamily. Relatives and
friends are invited to call on Friday,
from 5 to 7 p.m., and again on Sat-
urday, from9 to10 a.m., at McCune
Funeral Home, 80 S. Mountain
Blvd., Mountain Top.
In lieu of flowers, the family
would appreciate donations to St.
Pauls Lutheran Church or the
American Cancer Society. View
obituaries online at mccunefuneral-
serviceinc.com.
Douglas R. Schuette
May 8, 2012
J
oseph A. DiRisio, 88, of Hanover
section of Nanticoke, passed
away unexpectedly Monday, May 7,
2012, in the emergency room in
Wilkes-Barre General Hospital.
BornonMarch25, 1924inGirard-
ville, Schuylkill County, he was a
son of the late Donato and Jose-
phine DiRisio. After his fathers
death in 1927, Joe was raised in an
orphanage inSunbury sponsoredby
the International Order of Odd Fel-
lows. He graduated from Sunbury
High School in 1942.
A veteran of World War II, he
servedwiththe U.S. Navy from1943
until his honorable discharge in No-
vember 1945. After his training in
diesel engineering maintenance, he
was assigned to the ship L.S.T. 28
(Landing Ship Tank) which he
served on for the remainder of the
war. On June 6, 1944 (D-Day), Joes
shiplandedtroops onOmaha Beach
in the first wave after the invasion of
France. He attained the rank of Mo-
tor Machinists Mate third class.
Joe was employed by the Jewel
Tea Company, based in Barrington,
Ill., for 35 years, retiring in1986 as a
promotional salesman to hire and
train new employees.
He was a devoted Christian and
very much enjoyed attending
church. He was anactive member of
the First Primitive Methodist
Church, first in Girardville, later in
Wilkes-Barre, from 1961 until its
closing in 2007, and last at First
Primitive Methodist Church, Nanti-
coke, for the past five years.
He held many positions within
thechurchincludingSundaySchool
teacher for more than25years, pres-
ident of the Board of Trustees and
Sunday School Superintendent.
In 2007, he received an award for
42 years perfect attendance; he was
a member of American Legion Post
350, Nanticoke; and was president
of the Alumni Association of the or-
phanage, where he was raised and
kept intouchwithmany of his class-
mates to this day.
He was precededindeathby twin
brothers; three sisters; and sister-in-
law, Harriett Tarr.
Surviving are his wife of 61years,
the former Edna Jones, native of Gi-
rardville; sons, Joseph P. DiRisio,
Plains Township; DavidDiRisioand
his wife, Colleen, Exeter; daughter,
Elaine Halesey, and her husband,
Peter, Hanover Township; grand-
children, Peter J. Halesey, who will
graduate from the University of
Pittsburgh School of Law this Fri-
day; Christopher Halesey, who will
be a senior at the University of Pitts-
burgh; and Anna Katerina (Katie)
Anderson-DiRisio, finishing eighth
grade this year; sister-in-law, Ruth
Ann Jones, Hanover Township;
close family friend Mary Oliveri,
Hanover Township; 12 nieces and
nephews, most in California.
Funeral services will be held
Thursday 9 a.m. from Davis-
Dinelli Funeral Home, 170 E. Broad
St., Nanticoke, with the Rev. Kyle
Gildner, his pastor, officiating. Pri-
vate interment will be in Christ
Church Cemetery, Fountain
Springs, near Ashland. Visitation
will be this evening from5 to 8 p.m.
in the funeral home.
If desired, the family would ap-
preciate contributions in Mr. DiRi-
sios memory be made to First Prim-
itive Methodist Church, 101 E.
Church St., Nanticoke, PA18634.
Joseph A. DiRisio
May 7, 2012
M
arlene Coyle (Marie), of Mary
Street, Ashley, diedSunday, May
6, 2012, in Little Flower Manor,
Wilkes-Barre, after succumbing to
Ovarian Cancer.
Born in 1933, Marlene was a life-
long resident of Ashley and main-
tained the family homestead during
the past two decades.
Agraduate of St. Leo High School,
class of 1951, Marlene was employed,
immediately after her graduation, by
Bell Telephone of Pennsylvania. Her
career spanned 41years and all of the
transitions in the communication in-
dustry including the acquisitions of
Bell Telephone by AT&T and Veri-
zon.
Upon retirement in 1992, Marlene
volunteered at Mercy Hospital and
Geisinger South as a receptionist, a
position she valued and enjoyed for
many years. She was a familiar and
friendly face to patients and visitors
alike. Her other volunteer activities
included Board member of the
Friends of Osterhout Library and re-
ceptionist at Volunteers in Medicine.
As a devout Roman Catholic and
an active member of St. Leos Parish,
Marlene served as Eucharistic Minis-
ter, choir member, and on the com-
mittee for the St. Vincent de Paul
Soup Kitchen.
Marlene was preceded in death by
her parents, JohnB. Coyle andCathe-
rine Caffrey Coyle; two brothers-in-
law, John E. Smith and John A.
Moore.
Marlene is survivedby her beloved
sisters and one brother-in-law, Jane
Smith of Dallas; Mary Ann Moore of
Gulf Shores, Ala.; and Kathleen C.
Achorn and her husband, Peter J.
Achorn, of Doylestown. Also surviv-
ing are Coyle Smith and Mary Law-
ler, James Smith, Michael Smith, all
of Dallas; SeanA. Moore andhis wife,
Patti, Buford, Ga.; Eileen Moore
Francis and her husband, Terry, Ken-
nesaw, Ga.; Michael J. Moore and his
wife, Tammy, Alpharetta, Ga.
Marlenes love and devotion to her
niece and nephews brought great joy
to each of themand to her. She is also
survived by two grandnieces, four
grandnephews, two great-nephews:
Seana Francis, Ryan Moore, Patrick
Moore, Caffrey Francis, Will Ham-
mond, Adam Moore, Connor Robin-
son and Sean Michael Moore.
A Mass of Christian Burial will
be celebrated at 11 a.m. Thursday in
St. Leo the Great Church, 33 Manhat-
tan St., Ashley, with the Rev. Joseph
Kearney andthe Rev. Thomas OMal-
ley officiating. Interment will be pri-
vate. Family will greet friends Thurs-
day from 10 a.m. until the time of
Mass in the vestibule of the church.
The Lehman Family Funeral Ser-
vice Inc. is incharge of arrangements.
The family homestead will be closed
accordingtoMarlenes wishes inhon-
or of all the Coyle family members
who have lived and died there since
the early 1900s.
In lieu of flowers, contributions to
St. Leos Church, Osterhout Library
and St. Vincent de Paul will be appre-
ciated. To leave a message of condo-
lence, pleasevisit www.lehmanfuner-
alhome.com.
Marlene Coyle
May 6, 2012
D
avid B. Forster, 74, of Harveys
Lake, died Sunday, May 6, 2012,
in the Veterans Administration
Medical Center, Wilkes-Barre.
He was born in Wilkes-Barre, a
son of the late Isaac and Marie Keil
Forster.
Dave was a six-year Navy veteran
and was formerly employed by
IBEW Union Local 1319.
He was a member of American
Legion Post 967, Harveys Lake, and
was a former Harveys Lake Council-
man. He was a 50-year member of
the Landmark Lodge, Wilkes-Barre;
the Bloomsburg Consistory, the
Irem Temple Shrine, and the Irem
Motor Corp. Dave was also a pio-
neer in the local horse industry, and
a local 4-H leader. He was also a
yearly volunteer for the Luzerne
County Fair.
Besides his parents, he was pre-
ceded in death by his brother, Isaac
(Buddy) Forster.
He is survived by his daughters,
Bonnie Michaels and husband Jim,
Harveys Lake; Rhonda, Harveys
Lake; brother, Edward (Art) Forster
and wife, Sandy; uncle, WilliamFor-
ster and wife, Kathy; grandson, Ri-
chard Hislop and wife, Victoria;
great-granddaughter, Sophia His-
lop; several nieces and nephews.
Special gratitude goes to his
niece, Wendy Forster, who along
with Bonnie and Jim was a caregiv-
er to the end.
Aprivateservicewill be held
Thursday at 1 p.m. at Chapel
Lawn Memorial Park, Memorial
Highway, Dallas, with a celebration
of Daves life to follow at his daugh-
ter, Bonnies home. Details can be
obtained from the Kopicki Funeral
Home, 263 Zerbey Ave., Kingston.
David B. Forster
May 6, 2012
W
illard D. Bethel, of Flushing,
Ohio, passed away Saturday,
May 5, 2012, at Bayonet Point Re-
gional Medical Center in Hudson,
Fla.
Born May 30, 1926, he was a son
of Durward and Rebecca (Huff)
Bethel, Flushing, Ohio. He gradu-
ated from Flushing High School
andservedintheU.S. Armyduring
War World II, where he was award-
ed five Bronze Stars for valor.
Willard retired from Ohio Ma-
chinery Company as Regional
Manager in 1991.
Loving husband, caring father
and friend, he loved spending time
withhis family andenjoyedfishing
any time he got the chance to go.
Surviving are his wife, Goldie
Bethel; son, Ronald Bethel and
wife, Ella-Marie Bethel; daughter,
Donna Sue Mahr and husband,
Kenny Mahr; and grandson, Clay
Bethel.
Willard was preceded in death
by brothers, Harold, Allen and
Wade; and sister, Ruth.
He was cremated at Prevatt
Funeral Home, Hudson, Fla.,
and his remains will be interred in
Rock Hill Cemetery, Flushing
Township, Belmont Co., Ohio. No
memorial services will be held.
Willard D. Bethel
May 5, 2012
C M Y K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 2012 PAGE 9A
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they can count on their dreams
being crushed when they open
the door to drugs.
Freshman Jake Bevan, presi-
dent of the Interact Club, said he
felt Shannons message will help
students make good decisions if
they are pressured by peers at the
prom and other celebrations.
We also learned about incar-
ceration, and it teaches us what
thats like, said Interact Club
Vice President Tyler Fisher, a
freshman. I dont want to be in
prison.
Students listened as Shannon
told them about her troubled
teen years, when she smoked
marijuana at a concert with a
friends mom. Acid and Ecstasy
were next.
When I was 17 years old, I
went with friends to Philly and I
was introducedtocrackcocaine,
she said.
I lost my car, my home, (ev-
erything) within two months. I
graduated high school, but I
dont know how, she said. It got
so bad, she said, that at one point
she was snorting cocaine off a
textbookat the backof the school
bus.
Shannon joined the U.S. Army,
completed basic training and
worked as a combat medic in a
hospital. After two years in the
Army, she returned home to the
WyomingValley, where she met a
man, had a job and owned a car.
Then the dream of a good life
started to turn into a nightmare:
I started doing cocaine, she
said.
A short time later, Shannon
said, she became addicted to the
way Vicodin, Percocet and Xanax
made her feel. She started snort-
ing heroin and got violently sick
when she didnt have any.
I didnt care. I couldnt stop,
Shannon said.
Feeling trapped, hopeless and
powerless, she resorted to taking
blank checks from her mother to
get money to support her habit.
That landed her in jail on forgery
charges.
She violated the terms of her
work release by not returning to
the county prison, resulting in a
two-year prison term in 2010.
She has spent the past three
months in prison on other charg-
es, andhopes to be releasedinJu-
ly.
I know Im going to stay
clean, Shannon told the stu-
dents. I found one thing that is
going to help keep me clean
God.
She has been clean since Janu-
ary, is on work release and hopes
toreturnas a productive member
of society.
DRUGS
Continued from Page 3A
Stevens performed, however.
Silverstone said some of the
cases involved parents who had
more thanone childinthe custody
of Children and Youth. He deter-
mined there were instances where
timemayhavebeenchargedinde-
pendently for each child involved
for the same activity description.
Silverstone acknowledges he
couldnot independently verify the
timespentoneachclient. Hedeter-
mined Stevens overbilled for 72.6
hours, but does not provide a spe-
cific explanationof howhe arrived
at that figure. Healsodoesnot note
whether Stevens provided an ex-
planation as to why those errors
were made.
Controller Walter Griffith and
othercountyofficialsarereviewing
the audit to determine whether
they will accept its findings or
move forward with the original
plan for the county to hire its own
accounting firm do conduct a fo-
rensic audit.
The county had received four
proposals for an audit, ranging in
price from $22,000 to $46,500. It
decidedtoholdoff pendingreceipt
of Stevens audit.
Griffith stressed that, even
though the audit showed Stevens
does not owe any money, it does
not mean she is being left off the
hook for the overbillings because
she has already repaid the money
throughtheoffsetsshesentitledto
receive. The county is actually
ahead, he said, because Stevens is
not seeking payment for the
$20,633theaudit showssheisdue.
The county initially declined to
releasetheaudit onMonday, citing
asectionof thestateRighttoKnow
Law that allows a government
bodytodenyaccesstoarecordthat
is part of aninvestigation.
Assistant County Solicitor Vito
DeLucaagreedtoreleasethedocu-
ment Tuesday after Raspanti, at
the request of a Times Leader re-
porter and Griffith, contacted Ste-
vens, who gave the county permis-
siontorelease the report.
STEVENS
Continued from Page 2A
C M Y K
PAGE 10A WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 2012 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
7
5
4
2
8
7
If were going to reduce the more
than 50,000 new HIV infections in
this country each year, we need to
increase the available options for
people.
Ronald Johnson
The vice president of AIDS United, an advocacy organization striving to
end the AIDS epidemic, spoke in favor of a range of preventive
measures, including the possibility of a daily pill such as Truvada for
healthy people. The Food and Drug Administration on Thursday will
discuss whether the medication will become the first drug approved to
prevent HIV infection in high-risk individuals.
Take the time this week
to thank nurses, staff
T
wo national observances are being held
this week to recognize the important
contributions of health care profession-
als to the health and well-being of patients:
National Nurses Week and National Hospi-
tal Week.
National Nurses Week is celebrated
annually in honor of Florence Nightingale,
founder of nursing as a modern profession,
and the millions of people who have fol-
lowed in her footsteps. Strength, commit-
ment and compassion are hallmarks of the
national theme for Nurses Week in 2012
Nurses: Advocating, Leading, Caring
focusing on nurses dedication to saving
lives and maintaining the health of mil-
lions of people across the United States.
Nurses make the commitment every day to
building an even more meaningful nursing
profession, addressing the complexities of
patient care, reshaping the work envi-
ronment and influencing broader health
policies to benefit patients.
Nurses: Advocating, Leading, Caring
is exemplified by Geisinger nurses
throughout Northeastern Pennsylvania.
Geisinger nurses provide extraordinary
care to thousands of patients each day
whether its the nurse who devotes time
and energy teaching others to live health-
ier lives or the nurse who holds a patients
hand, making sure that compassion and
dignity are an integral part of the medical
treatment of every patient.
National Hospital Week provides an
opportunity to commemorate the impor-
tance of the men and women who work in
our hospitals. Making Miracles Happen
is the theme of this years celebration,
calling attention to the many facets of the
professional and the compassionate care
our employees provide to our patients and
their families and loved ones.
People in this region can enjoy the ad-
vantage of having Geisinger in their com-
munity, where extraordinary medical pro-
fessionals and world-class facilities deliver
healing treatment and compassionate care
around the clock.
As we celebrate National Nurses Week
and National Hospital Week, Geisinger
salutes our nurses and hospital staff mem-
bers for their talents, professional accom-
plishments and dedication to your health
and peace of mind.
Please take time to thank a nurse and a
hospital employee for their wonderful
work.
Margaret Hennelley Bergin
Chief nursing officer
Geisinger Northeast
Couple believes hospital
unnecessarily treated pet
B
e careful where you have your pet
cared for. We took our pet, Maggi, to
an animal hospital in November, know-
ing she had a disk problem. This problem
turned into an unnecessary back oper-
ation.
This hospital seemingly is all about
money. For $4,000, we received a box of
ashes.
There will be much more on this sub-
ject. This only scratches the surface.
Jack Gallagher
and
Patti Gallagher
Shavertown
MAIL BAG LETTERS FROM READERS
Letters to the editor must include the
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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.
Email: [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 WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 2012 PAGE 11A
EVERY TIME I watch the
news, read a newspaper or
magazine, or listen to the
conversations at the local
diner, I find there is an eth-
ical, controversial or legal
issue generating interest. So,
why is there so much to talk about that is
controversial, unethical or illegal? Wouldnt it
just make sense to do the right thing all the
time?
Sure it would, but who decides what the
right thing is?
Thats the beauty of ethics. They are adapt-
able to the individual or the culture. What
might be ethical to you might not be ethical
to me. It depends on an endless list of varia-
bles that make us unique. Still, there are a
couple characteristics that most of us share.
As humans we have a desire to be success-
ful and to be liked by others. This makes us
vulnerable to giving in to personal gain,
whether its financial or some other form of
reward, and to making decisions based on
what would make us more popular with those
about whom we care.
Well, there is a very simple process to go
through when making a decision that you
always can defend as being ethical. When
faced with a decision ask yourself the follow-
ing questions:
Is there an ethical decision to be made? If
yes, then
Are there any laws, rules or policies that
apply? If so, apply them.
What are my options? Consider the
possible consequences very carefully.
Which option is best? This often can be
determined by asking yourself who will be
affected by your choice. How many will be
affected by your decision? Which option
results in the greatest good or causes the
least harm?
Then reflect on your decision by asking
yourself these five questions:
1. Does it pass the legal test is it against
the law? If its illegal, dont do it!
2. How do I physically feel this is gut
check time. Are you having a physical reac-
tion to your decision that is telling you some-
thing doesnt feel right? If you are, then you
should revisit your decision.
3. How would I feel if my decision were on
the front page of the newspaper? Would I be
embarrassed or feel shame, or would I be
proud and feel confidence in my actions?
4. Would I be able to tell my mom about
my decision? Would I be able to tell those I
respect about my decision? If not, you should
reconsider.
5. Am I upholding the standards I set for
myself? Consider the type of person you want
to be and maintain that standard.
Sounds simple enough, but there are times
when doing the right thing can be the most
difficult decision to make because other fac-
tors come into play.
When this happens you need to remember
that making an ethical decision is not about
emotions, assumptions or popularity. It is not
based on what is easiest or the most popular.
And ethical decisions are not based on one-
sided knowledge.
There are times when family, friends and
coworkers talk to me about the events of the
day, and I often ask questions. I do this in
order to gain a better understanding of the
situation and to help them consider another
perspective. However, this can sometimes be
perceived as though I am taking the other
side. Im not; I simply believe if we truly want
to help ourselves and others, we need to
know as much as possible.
If you follow my suggestions, you might
not be the most popular person all the time,
but you should feel good about your deci-
sions. Eventually others will think of you as
someone who is thoughtful and fair, and
likely to do the right thing.
The more you engage in the practices
suggested above, the more natural and easier
it becomes to make an ethical decision. Soon
you wont even have to think about the ques-
tions to ask yourself because it will be an
automatic process that you wont even be
aware is happening. Just remember that first
you need to practice, practice, practice.
Robert H. Smith is director of the Center for
Ethics and Religious Affairs at The Pennsylvania
State University. For information, visit http://stu-
dentaffairs.psu.edu/spiritual/facilities.shtml
Deciding right thing sometimes debatable, always doable
COMMENTARY
R O B E R T H . S M I T H
P
OLITICAL upheaval in
Europe reached a new
apex over the weekend
when French voters
threwout their incumbent presi-
dent and Greeks gave the heave-
ho to the ruling parliamentary
coalition.
Theresults suggest that anew
consensus is emerging in Eu-
rope in favor of more economic
stimulus, but they also call into
question the continents ability
to agree on a plan to keep its fis-
cal problems fromspreading un-
controllably.
European leaders had agreed
to a series of pacts that would
rescue Greece andother default-
ing countries in exchange for
steepreductions intheir redink,
while also requiring every coun-
try that relies on the euro to
shrink their debts and curb def-
icit spending. Overtheweekend,
however, voters in Greece gave
such large minorities in parlia-
ment to candidates from far-
right and far-left parties who op-
posed the required spending
cutsthat therulingcoalitioncan-
not continue to govern. And
FrenchvotersdumpedPresident
Nicolas Sarkozy, whod been a
key negotiator in the European
rescue plans, infavor of Francois
Hollande of the Socialist Party,
whodeclaredthat austerity can
no longer be the only option.
It might beagoodideatomiti-
gate harsh spending cuts with
stronger economic growth;
weve long argued that faster
growth is crucial to solving the
U.S. budget problems. But Eu-
rope cant afford to raise doubts
about its determination to solve
its fiscal problems.
Los Angeles Times
OTHER OPINION: ECONOMIES
Austerity takes
a hit in Europe
W
HILEPINNEDIN
another of the
Wyoming Valleys
contorted, con-
struction-related traffic pat-
terns and reflecting on the pre-
dicament, we twisted a phrase
once reserved for Rome:
All roadblocks lead to
Wilkes-Barre.
Almost every bridge andma-
jor point of en-
try into the
county seat
poses a chal-
lenge for driv-
ers this
spring, and
the situation
likely will con-
tinue for
much of the year. Lane clo-
sures. Concrete barriers. Merg-
ing traffic. Vexing signs prohib-
iting left turns, or is it right
ones? Vehicle standstills.
Whether approaching by
way of the Market Street
Bridge, the more northerlyVet-
erans Memorial Bridge or the
Coal Street corridor, the view
through the windshield seems
strikingly familiar: orange
cones and red taillights.
Maddening? Perhaps if you
are the mayor (who probably
fields the most complaints), a
storekeeper or restaurant own-
er (whose bottom line might
temporarily sag) or a college
president (concerned about a
downtown campus image as
out-of-towners arrive for Mays
commencement activities).
For the vast majority of us,
however, these tie-ups amount
to nothing more than this: a
blip amid the days happen-
ings, something that shouldnt
raise the blood pressure an io-
ta, a minor inconvenience.
You can help to ensure that
neither tempers nor fenders
get bent out of shape during
these time-
consuming
improvement
projects by
keeping per-
spective and
practicing pa-
tience.
You are
not, most
likely, a NASCAR driver. Dont
act like one by trying to shoot
ahead of fellow motorists who
are squeezing into a single
lane. You are not, most likely,
the driver of an ambulance;
getting to your destination
without delay is desirable but
not a matter of life and death.
You are not invincible and
neither are the men and wom-
en who toil in roadway con-
struction zones. Give them a
break by liberally using your
brakes.
The citys transportation up-
grades ultimately will make it
more pleasant andeasier to get
where you want to go within
Wilkes-Barre.
Until then, remember, Rome
wasnt built in a day.
OUR OPINION: W-B DRIVING
Dont blow stack
over stopped traffic
QUOTE OF THE DAY
PRASHANT SHITUT
President and CEO/Impressions Media
JOSEPH BUTKIEWICZ
Vice President/Executive Editor
MARK E. JONES
Editorial Page Editor
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 WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 2012 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
N E W S
workforces.
The economy softening plus
efficiency gains are driving that
number, he said.
Cannella said technology has
allowed manufacturers to do
more with less, so while jobs are
down, the number of local manu-
facturers is actually on the rise.
Its the smaller ones, Cannel-
la noted. Well see maybe theyre
not looking to set up huge oper-
ations; instead, theyre looking to
do smaller, niche manufactur-
ing.
JimCummings, who workedat
Penns Northeast before taking a
position at Mericle Commercial
Real Estate, said manufacturing
ruled the local employment land-
scape a decade ago, and he
doesnt think its fallen from its
perch, even though manufactur-
ing jobs have left the area at a
higher rate than most of the na-
tions large metro regions.
At nearly 28,000, the number
of local manufacturing jobs ranks
68th nationally, but that total is a
39 percent drop from a decade
ago. That decrease is greater
than the national average drop of
33.2 percent. Over the past two
years, the decline is 4.9 percent,
one of the steepest losses in the
top 100 markets, ranking the re-
gion 96th. The national average
is a loss of just 2.7percent of man-
ufacturing jobs over that same
time span.
Nothing in the Brookings Re-
port about Scranton/Wilkes-
Barre surprised me, Cummings
said. (It) looks like manufactur-
ing, though gradually declining
here over the years, still has a
greater than average impact,
compared to the nation as a
whole, on our local economy.
He said about one-third of in-
quiries Mericle receives from
companies looking for a location
inNortheasternPennsylvania are
in the manufacturing industry.
Location matters
Cannella and Cummings said
the words often used in real es-
tate come into play in this case,
too.
My guess is our access to sup-
pliers and customers, strong util-
ities, rail availability, competitive
operating costs, and availability
of a labor force with manufactur-
ing skills are the primary reasons
manufacturing continues to sur-
vive here, Cummings said.
Withfiveinterstates crisscross-
ing the region, industrial and
business parks dotting the land-
scape in Jenkins, Pittston, Hazle
and Hanover townships and
Mountain Top in Luzerne Coun-
ty, plus a dozen more throughout
neighboringcounties, Northeast-
ern Pennsylvania has established
trade parks, an available work-
force and all important access to
the population centers of the
Northeastern United States plus
the South, Midwest and West,
thanks to the interstates.
You cant beat the 80/81corri-
dor, Niziolek said.
The report indicates why man-
ufacturers seem to prefer metro
areas.
The fact that U.S. manufactur-
ing is largely located in metro ar-
eas reflects the significant advan-
tages of density, the report
states. Firms are clustered with
other companies in the same or
related industries, making shar-
ing of ideas easier; employers
have access to a broad pool of
skilled workers with needed
skills; there is better access to
suppliers and customers; and
there is easier access to educa-
tional, financial, legal, manage-
ment, and consulting services.
Larry Newman, the vice presi-
dent of Planning, Policy, and De-
velopment for the Greater
Wilkes-Barre Growth Partner-
ship, said the report did not open
his eyes to anything he didnt
know, but it serves as a reminder
of the importance of manufactur-
ing to a region.
He said one thing the region
does that has both positives and
negatives is that its diversified
not only its overall employment
mix, but also the manufacturer
products, too.
According to the report, the
top three manufacturing indus-
tries locally are: fabricated met-
als, with15.6 percent of all manu-
facturing jobs; food, with 13.4
percent; and plastics and rubber
at 12.3 percent.
None of those is huge enough
to connect our region to any one
industry, Newman said. But if
one sector were to see an eco-
nomic downturn, the regions
economy wouldnt collapse be-
cause of the diversity.
JOBS
Continued from Page 1A
Manufacturing jobs are a big-
ger part of the Wilkes-Barre/
Scranton area economy than in
most regions, but the wages paid
here substantially lagnational av-
erages.
According to data published
today in a report by the Brook-
ings Institution Metropolitan
Policy Program, the local average
manufacturing salary of $44,958
ranks 96th among the nations
100 largest metropolitan areas.
The gap is comparable to that for
wages in all jobs. At $36,709, the
average local wage also ranks
96th.
But those pay rates must be
squared with the kinds of work
available.
The report states Scranton/
Wilkes-Barre scores poorly in
terms of raw wages but fares bet-
ter when rankings are adjusted
for industry composition, indi-
catingthat these metropolitanar-
eas are home to low-wage indus-
tries but pay at least average wag-
es for those industries.
Larry Newman, the vice presi-
dent of Planning, Policy and De-
velopment for the Greater
Wilkes-Barre Growth Partner-
ship, said the wage deficit comes
down to the type of manufactur-
ing done locally.
The percentage of manufactur-
ing jobs in this region classified
as either very hightechor moder-
ately hightech, withtheir accom-
panying high pay, ranks 66th and
93rd respectively, according to
the Brookings report.
Newman said a deeper look at
why those high-tech jobs arent
here circles back to our ongoing
issue withloweducational attain-
ment levels. Without a high
number of college graduates or at
least those with training in tech-
nically skilled fields, companies
wont locate here, he said.
Instead, the region makes due
with a large number of manufac-
turers that deal with lower-value
products.
We like to punch and twist
metal, Newman said with a
laugh.
And make food. According to
Brookings 13.4 percent of manu-
facturingjobs inthe market are in
the food industry.
But those employers are not
high-wage payers like the auto-
mobile, airplane or computer in-
dustries.
We have industries that gener-
ally pay low wages, Newman
said, noting that wages here are
on par with national averages
when the types of manufacturers
are taken into account.
-39.0%
-33.2%
Change in mfg. jobs
2000 to 2010
Change in mfg. jobs
2000 to 2010
Pct. mfg. jobs
moderately high tech
Pct. mfg. jobs
moderately high tech
Mfg. jobs as pct.
of all jobs
Mfg. jobs as pct.
of all jobs
Pct. mfg. jobs
very high tech
Pct. mfg. jobs
very high tech
2.7%
-4.9% -4.9%
8.5%
10.8%
16.1%
8.8%
18.6%
7.4%
-50% -40% -30% -20% -10% 0% 10% 20% 30%
79
96
16
66
93
Scranton/WB metro area
National average
Scranton/WB natl. rank
LOCAL VS. NATIONAL MANUFACTURING
Source: Brookings Metropolitan Policy Program Mark Guydish/The Times Leader
Change in mfg. jobs
Jan. 2010 to Dec., 2011
Change in mfg. jobs
Jan. 2010 to Dec., 2011
Low-tech jobs reason
for lagging area wages
By ANDREWM. SEDER
[email protected]
appropriate clearances.
Asked if the diocese was taking any
action with students, Genello said an
announcement was read to all stu-
dents Tuesday to ensure they were
aware of the situation and to let them
know that they could contact school
officials if they felt a need to talk.
School officials also met withthe
football team to offer support and the
opportunity to talk about the situation
and to assure the team the program
will continue, Genello said.
A meeting of the football team par-
ent club had been scheduled for Tues-
day evening before the arrest, but Ge-
nello said the club canceled it.
He did not knowwhere else Ostrow-
ski may have worked. Red Rock Job
Corps Director Kelly King confirmed
Ostrowski had worked at the center
until about a year ago, but he would
not say what his job or title was. The
JobCorps are federal facilities that pro-
vide career technical and academic
training at no cost to low-income peo-
ple ages 16 through 24.
Ostrowski had previously coached
at GAR High School in Wilkes-Barre
and Lake-Lehman High School in Leh-
man Township. Lake-Lehman athletic
director Tom Rokita said Ostrowski
was with the football program about
five years ago, and left after less then a
year to take the GAR post.
I was shocked when I read this in
the paper, Rokita said. When he was
applying for the Holy Redeemer job he
called me and asked for a reference,
and I had no reason to believe he
wasnt a good asset at the time.
GAR Athletic Director Simon Peter
said Ostrowski joined the coaching
staff around 2007 and worked there
four years with no problems. His ten-
ure here was what I would refer to as
plain vanilla.
I was very much surprised at the
arrest, Peter said.
Rokita and Peter said Ostrowski had
been cleared through state-mandated
checks before being hired.
Wilkes-Barre Area Meyers Athletic
Director Michael Namey coached Os-
trowski when he was on the Mohawk
football team. Namey said there were
no problems or incidents with Ostrow-
ski back then.
He was just your average high
school student, Namey said. Joe was
on the offensive line, he was a very
good high school football player.
Outside Holy Redeemer on Tuesday
afternoon, a student who said he was a
freshman on the team last fall said Os-
trowski had never had done anything
questionable and that he liked the
coach, adding that he was surprised at
the arrest.
School administrators and teachers
were quick to ask media to leave when
students were approached.
OSTROWSKI
Continued from Page 1A
busy, she said. Andactivities
improvethequalityof lifefor
residents. It keeps their
minds and bodies active.
And then she delivered
some cautionary advice to
legislators: Do not meddle
with Medicaid! Remember,
your parents may be resi-
dents someday, and so might
you, Smith said, her words
eliciting laughter and ap-
plause.
Yudichak said he admired
Smiths energy and passion,
and they had a good chat
about the budget that passed
out of the Senate Appropri-
ations Committee earlier
Tuesday with half the fund-
ing for nursing homes re-
stored.
Yudichaksaidhebelieves it
was the efforts of Smith and
countless others who advo-
cated for restoration of fund-
ing to Medicaid as well as so-
cial services and education
that convinced legislators to
make a bipartisan effort to re-
store $500 million to the bud-
get. He expects the amended
budget to come to a vote on
the Senate floor today.
Louise Bekisz, administra-
tor at Guardian Elder Care in
Nanticoke, said she and three
other employees visited state
Rep. Gerry Mullery, D-New-
port Township, to advocate
for funding restoration, and
he agreed to vote against any
cuts just as he did last year.
Its really hard to provide
the type of care we want to
the residents. The facility is
their home, and its hard to
make it feel like their home
when we dont have the re-
sources, she said.
Michael Wylie, vice presi-
dent of development for Gen-
funding for nursing homes.
Such a cut would be devas-
tating to nursing homes, ad-
vocates say, and caregivers
from across Pennsylvania
converged on the Capitol
building on Tuesday to visit
with legislators and make
their case to restore the ap-
proximately $102 million
funding reduction.
Smith, a volunteer at Gold-
en Living Center Summit,
in Wilkes-Barre, and others
from the center, met with
state Sen. John Yudichak, D-
Plymouth Township, in his
Capitol building office and
then headed to the rotunda
for a rally.
Smithexplainedtothoseat
the rally that she has been a
volunteer at Summit since
not long after her daughter
Marie Elena Smith, who had
been a patient there, died in
2006.
She had always been im-
pressed with the level of care
her daughter received, and
she got to know the staff and
other residents when she vis-
ited her daughter there every
day. She was glad she heeded
a suggestion to volunteer
there that came fromher oth-
er daughter, Barbara Dei-
trick, who accompanied
Smith on Tuesday.
The staff and residents
have become like a second
family to me. I came down to
Harrisburg today because I
hear they want to cut Medi-
caid. They cannot cut Medi-
caid. We need it so badly
here, Smith said.
She said Medicaid pays for
staff and activities, neither of
which should be reduced.
The nurses already are so
esis HealthCare, which owns
River Street Manor and Riv-
erviewRidge in Wilkes-Barre
among other facilities, said
advocates will continue push-
ing for full restoration of
fundingandhavesuggestions
for legislators on how to ac-
complish it.
Dr. Stuart Shapiro, presi-
dent and chief executive offi-
cer of the Pennsylvania
Health Care Association,
host of the rally, said the fed-
eral government stripped
$846 million from Medicare
in the last year, and state cuts
will put nursing facilities at
substantial risk because the
state already under-reim-
burses them by nearly $20
per day per resident.
Shapiro said that as of 4:30
p.m. Monday, 12,137 people
had signed a petition asking
state legislators to restore
Medicaid funding. A copy
was distributed to each legis-
lator on Tuesday.
Joe Barrick, administrator
at Manor Care in Camp Hill,
said funding cuts make it
more difficult to maintain
competent, dedicated staff.
Because of recent cuts to
his facility, merit raises were
delayed, employee contribu-
tions to health insurance pre-
miums increased, an assist-
ant business administrator
was not replaced and two li-
censed practical nurse posi-
tions were eliminated, Bar-
rick said.
The $130,000 reductionhis
facility would see with Cor-
betts budget proposal would
amount to the cost of 2.5 full-
time LPNs, he said.
Wecertainlywant toavoid
getting to the point where we
havetotell patients whoneed
care but whose care is going
to be funded by Medical As-
sistance, Were sorry, we just
cant afford to admit you,
Barrick said.
DON CAREYPHOTOS/THE TIMES LEADER
Joe Barrick, administrator
of HCR Manor Care.
Dr. Stuart Shapiro, president
and CEO of PAHealth Care
Association.
Mike Wylie of Genesis
HealthCare.
SMITH
Continued from Page 1A
See video from the rally at
timesleader.com.
ON THE NET
DALLAS TWP. Drilling
mud broke through the ground
near Leonard Creek during
drilling for Chief Gathering
LLCs new Wyoming County
pipeline last week, according to
the company and the state De-
partment of Environmental Pro-
tection.
Chief spokeswoman Kristie
Gittins said the company took
action on Friday to contain and
remove the drilling mud seep-
ing fromthe ground, and the on-
ly substance released was dirt
and water nothing else, no
chemicals, no additives.
DEP was notified immediate-
ly, she added.
DEP, meanwhile, said the
agency is conducting a follow-
up investigation, and neighbors
and township officials are
watching the situation closely.
Gittins said the incident oc-
curred while a drilling subcon-
tractor was drilling horizontally
near the Kunkle Fire Station in
the Kunkle section of Dallas
Township. The company is pre-
paring to run pipe beneath the
creek and a nearby wetland as
part of its Wyoming County
Pipeline project, that will con-
nect to the Transco Interstate
Pipeline in Dallas Township.
Water and mud pumped
through the drill bit, which nor-
mally carries drill cuttings back
out through the well head, burst
through the ground during drill-
ing, Gittins said.
DEP was notified about the
incident, but Chief is handling
the containment and cleanup,
she added, using hay bales to
contain the mud and vacuum
trucks to suck it up and away.
When the breakout occurred
we called DEP, they came out
immediately, and they inspect-
ed the process for our contain-
ment and cleanup, Gittins said,
adding the mud was contained
very quickly and DEP approved
the companys remediation
method.
Gittins said mud breakouts
are not uncommon during drill-
ing for any sort of pipeline, not
only oil and gas lines, and said
the company has procedures in
place to deal with them when
they occur.
They are something that we
are always anticipating as part
of our plan, Gittins said. Any-
time youre drilling under a
stream you can have naturally
occurring mud breakouts.
DEP spokeswoman Colleen
Connolly said the department is
investigating the incident to de-
termine what was released and
whether any environmental reg-
ulations were violated.
Connolly said the environ-
mental impact of the incident
would likely be minimal if only
mud was spilled theres mud
at the bottomof creeks, she ob-
served but that part of DEPs
follow-up investigation will in-
volve determining whether any
additives were used in drilling.
It all depends on whats in
this mud, she said. We dont
know. That will be determined
through our investigation and
on-site inspections.
Gittins reiterated no addi-
tives were used.
Chief did not use any other
type process to bore under the
creek that hadnt been used
many times before with other
industries, Gittins said. We do
not use or add in any chemicals
or additives in the mud for the
boring process.
That assurance didnt rest
easy with some area residents
and township officials.
George Turner, a professional
geologist from Tunkhannock
who does pre-drilling ground-
water testing, said he was con-
tracted to investigate the spill
by a concerned nearby resident
and observed the site on Friday
evening.
Turner characterized the inci-
dent as very minor but added
that he understood the con-
cerns of those living nearby.
You have a pipeline coming
in next to your property and all
of a sudden you have vacuum
trucks and all of these people
running down in orange vests,
he said.
Turner said he observed mud
flowing from the ground in two
places, one about 10 feet from
the creek. Workers had sur-
rounded the mud with hay bales
and were using vacuum trucks
to remove it. The operation ap-
peared to be working as de-
signed, Turner said.
He added, though, that could
change with if the rain that fell
all day Tuesday brings the creek
level higher.
If we get a lot of rain and that
creek floods, its going to be un-
der water, then whatevers com-
ing out of that hole is not going
to go in that vacuum truck, its
going to go straight into Bow-
mans Creek, he said, referring
to the larger creek into which
Leonard Creek drains.
Scott Cannon of the Gas Drill-
ing Awareness Coalition, a
group that opposed the con-
struction of Chiefs and other
gas lines in Dallas Township,
said the incident reflects an ac-
ceptable risk associated with
drilling that he does not find ac-
ceptable.
The damage coal mining did
to our region was a lesson
learned, and a lesson forgotten,
Cannon said. I just hope the
rain doesnt wash too much of
this drilling mud into Leonard
Creek, and I hope it wont affect
the local residents water wells.
Liz Martin, a Dallas Township
supervisor, said she is following
the situation closely and has
asked the township engineer to
determine through DEP how
much fluid was lost and a break-
down of the fluids contents.
There are three artesian wells in
the area, she said, including one
belonging to the Kunkle Fire
Company.
My concern is that it would
get into that water and I dont
want people to consume it if
theres anything that shouldnt
be in there, she said.
Martin said DEP replied that
approximately 200 gallons of
fluid had migrated and the ac-
tive ingredient is bentonite, a
kind of clay used in drilling, es-
pecially near wetlands. Connol-
ly could not confirm that report
Tuesday.
Drill mud seeps out near creek
DEP investigating to find out
what was released, whether
any regulations violated.
By MATT HUGHES
[email protected]
C M Y K
SPORTS S E C T I O N B
THE TIMES LEADER WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 2012
timesleader.com
HAZLETON He had heard enough questions during
the first week of this tour to know what was coming.
After giving his speech to a crowd of 216 registered fans
and alumni at Penn State Hazletons Cacesse Gymnasium,
Bill OBrien girded himself for the Q&Aportion of the lun-
cheon.
Well try to discourage certain questions, OBrien
deadpanned. Quarterback questions are off limits.
Laughter. Yeah, hes been asked that one once or twice
before.
Aquarterbackwill lineupfor us, OBriensaid. Wheth-
er hes under center or in the shotgun will be up to me.
That wouldhave to do for now. Tuesday markedthe first
time Penn States head football coach made an extended
stop in Luzerne County in more than a decade, and
OBrien was looking to talk about more than just one spot
on his team.
People ask me all the time and Im starting to get a
little annoyed with the question Why did you take this
job? OBrien said. And after being here for four months,
P E N N S TAT E F O O T B A L L
PSUs OBrien visits Hazleton
CLARK VAN ORDEN/THE TIMES LEADER
Penn State coach Bill OBrien answers a question during a press
conference at Penn State Hazleton Tuesday morning.
Coach addresses
many topics,
except QB
battle, as his
tour makes a
stop at local
campus.
By DEREK LEVARSE
[email protected]
See OBRIEN, Page 5B
WILKES-BARRETWP. Inthe thirdpe-
riod of Tuesdays Game 5 between the
Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins and St.
Johns IceCaps, Simon Despres inadver-
tently hit his goaltender, Brad Thiessen, in
the face with his stick.
Two overtime periods later, Despres hit
the back of the St. Johns net.
Withhis goal at 12:08 of the secondover-
time, Despres gave the Penguins a 3-2 win
to force a Game 6 in Canada on Friday.
It was a great relief. On the brink of
elimination the biggest goal of my ca-
reer, Despres said after the game.
It was the third straight game that the
two teams settled things in overtime. The
Penguins lost the last two and came into
the game down 3-1 in the series.
It was the fourth time in franchise histo-
ry that the Penguins played in multiple
overtimes. The longest was a three-over-
time marathon on April 25, 2005 a 3-2
win over Binghamton. The others were
CALDER CUP PLAYOFFS
ICECAPS
2
PENGUINS
3
OH, CANADA
PETE G. WILCOX/THE TIMES LEADER
Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins goalie Brad Thiessen focuses on the puck in the second period of Tuesday nights Calder
Cup playoff game at the Mohegan Sun Arena in Wilkes-Barre Township.
WBS Penguins head north after OT win
PETE G. WILCOX/THE TIMES LEADER
Geoff Walker (17) consoles goalie Brad Thiessen after St.
Johns IceCaps score first Tuesday.
PHILADELPHIA Bryce Salvador, David
Clarkson and Ilya Kovalchuk scored goals to lift
New Jersey to a 3-1 Game 5 win over the Phila-
delphia Flyers on Tuesday night, sending the
Devils into the Eastern Conference Finals for
the first time since 2003.
Martin Brodeur was strong in goal and has the
Devils back in position to win their fourth Stan-
ley Cup. The Devils await the winner of the New
S TA N L E Y C U P P L AYO F F S
AP PHOTO
New Jersey Devils Martin Brodeur, Travis Zajac and Andy
Greene, from left, celebrate the Devils win in Game 5 Tuesday.
Devils possess
series with win
3
DEVILS
1
FLYERS
New Jersey eliminates Flyers in five games
to move to Eastern Conference Finals for
first time since 2003.
By DAN GELSTON
AP Sports Writer
See DEVILS, Page 5B
BALTIMORE Josh Hamilton
became the 16th player to hit four
home runs in a game, launching a
quartet of two-run drives against
three different pitchers in a history-
makingperformance that carried
theTexas Rangers toa10-3vic-
tory over the Baltimore
Orioles on Tuesday
Hamilton homered off
Jake Arrieta in the first and
third innings, added another off Zach
Phillips in the seventh and topped it off
with a one-for-the-books shot against
Darren ODay in the eighth. During the
last at-bat, Hamilton took a mighty
hack and missed, lined a foul
into right-field seats and
then sent an 0-2 pitch
M L B
Hamilton ties record
with four home runs
By DAVID GINSBURG
AP Sports Writer
Josh Hamil-
ton tied a
record Tues-
day with
four HRs in
a game.
See RECORD, Page 5B
By TOMVENESKY
[email protected]
See PENGUINS, Page 5B
May 1: St.
Johns 3, Pen-
guins 1
May 2: Pen-
guins 3, St.
Johns 1
May 5: St.
Johns 2, Pen-
guins 1, OT
Sunday: St.
Johns 3, Pen-
guins 2, OT
Tuesday: Pen-
guins 3, St.
Johns 2, 2OT
Friday: Pen-
guins at St.
Johns, 6 p.m.
x-Saturday:
Penguins at St.
Johns, 6 p.m.
S E R I E S
G L A N C E
K
PAGE 2B WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 2012 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
S P O R T S
19. A captain and crew format will
be used, with a shotgun start at 8
a.m. Food and refreshments will
follow at the Plains Lions Pavilion
in Birchwood Hills. Golfers and
hole sponsors are still needed.
Cost is $80 per golfer, $320 per
foursome and $100 per hole spon-
sor. Call Coach Cinti at 332-3335 to
register.
Dallas football reunion for former
players of Ted Jackson will be
held from 4-8 p.m. on Sunday, May
27, at Irem Country Club in Dallas.
Cost of $45 per person includes
open bar and buffet dinner. Tickets
for those under age 21 are $20 per
person. Children age 4 and under
will be admitted free. For more
information or to make a reserva-
tion, contact Ted Jackson Jr. at
574-0409 or Sandy Jackson at
574-0412. Reservations must be
made by Friday, May. 18.
Hanover Township Fire District Golf
Tournament will be held Saturday,
May 19 at Edgewood in the Pines
Golf Course in Drums. Entry fee is
$80 with a shotgun start at 8 a.m.
For more information, call Joe
Nealon at 592-8126 or Ron Priet-
sman Jr. at 762-7015.
Jenkins Township Little League
annual golf tournament is May 12.
Registration is $75 per person and
$300 per team. Registration fee
includes greens fee, cart fee,
unlimited driving range, hog dog
and refreshments at the turn,
Italian buffet dinner and a hole-in-
one prize on all par-3s. For more
information, visit www.jenkinstw-
plittleleague.com.
The Penn State Hazleton annual
golf tournament will be held at
Sand Springs Country Club on
Friday, May 18. Cost is $65 for
Hazleton Alumni Chapter mem-
bers and $70 for non-chapter
members. Cost includes greens
fee, cart fee, lunch during the
tournament and a buffet dinner.
Prizes to be awarded include a
football autographed by Joe
Paterno. All proceeds benefit the
academic awards at Penn State
Hazleton. For more information,
call Blair Bell at 956-8549.
The Relay for Life Bowling Tourna-
ment will be held Saturday from
6-8 p.m. at Chackos Family Bowl-
ing Center, 195 N. Wilkes-Barre
Blvd. Cost is $20 per person with
teams of five. This includes two
hours of bowling, shoe rental, one
large plain pizza and one pitcher of
soda. This year will be played in
honor of Barbara Struckus. For
details, to register or for sponsor-
ship options, call Sara Edwards at
760-4083, Leigh Robinson at
814-1056 or Danielle Shanaberger
at 574-9820. Proceeds benefit the
American Cancer Society.
Sand Springs Country Club and
Tuskes Homes will host the 11th
annual Four-Man Scramble on
Tuesday, May 22. The tournament
features a cookout lunch at 11:30
a.m., followed by a 12:30 p.m.
shotgun start. Cost is $75 per
person and includes lunch, golf,
beverages and a buffet dinner.
Registration and payment are due
May 14. For more information, call
788-5845, ext. 1.
The Wyoming Valley Jewish Com-
munity Centers physical educa-
tion department has organized a
walk and run for Sunday, May 20
at 10:30 a.m. The course will run
through South Wilkes-Barre with
the start and finish line on River
Street. The race is 3 miles, and the
course is flat and fast. Registration
fee is $17. Race day registration will
be held at the JCC beginning at 9
a.m. Registration closes 10 minutes
prior to the race start. Make
checks payable to: Jewish Commu-
nity Center. Mail pre-entry fee and
official entry form to: JCC, Attn.
Bill Buzza, 60 S. River St. Wilkes-
Barre, 18702. For more informa-
tion, call 824-4646.
MEETINGS
Nanticoke Area Basketball Booster
Club will meet today at 6:00 p.m.
at the Alden Manor in Nanticoke.
Plans for summer leagues and
camps will be discussed. All par-
ents of both boys and girls basket-
ball players are invited and encour-
aged to attend.
GAR Soccer Booster Club will be
meeting today at 7 p.m. at Mags
Halftime Pub, Moyallen St. W-B.
Finalizing plans for end of year
activities.
Pittston Area Soccer Boosters will
hold their monthly meeting Thurs-
day at 7:30 p.m., at Tonys Pizza
and Wine Cellar. Plans for the
Patriot Cup will be discussed.
Parents of all players should at-
tend.
Hanover Township Open Golf Tour-
nament Committee will have a
meeting Monday at 7:30 p.m. at
Wyoming Valley Country Club.
Plains Yankees Football & Cheer-
leading Organization will hold its
next monthly meeting on Monday
at 7:00pm at the PAV in Hudson.
All are welcome to attend.
Swoyersville Little League will meet
today at 7:30 p.m. at the borough
building. All managers and coach-
es need to attend.
Wyoming Valley American Legion
Baseball will hold its annual dinner
meeting on Saturday, May 19, 6:00
p.m. at Nanticoke Post 350, 23
West Broad St, Nanticoke. Team
rosters will be available.
REGISTRATION/TRYOUTS
Greater Nanticoke Area Youth
Soccer will be holding sign-ups
Saturday at the Nanticoke High
School Cafeteria from10am-2pm.
BWBL Charity Wiffleball Classic will
be held May 19 at Coal Street Park.
Teams of 3-5 players are guaran-
teed at least two games. Fee is $10
per player ages 13 and up, with all
proceeds benefiting local cancer
charities. All materials (bats, balls,
etc.) provided. Call 704-8344 to
register. Deadline is May 16. Medi-
um pitch format with baserunning,
see full rules at www.bwbl.net, or
by e-mailing [email protected].
Hanover Area Quarterback Club will
be holding a meeting today at 7
p.m., at Bar 11 Restaurant in Hanov-
er Township. Election of board
members will be held, along with
discussion of the upcoming sea-
son. All parents of players should
attend.
Plains Yankees Football & Cheer-
leading Organization will hold
registration on Wednesday,
May16th from 6:00pm - 8:00pm at
the Plains American Legion, 101 E.
Carey Street, Plains. Cost is
$60.00 for one child or $75.00 per
family.
The JimAtherton Mens Adult
Basketball League has applica-
tions available for the upcoming
season, which begins May 29. All
games will be played at the Miner
Park basketball courts. There will
be two leagues: one on Monday
nights and another on Tuesday
nights. Teams interested in playing
can call John Leighton at 430-
8437.
The Pace Setter Athletic Club offers
summer basketball leagues at the
Greater Scranton YMCA in Dun-
more for seventh and eighth grade
boys and girls, as well as leagues
for varsity girls and boys. Interest-
ed parties can contact Pace Setter
Athletic Club at 347-7018 or 575-
0941, or e-mail to pacesetter-
[email protected].
Wilkes-Barre Cosmos Soccer Club
will have registration for the fall
season today and Thursday at Coal
Street Park in Wilkes-Barre from
5-7 p.m. Players must be 4 years
old by Aug. 1. For more information,
call Tom at 332-9141 or email wil-
[email protected].
UPCOMING EVENTS
The Coughlin Football Booster Club
is holding its sixth annual golf
tournament at Wilkes-Barre Munic-
ipal Golf Course on Saturday, May
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
BASEBALL
Favorite Odds Underdog
American League
Blue Jays 7.0 AS
White Sox 7.5 INDIANS
Rangers 9.0 ORIOLES
YANKEES 9.5 Rays
Angels 8.5 TWINS
Red Sox 8.5 ROYALS
Tigers 7.0 MARINERS
National League
BREWERS 7.0 Reds
Brave s NL CUBS
PADRES 7.0 Rockies
Nationals 7.0 PIRATES
PHILLIES 7.0 Mets
Marlins 8.0 ASTROS
Cards 9.0 DBACKS
DODGERS 6.5 Giants
NOTE: There will be no over/under run total (which
wouldbetheovernight total) for all theChicagoCubs
homegames duetotheconstantly changingweather
reports at Wrigley Field. Please check with www.a-
mericasline.com for the latest Cubs run total on the
day of the game.
NBA
Favorite Points Underdog
HEAT 11 Knicks
GRIZZLIES 6 Clippers
NHL
Favorite Odds Underdog
CAPITALS -$110/-
$110
Rangers
Sunday
Kings -$110/-
$110
COYOTES
AME RI C A S L I NE
BY ROXY ROXBOROUGH
BOXING REPORT: In the WBA/IBF welterweight title fight on May 19 in Las Vegas,
Nevada, Amir Khan is -$500 vs. Lamont Peterson at +$400; in the WBO welter-
weight title fight on June 9 in Las Vegas, Nevada, Manny Pacquiao is -$400 vs.
Timothy Bradley at +$300. Follow Eckstein on Twitter at www.twitter.com/vegasvig-
orish.
Large16-race programon the slate for the Mohegan Sun at Pocono
Downs for this evening. Most every race has full nine horse fields and
as usual plenty of potential for prices in a lot of different races, good
luck to all!
BEST BET: NIGHTIME FLASH (13TH)
VALUE PLAY: DINAH ROSS (10TH)
POST TIME 6:30 p.m.
All Races One Mile
First-$14,000 Cond.Trot;n/w 4 pm races life
6 Blue Muscles M.Kakaley 1-1-5 Stakes filly dominates 3-1
2 Transgressive M.Simons 1-2-5 Bumps up off the win 9-2
5 City Kid T.Buter 4-7-6 Note the driver change 7-2
8 Devilicious J.Pavia 3-3-3 Lacks little something late 4-1
9 Map Of Hawaii J.Morrill 8-4-3 Try another region 8-1
3 Somolli Crown D.Ingraham 8-6-5 Raced better at Chester 20-1
1 Wind Neath My Feet T.Jackson 6-8-1 Sailing south 6-1
4 State Fair G.Napolitano 5-9-5 Not fair season yet 15-1
7 Western Credit A.Spano 1-7-8 Bounced 10-1
Second-$11,000 Cond.Pace;n/w 2 pm races life
6 Its Rock N Roll J.Pavia 3-3-4 Time for a beat down 3-1
9 American Pilot B.Simpson 2-5-6 Live pacer 8-1
5 Powerful Pilot G.Napolitano 5-5-5 Behind the other pilot 4-1
7 Hurrikane Mitchell J.Morrill 8-1-7 Hung mile in most recent 7-2
4 Chester Hanover M.Romano 3-2-7 Just 1 for 38 lifetime 9-2
1 Savvy Savannah T.Jackson 9-9-1 Little since that upset 6-1
2 Im Not Telling C.Ryder 8-1-3 No one is listening 15-1
3 Hes Unbelievable A.McCarthy 5-5-7 Dull 10-1
8 Kanjo M.Kakaley x-8-8 Again in the rear 20-1
Third-$11,000 Cond.Trot;n/w $6,500 last 5
2 Master Begonia G.Napolitano 8-5-6 Easy level for him 5-2
1 Rushmore Hanover T.Jackson 6-9-3 Pole cant hurt 7-2
3 B Contemporary H.Parker 9-9-1 Best of the remainders 8-1
4 Wingbat M.Simons 3-3-6 Not the best of groups 4-1
5 M S Heather M J.Taggart 2-7-3 Maybe use in supers 6-1
6 Donnegal G.Wasiluk 6-6-7 Done indeed 15-1
7 Celebrity Legacy D.Ingraham 5-5-5 Ingraham not doing much 10-1
8 Victors Future M.Kakaley 7-5-1 Swallowed up 5-1
9 Ladys Night B.Simpson 5-9-5 Mare overmatched 20-1
Fourth-$9,000 Cond.Pace;n/w $4,000 last 5
1 Algebra J.Bongiorno 6-7-1 Remember this kids name 7-2
8 Dorm Roomie J.Morrill 4-5-4 Future meets the present 15-1
7 TEs Cammie J.Pavia 8-3-3 Invades from Philly 3-1
3 Hot List C.Ryder 2-8-5 Ryder again in bike 4-1
4 How Sweet Thou Art M.Simons 7-2-5 Yet to win in 2012 9-2
5 Real Joy E.Carlson 6-3-10 Too unpredictable 10-1
6 Livinwell Hanover J.Taggart 1-1-7 Monti import 8-1
2 Upland Hanover M.Kakaley 4-7-5 Rolling downhill 6-1
9 Real Espresso G.Napolitano 6-9-6 Yet to wake up 20-1
Fifth-$11,000 Cond.Trot;n/w 2 pm races life
8 Bold Fresh J.Morrill 2-1-5 Back to winners circle 3-1
9 American Saint C.Norris 4-4-8 Plenty talented 6-1
6 Marion Mon Ami M.Kakaley 5-3-4 Kakaley due to heat up 7-2
2 Cruisin Susan M.Romano 5-5-6 Matt catch drives 8-1
3 Missy Goldfire M.Simons 4-2-3 Plenty of early foot 9-2
4 Perfect Chance T.Jackson 5-3-6 Toms choice over #2 4-1
5 Bullvillcomeonjohn G.Napolitano 7-7-5 Struggled all season 10-1
1 Chapter Eleven H.Parker 8-5-8 Time to file 15-1
7 Bloomfieldcantifly B.Simpson 6-8-5 Grounded quickly 20-1
Sixth-$14,000 Clm.Hndcp Pace;clm.price $15-20,000
5 Five Star Gazer L.Stalbaum 5-1-4 Worth following 5-2
8 Blue Monster J.Bongiorno 2-1-7 Fits well with these 6-1
2 Woes Jet Filly A.Napolitano 3-1-1 Again draws inside main foes 5-1
9 G G Roulette J.Morrill 1-8-1 Can she go another big one 3-1
4 Highly Thought Of M.Kakaley 4-2-1 From the Burke barn 4-1
6 Doinit Dragonstyle G.Napolitano 7-2-2 Dragon returns from NY 10-1
3 Peeeeyouuuuuuuu E.Carlson 9-6-4 Living up to name 12-1
1 Miss Behave A.McCarthy 6-3-7 A long shot for sure 15-1
7 For All We Know A.Rucker 3-9-9 Reason Adam is here 20-1
Seventh-$14,000 Cond.Trot;n/w 4 pm races life
8 Aunt Mel J.Morrill 2-1-2 Look for big things from her 5-2
6 P L Eureka M.Johansson 5-5-1 Certainly there in #8 struggles 4-1
3 Opinion Hanover M.Simons 1-1-3 Never better 3-1
9 Vacation Credit T.Buter 2-3-2 Picking up his game 10-1
5 Martino G.Napolitano 3-3-2 Doesnt like to win 5-1
7 Overandovervictory M.Romano 8-2-5 Simons chose #3 instead 12-1
4 Bob N Tony M.Kakaley 4-2-3 Bring on the Celtics 6-1
2 Armed Dangerously A.McCarthy 3-1-2 Off since Oct 15-1
1 Celebrity Lovin J.Pavia 4-7-7 Bad habits 20-1
Eighth-$11,000 Cond.Pace;n/w $6,500 last 5
4 Pictonian Pride M.Kakaley 2-4-5 Time for a picture 3-1
2 Modern Valentine J.Morrill 7-3-3 Worthy contender 7-2
1 Armbro Billow E.Carlson 3-2-5 Winner of over $530k life 9-2
5 Bill Onthehill A T.Buter 2-7-4 Wont get same great trip 4-1
8 Cheyenne Knight M.Simons 2-3-4 Tough luck animal 6-1
6 Charliesandjimmys G.Napolitano 4-4-3 Waiting on Jimmy 20-1
7 Majority Rules J.Pavia 7-4-5 Lacks killer instinct 15-1
3 Monet C C D.Ingraham 4-5-5 Cash in your chips 8-1
9 Finn Man A.McCarthy 4-3-7 Swimming upstream 10-1
Ninth-$13,000 Cond.Trot;n/w $9,000 last 5
2 Shibboleth Hanover M.Simons 1-1-4 Found another gear 7-2
1 Swan Image M.Romano 1-7-6 Knew hed strike one night 15-1
3 Great Emancipator D.Ackerman 8-8-1 Moves in and draws lesser 6-1
8 Shining Ember J.Morrill 2-3-4 Cash burner 9-2
7 Habanero T.Buter 3-7-1 Goes for team Buter 4-1
5 Im Fabulous G.Napolitano 3-7-8 Looking for flat mile 8-1
4 Dream Lake A.Napolitano 7-5-2 Rides the rails 3-1
6 Hoboken Sonny H.Parker 2-8-5 Tries out the hopples 10-1
9 Biscuits N Gravy D.Ingraham 5-6-1 Little since that score 20-1
Tenth-$14,000 Clm.Hndcp Pace;clm.price $15-20,000
8 Dinah Ross J.Pavia 2-5-7 Belts out winning note 4-1
1 Cosmo Madness T.Buter 8-4-6 Dangerous shipper 12-1
3 Picked By An Angel G.Napolitano 2-3-6 Went down at 3-5 odds 5-2
5 Sarastar M.Simons 4-3-8 Sherman cooling down 7-2
2 Trieste Seelster J.Morrill 6-5-1 New to the Taylor barn 5-1
4 Touch The Clouds M.Kakaley 4-4-3 Keep reaching 6-1
6 Medoland Santorini A.McCarthy 7-2-4 In with toughies 15-1
7 Caramel Chinno T.Jackson 1-3-5 First try for a tag 8-1
Eleventh-$9,500 Cond.Pace;n/w 1 pm race life
3 Beach Girl Terror G.Napolitano 6-4-4 Allard been red hot in Jersey 7-2
1 Margarita Monday A.McCarthy 2-6-4 Mixes in for a place 3-1
2 Shelikesitherway T.Buter 5-5-4 Dont they all 4-1
4 S And M Terror M.Simons 5-5-2 Never hit the board 9-2
7 Sammys Magic Day M.Kakaley 2-7-9 Winless in 30 prior 8-1
6 Colbert Blue Chip M.Romano 4-4-7 Dragon Again filly 6-1
5 Cindys Girl J.Morrill 6-6-2 Lightly raced gal 15-1
8 Day Traker A.Kavoleff 4-3-8 Alex again reins 10-1
9 They Call Me Moon D.Ingraham 6-2-4 Not happening 20-1
Twelfth-$8,500 Clm.Pace;clm.price $10,000
1 PW Ivory Grin J.Morrill 1-5-2 Wins right off the claim 5-2
9 Bigdreamsnhihopes G.Napolitano 2-2-3 Been a hot commodity 5-1
3 Firiel Hanover T.Buter 1-5-3 Nice off the pace victory 3-1
2 Natural Woman N M.Kakaley 4-4-3 Had no answers from pocket 4-1
4 Cruisinthecoast M.Simons 8-4-1 Lacks forward momentum 6-1
7 Riverdancer M.Romano 3-4-4 A notch below these 10-1
5 Southwest J.Pavia 7-8-4 Ill take a pass 15-1
6 Party At Joyces J.Kakaley 5-6-3 The party is over 12-1
8 Wishfullartist A.McCarthy 4-5-3 Keep dreaming 20-1
Thirteenth-$11,000 Cond.Trot;n/w $6,500 last 5
3 Nightime Flash C.Norris 1-4-4 Sharp as a tack 5-2
5 Whanblazes T.Buter 6-2-2 Race is for the place 7-2
2 Tober D.Ingraham 3-7-2 Raced good last season 5-1
6 Miss Wapwallopen M.Simons 1-3-6 Moves up ladder of easy win 4-1
4 Martoddi T.Jackson 4-3-2 Jackson owns-trains-reins 12-1
1 Florida Mac Attack A.Napolitano 9-8-2 Much better post 6-1
7 Di Manggio H.Parker 6-4-7 Yet to find his stride 8-1
8 Pembrook Street J.Pavia 7-9-5 Go another route 15-1
9 Kings Cavalier J.Taggart 8-2-7 Career best just 2:00 20-1
Fourteenth-$11,000 Cond.Pace;n/w $6,500 last 5
3 Miss Annie J J.Pantaleano 1-6-8 Comes right back 5-2
1 Markella G.Napolitano 2-5-6 Looks for pocket ride 4-1
2 Gordyyys Pet J.Morrill 2-7-7 Its a battle to complete exacta 7-2
4 Discoverer E.Carlson 5-2-5 Rucker still struggling at PD 6-1
8 B Js Skye A.Napolitano 1-3-4 Class jumper 5-1
9 Sandy Absolut J.Taggart 3-5-6 Again gets a poor post 8-1
6 Hannah Isabel M.Kakaley 5-6-8 Riding a losing streak 12-1
5 Crazyboutdadrummer T.Buter 5-8-5 Staggers home 15-1
7 Tammibest D.Ingraham 9-8-2 The worst in here 20-1
Fifteenth-$11,000 Cond.Trot;n/w 2 pm races life
6 End Of Innocence J.Morrill 1-9-1 Chalk parade rolls on 5-2
5 Order By Me B.Simpson 3-3-1 Hoping for a miscue 6-1
1 Say What H.Parker 4-2-3 Rounds out the tri 7-2
4 Magical Affair M.Kakaley 1-1-4 Looking to go 2-for-2 4-1
7 Act Out Hanover J.Marohn Jr 8-3-4 Reason Jim is here 8-1
8 Mohegan Hanover G.Napolitano 1-5-5 Nap the new pilot 12-1
2 Four Starz Clyde A.Napolitano 2-5-9 Lacks late rally 5-1
3 Petite Polly A.McCarthy 5-5-3 .next 15-1
9 Womanizer Hanover J.Pavia 7-7-8 One more race to go 20-1
Sixteenth-$11,000 Cond.Pace;n/w 2 pm races life
4 El Bravo J.Morrill 1-6-7 Morrill caps late double 5-2
5 Intervention M.Kakaley 1-1-6 From potent Miller stable 7-2
1 My Civil Dollar T.Buter 3-6-1 Merits a small look 5-1
3 Ugdragons Rocket G.Napolitano 2-1-3 Does retain Nap 4-1
6 Seek The Dragon A.McCarthy 8-2-1 Looks for another check 6-1
7 Rockabella T.Jackson 2-6-5 Good n/w of 2 group 8-1
8 Chrome Cruiser M.Simons 7-4-2 Weak Schnittker trainee 20-1
2 Nip Pan Tuck J.Pavia 5-4-3 That show is over 15-1
9 Dial A Win D.Ingraham 1-5-2 See you on Fri 12-1
On the Mark
By Mark Dudek
Times Leader Correspondent
L O C A L
C A L E N D A R
TODAY'S EVENTS
H.S. BASEBALL
Hanover Area at Meyers, 4:15 p.m.
Berwick at Tunkhannock, 4:15 p.m.
Crestwood at Hazleton Area, 4:15 p.m.
Holy Redeemer at Coughlin, 4:15 p.m.
Lake-Lehman at Wyoming Seminary, 4:15 p.m.
Meyers at Northwest, 4:15 p.m.
MMI Prep at GAR, 4:15 p.m.
Wyoming Area at Wyoming Valley West, 4:15 p.m.
H.S. GIRLS SOCCER
GAR at MMI Prep, 4:15 p.m.
Hanover Area at North Pocono, 4:15 p.m.
Nanticoke at Lake-Lehman, 7 p.m.
Pittston Area at Wyoming Seminary, 4:15 p.m.
Berwick at Crestwood, 7 p.m.
Coughlin at Holy Redeemer, 7 p.m. Wilkes Univer-
sity
Delaware Valley at Wyoming Valley West, 7 p.m.
H.S. SOFTBALL
Berwick at Tunkhannock, 4:15 p.m.
Holy Redeemer at Coughlin, 4:15 p.m.
Hanover Area at Meyers, 4:15 p.m.
Lake-Lehman at Wyoming Seminary, 4:15 p.m.
MMI Prep at GAR, 4:15 p.m.
Wyoming Area at Wyoming Valley West, 4:15 p.m.
H.S TRACK AND FIELD
GAR at Hanover Area, 4:15 p.m.
Holy Redeemer at Meyers, 4:15 p.m.
Lake-Lehman at Wyoming Area, 4:15 p.m.
Northwest at Nanticoke, 4:15 p.m.
Berwick at Coughlin, 4:15 p.m.
Dallas at Wyoming Valley West, 4:15 p.m.
Hazleton Area at Crestwood, 4:15 p.m.
Pittston Area at Tunkhannock, 4:15 p.m.
H.S. BOYS VOLLEYBALL
Coughlin at Crestwood
Hazleton Area at Wyoming Valley West
North Pocono at Hanover Area
H.S. GIRLS LACROSSE
Dallas at Bellefonte, 5 p.m.
THURSDAY, MAY10
H.S. BASEBALL
Coughlin at Pittston Area, 4:15 p.m.
Hazleton Area at Nanticoke, 4:15 p.m.
Holy Redeemer at Crestwood, 4:15 p.m.
Lake-Lehman at Meyers, 4:15 p.m.
Wyoming Area at Dallas, 4:15 p.m.
Wyoming Valley West at Berwick, 4:15 p.m.
H.S. SOFTBALL
Hazleton Area at Nanticoke, 4:15 p.m.
Holy Redeemer at Crestwood, 4:15 p.m.
Lake-Lehman at Meyers, 4:15 p.m.
Pittston Area at Coughlin, 4:15 p.m.
Wyoming Area at Dallas, 4:15 p.m.
Wyoming Valley West at Berwick, 4:15 p.m.
H.S. GIRLS SOCCER
Meyers at Pittston Area, 4:15 p.m.
Wyoming Area at Tunkhannock, 7 p.m.
H.S. BOYS TENNIS
District 2 singles tournament first three rounds
H.S. BOYS VOLLEYBALL
Delaware Valley at Hanover Area
Nanticoke at Tunkhannock
COLLEGE SOFTBALL
Rowan vs. Misericordia, 2 p.m.
W H A T S O N T V
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL
7 p.m.
YES Tampa Bay at N.Y. Yankees
CSN, SNY N.Y. Mets at Philadelphia
ROOT Washington at Pittsburgh
MINOR LEAGUE BASEBALL
11:30 a.m.
SE2 Trenton at Reading
NBA BASKETBALL
7 p.m.
TNT Playoffs, first round, game 5, New York at
Miami
9:30 p.m.
TNTPlayoffs, first round, game5, L.A. Clippers at
Memphis
NHL HOCKEY
7:30 p.m.
NBCSN Playoffs, conference semifinals, game
6, N.Y. Rangers at Washington
10 p.m.
NBCSN Playoffs, conference semifinals, game
6, Phoenix at Nashville (if necessary)
T R A N S A C T I O N S
BASEBALL
American League
CLEVELAND INDIANSOptioned RHP Zach
McAllister to Columbus (IL).
KANSASCITYROYALSRecalled RHPVin Maz-
zaro from Omaha (PCL). Optioned LHP Tommy
Hottovy to Omaha.
National League
COLORADO ROCKIESRecalled RHP Alex
WhitefromColoradoSprings (PCL). OptionedRHP
Edgmer Escalona to Colorado Springs.
MILWAUKEE BREWERSSigned president of
baseball operations-general manager Doug Melvin
and manager Ron Roenicke to contract extensions.
Melvins contract includes a promotion from exec-
utive vice president and general manager.
WASHINGTON NATIONALSActivated 3B Ryan
Zimmermanfromthe15-Day DL. PlacedOFJayson
Werth on the 15-Day DL, retroactive to May 7.
Agreed to terms with LHP Michael Gonzalez on a
minor-league contract.
FOOTBALL
National Football League
ATLANTAFALCONSReleasedFBOvieMughel-
li.
CAROLINA PANTHERSSigned P Nick Harris to
a one-year contract.
CHICAGO BEARSAgree to terms With TE Evan
Rodriguez on a four-year contract.
CINCINNATI BENGALSClaimed G Chris Riley
off waivers fromTampa Bay and DT Vaughan Meat-
oga off waivers from Washington.
HOUSTON TEXANSSigned K Shayne Graham.
OAKLAND RAIDERSSigned C Colin Miller.
PITTSBURGH STEELERSAgreed to terms with
WR Toney Clemons.
SOCCER
Major League Soccer
PORTLAND TIMBERSAnnounced F Bright Dike
will join the L.A. Blues of USL PRO on a season-
long loan.
COLLEGE
BARTONNamed Jeff Lennox mens and wom-
ens volleyball coach.
BUFFALONamed Danny White athletic director.
GEORGETOWNPromoted Kenya Kirkland to
womens assistant basketball coach.
ILLINOIS STATENamed Dan Muller mens bas-
ketball coach.
LA SALLEAnnounced the resignation of softball
coach Brianne Brown.
MARY HARDIN-BAYLORNamed Austin Klumpe
womens assistant basketball coach.
MONTANANamed Kerry Rupp mens assistant
basketball coach.
MCMURRYAnnounced the resignation of mens
basketball coach J.D. Isler.
NYUNamed Trevor Miele mens and womens
swimming and diving coach. Announced the resig-
nation of womens basketball coach Stefano Trom-
peo.
TEXAS A&MAnnounced the retirement of athlet-
ic director Bill Byrne and will become a special ad-
viser to A&M President R. Bowen Loftin.
H O C K E Y
National Hockey League
CONFERENCE SEMIFINALS
Friday, April 27
Phoenix 4, Nashville 3, OT
Saturday, April 28
NY Rangers 3, Washington 1
Los Angeles 3, St. Louis 1
Sunday, April 29
Philadelphia 4, New Jersey 3, OT
Phoenix 5, Nashville 3
Monday, April 30
Washington 3, NY Rangers 2
Los Angeles 5, St. Louis 2
Tuesday, May 1
New Jersey 4, Philadelphia 1
Wednesday, May 2
NY Rangers 2, Washington 1, 3OT
Nashville 2, Phoenix 0
Thursday, May 3
New Jersey 4, Philadelphia 3, OT
Los Angeles 4, St. Louis 2
Friday, May 4
Phoenix 1, Nashville 0
Saturday, May 5
Washington 3, NY Rangers 2
Sunday, May 6
Los Angeles 3, St. Louis1, Los Angeles wins series
4-0
NewJersey 4, Philadelphia2, NewJersey leads se-
ries 3-1
Monday, May 7
NYRangers 3, Washington2, OT, NYRangers lead
series 3-2
Phoenix 2, Nashville 1, Phoenix wins series 4-1
Tuesday, May 8
New Jersey 3, Philadelphia 1, Devils win series 4-1
Today's Games
NY Rangers at Washington, 7:30 p.m.
Saturday, May 12
x-Washington at NY Rangers, TBD
American Hockey League
Playoff Glance
All Times EDT
(x-if necessary)
CONFERENCE SEMIFINALS
BEST OF 7
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Norfolk 2, Connecticut 2
Wednesday, May 2: Connecticut 3, Norfolk 2, OT
Friday, May 4: Norfolk 4, Connecticut 1
Sunday, May 6: Norfolk 4, Connecticut 3
Monday, May 7: Connecticut 4, Norfolk 1
Wednesday, May 9: Norfolk at Connecticut, 7 p.m.
Friday, May 11: Connecticut at Norfolk, 7:30 p.m.
x-Sunday, May 13: Connecticut at Norfolk, 5 p.m.
St. John's 3, Penguins 2
Tuesday, May 1: St. Johns 3, Penguins 1
Wednesday, May 2: Penguins 3, St. Johns 1
Saturday, May 5: St. Johns 2, Penguins 1, OT
Sunday, May 6: St. Johns 3, Penguins 2, OT
Tuesday, May 8: Penguins 3, St. Johns 2, 2 OT
x-Friday, May 11: Penguins at St. Johns, 6 p.m.
x-Saturday, May 12: Penguins at St. Johns, 6 p.m.
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Toronto 2, Abbotsford 1
Tuesday, May 1: Abbotsford 3, Toronto 1
Thursday, May 3: Toronto 5, Abbotsford 1
Saturday, May 5: Toronto 4, Abbotsford 1
Tuesday, May 8: Toronto at Abbotsford, late
Wednesday, May 9: Toronto at Abbotsford, 10 p.m.
x-Saturday, May 12: Abbotsford at Toronto, 3 p.m.
x-Sunday, May 13: Abbotsford at Toronto, 3 p.m.
Oklahoma City 2, San Antonio 1
Thursday, May 3: San Antonio 6, Oklahoma City 4
Saturday, May 5: Oklahoma City 5, San Antonio 4,
OT
Monday, May 7: Oklahoma City 2, San Antonio 1,
OT
Thursday, May10: Oklahoma City at San Antonio, 8
p.m.
Friday, May 11: Oklahoma City at San Antonio, 8
p.m.
x-Sunday, May13: San Antonio at Oklahoma City, 5
p.m. x-Tuesday, May 15: San Antonio at Oklahoma
City, 8 p.m.
B A S E B A L L
Minor League Baseball
International League
North Division
W L Pct. GB
Pawtucket (Red Sox) .............. 20 12 .625
Buffalo (Mets)........................... 18 13 .581 1
1
2
Lehigh Valley (Phillies) ........... 17 13 .567 2
Yankees ................................... 14 14 .500 4
Rochester (Twins) ................... 13 17 .433 6
Syracuse (Nationals)............... 10 20 .333 9
South Division
W L Pct. GB
Gwinnett (Braves) ................... 19 11 .633
Charlotte (White Sox) ............. 15 16 .484 4
1
2
Norfolk (Orioles) ...................... 13 17 .433 6
Durham (Rays)......................... 11 20 .355 8
1
2
West Division
W L Pct. GB
Toledo (Tigers) ........................ 19 11 .633
Indianapolis (Pirates)............... 17 13 .567 2
Columbus (Indians) ................. 16 13 .552 2
1
2
Louisville (Reds) ...................... 10 22 .313 10
Monday's Games
Pawtucket 4, Rochester 0
Norfolk 4, Louisville 2
Durham at Syracuse, ppd., rain
Buffalo 4, Gwinnett 3
Indianapolis 4, Lehigh Valley 0
Columbus at Scranton/Wilkes-Barre, ppd., rain
Toledo 6, Charlotte 1
Tuesday's Games
Syracuse 4, Durham 2, 1st game
Columbus 1, Yankee 0, 1st game
Rochester 3, Pawtucket 1
Norfolk 11, Louisville 4
Indianapolis 7, Lehigh Valley 2
Buffalo 3, Gwinnett 0
Yankees 4, Columbus 3, 2nd game
Durham 2, Syracuse 1, 2nd game
Toledo 4, Charlotte 4, susp. 8 innings
Today's Games
Norfolk at Louisville, 11:05 a.m.
Lehigh Valley at Indianapolis, 1:05 p.m.
Rochester at Pawtucket, 6:15 p.m.
Durham at Syracuse, 7 p.m.
Buffalo at Gwinnett, 7:05 p.m.
Columbus at Yankees, 7:05 p.m.
Toledo at Charlotte, 7:15 p.m.
B A S K E T B A L L
National Basketball
Association
Playoff Glance
(x-if necessary)
FIRST ROUND
(Best-of-7)
Thursday, May 3
Miami 87, New York 70
Oklahoma City 95, Dallas 79
Friday, May 4
Boston 90, Atlanta 84, OT
Philadelphia 79, Chicago 74
Denver 99, L.A. Lakers 84
Saturday, May 5
Indiana 101, Orlando 99, OT, Indiana leads series
3-1
L.A. Clippers 87, Memphis 86
Oklahoma City 103, Dallas 97, Oklahoma City wins
series 4-0
San Antonio 102, Utah 90
Sunday, May 6
Philadelphia 89, Chicago 82, Philadelphia leads
series 3-1
New York 89, Miami 87, Miami leads series 3-1
Boston 101, Atlanta 79, Boston leads series 3-1
L.A. Lakers 92, Denver 88, L.A. Lakers lead series
3-1
Monday, May 7
San Antonio 87, Utah 81, San Antonio wins series
4-0
L.A. Clippers 101, Memphis 97, OT, L.A. Clippers
leads series 3-1
Tuesday, May 8
Indiana 105, Orlando 87
Boston 87, Atlanta 86, Boston leads series 3-21
Philadelphia at Chicago, late
Denver at L.A. Lakers, late
Today's Games
New York at Miami, 7 p.m.
L.A. Clippers at Memphis, 9:30 p.m.
Thursday, May 10
x-Chicago at Philadelphia, TBD
x-Atlanta at Boston, 6 or 8 p.m.
x-L.A. Lakers at Denver, 9 or 10:30 p.m.
Friday, May 11
x-Indiana at Orlando, 7 p.m.
x-Miami at New York, 8 or 8:30 p.m.
x-Memphis at L.A. Clippers, 9 or 10:30 p.m.
Saturday, May 12
x-Philadelphia at Chicago, TBD
x-Boston at Atlanta, TBD
x-Denver at L.A. Lakers, TBD
Sunday, May 13
x-New York at Miami, TBD
x-Orlando at Indiana, TBD
x-L.A. Clippers at Memphis, TBD
H A R N E S S
R A C I N G
Pocono Downs Results
First - $8,500 Trot 1:57.0
4-Ashcroft (Mi Simons) 10.40 4.00 3.20
3-Queen Creek (Ge Napolitano Jr) 2.60 2.20
8-Universal Star (Do Irvine Jr) 8.00
EXACTA (4-3) $26.40
TRIFECTA (4-3-8) $256.60
50 CENT TRIFECTA (50 Cent) $64.15
SUPERFECTA (4-3-8-7) $1,853.80
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (10 Cent) $92.69
Second - $4,500 Pace 1:53.3
6-Chase The Sun (Br Simpson) 13.20 4.00 2.80
1-Kels Return (Ge Napolitano Jr) 2.60 2.10
7-Pegasus Osborne (Ho Parker) 2.80
EXACTA (6-1) $27.40
TRIFECTA (6-1-7) $103.40
50 CENT TRIFECTA (50 Cent) $25.85
SUPERFECTA (6-1-7-2) $384.60
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (10 Cent) $19.23
DAILY DOUBLE (4-6) $57.60
Scratched: Brother Ray
Third - $9,500 Trot 1:59.3
1-Armor Hanover (Th Jackson) 3.60 2.80 2.20
7-Andover Again (Ma Kakaley) 7.20 3.80
5-Ballagio Hanover (To Schadel) 2.20
EXACTA (1-7) $29.20
TRIFECTA (1-7-5) $102.00
50 CENT TRIFECTA (50 Cent) $25.50
SUPERFECTA (1-7-5-9) $456.80
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (10 Cent) $22.84
Fourth - $9,000 Pace 1:53.4
4-San Antony-O (Ty Buter) 4.40 3.00 2.60
7-Mcmarvel (Ge Napolitano Jr) 6.20 4.00
5-Thomas J (Ma Romano) 4.40
EXACTA (4-7) $29.60
TRIFECTA (4-7-5) $170.80
50 CENT TRIFECTA (50 Cent) $42.70
SUPERFECTA (4-7-5-6) $1,289.40
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (10 Cent) $64.47
Fifth - $9,000 Trot 1:58.1
8-Sephora De Vie (Ja Morrill Jr) 5.60 3.20 2.60
2-A Fortunes Legacy (Th Jackson) 3.00 2.40
4-Orphan Victor (Mi Simons) 2.80
EXACTA (8-2) $18.60
TRIFECTA (8-2-4) $44.20
50 CENT TRIFECTA (50 Cent) $11.05
SUPERFECTA (8-2-4-5) $155.00
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (10 Cent) $7.75
PICK 3 (1-4-8) $46.20
Sixth - $6,000 Pace 1:55.1
6-Gladiare Grande (Ja Morrill Jr) 6.60 5.00 3.40
7-Mountain Air (Th Jackson) 13.00 4.80
4-Timewell (An Napolitano) 3.20
EXACTA (6-7) $79.40
TRIFECTA (6-7-4) $244.60
50 CENT TRIFECTA (50 Cent) $61.15
SUPERFECTA (6-7-4-8) $3,025.00
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (10 Cent) $151.25
Scratched: Joey Hackett
Seventh - $8,500 Trot 1:57.4
7-Bayside Volo (Mi Simons) 5.60 4.60 4.20
2-Red Victor (Da Ingraham) 13.40 8.60
3-Lotsa Speed Nz (An McCarthy) 4.60
EXACTA (7-2) $112.60
TRIFECTA (7-2-3) $495.20
50 CENT TRIFECTA (50 Cent) $123.80
SUPERFECTA (7-2-3-8) $6,085.80
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (10 Cent) $304.29
Scratched: Zero Boundaries
Eighth - $9,000 Pace 1:52.4
6-Hacienda (Ma Kakaley) 30.80 9.00 3.40
3-Thunderfist (Jo Pavia Jr) 6.00 4.60
1-Glass Pack (Ge Napolitano Jr) 4.00
EXACTA (6-3) $187.20
TRIFECTA (6-3-1) $415.80
50 CENT TRIFECTA (50 Cent) $103.95
SUPERFECTA (6-3-1-2) $841.00
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (10 Cent) $42.05
Ninth - $12,000 Trot 1:57.3
1-Tameka Seelster (Ho Parker) 7.60 3.20 3.80
7-Stretch Limo (Ty Buter) 5.00 3.40
2-Tayas Photo (Ja Morrill Jr) 3.20
EXACTA (1-7) $43.40
50 CENT TRIFECTA (1-7-2) $445.60
50 CENT TRIFECTA (50 Cent) $111.40
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (1-7-2-3) $1,915.20
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (10 Cent) $95.76
PICK 4 (6-7-6-1 (4 Out of 4)) $2,989.40
Tenth - $25,000 Pace 1:52.1
3-Billmar Scooter (Ty Buter) 4.60 3.20 2.20
4-Southwind Jazmin (Ja Morrill Jr) 5.40 2.10
1-Forever Ivy (Ch Norris) 2.40
EXACTA (3-4) $30.00
TRIFECTA (3-4-1) $69.80
50 CENT TRIFECTA (50 Cent) $17.45
SUPERFECTA (3-4-1-7) $337.80
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (10 Cent) $16.89
Eleventh - $6,000 Trot 1:58.2
8-Hes Mine Stratto (An McCarthy) 6.20 3.20 2.80
4-Black Watch (Ja Morrill Jr) 2.40 2.10
7-Streetwise Hall (Er Carlson) 3.40
EXACTA (8-4) $22.60
TRIFECTA (8-4-7) $224.00
50 CENT TRIFECTA (50 Cent) $56.00
SUPERFECTA (8-4-7-2) $567.20
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (10 Cent) $28.36
Twelfth - $18,000 Pace 1:52.1
1-Red Star Hottie (Ma Kakaley) 6.40 3.20 2.60
3-Freedom Crossing (Ja Morrill Jr) 3.80 3.00
2-Runaway Tray (An Napolitano) 2.80
EXACTA (1-3) $19.60
TRIFECTA (1-3-2) $69.00
50 CENT TRIFECTA (50 Cent) $17.25
SUPERFECTA (1-3-2-4) $253.40
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (10 Cent) $12.67
PICK 3 (3-8-1) $89.80
Thirteenth - $9,000 Trot 1:57.1
7-Litany Of Lindy (Ja Morrill Jr) 17.20 12.00 9.80
3-Soapy Sap (Ji Taggart Jr) 5.00 5.00
8-Toocloseforcomfort (Ty Buter) 16.60
EXACTA (7-3) $101.00
TRIFECTA (7-3-8) $3,273.60
50 CENT TRIFECTA (50 Cent) $818.40
SUPERFECTA (7-3-8-1) $12,047.80
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (10 Cent) $602.39
Fourteenth - $6,000 Pace 1:55.0
3-Ludi Christy (Ma Romano) 9.20 2.80 2.40
1-Bugatti Hanover (Ge Napolitano Jr) 2.20 2.10
6-Live Blue (Da Ingraham) 12.80
EXACTA (3-1) $27.00
TRIFECTA (3-1-6) $383.60
50 CENT TRIFECTA (50 Cent) $95.90
SUPERFECTA (3-1-6-9) $1,554.40
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (10 Cent) $77.72
Scratched: Night Call
Fifteenth - $9,500 Pace 1:54.1
2-Quik Jolt (Mi Simons) 2.60 2.10 2.10
8-Mr Govianni Fra (Er Carlson) 4.80 3.40
7-One More Miracle (Ty Buter) 10.40
EXACTA (2-8) $7.40
TRIFECTA (2-8-7) $27.80
50 CENT TRIFECTA (50 Cent) $6.95
SUPERFECTA (2-8-7-3) $290.80
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (10 Cent) $14.54
LATE DOUBLE (3-2) $13.80
Scratched: Purple Mcrain
Total Handle-$557,319
B O X I N G
Fight Schedule
May 11
At Texas Station Gambling Hall &Hotel , Las Vegas
(SHO), Yudel Jhonson vs. Willie Nelson, 10, junior
middleweights.
May 12
At PasigCity, Philippines, BrianViloriavs. Omar Ni-
no, 12, for Vilorias WBO flyweight title.
May 18
At The Times Union Center, Albany, N.Y. (ESPN),
Karim Mayfield vs. Raymond Serrano, 10, for May-
fields NABO light welterweight title.
At Dover (Del.) Downs Hotel & Casino, Mike Mollo
vs. Franklin Lawrence, 10, for the vacant NABA
heavyweight title; Mike Stewart vs. Christopher
Fernandez, 10, for the WBU welterweight title.
May 19
At Mandalay Bay Hotel, Las Vegas (HBO), Lamont
Petersonvs. Amir Khan, 10, for Petersons WBASu-
per World and IBF super lightweight title.
May 24
At Boston House of Blues, Danny OConnor vs. Da-
niel Sostre, 10, junior welterweights.
May 25
At the Horseshoe Casino, Hammond, Ind., Fres
Oquendo vs. Joey Abell, 10, for the WBA Fedelatin
heavyweight title.
C M Y K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 2012 PAGE 3B
M A J O R L E A G U E B A S E B A L L
NEW YORK David Ro-
bertson struck out Carlos Pena
with the bases loaded to end a
rocky ninth inning in his first
save chance since Mariano
Riveras season-ending knee
injury, helping the New York
Yankees end a seven-game skid
against the Tampa Bay Rays
with a 5-3 victory Tuesday
night.
Raul Ibanez homered twice,
Curtis Granderson also con-
nected and the Yankees handed
James Shields (5-1) his first
loss in seven starts this season.
Ivan Nova (4-1) rebounded
nicely after snapping his 15-
game winning streak, pitching
seven sharp innings, the last
three in a steady rain. He gave
up six hits and struck out
eight. His effort comes on the
day New York learned Andy
Pettitte will be activated Sun-
day to make his first start since
retiring after the 2010 season
meaning one pitcher will
lose a spot in the rotation.
The Yankees began the sea-
son with three straight losses
to Tampa Bay in Florida and
last beat the AL East-leading
Rays on Sept. 21. It was their
longest losing streak all-time
against the Rays.
Rafael Soriano moved up to
the eighth-inning spot in the
Yankees reorganized bullpen
and immediately gave up a
triple to Ben Zobrist. Zobrist
scored on a wild pitch to make
it 4-3 but Soriano struck out
the side.
Mark Teixeira had an RBI
double in the eighth to give
Robertson a two-run cushion.
Twins 5, Angels 0
MINNEAPOLIS Scott
Diamond pitched a career-best
seven scoreless innings in his
season debut and Ryan Doumit
hit a two-run homer, lifting
Minnesota over Los Angeles.
Diamond (1-0) struck out
six, the most in any of his eight
major league starts, and al-
lowed only four hits. Hes the
first Twins starter to pitch this
year without allowing a run.
Diamond got 12 groundball
outs, seven to shortstop Brian
Dozier, and walked only one.
Dan Haren (1-3) didnt even
finish the fourth, the shortest
of his seven starts this season
after pitching into the seventh
inning in each of his last four
appearances. He gave up eight
hits and five runs with two
walks over 3 2-3 innings.
Royals 6, Red Sox 4
KANSAS CITY, Mo. Billy
Butler hit a mammoth three-
run homer in the eighth inning
to lead Kansas City past Bos-
ton.
Chris Getz and Humberto
Quintero also drove in runs for
the Royals, who overcame
another lousy performance by
their starting pitcher to pick up
a confidence-boosting win.
Daniel Bard (2-4) walked
Jarrod Dyson and Alex Gordon
to start the eighth before giv-
ing way to reliever Matt Al-
bers, whose third pitch to But-
ler landed beyond the left-field
wall.
White Sox 5, Indians 3, 10
Innings
CLEVELAND Alex Rios
tripled home the go-ahead run
in the 10th inning to lead Chi-
cago over Cleveland.
Cleveland closer Chris Perez
(0-1) yielded a leadoff single to
Paul Konerko, who was re-
placed by pinch-runner Brent
Lillibridge. After A.J. Pier-
zynski fouled out, Rios lined a
ball over the head of second
baseman Jason Kipnis that
rolled all the way to the wall.
Rios scored on a fielders
choice, beating the throw
home from Kipnis, who fielded
a ground ball hit by Alexei
Ramirez.
A M E R I C A N L E A G U E R O U N D U P
Robertson closes
out Yanks win
The Associated Press
PHILADELPHIA Lucas
Duda had a tiebreaking, two-
out RBI single in the seventh
and the New York Mets took
advantage of Philadelphias
defensive blunder.
Duda and David Wright had
two hits and two RBIs each to
help the Mets win their fourth
straight.
Hunter Pence homered for
the Phillies, who have lost four
of five.
The Mets took the lead in
the seventh with four two-out
runs on four hits, including
Dudas single to right off left-
hander Antonio Bastardo (1-2)
that drove in Wright with the
go-ahead run.
Pirates 5, Nationals 4
PITTSBURGH (AP) Rod
Barajas hit a two-run homer off
Washington closer Henry Ro-
driguez with two outs in the
ninth to lift the Pittsburgh
Pirates to a 5-4 victory on
Tuesday night.
The veteran catcher, mired
in a season-long slump, drilled
a shot down the left field line
that sailed a few rows into the
seats for his first home run and
RBIs of the year.
The Nationals went ahead
4-3 after Adam LaRoches two-
run blast in the top of the ninth
off Pittsburgh closer Joel Han-
rahan.
Astros 3, Marlins 2
HOUSTON (AP) Pinch-
hitter Brian Bogusevic hit an
eighth-inning RBI double and
Houston ended Miamis sea-
son-long seven-game winning
streak.
The game was tied at 2-2
when Travis Buck singled with
two outs before Bogusevics hit
off Ryan Webb (1-1) to the
corner of left field, which a
leaping Logan Morrison just
missed, sent Buck home.
The Astros had tied the
game when two errors on one
play by Omar Infante allowed
two runs to score in the sixth
inning.
Infante had a solo homer in
the fourth and Buck added one
in the fifth to give Miami the
2-0 lead, but they managed just
two hits the rest of the way.
Braves 3, Cubs 1
CHICAGO Dan Uggla hit
a tiebreaking two-run single in
the eighth inning and the At-
lanta Braves beat the Chicago
Cubs 3-1 Tuesday night.
Michael Bourn reached on a
leadoff single and Kerry Wood
issued two walks before Uggla
drove a 1-1 pitch back up the
middle for his third hit of the
game. Freddie Freeman helped
set up the big inning by hus-
tling down the line to prevent a
potential double play.
Wood (0-2) has struggled
since he was sidelined for three
weeks with right shoulder
fatigue, yielding two runs in
each of his two outings since
he was activated from the
disabled list on Thursday.
Brewers 8, Reds 3
MILWAUKEE Aramis
Ramirez hit a three-run triple,
helping the Milwaukee Brew-
ers shake off their recent offen-
sive struggles in an 8-3 victory
over the Cincinnati Reds on
Tuesday night.
Yovani Gallardo (2-3) gave
up two runs in six innings and
tied a season high with eight
strikeouts for the Brewers, who
had lost eight of their previous
11 games.
N AT I O N A L L E A G U E R O U N D U P
Mets rallt to beat
Phils all the Duda day
The Associated Press
STANDINGS/STATS
Cardinals 9, Diamondbacks 6
St. Louis Arizona
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Furcal ss 5 1 3 2 GParra cf 5 0 2 1
Beltran rf 4 1 1 1 J.Upton rf 3 0 0 0
Hollidy lf 4 1 1 1 Zagrsk p 0 0 0 0
Craig 1b 3 2 2 2 Gldsch ph 1 0 0 0
Rzpczy p 0 0 0 0 Shaw p 0 0 0 0
Motte p 0 0 0 0 DHrndz p 0 0 0 0
Freese 3b 5 2 2 2 JMcDnl ph 1 0 0 0
YMolin c 4 0 2 1 Breslw p 0 0 0 0
Jay cf 5 0 1 0 Kubel lf 4 0 1 0
Greene 2b 5 1 1 0 MMntr c 4 1 2 1
Lynn p 2 1 0 0
Ransm
3b-ss 5 1 2 2
Roinsn ph 1 0 0 0 Overay 1b 3 1 0 0
JRomr p 0 0 0 0 A.Hill 2b 5 1 1 0
Salas p 0 0 0 0 Blmqst ss 2 0 1 0
Schmkr ph 1 0 0 0 RRorts 3b 2 1 1 2
VMarte p 0 0 0 0 JSndrs p 0 0 0 0
MCrpnt 1b 0 0 0 0 Ziegler p 0 0 0 0
Pollock
ph-rf 3 1 2 0
Totals 39 913 9 Totals 38 612 6
St. Louis............................. 302 200 200 9
Arizona............................... 000 006 000 6
EM.Montero (4), R.Roberts (3). DPArizona 3.
LOBSt. Louis 8, Arizona 10. 2BFreese (5),
Y.Molina (11), R.Roberts (4). 3BG.Parra (1).
HRFurcal (2), Beltran (8), Holliday (6), Craig (2),
Freese (7), Ransom (4). SBFurcal (6), Kubel (1).
IP H R ER BB SO
St. Louis
Lynn W,6-0 .............. 5 3 0 0 4 7
J.Romero ................. 0 4 5 5 1 0
Salas H,1 ................. 1 3 1 1 0 3
V.Marte H,3 ............. 1
1
3 0 0 0 0 1
Rzepczynski H,3.....
2
3 0 0 0 0 0
Motte S,5-6.............. 1 2 0 0 0 2
Arizona
J.Saunders L,2-2 .... 3
1
3 9 7 6 1 2
Ziegler ...................... 1
2
3 1 0 0 1 0
Zagurski ................... 1 0 0 0 0 0
Shaw......................... 1 2 2 2 1 0
D.Hernandez ........... 1 1 0 0 1 0
Breslow.................... 1 0 0 0 0 0
J.Romero pitched to 5 batters in the 6th.
HBPby D.Hernandez (Beltran).
UmpiresHome, Paul Schrieber;First, TimWelke-
;Second, Laz Diaz;Third, Mike Everitt.
T3:24. A26,447 (48,633).
Padres 3, Rockies 2
Colorado San Diego
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Scutaro 2b 4 1 2 0 Denorfi rf-lf 3 0 0 0
Pachec 3b 3 0 0 0 Maybin cf 4 1 1 0
CGnzlz lf 4 0 2 1 Headly 3b 3 1 1 0
Tlwtzk ss 3 0 0 0 Guzmn lf 2 0 1 0
Helton 1b 4 0 0 0 Grgrsn p 0 0 0 0
Cuddyr rf 3 0 0 0 Thayer p 0 0 0 0
WRosr c 2 0 0 0 Alonso 1b 3 0 2 2
Fowler cf 3 0 0 0 Hundly c 4 0 1 0
DPmrn p 1 1 1 1 OHudsn 2b 3 1 1 0
Roenck p 1 0 0 0 Brach p 0 0 0 0
Colvin ph 1 0 0 0 Venale rf 1 0 0 0
Belisle p 0 0 0 0 Bartlett ss 4 0 0 0
Brothrs p 0 0 0 0 Volquez p 2 0 0 0
Thtchr p 0 0 0 0
Parrino 2b 1 0 0 0
Totals 29 2 5 2 Totals 30 3 7 2
Colorado ............................ 001 001 000 2
San Diego.......................... 111 000 00x 3
DPSan Diego1. LOBColorado 4, San Diego 8.
2BMaybin (4). HRD.Pomeranz (1). CSCud-
dyer (1), Headley (1).
IP H R ER BB SO
Colorado
D.Pomeranz L,0-2 .. 3 5 3 3 3 2
Roenicke.................. 3 2 0 0 2 2
Belisle....................... 1
1
3 0 0 0 0 1
Brothers ...................
2
3 0 0 0 0 1
San Diego
Volquez W,1-2 ........ 5
1
3 5 2 2 4 5
Thatcher H,1............
1
3 0 0 0 0 1
Brach H,1................. 1
1
3 0 0 0 0 3
Gregerson H,3 ........ 1 0 0 0 0 1
Thayer S,1-1............ 1 0 0 0 0 0
WPD.Pomeranz. PBW.Rosario.
UmpiresHome, Brian ONora;First, Chad Fair-
child;Second, TomHallion;Third, AlfonsoMarquez.
T2:58. A15,895 (42,691).
Dodgers 9, Giants 1
San Francisco Los Angeles
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Pagan cf 5 0 0 0 DGordn ss 4 1 1 0
Theriot 2b 4 0 0 0 M.Ellis 2b 4 2 1 1
MeCarr rf 4 1 2 0 Kemp cf 3 1 3 0
Posey 1b 3 0 0 0 Lindlm p 0 0 0 0
Pill lf 4 0 0 0 AKndy ph 1 1 1 1
Blackly p 0 0 0 0 Elbert p 0 0 0 0
Arias ss 4 0 3 1 Ethier rf 4 0 2 2
HSnchz c 4 0 0 0 JRiver 1b-lf 5 0 0 2
Gillaspi 3b 3 0 0 0 Abreu lf 3 1 2 0
A.Huff ph 1 0 0 0 Belisari p 0 0 0 0
Zito p 2 0 1 0
Loney
ph-1b 2 0 0 0
Schrhlt ph 1 0 1 0 Uribe 3b 4 1 0 0
Edlefsn p 0 0 0 0 A.Ellis c 4 1 2 1
GBlanc lf 1 0 1 0 Lilly p 2 0 0 0
GwynJ
ph-lf-cf 1 1 1 0
Totals 36 1 8 1 Totals 37 913 7
San Francisco.................... 000 001 000 1
Los Angeles....................... 001 002 15x 9
EEdlefsen (1), Posey (5), Gillaspie (2), Kemp (1),
D.Gordon 2 (9). LOBSan Francisco 10, Los An-
geles 10. 2BArias (2), M.Ellis (3), Kemp (5),
Abreu (2), A.Ellis (5). SBPagan (5). CSD.Gor-
don (5). SGwynn Jr..
IP H R ER BB SO
San Francisco
Zito L,1-1.................. 6 8 3 3 4 3
Edlefsen................... 1 2 2 2 0 0
Blackley.................... 1 3 4 3 1 0
Los Angeles
Lilly W,4-0................ 6 4 1 1 2 6
Belisario H,1............ 1 1 0 0 0 0
Lindblom H,6........... 1 2 0 0 0 0
Elbert ........................ 1 1 0 0 0 1
Edlefsen pitched to 1 batter in the 8th.
WPBlackley, Lilly 2, Elbert. PBA.Ellis.
UmpiresHome, Fieldin Culbreth;First, Adrian
Johnson;Second, Gary Cederstrom;Third, Lance
Barksdale.
T3:03. A43,713 (56,000).
Mariners 3, Tigers 2
Detroit Seattle
ab r h bi ab r h bi
AJcksn cf 4 0 2 0 Ackley 2b 4 0 1 0
Dirks lf 3 1 2 0 Ryan ss 3 1 0 0
MiCarr 3b 4 0 0 0 ISuzuki rf 3 1 1 0
Fielder 1b 4 1 2 1 JMontr c 4 0 1 1
DYong dh 4 0 0 0 Kawsk pr 0 1 0 0
Avila c 4 0 0 0 Seager 3b 3 0 0 0
JhPerlt ss 4 0 2 0 Jaso dh 3 0 1 1
Boesch rf 3 0 1 1 Smoak 1b 3 0 0 0
RSantg 2b 1 0 0 0 Carp lf 2 0 0 0
Raburn 2b-rf 4 0 0 0
C.Wells
ph-lf 1 0 0 0
MSndrs cf 3 0 1 0
Totals 35 2 9 2 Totals 29 3 5 2
Detroit................................. 100 100 000 2
Seattle ................................ 000 000 003 3
Two outs when winning run scored.
DPSeattle 1. LOBDetroit 7, Seattle 4.
2BDirks (4), Fielder (3), I.Suzuki (7), J.Montero
(5), Jaso (4). SBA.Jackson (5). SSeager. SF
Jaso.
IP H R ER BB SO
Detroit
Fister......................... 7 4 0 0 0 3
Coke H,5.................. 1 0 0 0 0 2
Dotel L,1-1 BS,1-1.. 0 1 3 3 2 0
Below........................
2
3 0 0 0 0 0
Seattle
Beavan ..................... 3 4 1 1 0 1
Iwakuma................... 3 3 1 1 0 5
Kelley........................
2
3 1 0 0 0 0
Furbush.................... 1
1
3 1 0 0 1 1
Delabar W,1-0......... 1 0 0 0 0 2
Dotel pitched to 3 batters in the 9th.
WPDotel. PBAvila.
UmpiresHome, Wally Bell;First, Brian Knight-
;Second, Mike Winters;Third, Mike Muchlinski.
M O N D A Y S L A T E B O X E S
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Monday's Games
Cleveland 8, Chicago White Sox 6, 1st game
Cleveland 3, Chicago White Sox 2, 2nd game
Texas 14, Baltimore 3
Boston 11, Kansas City 5
L.A. Angels 8, Minnesota 3
Seattle 3, Detroit 2
Tuesday's Games
Chicago White Sox 5, Cleveland 3, 10 innings
N.Y. Yankees 5, Tampa Bay 3
Texas 10, Baltimore 3
Kansas City 6, Boston 4
Minnesota 5, L.A. Angels 0
Toronto at Oakland, 10:05 p.m.
Detroit at Seattle, 10:10 p.m.
Wednesday's Games
Toronto (Morrow 3-1) at Oakland (McCarthy 2-3),
3:35 p.m.
Chicago White Sox (Peavy 3-1) at Cleveland (J.Go-
mez 2-1), 7:05 p.m.
Tampa Bay (Niemann 2-3) at N.Y. Yankees (Phelps
0-1), 7:05 p.m.
Texas (Lewis 3-1) at Baltimore (W.Chen 2-0), 7:05
p.m.
Boston (Lester 1-2) at Kansas City (B.Chen 0-4),
8:10 p.m.
L.A. Angels (E.Santana 0-6) at Minnesota (Pavano
2-2), 8:10 p.m.
Detroit (Smyly 1-0) at Seattle (Vargas 3-2), 10:10
p.m.
Thursday's Games
Tampa Bay at N.Y. Yankees, 7:05 p.m.
Texas at Baltimore, 7:05 p.m.
Cleveland at Boston, 7:10 p.m.
Toronto at Minnesota, 8:10 p.m.
Detroit at Oakland, 10:05 p.m.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Monday's Games
N.Y. Mets 5, Philadelphia 2
Chicago Cubs 5, Atlanta 1
Miami 4, Houston 0
Cincinnati 6, Milwaukee 1
St. Louis 9, Arizona 6
San Diego 3, Colorado 2
L.A. Dodgers 9, San Francisco 1
Tuesday's Games
N.Y. Mets 7, Philadelphia 4
Pittsburgh 5, Washington 4
Atlanta 3, Chicago Cubs 1
Houston 3, Miami 2
Milwaukee 8, Cincinnati 3
St. Louis at Arizona, 9:40 p.m.
Colorado at San Diego, 10:05 p.m.
San Francisco at L.A. Dodgers, 10:10 p.m.
Wednesday's Games
Cincinnati (Cueto 4-0) at Milwaukee (Greinke 3-1),
1:10 p.m.
Atlanta (T.Hudson 1-0) at Chicago Cubs (Maholm
3-2), 2:20 p.m.
Colorado (Friedrich 0-0) at San Diego (Bass 1-3),
3:35 p.m.
N.Y. Mets (Gee 2-2) at Philadelphia (Cl.Lee 0-1),
7:05 p.m.
Washington (Detwiler 3-1) at Pittsburgh (Bedard
2-4), 7:05 p.m.
Miami (Jo.Johnson 0-3) at Houston (Harrell 2-2),
8:05 p.m.
St. Louis (Lohse 4-1) at Arizona (Miley 3-0), 9:40
p.m.
San Francisco (Lincecum 2-2) at L.A. Dodgers (Bil-
lingsley 2-2), 10:10 p.m.
Thursday's Games
Washington at Pittsburgh, 7:05 p.m.
A M E R I C A N
L E A G U E
Rangers 10, Orioles 3
Texas Baltimore
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Kinsler 2b 5 0 1 0 EnChvz lf 5 1 1 0
Andrus ss 4 4 2 0 Hardy ss 4 1 2 1
Hamltn cf 5 4 5 8 Flahrty ss 1 0 0 0
Beltre dh 5 2 2 1 Markks rf 5 1 3 2
MYong 3b 5 0 0 0 AdJons cf 3 0 0 0
DvMrp lf 4 0 2 0 Wieters c 3 0 1 0
N.Cruz rf 5 0 3 1 Exposit c 0 0 0 0
Napoli c 4 0 0 0 C.Davis 1b 4 0 1 0
Morlnd 1b 5 0 0 0 Betemt 3b 4 0 0 0
MrRynl dh 4 0 1 0
Andino 2b 4 0 2 0
Totals 42101510 Totals 37 311 3
Texas ............................... 203 000 320 10
Baltimore.......................... 000 001 020 3
EWieters (4). DPTexas 1, Baltimore 1. LOB
Texas 8, Baltimore 9. 2BHamilton (4), N.Cruz (8),
En.Chavez (2), Hardy (7). HRHamilton 4 (14),
Beltre (6), Hardy (7), Markakis (4).
IP H R ER BB SO
Texas
Feliz W,2-1 .............. 6 4 1 1 2 8
Uehara ..................... 1 1 0 0 0 0
R.Ross ..................... 1 4 2 2 0 0
Feldman ................... 1 2 0 0 0 0
Baltimore
Arrieta L,2-3............. 6
1
3 9 6 6 1 3
Z.Phillips ..................
2
3 3 2 2 2 0
ODay........................ 1 2 2 2 0 1
Patton ....................... 1 1 0 0 0 2
UmpiresHome, Paul Emmel;First, Scott Barry-
;Second, Jerry Meals;Third, Gary Darling.
T2:51. A11,263 (45,971).
Yankees 5, Rays 3
Tampa Bay New York
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Zobrist rf 3 1 2 0 Jeter ss 4 0 1 0
C.Pena 1b 5 0 0 0 Grndrs cf 4 1 1 1
BUpton cf 4 0 0 0 AlRdrg 3b 3 1 1 0
Joyce lf 3 0 0 0 Cano 2b 3 0 1 0
Scott dh 4 1 1 1 Teixeir 1b 3 0 1 1
Kppngr 3b 3 0 1 0 Swisher rf 4 1 0 0
Rhyms 2b 3 0 2 0 Ibanez dh 4 2 2 3
SRdrgz ss 4 0 1 0 Martin c 3 0 0 0
JMolin c 3 1 1 1 ENunez lf 3 0 1 0
Allen ph 1 0 0 0 Wise lf 0 0 0 0
Totals 33 3 8 2 Totals 31 5 8 5
Tampa Bay......................... 000 001 110 3
New York ........................... 000 210 11x 5
EB.Upton (1). DPTampa Bay 1, New York 2.
LOBTampa Bay 8, NewYork 5. 2BRhymes (1),
Cano (9), Teixeira (6). 3BZobrist (3). HRScott
(7), J.Molina (2), Granderson (10), Ibanez 2 (5).
CSZobrist (2).
IP H R ER BB SO
Tampa Bay
Shields L,5-1 ........... 6 4 3 3 3 4
Badenhop.................
2
3 2 1 1 0 0
McGee......................
2
3 1 1 1 0 1
Jo.Peralta.................
2
3 1 0 0 0 0
New York
Nova W,4-1.............. 7 6 2 2 2 8
R.Soriano H,3.......... 1 1 1 1 1 3
Robertson S,1-1 ..... 1 1 0 0 2 2
WPShields, Jo.Peralta, R.Soriano.
UmpiresHome, Jim Joyce;First, Jim Reynolds-
;Second, Mike Estabrook;Third, James Hoye.
T3:08. A37,086 (50,291).
White Sox 5, Indians 3, 10
innings
Chicago Cleveland
ab r h bi ab r h bi
De Aza cf 5 1 2 0 Damon lf 5 1 1 0
Bckhm 2b 4 1 1 0 Kipnis 2b 5 0 0 1
A.Dunn dh 2 1 1 0 ACarer ss 4 0 0 0
Konerk 1b 5 0 2 1 CSantn c 3 0 2 2
Lillirdg pr-1b 0 1 0 0 Duncan dh 3 0 0 0
Przyns c 5 0 1 2 Hafner ph 1 0 0 0
Rios rf 4 1 3 1 Choo rf 4 0 1 0
AlRmrz ss 5 0 0 1 Brantly cf 4 0 0 0
Viciedo lf 3 0 0 0 Ktchm 1b 4 1 2 0
Fukdm ph-lf 1 0 0 0 Hannhn 3b 4 1 2 0
Morel 3b 5 0 0 0
Totals 39 510 5 Totals 37 3 8 3
Chicago ........................ 200 000 100 2 5
Cleveland ..................... 000 000 030 0 3
EAl.Ramirez (3). DPChicago 1, Cleveland 2.
LOBChicago 10, Cleveland 8. 2BA.Dunn (8),
C.Santana (5), Kotchman (3). 3BRios (2). SB
Rios (4), Al.Ramirez (2). CSC.Santana (1).
IP H R ER BB SO
Chicago
Danks ....................... 7 5 2 2 3 1
Sale BS,1-1 ............. 1 1 1 0 1 1
H.Santiago W,1-1 ... 1 2 0 0 0 1
Reed S,2-2 .............. 1 0 0 0 0 2
Cleveland
Masterson................ 6 6 2 2 5 3
Wheeler.................... 2 2 1 1 1 0
Hagadone................ 1 0 0 0 0 3
C.Perez L,0-1.......... 1 2 2 2 0 1
Danks pitched to 2 batters in the 8th.
WPDanks.
UmpiresHome, Todd Tichenor;First, Larry Vano-
ver;Second, Brian Gorman;Third, Tony Randazzo.
T3:03. A11,304 (43,429).
Royals 6, Red Sox 4
Boston Kansas City
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Aviles ss 4 1 1 0 Dyson cf 3 1 0 0
Pedroia 2b 4 0 1 2 AGordn lf 3 1 0 0
Ortiz dh 5 0 1 0 Butler dh 4 1 2 3
C.Ross rf-lf 3 0 0 0 Hosmer 1b 4 1 1 0
AdGnzl 1b 3 1 2 0 Francr rf 3 0 1 0
Mdlrks 3b 1 1 1 0 Mostks 3b 4 1 1 0
Punto 3b 2 0 0 0 Getz 2b 1 1 1 1
DMcDn lf 2 0 0 0 AEscor ss 3 0 0 0
Sweeny ph-rf 2 0 0 0 Quinter c 2 0 1 1
Byrd cf 4 1 2 0
B.Pena
ph-c 1 0 0 0
Shppch c 4 0 1 1
Totals 34 4 9 3 Totals 28 6 7 5
Boston................................ 020 110 000 4
Kansas City ....................... 030 000 03x 6
EGetz (1). DPBoston 1, Kansas City 1. LOB
Boston 8, Kansas City 3. 2BAviles (9), Ortiz (13),
Ad.Gonzalez (7), Middlebrooks (4). HRButler (6).
CSByrd (1), Quintero (1). SGetz.
IP H R ER BB SO
Boston
Bard L,2-4 ................ 7 6 5 5 4 1
Albers BS,1-1..........
2
3 1 1 1 0 0
A.Miller .....................
1
3 0 0 0 0 1
Kansas City
Duffy ......................... 4
1
3 7 4 3 5 1
K.Herrera ................. 1
2
3 0 0 0 0 2
Mijares W,2-1.......... 2 2 0 0 0 3
Broxton S,6-7 .......... 1 0 0 0 0 0
Bard pitched to 2 batters in the 8th.
WPBard. BalkBard 2.
UmpiresHome, Chris Guccione;First, Jeff Nel-
son;Second, Bill Welke;Third, Tim Tschida.
T2:52. A20,524 (37,903).
Twins 5, Angels 0
Los Angeles Minnesota
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Trout cf 3 0 1 0 Komats cf 4 0 0 1
Callasp 3b 4 0 0 0 Dozier ss 4 1 2 1
Pujols 1b 4 0 0 0 Mauer 1b 4 0 2 0
TrHntr rf 4 0 0 0 Wlngh lf 3 1 2 1
Trumo dh 3 0 1 0 Doumit dh 3 1 1 2
HKndrc 2b 3 0 1 0 Valenci 3b 4 0 0 0
V.Wells lf 3 0 1 0 Plouffe rf 4 1 2 0
Aybar ss 3 0 0 0 Butera c 4 1 1 0
Iannett c 2 0 0 0 JCarrll 2b 3 0 2 0
MIzturs ph 1 0 0 0
BoWlsn c 0 0 0 0
Totals 30 0 4 0 Totals 33 512 5
Los Angeles....................... 000 000 000 0
Minnesota.......................... 300 200 00x 5
DPLos Angeles 1, Minnesota 1. LOBLos An-
geles 4, Minnesota10. 2BTrumbo (5), Mauer (5),
Willingham(8), J.Carroll (5). HRDoumit (4). SB
J.Carroll (3). SJ.Carroll. SFKomatsu.
IP H R ER BB SO
Los Angeles
Haren L,1-3.............. 3
2
3 8 5 5 2 0
Pauley....................... 4 4 0 0 2 3
Takahashi ................
1
3 0 0 0 0 0
Minnesota
Diamond W,1-0....... 7 4 0 0 1 6
Burton....................... 1 0 0 0 0 1
Capps....................... 1 0 0 0 0 1
PBButera.
UmpiresHome, Cory Blaser;First, Sam Hol-
brook;Second, Andy Fletcher;Third, Rob Drake.
T2:37. A30,776 (39,500).
N A T I O N A L
L E A G U E
Mets 7, Phillies 4
New York Philadelphia
ab r h bi ab r h bi
ATorrs cf 5 2 2 0 Rollins ss 4 0 0 0
Niwnhs lf 3 2 2 2 Pierre lf 5 1 2 0
DWrght 3b 5 1 2 1 Victorn cf 4 0 1 1
Duda rf 4 0 2 2 Pence rf 5 1 1 2
Rauch p 0 0 0 0 Ruiz c 4 0 1 0
DnMrp 2b 5 0 1 1 Polanc 3b 4 0 1 0
I.Davis 1b 4 0 0 0 Mayrry 1b 4 1 2 0
Vldspn ss 3 1 0 0 Orr 2b 4 1 2 1
Nickes c 3 0 0 0 Galvis 2b 0 0 0 0
Batista p 1 0 0 0 Blanton p 2 0 0 0
Acosta p 0 0 0 0 Qualls p 0 0 0 0
Hairstn ph 1 0 0 0 Bastrd p 0 0 0 0
RRmrz p 0 0 0 0 Contrrs p 0 0 0 0
Byrdak p 0 0 0 0 L.Nix ph 0 0 0 0
Baxter ph-rf 0 1 0 0 Wggntn ph 1 0 0 0
Schwm p 0 0 0 0
Savery p 0 0 0 0
Totals 34 7 9 6 Totals 37 410 4
New York ........................... 000 100 402 7
Philadelphia....................... 220 000 000 4
EBatista (1), Valdespin (1), Orr 2 (3). DPNew
York 1. LOBNew York 7, Philadelphia 9.
2BNieuwenhuis (5), D.Wright (6), Victorino (4),
Ruiz (7), Orr (3). HRPence (7). SBPierre (5),
Orr (1). CSI.Davis (1). SBatista. SFNieuwen-
huis.
IP H R ER BB SO
New York
Batista....................... 5
1
3 8 4 2 2 1
Acosta W,1-2...........
2
3 0 0 0 0 1
R.Ramirez H,1......... 1
2
3 1 0 0 1 2
Byrdak H,7...............
1
3 0 0 0 0 0
Rauch S,1-3............. 1 1 0 0 0 0
Philadelphia
Blanton ..................... 6
2
3 5 4 4 3 7
Qualls L,1-1 BS,3-3 0 1 1 0 0 0
Bastardo...................
2
3 1 0 0 0 0
Contreras.................
2
3 0 0 0 0 0
Schwimer .................
2
3 1 2 2 1 1
Savery ......................
1
3 1 0 0 0 0
Qualls pitched to 1 batter in the 7th.
HBPby Blanton (Nickeas). WPR.Ramirez 2.
UmpiresHome, Alan Porter;First, Ron Kulpa;Se-
cond, Jim Wolf;Third, Derryl Cousins.
T3:18. A43,821 (43,651).
Pirates 5, Nationals 4
Washington Pittsburgh
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Dsmnd ss 4 0 0 0 Tabata lf-rf 4 0 0 0
Harper rf 4 1 1 0 Walker 2b 3 0 1 1
Zmrmn 3b 4 1 1 0 McCtch cf 2 1 1 1
LaRoch 1b 3 1 2 2 PAlvrz 3b 4 0 0 0
Espinos 2b 4 0 0 0 McGeh 1b 4 0 0 0
Ankiel cf 4 0 1 1 GJones rf 3 1 1 1
WRams c 4 1 2 1 Hanrhn p 0 0 0 0
Berndn lf 4 0 0 0 Watson p 0 0 0 0
EJcksn p 2 0 2 0 Presley ph 1 1 1 0
Lmrdzz ph 1 0 0 0 Barmes ss 3 0 0 0
Clipprd p 0 0 0 0 Navarr ph 1 0 0 0
HRdrgz p 0 0 0 0 Barajs c 4 1 1 2
AJBrnt p 2 0 0 0
McLoth
ph-lf 0 1 0 0
Totals 34 4 9 4 Totals 31 5 5 5
Washington ....................... 001 100 002 4
Pittsburgh .......................... 000 200 012 5
Two outs when winning run scored.
EDesmond (4). DPPittsburgh 2. LOBWash-
ington 4, Pittsburgh 4. 2BHarper (6), Walker (3).
HRLaRoche (5), W.Ramos (2), McCutchen (1),
G.Jones (4), Barajas (1). SFWalker.
IP H R ER BB SO
Washington
E.Jackson................ 7 3 2 2 1 5
Clippard.................... 1 0 1 0 2 1
H.Rodriguez L,1-2
BS,2-8 ......................
2
3 2 2 2 0 1
Pittsburgh
A.J.Burnett ............... 8 6 2 2 1 10
Hanrahan BS,1-6 ....
2
3 2 2 2 0 1
Watson W,2-0..........
1
3 1 0 0 0 1
WPH.Rodriguez 2.
UmpiresHome, Vic Carapazza;First, Gerry Da-
vis;Second, Phil Cuzzi;Third, Greg Gibson.
T2:35. A10,323 (38,362).
Astros 3, Marlins 2
Miami Houston
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Reyes ss 4 0 0 0 Schafer cf 3 0 0 0
Bonifac cf 3 0 0 0 Altuve 2b 4 1 1 0
HRmrz 3b 4 0 0 0 Lowrie ss 4 0 0 0
Morrsn lf 4 0 1 0 Ca.Lee 1b 3 0 0 0
DMrph pr 0 0 0 0 T.Buck rf 4 1 1 0
Infante 2b 4 1 1 1 Myers p 0 0 0 0
Stanton rf 3 0 0 0 JDMrtn lf 3 0 0 0
GSnchz 1b 3 0 0 0 Lyon p 0 0 0 0
J.Buck c 2 1 1 1 WLopez p 0 0 0 0
ASnchz p 1 0 0 0
Bogsvc
ph-rf 1 0 1 1
Dobbs ph 1 0 1 0 CJhnsn 3b 4 0 1 0
Choate p 0 0 0 0 JCastro c 3 0 0 0
Webb p 0 0 0 0 AnRdrg p 1 0 1 0
MGnzlz ph 1 1 1 0
Maxwll lf 1 0 1 0
Totals 29 2 4 2 Totals 32 3 7 1
Miami .................................. 000 110 000 2
Houston.............................. 000 002 01x 3
EInfante 2 (3). DPHouston 1. LOBMiami 3,
Houston 7. 2BBogusevic (4). HRInfante (6),
J.Buck (3). SBBonifacio (15). SA.Sanchez.
IP H R ER BB SO
Miami
A.Sanchez................ 7 5 2 0 2 8
Choate......................
1
3 0 0 0 0 0
Webb L,1-1..............
2
3 2 1 1 0 0
Houston
An.Rodriguez .......... 6 2 2 2 2 6
Lyon.......................... 1 0 0 0 0 0
W.Lopez W,3-0....... 1 1 0 0 0 0
Myers S,8-8............. 1 1 0 0 0 0
UmpiresHome, Marty Foster;First, Tim Tim-
mons;Second, Jeff Kellogg;Third, Eric Cooper.
T2:22. A14,801 (40,981).
Braves 3, Cubs 1
Atlanta Chicago
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Bourn cf 5 1 1 0 DeJess rf 3 0 2 0
Prado lf 3 0 2 0 Campn cf 4 1 1 0
Fremn 1b 4 1 0 0 SCastro ss 4 0 1 0
McCnn c 2 0 0 0 LaHair 1b 3 0 0 0
Uggla 2b 4 0 3 2 ASorin lf 3 0 1 1
C.Jones 3b 4 0 0 0 IStewrt 3b 4 0 0 0
Heywrd rf 4 1 1 0 Soto c 4 0 0 0
Pstrnck ss 2 0 0 1 Cardns 2b 3 0 0 0
JWilson ss 1 0 1 0 Dmpstr p 2 0 0 0
Delgad p 2 0 1 0 RJhnsn ph 1 0 0 0
OFlhrt p 0 0 0 0 K.Wood p 0 0 0 0
JFrncs ph 1 0 0 0 Camp p 0 0 0 0
Medlen p 0 0 0 0
Venters p 0 0 0 0
Hinske ph 1 0 0 0
Kimrel p 0 0 0 0
Totals 33 3 9 3 Totals 31 1 5 1
Atlanta ................................ 000 010 020 3
Chicago.............................. 000 001 000 1
EC.Jones (4). DPAtlanta 1, Chicago 1. LOB
Atlanta 7, Chicago 6. 2BDeJesus (6), A.Soriano
(5). 3BHeyward (3). SBPrado (3). CSUggla
(1), DeJesus (2). SFPastornicky.
IP H R ER BB SO
Atlanta
Delgado.................... 5
2
3 3 1 1 3 5
OFlaherty ................
1
3 0 0 0 0 0
Medlen W,1-0.......... 1 0 0 0 0 0
Venters H,6.............. 1 2 0 0 0 0
Kimbrel S,10-11...... 1 0 0 0 0 2
Chicago
Dempster ................. 7 6 1 1 1 7
K.Wood L,0-2 .......... 1 2 2 2 2 0
Camp........................ 1 1 0 0 0 1
UmpiresHome, Dan Bellino;First, Jerry Layne-
;Second, Bob Davidson;Third, Chris Conroy.
T2:47. A38,523 (41,009).
Brewers 8, Reds 3
Cincinnati Milwaukee
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Cozart ss 5 0 2 0 Morgan cf 4 2 2 0
Stubbs cf 5 0 0 0 RWeks 2b 4 0 0 0
Votto 1b 3 0 1 0 Braun lf 4 2 3 1
BPhllps 2b 4 2 2 0 Dillard p 0 0 0 0
Bruce rf 4 1 2 2 ArRmr 3b 3 1 1 3
Rolen 3b 4 0 1 1 Aoki lf 0 0 0 0
Ludwck lf 3 0 0 0 Hart rf 3 0 0 0
Simon p 0 0 0 0 Lucroy c 4 1 2 2
Mesorc c 4 0 0 0 Ishikaw 1b 4 0 0 0
HBaily p 1 0 0 0
CIzturs
ss-3b 4 2 2 1
Hoover p 0 0 0 0 Gallard p 3 0 1 1
Cairo ph 1 0 0 0 Loe p 0 0 0 0
LeCure p 0 0 0 0 Green ph 1 0 0 0
Frazier ph 1 0 1 0 Veras p 0 0 0 0
Arrdnd p 0 0 0 0 Maysnt ss 0 0 0 0
Heisey lf 1 0 0 0
Totals 36 3 9 3 Totals 34 811 8
Cincinnati ........................... 000 002 010 3
Milwaukee.......................... 210 310 10x 8
EAr.Ramirez (3). DPCincinnati 1, Milwaukee 1.
LOBCincinnati 8, Milwaukee 7. 2BCozart (9),
Votto (14), B.Phillips (3), Rolen (6), Braun (6), Lu-
croy (3). 3BAr.Ramirez (2). HRBruce (10),
C.Izturis (1).
IP H R ER BB SO
Cincinnati
H.Bailey L,1-3.......... 3
2
3 6 6 6 3 4
Hoover......................
1
3 1 0 0 0 0
LeCure ..................... 2 3 1 1 0 4
Arredondo................ 1 1 1 1 0 1
Simon ....................... 1 0 0 0 0 1
Milwaukee
Gallardo W,2-3........ 6 4 2 2 2 8
Loe............................ 1 1 0 0 0 1
Veras ........................ 1 3 1 1 0 0
Dillard ....................... 1 1 0 0 0 1
HBPby Simon (Morgan), by H.Bailey (Ar.Rami-
rez). WPLeCure.
UmpiresHome, DaleScott;First, CBBucknor;Se-
cond, Bill Miller;Third, Dan Iassogna.
T3:04. A28,108 (41,900).
M A J O R
L E A G U E
L E A D E R S
NATIONAL LEAGUE
BATTINGKemp, Los Angeles, .406; Jay, St.
Louis, .381; DWright, New York, .375; LaHair, Chi-
cago, .373; Altuve, Houston, .348; SCastro, Chica-
go, .347; Furcal, St. Louis, .342.
RUNSKemp, Los Angeles, 29; Freeman, Atlanta,
22; Furcal, St. Louis, 22; CGonzalez, Colorado, 22;
Beltran, St. Louis, 21; Bourn, Atlanta, 21; MEllis, Los
Angeles, 21; Uggla, Atlanta, 21; JUpton, Arizona,
21.
RBIEthier, Los Angeles, 30; Kemp, Los Angeles,
27; Freeman, Atlanta, 26; Freese, St. Louis, 26;
CGonzalez, Colorado, 26; Bruce, Cincinnati, 23;
Pence, Philadelphia, 22.
HOME RUNSKemp, Los Angeles, 12; Bruce,
Cincinnati, 10; Braun, Milwaukee, 9; Beltran, St.
Louis, 8; LaHair, Chicago, 8; PAlvarez, Pittsburgh,
7; Freese, St. Louis, 7; CGonzalez, Colorado, 7;
Pence, Philadelphia, 7.
PITCHINGLynn, St. Louis, 6-0; Bumgarner, San
Francisco, 5-1; 9 tied at 4.
STRIKEOUTSASanchez, Miami, 46; Hamels,
Philadelphia, 44; GGonzalez, Washington, 41;
MCain, San Francisco, 40; Gallardo, Milwaukee,
39; Samardzija, Chicago, 39; Strasburg, Washing-
ton, 38; Volquez, San Diego, 38.
SAVESKimbrel, Atlanta, 10; Papelbon, Philadel-
phia, 9; Guerra, Los Angeles, 8; Myers, Houston, 8;
FFrancisco, New York, 8; HRodriguez, Washing-
ton, 6; Putz, Arizona, 6; RBetancourt, Colorado, 6;
Axford, Milwaukee, 6.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
BATTINGHamilton, Texas, .406; Jeter, New
York, .392; Ortiz, Boston, .372; Sweeney, Boston,
.360; Konerko, Chicago, .345; ACabrera, Cleve-
land, .340; Longoria, Tampa Bay, .329.
RUNSKinsler, Texas, 29; Hamilton, Texas, 25;
De Aza, Chicago, 24; AdJones, Baltimore, 23; Je-
ter, New York, 22; Aviles, Boston, 21; Granderson,
New York, 21; Ortiz, Boston, 21.
RBIHamilton, Texas, 36; Encarnacion, Toronto,
25; Swisher, NewYork, 24; Butler, Kansas City, 23;
ADunn, Chicago, 23; Ortiz, Boston, 23; MiCabrera,
Detroit, 22; Scott, Tampa Bay, 22.
HOME RUNSHamilton, Texas, 14; Granderson,
New York, 10; ADunn, Chicago, 9; Encarnacion,
Toronto, 9; AdJones, Baltimore, 8; 7 tied at 7.
STOLEN BASESDeJennings, Tampa Bay, 8;
AEscobar, Kansas City, 7; Lillibridge, Chicago, 7;
MIzturis, Los Angeles, 6; Kipnis, Cleveland, 6; 8tied
at 5.
PITCHINGWeaver, Los Angeles, 5-0; Shields,
Tampa Bay, 5-1; Price, Tampa Bay, 5-1; 10 tied at 4.
STRIKEOUTSFHernandez, Seattle, 51; Weaver,
Los Angeles, 47; Darvish, Texas, 44; Shields, Tam-
pa Bay, 43; Sabathia, NewYork, 43; Verlander, De-
troit, 42; Peavy, Chicago, 39; CWilson, Los An-
geles, 39.
AP PHOTO
Yankees catcher Russell Martin has the ball in his glove as Rays
DH Luke Scott strikes out in the eighth inning Tuesday.
S T A N D I N G S
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division
W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Away
Baltimore........................................ 19 11 .633 7-3 L-2 8-6 11-5
Tampa Bay..................................... 19 11 .633 6-4 L-3 13-3 6-8
New York ....................................... 16 13 .552 2
1
2 2
1
2 5-5 W-2 8-6 8-7
Toronto........................................... 16 13 .552 2
1
2 2
1
2 6-4 L-2 8-7 8-6
Boston............................................ 12 17 .414 6
1
2 6
1
2 3-7 L-1 4-10 8-7
Central Division
W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Away
Cleveland....................................... 17 12 .586 7-3 L-1 8-9 9-3
Detroit............................................. 14 14 .500 2
1
2 4 4-6 L-1 9-9 5-5
Chicago.......................................... 14 17 .452 4 5
1
2 4-6 W-1 5-9 9-8
Kansas City ................................... 10 19 .345 7 8
1
2 5-5 W-1 3-13 7-6
Minnesota...................................... 8 21 .276 9 10
1
2 3-7 W-1 4-9 4-12
West Division
W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Away
Texas ............................................. 20 10 .667 5-5 W-2 8-5 12-5
Oakland.......................................... 15 14 .517 4
1
2 3
1
2 6-4 W-2 6-7 9-7
Seattle ............................................ 14 17 .452 6
1
2 5
1
2 3-7 W-3 6-7 8-10
Los Angeles .................................. 13 18 .419 7
1
2 6
1
2 6-4 L-1 9-8 4-10
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division
W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Away
Washington ................................... 18 11 .621 4-6 L-2 12-4 6-7
Atlanta............................................ 19 12 .613 6-4 W-1 8-5 11-7
New York ....................................... 17 13 .567 1
1
2 6-4 W-4 10-6 7-7
Miami .............................................. 15 15 .500 3
1
2 2 7-3 L-1 6-5 9-10
Philadelphia................................... 14 17 .452 5 3
1
2 4-6 L-2 5-7 9-10
Central Division
W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Away
St. Louis......................................... 18 11 .621 6-4 W-2 8-4 10-7
Cincinnati ....................................... 15 14 .517 3 1
1
2 6-4 L-1 8-6 7-8
Houston ......................................... 14 16 .467 4
1
2 3 6-4 W-1 10-7 4-9
Pittsburgh ...................................... 13 16 .448 5 3
1
2 5-5 W-1 7-6 6-10
Milwaukee...................................... 13 17 .433 5
1
2 4 4-6 W-1 7-7 6-10
Chicago.......................................... 12 18 .400 6
1
2 5 5-5 L-1 8-10 4-8
West Division
W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Away
Los Angeles .................................. 19 10 .655 6-4 W-1 11-2 8-8
San Francisco ............................... 14 15 .483 5 2
1
2 4-6 L-1 8-7 6-8
Arizona........................................... 14 16 .467 5
1
2 3 4-6 L-3 6-8 8-8
Colorado........................................ 12 16 .429 6
1
2 4 3-7 L-4 8-10 4-6
San Diego...................................... 10 20 .333 9
1
2 7 4-6 W-1 8-13 2-7
C M Y K
PAGE 4B WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 2012 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
S P O R T S
nary open a 1-0 lead when his
match at No. 2 singles against
Walker Temperton was the first
to end in straight sets. Parkhurst
trailed 1-0 in the first set before
winning 6-2. He was never be-
hind in the second set, pulling
out a 6-1 victory.
Just a few minutes later, Hen-
ry Cornell (No. 3 singles) came
from behind in the second set to
knock off Keller McGurrin for a
2-0 Seminary lead.
Cornell, whodidnt fall behind
at all inthe first set after opening
a 3-0 lead before winning 6-2,
was down in the second 1-0 be-
fore taking leads of 2-1 and 3-2.
He finished off McGurrin in
three of the last four games for a
6-3 win.
In Class 3A, Crestwoods run
at a District 2 title ended with a
3-0 loss to Scranton in the quar-
terfinals at the Kingston Indoor
Tennis Club. The Knights nearly
pulled off an upset in the semis,
taking Williamsport to a deci-
sive thirdset at No. 3singles, but
wins were impressive straight-
set victories for the Blue
Knights, the most striking came
at No. 2 doubles.
The team of Evan Botwin and
Matt Cartwright won the first
set 6-3 before falling behind in
the second set 4-1. But the duo,
which has been working togeth-
er for just about three weeks and
hasnt dropped a set this season,
rebounded and didnt drop any-
more games to win 6-4 and
clinch the championship plaque
for their team.
To overcome a deficit like
that against a good team like
Prep has to be a shot in the arm
to them, Balutanski noted
about his No. 2 doubles pair.
When youre winning all the
time, thats easy. When youre
down and somebodys punching
you in the side of the neck, to
fight back and hold your ground
and then overcome that obsta-
cle, mentally thats just invalu-
able.
Harry Parkhurst helped Semi-
CLARKS SUMMIT Wyom-
ing Seminary is a teamon a mis-
sion.
That couldnt have been more
evident on Tuesday at the Birch-
wood Tennis and Fitness Center
during the District 2 Class 2A
Team Tennis Tournament.
After losing just once last year
in the state semifinals to even-
tual PIAAchampion Holy Ghost
Prep and with most of the play-
ers back fromthat team, the task
is just beginning in 2012 and the
Blue Knights are going full
steam ahead.
The team defeated Scranton
Prep 3-0 on Tuesday for their
third straight team champion-
ship. The previous two seasons
when Seminary won the district
title over their rival from up
north, Prep won at least one
match.
But not this time as Seminary
took care of business in just over
an hour. The three-time district
champion advances to the first
round of the PIAA Champion-
ships on Tuesday against the
District 11 champion, with the
location slated for Kirby Park in
Wilkes-Barre.
The previous two years, the
Knights faced Moravian Acade-
my in that round. Moravian is
the top seed in this years D-11
tournament. If the Blue Knights
winnext week, theywill advance
to the PIAA Team Champion-
ships on May 18-19 at the Her-
shey Racquet Club.
The returning players as a
whole felt that we had some un-
finished business because we
lost to the eventual state cham-
pion, Blue Knights coach Mike
Balutanski said. You dont feel
great about that, but you cant
feel badly that you lost to one
team the whole season that hap-
pened to be playing well and
won the whole state tourna-
ment.
While all three individual
fell short and lost the match 3-2.
The results were unavailable.
Delaware Valley did manage
to work an upset in 3A semifi-
nals, defeating top-seeded
Abington Heights, 3-2.
District 2 Class 2A
TeamTennis Tournament
(at Birchwood Tennis and Fitness Center)
Semifinals
Wyoming Seminary 4, Valley View 0
Singles: 1. George Parkhurst (WS) d. Jordan
Furdock 6-0, 6-0; 2. Harry Parkhurst (WS) d. Tony
Jadus 6-0, 6-1; 3. Henry Cornell (WS) d. Travis
Troiani 6-0, 6-1
Doubles: 1. Chris Kim/Willie Lu (WS) d. John
Harrison/Dalton Leonard 6-1, 6-3; 2. Evan Botwin/
Matt Cartwright (WS) vs. Nick Chesko/Dave Les-
nefsky 6-1, 4-5 (halted)
Scranton Prep 4, Holy Cross 0
Singles: 1. Will Cognetti (SP) vs. Robby Azza-
relli 6-1, 0-1 (halted); 2. Walker Temperton (SP) d.
T.J. Thomas 6-1, 6-2; 3. Keller McGurrin(SP) d. Jo-
nathan Kelly 6-1, 6-1
Doubles: 1. Jay Patel/Alex Thomas (SP) d.
Casey Gaughan/Mike Bauman 6-0, 6-0; 2. Matt Ha-
nahue/Connor Fitzsimmons (SP) d. Chris Gasper/
Joe Baurys 6-1, 6-0
Finals
Wyoming Seminary 3, Scranton Prep 0
Singles: 1. George Parkhurst (WS) vs. Will
Cognetti 6-2, 4-3 (halted); 2. Harry Parkhurst (WS)
d. Walker Temperton 6-2, 6-1; 3. Henry Cornell
(WS) d. Keller McGurrin 6-2, 6-2
Doubles: 1. Chris Kim/Willie Lu (WS) vs. Jay
Patel/Alex Thomas 6-4, 3-5 (halted); 2. Evan Bot-
win/Matt Cartwright (WS) d. Matt Hanahue/Connor
Fitzsimmons 6-3, 6-4
D I S T R I C T 2 B OY S T E N N I S
Knights crowned champions
Seminary wins third
consecutive team title by
defeating Scranton Prep.
By DAVE ROSENGRANT
[email protected]
BILL TARUTIS/FOR THE TIMES LEADER
Crestwoods Nikhil Patel, right, readies for the return of the serve of doubles teammate Neil Patel
in their District 2 Class 3A quarterfinal match Tuesday against Scranton.
BERWICK Rob Wingert had
14 kills to lead Holy Redeemer to
a 3-0 victory over Berwick in
Wyoming Valley Conference boys
volleyball on Tuesday.
The Royals won by scores of
25-13, 25-19, 25-13.
Mike Prociak (11 kills), Mike
Vamos (seven kills), and Brendan
Lehigh (four kills) all contributed.
Tunkhannock 3, Dallas 0
James Hawk had12 kills to
lead the Tigers shut out win over
the Mountaineers 25-12, 25-15,
25-19.
Ryan Potuck (11 kills), Randy
Howell (38 assists) and Cliff
Kingston (eight kills) contributed.
Dallas was led by Corey Schref-
fler (10 kills) and Bryce Mattson
(20 assists).
POSTPONEMENTS
Rain wiped out the schedule
for many sports.
Here is a list of the new dates.
Baseball: Wyoming Area at
Wyoming Valley West, Lake-
Lehman at Wyoming Seminary
and MMI Prep at GAR are resche-
duled for 4:15 p.m. today.
Nanticoke at Holy Redeemer
and Hanover Area at Meyers will
be made up on May 17.
Softball: Lake-Lehman at
Wyoming Seminary, MMI Prep at
GAR and Wyoming Area at
Wyoming Valley West are resche-
duled for 4:15 p.m. today.
Nanticoke at Holy Redeemer
will be played May 17.
Girls Soccer: Meyers at Pittston
Area will be played 4:15 p.m.
Thursday.
Track: Berwick at Coughlin,
Dallas at Wyoming Valley West,
Hazleton Area at Crestwood and
Pittston Area at Tunkhannock
will be 4:15 p.m. today.
H . S . R O U N D U P
Redeemer shuts out Berwick
The Times Leader staff
in the bottom of the inning on
Jack Custs single, then tied it in
the second on Kevin Russos dou-
ble. The second baseman was 4-
for-6 on the night.
Musteliers HR in the third in-
ning put the Yankees ahead 4-2
andcame off former Twins righty
Kevin Slowey. It was Musteliers
first homer this season. The Clip-
pers made it 4-3 on Cord Phelps
single in the fourth. On that play,
left fielder Yankees Ray Kruml
threwout Matt Pagnozzi at home
trying to score fromsecond base.
They threatened again in the
fifth, but reliever Juan Cedeno
(2-0) ended the inning on a
groundout with runners on sec-
ond and third.
Columbus also put runners on
first and third with one out in the
seventh, but Kevin Whelan
struck out Canzler and got Mills
to fly out for his seventh save.
Even in the losses we had
some opportunities, but just
hadnt come up with the big hit,
Miley said. Tonight Mustelier
came up with the big home run
and (we got) big outs by Cedeno
and a good job by Whelan in the
seventh.
Notes: The paid crowd was an-
nounced at 1,361, but only a few
hundred fans were there. Be-
fore the game, the Yankees put
catcher Craig Tatum on the dis-
abled list and activated Gustavo
Molina, who played in Game 2.
GAME ONE
COLUMBUS 1, SWB YANKEES 0
Yankees Columbus
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Gardner lf 3 0 2 0 Phelps 2b 3 0 1 0
Russo 2b 3 0 1 0 Huffman rf 3 0 0 0
Pearce 1b 3 0 0 0 Lopez 3b 3 0 0 0
Cust dh 2 0 0 0 LaPorta 1b 3 0 1 0
Mustelier rf 3 0 0 0 Canzler lf 3 0 0 0
Laird 3b 3 0 0 0 Mills dh 3 1 1 0
Cervelli c 3 0 0 0 LaRoche ss 3 0 1 1
Garner cf 3 0 0 0 Carlin c 2 0 0 0
Mujica ss 2 0 1 0 Copeland cf 3 0 0 0
Totals 25 0 3 0 Totals 26 1 3 1
Yankees ................................... 000 000 0 0
Columbus................................. 000 010 0 1
2B LaRoche, Mujica 3B HR LaRoche
IP H R ER BB SO
Yankees
Banuelos (L, 0-2) ..... 5 4 1 1 0 3
Whitley....................... 2 1 0 0 1 3
Columbus
Huff (W, 1-1)............. 7 4 0 0 1 5
GAME TWO
SWB YANKEES 4, COLUMBUS 3
Yankees Columbus
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Russo 2b 3 1 3 1 Phelps 2b 4 1 2 1
Curtis cf 3 0 0 0 Huffman rf 4 1 1 1
Pearce 1b 3 0 1 0 Lopez 3b 4 0 3 0
Cust dh 3 1 2 1 LaPorta dh 4 0 1 1
Mustelier rf 3 1 1 2 Canzler lf 4 0 1 0
Laird 3b 3 0 0 0 Mills 1b 4 0 0 0
Mujica ss 3 0 0 0 LaRoche ss 3 1 3 0
Molina c 3 0 0 0 Pagnozzi c 3 0 1 0
Kruml lf 3 1 1 0 Copeland cf 3 0 2 0
Totals 27 4 7 4 Totals 33 3 14 3
Yankees ................................... 112 000 0 4
Columbus................................. 200 100 0 3
2B Huffman, LaPorta, Canzler, Russo, Cust 3B
HR Huffman, LaPorta, Phelps, Mustelier
IP H R ER BB SO
Yankees
Warren....................... 4.2 11 3 3 0 4
Cedeno (W, 2-0) ...... 1 2 0 0 0 0
Whelan (S, 7) ........... 1.1 1 0 0 0 2
Columbus
Slowey (L, 2-3)......... 4.2 11 3 3 0 4
Barnes ....................... 1 0 0 0 0 3
ROCHESTER, N.Y. It didnt
take long for Brett Gardner to de-
clare himself ready for the New
York Yankees.
One game and three at-bats
two of which were hits into a re-
habilitation assignment with the
Scranton/Wilkes-Barre Yankees,
the speedy left fielder said hes
ready to return to the Bronx. Hes
been on the disabled list the past
three weeks with a bruised right
elbow and strained arm muscle.
I felt good. My whole body
feels good my arm, my legs,
running around the bases and in
the outfield, the 28-year-old said
after the Triple-AYankees lost 1-0
in Game 1 to the Columbus Clip-
pers at Frontier Field. I felt bet-
ter than I thought I would. Well
see if Imstill here tomorrowor if
I leave tomorrow.
Added manager Dave Miley:
He looked fine. He got in his
work, no problems.
Gardner didnt play in Game 2,
when Scranton/Wilkes-Barre
snapped a five-game losing
streak with a 4-3 win. Right fiel-
der Ronnier Musteliers two-run
home run in the third inning was
the difference.
Hazelton High School gradu-
ate Russ Canzler, the 26-year-old
Columbus left fielder who was
last years International League
MVP for Durham, went 0-for-3 in
the first game and 1-for-4 with a
double inthe nightcap. He struck
out with the tying run at third
and one out in the final inning of
Game 2.
Canzler, who is hitting .257,
was tradedto the Indians inJanu-
ary after spending last year in the
Tampa Bay organization.
Left-hander Manny Banuelos
(0-2), one of the Yankees top pro-
spects, was the Game 1 tough-
luck loser. He scattered four hits
in five innings, struck out three
and didnt walk a batter. Forty-
nine of his 75 pitches were
strikes.
Columbus pushed across its
only run on a lead-off single by
Beau Mills and Andy LaRoches
fifth-inning double.
Batting lead-off for Scranton/
Wilkes-Barre, Gardner lined a
sharpsingletoleft fieldinhis first
at-bat on what he called a good
fastball away, from left-hander
David Huff (1-1). He singled
again on a 2-and-0 pitch in the
third inning before grounding
out in the fifth. He hurt his arm
diving to try to make a catch on
April 18 against the Minnesota
Twins.
In Game 2, the Clippers took a
2-0 lead in the top of the first on
RBI doubles fromChad Huffman
and Matt LaPorta. Scranton/
Wilkes-Barre cut its deficit in half
I L B A S E B A L L
Gardner stars
as SWB splits
New York Yankees left fielder
says first game of rehab
assignment went well.
By JEFF DiVERONICA
For the Times Leader 0-4
YANKEES
1-3
CLIPPERS
NEW YORK Andy Pettitte
will be back on the mound in the
Bronx on Sunday, and the New
York Yankees are hoping he can
again be a reliable presence in
their rotation.
Pettitte is set to start against
the Seattle Mariners in his first
major league outing since retir-
ing after the 2010 postseason.
I think it will be a great day at
the Stadium, manager Joe Gi-
rardi said.
The lefty, who turns 40 next
month, returned to the team in
spring training and has made
four minor league starts. Even
though Pettitte was shaky over
five innings in a Triple-A start
Sunday, general manager Brian
Cashman says the time is right.
I think everybodys in agree-
ment that hes not going to really
benefit from any more time
down there, Cashman said.
One thing the Yankees man-
agement does agree on is the ro-
tation needs help. Expected to
be a strong part of the teamafter
the addition of Hiroki Kuroda
andMichael Pinedaintheoffsea-
son, the Yankees rotation has
struggled this to a 5.54 ERAand
a .292 opponents batting aver-
age only Minnesota and Col-
orado have worse averages
against.
Pineda is out for season fol-
lowing shoulder surgery and
Freddy Garcia was demoted to
the bullpen. Rookie David
Phelps is scheduled to make his
second start against Tampa Bay
on Wednesday, then is a likely
candidate to return to the bull-
pen. But Girardi would not say
whose spot Pettitte will take.
Pettitte is 240-138 in 13 years
with the Yankees and three with
Houston. He was a steady force
in the Yankees rotation for five
World Series championships
and is a fan favorite as one of the
CoreFour withDerekJeter, Mar-
iano Rivera and Jorge Posada.
Cashman, though, is trying to
be realistic in his expectations
for Pettitte, who will be making
his first big league start in 573
days, since Game 3 of the AL
championship series against
Texas on Oct. 18, 2010.
Theres still the unknown,
Cashmansaid. Theres a gapbe-
tweenwhat theoldAndyPettitte
is and what were going to get? I
just dont know yet.
M L B
Pettitte set to return to Yankees
The 39-year-old lefty, who
retired after the 2010
season, will start Sunday.
By HOWIE RUMBERG
AP Sports Writer
AP PHOTO
Andy Pettitte has made four minor league starts this season
after coming out of retirement.
DENVER Jerry McMorris,
one of the instrumental figures
in bringing the Colorado Rock-
ies to town, has died, the team
said in a statement.
The team said that McMorris
died Tuesday in Denver of can-
cer. He was 71.
McMorris was part of a group
that purchased a controlling in-
terest in the club in 1992, a year
before the team started play. He
served as chairman, president
and CEO of the team until 2001.
He was part of the teams own-
ership group until 2005.
I believe it is fair to say with-
out the efforts of Jerry, there
may have never been Major
League Baseball in Denver,
Rockies owner and CEO Dick
Monfort said.
McMorris was a limited part-
ner when the original ownership
group was formed. He stepped
up when members of the origi-
nal group in the deal for the ex-
pansion team ran into financial
and legal trouble. McMorris as-
sistedinmakingupa $20million
shortfall on the $95 million ex-
pansion fee. He also garnered
other support for the team,
bringing on board Charles Mon-
fort and the late Oren Benton.
Major league owners ap-
proved Denver and South Flor-
ida as two newmembers on July
5, 1991. The Rockies playedtheir
first home game onApril 9, 1993,
when a crowd of 80,227 packed
intooldMileHighfor an11-4win
over Montreal.
McMorris is survived by his
wife, Mary, two childrenandfive
grandchildren. Funeral arrange-
ments are pending.
M L B
Man who helped land major league franchise in Colorado dies
The Associated Press
C M Y K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 2012 PAGE 5B
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MOTHERS DAY
HANGING BASKETS
being around our players, meet-
ingthecoaches inthis athletic de-
partment, coming on this cara-
van and seeing all of the people
Look at this! Why wouldnt you
take this job?
Joined by womens basketball
coach Coquese Washington and
mens golf coachGregNyeonthis
latest stop of Penn States coach-
es caravan, OBrien again tried to
steer discussion away from the
programs darkest hours.
That wont be easy. Updates
from the Jerry Sandusky scandal
that rocked the university are in-
creasing in frequency as a trial
date approaches. Spring ball is
now over and the new season is
still four months away.
I dont see dark clouds,
OBrien said. I dont believe in
dark clouds. I wasnt here in the
fall.
So he spent much of Tuesday
discussing the future, first at a
small press conference and then
speaking in front of the crowd
who came in for the luncheon.
OBrien had said at an earlier
stop on the bus tour which
spans18 cities over three weeks
that he was interested in restart-
ing the old rivalry with Pitt down
the road. On Tuesday he expand-
ed on that, saying he would like
to see the Nittany Lions work out
marquee matchups to open the
season.
For instance, we could open
the seasonmaybe at a neutral site
or maybe at Beaver Stadium
thats not set yet, OBrien said.
That would be against, obvious-
ly, a major college power. Like an
Alabama, like a Southern Cal,
like a Stanford.
That would give our guys
something to shoot for in the
summer, and thats something
our fans would like.
Non-conference scheduling in
major college football is often
worked out years in advance,
meaningthat 2015 looks tobe the
first season that the Lions have
some flexibility to fit in such a
game. OBrien used the New
York Giants and Jets MetLife
Stadiumas a hypothetical venue.
As for this coming season,
OBrien said that the team came
out of the spring with perhaps
three or four players apiece on
offense and defense who are
locks to start in September.
Off the topof his headhe threw
out the names of JordanHill, Ger-
ald Hodges and Stephon Morris
on defense and mentioned line-
men John Urschel and Matt Stan-
kiewitchonoffense before declin-
ing to list any more.
Asked by both reporters and a
fan in the crowd about the status
of wide receiver Devon Smith,
OBrienreiteratedthat the senior
who faces a pair of misdemean-
or drug charges will remain on
the team.
It was the coachs most vocal
public defense of his player since
charges were filed in late April.
Theres two sides to every sto-
ry, OBrien said. Again, I be-
lieve in Devon. Devons not per-
fect. Hes made mistakes along
the way and hed be the first one
to tell you that. Hes a good kid.
Hes a kid that Ive formed a bond
with and I believe in him.
Were going to run a very dis-
ciplined program, thats for sure.
And the punishment will be be-
tween Devon and I. But hes a kid
I definitely have faith in.
OBRIEN
Continued from Page 1B
York Rangers-Washington Capi-
tals series. The Devils rebound-
ed this season under coach Peter
DeBoer after missing the play-
offs for the first time since 1996
last season.
The sixth-seeded Devils
scored twice in the first period
and became the first East team
to win four straight games in
these playoffs.
It was just sticking with the
game plan and doing what it
takes to be successful, DeBoer
said. Marty made some saves
when he needed to, and we held
on.
Max Talbot scored for the
Flyers, but Philadelphia was
eliminated in the conference
semifinals for the second
straight season. The Flyers fin-
ished the season without sus-
pended All-Star forward Claude
Giroux because of his illegal
check to the head on NewJersey
center Dainius Zubrus in Game
4.
The Flyers underwent a face-
lift last summer that saw them
trade team captain Mike Ri-
chards to the Los Angeles Kings
andacquire goalie Ilya Bryzgalov
from the Phoenix Coyotes.
The Kings and Coyotes will
play in the West finals while the
Flyers watch from home.
The Flyers again failed in the
postseason to hold a quick lead
after Talbot scored in the first.
The Devils also survived a rug-
ged series of hits unleashed by a
frustrated Flyers teamthat failed
to build anything off their first-
round victory over Pittsburgh.
Anton Volchenkov, Marek Zi-
dlicky and Zubrus all suffered
punishing hits that knocked
themdown on the ice in Game 5.
Bryzgalov had a disheartening
end to an erratic first season in
Philadelphia. He allowed two
YouTube-worthy goals like only
he can.
Salvador unleashed a shot
from outside the circle that
skipped along the ice as if he
threw a rock across a pond and
sailed high over Bryzgalov for
the tying goal.
In a season loaded with head-
scratching tallies allowed, Bryz-
galov saved the weirdest for the
finale. Clarksons shot onBryzga-
lov was deflected off the goalie
stick straight back at the fore-
checking forward. Bryzgalov on-
ly looked himbehind in disbelief
after Clarkson knocked it right
into the net.
The Devils could credit Bryz-
galov withthe assist onthat goal.
Kovalchuk fired a liner from
the highslot after the Devils won
the faceoff to make it 3-1 in the
third to seal the win. Fromthere,
New Jerseys depth took over
and stuffed any hope of a home
team rally.
The fact that we have four
lines and roll six defensemen re-
ally helps, DeBoer said. Its a
team game. We play that way,
and guys really believe in what
were doing. But thats a good
teamwe just beat over there, and
we have a long way to go.
All the inspirational Rocky
clips on their highlight reel
couldnt inspire the Flyers. Even
Girouxs presence may not have
even mattered in Game 5.
Without their leading scorer,
the Flyers tried to knock around
the Devils with a series of both
clean and questionable hits.
Zac Rinaldo stayed on his
skates when he charged full
speed with his right shoulder
and crushed Volchenkov against
the boards. Volchenkov was
down on his knees for several
minutes before he gingerly walk-
ed to the bench.
Thats my bread and butter
right there, Rinaldo said.
Thats what I feed off of and
thats what gets the boys going.
We got a goal off it so we just
have to keep it going and keep
positive.
DEVILS
Continued from Page 1B
over the center-field wall.
He also doubledinthe fifthin-
ning. His 18 total bases is a new
single-game American League
record, and his eight RBIs are a
career high.
The last player to hit four
home runs in a game was Carlos
Delgado on Sept. 25, 2003, for
Toronto against Tampa Bay.
Two of the 16 players to hit four
homers in a game did it before
1900.
Hamilton is the sixth ALslug-
ger to performthe feat. The last
player to hit four homers in a
game against the Orioles was
Rocky Colavito in 1959, at old
Memorial Stadium.
Hamilton, who is in the final
year of his contract and could
become a free agent after this
season, leads the AL with 14
homers and 36 RBIs, and his 5-
for-5 effort raised his batting av-
erage to .406.
He also set the Texas single-
game club record with five ex-
tra-base hits, breaking the mark
of four heldby eight players. Ha-
miltonhas homeredinfiveof his
last six at-bats, counting his fi-
nal trip to the plate Monday
night.
Andrian Beltre also homered
for the Rangers. Coming off a
14-3 win in the series opener,
Texas has won two straight for
the first time since April 24-25
and are 20-10, their best-ever re-
cord after 30 games.
Dating back to last season,
Texas has won seven in a row
over Baltimore by a combined
70-18 score.
Rangers starter Neftali Feliz
(2-1) gave up one run on four
hits and had a career-high eight
strikeouts. Converted to starter
after notching 72 saves over the
previous two seasons, Feliz had
a 2-0 lead to protect before
throwing his first pitch and
maintained the advantage
just like when he was closer.
RECORD
Continued from Page 1B
ATLANTA Al Horford
scored 19 points in his first start
since January, and the Atlanta
Hawks held on for an 87-86
victory over the Boston Celtics
in a thrilling Game 5 of the
Eastern Conference playoffs
Tuesday night.
The Celtics lead the series 3-2
heading back to Boston for
Game 6 on Thursday. If the
Hawks can steal one on the
road, the deciding game would
be Saturday in Atlanta.
Boston had a chance to clinch
the series when Rajon Rondo
stole Josh Smiths inbounds pass
with 10 seconds remaining and
raced down the court, looking
for the winner. But he got
hemmed in along the sideline
and Smith knocked away a des-
peration pass, the ball rolling
away as time ran out.
A relieved Smith collapsed on
the scorers table.
Paul Pierce and Kevin Garnett
led the Celtics with 16 points
apiece. Rondo had 13 points and
12 assists, and the last of his five
assists gave Boston a chance to
end the series early and get
some much-needed rest.
But theres still work to do.
The Hawks kept their season
going, getting a huge contribu-
tion from a player who wasnt
there for much of it. Horford
went down in January with a
torn pectoral muscle, missing
the rest of the regular season
and the first three games of the
playoffs. But he made a surprise
return in Game 4, one of the few
bright spots in an embarrassing
101-79 loss that gave the Celtics
command of the series.
Boston headed to Atlanta
intent on wrapping things up,
but Horford clearly wanted to
play a little longer after missing
so much time. He led fast breaks
and dived on the court for loose
balls, not the least bit worried
about reinjuring himself. In
addition to leading the Hawks
in scoring, he grabbed 11 re-
bounds, dished out three assists,
came up with three steals and
blocked three shots.
Smith clearly looked hobbled
by a sore knee, but still man-
aged 13 points and 16 rebounds.
Jeff Teague had 16 points, while
Joe Johnson and Marvin Wil-
liams had 15 apiece, giving
Atlanta double-figure scoring
from all five of its starters in a
revamped lineup.
In a back-and-forth game, the
Celtics tied it at 83 on Ray Al-
lens 3-pointer from the corner,
capping a quick 7-0 run.
Pacers 105, Magic 87
INDIANAPOLIS Danny
Granger scored 25 points to
help the Indiana Pacers defeat
the Orlando Magic 105-87 on
Tuesday night and clinch their
first-round Eastern Conference
playoff series 4-1.
It was Indianas first series
win since 2005 and its first
clincher on its home court since
the first round of the 2000 play-
offs. The Pacers will play Miami
or New York in the second
round.
Darren Collison scored 15 of
his 19 points in the fourth quar-
ter and George Hill added 15
points for the Pacers, who
trailed by two at the end of the
third quarter but outscored the
Magic 36-16 in the final 12 min-
utes.
Jameer Nelson led Orlando
with 27 points and made 5 of 8
3-pointers. Glen Davis, a thorn
in Indianas side throughout the
series, scored 15 but made just 6
of 17 shots. The Magic made
just 5 of 16 shots in the fourth
quarter.
Collison made a layup and hit
a 3-pointer to give the Pacers a
78-73 lead with 9:33 to play.
After Nelson drained another 3,
Collison came back with a lay-
up, then Leandro Barbosas steal
and layup pushed Indianas lead
to 87-80 with 6:49 to play and
forced an Orlando timeout. A
few minutes later, Indianas Paul
George stole an inbounds pass
and found Granger under the
hoop for a layup and a 91-80
lead. The Pacers dominated
from there.
N B A P L AYO F F S
Hawks live to soar another day
The Associated Press
AP PHOTO
Boston Celtics forward Paul Pierce (34) is covered by Atlanta Hawks center Al Horford (15) and Jeff
Teague (0) during the first half of Game 5 on Tuesday.
both two-overtime contests a
2-1 win against Hershey in 2001
anda4-3losstotheBearsin2007.
Tuesdays contest was the third-
longest in franchise history.
With the puck deep in the of-
fensive zone in the second over-
time, Despres skated out from
the corner and ripped a shot. Af-
ter the save, Despres collected
the rebound in front and back-
handed the puck into the far side
for the win.
They didnt want their season
to end, head coach John Hynes
said of his players. Theyre a
close group and when your sea-
son is on the line you can give
more sometimes than you think
you can.
Thiessen got the win after a
long night in which he allowed
the puck to get through his legs
after a dump-in from the neutral
zone inthe first periodtogive the
IceCaps a 1-0 lead. He later got
cut above the eye after being
struck through the mask by
Despres stick.
But he also stopped 26 of the
28 shots he faced to get the win.
It was one of the more event-
ful nights Ive in a while, said
Thiessen, whohadstitches above
his right eye. That first goal is
was not something you imagine
happening, but I still felt like I
needed to be there for the guys
andwas abletoput it behindme.
During regulation, the IceCaps
struck first when Jason King
dumpedthepuckinfromtheneu-
tral zone. Thiessen skated up to
playit withhis stick, but the puck
slid through his legs and into the
net for a 1-0 lead.
Thiessendroppedhis stickand
lowered his head after the play,
but it was the beginning of what
wouldturnout tobe a longnight.
The Penguins regroupedinthe
second period and tied the game
after matchingminors toIceCaps
goaltender Eddie Pasquale and
Brandon DeFazio left both teams
withfour skaters. Withtheplayin
the St. Johns end, Cal OReilly
forced the puck out to the low
slot, where Paul Thompson
picked it up fired to the wide side
of Pasquale to make it 1-1. It was
Thompsons first goal of the play-
offs and the first postseason tally
of his career.
The Penguins kept upthe pres-
surefor therest of theperiod, out-
shooting the IceCaps 14-3 but
were unable to beat Pasquale
again.
AlexGrant connectedless than
three minutes into the third peri-
od when he snuck into the slot,
collected a pass from Jason Wil-
liams andfireda shot intothe top
of the net to make it 2-1.
The lead was short-lived as the
IceCaps evened things up with a
power-play goal from Paul Post-
ma less than two minutes later
for a 2-2 tie.
The Penguins attacked the net
relentlessly in the second half of
the period, producing several
quality scoring chances. Alex
Grant fired a slapshot from the
point, Thompson a wrister in
front and Ben Street on a break-
away.
But Pasquale saved themall to
keep the game tied and eventual-
ly force overtime.
St. Johns............................................... 1 0 1 0 0 2
Penguins................................................ 0 1 1 0 1 3
First Period: Scoring 1. STJ, Jason King 2 unas-
sisted 5:21. Penalties STJ, Trotter (hooking) 1:37;
WBS, Grant (interference) 15:13; STJ, Ramsey
(high-sticking) 19:02.
SecondPeriod: Scoring2. WBS, Paul Thomp-
son 1 (OReilly, Picard) 8:12. Penalties STJ, Post-
ma (tripping) 3:17; STJ, Pasquale (roughing) 7:37;
WBS, DeFazio(goaltender interference) 7:37; WBS,
Tangradi (slashing) 13:45.
Third Period: Scoring 3. WBS, Alex Grant 2
(Williams, Street) 2:18. 4. STJ, Postma1(Machecek,
Trotter) power play 4:00. Penalties WBS, Walker
(holding) 2:29.
Overtime: Scoring None. Penalties None.
Second Overtime: Scoring 5. WBS, Simon
Despres 1 (Street, Tangradi) 12:08. Penalties
None.
Shots on goal: St. Johns 7-3-8-9-2-29; Pen-
guins 4-1412-10-5-45
Power-play Opportunities: St. Johns 1 of 3;
Penguins 0 of 3
Goaltenders: St. Johns EddiePasquale7-3
(42 saves - 45 shots)
Penguins Brad Thiessen 5-6 (26-28); Scott
Munroe 13:09 of the third period (1-1); Thiessen
17:34 of the third period (1-1)
Starters: St. Johns GEddiePasquale, DBrett
Festerling, DPaul Postma, LWMaxime Macenauer,
C Patrice Cormier, RWSpencer Machecek
Penguins G Brad Thiessen, D Joey Mormina,
D Simon Despres, LW Brandon DeFazio, C Zach
Sill, RWRyan Craig
Three Stars: 1. WBS, Simon Despres (game-
winning goal) 2. WBS, Paul Thompson (goal) 3.
WBS, Alex Grant (goal)
Referee Marcus Vinnerborg, Geno Binda. Li-
nesmen Bob Goodman, Jud Ritter
Attendance 3,506
PENGUINS
Continued from Page 1B
C M Y K
PAGE 6B WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 2012 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
S P O R T S
509 Building/
Construction/
Skilled Trades
CARPENTER/HELPER
Full time. Residen-
tial remodeling.
Experience helpful.
Must have valid PA
Drivers license and
reliable transporta-
tion. $12/hour to
start. Holidays and
one week paid
vacation after one
year. Call Monday
through Friday 6-
8pm. 570-696-2494
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
536 IT/Software
Development
Landscape Laborers
Valid PA License.
Send resume to
frankay@
frontiernet.net
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700
MERCHANDISE
COURTDALE
Courtdale United
Methodist Church
225 Courtdale Ave.,
Thursday, Friday &
Saturday
May 10, 11 & 12
Thursday & Friday
9 am to 8 pm
Saturday
9 am-1 pm
Saturday is bag day
KINGSTON
16 S. Thomas Ave.
Sat., May 12th,
8-Noon. Fiberglass
insulation, golf,
NASCAR, tools,
miter saw, drills,
bar stools, glasses,
coasters, etc.
PLYMOUTH
269 E. Main Street
May 10th, 9-4pm,
May 11th, 9-4 &
May 12th 9-12pm.
A Variety of house-
hold items, books,
clothing, Christmas
& much more!
786 Toys & Games
TRAX. Girls, kids,
18 months + up.
New in box, battery
& charger included.
Asking $50.
570-328-4927
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800
PETS & ANIMALS
815 Dogs
German Shepard
Purebred puppies.
$550 less cash
discount. Please
call
570-836-8044
900
REAL ESTATE
FOR SALE
906 Homes for Sale
ComeUpToQuailHill.
com
New Homes
From $275,000-
$595,000
570-474-5574
LivingInQuailHill.com
New Homes
From $275,000-
$595,000
570-474-5574
912 Lots & Acreage
LivingInQuailHill.com
New Homes
From $275,000-
$595,000
570-474-5574
It's that time again!
Rent out your
apartment
with the Classifieds
570-829-7130
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
PITTSTON
2nd floor, 2 bed-
rooms, living room,
eat in kitchen.
Stove, garbage dis-
posal, fridge, wash-
er & dryer included.
Carpeted & newly
painted, A/C. Trash
& sewer paid. Off
street parking for 1
car. No smoking. No
pets. $575 + utilities,
security & 1st
month.
570-696-1485
Leave Message
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
WILKES-BARRE
1 bedroom, and
also a 3 bedroom
apartment for rent,
newly remodeled,
with stove, fridge,
washer & dryer
hookup. $425 and
$625 plus utilities
and security.
Call 570-301-8200
950 Half Doubles
HANOVER TWP.
221 Boland Ave.
1 bedroom.
$325+ utilities
Call Mark at
(570) 899-2835
(917) 345-9060
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KINGSTON
$695/month. New
bath, kitchen, living
room, dining, 2 1/2
bedrooms. Water,
sewer & recycling
included. Gas fire-
place. New flooring,
ceiling fans. Wash-
er/dryer hook up.
Lease & security.
Call after 6 pm.
570-479-0131
950 Half Doubles
Kingston,
3 BEDROOM, 1
bath in Kingston;
$500/month; gas
heat; being shown
Saturday, 5/12
from 10am to 2pm;
applications avail-
able at that time;
bring credit report,
current pay stub;
security deposit
$500; ready for
occupancy after
5/13; 949-322-
7780 for further
info; small pets
considered.
965 Roommate
Wanted
MOUNTAIN TOP
Male homeowner
looking for
responsible male
roommate to
share house. Min-
utes away from
Industrial Park. Off
street parking.
Plenty of storage.
Furnished room.
Large basement
with billiards and
air hockey. All util-
ities included.
$425. Call Doug
570-817-2990
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746 Garage Sales/
Estate Sales/
Flea Markets
PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla.
Tiger Woods is about the only
person not in a panic about his
game.
Theseremaincurious times for
the guy tryingtoshowhe canstill
dominate golf as he once did. In
his last four tournaments, Woods
walked off the course in the mid-
dle of the final round at Doral
with tightness in his left Achilles
tendon, won by five shots at Bay
Hill for his first PGA Tour title in
30 months, was an also-ran at the
Masters with his worst perform-
ance as a pro and missed the cut
at Quail Hollow for only the
eighth time in his career.
In the absence of trophies,
there is no shortage of opinions.
Peter Alliss, the player-turned-
broadcaster, said before his in-
duction into the World Golf Hall
of Fame that Woods is gone at
the moment. Nick Faldo, a six-
time major champion who works
for CBSSports andGolf Channel,
saidWoods nolonger has the self-
belief that made him No. 1 for all
those years. Brandel Chamblee, a
journeyman on the PGA Tour
andnowananalyst for Golf Chan-
nel, said Woods should fire Sean
Foley and call his old coach,
Butch Harmon.
And I knowhell never do that
because hes letting his ego get in
the way of common sense,
Chamblee said on a conference
call for The Players Champion-
ship, which starts Thursday. He
wants to prove to people hes
right. He would rather prove to
people hes right than be right.
Woods has been down this
road, though not with so many
detours.
Guys, Ive done this before,
Woods said. Ive been through
this. Actually, a lot of you guys
lived it with me, went through
those periods where I wasnt
quite where I wanted to be. I had
some pretty good runs after that,
and this is no different. It takes a
little bit of a time, and I keep
building and things eventually
come around to where they feel
natural and efficient.
I think thats probably the
most important word, is that you
get out there and you feel effi-
cient in what youre doing.
Woods shot back with subtlety
at the TV analysts.
I can understand that every-
one has anopinion, andhes entit-
led to his. But hes no longer play-
ing anymore, so, so be it, Woods
said of Chamblee, who won once
in 380 starts in his PGA Tour ca-
reer.
As for Faldos comments on his
self-belief?
I always find it interesting
since theyre not in my head,
Woods said. They must have
some kind of superpower I dont
know about.
If he is looking for good vibes
to turn his fortunes, the TPC
Sawgrass might not be the best
place.
No other course on his regular
schedule has given himmore fits.
Sure, Woods won in 2001 with
that better than most 60-foot
birdie putt on the island-green
17th in the third round, and he
was runner-up to Hal Suttons
Be the right club today! mo-
ment in2000. But he has hadonly
two other finishes in the top10 at
The Players Championship, and
thelast twoyears wereparticular-
ly troubling.
In 2010, returning to the scene
where he made his first public ap-
pearance since the scandal in his
personal life, he withdrew half-
way through the final round with
what turned out to be a minor
neck injury. Last year, he with-
drewafter nine holes and a 42 on
his card with injuries to his left
leg.
P R O G O L F
Tiger not worried about what his critics are saying
Woods brushes off opinions of
various golf analysts as he
prepares for TPC Sawgrass.
By DOUG FERGUSON
AP Golf Writer
AP PHOTO
Tiger Woods chips onto the fourth green during a practice round
for The Players Championship golf tournament Tuesday.
NEW YORK The NFL is
telling retirees about a medical
study that says former players
live longer than men in the gen-
eral population.
While player safety issues re-
lated to brain trauma and other
football-related injuries dom-
inate the headlines, the study by
the National Institute for Occu-
pational Safety and Health
(NIOSH) found 334 deceased
men in a sampling of 3,439 for-
mer NFL players. Estimates for
the general populationanticipat-
ed 625 deaths.
Players in the study participa-
ted in the NFL for at least five
seasons from1959 through1988,
and were observed by NIOSH
through 2007.
The study is a follow-up to a
1994 report the institute did at
the request of the players union
to, investigate concerns that
players were dying premature-
ly. The latest findings, which
contradict that idea, were pub-
lished earlier this year in the
American Journal of Cardiology
and on NIOSHs blog. The NFL
sent a newsletter from NIOSH
about the studys finding to
about 3,200 pre-1993 retired
players on Tuesday.
The results come as NFL vet-
erans by the hundreds from
both recent years and decades
ago are suing the league be-
cause of long-term health ef-
fects, many head injuries they
sustained playing football. The
league maintains player safety
was and is a major priority.
The latest study found that
players had a much lower rate of
cancer-related deaths, with 85
dying from the disease as op-
posed to a projected 146 based
on estimates from the general
population. One reason for that
could be low levels of smoking
among athletes, but NIOSH did
not attempt to contact former
players about their smokinghab-
its.
Larger players, particularly
defensive linemen, had a higher
level of deaths from heart dis-
ease, 41as opposed to an expect-
ed 29. There were 498 defensive
linemen studied.
Overall, though, the study
showed that the risk of players
dying of heart disease was lower
than the general population,
with126 deaths while the antici-
pated number was 186.
N F L
Study says former players live longer
Institutes research shows a
lower death rate compared to
the general public.
The Associated Press
CHARLOTTE, N.C. It was
just a year ago that Penske Rac-
ing, or at least its NASCAR
branch, appeared to be in total
turmoil.
Kurt Busch used a meltdown
over his team radio at Richmond
to assail all the shortcomings he
sawat Penske. It certainly got the
attention of team management,
and behind-the-scene changes
began almost immediately.
The performance began to im-
prove, too, especially for BradKe-
selowski. Spurred in part by
Buschs claim that it had been
years since hed had a competi-
tive teammate, Keselowski went
on to win three races and earn a
spot in the Chase for the Sprint
Cup championship.
Now, a year removed fromthat
low point for the proud Penske
organization, things couldnt be
better. Keselowskis win on Sun-
day at Talladega Superspeedway
the first for teamowner Roger
Penske was his second of the
season and cemented him as a
strong contender to give Penske
his first Cup championship.
And, oh, by the way, Penskes
IndyCar teamis pretty good, too.
His drivers have combinedtowin
all four races and all four poles so
far this season, and begin Satur-
day preparing for the Indianapo-
lis 500 a race the organization
has won 15 times.
Im not king of the world, Ill
tell you that for sure, Penske
said. I think we made some
changes last year after Rich-
mond. We had a plan. I think ev-
erybody stuck together. Kurt was
a big help there, obviously as we
got going with getting in the
Chase. I think youve seen this
year this year weve been very
competitive.
On the IndyCar side, when
you win the first four races, cant
do much better than that. Over-
all, I think weve got a great sea-
son going. Its a credit really to
our people.
It was Keselowski who gave
Penske his only NASCARtitle, in
2010 in the second-tier Nation-
wide Series. Otherwise, the most
decorated team owner in motor-
sports has been shutout. Penske
first joined in NASCAR in 1972,
but was out of the series from
1981 through 1990.
The opportunity to take
Penske to the head table at the
season-ending awards ceremony
is why Keselowski chose the or-
ganizationover everybody else in
NASCAR when he got out of his
developmental deal with Hen-
drick Motorsports after the 2009
season.
I want tobethat first guy. I feel
like (Penskes) dedicated to mak-
ing that happen, Keselowski
said. I look as some of the other
elite car owners in the sport, and
I dont want this to be offensive,
but to win another Cup cham-
pionship for Hendrick or Richard
Childress is not the same as win-
ning the first for Roger Penske.
Thats a whole different accom-
plishment.
I think hes certainly paid his
dues in this sport, has that repu-
tation as ... a titan for a reason,
andthat is that he canget it done.
I want to be the guy that proves it
in the record books.
Keselowski is ranked 12th in
the Sprint Cup standings, but
those two wins should pretty
much guarantee him at least one
of the two wild card slots in the
12-driver Chase. Thats how he
got in last year, when three regu-
lar-season victories locked him
into the championship field, and
Keselowski finished fifth in the fi-
nal standings.
This year, hes shown versatil-
ity with wins at Talladega and
Bristol.
At Talladega, he used a calcu-
lated last-lap move to stave off
Kyle Busch and become the first
driver in five races at the 2.66-
mile superspeedway to take the
white flag and hold on for the vic-
tory. His win on the 0.533-mile
Bristol bullring was more dom-
inant: he led 232 of the 500 laps
and held off Matt Kenseth on a
late restart.
I wouldnt trade him for any-
body right now, Penske said.
He feels the same way about
his other drivers, too.
Kurt Busch is no longer with
the team, and replacement AJ
Allmendinger does not yet have
the results to match the potential
hes shown.
N A S C A R
Turnaround continues for Penske
Longtime NASCAR owner
might have found the right
driver in Brad Keselowski.
By JENNA FRYER
AP Auto Racing Writer
AP PHOTO
Brad Keselowski celebrates after winning the NASCAR Sprint Cup
Series auto race at Talladega Superspeedway Sunday.
GREAT FALLS, Mont. For-
mer NFL quarterback Ryan Leaf
pleaded guilty Tuesday to charg-
es that he broke into a Montana
home and illegally possessed
painkillers, part of a deal with
prosecutors that recommends he
spend nine months in a secure
drug treatment facility.
The former San Diego Char-
gers quarterback and Washing-
ton State standout was shackled
hand and foot and wore a black-
and-white prison stripes as he
told Cascade County District
Judge Kenneth Neill that he
needed treatment.
Im very
much looking
forward to the
opportunity
presented,
Leaf said. An
intensive nine-
month rehab fa-
cility is present-
ly needed.
It was one of the few state-
ments Leaf made in the hearing
under questioning by his attor-
ney, Kenneth Olson. Leaf admit-
ted that he broke into a home in
Cascade County on April 1. He
thenadmittedthat a fewdays ear-
lier, on March 28, he illegally pos-
sessed oxycodone that was not
prescribed to him.
Leaf pleaded guilty to one
count each of felony burglary and
criminal possession of a danger-
ous drug. Under the agreement,
County Attorney John Parker
agreed to dismiss two other
counts of burglary and drug pos-
session.
Neill set sentencing for June
19. Parker and Olson are recom-
mending a five-year sentence in
the custody of the Montana De-
partment of Corrections for the
burglary charge.
Olson said that recommenda-
tion will include a nine-month
program at the Nexus Treatment
Center in Lewistown, a center af-
filiated with the DOC, where
Leaf would be locked down and
unable to leave. That would be
followed by time in a pre-release
program in which Leafs move-
ments would be restricted.
The agreement recommends a
separate five-year sentence for
the possessioncharge, but all of it
would be suspended, Olson said.
Neill is not bound by the sen-
tencing recommendation, but in-
dicated he may look favorably on
it.
N F L
Leaf enters guilty pleas to two charges
Troubled former NFL QB
admits breaking into a home
and possessing painkillers.
By MATT VOLZ
The Associated Press
Leaf
C M Y K
Stocks, commodities fall
Political uncertainty in debt-hobbled
Europe spread to financial markets
Tuesday and pushed stocks lower on
both sides of the Atlantic.
The Dow Jones industrial average
was down almost 200 points at its low
point for the day before recovering
most of its loss. It was the averages
fifth straight decline.
Prices plummeted for commodities
that depend on the health of the world
economy. U.S. crude lost 93 cents to
$97.01 per barrel in New York, after
briefly dipping below $96 around mid-
day.
Gold dipped below $1,600 per ounce
for the first time since early January.
Ford to build more vehicles
Rising car and truck sales have
prompted Ford Motor Co. to add a
week of production at 13 North Amer-
ican factories so the company can
make another 40,000 vehicles this year.
Ford said Tuesday that it would cut
in half the normal two-week summer
shutdown at six assembly plants and
seven engine and parts plants. Auto
plants normally close for two weeks
around the July 4 holiday as they
switch over to make vehicles for the
next model year.
Australia balancing books
Australia will rein in defense spend-
ing and scale back increases in foreign
aid as it tries to become the first major
developed economy to balance its
books after the global economic crisis.
The budget deficit for the current
year has almost doubled from the fore-
cast a year ago, to reach $44.4 billion
about 3 percent of the nations econ-
omy.
The cuts would not affect Australias
overseas military deployments, in-
cluding 1,550 troops in Afghanistan,
according to government documents.
Mass. casino plan on hold
Plans to bring a $1 billion resort-style
casino proposed by Las Vegas casino
developer Steve Wynn to the New
England Patriots hometown have been
suspended.
Tuesdays announcement from The
Kraft Group and Wynn Resorts came
after Foxborough, Mass. voters elected
two selectmen who opposed negotia-
tions with Wynn.
He had planned to build the resort
on land leased from Patriots owner
Robert Kraft.
I N B R I E F
$3.73 $3.97 $3.96
$4.06
07/17/08
JacobsEng 39.14 -.15 -3.5
JohnJn 64.98 +.18 -.9
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Columbia
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BlChGrow 47.80 -.40 +12.7
CapInc d 9.22 -.02 +8.5
Contra 75.35 -.59 +11.7
DivrIntl d 27.46 -.37 +7.6
ExpMulNat d 22.66 -.13 +9.6
Free2020 13.92 -.06 +6.1
Free2030 13.70 -.08 +7.0
GNMA 11.91 -.01 +1.5
GrowCo 92.54 -1.30 +14.4
LatinAm d 51.08 -1.27 +4.5
LowPriStk d 38.97 -.34 +9.1
Magellan 69.91 -.42 +11.2
Overseas d 29.34 -.36 +10.8
Puritan 19.05 -.08 +8.1
StratInc 11.17 ... +4.9
TotalBd 11.11 +.01 +2.9
Value 69.71 -.35 +9.8
Fidelity Advisor
NewInsI 22.25 -.18 +11.5
ValStratT m 26.02 -.15 +11.7
Fidelity Select
Gold d 34.74 -1.33 -17.7
Pharm d 14.37 -.01 +6.4
Fidelity Spartan
500IdxAdvtg 48.40 -.20 +9.2
500IdxInstl 48.40 -.21 +9.2
500IdxInv 48.40 -.20 +9.2
First Eagle
GlbA m 47.09 -.35 +4.4
FrankTemp-Franklin
CA TF A m 7.43 +.02 +6.0
GrowB m 46.44 -.19 +8.9
Income A m 2.14 -.01 +4.7
Income C m 2.16 -.01 +4.4
FrankTemp-Mutual
Discov Z 28.79 -.21 +4.8
Euro Z 19.59 -.33 +3.4
Shares Z 21.25 -.09 +6.5
FrankTemp-Templeton
GlBond A m 12.99 -.07 +6.3
GlBond C m 13.02 -.06 +6.2
GlBondAdv 12.95 -.07 +6.4
Growth A m 17.09 -.20 +4.9
GMO
QuVI 23.44 -.10 +6.9
Harbor
CapApInst 42.39 -.45 +14.9
IntlInstl d 57.37 -1.00 +9.4
INVESCO
ConstellB m 21.02 -.08 +10.3
GlobEqA m 10.88 -.12 +5.8
PacGrowB m 18.77 -.16 +5.2
YTD
Name NAV Chg %Rtn
YTD
Name NAV Chg %Rtn
YTD
Name NAV Chg %Rtn
YTD
Name NAV Chg %Rtn
YTD
Name NAV Chg %Rtn
YTD
Name NAV Chg %Rtn
52-WEEK YTD
HIGH LOW NAME TKR DIV LAST CHG %CHG
52-WEEK YTD
HIGH LOW NAME TKR DIV LAST CHG %CHG
Combined Stocks
AFLAC 43.59 -.15 +.8
AT&T Inc 33.04 +.04 +9.3
AbtLab 62.60 +.09 +11.3
AMD 7.03 -.15 +30.2
AlaskAir s 34.10 +.57 -9.2
Alcoa 9.21 -.12 +6.5
Allstate 34.69 +.43 +26.6
Altria 32.26 +.06 +8.8
AEP 38.12 +.07 -7.7
AmExp 59.89 -.21 +27.0
AmIntlGrp 31.70 -.14 +36.6
Amgen 70.70 +1.09 +10.1
Anadarko 69.10 +.13 -9.5
Apple Inc 568.18 -1.30 +40.3
AutoData 53.69 +.13 -.6
AveryD 31.00 -.29 +8.1
Avon 19.77 -.30 +13.2
BP PLC 40.42 -.91 -5.4
BakrHu 41.39 -.39 -14.9
BallardPw 1.28 -.02 +18.5
BarnesNob 18.02 +.35 +24.4
Baxter 54.82 +.04 +10.8
Beam Inc 59.70 +.34 +16.5
BerkH B 82.22 -.25 +7.8
BigLots 36.07 -1.13 -4.5
BlockHR 14.47 -.01 -11.4
Boeing 75.40 -.56 +2.8
BrMySq 33.21 -.25 -5.8
Brunswick 23.85 -.82 +32.1
Buckeye 53.25 -.19 -16.8
CBS B 32.90 -.07 +21.2
CMS Eng 22.62 +.18 +2.4
CSX s 21.99 ... +4.4
CampSp 33.96 -.12 +2.2
Carnival 31.84 -.15 -2.5
Caterpillar 96.49 -.70 +6.5
CenterPnt 19.89 ... -1.0
CntryLink 38.17 -.37 +2.6
Chevron 102.84 -.47 -3.3
Cisco 18.71 -.37 +3.8
Citigrp rs 31.32 -.35 +19.0
Clorox 68.49 +.32 +2.9
ColgPal 99.18 -.42 +7.3
ConAgra 25.60 -.10 -3.0
ConocPhil s54.31 +.96 -2.2
ConEd 59.70 +.56 -3.8
Cooper Ind 61.64 -.42 +13.8
Corning 13.36 -.24 +2.9
CrownHold 36.52 +.10 +8.8
Cummins 106.89 +1.39 +21.4
DTE 55.69 +.21 +2.3
Deere 80.54 +.32 +4.1
Diebold 37.89 -.43 +26.0
Disney 44.30 +.48 +18.1
DomRescs 51.96 +.09 -2.1
Dover 58.72 -.29 +1.2
DowChm 32.11 -.18 +11.6
DryShips 2.85 -.01 +42.5
DuPont 52.68 -.06 +15.1
DukeEngy 21.55 +.08 -2.0
EMC Cp 27.37 -.34 +27.1
Eaton 45.51 -.09 +4.5
EdisonInt 43.43 -.14 +4.9
EmersonEl 49.16 +.46 +5.5
EnbrdgEPt 29.47 -.26 -11.2
Energen 48.02 -.40 -4.0
Entergy 64.16 +.03 -12.2
EntPrPt 50.70 -1.22 +9.3
Exelon 38.16 -.03 -12.0
ExxonMbl 84.02 -.46 -.9
Fastenal s 43.84 +.01 +.5
FedExCp 88.96 -.41 +6.5
FirstEngy 47.04 +.06 +6.2
FootLockr 29.13 -.85 +22.2
FordM 10.61 -.05 -1.4
Gannett 13.55 +.04 +1.3
Gap 28.05 -.52 +51.2
GenDynam 67.53 +.11 +1.7
GenElec 19.25 -.07 +7.5
GenMills 38.82 +.29 -3.9
GileadSci 49.46 -.44 +20.8
GlaxoSKln 46.57 ... +2.1
Goodrich 124.97 -.09 +1.0
Goodyear 10.84 -.04 -23.5
Hallibrtn 32.69 +.27 -5.3
HarleyD 50.69 -.85 +30.4
HarrisCorp 41.61 +.41 +15.5
HartfdFn 19.70 +.03 +21.2
HawaiiEl 26.75 +.24 +1.0
HeclaM 4.10 +.22 -21.6
Heico s 39.44 +.04 -15.6
Hess 49.85 -.49 -12.2
HewlettP 23.32 -.55 -9.5
HomeDp 50.62 -.77 +20.4
HonwllIntl 59.37 -.15 +9.2
Hormel 29.06 +.13 -.8
Humana 81.39 +.17 -7.1
INTL FCSt 21.23 -.13 -9.9
ITT Cp s 22.06 -.24 +14.1
ITW 56.53 -.23 +21.0
IngerRd 42.27 -.40 +38.7
IBM 201.48 -1.42 +9.6
IntFlav 58.67 -.81 +11.9
IntPap 31.67 -.28 +7.0
JPMorgCh 41.38 -.40 +24.5
Name Last Chg %YTD Name Last Chg %YTD Name Last Chg %YTD Name Last Chg %YTD Name Last Chg %YTD Name Last Chg %YTD
Stocks of Local Interest
98.01 72.26 AirProd APD 2.56 85.24 -.52 +.1
34.89 25.39 AmWtrWks AWK .92 33.87 -.14 +6.3
47.10 36.76 Amerigas APU 3.20 39.52 -.32 -13.9
23.28 19.28 AquaAm WTR .66 22.48 +.01 +2.0
34.19 23.69 ArchDan ADM .70 32.98 +.39 +15.3
399.10 266.25 AutoZone AZO ... 383.80 -3.11 +18.1
12.43 4.92 BkofAm BAC .04 7.79 -.17 +40.1
28.93 17.10 BkNYMel BK .52 22.87 -.23 +14.9
12.22 2.23 BonTon BONT .20 5.96 +.01 +76.9
46.22 31.30 CVS Care CVS .65 45.27 +.01 +11.0
52.95 38.79 Cigna CI .04 45.74 +.15 +8.9
77.82 63.34 CocaCola KO 2.04 77.14 -.14 +10.2
30.88 19.19 Comcast CMCSA .65 29.40 -.23 +24.0
29.47 21.67 CmtyBkSy CBU 1.04 28.32 +.51 +1.9
31.55 14.61 CmtyHlt CYH ... 23.64 ... +35.5
42.74 29.57 CoreMark CORE .68 41.61 +3.76 +5.1
58.47 39.50 EmersonEl EMR 1.60 49.16 +.46 +5.5
47.34 30.78 EngyTEq ETE 2.50 39.90 -.27 -1.7
10.50 4.61 Entercom ETM ... 5.45 -.06 -11.4
20.58 10.25 FairchldS FCS ... 13.16 -.09 +9.3
8.97 3.49 FrontierCm FTR .40 3.26 -.35 -36.7
18.16 13.37 Genpact G .18 16.09 -.19 +7.6
10.24 7.00 HarteHnk HHS .34 8.30 +.10 -8.7
55.00 48.17 Heinz HNZ 1.92 54.08 +.32 +.1
67.45 53.77 Hershey HSY 1.52 67.74 +.70 +9.6
39.99 31.88 Kraft KFT 1.16 39.17 -.09 +4.8
32.29 18.07 Lowes LOW .56 30.67 -.12 +20.8
90.00 66.40 M&T Bk MTB 2.80 86.26 -.30 +13.0
102.22 79.08 McDnlds MCD 2.80 93.55 -1.96 -6.8
24.10 17.05 NBT Bcp NBTB .80 20.33 +.21 -8.1
10.28 5.53 NexstarB NXST ... 6.98 +.12 -11.0
67.89 42.70 PNC PNC 1.60 65.89 -.16 +14.3
30.27 25.00 PPL Corp PPL 1.44 27.58 +.21 -6.3
17.34 6.50 PennaRE PEI .60 14.20 -.18 +36.0
71.89 58.50 PepsiCo PEP 2.15 66.52 -.10 +.3
91.05 60.45 PhilipMor PM 3.08 87.72 -.56 +11.8
67.95 57.56 ProctGam PG 2.25 64.16 -.09 -3.8
65.30 42.45 Prudentl PRU 1.45 51.58 -.61 +2.9
2.12 .85 RiteAid RAD ... 1.44 -.01 +14.3
17.11 10.91 SLM Cp SLM .50 13.73 -.19 +2.5
60.00 39.00 SLM pfB SLMBP 4.63 46.00 +.43 +17.9
42.76 24.60 TJX s TJX .46 41.29 -.08 +27.9
33.12 24.07 UGI Corp UGI 1.08 29.39 +.23 0.0
40.84 32.28 VerizonCm VZ 2.00 40.55 +.02 +1.1
62.63 48.31 WalMart WMT 1.59 59.05 -.14 -1.2
45.52 36.52 WeisMk WMK 1.20 45.13 +.82 +13.0
34.59 22.58 WellsFargo WFC .88 33.15 -.35 +20.3
USD per British Pound 1.6165 -.0019 -.12% 1.6117 1.6370
Canadian Dollar .9986 +.0054 +.54% 1.0100 .9692
USD per Euro 1.3030 -.0020 -.15% 1.3835 1.4337
Japanese Yen 79.79 -.15 -.19% 77.70 80.58
Mexican Peso 13.3794 +.2298 +1.72% 13.3535 11.6489
CURRENCY CLOSE PVS. %CH. 6MO. 1YR.
Copper 3.69 3.78 -2.44 +4.35 -8.54
Gold 1604.00 1638.60 -2.11 -10.81 +5.76
Platinum 1508.30 1530.10 -1.42 -9.85 -16.25
Silver 29.41 30.07 -2.19 -16.29 -23.56
Palladium 622.35 647.20 -3.84 -8.09 -15.04
METALS CLOSE PVS. %CH. 6MO. 1YR.
Foreign Exchange & Metals
JPMorgan
CoreBondSelect11.97+.01 +2.2
John Hancock
LifBa1 b 13.05 -.05 +7.2
LifGr1 b 12.89 -.08 +8.2
RegBankA m 14.18 +.02 +17.5
SovInvA m 16.54 -.07 +7.5
TaxFBdA m 10.37 +.02 +4.6
Lazard
EmgMkEqtI d 18.72 -.22 +11.4
Loomis Sayles
BondI 14.68 -.03 +7.1
MFS
MAInvA m 20.64 -.11 +10.5
MAInvC m 19.92 -.11 +10.2
Merger
Merger b 15.81 ... +1.4
Metropolitan West
TotRetBdI 10.64 ... +4.2
Mutual Series
Beacon Z 12.53 -.05 +7.3
Neuberger Berman
SmCpGrInv 18.74 -.18 +6.3
Oakmark
EqIncI 28.58 -.05 +5.7
Oppenheimer
CapApB m 41.59 -.13 +10.7
DevMktA m 32.43 -.44 +10.6
DevMktY 32.08 -.44 +10.7
PIMCO
AllAssetI 12.13 -.05 +6.1
ComRlRStI 6.50 -.05 +0.3
HiYldIs 9.35 -.01 +6.5
LowDrIs 10.48 ... +2.8
RealRet 12.22 +.02 +4.2
TotRetA m 11.27 +.01 +4.8
TotRetAdm b 11.27 +.01 +4.8
TotRetC m 11.27 +.01 +4.5
TotRetIs 11.27 +.01 +4.9
TotRetrnD b 11.27 +.01 +4.8
TotlRetnP 11.27 +.01 +4.9
Permanent
Portfolio 47.59 -.36 +3.3
Principal
SAMConGrB m13.73 -.07 +6.9
Prudential
JenMCGrA m 30.89 -.26 +11.2
Prudential Investmen
2020FocA m 16.02 -.12 +7.7
BlendA m 17.80 -.10 +8.4
EqOppA m 14.76 -.06 +8.5
HiYieldA m 5.56 -.01 +6.3
IntlEqtyA m 5.69 -.06 +6.2
IntlValA m 18.39 -.20 +4.8
JennGrA m 20.80 -.22 +15.0
NaturResA m 44.67 -.62 -3.6
SmallCoA m 21.39 -.07 +7.5
UtilityA m 11.41 -.04 +6.0
ValueA m 14.56 -.08 +5.6
Putnam
GrowIncB m 13.53 -.07 +8.6
IncomeA m 6.95 +.01 +3.8
Royce
LowStkSer m 14.74 -.16 +3.0
OpportInv d 11.56 -.01 +12.0
ValPlSvc m 13.04 -.07 +8.7
Schwab
S&P500Sel d 21.36 -.09 +9.1
Scout
Interntl d 30.32 -.41 +8.4
T Rowe Price
BlChpGr 44.44 -.38 +15.0
CapApprec 22.14 -.04 +7.4
DivGrow 25.08 -.10 +7.8
DivrSmCap d 16.84 -.09 +9.0
EmMktStk d 30.76 -.30 +7.9
EqIndex d 36.81 -.15 +9.1
EqtyInc 24.75 -.10 +7.9
FinSer 13.61 -.10 +14.7
GrowStk 36.72 -.24 +15.4
HealthSci 38.49 +.07 +18.1
HiYield d 6.78 -.01 +7.1
IntlDisc d 42.80 -.51 +14.7
IntlStk d 13.31 -.16 +8.3
IntlStkAd m 13.25 -.16 +8.2
LatinAm d 39.70 -1.00 +2.2
MediaTele 53.59 -.11 +14.2
MidCpGr 57.91 -.28 +9.8
NewAmGro 34.27 -.11 +7.7
NewAsia d 15.66 -.03 +12.6
NewEra 41.81 -.47 -0.6
NewHoriz 34.59 -.24 +11.5
NewIncome 9.79 ... +2.3
Rtmt2020 17.14 -.09 +7.7
Rtmt2030 18.00 -.10 +8.8
ShTmBond 4.85 ... +1.6
SmCpVal d 37.16 +.06 +7.8
TaxFHiYld d 11.53 +.02 +6.9
Value 24.32 -.09 +7.9
ValueAd b 24.07 -.09 +7.8
Thornburg
IntlValI d 26.12 -.30 +6.6
Tweedy, Browne
GlobVal d 23.21 -.25 +6.2
Vanguard
500Adml 125.87 -.52 +9.2
500Inv 125.85 -.53 +9.1
CapOp d 31.35 -.11 +6.2
CapVal 10.25 -.10 +11.1
Convrt d 12.56 -.04 +6.7
DevMktIdx d 8.92 -.13 +5.1
DivGr 16.28 -.06 +5.6
EnergyInv d 57.57 -.50 -2.4
EurIdxAdm d 54.18 -.82 +5.0
Explr 78.05 -.36 +9.3
GNMA 11.06 -.02 +1.2
GNMAAdml 11.06 -.02 +1.2
GlbEq 17.35 -.17 +9.1
GrowthEq 12.30 -.07 +14.0
HYCor d 5.89 -.01 +5.9
HYCorAdml d 5.89 -.01 +6.0
HltCrAdml d 57.70 +.06 +6.4
HlthCare d 136.74 +.15 +6.3
ITGradeAd 10.21 +.01 +4.2
InfPrtAdm 28.47 +.05 +3.0
InfPrtI 11.60 +.02 +3.0
InflaPro 14.50 +.03 +3.0
InstIdxI 125.05 -.52 +9.2
InstPlus 125.06 -.52 +9.2
InstTStPl 30.86 -.12 +9.5
IntlExpIn d 14.14 -.19 +10.3
IntlGr d 17.75 -.28 +8.6
IntlStkIdxAdm d23.15 -.33 +6.0
IntlStkIdxIPls d92.60-1.34 +6.0
LTInvGr 10.51 +.03 +4.2
MidCapGr 21.09 -.08 +12.0
MidCp 21.51 -.12 +9.5
MidCpAdml 97.64 -.57 +9.5
MidCpIst 21.57 -.12 +9.6
MuIntAdml 14.28 +.02 +3.0
MuLtdAdml 11.18 ... +0.9
PrecMtls d 16.77 -.60 -10.8
Prmcp d 65.65 -.13 +6.3
PrmcpAdml d 68.12 -.14 +6.4
PrmcpCorI d 14.21 -.04 +5.3
REITIdx d 21.78 -.04 +14.0
REITIdxAd d 92.96 -.14 +14.1
STCor 10.77 ... +2.1
STGradeAd 10.77 ... +2.1
SelValu d 19.71 -.13 +6.0
SmGthIdx 23.39 -.13 +8.8
SmGthIst 23.44 -.12 +8.9
StSmCpEq 20.19 ... +7.3
Star 19.97 -.09 +6.6
StratgcEq 20.12 -.08 +9.7
TgtRe2015 12.98 -.05 +5.5
TgtRe2020 23.00 -.11 +6.0
TgtRe2030 22.39 -.13 +7.0
TgtRe2035 13.45 -.08 +7.5
Tgtet2025 13.07 -.07 +6.5
TotBdAdml 11.07 ... +1.8
TotBdInst 11.07 ... +1.8
TotBdMkInv 11.07 ... +1.7
TotBdMkSig 11.07 ... +1.8
TotIntl d 13.84 -.20 +6.0
TotStIAdm 34.09 -.14 +9.4
TotStIIns 34.10 -.13 +9.4
TotStIdx 34.08 -.14 +9.4
TxMIntlAdm d10.28 -.14 +5.0
TxMSCAdm 29.40 -.02 +7.9
USGro 20.35 -.13 +12.7
USValue 11.06 -.05 +8.4
WellsI 23.70 -.02 +4.2
WellsIAdm 57.41 -.07 +4.2
Welltn 32.99 -.12 +6.0
WelltnAdm 56.99 -.19 +6.0
WndsIIAdm 49.82 -.22 +8.9
WndsrII 28.06 -.13 +8.8
Wells Fargo
DvrCpBldA f 6.64 -.02 +5.1
DOW
12,932.09
-76.44
NASDAQ
2,946.27
-11.49
S&P 500
1,363.72
-5.86
RUSSELL 2000
793.06
-.75
6-MO T-BILLS
.14%
...
10-YR T-NOTE
1.84%
-.03
CRUDE OIL
$97.01
-.93
q q n n q q p p
q q q q q q q q
NATURAL GAS
$2.39
+.05
BUSINESS S E C T I O N B
THE TIMES LEADER WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 2012
timesleader.com
W
ASHINGTON U.S.
companies in March post-
ed the highest number of
job openings in nearly
four years, a sign that hiring could
strengthen in the coming months after
slowing this spring.
The Labor Department said Tues-
day that employers advertised 3.74
million job openings in March. Thats
up froma revised3.57 millioninFebru-
ary and the most since July 2008, just
before the financial crisis erupted.
The increase in U.S. job openings
suggests that weaker hiring gains in
MarchandApril couldbe temporary. It
usually takes one to three months for
employers to fill openings.
Even with the increase, roughly 12.7
million people were unemployed in
March. That means an average of 3.4
people competed for each open job.
While thats far better than the nearly
7-to-1 ratio when the recession ended,
ina healthy job market, the ratio is usu-
ally around 2 to 1.
Last week the government said em-
ployers added just 115,000 jobs in April
and 154,000 in March. That was a
sharp decline from December through
February, when the economy added an
average of 252,000 jobs per month.
Jared Franz, an economist at T.
Rowe Price in Baltimore, said that in-
crease in job openings was evidence
that steady labor market healing con-
tinues.
Tuesdays report, known as the Job
Openings and Labor Turnover survey,
or JOLTs, showed that more people
quit their jobs in March.
More quits are a good sign because
most people quit in order to move to a
new job. Rising quits suggest workers
are finding more opportunities in the
job market.
The increase in openings reflected
gains in two sectors vital to the econo-
mys health: manufacturing and con-
struction. In March, factories adver-
tised 55,000 more openings, while con-
struction firms posted 23,000 more
openings.
However, government job openings
decreased by 26,000. The majority of
the decline was at the state and local
level, where governments continue to
face budgetary pressures.
AP PHOTO
A Lowes store advertises job openings and gas grills Tuesday in Pembroke, Mass. The Labor Department said Tuesday
that U.S. companies in March posted the highest number of job openings in nearly four years.
Job outlook brighter
U.S. employers posted 3.74 million March positions
By MARTIN CRUTSINGER
AP Economics Writer
CHARLOTTE, N.C. More
than 200,000 letters from Bank
of America will begin landing in
homeowners mailboxes this
week, the bank said Tuesday, of-
fering principal reduction as
part of the $25 billion mortgage
settlement announced in Febru-
ary.
Its one of the banks first
steps in the blockbuster agree-
ment between state attorneys
general, federal agencies and the
nations five largest mortgage
servicers.
Bank of America says the aver-
age savings will
be about 30 per-
cent of the
homeowners
monthly pay-
ment.
The bank an-
nounced the out-
line of this pro-
gram in March,
and its guide-
lines are spelled
out in the con-
sent order ap-
proved by a fed-
eral judge last month.
Bank of America will reduce
principal to as low as the cur-
rent value of the property, and
will lower the interest rate and
extend the duration of the loan
as needed to get to the target
monthly payment.
Homeowners must make three
payments under the terms of the
loan modification before it be-
comes permanent.
Eligible homeowners:
Owe more than the property
is worth,
Were at least 60 days behind
on payments as of Jan. 31,
Make a monthly payment of
at least 25 percent of gross
household income,
Have a loan owned and ser-
viced by Bank of America, or
serviced by Bank of America and
owned by an investor who has
given the bank permission to re-
duce principal. Government-
backed housing giants Fannie
Mae and Freddie Mac have not
given permission; nor have the
Federal Housing Administration
and the Department of Veterans
Affairs.
Bank of America will also
spend money to provide refi-
nancing for underwater home-
owners current on payments and
to provide other types of fore-
closure avoidance.
B of A is
offering to
cut principal
By ANDREWDUNN
McClatchy Newspapers
Bank of Amer-
ica says the
average sav-
ings will be
about 30
percent of the
homeowners
monthly pay-
ment.
LOS ANGELES WatchESPN, the
online and mobile version of Disneys
popular sports TV network, was activa-
ted Tuesday for most of Comcasts 22
million video subscribers.
Its one of the perks being offered to
cable subscribers to convince them to
keep paying for TV. Getting online or
mobile access to shows you already pay
for is known in the industry as TV Ev-
erywhere.
Robert Grove, a Comcast spokesman,
said the service would be offered in the
Wilkes-Barre/Scranton market to Xfin-
ity TV customers.
The new offering results from a 10-
year deal between Comcast Corp. and
The Walt Disney Co. that was an-
nouncedinJanuary. It doubles the num-
ber of customers able to access Watch-
ESPN to about 40 million.
WatchESPN offers live feeds of four
pay TV networks: ESPN, ESPN2,
ESPN3andESPNU. It alsooffers on-the-
go access to feeds of ESPN Goal Line
when college football is underway or
ESPNBuzzer Beater duringcollege bas-
ketball season.
Customers of Time Warner Cable
Inc., Bright House Networks and Veri-
zon FiOS also have access to Watch-
ESPN. Its app, available on iPads and
iPhones, has been downloaded about 8
million times.
For now, the online and mobile ver-
sions comewithfewor noads as theDis-
ney subsidiary experiments with inter-
active advertising. During TV commer-
cials, the online version often puts up a
message that says Commercial break.
Well be right back.
Users must provetheyaresubscribers
to use the website or the mobile apps.
WatchESPN comes to Comcasts video customers
By RYAN NAKASHIMA
AP Business Writer
C M Y K
PAGE 8B WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 2012 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
W E A T H E R
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6
6
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Find the car you want fromhome. timesleaderautos.com m
Ideal bldg for retail sales
or prof offices. High traffic location on
Route 309S. Zoned Commercial. MLS#12-
1534
MIKE JOHNSON 970-1100
Fire damaged
former restaurant tavern w/apt,
garage & parking lot. MLS#11-4410
JULIO ACOSTA 239-6408
Former Tavern w/2 apts. No
liquor license. Needs work. Addl lot for OSP.
MLS#12-421
JULIO 714-9252 or ANDY 714-9225
Great business opportunity. 1st flr has 2
BR, Apt. Freshly painted exterior. Zoned
Community Business. MLS#11-4416
MATT 714-9229
900 SF Commercial space on
1st flr. 900 SF 2 BR apt on 2nd flr.
Billboard also available to rent on bldg.
MLS#10-4309
TINA 714-9251
Large 8000 SF building looking
for a new lease on life! Zoned Commercial.
MLS#11-4058
SANDY 970-1110 or DAVID 970-1117
1600 SF building - ideal for
professional offices. Includes office
furniture. Zoned Commercial. MLS#12-
1422
MIKE JOHNSON 970-1100
Excellent opportunity-
Established Restaurant for sale in busy
shop ctr. Business only. MLS#11-2782
PAT G 788-7514
6000+ SF former furniture
store, plus apt. & lots more space. High
traffic area. Combined w/12 Davenport.
MLS#11-3865
RAE DZIAK 714-9234
2 bldgs zoned commercial.
1 consists of retail space & apts, the
other is a 2-story home. MLS#10-4056
MIKE JOHNSON
Multi-Purpose Bldg -
Convenient location on State St - Adjacent lot
available. MLS#10-4590
MARGY 696-0891 or MIKE J 970-1100
Unique bldg currently used
as single residence. May be converted to
suit your needs (w/zoning approval).
MLS#12-844
DAVID 970-1117
Nicely maintained offices
& garage. 2400 SF w/overhead door. Great
for many uses. Near highways. MLS#11-
4561
JUDY RICE 714-9230
Prime commercial
storefront + 3 spacious Apts.
Parking lot in rear. MLS#12-687
DONNA S 788-7504
Established turn-key
restaurant w/2 apts. Business &
building priced to sell! MLS#11-130
ANDY 714-9225
Auto repair & body
shop w/state certified paint booth.
2nd flr storage. MLS#11-2842
ANDY 714-9225
Currently business on 1st
flr, 3 BR apt. on 2nd flr. Lg garage in rear
w/storage. Owner financing or lease
purchase available. MLS#11-4015
ANDY 714-9225
High traffic Route 11
w/6000 SF Showroom/Garage, &
Apt above. MLS#11-2106
ANITA REBER 788-7501
Great location for professional
office. Private drive in rear. Zoned C-3.
Property being sold "as is". MLS#10-4362
TINA 714-9251
3 BR, Ranch w/gar+
attached bldg. Zoned HWY COMM. Ideal
for office or sm business. MLS#10-4367
RAE 714-9234
Prime location -
ZONED HWY COMMERCIAL- 4 BR Cape
Cod on 100x556 lot. MLS#11-229
RAE 714-9234
Brick & block prime office bldg.
Includes professional office space +
restaurant. MLS#12-366
GERALD PALERMO 788-7509
Great location on busy Rte
309! Office Bldg w/1500 SF of space
& 2270 SF warehouse. MLS#11-2094
ANITA REBER 788-7501
Wonderful opportunity for
commercial bldg w/ice cream stand,
storefront & apt. Also storage bldg.
MLS#12-370
CORINE 715-9321
3235 SF Warehouse.
Perfect for landscaper, contractor, etc.
Zoned Industrial. MLS#12-1376
ANDY CISNEY 714-9225
4 Sty brick office bldg, more
than half rented. High traffic area. 2 lots
included for pkg. MLS#11-1045
ANDY 714-9225 or MARGY 696-0891
Former landmark restaurant.
offers 3500 SF on the 1st level plus
basement. Parking for 40 cars. MLS#12-89
GERALD PALERMO 788-7509
Well built 2 story - 8000 SF bldg.
Prime location/high traffic area. Addl pkg
available. 1st flr office/commercial space &
2 apts on 2nd flr. MLS#11-508
RHEA SIMMS 696-6677
High traffic location. 2900 SF
professional office space w/basement
storage. Pkg for at least 12 cars. MLS#12-
416
RHEA SIMMS 696-6677
Retail, Office, Medical -
Whatever your need - This 4000 SF Bldg can
accommadate it! Parking for 10. MLS#12-
276
JUDY RICE 714-9230
Outstanding brick
bldg! Parking for 7-10 cars.
MLS#08-2790
PEG 714-9247
Lg Commercial warehouse &
office space w/over 3.5 acres. Owner
financing or lease purchase available.
MLS#11-4014
ANDY 714-9225
Commercial - Vacant Land -
Perfect downtown corner location near Coal
Street Exit. Ideal for many uses. MLS#12-
181
MIKE JOHNSON 970-1100
Commercial opportunity awaits
your business.1st flr 10,000 SF w/offices.
2nd flr storage. Plenty of pkg on 4.62 acres.
MLS#10-1110
JUDY 714-9230
Prime location - former
Convention Hall. Wonderful opportunity for
professional offices. Pkg for 100+ cars.
Zoned Hwy Business. MLS#11-3654
MARGY SIMMS 696-0891
32,000SF,
30+ parking, including trailer spaces
MLS#08-1305
VIRGINIA ROSE 288-9371
Rental space - office &
warehouse, 500SF to 15000SF. MLS#09-
2115
MATT 714-9229
1st floor modern office
space w/private restroom. OSP &
handicap access. MLS#12-621
MATT 714-9229
Prime Location -
1900SF - 12 pkg spaces. MLS#09-
3085
MARGY 696-0891
Lease this building
w/nice offices, conference room & Kit.
Ample parking. MLS#11-419
JUDY 714-9230
3000 SF Building zoned
commercial available for lease. Located in high
traffic area. Parking for 20 cars. MLS#12-1452
BARBARA M 696-0883
ALMANAC
REGIONAL FORECAST
NATIONAL FORECAST
For more weather
information go to:
www.timesleader.com
National Weather Service
607-729-1597
Forecasts, graphs
and data 2012
Weather Central, LP
Yesterday 61/53
Average 68/45
Record High 90 in 1936
Record Low 30 in 1956
Yesterday 8
Month to date 31
Year to date 4865
Last year to date 6100
Normal year to date 6069
*Index of fuel consumption, how far the days
mean temperature was below 65 degrees.
Precipitation
Yesterday 0.67
Month to date 1.45
Normal month to date 0.86
Year to date 9.36
Normal year to date 11.14
Susquehanna Stage Chg. Fld. Stg
Wilkes-Barre 4.66 -0.67 22.0
Towanda 2.94 -0.18 21.0
Lehigh
Bethlehem 3.07 0.75 16.0
Delaware
Port Jervis 3.56 -0.14 18.0
Todays high/
Tonights low
TODAYS SUMMARY
Highs: 70-75. Lows: 46-51. Cloudy with
showers likely today. Showers gradually
ending tonight.
The Poconos
Highs: 63-71. Lows: 54-58. Cloudy with
showers likely today. Showers gradually
ending tonight.
The Jersey Shore
Highs: 60-72. Lows: 42-44. Cloudy skies
with showers likely today. Mostly cloudy
with a chance of showers tonight.
The Finger Lakes
Highs: 75-76. Lows: 54-57. Cloudy with
showers likely today. Showers gradually
ending tonight.
Brandywine Valley
Highs: 68-75. Lows: 56-60. Cloudy with
showers likely today. Showers gradually
ending tonight.
Delmarva/Ocean City
Anchorage 53/36/.00 51/38/c 50/38/r
Atlanta 80/66/.18 80/56/t 77/56/s
Baltimore 72/59/.06 75/57/sh 71/49/s
Boston 58/50/.08 68/56/sh 66/49/sh
Buffalo 63/54/.52 60/42/sh 57/41/sh
Charlotte 77/64/.23 77/55/t 74/48/s
Chicago 70/52/.00 55/48/pc 61/46/pc
Cleveland 65/57/.69 60/45/sh 56/42/s
Dallas 72/67/.00 79/55/t 80/59/pc
Denver 64/39/.00 77/49/s 83/46/pc
Detroit 73/56/.02 63/42/sh 63/46/s
Honolulu 82/72/.00 85/70/s 85/70/s
Houston 86/68/.03 81/63/t 83/65/c
Indianapolis 72/55/.01 66/42/pc 68/46/s
Las Vegas 87/71/.00 94/70/s 97/70/s
Los Angeles 64/58/.00 74/59/s 68/58/s
Miami 85/70/.58 87/73/t 87/73/t
Milwaukee 68/51/.00 56/43/pc 60/45/pc
Minneapolis 58/49/.01 65/47/s 74/54/pc
Myrtle Beach 77/70/.00 80/63/t 78/60/s
Nashville 79/66/.00 75/50/c 73/48/s
New Orleans 88/72/.03 82/62/t 82/65/s
Norfolk 81/60/.00 79/61/t 74/54/s
Oklahoma City 73/55/.00 76/50/s 79/56/s
Omaha 67/47/.00 70/49/s 77/59/s
Orlando 90/65/.00 90/68/t 88/67/t
Phoenix 91/66/.00 93/72/pc 96/71/s
Pittsburgh 73/61/1.47 67/42/sh 60/39/pc
Portland, Ore. 71/50/.00 59/41/pc 61/40/pc
St. Louis 74/56/.00 72/50/s 72/50/pc
Salt Lake City 73/43/.00 80/55/s 76/45/pc
San Antonio 70/66/.57 81/64/t 78/66/t
San Diego 68/60/.00 71/61/s 68/62/s
San Francisco 73/50/.00 70/51/s 74/53/s
Seattle 64/49/.00 57/42/pc 58/44/pc
Tampa 87/71/.00 86/72/t 86/70/t
Tucson 88/54/.00 85/60/t 92/63/s
Washington, DC 75/61/.02 75/56/sh 70/50/s
City Yesterday Today Tomorrow City Yesterday Today Tomorrow
Amsterdam 63/50/.00 58/57/sh 68/54/r
Baghdad 93/64/.00 101/72/s 105/75/pc
Beijing 90/54/.00 83/60/s 86/64/pc
Berlin 66/48/.00 71/55/sh 74/56/c
Buenos Aires 75/63/.00 78/63/t 69/53/t
Dublin 54/41/.00 48/42/sh 53/37/c
Frankfurt 72/46/.00 67/55/sh 82/61/c
Hong Kong 91/81/.00 88/81/t 88/79/t
Jerusalem 77/61/.00 85/62/s 77/59/s
London 64/50/.00 56/55/sh 63/47/c
Mexico City 82/61/.00 80/54/t 80/52/pc
Montreal 61/52/.00 62/44/sh 55/39/sh
Moscow 72/50/.00 73/53/sh 73/55/c
Paris 66/55/.00 64/59/c 78/62/sh
Rio de Janeiro 79/70/.07 76/64/sh 80/67/pc
Riyadh 102/77/.00 103/77/s 105/78/s
Rome 70/48/.00 73/55/pc 77/57/pc
San Juan 86/76/.01 85/74/t 84/75/t
Tokyo 73/61/.00 71/60/t 66/57/sh
Warsaw 63/36/.00 70/52/s 74/53/c
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
76/57
Reading
76/51
Scranton
Wilkes-Barre
73/47
73/47
Harrisburg
74/49
Atlantic City
65/55
New York City
73/56
Syracuse
70/44
Pottsville
72/47
Albany
74/50
Binghamton
Towanda
72/44
73/44
State College
71/45
Poughkeepsie
77/51
79/55
55/48
77/49
73/52
65/47
74/59
69/51
71/50
82/48
57/42
73/56
63/42
80/56
87/73
81/63
85/70
45/35
51/38
75/56
Sun and Moon
Sunrise Sunset
Today 5:51a 8:10p
Tomorrow 5:50a 8:11p
Moonrise Moonset
Today none 9:04a
Tomorrow 12:08a 10:12a
Last New First Full
May 12 May 20 May 28 June 4
Now that weve
had rain on 7 of
the past 8 days,
our lawns, gar-
dens and our
weeds are grow-
ing very nicely.
This was not
expected to be
an unusually wet
month, but it
sure is starting
out that way.
Another cold
front is
approaching
today, so we can
expect another
round of show-
ers later this
afternoon into
tonight.
Northerly winds
tonight will
usher in colder
temperatures for
Thursday, but we
do not expect
frost at night.
Saturday is still
looking nice and
dry, but perhaps
not as nice on
Sunday.
- Tom Clark
NATIONAL FORECAST: Showers and thunderstorms will be likely throughout the East as a storm sys-
tem pushes through that region. Strong to severe storms will be possible from the eastern North
Carolina to southern Mississippi. A few scattered thunderstorms will be possible from the Lower
Mississippi Valley into Southern Texas.
Recorded at Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Intl Airport
Temperatures
Heating Degree Days*
Precipitation
TODAY
Partial clearing,
shower
THURSDAY
Breezy,
much
cooler
62
52
SATURDAY
Sunny
73
42
SUNDAY
Partly
sunny, a
shower
73
45
MONDAY
Partly
sunny, a
shower
70
50
TUESDAY
Rain
possible
70
55
FRIDAY
Mostly
sunny
67
42
73

56

C M Y K
TASTE S E C T I O N C
THE TIMES LEADER WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 2012
timesleader.com
WITH SUMMER
slowly approaching,
here is a slight twist
on a traditional dess-
ert that has been
around for gener-
ations: Creamy Carib-
bean Coconut Rice
Pudding.
Rice pudding is often neglected and
sometimes considered a boring dess-
ert. As a matter of fact, it actually can
be a simple, yet decadent dessert to
make with many variations.
For example, I took a basic rice pud-
ding recipe and chose to add pineapple,
mango and coconut milk to it. The
flavors are incredible when all paired
together. If Caribbean fruits or flavors
are not your style, you may add differ-
ent extracts and fruits as you wish. Just
take my rice-pudding recipe as listed
below, and instead of the 2 cups of
coconut milk just substitute 2 more
cups of milk. You will have your basic
rice pudding recipe with whatever you
decide to add to it.
When preparing this dessert, be
mindful not to continuously stir the
rice pudding because it may become
frail. Occasionally stir the rice pudding
while cooking to ensure a nice creamy
rice texture as your end product.
This dessert will be featured this
weekend as well as on our famous
Mothers Day Dinner Buffet with vari-
ous other choices at Fire and Ice on
Toby Creek Restaurant in Trucksville.
Enjoy the recipe.

CREAMY CARIBBEAN
COCONUT RICE PUDDING
3 cups water
1
4 teaspoon salt

1
1
2 cups white rice
2 cups 2 percent milk
2 cups coconut milk
2 cups half & half
1
1
2 cups sugar

2 whole eggs
4 egg whites
1 teaspoon vanilla
1
4 teaspoon salt

1
2 cup ripe mangos (small diced)
1
2 cup ripe pineapple (small diced)

1 cup toasted coconut

Preheat oven to 350 degrees F (for


toasting the coconut).
Bring 3 cups water and
1
4 teaspoon salt
to boil in a 4-quart pot, stir in 1
1
2 cups rice.
Cover and simmer until water is absorbed,
about 15 minutes. Stir in 4 cups milk, 2
cups half and half, 1
1
2 cups sugar and heat
up until steamy (stirring continuously)
then reduce to low heat, cover, until mix-
ture looks thick soup, about 1 hour.
Whisk 2 eggs, 4 egg whites, 1 teaspoon
vanilla and
1
4 teaspoon salt in separate
bowl, then add to rice mixture. Do not let
boil; stir about 1-2 minutes on low heat so
temperature reaches 160-170 degrees.
Remove from heat and add your mangos
and pineapple Cover surface with plastic
wrap so the rice pudding will not develop a
skin as it is cooling down. Cool for about
an hour. While your rice pudding is cooling,
begin to toast the coconut.
Place the coconut in a baking pan and
toast until slightly golden brown. (This
should take about 5-10 minutes. Toss the
coconut while baking to ensure equal
browning) This recipe makes 3 quarts.
Serve chilled. Top rice pudding with toast-
ed coconut as desired.
CHEFS CORNER
C A T H Y M A R C Z A K
F I R E A N D I C E
O N T O B Y C R E E K
Beyond basic
rice pudding
PETE G. WILCOX/THE TIMES LEADER
Executive pastry chef Cathy Marczak
made this rice-pudding dessert at Fire
& Ice on Toby Creek just in time for
Mothers Day.
Editors note: If you are a chef who would
like to contribute to Chefs Corner, contact
[email protected] or 829-7283.
I
f youve been watching Dancing With the
Stars on ABC this season, youve likely
heard contestant Maria Menounos shout
Im Greek! Im Greek! to explain how she can
dance despite broken bones in her feet.
Could there be some mysterious compo-
nent in Greek food that helps you play
through pain?
Shes young. Youth is always part of the
process, Theresa Karambelas of Kingston
said with a laugh as she helped a group of
cooks prepare fragrant trays of pastitsio in
the kitchen at Annunciation Greek Orthodox
Church on East Ross Street in Wilkes-Barre.
Pastitsio, a type of Greek-style lasag-
na, is just one of many dishes the vol-
unteers have been preparing for a
Greek Food Festival that runs from11
a.m. to 8 pm. today through Saturday.
Spanakopita (spinach pie), dolmada-
kia (stuffed grapevine leaves); souvlaki
(shish kebab) and baklava and meloma-
karona pastries also are available for
eat-in or take-out, and Dina Banas of
Harding said, the $15 trays of Greek
cookies make great Mothers Day gifts.
For weeks the cooks, mostly women
but some men, have been getting to-
gether just about every Thursday and
Saturday to prepare, then freeze, the
festival food. Saturday sessions allow
members of the younger generation
who are in the work force a chance to
practice the recipes of their ancestors
on their day off, Harriet Koukoltsios of
Wyoming said.
Karambelas, who married into the
culture, said the Greek community is
close-knit, to the point where friends
from a Scranton church help out at the
Wilkes-Barre festival, and the Wilkes-
Barre church volunteers reciprocate.
This week at Annunciation Church,
volunteers expect to sell pounds and
pounds of food.
You can eat in or take out and youre
welcome but not required to pre-order
at 823-4805 or through greekfood-
festival.webs.com. Delivery is available
for orders of $30 or more within two
miles of the church.
If youd like to try making pastitsio at
home, here is a recipe that should fit a
12x18-inch pan.
PETE G. WILCOX/THE TIMES LEADER
Marina Calimeres (left), Harriet Koukoltsios and Georgia Calimeres work on the pastitsio, a type of Greek lasagna, one of many traditional foods to
be sold at Annunciation Greek Orthodox Churchs Greek Food Festival today through Saturday.
Going Greek
Harriet Koukoltsios places a tray of pastitsio
into a convection oven to bake as Georgia Cali-
meres looks on.
Pastitsio is a Greek-style lasagna, one of many
foods prepared by parishioners of the Annun-
ciation Greek Orthodox Church.
Harriet Koukoltsios, left, pulls a tray of Greek
lasagna from the convection oven and places it
on the counter as Marina Calimeres looks on.
What: Greek Food Festival
Where: Annunciation Greek Orthodox
Church, 32 E. Ross St., Wilkes-Barre
(across the street from Wilkes-Barre Post
Office)
When: 1 1 a.m. to 8 p.m. today through
Saturday
To pre-order: Call 823-4805 or visit
greekfoodfestival.webs.com
IF YOU GO By MARY THERESE BIEBEL
[email protected]
See GREEK, Page 5C
Annunciation Greek Orthodoxs annual food festival starts today
Wed have liked to provide some
burger-making tips to coincide with
the start of grilling season, but as
everyone knows, this year that ship
sailed with La Nina. And even when
we do get a normal transition from
winter into spring, many of you have
been firing up the grill year-round.
Nonetheless, weve been flipping up
a storm at the backyard grill, making
burgers from a variety of meats (and
in one case, a vegetable).
Our first suggestion: Use high-qual-
ity, relatively low-fat beef but add
some fat, working from the inside out.
Putting a pat of herb butter inside the
uncooked patty makes the interior
moist while adding flavor.
Our second suggestion: Skip the
beef and go with bison for a full, mea-
ty flavor. Bison has about a third less
fat than 90 percent lean beef, however,
so it, too, can benefit greatly from
added ingredients. We recommend
adding one egg for every pound of
ground bison and flavoring it with
just a touch of shallot and Worcester-
shire. Other flavorings would work
equally well, so experiment with your
favorites.
Our third suggestion involves mov-
ing beyond red meat. Turkey burgers
are generally lower in fat than beef
burgers, but be careful: Not all ground
turkey is created equal. Look for a
label that specifies lean ground turkey
breast, with no dark meat or skin
added.
And finally, for our fourth and fifth
suggestions, consider dropping the
meat altogether.
Make a burger out of fish a tuna
burger, for example or take ad-
vantage of the fact that a portobello
mushroom cap cooked on the grill
looks a lot like burger patty.
BISON BURGERS
Yield: 4 servings
1 egg
2 tablespoons Worcestershire sauce
1 tablespoon minced shallot
Salt
Freshly ground black pepper
1 pound ground bison
4 hamburger buns
Directions:
1. Preheat a grill for direct heat.
2. Combine egg and Worcestershire
sauce in a bowl; beat with a fork until well
combined. Stir in shallot and salt and
pepper to taste. Add bison; with your
hands, mix gently but well. Form into four
patties. Season again with salt and pep-
per.
3. Brush oil on the grill grate. Cook
burgers over direct heat 4 to 6 minutes
per side. If desired, rotate the burgers 90
degrees halfway through cooking each
side for an attractive crosshatch of grill
marks. Cook until an instant-read meat
thermometer reads 125 degrees for rare,
135 degrees for medium-rare or 145 de-
grees for medium. Cooking beyond medi-
um is not recommended as bison can dry
out easily.
4. Place each patty on a bun, garnish as
desired and serve.

JOE BONWICH
St. Louis Post-Dispatch
MCT PHOTO
Try a bison burger for an alternative
to beef. Bison is leaner and can use a
little extra fat, say from eggs.
See BURGERS, Page 5C
Building better burgers that youll flip over
C M Y K
PAGE 2C WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 2012 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
7
4
8
4
9
7
C M Y K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 2012 PAGE 3C
AT THESE UNBELIEVABLE PRICES, WE ARE UNABLE TO OFFER RAIN CHECKS
QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED
3
DAY
MEAT
SALE
SALE DATES: WEDNESDAY MAY 9TH thru FRIDAY MAY 11TH 2012
2203 STATE ROUTE 118
HUNLOCK CREEK, PA 18621
PHONE: 570-477-2988
STORE HOURS:
Daily 8AM - 8PM
Sunday 9AM to 5PM
Complete Line Of:
Groceries, Meats, Deli,
Produce and In-Store Bakery
DOUBLE
COUPONS
EVERY DAY
Whole or Half
Boneless
NewYork Strips
12 - 15 lb. avg.
Cut FREE Into Steaks
Whole Peeled
Beef Tenderloin
Filet Mignon
5-8 lb. avg.
Cut FREE! Into Steaks
Fresh 85% Lean
Ground
Beef
Sold in Packs of
3 lbs. or More
Regular or Jumbo - 16 oz. pkg.
Bar-S
Meat Weiners
Boneless Beef
Western Griller
London Broil
Sold in
Family Packs Only!
Whole
Boneless
Pork Loin
Cut FREE! into
Pork Chops or Roasts Only
Sold in Packs of
3 lbs. or More
Sahlens
Smokehouse
Ham
FROM OUR DELI FROM OUR DELI
Shurne Deli Gourmet
Packaged for your convenience
American
Cheese
Kunzler - 16 oz. pkg.
Red Rose
Sliced Bacon
Fresh Sheet
Pork
Spareribs
Sold in
Family Packs Only!
Individually Quick Frozen
41/50 Ct. Peeled & Deveined
Ready To Eat - Large
Cooked
Shrimp
Large
Eggs
Dozen
Russet
Potatoes
WOW
5 lb. bag
Assorted Varieties
Herrs
Potato Chips
10 -10.5 oz. bag
2 LB.
BAG
Red, Ripe
Whole Seedless
Watermelon
$
5
98 $
5
98 $
2
78
lb. lb.
$
2
48
$
3
98
lb.
$
2
48
lb.
$
1
98
lb.
2
/
$
5
$
2
48
lb.
ONLY
$
11
98
98

88

WOW
$
1
98
$
4
98
ea.
$
1
78
Fresh
Yellow Cooking
Onions
98

2 lb. bag
California
Large Head
Iceberg
Lettuce
98

ea.
Boneless & Skinless
Chicken
Breasts
lb.
$
1
78
WOW
EVERY TUESDAY 5% SENIOR CITIZENS DISCOUNT
lb.
lb.
lb.
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C M Y K
PAGE 4C WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 2012 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
Photographs and information
must be received two full weeks
before your childs birthday.
Your information must be
typed or computer-generated.
Include your name and your
relationship to the child (parent,
grandparent or legal guardians
only, please), your childs name,
age and birthday, parents,
grandparents and great-grand-
parents names and their towns
of residence, any siblings and
their ages. Dont forget to in-
clude a daytime contact phone
number. Without one, we may
be unable to publish a birthday
announcement on time.
We cannot guarantee return
of birthday or occasions photos
and do not return community-
news or publicity photos. Please
do not submit precious or origi-
nal professional photographs
that require return because
such photos can become dam-
aged, or occasionally lost, in the
production process.
Email your birthday announ-
cement to people@timeslead-
er.com or send it to: Times Lead-
er Birthdays, 15 North Main St.,
Wilkes-Barre, PA 18711-0250. You
also may use the form under the
People tab on www.timesleader-
.com.
GUIDELINES
Birthdays (ages 1-16) will be published free of charge
C O M M U N I T Y N E W S
Happy Mothers Day!
Captured Moments By Jessica
Capture the moments that take your breath away.
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428 Hazle St. Wilkes-Barre, Pa 18702
(570) 822-5511
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HOURS: Tues, Wed, Fri 9-5 Thurs 9-6 Sat 9-3
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Seating 12:00, 2:00 and 4:00 P.M.
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Treat MomTo Her Favorite Menu Items
Fresh Carved Oven Roasted Turkey With Herb Stuffng, Seafood Newburg,Top Sirloin Of
Beef With Portabella Mushroom Sauce, Sauteed Chicken Tenderloin With Lemon White
Wine Butter Sauce, Fresh Smoked Country HamWith Mandarin Orange Glace, Real Mashed
Potatoes With Turkey Gravy, Fresh Candied Maple GlazedYams,Winter Vegetables Medley,
Chicken Noodle Soup, Salad Station,Tossed Caesar Salad, Potato Salad, Cole Slaw, Pasta Salad,
Dessert Station, Cakes, Pies, Puddings, Cookies.
Romantic Dinner In Front of 2 Cozy Fireplaces
HAPPY BIRTHDAY!
Benjamin S. Polomchak, son of
Tom and Chrissie Polomchak,
Plymouth, is celebrating his
seventh birthday today, May 9.
Benjamin is a grandson of Wil-
liam and Margaret Sharksnas,
Wilkes-Barre, and the late Jo-
seph and Lorraine Polomchak.
He is a great-grandson of James
and Mary Pahler and Mary
Sharksnas and the late William
Sharksnas, all of Wilkes-Barre.
Benjamin has two sisters, Nadia,
17 months, and Zoe, 12.
Benjamin S. Polomchak
Kendall Theresa Petrosky,
daughter of Stan and Kim Pe-
trosky, Mountain Top, is cele-
brating her fifth birthday today,
May 9. Kendall is a granddaught-
er of William and Theresa Ma-
guire, Mountain Top, and Do-
rothy Petrosky and the late
Stanley Petrosky, Plymouth. She
is a great-granddaughter of
Lottie Katra, Nanticoke. Kendall
has two brothers, Matthew and
Ryan.
Kendall T. Petrosky
THIS WEEK: May 9 to May 15
Spaghetti and Pasta Dinner
4-6:30 p.m. every Thursday at
St. Marys Antiochian Orthodox
Church, 905 S. Main St., Wilkes-
Barre. Choice of five pastas and
five sauces. Salad, dessert and
beverages included. Takeouts
available. Adults pay $7; $5 for
children 5 to 12 years old; chil-
dren younger than 5 years dine
free. Call 824-1674 Thursdays.
Community Lunch Program for
White Haven Residents 1 1:30
a.m.-noon every Monday,
Wednesday and Friday, St. Pauls
Lutheran Church, 418 Berwick
St., White Haven. This ministry
is supported through volunteers
and donations. Doors open at 10
a.m. for coffee and close at 1:30
p.m. Contact the Rev. Dawn
Richie of St. Pauls Lutheran
Church at 443-9424 for more
information.
Pierogi Sale, 1 1 a.m.-1 p.m. today,
St. Marys Byzantine Church,
Social Hall, 522 Madison St.,
Wilkes-Barre. Potato $6 per
dozen and cabbage $7 per
dozen. Walk in or call 829-9288.
Spring Greek Food Festival, 1 1
a.m.-8 p.m. today to Saturday,
hosted by the Annunciation
Greek Orthodox Church, 32 E.
Ross St., Wilkes-Barre (near the
Wilkes-Barre Post Office). As-
sorted Greek food and pastries,
including gyros, stuffed grape
vine leaves, spinach pies, bakla-
va, galaktoboureko and more.
Eat in or take out. Orders of
more than $30 can be delivered
free within a 2 mile radius from
the church. Baklava and assort-
ed Greek pastry baskets will be
sold for Mothers Day. Ethnic
products will also be sold, in-
cluding a Greek-themed raffle.
Customers are welcome but not
required to pre-order by calling
823-4805 during festival hours,
or by ordering online at greek-
foodfestival.webs.com. Call
417-4465 or visit the website
listed above for the menu and
festival details.
Chicken and Biscuit Dinner/Bake
Sale, 4:30-6:30 p.m. Saturday,
Loyalville United Methodist
Church. $8 adults; $3.50 chil-
dren. Takeouts available. Call
ahead and leave a message at
477-3521 with name, phone
number, number of dinners and
pick-up time. Call for directions.
Breakfast, 7:30-10:30 a.m. Sat-
urday, sponsored by I.O.O.F. Odd
Fellows Oneida Lodge 371 at St.
Pauls Lutheran Church. $6.
Monies raised will support
arthritis research and a local
student attending a United
Nations trip. Contact Clarence
J. Michael at 675-0488.
Barbecue, noon-3 p.m. Saturday,
Glad Tidings Assembly of God,
220 Middle Road, Nanticoke, in
appreciation of the Nanticoke
police and firefighters. All are
welcome for food, music, games
and fun. Call Douglas Marsh at
717-658-5113 to become a part of
the event or for details.
Mothers Day Breakfast Buffett,
8-1 1 a.m. Sunday, St. Marthas
Church, 260 Bonnieville Road,
Fairmount Springs. $7 adults; $3
children; free for children six
and younger.
Mothers Day Brunch, 10 a.m.-2
p.m. Sunday, St. Patricks
Church Parish Center, 411 Al-
legheny St., White Haven. Menu
includes carving station with
roast beef and turkey; omelet
station; sweets station with
cakes, doughnuts and pastries;
drink station with coffee, tea,
milk and juices; bread station
with bagels, muffins and breads;
and brunch table with bacon,
sausage, home fries, vegetables,
French toast, mashed potatoes,
macaroni and cheese, chicken
tenders and fruit cocktail. $10
adults; $5 moms; $5 children
6-10; and free for children 5 and
younger. Entertainment by
George Rittenhouse. Free gift
for all mothers. Door prizes.
Sponsored by the youth group
and events committee of St.
Patricks Church.
Mothers Day Brunch, 9 a.m.-1
p.m. Sunday, Andrew Lawrence
American Legion Post 644, 259
Shoemaker St., Swoyersville.
Menu includes eggs, sausage,
ham, SOS, home fries, toast,
roast beef, pork chops, scal-
loped potatoes, baked ziti,
salad, desserts, coffee, tea and
orange juice. $10 adults; $5
children 10 and younger. For
more information or to pur-
chase tickets call Cindy at 706-
5963.
FUTURE:
Chicken Dinner, 4-6:30 p.m. May
19, Wyoming United Methodist
Church, 376 Wyoming Ave. $9
adults; $5 children 12 and
younger. Dine in or take out.
Tickets available at the door or
by calling 693-2821.
Chicken Croquette Dinner and
Bake Sale, 4-8 p.m. May 19, the
Idetown Fire Hall, Memorial
Highway, Dallas, sponsored by
Dallas Junior Football. $10 per
dinner. Eat in or take out. To
order meal ticket, call Kelly at
313-3926 or emailkjcu-
[email protected].
Welsh Cookie Bake, 10 a.m.-3 p.m.
May 19, Bennett-Derr United
Methodist Church, Chapel and
New Grant streets, East End.
Cookies are $3.50 per dozen
and can be pre-ordered by
calling 823-1469 by May 16 or
email [email protected].
Halupki Sale, 1 1 a.m.-2 p.m. May 19,
St. Michaels Orthodox Church,
Church Hall, Church and Winter
streets, Old Forge. Takeouts
only. $1 per halupki. Place orders
by May 14. Call Dorothy at 562-
1434 or Sandra at 457-9280, or
leave a message at the church
at 457-2875.
Meatloaf Dinner, 4-7 p.m. May 19,
Alderson United Methodist
Church, Pole 108 Lakeside Drive,
Harveys Lake. Meatloaf, baked
potato, green bean casserole,
cole slaw, rolls, butter, beverage
and pie. $8 adults; $4 children
younger than 12. Takeouts avail-
able. For information call 639-
5688 or 333-4218.
Chicken Barbeque, 4-6 p.m. May
19, Larksville United Methodist
Church, 147 Wilson St., Larks-
ville. Takeouts only. Dinner
includes chicken, barbequed in
a secret recipe; baked potato;
vegetable; applesauce; pepper
hash; roll; and homemade dess-
ert. Tickets are $8 and available
from any church member of by
calling 287-5805.
GOOD EATS!
Editors note: Please send news
for this space by noon Friday to
[email protected] or by
mail to Good Eats, The Times
Leader, 15 N. Main St., Wilkes-
Barre, PA18711. To ensure accuracy,
information must be typed or
computer generated. The com-
plete list of events can be viewed
at www.timesleader.com by click-
ing Community News under the
People tab.
HANOVERTWP.: AMVETS
Post 59, Hanover Township, will
be placing flags onveterans
graves at St. Marys Cemetery on
Saturday. Any personor orga-
nizationinterestedinhelping is
askedto meet at 9 a.m. at the
post home, 578 Fellows Avenue.
The post places more than
8,000 flags at the cemetery and
all assistance is appreciated. If
possible, call the post at 825-8197
to confirmparticipation.
IN BRIEF
Corpus Christi Parish, 605 Luzerne Ave., West Pittston, is sponsoring a fundraising event, In the
Kitchen with Cheryl, 6-8 p.m. May 25 in the parish hall. Cheryl Sempa Radkiewicz, a local version of a
Food Network star, will provide cooking instruction and tips and a delicious meal with take-home treats.
Basket raffle tickets will also be available for purchase. Cost is $25. Meal and instruction includes prep-
aration of bourbon-glazed pork tenderloin, creamy mashed potatoes, honey-buttered carrots and two
desserts. For reservations call Jacqueline at 760-7082 or Teresa at 357-3985. Planning committee
members, from left, first row, are Barbe Sempa, Peggy Balberchak, Margaret Rogo and Kathie Man-
tione. Second row: Denise Bartoletti, Beverly Williams, Dorothy DeBella, Joyce Cecconi, Carmen DeBel-
la, Cheryl Radkiewicz, Monsignor John Sempa, Santa Maria Niedzwiecki, JuelAnne Klepadlo, Darlene
Medico and Joan Murphy.
Corpus Christi Parish plans In the Kitchen with Cheryl
Thursday
PLYMOUTH: The Shawnee
Senior Citizens, 1 p.m., First
Welsh Baptist Church, West
Shawnee and Girard avenues.
Sharon Harry, executive direc-
tor of Wyoming Valley Chil-
drens Association, will pre-
sent a program. The Rev.
Anita J. Ambrose will preside.
The board will meet at noon.
Attendees should bring a
sandwich.
MEETINGS
WILKES-BARRE: Accountant
Andrea Caladie will receive the
2012 Distinguished Leadership
Award at Lead-
ership Wilkes-
Barres annual
dinner and
graduationJune
7 at the Wood-
lands Inn & Re-
sort, Plains
Township. The
dinner cele-
brates Leader-
ship Wilkes-
Barres graduat-
ing class of 2012
and welcomes
the Class of
2013.
Caladie, gov-
ernmental compliance director,
ParenteBeard LLC, is a 1999
graduate of Leadership Wilkes-
Barres Core program. With
more than 22 years of account-
ing experience working with
nonprofits, colleges and univer-
sities, commercial and govern-
ment entities, she lends her ex-
pertise to community organiza-
tions suchas the F.M. Kirby Cen-
ter for the Performing Arts,
where she serves as a board
member and treasurer, and
Candys Place.
She also serves as treasurer of
Circle 200andonthe Leadership
Wilkes-Barre board of directors
executive committee. Prior to
joining the executive commit-
tee, she served as chair of the
alumni council and board trea-
surer.
At ParenteBeard LLC, Caladie
acts as a mentor and coach to
younger teammembers. She is a
graduate of the companys inter-
nal leadership program. She re-
ceived the Leadership Excel-
lence Award in June 2009.
Justin Davis, chief operations
officer, Wilkes-Barre General
Hospital, will serve as chairper-
son for the dinner and gradua-
tion. He is a 2010 graduate of Ex-
ecutive Leadership Wilkes-Barre
and serves on the board of direc-
tors.
Individuals interested in at-
tending the cocktail hour and
dinner on June 7, may contact
the Leadership Wilkes-Barre of-
fice at 823-2101 ext. 135. Cost is
$55.
Leadership W-B
will honor Caladie
Caladie
Davis
C M Y K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 2012 PAGE 5C
T A S T E
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MILK, CIGARETTES OR PRICE OF THE GOLD CARD ITEM.
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LIMIT 6
150 South Wyoming Avenue | Kingston
(across from Jack Williams)
283-0651
exp. May 12, 2012
Sterling Silver,Yellow or White Gold
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Starting from
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Takes 2 to 5 Birthstones
Delivery 5 to 6 Days
Takes 5 to 15 Birthstones
Delivery 5 to 6 Days
Please Join Us For Our
Community Fair
Tuesday, May 15th 10:00am - 2:00pm
FREE
Refreshments!
Exhibits from
Local Businesses,
Artists and more!
230 Wyoming Ave., Kingston
Raindate: Thursday, May 17 10:00am -2:00pm
DAN FLOOD TOWERS DAN FLOOD TOWERS
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Estate
Jewelry
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258 Charles Street Luzerne 288-5337
Lunch: Mon. - Fri. 11am - 2pm Dinner: Mon. - Thurs. 4pm - 9pm Fri. & Sat. 4pm - 10pm
Featuring A Full Menu of Homemade Italian/American
Specialties, Steaks, Seafood & Chops
Closed Monday, May 14
th
OPEN Mothers Day
Noon-6:30pm
Now Accepting Reservations
20 P u b lic Sq u are,W ilkes-B arre,P A
M o th ers D ay B ru n ch
M ay 13,2012
Serv in g 10am - 2p m P ian o M u sic
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H o t B u ffet G rilled S ausage,C racked P epperand B row n S ugarB acon,H om e F ries,
Traditionaland B ananas F osters F rench Toast,P enne w ith R ose S auce,
C hicken F rancaise,B roiled H addock w / C rabm eat,C hicken & R igatoni/V odka S auce,
W hipped P otatoes,G lazed C arrots,S pring V egetable M edley M ade to O rderE g g & O m elet
Statio n G ran d D essert D isp lay B ev erag es C offee,Tea,Iced Tea,S oda,M ilk & Juice
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(P lu s 6% tax an d 18% G ratu ity)
C all fo rR eserv atio n s (570) 824-7100
timesleader.com
Get news when
it happens.
Thomas J. Delehanty, M.D.
Is closing his private practice of
pulmonary medicine effective
May 31, 2012.
Dr. Pramthesh K. Desai is taking custody
of his medical records and is welcoming
new patients. Please make future
appointments with Dr. Desai by calling
(570) 270-4480.
MARTIN OMALIA GREENHOUSES
747 North Main Street, Hilldale, (Plains Twp.)
Mums Logs Pots Hanging Baskets Vegetable & Bedding Plants
Mothers Day Flowers
Wholesale
& Retail
One
Location Only
Open
Mon.-Sat. 9AM-6PM
Sunday 10AM-5PM
824-0490
DIRECTIONS: Take N. Main St. from light in Plains,
go up hill approx. 1 1/2 miles to Hillside baseball dia-
mond. From Wyoming, over 8th St. Bridge, right at
light over tracks, make 1st left, straight at stop sign.
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HAMBURGERS
WITH HERB BUTTER
Yield: 4 servings
4 teaspoons finely chopped fresh
herbs (any combination of
parsley, chives, basil, oregano
and tarragon)
1
2 clove garlic, minced
Freshly ground black pepper
1
4 cup (
1
2 stick) salted butter, at
room temperature
1
1
2 pounds ground sirloin, round
or chuck
Coarse salt
4 slices pancetta, optional
4 slices white Cheddar cheese,
optional
4 hamburger buns
2 tablespoons melted butter
Directions:
1. Place herbs, garlic,
1
4 teaspoon
black pepper and softened butter
in a small mixing bowl; stir or beat
to combine thoroughly.
Place on a piece of plastic wrap
or parchment paper, roll into a
cylinder and twist the ends to
compact the mixture. Refrigerate
or freeze until firm.
2. Cut the herbed butter into 4
slices. Wet your hands with cold
water and divide the ground beef
into 4 portions. Pat each portion of
beef into a thick patty. Press an
indentation into the center of the
patty, filling it with a slice of herbed
butter.
Mold the beef to enclose the
butter completely. Sprinkle burgers
with salt and pepper to taste.
3. Set up a grill for direct heat
and preheat to high. When ready to
cook, brush oil on the grill grate.
Grill the pancetta, if using, until
golden brown, 2 to 3 minutes per
side. Transfer to a plate lined with
paper towels to drain.
4. Place the burgers on the hot
grate and season again with salt
and pepper. Grill the burgers until
cooked through, 5 to 7 minutes per
side for medium. If desired, rotate
the burgers 90 degrees halfway
through cooking each side for an
attractive crosshatch of grill marks.
5. Brush the buns with the melt-
ed butter and toast on the grill for
30 seconds to 1 minute.
Adapted from How to Grill, by
Steven Raichlen (Workman, 2001)

BELLO BURGER
Yield: 4 servings
1
4 cup balsamic vinegar
1
4 cup soy sauce
1
4 cup plus 1 teaspoon olive oil,
divided
3 cloves garlic, minced
4 portobello mushroom caps
(about 5 inches in diameter)
1
2 medium roasted red bell pep-
per, stemmed, skinned and
seeded
1/3 cup mayonnaise
1 pinch ground red (cayenne)
pepper
4 thin slices mozzarella cheese,
optional
4 large, crusty rolls, such as
kaiser rolls
4 lettuce leaves
4 slices ripe tomato
Directions:
1. At least 30 minutes and up to 2
hours before you plan to grill,
prepare a marinade by combining
the balsamic vinegar, soy sauce,
1
4
cup olive oil and garlic in a medium
bowl. Place the mushrooms in a
plastic bag, pour the marinade into
the bag, shake to coat and let sit at
room temperature. Turn the bag
occasionally to saturate the sur-
face of the mushrooms with the
marinade.
2. Cut roasted red pepper into
several chunks and place in a food
processor or blender. Add may-
onnaise, the remaining 1 teaspoon
olive oil and cayenne pepper. Proc-
ess until pureed. Refrigerate until
serving time.
3. Prepare grill for direct heat at
medium temperature. Drain mush-
room caps, discarding marinade.
Place mushrooms, gill-side down,
on the grill. Grill uncovered for 8 to
10 minutes, turning the mushrooms
twice.
Top each with a cheese slice, if
using, after the second turn. Mean-
while, toast the rolls at the grills
edge.
4. Place the mushrooms on the
bottoms of the toasted rolls and
top with lettuce, tomato and dol-
lops of the mayonnaise. Close the
sandwiches with the top of the
buns. Serve hot.
Adapted from Born to Grill, by
Cheryl Alters Jamison and Bill
Jamison (Harvard Common Press,
1998)
BURGERS
Continued from Page 1C

PASTITSIO
1.5 pounds macaroni or penne
3 pounds ground beef
6 eggs, beaten
1 medium onion, chopped
1 tablespoon tomato paste
1
2 pound butter
1 tablespoon salt
1 teaspoon pepper
Cook the pasta following
package directions. Set aside.
Brown onions and meat in the
butter until onions are trans-
lucent and meat has lost its
pinkness; add tomato paste, salt,
pepper. Stir the beaten eggs into
pasta; add to meat mixture.
CREAM SAUCE
6 cups milk
4 tablespoons cornstarch
dissolved in additional cup
milk
6 eggs, beaten
1 stick butter
1 cup grated Parmesan cheese
Heat six cups of milk to boil-
ing. Slowly add additional cup of
milk that has cornstarch dis-
solved in it. Add butter and stir
until it melts. Add cheese fol-
lowed by well-beaten, room-
temperature eggs. Add the eggs
slowly. Stir until smooth.
Pour cream sauce over meat
mixture and bake in 375-degree
oven for 45 minutes or until top
is lightly browned and has
formed a light crust.
Remove from oven and allow
to set about 20 minutes before
cutting and serving.
GREEK
Continued from Page 1C
C M Y K
PAGE 6C WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 2012 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
THE AREA AGENCY ON AGING FOR LUZERNE/WYOMING COUNTIES ANNOUNCES THE DISTRIBUTION
SCHEDULE OF THE FARMERS MARKET NUTRITION VOUCHERS PROVIDED BY THE PENNSYLVANIA
AND UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
To be eligible for program you must:
Be a resident of Luzerne or Wyoming County Proof Required Be at least 60 years of age by December 31, 2012 Proof Required
Meet 2012 Income Eligibility Guidelines Total Household Income: (Self-Declaration of income)
1 Person in Household - $20,665 2 People in Household - $27,991 3 People in Household - $35,317
4 People in Household - $42,643 5 People in Household - $49,969
If a senior is unable to pickup the vouchers, he/she can send someone in their place as long as they have a signed and completed proxy form
with them when picking up the vouchers. The proxy forms are now available at the centers or the proxy form in this ad can be used, A limit
of two (2) proxy forms is allowed per person. A spouse must have the official proxy form if picking up vouchers for his/her spouse. A person
having Power of Attorney is required to provide a proxy form.
DETWEILER FARMS - White Haven Community
165 Tunnel Road, White Haven, PA
For more info, please call AAA 822-1159 Ext. 3337
Voucher Distribution Date: FRIDAY, JUNE 29, 2012 - 10:00-12:00 noon
WYOMING COUNTY SENIOR CENTER (Ctr Hours Mon.-Fri. 8-4 p.m.)
101 Dymond Terrace
Tunkhannock, PA 18657 836-2324
Voucher Distribution Date: THURSDAY, JUNE 7, 2012 - 9:00-1:00 p.m.
CHARLES T. ADAMS SENIOR CENTER (Ctr Hours Mon.-Fri. 8-4 p.m.)
5 East Market Street
Wilkes-Barre, PA 825-3484
Voucher Distribution Date: TUESDAY, JUNE 5, 2012 - 9:00-3:00 p.m.
KINGSTON SENIOR CENTER (Center Hours Mon.-Fri. 8-4 p.m.)
680 Wyoming Avenue
Kingston, PA 18704 287-1102
Voucher Distribution Date: MONDAY, JUNE 4, 2012 - 9:00-3:00 p.m.
PITTSTON SENIOR CENTER (Center Hours Mon.-Fri. 8-4 p.m.)
441 N. Main Street
Pittston, PA 18640 655-5561
Voucher Distribution Date: FRIDAY, JUNE 1, 2012 - 9:00-3:00 p.m.
CHURCH OF CHRIST - Sweet Valley Community
5439 Main Road, Sweet Valley, PA
For more info, please call AAA 822-1159 Ext. 3337
Voucher Distribution Date: WED., JUNE 27, 2012 - 10:00-12:00 noon
PLYMOUTH SENIOR CENTER (Regular Center Hours Mon.-Fri. 8-4pm)
Dan Flood Apts., Community Room, 160 E. Main Street
Plymouth, PA 18657 779-9664
Voucher Distribution Date: TUESDAY, JUNE 26, 2012 - 10:00-12:00 noon
MISERICORDIA UNIVERSITY - Back Mountain Community
Anderson Sports Center Bldg., 220 Lake Street
Dallas, PA 18612 For more info, call 822-1159 Ext. 3319
Voucher Distribution Date: MONDAY, JUNE 25, 2012 - 10:00-12:00 p.m.
LAKE WINOLA SENIOR CTR (Regular Ctr Hours Mon.-Fri. 10-2 p.m.)
100 View Lane
Factoryville, PA 18419 For more info, call 822-1159 Ext. 3319
Voucher Distribution Date: FRIDAY, JUNE 22, 2012 - 12:00-2:00 p.m.
FALLS SENIOR CENTER (Regular Center Hours Mon.-Fri. 9-2 p.m.)
2813 Sullivan Trail
Falls, PA 18615 388-2623
Voucher Distribution Date: FRIDAY, JUNE 22, 2012 - 9:00-11:00 a.m.
EDWARDSVILLE SENIOR CTR (Regular Ctr Hours Mon.-Fri. 10-2 p.m.)
57 Russell Street
Edwardsville, PA 18704 287-3381
Voucher Distribution Date: WEDNESDAY, JUNE 20, 2012 - 10:00-2:00 p.m.
MOUNTAINTOP SENIOR CTR (Regular Ctr Hours Mon.-Fri. 10-2 p.m.)
Wright Manor Apts., 460 South Main Road
Mountaintop, PA 18707 868-8517
Voucher Distribution Date: TUESDAY, JUNE 19, 2012 - 12:00-2:00 p.m.
BUTLER TWP SENIOR CENTER (Regular Ctr Hours Mon.-Fri. 9-1 p.m.)
411 West Butler Drive
Drums, PA 18222 788-4881
Voucher Distribution Date: TUESDAY, JUNE 19, 2012 - 9:00-11:00 a.m.
LEE PARK SENIOR CENTER (Regular Center Hours Mon.-Fri. 10-2 p.m.)
Lee Park Towers, 140 Lee Park Avenue, Hanover Twp.
Wilkes-Barre, PA 18706 825-9883
Voucher Distribution Date: MONDAY, JUNE 18, 2012 - 10:00-2:00 p.m.
SHICKSHINNY SENIOR CTR (Regular Center Hours Mon.-Fri. 10-2 p.m.)
Main & Vine Streets
Shickshinny, PA 542-4308
Voucher Distribution Date: FRIDAY, JUNE 15, 2012 - 10:00-12:00 noon
FREELAND SENIOR CENTER (Center Hours Mon.-Fri. 8:30-1:30)
701 Chestnut Street
Freeland, PA 18222 636-3080
Voucher Distribution Date: WEDNESDAY, JUNE 13, 2012 - 10:00-2:00 p.m.
PLAINS SENIOR CENTER (Center Hours Mon.-Fri. 9:00-2:00)
50 Second Street
Plains, PA 18705 824-5542
Voucher Distribution Date: TUESDAY, JUNE 12, 2012 - 10:00-2:00 p.m.
JEWISH COMMUNITY CENTER (Center Hours Mon.-Fri. 10:00-4:00 p.m.)
60 South River Street
Wilkes-Barre, PA 824-4646
Voucher Distribution Date: MONDAY, JUNE 11, 2012 - 10:30-12:30 p.m.
HAZLETON SENIOR CENTER (Center Hours Mon.-Fri. 8:00-4:00 p.m.)
24 East Broad Street
Hazleton, PA 18201 459-1441
Voucher Distribution Date: FRIDAY, JUNE 8, 2012 - 9:00-3:00 p.m.
LUZERNE COUNTY COMMUNITY COLLEGE (Nanticoke Community)
1333 S. Prospect Street, Nanticoke, PA 18634
Voucher Distribution Date: MONDAY, JUNE 11, 2012 - 9:00-3:00 p.m.
Any questions, please call the Rose Tucker @ Mercy Senior Center @ 735-1670.
COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
SENIOR FARMERS MARKET NUTRITION PROGRAM
2012 ELIGIBILITY & PROXY FORM
RIGHTS AND RESPONSIBILITIES
I have been advised of my rights and obligations under SFMNP. I
certify that the information I have provided for my eligibility determination
is correct, to the best of my knowledge. This certifcation form in being
submitted in connection with the receipt of Federal assistance. Program
officials may verify information on this form. I understand that intentionally
making a false or misleading statement or intentionally misrepresenting,
concealing, or withholding facts may result in paying the State agency,
in cash, the value of the food benefts improperly issued to me and may
subject me to civil or criminal prosecution under State and Federal law.
Standards for eligibility and participation in the SFMNP are the
same for everyone, regardless of race, color, national origin, age, disability,
or sex.
I understand that I may appeal any decision made by the local
agency regarding my eligibility for the SFMNP.
Participant Name:
Date:
Address:
Telephone Number:
Birthday:
(Month/Year)
Income guidelines: $20,665 Single $27,991 Couple
Please check the box of the most appropriate identifer for each.
Ethnicity: Ethnicity Hispanic or Latino Not Hispanic or Latino
Race: American Indian or Alaskan Native Asian
Black or African American Native Hawaiian or other Pacifc Islander White
Proxy Name:
Date:
Address:
I hereby acknowledge with my signature that I am a Pennsylvania resident,
I am 60 years or older and my household income is within the income
guidelines for participation in SFMNP.
Participants Signature:
Proxy Signature:
Check number Received: , , ,
**The proxy must take this form to a distribution site in the
county you reside.
(Person the checks are for)
(Person the checks are for)
(Person picking up the checks)
(Person picking up the checks)
(Month/Year)
Advertisement
Distribution Sites/Dates/Times:
C M Y K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 2012 PAGE 7C
MOUNTAINTOP Hallmark Homes - Formal LR
& DR opens to great room w/gas FP, breakfast
room off deck, pool & backyard. Kitchen w/gran-
ite counters, stainless steel appliances, Master
Suite w/2 large walk-in closets, master bath w/
whirlpool & steam shower! Much more!
MLS# 12-1241
TERRY D. 715-9317 $409,000
MOUNTAIN TOP Gorgeous unique new
construction featuring 4 bedrooms, 2 1/2
baths, granite kitchen, ss appliances, vinyl
deck, tankless hot water heater.
MLS#12-747
CORINE 715-9331 $369,900
MOUNTAINTOP Brand new 4BR, 2.5 bath
2-Story in Heritage Woods. Great open fr
plan, 9 ceilings, hw fooring, FR w/FP, cus-
tom kit w/granite, lux MBR w/whirlpool.
Gas heat & CA. MLS#12-1056
DONNA S 788-7504 $358,900
MOUNTAINTOP Beautiful Victorian home reno-
vated w/open fr plan, 6BRs, 4.5 elegant baths &
stunning Kit - HW frs, spacious rms, handsome
FPs, front & back staircases, delightful Gazebo
& huge wrap around porch. Glen Summit Com-
munity 7miles from W-B. MLS# 10-2874 MARGY
696-0891 or RHEA 696-6677 $650,000
BENTON Magnifcent Estate. The 4500SF resi-
dence on 10acres has been renovated & en-
larged w/meticulous craftsmanship. Spacious
rms, HW frs, sweeping views, gourmet kit, stone
terrace, gardens & orchards. Gracious LR w/
stone FP, 4 lg BRs, 3.5 baths. 1200SF build-
ing w/FP used as offce & trophy rm. Addl land
available. MLS#11-94
RHEA 696-6677 $640,000
SHAVERTOWN NEW LISTING Stunning
4BR, 5 bath on a beautifully landscaped
private lot. Large kitchen, HW foors, 9
ceilings, open plan.
MLS# 12-1614
JOAN 696-0887 $435,000
SHAVERTOWN NEW LISTING Elegant
7yr, 2 story w/premium fnishes through-
out. Open 2 story foyer, custom kitchen
w/granite tops, walk-out fnished LL, pri-
vate 1.16acre lot. MLS# 12-1617
GERI 696-0888 $432,000
DALLAS
Elevator - great fea-
ture! Beautiful 3BR
Condo. Wood foors,
custom kitchen, dra-
matic windows, 2 car
garage. MLS# 12-970
VIRGINIA 714-9253
$292,000
SHAVERTOWN Elegant home w/wonderful
foor plan-5BRs, 6baths & huge kitchen w/
Garland range & bright breakfast area. Great
fnished lower walks out to patio & stunning
Sylvan pool! MLS# 11-37
MARGY 696-0891 $695,000
EDWARDSVILLE Recently updated, this 4BR
home offers modern kitchen w/oak cabinets,
2 baths, deck w/a beautiful view of the valley,
fenced in yard & fnished lower level. All appli-
ances included. A must see! MLS# 11-4434
CHRISTINA 714-9235 $88,900
DALLAS REDUCED This outstanding Federal brick
& stone home is situated on 7acres & overlooks
the Huntsville Reservoir. Inviting foyer w/lovely
curved staircase - spacious rms offer HW frs, pe-
riod moldings & cabinetry & wonderful arched door-
ways. Stunning kitchen is classic yet ultra modern
w/Viking & Sub-Zero - 5BRs, 4 baths - Beautifully
landscaped property is complete with a carriage
house & Bocce court. MLS# 11-2533
RHEA 696-6677 $699,000
DRUMS Country living at its best! Move-in to
this 3BR, 2 bath Ranch with C/A & lots of
privacy! MLS# 11-4254
PATTY A. 715-9332 $144,900
DALLAS Building lot on cul-de-sac in desire-
able neighborhood. Public utilities. Covenants
apply. Dallas School District. .76acres.
MLS# 11-4401
TRACY Z. 696-6674 $59,900
DUPONT REDUCED Move-in ready! LR,
DR, eat-in kitchen, 1st fr laundry. Gener-
ous room sizes, high ceilings, newer roof
& gutters. MLS #12-1088
MARY D. 696-0730 $77,900
HARVEYS LAKE REDUCED! Breathtaking beauty - 88 feet of lake frontage. 5BR
home w/new Master Suite & gourmet kitchen, exceptional boathouse w/dream
view. MLS# 11-605
VIRGINIA ROSE 714-9253 $950,000
DALLAS Elegant home in beautiful set-
ting overlooks Irem Golf Course - Spacious
rooms w/handsome beamed ceilings &
wonderful detail - 4BRs, 3 full & 2.5 baths
- French doors lead to lovely patio & pool.
MLS# 12-1104
MARGY 696-0891 $500,000
SHAVERTOWN Attractive 2 Story - al-
most new const. Elegant kitchen w/
bkfst bar, FR w/gas FP, 3-4 BRs, hdwd
frs, 3 car garage & much more!
MLS# 12-1433
JUDY 714-9230 $459,900
TAYLOR NEW LISTING NEW CONSTRUC-
TION at an amazing price! Features 4BRs,
2.5 baths on large lot. FR on LL. Plenty of
room to grow! MLS#12-1506
CHRISTINA 714-9231 $179,900
DALLAS REDUCED Beautifully main-
tained Townhouse. 4BRs, 3.5 baths, FR
w/FP, HW frs & crown mldgs, fnished LL.
Maintenance free - golf, pool & tennis!
MLS# 11-2608
GERI 696-0888 $179,000
AVOCA Beautifully updated 2BR, 1 bath
house in desirable Avoca neighborhood.
All appliances included. Lots of closet
space & great view from backyard.
MLS# 12-962
ANDREA 714-9244 $91,900
MOUNTAINTOP Located on a cul-de-sac
with .9acres this home boasts 3500SF.
3 freplaces, classic moldings, HW foors,
granite, 2-5BRs. MLS# 12-1111
DAVID 970-1117 $324,975
NORTH LAKE GREAT HOUSE w/ 90ft of
lakefront! 3BR, 2.5 bath Cape Cod w/
Open f plan has extensive views, 1 f
Master opens to screened porch & large
deck. MLS# 11-2958
RHEA 570-696-6677 $328,500
BEAR CREEK VILLAGE ENCHANTING PERRENIAL
GARDENS & WATER FEATURES COMPLIMENT THIS
CHARMING BRICK & STUCCO 4BR, 2.5 BATH TUDOR
W/EAT-IN KIT NEXT TO FR W/FP. SCREEN PORCH &
DECK WILL ASSURE SUMMER RELAXATION! LAKE
RIGHTS AVAILABLE W/OPTIONAL ASSOC. MEMBER-
SHIP $500/YR. MLS# 12-1461
ANN LEWIS 714-9245 $299,000
DALLAS Century home w/charm & func-
tionality! 2 Story w/3 BRs, 2 baths, FR
& garage. Hdwd foors, freplace & more!
MLS# 12-1406
JUDY 714-9230 $164,900
WILKES-BARRE Spacious 4BR, 2.5 bath
home in conveniently located Wilkes-Barre
neighborhood. Amenities include 1st foor
HW, modern kitchen & 3 season porch.
MLS# 12-1294
TERRY NELSON 714-9248 $129,000
DALLAS This almost new 2 story w/open
foor plan boasts eat-in kitchen, FR w/
gas FP, spacious 4BRs, double lot & more!
MLS# 12-1344
TERRY NELSON 714-9248 or
JUDY 714-9230 $289,900
FORTY FORT Attractive move-in condition
Cape boasts 3BR, 1.5 baths, LR, DR, PLUS
eat-in kitchen, lower level private drive on
quiet street. MLS# 12-1119
CLYDETTE 696-0897 $117,000
MOUNTAINTOP Diamond in the rough.
Over 23 acres waiting to be improved by
energetic developer. Lots are level.
MLS# 10-3409
JILL HISCOX 696-0875 $169,900
C M Y K
PAGE 8C WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 2012 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
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CABIN IN THE WOODS, THE (DIGITAL) (R)
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CHIMPANZEE (DIGITAL) (G)
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DR. SEUSS THE LORAX (DIGITAL) (PG)
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FIVE-YEAR ENGAGEMENT, THE (DIGITAL) (R)
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6
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professors bad pen name takes over.
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fying items.
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traz Live Event
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YOUTO
Adrena-
lina
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lina
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lina
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C M Y K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 2012 PAGE 9C
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 have
heard that your
dessert recipes are
fabulous and Id like
to have them. I saw
a column in which
you mentioned your
cookbooklets. I hope
Im correct about this, because Id
be interested in getting them. I have
your booklet of poems and essays,
which I have read and enjoyed many
times.
Would you print your personal fa-
vorite dessert recipe and let me know
how to get your cookbooklets? Warm-
est wishes to you, Abby, and thank
you for all your columns.
Anita B. in New Jersey
Dear Anita: You are welcome. Its
hard for me to choose just one recipe
because I have a notorious sweet
tooth, and my cookbooklets contain
more than a few that I have enjoyed
many times. However, because you
asked for my personal favorite, it
would be one that not only I have
enjoyed, but also one I have made for
friends as gifts Regency Brownies
With Chocolate Frosting. (Because
the recipe yields 4 1/2 dozen, I con-
fess I usually keep the extra six to
munch on myself.)
BROWNIES
1 cup butter (2 sticks)
4 ounces bittersweet chocolate
2 cups sugar
4 eggs
1 cup all-purpose flour
1 teaspoon salt
2 cups chopped walnuts
1 teaspoon vanilla
FROSTING
1 cup heavy cream
8 ounces bittersweet chocolate,
finely chopped
Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
Line the bottom of an 18-by-12-by-2
(or 1)-inch baking pan with baking
parchment paper and spray generous-
ly with butter-flavored cooking spray.
In the top of a double boiler, over
medium heat, melt butter and 4 ounc-
es chocolate. Reserve.
In a large bowl, beat sugar and
eggs until fluffy. Add flour and salt,
mixing well. Add chocolate mixture,
blending thoroughly. Stir in nuts and
vanilla.
Pour into prepared baking pan.
(Batter should be about 1/2 inch
thick, NOT MORE.) Bake for 35 to
40 minutes, or until top is crisp and
toothpick inserted in center comes
out clean. Cool before pouring frost-
ing over the top.
For the frosting: Bring cream to
a boil, stirring constantly. Place
chopped chocolate in a medium bowl;
pour boiling cream over the chocolate
and stir to blend well. Spread thin
layer of warm frosting over top of
brownies in pan. When cool, cut into
2-inch squares.
My cookbooklet set contains not
only many crowd-pleasing recipes,
but also tips on entertaining. It can
be ordered by sending your name and
address, plus check or money order
for $14 (U.S. funds) to: Dear Abby
Cookbooklet Set, P.O. Box 447,
Mount Morris, IL 61054-0447. Ship-
ping and handling are included in the
price. If youre a serious chocolate
lover, these brownies will make your
toes curl, and thats a promise. With
summer coming and families gather-
ing for the holidays, nows the time
to dust off your favorite picnic and
barbecue recipes. My dessert recipes
have started many a family tradition.
DEAR ABBY
A D V I C E
Attention all chocolate lovers: Prepare to swoon over brownie recipe
To receive a collection of Abbys most memo-
rable and most frequently requested po-
ems and essays, send a business-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 Mor-
ris, IL 61054-0447. (Postage is included.)
ARIES (March 21-April 19). Life
becomes more precious and
beautiful to you when youre
around a certain someone. This
is mainly because being around
this person heightens your
awareness and makes you slow
down and tune in.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20). You
have the solution to your prob-
lem. This is hard to believe in
the moments when you lack
self-confidence or feel stuck or
oppressed. Cultivate faith
GEMINI (May 21-June 21). At this
point, life seems so uncertain
that you dont even want to set
goals. Take a break. Relax and
rejuvenate. Everything will feel
more joyful when you do.
CANCER (June 22-July 22). In a
sense, you are shopping for
new alliances today. Whether
what you need most is a friend,
a business partner or a romance,
be sure to choose the person,
not the credentials.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). You have
ideas, and now they are string-
ing themselves together in your
head to formulate an improved
vision of the future. You could be
the one to open a new heaven
for your loved ones.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Wanting
something to be finished will not
make it so. Youre well aware of
the steps involved, though mak-
ing yourself go through them will
be a challenge.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). The writ-
ten word will be your most pow-
erful form of communication.
So wherever possible, put your
ideas down in writing. People
need to remember your words
and attribute them to you.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). Stand
back and see your situation
anew. Are you handing someone
power that belongs to you? Your
self-respect is a resource. You
may have given a little of it away,
but you can get it back.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). A
relationship is forming. You cant
quite frame it in your mind, but
ideas and feelings are coming
together, and by the end of the
week, youll have a clear picture
of what you want to do next.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). You
have influence, but you wont
know about it unless you take
action. Make a move. Suddenly,
someone follows your lead.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). What
you say in a group will matter
immensely. The compliments you
give people in public will mean
more than the ones you give
privately. Singing a loved ones
praises publicly is a good way to
build relationship points.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). What
you want is very much in line
with all that is possible for you.
Still, you need to streamline your
efforts. Cut out the fat. Make
every attempt to be lean and
mean in your approach.
TODAYS BIRTHDAY (May 9). You
have amazing powers of visu-
alization. Youll paint your ideal
world in words and images and
then take steps to make it real.
Youll network and put together
a lucrative deal over the next
seven weeks. A turn of events
gives you an unexpected advan-
tage in June. November brings a
journey. Pisces and Virgo people
adore you. Your lucky numbers
are: 3, 14, 39, 1 and 18.
F U N N I E S WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 2012 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
SALLY FORTH
CLASSIC PEANUTS
STONE SOUP
BLONDIE
BEETLE BAILEY
THATABABY
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
GET FUZZY
CLOSE TO HOME
ARGYLE SWEATER
B.C.
PICKLES
PARDON MY PLANET
MARMADUKE HERMAN
DRABBLE
GARFIELD
HAGAR THE HORRIBLE
MOTHER GOOSE & GRIMM
TUNDRA
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 2012 PAGE 1D
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Fixed Income ...... WE HAVE A BANK
FOR THAT
First Time Buyer... WE HAVE A BANK
FOR THAT
Repo ................ WE HAVE A BANK
FOR THAT
Foreclosure ........ WE HAVE A BANK
FOR THAT
Unemployment .... WE HAVE A BANK
FOR THAT
288-6459
A uthoriz e d Bos c h
S e rvic e De a le r
Sprin g
Specia l
S A V E 10%
P a in tle s s
De n t
Re m ova l
Revolutionary
Process to Rem ove
Sm allDents - Dings
Even HailDam age.
412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale
468 Auto Parts 468 Auto Parts
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 CASH!!
DRAWINGTO BE HELD LAST DAY
OF EACH MONTH
www.wegotused.com
BUYING JUNK
VEHICLES
$300 AND UP
$125 EXTRA IF DRIVEN,
DRAGGED OR PUSHED IN!
NOBODY Pays More
570-760-2035
Monday thru Saturday 6am-9pm Happy Trails!
100
ANNOUNCEMENTS
110 Lost
ALL JUNK
VEHICLES
WANTED!!
CALL ANYTIME
HONEST PRICES
FREE REMOVAL
CA$H PAID
ON THE SPOT
570.301.3602
BEST PRICES
IN THE AREA
CA$H ON THE $POT,
Free Anytime
Pickup
570-301-3602
570-301-3602
CALL US!
TO JUNK
YOUR CAR
WANTED
ALL JUNK
CARS &
TRUCKS
HEAVY
EQUIPMENT
DUMPTRUCKS
BULLDOZERS
BACKHOES
Highest Prices
Paid!!!
FREE
REMOVAL
Call
Vitos & Ginos
Anytime
288-8995
LOST
Gold multi gem
stone earring with
omega back. Lost
approximately 1
month ago.
Reward offered.
570-639-1861,
leave message.
120 Found
All Junk
Cars &
Trucks
Wanted
Highest
Prices
Paid In
CA$H
FREE
PICKUP
570-574-1275
FOUND black, very
tiny female teacup,
some long hair Chi-
huahua. 851-0436
FOUND large male
neutered cat, West
Wyoming, white,
orange marks.
570-693-0572
120 Found
Found- Pure black
cat on South Sher-
man Street. (Wilkes
Barre.) Female, very
friendly. White
speck on chest Call
570-606-8656
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
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
LEGAL NOTICE
OFFICIAL NOTICE is
hereby given that
the WILKES-BARRE
AREA SCHOOL DIS-
TRICT BOARD OF
EDUCATION WILL
hold a Budget
Finance Committee
Meeting on
Wednesday, May
16, 2012 at 6:00
PM. A Special
Meeting for General
Purposes will be
held on Thursday,
May 24, 2012 at
6:00 PM.
All meetings will be
held in the Board
Room of the Admin-
istration Building,
730 South Main
Street,
Wilkes-Barre, PA
BY ORDER OF THE
BOARD
Leonard B.
Przywara,
Secretary
_____________________
LEGAL NOTICE
Church in Dallas, PA
Address: 33 White
Tail Drive, Dallas, PA
18612
Status: Non-profit S
Corporation
Date:March 1, 2012.
135 Legals/
Public Notices
ELECTION NOTICE
The County Board
of Elections of
Luzerne County will
meet on Friday,
May 11, 2012 at the
Election Bureau
Office at Penn
Place 20 North
Pennsylvania
Avenue Wilkes-
Barre, Pa at 1:30
PM to submit for
certification the
results of the April
24, 2012 Primary
Election for
Republican County
Committee.
Luzerne County
Board
of Election
H.Jeremy Packard
Chairman
John Newman,
Secretary
Thomas Baldino,
PhD
John Ruckno
Barbara Williams
Attest:
Thomas Pizano
Interim Director
LEGAL NOTICE
The Wyoming Area
Board of Education
will hold a work ses-
sion on Tuesday,
May 15, 2012 at 7:00
p.m. in the auditori-
um of the Sec-
ondary Center, 20
Memorial Street,
Exeter.
The regular meeting
will be held on Tues-
day, May 22, 2012,
at 7:00 p.m. Both
meetings will be
preceded by a non-
public executive
session.
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
ESTATE NOTICE
NOTICE IS HEREBY
GIVEN that Letters
Testamentary have
been issued to
Ronald W. Simms in
the Estate of Emma
L. Simms, De-
ceased, who died
March 9, 2012, late
of Fairview Town-
ship, Luzerne Coun-
ty, Pennsylvania. All
creditors are
requested to pres-
ent their claims and
all persons indebted
to the decedent will
make payment to
the aforementioned
Executor of his
attorney.
ROSENN, JENKINS
& GREENWALD, LLP
15 South Franklin St.
Wilkes-Barre, PA
18711
ESTATE NOTICE
NOTICE IS HEREBY
GIVEN that letters
Testamentary have
been granted in the
Estate of ANN B.
STINE, late of the
Township of Kings-
ton, Luzerne Coun-
ty, Pennsylvania,
who died April 2nd,
2012. All persons
indebted to said
Estate are request-
ed to make payment
and all those with
claims or demands
are to present the
same to the Ex-
ecutrix, Kristen S.
Armstrong, 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
135 Legals/
Public Notices
Wyoming Area
School District
Invitation to Bid
Wyoming Area
School District is
accepting the fol-
lowing bids for the
2012-2013 school
year: Art, Athletic
Medical, Band,
Electrical, General,
Janitorial, Marching
Band, Music, Nurs-
ing, Physical Educa-
tion and Science.
Sealed bids will be
received at the
Office of the Secre-
tary, Wyoming Area
School District, 20
Memorial Street,
PA., 18643, no later
than Tuesday, May
29, 2012, at 10:00
a.m., at which time
bids will be opened.
Bid specifications
and conditions are
available at the Dis-
tricts Business
Office, 20 Memorial
Street, Exeter, PA.,
18643, Monday
through Friday, 8:00
a.m. to 12:00 p.m.
By order of the
Board,
Elizabeth
Gober-Mangan
Secretary of the
Board
145 Prayers
THANK YOU GOD
Prayer to God. Say
9 Hail Marys for 9
days. Ask for three
wishes. First for
business, second
and third for the im-
possible. Publish
this article on the
ninth day. Your
wishes will come
true, even though
you may not believe
it. Thank you God.
F.B
150 Special Notices
ADOPT: Loving,
secure, accom-
plished married
couple to adopt
newborn. Expenses
paid. Please call
Ben & Jim
888-690-9890
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
Want a special
treat for mom
this Mothers
Day? Bring her
to the Genetti
Mothers Day
Buffet featuring
all of her
favorites!
bridezella.net
All Junk
Cars &
Trucks
Wanted
Highest
Prices
Paid In
CA$H
FREE
PICKUP
570-574-1275
P PA AYING $500 YING $500
MINIMUM
DRIVEN IN
Full size 4 wheel
drive trucks
ALSO PAYING TOP $$$
for heavy equip-
ment, backhoes,
dump trucks,
bull dozers
HAPPY TRAILS
TRUCK SALES
570-760-2035
542-2277
6am to 8pm
330 Child Care
DAYCARE
In my Kingston
home. Licensed.
Ages 15 months to 6
years.
570-283-0336
380 Travel
ATLANTIC CITY
RESORTS 5/27/12
ROUND TRIP
$30/PP
REBATE $25 +
SNACKS
570-740-7020
BROADWAY
SHOW
BUS TRIPS
THE LION
KING
Wed., June 13
$175.
Orchestra
JERSEY
BOYS
Wed., July 18
$150.
Front Mezz
PHANTOM
OF THE
OPERA
Wed., July 18
$135.
Orchestra
Call
Roseann @
655-4247
PERSONAL
DRIVER
Ill drive you with
your vehicle to or
from any East coast
destinations. Reli-
able, trustworthy,
experienced. Clean
driving record. Call
Ken for info:
570-388-0161
380 Travel
CAMEO HOUSE CAMEO HOUSE
BUS BUS T TOURS OURS
ITS
OFFICIAL!!!
Kips Bay
ShowHouse
is at the
Aldyn in NYC
Sat., May 19
Coming
Attraction
June 24
Coney Island
Call Anne
570-655-3420
anne.cameo
@verizon.net
Collect cash, not dust!
Clean out your
basement, garage
or attic and call the
Classified depart-
ment today at 570-
829-7130!
DONT MISS
OUT!
New! Special
Incredible Last
Minute Deals to
Cancun
and
Punta
Cana
All
inclusive
packages
For Travel
April, May and
early June
First Come,
First Serviced!
Limited Availability,
Passports Required
Call NOW!
300 Market St.,
Kingston, Pa 18704
570-288-TRIP
(288-8747)
406 ATVs/Dune
Buggies
HAWK `11 125CC
Auto, key start, with
reverse & remote
control. $700. OBO
570-674-2920
409 Autos under
$5000
00 VOLKSWAGEN GTI
2 door hatchback,
1.8 turbo, 5 speed
transmission, AC
power steering and
windows, moon
roof, new brakes,
tires, timing belt,
water pump and
battery. Black on
black. 116,000 miles
$4,500
570-823-3114
CHEVROLET `01
IMPALA
High mileage. Runs
like a dream. If you
can name it, it has
probably been
replaced. $1,999
(570)690-8588
DODGE `93 CARAVAN
SE. Inspection good
till 12/12. AM/FM/CD.
A/C. All new brakes,
muffler, gas tank,
radiator, struts. 163k
miles. Body & tires
good, paint fair. Has
had noisy engine for
4 years. $800 or
best offer. Call
570-283-9452
JEEP 98 GRAND
CHEROKEE
Good condition
$2100
570-709-1508
409 Autos under
$5000
LEOS AUTO SALES
92 Butler St
Wilkes-Barre, PA
570-825-8253
CHEVY 04
MALIBU CLASSIC
4 door, 4 cylinder,
auto, good condi-
tion. 120k. $2,450.
FORD 01 F150 XLT
Pickup Triton V8,
auto, 4x4 Super
Cab, all power,
cruise control,
sliding rear window
$3,850
PONTIAC 99
GRAND AM
4 door, 6 cylinder,
auto, good condition
75k. $2,150.
Current Inspection
On All Vehicles
DEALER
SUZUKI 06
SWIFT RENO
4 cylinder. Automat-
ic. 4 door. $4,800
(570) 709-5677
(570) 819-3140
412 Autos for Sale
ACURA `08 TL
Type S, automatic
and manual trans-
mission. 53,000
miles. $18,959
570-479-3452
Selling your
Camper?
Place an ad and
find a new owner.
570-829-7130
Audi `01 A6 Quattro
123,000 miles, 4.2
liter V8, 300hp, sil-
ver with black
leather,heated
steering wheel, new
run flat tires, 17
rims, 22 mpg, Ger-
man mechanic
owned.
Reduced $4995.
570-822-6785
BMW `00 528I
Premium sound
package, very
clean, recently
tuned, seat memo-
ry, silver. 26 mpg
on trips, Low
mileage for the age
of the car
$5,800
570-735-7468
412 Autos for Sale
BMW `06 650 CI
Black convertible,
beige leather, auto
transmission, all
power. $35,750.
570-283-5090 or
570-779-3534
BMW 98 740 IL
White with beige
leather interior.
New tires, sunroof,
heated seats. 5 cd
player 106,000
miles. Excellent
condition.
$4,800. OBO
570-451-3259
570-604-0053
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
BUICK 98
CENTURY CUSTOM
V6, BARGAIN
PRICE! $2,995
Call For Details!
570-696-4377
FORD `93 MUSTANG
Convertible. 5.0. 5
speed. New top.
Professional paint
job. Show car.
$6,500. Call
570-283-8235
Find Something?
Lose Something?
Get it back where it
belongs
with a Lost/Found ad!
570-829-7130
Travel
Line up a place to live
in classified!
PAGE 2D WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 2012 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
412 Autos for Sale
250 General Auction
412 Autos for Sale
250 General Auction
JEWELRY & LINENS
AUCTION
CHUCKS AUCTION SERVICE
1144 Exeter Avenue, Exeter,PA 18643
Friday May 11th, 2012 @ 5:30pm
Jewelry: 125+ lots over 400 pieces antique to mod-
ern. 14k rings-amethyst, CZ, Topaz. 10k garnet, 10k
blue Topaz ring, and more. Nice selection of Sterling
rings, necklaces, pins, bracelets, etc. Lots of costume
including designer: Weiss, Coro, Trifari, BSK, etc.
Also silent auction tables available for viewing dur-
ing the week.. Linens: nice chenille bedspreads,
tablecloths, fancy sheets & pillowcases, lots of
embroidery and crochet. Hats, purses, clothing, han-
kies-including new old store stock, fabric, and much
more. Check website for detailed list and pictures.
Terms: Cash, MC, Visa, 13% buyers premium w/
3% discount for cash or check
Information: 693-0372, chucksauction.com,
auctionzip.com #4156 Au001443
135 Legals/
Public Notices
135 Legals/
Public Notices
150 Special Notices 150 Special Notices
INVITATION FOR BID
BUS STOP SIGNAGE
The County of Lackawanna Transit System
(COLTS), the public transportation
provider in Scranton and Lackawanna
County, in accordance with directives from
the U. S. Department of Transportation
and the Pennsylvania Department of
Transportation, is seeking bid quotations
for the production of its bus stop signage.
The installation of these signs will be pro-
cured through a separate solicitation.
All bids and related documents will be sub-
ject to the financial assistance contract
between the Pennsylvania Department of
Transportation (PennDOT) and COLTS.
COLTS will not discriminate against any
bidder because of race, color, religion,
sex, or national origin. Any firm or person
who enters into a contract with COLTS
must agree to comply with any and all FTA
and Commonwealth of PA laws regarding
the prohibition of discrimination. All bid-
ders, by submitting a bid, shall accept the
affirmative duty to ascertain and comply
with such laws.
Copies of the IFB package can be
requested by e-mail at
[email protected] or obtained from
our website, www.coltsbus.com. All ques-
tions regarding the IFB are to be directed
to Jennifer Honick, Director of Finance and
Administration.
Five (5) copies of the bid must be submit-
ted in the format outlined and marked
Signage Production. Completed bid
packages are due at the offices of COLTS
no later than noon (12:00 P.M. EST) on
June 8, 2012. Bids should be addressed
to:
Jennifer Honick
County of Lackawanna Transit System
800 North South Road
Scranton, PA 18504
Bids received later than noon (12:00 P.M.
EST) on June 8, 2012 shall be rejected.
The County of Lackawanna Transit Sys-
tem reserves the right to reject any and
all bids.
Octagon Family
Restaurant
375 W Main St, Plymouth, PA 18651
570-779-2288
Wednesday, May 9 Special
.35 cent Wings
In House Only. Cannot be combined with
other offers. Minimum purchase of a dozen.
Wednesday-Sunday Open at 4 pm
Home of the Original
O-Bar Pizza
LAW
DIRECTORY
Call 829-7130
To Place Your Ad
Dont Keep Your
Practice a Secret!
310 Attorney
Services
BANKRUPTCY
FREE CONSULT
Guaranteed
Low Fees
Payment Plan!
Colleen Metroka
570-592-4796
Line up a place to live
in classified!
310 Attorney
Services
Free Bankruptcy
Consultation
Payment plans.
Carol Baltimore
570-822-1959
SOCIAL SECURITY
DISABILITY
Free Consultation.
Contact Atty. Sherry
Dalessandro
570-823-9006
AUTO
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
468 Auto Parts
All Junk
Cars &
Trucks
Wanted
Highest
Prices
Paid In
CA$H
FREE
PICKUP
570-574-1275
472 Auto Services
WANTED
Cars & Full Size
Trucks. For prices...
Lamoreaux Auto
Parts 477-2562
472 Auto Services
$ WANTED JUNK $
VEHICLES
LISPI TOWING
We pick up 822-0995
EMISSIONS
& SAFETY
INSPECTION
SPECIAL
$39.95 with
this coupon
Also, Like
New, Used
Tires & Bat-
teries for
$20 & up!
Vitos &
Ginos
949 Wyoming
Avenue
Forty Fort, PA
574-1275
Expires 6/30/12
To Place Your Ad, Call 829-7130
412 Autos for Sale
BUICK 09 ENCLAVE
CXL top of the line.
AWD, 50K original
miles. 1 owner.
Cocoa brown
metallic. Dual sun-
roofs, power mem-
ory cooled and
heated seats. 3rd
row seating. DVD
rear screen, navi-
gation system, bal-
ance of factory
warranty.
Bought new over
$50,000. Asking
$25,900. Trade ins
welcome
570-466-2771
CADILLAC 00 DTS
Tan, satellite
radio, leather,
moon roof, loaded
excellent
condition. 136k
miles. $4,995.
570-814-2809
CADILLAC 11 STS
13,000 Miles,
Showroom
condition.
$38,800
MAFFEI AUTO
SALES
570-288-6227
CHEVROLET `00
CORVETTE
CONVERTIBLE
12,500 miles. Torch
red with oak top &
interior. Fully
loaded, auto, many
extras. Like New!
$26,999
(570)474-2756
CHEVROLET `94
CAMARO
Z28, LT1, 350 Auto-
matic, tilt, cruise,
A/C, power win-
dows, power
brakes, power
steering. All
original. $5000
570-479-4486
CHEVY 95 ASTRO
MARK III CONVERSION
VAN. Hightop. 93K.
7 passenger.
TV/VCP/Stereo.
Loaded. Great con-
dition. $3,495
(570) 574-2199
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
CHEVY 04
MONTE CARLO
Silver with Black
Leather, Sunroof,
Very Sharp!
$4,995
Call For Details!
570-696-4377
CHRYSLER `04
SEBRING
LXI CONVERTIBLE
Low miles - 54,000.
V6. FWD. Leather
interior. Great
shape. A/C. CD.
All power.
$6,900. Negotiable
New inspection &
tires.
(570) 760-1005
DODGE `00 DURANGO
SPORT
4.7 V8, 4WD, 3rd
row seat, runs
good, needs body
work $1900.
570-902-5623
FORD `93 MUSTANG
Convertible. 5.0. 5
speed. New top.
Professional paint
job. Show car.
$6,500. Call
570-283-8235
412 Autos for Sale
11 DODGE
DAKOTA CREW
4x4, Bighorn 6 cyl.
14k, Factory
Warranty.
$21,399
11 Ford Escape
XLT, 4x4, 26k,
Factory Warranty,
6 Cylinder
$20,499
11 Nissan Rogue
AWD, 17k, Factory
Warranty.
$19,399
08 Chrysler
Sebring Conv.
Touring 6 cyl.
32k $12,899
08 SUBARU
Special Edition
42K. 5 speed,
Factory warranty.
$11,899
05 HONDA CRV EX
4x4 65k, a title.
$12,799
06 FORD FREESTAR
62k, Rear air A/C
$7999
01 LINCOLN TOWN
CAR Executive 74K
$5,199
11 Toyota Rav 4
4x4 AT
only 8,000 miles,
new condition
$23,099
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
FORD `94 MUSTANG
GT
Convertible, candy
apple red. Tan inte-
rior & top. 5.0, 5
speed. Totally origi-
nal, low original
miles. $6,800
570-283-8235
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
FORD 02
TAURUS SES
LIKE NEW!
$3,995
Call For Details!
570-696-4377
Let the Community
Know!
Place your Classified
Ad TODAY!
570-829-7130
FORD 83 MUSTANG
5.0 GT. FAST!
70,000 original
miles. Black with
black leather inte-
rior. California car,
5 speed, T-tops,
Posi rear end,
traction bars,
power windows,
rear defroster,
cruise, tilt wheel,
all factory. New
carburetor and
Flow Master.
Great Car! $5000,
Or best offer.
570-468-2609
HONDA 08 ACCORD
4 door, 4 cylinder,
auto $16,995
WARRANTY
MAFFEI AUTO
SALES
570-288-6227
HONDA 08 ACCORD
4 door, EXL with
navigation system.
4 cyl, silver w/
black interior. Satel-
lite radio, 6CD
changer, heated
leather seats, high,
highway miles. Well
maintained. Monthly
service record
available. Call Bob.
570-479-0195
JEEP `96 GRAND
CHEROKEE V8
Automatic, four
wheel drive, air
conditioning, new
tires, brakes &
transmission.
$3,300.
570-972-9685
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 CONV.
Sprint blue, black
/ brown leather
int., navigation,
7 spd auto turbo,
AWD
09 CADILLAC DTS
PERFORMANCE
PLATINUM silver,
black leather,
42,000 miles
09 CHRYSLER SEBRING
4 door, alloys,
seafoam blue.
08 CHEVY AVEO
red, auto, 4 cyl
07 BUICK LACROSSE
CXL, black, V6
07 CHRYSLER PT
Cruiser, white,
auto, 4 cyl.,
68k miles
07 CHRYSLER PT
Cruiser black,
auto, 4 cyl
07 BUICK LUCERNE
CXL, silver, grey
leather
06 LINCOLN ZEPHYR
grey, tan leather,
sun roof
06 MERCURY MILAN
PREMIER, mint
green, V6, alloys
05 VW NEW JETTA
gray, auto, 4 cyl
04 NISSAN MAXIMA LS
silver, auto,
sunroof
03 AUDI S8 QUATTRO,
mid blue/light grey
leather, naviga-
tion, AWD
01 VOLVO V70 STATION
WAGON, blue/grey,
leather, AWD
73 PORSCHE 914
green & black, 5
speed, 62k miles,
$12,500
SUVS, VANS,
TRUCKS, 4 X4s
07 CADILLAC SRX
silver, 3rd seat,
navigation, AWD
06 CHRYSLER PACIFICA
TOURING, red, 3rd
seat (AWD)
06 FORD EXPLORER
XLT, black, 3rd
seat, 4x4
06 JEEP GRAND
CHEROKEE LTD
blue, grey leather
4x4
06 NISSAN TITAN KING
CAB SE white, auto
50k miles 4x4 truck
06 CHEVY TRAILBLZAER
LS, SILVER, 4X4
06 PONTIAC TORRENT
black/black leather
sunroof, AWD
05 FORD ESCAPE LTD
green, tan leather,
V6, 4x4
05 DODGE DAKOTA
CLUB CAB SPORT,
blue, auto, 4x4
truck
04 DODGE DURANGO
LTD, gray, gray
leather, 3rd seat,
4x4
04 HYUNDAI SANTA FE
GLS, silver (AWD)
04 CHEVY AVALANCHE
Z71, green, 4 door,
4x4 truck
04 DODGE RAM 1500
QUAD CAB SLT SILVER,
4 door, 4x4 truck
04 FORD FREESTAR,
blue, 4 door, 7
passenger mini
van
04 JEEP GRAND
CHEROKEE OVERLAND
graphite grey,
2 tone leather,
sunroof, 4x4
03 CHEVY TRAILBLAZER
LTZ, blue, two tone
leather, V6, 4x4
03 FORD EXPEDITION
XLT, silver, 3rd
seat, 4x4
03 FORD EXPLORER
SPORT TRAC XLT, 4
door, green, tan,
leather, 4x4
02 GMC ENVOY SLE,
brown, V6, 4x4
02 NISSAN PATHFINDER
SE, Sage, sun
roof, autop, 4x4
01 FORD F150 XLT
Blue/tan, 4 door,
4x4 truck
01 CHEVY BLAZER
green, 4 door,
4x4
01 FORD EXPLORER
sport silver, grey
leather, 3x4 sun-
roof
00 CHEVY SILVERADO
XCAB, 2WD truck,
burgundy
89 CHEVY 1500,
4X4 TRUCK
412 Autos for Sale
VITOS
&
GINOS
Wanted:
ALL
JUNK
CARS &
TRUCKS
Highest
Prices
Paid!!
FREE PICKUP
288-8995
LEXUS `01 ES 300
80,000 miles,
excellent condi-
tion, all options.
Recently serv-
iced. New tires.
$8,800.
570-388-6669
WANTED!
ALL
JUNK
CARS!
CA$H
PAID
570-301-3602
MERCEDES-BENZ
`91 350 SD
Grey metallic with
beige leather interi-
or. Turbo diesel.
Auto. All power
options. Cruise.
Sunroof. New
inspection, oil
change, front brakes,
water pump, injec-
tor & clutch fan. 4
new tires. Runs
excellent & great
MPGs. Florida car.
No rust. Excellent
condition. $5,900.
Trade welcome.
Call
570-817-6000
NISSAN `99 SENTRA
XE. Runs excellent,
great gas mileage.
Moving - must sell.
Asking $2,800,
negotiable. Call
570-852-7323
PONTIAC 06
G6 GTP
2 door, red with
black interior, V6,
sunroof, remote
start, R-Title, 52,000
miles. Priced to sell
at $7200 firm.
(570) 283-1756
SUBARU 11 IMPREZA
PREMIUM. AWD,
3,000 miles. Like
new, metallic silver,
satellite radio, 4
door, 170 hp.
$17,500 OBO
570-696-3447
570-574-2799
TOYOTA `10 CAMRY
Black with grey inte-
rior. Auto. A/C. 1
owner. All power
options. Still under
factory warranty. No
accidents and has-
nt been smoked in.
Remote starter. 47K
miles. Trades Wel-
come. $17,500.
570-817-6000
TOYOTA 09 CAMRY
18,000 Miles,
1 owner, 4 cylinder.
$16,900
MAFFEI AUTO
SALES
570-288-6227
VOLKSWAGEN `88
VANAGON
Runs good, needs
head gasket.
Will take offer.
(347)693-4156
412 Autos for Sale
TOYOTA 04 CELICA GT
112K miles. Blue,
5 speed. Air,
power
windows/locks,
CD/cassette, Key-
less entry, sun-
roof, new battery.
Car drives and
has current PA
inspection. Slight
rust on corner of
passenger door.
Clutch slips on
hard acceleration.
This is why its
thousands less
than Blue Book
value. $6,500
OBO. Make an
offer! Call
570-592-1629
VOLVO 850 95
WAGON
Runs good,
needs some work.
Will take offer.
347-693-4156
VW `87 GOLF
Excellent runner
with constant serv-
icing & necessary
preventative main-
tenance. Repair
invoices available.
Approx 98,131
miles. Good condi-
tion, new inspec-
tion. $1,500. Call
570-282-2579
415 Autos-Antique
& Classic
FORD 65 GALAXIE
Convertible, white
with red leather
interior. 64,000
original miles.
Beautiful car.
Asking. $10,500
570-371-2151
MAZDA `88 RX-7
CONVERTIBLE
1 owner, garage
kept, 65k original
miles, black with
grey leather interior,
all original & never
seen snow. $7,995.
Call 570-237-5119
MERCEDES-BENZ `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. Reduced
price to $26,000.
Call 570-825-6272
MERCURY `79
ZEPHYR
6 cylinder
automatic.
52k original miles.
Florida car. $1500.
570-899-1896
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
421 Boats &
Marinas
GRUMMAN 95 DEEPV
16 48hp Evinrude
50 lb thrust electric
motor. All tackle
and life vests
included. Live well,
fish finder. $4,000
570-579-3975
SILVERCRAFT
Heavy duty 14 alu-
minum boat with
trailer, great shape.
$1,250.
570-822-8704 or
cell 570-498-5327
421 Boats &
Marinas
ABANDONED 12
foot lowe rowboat.
PA fishboat# 584
3AW. 570-871-5652
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
427 Commercial
Trucks &
Equipment
CHEVY 08 3500
HD DUMP TRUCK
2WD, automatic.
Only 12,000 miles.
Vehicle in like
new condition.
$19,000.
570-288-4322
FREIGHTLINER 96
FL70
5.9L CUMMINS,
6 speed, 24 box
with tail gate.
26000 lb.
$6995.00 or BO
570-655-2804
439 Motorcycles
HARLEY 10 DAVIDSON
SPORTSTER CUSTOM
Loud pipes.
Near Mint
174 miles - yes,
One hundred and
seventy four
miles on the
clock, original
owner. $8000.
570-876-2816
HARLEY DAVIDSON `07
Road King Classic
FLHRC. Burgundy /
Cream. 6 speed.
Cruise control. Back
rests, grips, battery
tender, cover. Willie
G accessories.
19,000miles. $13,250.
Williamsport, PA
262-993-4228
HARLEY
DAVIDSON 01
Electra Glide, Ultra
Classic, many
chrome acces-
sories, 13k miles,
Metallic Emerald
Green. Garage
kept, like new
condition. Includes
Harley cover.
$12,900
570-718-6769
570-709-4937
HARLEY DAVIDSON
03 DYNA WIDE GLIDE
Golden Anniversary.
Silver/Black. New
Tires. Extras. Excel-
lent Condition.
19,000 miles
$10,000.
570-639-2539
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
09 V-ROD MUSCLE
VRSCF. 1250 cc.
Brilliant silver, 7,988
miles. Excellent
condition. ABS,
Brembo triple disc
brakes, factory
security, + extras.
Original owner, gar-
age kept. $12,500.
570-762-6893
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 OBO
570-905-9348
MATTIE
AUTOMOTIVE
220 Bennett
Street, Luzerne
Motorcycle State
Inspection,
Tire Sales &
Maintenance
570-283-1098
439 Motorcycles
SUZUKI 01 VS 800
GL INTRUDER
Garage kept, no
rust, lots of
chrome, black with
teal green flake.
Includes storage
jack & 2 helmets.
$3600
570-410-1026
YAHAMA 06 VSTAR
650 CC CRUISER
Only 1,107 miles,
bike was bought 6
years ago for my
wife but because of
an accident where
her friend was killed
on a bike she lost
interest in riding.
The bike sat in our
shed for years...
thus the low, low
miles. Perfect run-
ning & body condi-
tion. Silver & blue.
Back rest for a pas-
senger, free helmet,
title is free & clear.
$3,599 Call John or
Wendy. 570-674-
0735 You wont be
disappointed,
practically brand
new.
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
COLEMAN 02
POP UP
Like new. Stove,
lights, fans, sink,
sleeps 6.
$3,500
570-443-7202
FLAGSTAFF `08
CLASSIC
NOW BACK IN PA.
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, ,
awning, microwave
oven, tinted safety
glass windows,
fridge & many
accessories &
options. Excellent
condition, $22,500.
570-868-6986
MOTORHOME
COACHMAN
2005 ENCORE
380DS 15,500
miles Cat engine,
Allison Auto trans,
New Tires, New
Aluminum Wheels,
new Brakes
Satellite antenna.
Has R-TITLE
repaired in 2008.
perfect condi-
tion.$74,500.
Any Questions call
570-655-2804
451 Trucks/
SUVs/Vans
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
CHEVY 05
SILVERADO X CAB
2 WHEEL DRIVE
$6,995
Call For Details!
570-696-4377
451 Trucks/
SUVs/Vans
DODGE 05 CARAVAN
SXT Special Edition.
Stow and go, beau-
tiful van. Leather
heated seats with
sunroof, tinted win-
dows, luggage
rack. Brandy color,
85K miles.
$11,875 negotiable
570-301-4929
FORD 02 EXPLORER
Red, XLT, Original
non-smoking owner,
garaged, synthetic
oil since new, excel-
lent in and out. New
tires and battery.
90,000 miles.
$7,500
(570) 403-3016
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
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
FORD 06 ESCAPE XLT
4x4. Sunroof. Like
new. $6,995
Call For Details!
570-696-4377
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
FORD 00
EXPLORER XLT
eXTRA cLEAN!
4X4.
$3,995.
570-696-4377
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
FORD 04 EXPLORER
V6. Clean,
Clean SUV!
4WD
$5995
Call For Details!
570-696-4377
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
FORD 04 RANGER
Super Cab
One Owner, 4x4,
5 Speed,
Highway miles.
Sharp Truck!
$5,995
Call For Details!
570-696-4377
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 Low
Miles. 10 year,
100,000 mile war-
ranty. $22,500. Will-
ing to negotiate.
Serious inquires
only - must sell,
going to law school.
(570) 793-6844
451 Trucks/
SUVs/Vans
MERCURY `03
MOUNTAINEER
AWD. Third row
seating. Economical
6 cylinder automat-
ic. Fully loaded with
all available options.
93k pampered miles.
Garage kept. Safety /
emissions inspected
and ready to go. Sale
priced at $7595.
Trade-ins accepted.
Tag & title process-
ing available with
purchase. Call Fran
for an appointment
to see this out-
standing SUV.
570-466-2771
Scranton
NISSAN `04
PATHFINDER
ARMADA
Excellent condition.
Too many options to
list. Runs & looks
excellent. $10,995
570-655-6132 or
570-466-8824
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.
457 Wanted to Buy
Auto
VITOS
&
GINOS
Wanted:
ALL
JUNK
CARS &
TRUCKS
Highest
Prices
Paid!!
FREE PICKUP
288-8995
506 Administrative/
Clerical
Church Administrative
Assistant
3 hours/day.
3 days/week. Expe-
rience as a secre-
tary with MS Office,
social media and
website mainte-
nance required.
Reply by 5/18/2012.
office@
firwoodumc.org
or call 570-823-7721
Leave message.
509 Building/
Construction/
Skilled Trades
CARPENTER/HELPER
Full time. Residential
remodeling. Experi-
ence helpful. Must
have valid PA Dri-
vers license and
reliable transporta-
tion. $12/hour to
start. Holidays and
one week paid
vacation after one
year. Call Monday
through Friday 6-
8pm. 570-696-2494
509 Building/
Construction/
Skilled Trades
CARPENTERS
NEEDED
Call 570-654-5775
Entry Level
Construction Laborer
Two person crew,
no experience nec-
essary, company
will train. The work
is outdoor, fast-
paced, very physical
and will require the
applicant to be out
of town for eight day
intervals followed by
six days off. Appli-
cants must have a
valid PA drivers
license and clean
driving record.
Starting wage is
negotiable but will
be no less than
$14.00 per with
family health, dental
and 401k. APPLY AT
R.K. HYDRO-VAC,
INC., 1075 OAK ST
PITTSTON, PA
18640
E-MAIL RESUME TO
TCHARNEY@
RKHYDROVACPA.COM
OR CALL 800-237-
7474 MONDAY TO
FRIDAY, 8:30 TO
4:30 E.O.E. AND
MANDATORY DRUG
TESTING.
518 Customer
Support/Client Care
Automotive
Claims Assistant/
Customer Service
Applicants must
have a good work
ethic, should be well
organized and have
excellent phone
skills. Applicants
must be able to
communicate effec-
tively on the phone
and in person. The
applicant should
have basic typing
skills, and some
data entry experi-
ence is preferred.
Knowledge of Span-
ish is a plus. This
position is a full time
position.
Benefit package
available.
PLEASE E-MAIL
RESUMES TO
joann.Lombardo@
pennwarrantycorp.
com
522 Education/
Training
EMT/PARAMEDIC
INSTRUCTORS
DoH Instructor
required for Lec-
tures, also need skill
Instructors for new
Paramedic Program
starting up. Send
resume and letter of
intent to
Barbara.Reese@
mccann.edu
by May 30, 2012
527 Food Services/
Hospitality
STAFF WANTED
Must be profession-
al, energetic, hard-
working, with the
ability to multitask.
Cooking experience
required. Daytime
hours available.
Call for details at
570-674-4395,
or stop by 566
Memorial Highway,
Dallas to apply.
533 Installation/
Maintenance/
Repair
AUTO SALES PEOPLE
NEEDED NOW.
Expanding Staff - 3
Positions Available.
Some experience
helpful but will train.
Good Pay - Great
Benefits.
Call Jason Kerr
GSM or email jkerr@
tomhesser.com
570-588-2000
ext 11
Tom Hesser Nissan Scranton
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 2012 PAGE 3D
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
of Scranton - NEPA
R.J. BURNE
1205-1209 Wyoming Avenue, Scranton
(570) 342-0107 1-888-880-6537
www.rjburne.com Mon-Thurs 9-8 Sat 9-4
1205 Wyoming Ave. RJ Burne Cadillac
From Wilkes-Barre to Scranton
Expressway 8 Blocks on
Wyoming Avenue
WYOMING AVE. E
X
P
W
A
Y
8
1 *TAX & TAGS EXTRA NC + Non-Certifed
2012 Cadillac SRX
Luxury Edition
MSRP $43,085
LEASE IT!
39 MONTHS
$
429
Lease price based on a 2012 SRX AWD Luxury Edition $43,085 MSRP. $429 per
month plus 9% PA sales tax total $467 per month. 39 Month lease 10,000 miles
per year. 39 Monthly payments total $18,213 $.25/mile penalty over 32,500 miles.
$2000 down payment plus $429 frst payment plus tax and tags due at delivery.
Total due at delivery $2650 plus tag fees. MUST BE A CURRENT LESSEE OF
A 1999 OR NEWER NON-GM LEASE. Leasee responsible for excessive wear
and tear. Must take delivery by 5/31/2012. Requires ALLY Bank Tier S credit
approval. Please see sales person for complete details. Example payment per
thousand 16.67 per month. Example down payment 29%.
2012 Cadillac CTS
All Wheel Drive
MSRP $40,360
LEASE IT!
39 MONTHS
$
279
Lease price based on a 2012 CTS Sdn with All Wheel Drive $40,360 MSRP.
$279 per month plus 9% PA sales tax total $306 per month. 39 Month lease
10,000 miles per year. 39 Monthly payments total $11,934 $.25/mile penalty over
32,500 miles. $2000 down payment plus $279 frst payment plus tax and tags
due at delivery. Total due at delivery $2539 plus tag fees. MUST BE A
CURRENT LESSEE OF A 1999 OR NEWER NON-GM LEASE. Leasee re-
sponsible for excessive wear and tear. Must take delivery by 5/31/2012. Requires
ALLY Bank Tier S credit approval. Please see sales person for complete details.
Example payment per thousand 16.67 per month. Example down payment 29%.
2012 Cadillac SRX
Front Wheel Drive
MSRP $36,075
LEASE IT!
24 MONTHS
$
329
$
0
SECURITY
DEPOSIT
Per Month
+ Tax*
Per Month
+ Tax*
Per Month
+ Tax*
Lease price based on a 2012 SRX FWD Luxury Edition $36,075 MSRP. $329 per
month plus 9% PA sales tax total $358 per month. 24 Month lease 10,000 miles
per year. 24 Monthly payments total $8,616 $.25/mile penalty over 20,000 miles.
$2000 down payment plus $329 frst payment plus tax and tags due at delivery.
Total due at delivery $2550 plus tag fees. MUST BE A CURRENT LESSEE OF
A 1999 OR NEWER NON-GM LEASE. Leasee responsible for excessive wear
and tear. Must take delivery by 5/31/2012. Requires ALLY Bank Tier S credit
approval. Please see sales person for complete details. Example payment per
thousand 16.67 per month. Example down payment 29%.
2011 Cadillac
CTS AWD
Sunroof, All Wheel Drive,
5,952 Miles
$
31,991
2008 Cadillac
CTS AWD
#12505, Silver Titanium, Sunroof, Heated
Seats, Memory Pkg, Only 16,713 Miles
$
28,998
2008 Cadillac
DTS Premium
White Diamond/Cashmere Leather,
Navigation, Heated/Cooled Seats,
18 Performance Wheels, Sunroof
$
28,998
2011 Cadillac
SRX AWD
Ultra View Sunroof, All Wheel
Drive, Heated & Memory Seats
$
36,991
2006
Cadillac DTS
$
18,996
2010 Cadillac
Escalade
#12533, Black/Black Leather, Navigation,
22 Chromes, Sunroof, Rear
Entertainment, Only 22,506 Miles
$
51,990
2008 Cadillac
STS AWD
#12531, Radiant Bronze/Cashmere,
Sunroof, Chromes, XM, Onstar, Memory
Package, Only 31,472 Miles
$
24,998
Premium Select Pre-Owned Cars
$
0
SECURITY
DEPOSIT
$
0
SECURITY
DEPOSIT
Memory Settings, Chrome
Wheels, Only 26,940 Miles
USED CARS
HOURS: Monday Thru Thursday 8:00am - 7:00pm
Friday & Saturday 8:00am - 5:00pm
1-888-307-7077
*In stock vehicles only. Prices plus tax & tags. All rebates applied. See Salesperson for Details. Financing must be approve thru ally bank. See dealer for details.
2011 MAZDA
CX-7
$
22,800
All Wheel Drive,
Black Beauty,
17K Miles
2011 VW JETTA
SE
$
15,800
Auto, Power
Group, Alloy
Wheels
2011 HYUNDAI SANTA FE
GLS
$
19,900
All Wheel Drive,
Power
Throughout,
16K Miles
2011 CHRYSLER 200 LX
$
15,100
New Body
Style, Preferred
Equipment
2012 CHEVY IMPALA
LTZ
$
22,000
Leather,
Moonroof,
From 13K Miles
2011 HYUNDAI ACCENT
GLS SDNS
$
11,995
Choose From 5,
Nice Colors
2012 JEEP LIBERTY
SPORT 4X4
$
20,600
Choose From 3,
Miles As
LowAs 12K
2011 JEEP LIBERTY
SPORT 4X4
$
18,600
Choose From 2,
Balance Of
Factory
Warranty
2010 NISSAN
ALTIMA S
$
15,900
Preferred
Equipment Pkg,
Extra Sharp!
2010 VW BEETLE
COUPE
$
14,500
Black Beauty,
35K Miles,
Power Equipped
2010 CHRYSLER
SEBRING SEDAN
$
13,700
Limited, Touring,
Tons of Factory
Warranty
2010 DODGE AVENGER
SXT
$
14,200
Power Galore,
Balance of
Warranty
2010 & 2011 CHEVY
TRAVERSE LT
$
25,600
All Wheel Drive,
Low Miles
2011 FORD FUSION SE
$
16,600
V6 Engine,
Choose From 2
2011 CHEVY IMPALA LT
$
14,900
One Owner,
Balance of
Warranty
2011 CHEVY MALIBU
LTZ
$
17,800
White Beauty,
Power Galore
2011 NISSAN
SENTRA S
$
14,700
One Owner,
Balance of
Warranty
2010 DODGE CALIBER
SXT
$
13,995
Choose From 2,
Tons of
Warranty
2008 DODGE RAM 3500
REG CAB DUALLY 4X4
$
26,995
Only 54K Miles,
Auto, Diesel
Engine
2003 CHEVY CORVETTE
$
28,995
2010 TOYOTA TUNDRA
DOUBLE CAB 4X4
$
30,995
Rock Warrior Edition,
TRD Pkg,
Only 13K Miles
2002 CADILLAC DEVILLE
$
8,995
Low Miles,
Local New
Car Trade
2003 FORD F-150
SUPER CREW
$
8,995
FX4 Pkg, Local
New Car Trade
2009 MERCURY
GRAND MARQUIS
$
13,995
Ultimate Pkg,
Only 52K Miles
2010 HYUNDAI TUCSON
GLS
$
17,995
Just 18K Miles,
Local One
Owner
$
22,995
Just Traded,
Navigation, Rear
Entertainment
2011 BUICK ENCLAVE
CXL
$
33,300
All Wheel Drive,
19K Miles,
7- Passenger
2011 DODGE
CHALLENGER SE
$
21,300
Choose From 2,
Miles As Low
As 15K
2011 GMC ACADIA
SLT
$
32,300
Leather Seating,
18K Miles,
7-Passenger
2011 BUICK LUCERNE
CXL
$
20,500
Leather Seating,
Choose From 2
2011 KIA
RIO LX
$
11,200
Auto, Air,
Balance of
Factory
Warranty
2010 DODGE CHARGER
SXT
$
15,200
Power Galore,
Balance of
Factory
Warranty
2011 NISSAN ROGUE
SV
$
19,900
All Wheel Drive,
Silver Beauty,
12K Miles
2011 CHEVY CAMARO
LT CPE
$
22,500
Power Galore,
Extra Sharp!
2011 DODGE DAKOTA
CREW CAB 4X4S
$
21,400
Big Horn
Edition, Miles
As LowAs 14K
2011 CHEVY AVEO LT
SDNS
$
11,600
Choose
From 4,
Low Miles
2008 CHEVY
IMPALA LT
$
15,995
Just 21K
Pampered One
Owner Miles
2011 GMC TERRAIN
SLE-2
$
23,500
All Wheel Drive,
18K Miles, Tons
of Warranty
2011 CHEVY HHR
WAGONS
$
11,900
LS & LT Pkg,
Choose From 5
Only 5K Miles, 6-Speed,
As-New Condition
AS
TRADED
2007 GMC YUKON
DENALI XL
FROM FROM FROM FROM FROM
FROM FROM FROM FROM FROM FROM FROM
FROM FROM FROM FROM FROM FROM
FROM FROM FROM FROM FROM FROM
FROM FROM FROM FROM FROM
PAGE 4D WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 2012 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
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). Photos of vehicles are for illustration purposes only. Coccia Ford-Lincoln is not responsible for any typographical errors. No Security Deposit Necessary. See dealer for details. Sale ends
*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 5/31/12.
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 5/31/12.
24
Mos.
Auto., CD, Alum. Wheels, Tilt Wheel, Pwr.
Seat, Safety Pkg., 1st & 2nd Air Curtains,
Side Impact Air Bags, Anti-Theft Sys., PL,
Siruis Satellite Radio, Keyless
Entry, PW, Message Center,
M
O
S.
APR
PLUS
MPG
*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 5/31/12.
24
Mos.
3.5L Engine, MyFord
Display, CD, Auto. Climate
Control,17 Steel Wheels,
Keyless Entry, MyKey,
Cruise Control, PW,
PM,
, Safety Canopy, Air, Side
Impact Safety Pkg., Pwr. Drivers Seat, Fog
Lamps, Rear Cargo Convenience Pkg.,
Privacy Glass,16 Alum. Wheels, Roof
Rack, Auto., Sirius Satellite Radio,
CD, PW, PDL, 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 5/31/12.
24
Mos.
M
O
S.
APR
PLUS
Safety Canopy, Air, Side Impact Safety Pkg.,
Fog Lamps, Rear Cargo Convenience Pkg.,
Privacy Glass,16 Alum. Wheels, Roof
Rack, Auto., Pwr. Drivers Seat, Sirius
Satellite Radio, PW, PDL, Keyless
Entry, CD,
*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 5/31/12.
24
Mos.
M
O
S.
APR
PLUS
CD, Alum Wheels, Tilt, PW,
PDL, Pwr. Seat, Safety Pkg., Side Impact Air Bags, 1st &
2nd Air Curtains, Anti-Theft Sys., Sirius Satellite Radio,
Keyless Entry w/Keypad, Message Center,
M
O
S.
APR
PLUS
*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 5/31/12.
24
Mos.
Auto., AC, Pwr. Mirrors, Advanced Trac with
Electronic Stability Control, Side Curtains,
CD, Pwr. Door Locks, Tilt Wheel, ,
Cruise Control, 15 Alum.
Wheels,
Keyless Entry w/Keypad
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 5/31/12.
Auto., CD, Anti-Theft Sys., Side Curtain Air Bags, AC,
16 Alloy Wheels, Tilt Wheel, Instrument Cluster,
Message Center, Fog Lamps, Convenience Pkg.,
Cruise Control, MyKey, Perimeter Alarm,
MyFord, SYNC, Sirius Satellite Radio,
XL Plus
Pkg., Cruise Control,
MyKey System,
Pwr. Equipment
Group, CD,
Pwr. Mirrors,
40/20/40
Cloth Seat, XL
Decor Group
M
O
S.
APR
PLUS
Steve Mizenko
Service Manager
16 Yrs. at Coccia
Rudy Podest
Parts & Service
Director
28 Yrs. at Coccia
Pat McGinty
Parts Manager
21 Yrs. at Coccia
Barry Williams
Finance Manager
25 Yrs. at Coccia
George Geiges
Service Manager
25 Yrs. with Ford
Lenny Santarsiero
Body Shop Manage
1 Yr. at Coccia
Greg Martin
General Manager
22 Yrs. at Coccia
US MARINES
Joe Bobo Nocera
Used Car Manager
26 Yrs. at Coccia
US NAVY
Abdul Alsaigh
Sales Manager
5 Yrs. at Coccia
Terry Joyce
Sales Manager
35 Yrs. at Coccia
Tom Washington
Sales Manager
15 Yrs. with Ford
Len Gierszal
Finance Manager
1 Yr. at Coccia
*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 5/31/12.
24
Mos.
Auto., 3.5L V6, SYNC,
Reverse Sensing Sys., CD, Keyless
Entry with Keypad, PW, PDL,
18 Alum. Wheels, Anti-Theft
Perimeter Alarm, Sirius
Satellite Radio,
*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 5/31/12.
24
Mos.
STX, 3.7L V6, Auto., 17 Alum.
Wheels, ABS, Cloth Seat, Air,
CD, 40/20/40 Split Seat,
Decor Pkg., Cruise,
Pwr. Equipment Group
*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 5/31/12.
24
Mos.
Jim Bufalino
Salesperson
19 Yrs. at Coccia
US AIR FORCE
Toni Grasso
Salesperson
9 Yrs. at Coccia
Marcus Ossowski
Salesperson
2 Yr. at Coccia
Frank Vieira
Salesperson
2 Yrs. at Coccia
Victor DeAnthony
Salesperson
5 Yrs. at Coccia
Kevin Uren
Salesperson
2 Yrs. at Coccia
Ginny Kutzer
Salesperson
21 Yrs. at Coccia
US AIR FORCE
Jason Kilduff
Salesperson
1 Yr. at Coccia
Mike Hallock
Salesperson
1 Yr. at Coccia
Jim Williams
Salesperson
Mark Walsh
Salesperson
Patrick Yearing
Internet Specialist
Pwr. Windows, Convenience Group, Advance Trac
with Roll Stability Control, PDL,
Air, Reverse Sensing Sys.,
Remote, Keyless Entry
with Keypad, MyFord,
CD, Auto Headlamps
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 2012 PAGE 5D
533 Installation/
Maintenance/
Repair
509 Building/
Construction/
Skilled Trades
503 Accounting/
Finance
533 Installation/
Maintenance/
Repair
509 Building/
Construction/
Skilled Trades
503 Accounting/
Finance
533 Installation/
Maintenance/
Repair
548 Medical/Health 548 Medical/Health
554 Production/
Operations
554 Production/
Operations
554 Production/
Operations
ACCOUNTS PAYABLE
ASSOCIATE
McCarthy Tire Service is seeking a full time
Accounts Payable Associate for our corpo-
rate operations in Wilkes-Barre. Qualified
candidate must be proficient in AP entry and
processing, must be able to work in a fast
paced environment and be detailed oriented.
Candidates must also be proficient in Excel
and have a working knowledge of Microsoft
office. Excellent written and verbal communi-
cation skills are essential.
We offer a competitive pay rate and benefits
package that includes medical, dental and
vision insurance, 401(K) program with com-
pany match, vacation and personal holiday
time off.
Interested applicants may send resume
with salary requirements to
[email protected] or to
Human Resources Department,
McCarthy Tire Service, 340 Kidder Street,
Wilkes-Barre, PA 18703.
WHEN: May 11, 2012
WHERE: Hampton Inn & Suites
876 Schechter Dr.
Wilkes-Barre, PA 18702
TIME: 12:00 Noon to 6:00 p.m.
Turner Bros. is seeking qualified
candidates for the following positions:
NCCCO Operators - Conventional & Hydraulic,
Riggers, Wind Turbine Techs, QA/QC Inspectors
with wind industry experience, Mechanic,
Forklift Operators, Tower Washers and
General Laborers. Experience helpful.
Bring your resume and meet our
Leadership Team.
Turner Bros. is an Equal Opportunity Employer
JOB
FAIR
MAINTENANCE POSITIONS
INDUSTRIAL ELECTRICIAN I
MAINTENANCE MECHANIC II
MAINTENANCE TRAINEE
Fabri-Kal Corporation, a major thermoforming plastics
company, has immediate full time benefitted positions.
12 hour shifts.
Industrial Electrician: Conduit, emt and ridged pipe; Equip-
ment testing; AC/DC motors and drives; PLC systems. 3 Yrs
Exp. HS/GED required, vocational/trade school preferred.
Mechanic: Troubleshooting, hydraulic/pneumatic, machine
shop, plumbing, welding, rebuild mechanic devices, schemat-
ics, test equipment, basic electrical systems. 3 Yrs Exp.
HS/GED required, vocational/trade school preferred.
Maintenance Trainee: Associates Degree in Electronic field or
Technical Certification in Electronics to include AC/DC Funda-
mentals, Industrial Electricity, Motor Controls, AC/DC Drives,
PLCs, Basic testing equipment/Multi-meter/Amp probes.
Drug & Alcohol screening and background checks are condi-
tions of employment. Competitive wage and benefits package:
Family Health Insurance, Prescription, Dental & Vision, Disabil-
ity, 401K, Education, Paid Leave. EOE. Apply on site
Monday-Friday 8AM-5PM; or forward resume to:
Fabri-Kal Corporation
ATTN: Human Resources
150 Lions Drive
Hazle Township, PA 18202
FAX (570) 501-0817; EMAIL: [email protected]
www.fabri-kal.com
Kingston Commons, a Long Term Care Facility
located in Kingston, PA, is looking for a Regis-
tered Dietician. Candidates for this full-time
position must possess a Bachelors degree in
Food & Nutrition, have clinical experience in
healthcare setting, have a current PA licensure
and registration with ADA.
REGISTERED DIETITIAN
Apply In Person:
Kingston Commons
615 Wyoming Ave. Kingston, PA 18704
Fax: 570-288-8335, or email resume to:
[email protected]
Drug Free Work Place E.O.E.
7
5
4
7
1
3
If youre searching for a career with real growth potential, its time you
take a look at Lowes. Never stop improving at our state of the art
distribution center in Pittston.
Lowes Distribution Center in Pittston, PA is holding a Career Fair
on Saturday, May 12 9AM-Noon
We are looking for Supervisors for our Night and Weekend Shift.
This highly motivated Operations Supervisor is accountable for
supervising a high performing team between 10-20 responsible
for handling product safely, efciently and effectively as it moves
through the facility. The Operations Supervisor must possess
demonstrated leadership and supervisory experience; and the ability
to successfully manages multiple tasks simultaneously. A College
degree is preferred.
Please come to discuss your experiences, as we will be
conducting pre-screen interviews that day.
We will provide onsite child care to assist your child care needs.
Interested applicants please, bring an updated resume.
Lowes Distribution Center
200 Centerpoint Blvd.
Pittston, PA 18640
Questions, please call
570-603-6100 X 823
Lowes is an Equal Opportunity Employer committed to Diversity and Inclusion.
Lowes maintains a drug-free work place.
533 Installation/
Maintenance/
Repair
LOOKING FOR
CAREER CHANGE?
WE PROVIDE INITIAL &
ONGOING TRAINING.
OUR TECHNICIANS
APPLY FERTILIZER, LIME
& WEED PREVENTATIVES
AS WELL AS INSECT
CONTROL & TURF AERA-
TION SERVICES FOR RES-
IDENTIAL & COMMER-
CIAL CUSTOMERS.
FULL TIME WORK
MONDAY-FRIDAY
8 AM 5 PM
MUST HAVE GOOD MATH
SKILLS, CLEAN DRIVING
RECORD & PASS PHYSI-
CAL & DRUG TEST.
APPLY ONLINE AT:
WWW.GRASSHOPPER
LAWNS.COM
OR STOP IN FOR
APPLICATION AT:
470 E. STATE STREET
LARKSVILLE, PA 18651
QUESTIONS? EMAIL
BRIAN PHILLIPS AT:
GRASSHOPPER.JOBS
@GMAIL.COM
LAWN CARE
TECHNICIAN
536 IT/Software
Development
Landscape Laborers
Valid PA License.
Send resume to
frankay@
frontiernet.net
538 Janitorial/
Cleaning
HOUSEKEEPING
Full time. Morning,
Afternoon and
Evening Shifts.
Apply in person:
Wilkes-Barre Family
YMCA, 40 W.
Northampton St.
Wilkes-Barre
OFFICE & WAREHOUSE
CLEANING
All shifts. Pittston
Location. Experi-
enced Floor Person
Needed, Also.
570-771-6173
539 Legal
COMMUNICATION/
ENGLISH MAJOR
Law office needs
above graduate
with at least 3 years
proven writing and
research skills.
Email resume to
essexfells@
hotmail.com
542 Logistics/
Transportation
CLASS A CDL DRIVER
O/O: Company
845-616-1461
Say it HERE
in the Classifieds!
570-829-7130
NOW HIRING:
CLASS A OTR
COMPANY DRIVERS
Van Hoekelen
Greenhouses is a
family owned busi-
ness located in
McAdoo, PA.
We have immedi-
ate openings for
reliable full-time
tractor trailer driv-
ers, to deliver prod-
uct to our cus-
tomers across the
48 states. Our pre-
mier employment
package includes:
Hourly Pay-
including paid
detention time, and
guaranteed
8 hours per day
Safety Bonus-
$.05/mile paid
quarterly
Great Benefits-
100% paid health
insurance, vision,
dental, life, STD,
401K, vacation
time, and holiday
pay.
Pet & Rider
Program
Well maintained
freightliners and
reefer trailers
Continuous year-
round steady work
with home time
Requirements are:
Valid Class A CDL,
minimum 1 year
OTR experience,
must lift 40lbs, and
meet driving and
criminal record
guidelines
PLEASE
CONTACT
SHARON AT
(800)979-2022
EXT 1914,
MAIL RESUME TO
P.O. BOX 88,
MCADOO, PA
18237 OR FAX TO
570-929-2260.
VISIT OUR
WEBSITE AT
WWW.VHGREEN
HOUSES.COM
FOR MORE
DETAILS.
Drivers: $2,500
Sign-On Bonus
Home Nightly
Hazleton, PA
Dedicated Run.
CDL-A, 1 year expe-
rience required.
Estenson Logistics.
Apply:
www.goelc.com
1-866-336-9642
GENERAL
SCHOOL BUS DRIVERS
West Side, semi re-
tired & home mak-
ers welcome, will
train. 570-288-8035
542 Logistics/
Transportation
O/O'S & CO
FLATBED DRIVERS
SIGN ON BONUS
Hazleton/
Scranton, PA
Growing dedi-
cated account
needs Drivers
Now! SIGN ON
BONUS: $1,000
after 3 months &
$1,000 after 6
months for Owner
Operators & com-
pany drivers. Dri-
ver Home Loca-
tions: Hazleton, PA,
or surrounding
Area. Miles per
Week Target is
2,275. Runs will go
into North east
locations. $1.15 all
dispatched miles
plus fuel surcharge
for ALL Dispatch/
Round Trip Miles at
$1.50 Peg, paid at
$.01 per $.06
increments. Truck
must be able to
pass a DOT
inspection. Plate
provided with
weekly settle-
ments and fuel
card.
Also needing up
to 10 Company
Drivers. Excellent
Benefits! .45cents
a mile, with tarp
pay. Flatbed freight
experience
required. Class A
CDL drivers with 2
years of experi-
ence.
Feel free to
contact
Kevin McGrath
608-207-5006
or Jan Hunt
608-364-9716
visit our web site
www.blackhawk
transport.com
GREAT PAY,
REGULAR/SCHEDULED
HOME TIME & A
GREAT, FRIENDLY,
PROFESSIONAL STAFF
TO WORK WITH!
Tri-Axle
Drivers Needed
Call
570-690-8393
548 Medical/Health
CAREGIVERS
Looking for mature
& compassionate
people to work with
elderly in their
homes. Personal
care & transporta-
tion required.
All Shifts available.
Call: 570-338-2681
Part Time
Clinic Coordinator
(NON-NURSING
POSITION)
For one physician
medical practice in
Plains, PA. Office
and home work
combination. Expe-
rience in front office
medical practice
necessary.
Call 570-814-0657
548 Medical/Health
Community Home
Workers
Full time week on
week off position
(including 7 asleep
overnight shifts)
working with indi-
viduals with devel-
opmental disabili-
ties in the Wilkes-
Barre Area! Valid
Drivers License is
required. Experi-
ence is helpful paid
training is provided.
Starting salary is
$22,048 plus Bene-
fits for full time
include health insur-
ance for employee,
vacation and holi-
day pay, 401K,
Life Insurance.
For information or
application, call
IMPACT SYSTEMS/
Keystone Human
Services. at 829-
3671. Drug Free
Workplace EOE
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
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.
LPNs/
Resident Care Aides
Looking for caring,
and compassionate
people for
Alzheimers assist-
ed living facility.
We are currently
hiring Part Time
LPNs (3rd shift).
Resident Care
Aides, all shifts.
Must be a high
school graduate,
experience pre-
ferred. NO PHONE
CALLS PLEASE.
Apply within.
Keystone
Garden Estates
100 Narrows Rd
Route 11
Larksville, PA 18651
551 Other
DELIVERY
SETUP PERSON
Part Time. 20-30
hours. Must have
PA drivers license.
Must be available
Friday-Monday.
Call 570-283-3800
551 Other
JOBS, JOBS AND
MORE JOBS!
No Resume?
No Problem!
MONSTER MATCH
ASSIGNS A PROFESSION-
AL TO HAND-MATCH
EACH JOB SEEKER WITH
EACH EMPLOYER!
THIS IS A
FREE SERVICE!
CREATE YOUR
PROFILE NOW
BY PHONE OR
WEB FREE!
1-866-781-5627
or
www.
timesleader.com
NO RESUME NEEDED!
CALL THE AUTOMATED
PHONE PROFILING
SYSTEM OR USE OUR
CONVENIENT ONLINE
FORM TODAY SO OUR
PROFESSIONALS CAN
GET STARTED MATCHING
YOU WITH EMPLOYERS
THAT ARE HIRING -
NOW!
CHOOSE THE
FOLLOWING MAIN JOB
CODES TO ENTER
YOUR INFORMATION:
#10:ACCOUNTING /
FINANCE
#11:AIRLINE/AIRPORT
#12:ARTS
#13:BANKING
#14:CALL CENTER/
CUSTOMER SERVICE
#15:CHILDCARE
#16:COMPUTERS / IT
#17:COUNSELING &
SOCIAL SERVICES
#55:DENTAL
#45:DRIVERS/
TRANSPORTATION
#18:EDUCATION
#19:ENGINEERING
#20:ENVIRONMENTAL
#24:FACTORY &
WAREHOUSE
#57:HEALTH CARE
ASSISTANTS
#44:HOTEL &
HOSPITALITY
#23:HUMAN
RESOURCES
#21:INSURANCE/
FINANCIAL SERVICES
#25:JANITORIAL &
GROUNDS
MAINTENANCE
#26:LEGAL
#27:MANAGEMENT
#28:MATERIALS &
LOGISTICS
#29:MECHANICS
#30:MEDIA &
ADVERTISING
#58:MEDICAL RECORDS
#56:MEDICAL
TECHNICIANS
#53:MEDICAL
THERAPISTS
#52:NURSING
#31:OFFICE
ADMINISTRATION
#32:OPERATIONS
#33:PERSONAL CARE
#54:PHARMACY
#46:PRINTING
#34:PROTECTIVE
SERVICES
#35:QUALITY CONTROL
#48:REAL ESTATE
#36:RESEARCH &
DEVELOPMENT
#37:RESTAURANT
#38:RETAIL
#39:SALES
#51:SKILLED TRADES:
BUILDING GENERAL
#47:SKILLED TRADES:
CONSTRUCTION
#40:SKILLED TRADES:
BUILDING PROF.
#41:SKILLED TRADES:
MANUFACTURING
#50:SPECIALTY
SERVICES
#42:TELEPHONE/
CABLE
#49:TRAVEL AND
RECREATION
#43:TRUCKING
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
554 Production/
Operations
MACHINE OPERATORS
Local company
seeking experi-
enced individuals.
Luzerne county
area. Call 825-2105
1124 Highway 315
Wilkes-Barre, PA
Save time, Apply
online! www.one
sourcestaffing.com
554 Production/
Operations
MACHINE OPERATOR
TRAINEES/PRINT
OPERATOR TRAINEES
A major thermo-
forming plastics
company is seeking
full time positions
for Machine Opera-
tor Trainees/Print
Operator trainees.
Qualified candidates
must possess
strong mechanical
aptitude with good
written and oral
communication
skills. Starting
wage, $17.62/hr
with 3/4 day weeks-
12 hour shifts. Drug
screenings and
background checks
are conditions of
employment.
Applications are
accepted on-site: 8
AM-5 PM or you
may forward
resume to:
Fabri-Kal Corporation
ATTN:
Human Resources
Valmont Industrial
Park
150 Lions Drive
Hazleton, PA. 18202
Phone: 570-861-3303
procure@
Fabri-Kal.com
* * O P T I C A L O P T I C A L * *
MACHINE
OPERATOR
3pm-8pm
Benefits for full
time. Send resume
or apply in person,
Monday-Friday,
8:30a - 6pm to:
LUZERNE OPTICAL
180 N. WILKES-
BARRE BLVD.
WILKES-BARRE, PA
18702
OPERATIONS
COORDINATOR
The City of Pittston
is accepting appli-
cations for the posi-
tion of Operations
Coordinator. The
position requires a
Bachelors Degree
in Public Administra-
tion or related field
(Masters Degree
Preferred) or at
least eight years of
municipal manage-
ment experience.
Qualified candidate
will have working
knowledge of zon-
ing/land use plan-
ning, codes
enforcement, public
works operations,
and proven adminis-
trative skills in budg-
eting and purchas-
ing.
Send cover letter
with resume no
later than May 11,
2012 to: City Clerk,
City of Pittston, 35
Broad Street,
Pittston PA 18640.
560 Quality
Assurance/Safety
CDL TRUCK
DRIVERS/QUARRYMEN:
Experienced per-
sons needed for
busy Quarry in N.E.
PA. Experience with
Quarry operations
and plant mainte-
nance preferred.
Truck drivers must
have valid CDL and
medical card. Com-
petitive salary and
health benefits.
Please fax resume
to: 570-643-0903
566 Sales/Retail/
Business
Development
Sales Inside/Outside
for Insurance Office
LOW SALARY/
HIGH COMMISSION
GO GETTERS ONLY
EMAIL RESUMES
STREMEL2@
NATIONWIDE.COM
Sales Representative
Full or part time.
Focus is primarily on
growing the com-
mercial and resi-
dential customer
base through face-
to-face solicitation
of targeted com-
mercial prospects
within a defined
area. Base income
in addition to resid-
ual commission with
car allowance.
Health benefits and
401(k).
Send resume to
Tulpehocken
Spring Water, P.O.
Box 1474, Scranton,
PA 18501, fax to
570-424-2349 or
email: [email protected]
600
FINANCIAL
610 Business
Opportunities
COFFEE SHOP
Turn key operation
in a wonderful area.
A must see! Deli &
ice cream. Will train,
excellent opportuni-
ty. $25,000.
570-262-1497
FIRE FIRE YOUR BOSS!!!! YOUR BOSS!!!!
WORK FOR
YOURSELF
INVEST IN
YOURSELF
WITH
JAN PRO
*Guaranteed Clients
* Steady Income
*Insurance &
Bonding
* Training & Ongoing
Support
* Low Start Up
Costs
*Veterans Financing
Program
* Accounts available
through
0ut Wilkes-Barre
& Scranton
570-824-5774
Janpro.com
LIQUOR LICENSE
FOR SALE. Luzerne
County. $20,000.
570-574-7363
TURN KEY OPERATION
Located at
Wyoming Valley Mall
must sell. $125,000
negotiable. Ask for
Rob 570-693-3323
700
MERCHANDISE
702 Air
Conditioners
AIR CONDITIONER
large room duct-
less, remote,
11,500BTU, model#
LSU122CE. Outdoor
& indoor units, clean
& very good condi-
tion. $500.
570-388-6348
AIR CONDITIONERS
Ready for HOT
weather, 2 window
units, GE 8K BTU
$75, Fedders 5K
BTU $50, excellent
condition. 696-1267
LG AIR CONDITIONER
& Heat Pump
18,000.4 SEER
R410 Refrigerant
Wall mounted, duct-
less. 220 volt. One
indoor, one outdoor
unit with remote
control. Call
570-288-0735
706 Arts/Crafts/
Hobbies
Victorian picture
$35.00 Large
botanical garden
picture $40.00. 3
pottery vases
$35.00 498-0977
708 Antiques &
Collectibles
ANTIQUE TOYS
WANTED
Larry - Mt. Top
474-9202
COINS. Fine - Ex
Fine 56-P, 58-P, 60-
D, 61-D, 63-P $75.
570-287-4135
MADAME ALEXAN-
DER DOLLS 4
$10. each in boxes.
570-457-2496
PIANO. Luis Casali
Spanish Street
Piano made about
1900. 48 wide x
23 deep, x 49 tall.
Front turn crank, a
large barrel with
tin mechanism, 55
piano notes, 5 bells,
good condition.
Asking $2000. Call
8:00 am to 9:00 pm.
570-333-4199
RECORD COLLEC-
TION, 207 records
78RPM and 70
records 45RPM,
various artists, all
for $10.
Call 570-735-6638
YEARBOOKS, Kings
College 70, 90,
94, 95, 96. Wilkes
University 88, 89.
$5 each. 706-1548
708 Antiques &
Collectibles
SEWING MACHINE,
Antique Singer
pedal factory
sewing machine
with original table -
converted to elec-
tric. Works great!
Model # 31-15. Serial
#AA-90760. New
belt, plus extra bob-
bins and needles.
Asking $175 OBO
Call 570-947-6531.
710 Appliances
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
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
GENES
RECONDITIONED
APPLIANCES
60 Day Warranty
Monday-Friday
8:00PM-5:00PM
Saturday
8:00AM-11:00AM
Gateway
Shopping Center
Kingston, PA
(570) 819-1966
DRYER G.E. electric,
works great $30.
570-824-8334
DRYER white, elec-
tric Bosch vented,
Axxis model WTA
3510, several years
old & perfect oper-
ating condition.
$125. 570-825-2961
RANGE & HOOD 30
GE Electric glass
top range & hood.
(Bisque) Excellent
condition. $275.
570-735-3519
RANGE: Kenmore
countertop electric,
stainless steel, 4
burner with center
grill. Good condition.
$125.570-675-0248
WASHER & DRYER
Whirlpool $40 each
or $75 for both.
Older models but
working order.
570-696-3368
712 Baby Items
BABY ITEMS, Graco
infant car seat with
base $20, Kidsline
farmyard themed
nursery set with
lamp and many
accessories $20,
Shermag glider and
ottoman combo,
oak wood with tan
upholstery $50. All
originally purchased
at BabiesRUs and
in excellent condi-
tion. 570-902-9822
STROLLER. New 3
wheel jogger still in
box, never used.
Paid $249, asking
$125 & a new cradle
baby swing with
canopy. Paid $160,
asking $100, or
$225 for all items.
Call 570-771-6081
714 Bridal Items
WEDDING GOWN,
New, beautiful, size
10, tags on, ivory
strapless, beaded
with veil & slip. A
must see. Paid
$600. asking $100.
570-287-3505
716 Building
Materials
BATHROOM match-
ing sink set. Gerber
white porcelain with
mirror & medicine
cabinet $80.
570-331-8183
TILE, approximately
300 available, can
by smaller quanti-
ties. $2.00 per tile.
570-288-3947
726 Clothing
BRIDESMAID DRESS
size 16, wine color
with shoes $20.
Taupe color mother
of the groom dress
size 16 with shoes
$20. 570-972-4371
COAT
KENNETH COLE
Beige, size 6,
hardly worn. $75.
570-855-5385
COAT ladies black
leather fully lined,
size large, knee
length wrap style,
excellent condition
f$80. Ladies size 10
tan suede calf hi
boots with beige fur
trim, never worn
$15. 484-632-8072
730 Computer
Equipment &
Software
COMPUTER.
Complete set up in-
cludes office size
desk & chair. E-
machines CPU with
XP Home. Craig flat
screen monitor,
Lexmark color print-
er. Excellent.
All $300
570-489-2675
730 Computer
Equipment &
Software
LAPTOPS Dell/Gate-
way/hp/i bm:cdrw-
d v d r w, wi f i , n e w
bags, windows7,
office 10, anti-
virus+more!$50-200
Desktops & towers>
Del l /Acer/Hp/IBM:
c d r w + d v d r w ,
windows7, office 10,
antivirus + more.
keyboard + mouse
included $100-$175.
LCD 17 monitors +
all cords $25-$45.
All warrantied + free
delivery! 862-2236
732 Exercise
Equipment
Fitness Stepper,
Wagen Tech. An
effective cardiovas-
cular workout. Fits
in 12x16 floor
space. AAA battery,
only $35. 287-8498
TREADMILL. Voit
505MS manual
operation with digi-
tal readout. Good
condition. $25.
570-696-4487
744 Furniture &
Accessories
BEDROOM SET:
Girls 5 piece bed-
room set. Includes
headboard, dresser
with mirror, chest of
drawers and more.
$350. Call
570-868-6254
Clock, Grandfather-
runs perfect $350.
Fireplace, oak with
log heater $150.
570-740-7446
COFFEE TABLE solid
oak, oval, $125.
Excellent condition.
570-256-7208
COMPUTER DESK:
Very good condition.
Black with slide key-
board shelf. $45.
570-740-1412 or
570-498-0439
DINING ROOM SET
4 chairs, 2 captain
chairs & hutch $250
2 wood end tables
$50 Wood roll
top desk $80. Com-
puter desk with
hutch $20. 32 TV
$30. 570-709-6664
Entertainment cen-
ter with glass stereo
cabinet. Very good
condition. Asking
$75. 570-239-6011
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
FURNITURE: assort-
ed. 87 sofa, 62
loveseat, light
green, $200; 3 oak
tables, coffee table,
2 end tables all for
$350.570-814-0633
HUTCH & BUFFET
Solid cherry, 3
drawers, 4 doors.
Hutch has 2 doors.
$250. Chromcraft
kitchen table, 1 leaf
& 4 upholstered
chairs. $75.
570-655-5598
HUTCH, Lighted
Oak Dining Room. 2
pieces, bottom is
combination of
doors & drawers.
570-313-9763
LAMPS (2) parlor
stand up, grey metal
& black. $20 each.
570-740-1246
Mattress
Queen Plush-Top
Set
New in Plastic
Must Sell ASAP
$150
Call Steve @
570-280-9628
MATTRESS SALE
We Beat All
Competitors Prices!
Mattress Guy
Twin sets: $139
Full sets: $159
Queen sets: $199
All New
American Made
570-288-1898
RECLINER burgundy
leather FREE.
570-287-2517
ROCKER,
wood/tapestry,
$75. RECLINER,
Burgundy velour
cloth, $125.
SOFA, CHAIR,
OTTOMAN, 3
TABLES, great
for den. Wood
and cloth, all in
excellent condi-
tion. $450.
Call after 6 PM
570-675-5046
SOFA & loveseat
matching set in blue
pattern with solid
blue slipcovers and
Lane solid blue
rocker. All in good
condition. $200.
570-262-8790
SOFA & MATCHING
CHAIR by Clayton
Marcus A la-z boy
co. Beige with flow-
ered print, used 6
months new $1800
asking $500.
570-287-0005
SOFA, LOVESEAT,
CHAIR. Brown. Fair
condition. FREE
570-3882388
TABLES efficiency
size drop leaf table
with 2 chairs, dark
wood $75. Antique
Hitchcock small
drop leaf table, 2
chairs, fair condition
$100. 287-3505
Wicker-glass end
table $25.00
570-498-0977
744 Furniture &
Accessories
TV armoire with 27
inch Zeneth televi-
sion,$200.00 High
bedroom dresser
$50.00, triple dress-
er with mirror 50.00
Total Price For All
Items: $500.00
570-606-1624
COURTDALE
Courtdale United
Methodist Church
225 Courtdale Ave.,
Thursday, Friday &
Saturday
May 10, 11 & 12
Thursday & Friday
9 am to 8 pm
Saturday
9 am-1 pm
Saturday is bag day
KINGSTON
16 S. Thomas Ave.
Sat., May 12th,
8-Noon. Fiberglass
insulation, golf,
NASCAR, tools,
miter saw, drills,
bar stools, glasses,
coasters, etc.
PLYMOUTH
269 E. Main Street
May 10th, 9-4pm,
May 11th, 9-4 &
May 12th 9-12pm.
A Variety of house-
hold items, books,
clothing, Christmas
& much more!
750 Jewelry
CAROL IS BUYING
PAYING TOP
DOLLAR for your
gold, silver, co
ins, scrap jewel-
ry, rings, dia-
monds, neck-
laces,bracelets,
old antique cos-
tume jewelry.
Guaranteed to
be paid top dol-
lar. WE MAKE
HOUSE CALLS!
570-855 7197
570-328-3428
CHAINS 5 sterling
silver chains 925
Italy $60. 1 silver
Italy bracelet $20.
Rhinestone neck-
lace, earrings,
bracelet $30.
570-574-0271
752 Landscaping &
Gardening
LAWN MOWER:
Front wheel pro-
pelled Craftsman
mower, 6.25. 22
cut with catcher.
$100. Also, B&D 16
electric steel hedge
clippers. $25. Call
570-457-3541
LAWN TRACTOR
Craftsman VT3000;
22HP; Mulch Kit;
used 1 Season;
Excellent $995.
570-472-3888
TRIMMER Black &
decker, electric in
box $30. 574-0271
754 Machinery &
Equipment
FARM EQUIPMENT
Hay baler/ cut/
ditoner. Hay Wagon.
Corn Picker. Dirt
bucket. Disk,
sprayer. ATV. Call
570-427-4298
GENERATOR:
Robot. 3,300 Watts.
110 volt / 12 volt.
Brand new. Used 2
hours. $275 or best
offer. Call
570-283-9452
756 Medical
Equipment
Lift chair, mauve,
battery back up,
very good condition
$300 OBO.
570-287-6967 leave
message.
WALKERS (1) $10.
Folding walker $15.
Folding walker with
front wheels $18.
Toilet assistance
$20. Canes $12.,
$15., $18., & 20. 4
prong cane
adjustable $40.
570-825-2494
758 Miscellaneous
AFGANS & Cro-
cheted Doilies Must
see. $150.824-8810
Car Rims. Honda, 4
pair 15 will fit any
model Accord,
Civic, and Del-Sol
cars. Brand new.
asking $175
570-239-6011.
CD collection, all
country $2. ea. ICE
CHEST very large
100 quart + capacity
$30. 570-655-9472
To place your
ad Call Toll Free
1-800-427-8649
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!
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
746 Garage Sales/
Estate Sales/
Flea Markets
PAGE 6D WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 2012 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
551 Other
518 Customer
Support/Client Care
566 Sales/Business
Development
551 Other
518 Customer
Support/Client Care
566 Sales/Business
Development
551 Other
518 Customer
Support/Client Care
518 Customer
Support/Client Care
533 Installation/
Maintenance/
Repair
522 Education/
Training
518 Customer
Support/Client Care
533 Installation/
Maintenance/
Repair
522 Education/
Training
518 Customer
Support/Client Care
533 Installation/
Maintenance/
Repair
518 Customer
Support/Client Care
533 Installation/
Maintenance/
Repair
We currently offer this employment opportunity
Part Time Customer Service Specialist working 15 hours per week. Ideal
candidate will enjoy speaking with customers to provide top-notch service
in a fast-paced environment.
Duties include, but are not limited to:
Answer incoming calls from customers
Make outgoing calls to current customers
Some data entry
A regional multimedia company headquartered in Wilkes-Barre, we provide
news, information and entertainment across multiple media platforms.
Our fagship publication, The Times Leader, and several weekly and
specialized publication serve the readers and advertisers of northeastern
Pennsylvania well. We provide commercial and other services in the region
and surrounding states.
Building on our solid print foundation, we offer various multimedia products:
website development; social media marketing; search engine optimization
and marketing; QR code marketing and tracking; and many other services.
We need sales professionals with a strong desire to succeed. Must be
able to develop and maintain strong business relationships with clients,
understand and deliver clients media needs through all aspects of the job
to differentiate us from the competition.
This requires excellent customer service skills, strong organizational skills,
self-motivation and high energy. We have phone sales and outside territory
sales positions available.
We offer base salary plus commissions and benefts.
Weekend Customer Service Specialist
Media Sales Consultants
Earn Extra Cash
For Just A Few
Hours A Day.
Deliver
Available routes:
( No Col l ect i ons)
Wilkes-Barre North
$835 Monthly Prot + Tips
212 daily / 235 Sunday
Coal Street, Custer Street, North Empire Street,
North Grant Street, North Hancock Street,
McFarland Street, Hillside Street
Pringle/Courtdale
$900 Monthly Prot + Tips
193 daily / 215 Sunday
Pringle Street, Broad Street, Cooper Street,
Evans Street, Charles Street, Courtdale Avenue,
White Rock Terrace
West Pittston
$980 Monthly Prot + Tips
233 daily / 241 Sunday
Packer Avenue, Schooley Avenue, Susquehanna Avenue,
Wyoming Avenue, Atlantic Aveneue
Nanticoke
$820 Monthly Prot + Tips
190 daily / 228 Sunday
Agostina Drive, East Broad Street, East Church Street,
East Green Street, East Main Street
Wilkes-Barre South
$950 Monthly Prot + Tips
242 daily / 271 Sunday
W. Academy Street, Amherst Avenue, Catlin Avenue,
Crescent Avenue, Dagobert Street, Maffett Street
To nd a route near you, call Rosemary at
570-829-7107
Luzerne/Swoyersville
$960 Monthly Prot + Tips
204 daily / 223 Sunday
Bennett St., Charles St., Hughes St., Willard St.,
Broderick St., Diamond St., Oliver St.
ONE OF THE MOST SUCCESSFUL
COMPANIES IN THE INDUSTRY
Proud of What We Do!
**Vocational Training or Industrial
Mechanical experience REQUIRED!
Maintenance Technicians Job Fair
Cargill Case Ready in Hazleton, PA is HIRING for
Day and Night Maintenance Techs!
12hr schedule pays up to $24.10/hr
Benefts include: medical, dental, vision and 401K
When: Saturday May 12, 2012
What Time: From 10:00am to 2:00 pm
Where: Cargill Plant. At 65 Green Mountain Rd. Hazleton, PA
570-384-8460
(We are located on the last entrance of the Humboldt Industrial Park
in Hazleton, PA, immediately pass Eagle Rock)
On site applications and interviews
Cargill is an Equal Employment Opportunity
and Affrmative Action employer
and a drug free place.
Applications will only be accepted
for Maintenance Tech
CUSTOMER SERVICE
REPRESENTATIVE
Local manufacturing company is seeking a full-
time Customer Service Representative to join our
team. This position serves as the point of contact
for customers and proactively works to resolve
any customer issues, responsible for monitoring
all incoming customer orders and entering orders
through web-based software. Must demonstrate
strong, effective communication and problem
solving skills, promptly communicate with appro-
priate staff and management and customers to
ensure timely and quality delivery of orders, have
excellent organization skills with the ability to pri-
oritize tasks, and work well under pressure in a
fast-paced work environment. People skills are
essential in this position, and the ideal candidate
should be friendly, pleasant, and maintain a pro-
fessional demeanor at all times. Candidate should
have at least 4 years Customer Service experi-
ence. Even though not required for the position,
applicants with a College Degree and Supervisory
experience are strongly encouraged to apply. We
offer a competitive wage and benefits package.
Qualified applicants should apply by mailing a
resume to: c/o The Times Leader
Box 4010
15 N. Main Street
Wilkes-Barre, PA 18711-0250
AUTOMOTIVE AUTOMOTIVE
SALES SALES
CONSULTANT CONSULTANT
601 Kidder Street, Wilkes-Barre
Salary & Commission Benefits
401K Plan 5 Day Work Week
Huge New & Used Inventory
BE PART OF THE
BEST SALES TEAM
IN THE VALLEY!
Valley Chevrolet is seeking
individuals who are self starters,
team oriented and driven.
(No Experience Necessary)
Apply in person to:
Blake Gagliardi, Sales Manager
Rick Merrick, Sales Manager
VALLEY CHEVROLET VALLEY CHEVROLET
DALLAS SCHOOL DISTRICT - EOE
Immediate Opening:
Long Term Sub
High School
Guidance Counselor
The position is available August-April during
the 2012-2013 School Year.
If a complete application packet is on file,
please submit a letter of interest only. All oth-
ers submit a complete application packet. For
details visit the Employment page of the district
web site, www.dallassd.com
All application packets must be received by
Deadline: May 21, 2012
758 Miscellaneous
All Junk
Cars &
Trucks
Wanted
Highest
Prices
Paid In
CA$H
FREE
PICKUP
570-574-1275
BASKETBALL
HOOP, new never
opened $100. POP-
CORN MACHINE,
new never opened
$50. HIGH CHAIR
$60. & BOUNCER
$50. both extremely
good condition.
BLACK SWIVEL TV
STAND $10. LARGE
GREEN BIRD CAGE
with stand $40.
DORA DOLLHOUSE
never opened $25.
570-972-4371
BEDLINER: 89
Chevy S10 truck
bedliner, standard
6 cab $15. Gong
Show movie DVD
$10 or $13 shipped.
5 storm windows
$10. each. V6 HEI
distributor cap from
80 Monte Carlo,
very good $10. (2)
white letter
BFGoodrich tires.
P235/70/15. $80
both,firm.
570-740-1246
COOKIE JAR
Antique House -
Cottage, Good
condition. $50.
570-675-0248
DINNERWARE:
Pfaltzgraff Heritage
pattern, white, serv-
ice for 8 + butter
dish $40. Stainless
steel flatware serv-
ice for 8 $5.
570-678-7421
GAZEBO: Very nice
10 x 10 metal frame
needs canvas top,
two metal pool
lounge chairs $80.
570-407-0008
GRANDFATHER
CLOCK, Howard &
Miller, oak, $795.
570-472-4744
758 Miscellaneous
FREE AD POLICY
The Times Leader
will accept ads for
used private
party merchan-
dise only for items
totaling $1,000 or
less. All items must
be priced and state
how many of each
item. Your name
address, email and
phone number must
be included. No
ads for ticket
sales accepted.
Pet ads accept-
ed if FREE ad
must state FREE.
You may place your
ad online at
timesleader.com,
or email to
classifieds@
timesleader.com or
fax to 570-831-7312
or mail to Classified
Free Ads: 15 N.
Main Street, Wilkes-
Barre, PA. Sorry
no phone calls.
HEATER Quartz
infrared 1200W, 20.
Great for work-
shop/garage, like
new, $30. 696-1267
HO TRAIN SET
Sante Fe $30.
570-574-0271
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
LADDER 24 alu-
minum $100. 2 Chef
dorm refrigerator
1.7 cu $75. Box-
wood stove brand
new never used
firebox size 29x15
$200. Mantis 9 inch
tiller w/ attachments
$200
570-735-2236
LEFTOVER GARAGE
SALE ITEMS: 165
Soy Candles $895,
Futon - black $85,
Heavy Duty Wheel
Barrel - $65, Motor-
ized racing set -
$115, 40 Aluminum
extension ladder
$350, Sofa Love
Seat $65, 40 five
gallon buckets of
dirt $110. Call
570-288-1077
Sewing machine,
Singer. Heavy duty
head with formica
table. $100.
570-740-7446
758 Miscellaneous
MIXER Sunbeam
Mixmaster HD
model 2347 dual
motor 450W 12
speed with beaters,
wire whip & dough
hooks, works fine
$150. Singer sewing
machine HD school
model 9410, 10 built
in stitches, 3 button-
holes works great
$150. Walker with
basket/seat teal
color $130.
570-714-4477
Trees, potted dwarf,
red maple $5.00
and up. 655-4815
Yard sale leftovers,
household items,
decorations, wood-
en shelf, etc.Asking
$200 for everything,
call 570-239-6011
762 Musical
Instruments
LUDWIG DRUMSET,
Almost new, very lit-
tle signs of usage!
Includes bass drum
(23), snare, hi-hats
(14), Avanti crash
symbol (18) with
additional stand,
two toms (12, 14),
floor tom (16), &
foot petal. Burgundy
color finish. Only
missing throne.
$350 firm. A STEAL
in this condition!
Call or text
570-855-3382
766 Office
Equipment
GOLF CLUBS: 1
very nice set of
deep red irons. a
deal at $60.
570-655-3512
768 Personal
Electronics
Computer monitor
$35. Call 498-0977
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!
770 Photo
Equipment
CAMERA Argus
35mm with flash
attachment & tri-
pod, collectors item
from 1950s. $50.
570-288-9260
772 Pools & Spas
POOL: Intex 12w x
36 deep metal
frame pool, easy set
up with pump filter,
ladder & debris
cover with extras -
solar cover, 2 new
filters & pool chemi-
cals. Used 2 sum-
mers very good
condition $125.
570-609-5012
POOL 24 round fil-
ter, solar & winter
covers, all acces-
sories, with 24 x 16
pressure treated
deck, all for $75.
570-868-5322.
774 Restaurant
Equipment
LIGHT, Neon, Coca-
Cola. $50, firm.
570-313-9763
776 Sporting Goods
Golf carts $40.
Practice golf balls
5.00 dozen. Bmw
tan mates $35.00.
Exterra mates
$35.00. 498-0977
776 Sporting Goods
FISHING ROD &
REEL combos,
Ugly sticks, Fen-
wicks, Okuma $25 -
$50. Calloway FTI
driver $70. White
Ice mallet putter
(new) $90. Cal-
loway X#4 hybrid
$50. Srixon wedge
$15. Golf balls 5 gal-
lon pail $30.
570-655-9472
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
POOL TABLE. Bar
room size. Slate.
Very good felt.
Includes 6-sticks,
bridge, rack & balls.
$500. 570-824-
9166 ask for Jack.
SPOTTING SCOPE
20-60x60mm with
tripod adjust from
13 to 42, new in
box $45. 288-9260
TENNIS RACQUETS
(3),Prince Longbody
Thunder 820 (2)
&Cayman Strike X
95. All 3 $65.
570-639-1242
776 Sporting Goods
Tent- Hillary Camp-
ing, sleeps 6. $45
Camping Cots, 2
metal framed, both
$20. Metal Ham-
mock Frame $12.00.
Bike- Murray 18
speed, 20 inches,
Herculite micro
alloy. $45. 824-0591
778 Stereos/
Accessories
Radio, boombox
with CD & cassette
tape asking $5.00
call Robert 903-
9524
SPEAKERS Wharf-
edale Vintage 1970
Large floor model
$75. 570-655-9472
780 Televisions/
Accessories
TV and stand,
Philips Magnavox,
good condition,
plays good. $25 Call
Robert at 903-9524
TV. 60 HD Projec-
tion TV. Good condi-
tion. $200, OBO.
570-313-9763
784 Tools
RADIAL SAW Crafts-
man 10, 5 hp, many
attachments $85.
Heavy duty 1/2 drill
$15. Drill bit sharp-
ener $45. Sears
scroll saw $75.
Glasco glass
grinder $25. Exten-
sion aluminum lad-
der $50. 696-9005
RETROFIT LASER
GUIDE for most 10
miter saws, works
great! $8. 696-1267
Saw, Craftsmen
Radial 10 5 HP,
many attachments
$85. Drill bit sharp-
ener, $45.
Scroll Saw, Sears
$80. Glass Grinder
Glasco Star 2, $25.
Ladder, Aluminum
extension $50. And
many miscellaneous
tools. 696-9005
786 Toys & Games
TRAX. Girls, kids,
18 months + up.
New in box, battery
& charger included.
Asking $50.
570-328-4927
786 Toys & Games
SWING SET: Rain-
bow Play Systems
wooden swing set in
good to excellent
condition. Approx
14W x 33.5L. Con-
tains 3 swings, 1 tire
swing, 1 rope swing,
trapeze / rings
combo, slide,
Jacobs rope ladder
and monkey bars.
Also has a club-
house with pent-
house. Asking $999
or best offer. Call
570-868-5582
between 6pm&8pm
788 Stereo/TV/
Electronics
Sewing Machine
$50.00 Digital pic-
ture frame $30.00.
570-498-0977
792 Video
Equipment
CAMCORDER Mag-
navox VHS older
style but works per-
fectly. Comes with
sturdy black leather
case, adaptors &
battery included.
Will provide heavy
duty tripod if pur-
chased for hands
free movie making.
$75. 484-632-8072
794 Video Game
Systems/Games
GAME CONSOLE REPAIR
I offer the lowest
prices locally. Bro-
ken Xbox 360s,
PS3s, Wiis, disc
read errors, etc.
Call Chris or visit the
Video Game Store
28 S. Main St, W-B
570-814-0824
796 Wanted to Buy
Merchandise
$ ANTIQUES BUYING $
Old Toys, model kits,
Bikes, dolls, guns,
Mining Items, trains
&Musical Instruments,
Hess. 474-9544
WE PAY MORE
FOR YOUR
GOLD, SILVER
JEWELRY,
COINS SCRAP
JEWELRY, Bring
it on down for a
great price.
Anything old in
good condition,
trains, toys etc.
570-328-3428
570-855-7197
796 Wanted to Buy
Merchandise
VITOS
&
GINOS
Wanted:
ALL
JUNK
CARS &
TRUCKS
Highest
Prices
Paid!!
FREE PICKUP
288-8995
800
PETS & ANIMALS
810 Cats
CAT: grey striped 9
months, mellow,
friendly urgently
needs home. Free
to good home.
570-256-3660
CATS & KI TTENS
12 weeks & up.
All shots, neutered,
tested,microchipped
VALLEY CAT RESCUE
824-4172, 9-9 only
KITTENS, FREE - 3
male and 2 female,
black, gray and
mixed, very healthy
and cute. (Duryea)
(570) 457-3983
KITTENS- FREE
Includes food, litter,
litter box & scoop,
chow & toys.
570-270-0124
leave message
815 Dogs
BASSET HOUND PUPS
AKC & UKC regis-
tered. Try-lemon
and white. Excellent
hunters and great
pets.
(570) 490-1464
BRAZILIAN MASTIFF
PUPPIES
3 males, 1 female,
$600 males $650
females. De-
wormed. Ready to
go. Great mothers
day present!
570-328-2569
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.
CAVALIER KING
CHARLES SPANIEL
PUPPIES
Registration avail-
able, health certi-
fied. $700 to
$1,500.
HAVANESE
PUPPIES
All colors and both
genders available.
$700 to $1,300
www.willowspring
cavaliers.com
215-538-2179
CHIHUAHUA FOX TERRIER
9 weeks old,
2 males $225. Very
playful 371-3441
ENGLISH BULLDOG
PUPPIES
Call 570-379-3729
German Shepard
Purebred puppies.
$550 less cash
discount. Please call
570-836-8044
AKC DOBERMAN PUP
Male.Ready May 20.
Champion line. Call
570-788-2963
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 2012 PAGE 7D
TAPP INTO IT.
ADVERTISERS: CALL 829-7100
TOFINDHOWWE CANCUSTOMIZE AN
AFFORDABLE ADVERTSINGPACKAGE FORYOU
THAT INCLUDES ADS ONOUR APP.
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815 Dogs
GERMAN SHEPHERD
PUPPIES
Pure-Bred. Black &
Brown. $500. Call
570-840-4243
LINEUP
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POMERANIAN
AKC, 9 weeks, 1
female, & 1 male.
Chocolate &
White. Shots &
wormed. Vet
checked. Home
Raised. $500.
570-864-2643
Poms, Yorkies, Mal-
tese, Husky, Rot-
ties, Golden,
Dachshund, Poodle,
Chihuahua, Labs &
Shitzus.
570-453-6900
570-389-7877
820 Equestrian
PINE SHAVINGS
Great for Bedding
Large Steady
Supply Available
Call for Pricing and
Delivery Rates
R&K Wettlaufer
Logging, Inc.
570-924-3611
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.
WEBUY
HOMES!
Any Situation
570-956-2385
906 Homes for Sale
ASHLEY
Exclusive Listing
REDUCED TO
$28,500
127 DONATO DRIVE
Large mobile home,
excellent condition
on double lot, locat-
ed in Ashley Park.
Carport, above
ground pool with
deck, 2 sheds,
fenced in yard,
modern kitchen,
dining room, family
room with wood
burning fireplace, 2
bedrooms, master
bedroom has whirl-
pool tub, laundry
room with appli-
ances, foyer, large
en-closed heated
porch. New hard-
wood floors thruout,
vinyl siding, central
air, skylights, private
driveway, appli-
ances.
Listed
exclusively by
Capitol Real
Estate
Shown by
appointment
Qualified buyers
only!
Call John Today
570-823-4290
570-735-1810
CAPITOL REAL ESTATE
www.capitol-realestate.com
for additional
photos
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!
AVOCA
1215 South St.
SpaPcious 4
bedroom home
with in law suite
with separate
entrance. Large
lot, large room
sizes. Split sys-
tem A/C in fami-
ly room. For
more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-963
$89,900
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
P
E
N
D
I
N
G
906 Homes for Sale
AVOCA
214 Gedding St.
Cozy Cape Cod
home with 2 bed-
rooms, 1st floor
laundry, nice yard
with deck. For more
info and photos
visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-668
$59,900
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
AVOCA
901 Main St.
Stately 4 bedroom
home with beautiful
woodwork, extra
large rooms with
gas heat and
nice yard.
MLS 12-884
$79,900
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
BACK MOUNTAIN
Immaculate 4 bed-
room 3 bath brick
front home in North-
woods. Many
amenities include
hardwood floors in
the living room &
dining room, cherry
kitchen with break-
fast area that opens
to deck overlooking
a large yard and
gazebo. Family
room with gas fire-
place, moldings,
gas heat, central air
& attached 2 car
garage. MLS#11-
1193 $369,000
Call Rhea
570-696-6677
906 Homes for Sale
Back Mountain
Newberry Estate
Three story freshly
painted unit at Hill-
side. 2 bedrooms &
loft, 3 bath, modern
kitchen, fireplace in
living room, central
air & gas heat. Con-
venience of living at
Newberry Enjoy
golf, tennis & swim-
ming. MLS#11-4435
$132,900
Call Rhea
570-696-6677
BACK MOUNTAIN
Dakota Woods
Enjoy maintenance
free living at Dakota
Woods Develop-
ment in the Back
Mountain. This 3+
bedroom condo
features an open
floor plan, first floor
master suite, hard-
wood floors, stun-
ning granite
kitchen, gas fire-
place & 2 car
garages. Large loft
area provides multi-
use space. MLS#
11-3212 $299,000
Call Rhea
570-696-6677
Line up a place to live
in classified!
BEAR CREEK
6650 Bear
Creek Blvd
Well maintained
custom built 2 story
nestled on 2 private
acres with circular
driveway - Large
kitchen with center
island, master bed-
room with 2 walk-in
closets, family room
with fireplace, cus-
tom built wine cellar.
A MUST SEE!
MLS#11-4136
$299,900
Call Geri
570-696-0888
906 Homes for Sale
BEECH MOUNTAIN
LAKES
LAKE VIEW custom
built Chalet with 4
bedrooms, 2.5
baths & 2,600 sq. ft.
Features hardwood
floors thruout 1st &
2nd floors & bam-
boo flooring in the
finished lower level.
2 fireplaces & cen-
tral air.
Motivated Seller.
Take a virtual tour at
www.PaHouseHunt
ers.com or TEXT
2308 to 85377 for
additional info & pic-
tures. MLS #12-564
$249,900
Cindy Perlick
Smith Hourigan
Group
Mountain Top
570-715-7753
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
DALLAS
143 Nevel Hollow
Road
Great country living
in this 3 bedroom, 2
& 1/2 bath home
with 1 car attached
garage, large enter-
tainment room
lower level. Plus a
30'x30' detached
garage with open
2nd floor ready to
finish & mechanics
pit in one stall.
MLS 11-4124
$195,000
570-675-4400
906 Homes for Sale
DALLAS
20 Fox Hollow Drive
OPEN HOUSE
SUN. APRIL 29TH
12 NOON-1:30PM
If you have seen it
before, TAKE
ANOTHER LOOK!
Freshly painted,
new tile. Open floor
plan & so much
room!Well main-
tained home on
wooded lot in desir-
able neighborhood.
4-6 Bedrooms, 3.5
baths, tile kitchen,
hardwoods in family
room, new carpet.
Finished walk-out
lower level with two
additional bed-
rooms and 3/4
bath. Two fire-
places. ONE YEAR
HOME TRUST WAR-
RANTY included.
$270,000
MLS #11-3504
Call Tracy Zarola
570-696-0723
Looking for that
special place
called home?
Classified will address
Your needs.
Open the door
with classified!
DALLAS
211 Hillside One
"Newberry Estate"
OPEN HOUSE
MAY 6TH
1PM-2:30PM
Enjoy comforts and
amenities of living in
a beautifully main-
tained townhouse.
3000 square feet.,
4 bedrooms, 3 l/2
baths, hardwood
floors, Bright & Airy
kitchen, Tennis,golf
and swimming are
yours to enjoy.
PRICE REDUCED!
$179,000
MLS# 11-2608
Call Geri
570-696-0888
906 Homes for Sale
DALLAS
4 bedroom Colonial
with hardwood
floors in formal din-
ing & living room.
Modern eat in
kitchen, finished
basement with 24
x 30 recreation
room. Deck, hot tub
and ceiling fans.
MLS#11-4504
$199,000
Call Joe Moore
570-288-1401
DALLAS
Huge Reduction
248 Overbrook Rd.
Lovely 4 bedroom
cape cod situated
in a private setting
on a large lot.
Vaulted ceiling in
dining room, large
walk in closet in 1
bedroom on 2nd
floor. Some
replacement win-
dows. Call Today!
MLS 11-2733
$114,900
Jay A. Crossin
Extension 23
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
To place your
ad call...829-7130
DALLAS
Just minutes from
309 this Bi-level is
ideally located near
shopping, schools
and major high-
ways. Complete
with an oak kitchen
with dining area
leading to deck, 3
bedrooms and bath
on the main level
plus L shaped family
room, 4th bedroom,
power room & stor-
age/ laundry area it
awaits its new own-
ers. It offers a spa-
cious rear yard, an
enclosed patio and
has dual access
from 2 streets.
$ 121,900.
Ann Marie Chopick
570-760-6769
570-288-6654
906 Homes for Sale
DALLAS
NEWBERRY ESTATE
ORCHARD EAST
Two bedroom
condo, 2nd floor.
Living/dining room
combination. 1,200
square feet of easy
living. Tiled bath,
new vinyl exterior,
Two balconies,new
roof, 2005. New
electrical system.
one car garage
nearby. Security
system, cedar clos-
et, use of in-ground
pool.
$109,000
MLS#11-4031
Call Joe Moore
570-288-1401
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
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the directions!
DALLAS
148 E Center Hill Rd
Conveniently locat-
ed, roomy and
comfortable 2 story
awaits your family.
3 bedrooms 1.5
bath, hardwood
floors, new deck
and pool, new win-
dows. MLS#11-3815
New price
$144,900
Call Tracy Zarola
570-696-0723
906 Homes for Sale
DALLAS
Newberry Estates
Condos with archi-
tect designed interi-
or on 3 floors.
Large, well equipped
tiled kitchen with
separate breakfast
room, den with fire-
place-brick & gran-
ite hearth. Open floor
plan in living/dining
area. 3 or 4 bed-
rooms, 3.5 baths.
Lower level has den
or 4th bedroom with
family room & bath.
Recently sided;
attached 2-car
garage, walk-out
lower level, decks
on 1st & 2nd floor;
pets accepted
(must be approved
by condo associa-
tion). Country Club
amenities included
& private pool for
Meadows residents.
MLS 12-203
$250,000
Maribeth Jones
570-696-6565
Collect cash, not dust!
Clean out your
basement, garage
or attic and call the
Classified depart-
ment today at 570-
829-7130!
DRUMS
61 Acer Lane
Great value, great
location on a fabu-
lous lot. From your
hot tub you can
enjoy the view of the
almost full acre lot.
Year round sun
room, plus you have
a Lower Level that
adds more space to
this great home.
Dont miss out on
this incredible buy!!
Schedule your
showing today.
MLS 12-808
$139,900
Call Tony Wasco
570-855-2424
Trademark
Realtor Group
570-613-9090
906 Homes for Sale
DUPONT
140 Bear Creek
Boulevard
Beautiful family
home
on over 1/2
acre with 3 bed-
rooms, 4 bath-
rooms and fin-
ished lower
level.
For more info
and photos visit:
www. atlasreal-
tyinc.com
MLS 12-918
$159,900
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
S
O
L
D
ComeUpToQuailHill.
com
New Homes
From $275,000-
$595,000
570-474-5574
Looking to buy a
home?
Place an ad here
and let the
sellers know!
570-829-7130
DURYEA
$159,900
Good visibility com-
mercial location.
Room for up to 3
businesses! Also
has 2 apartments.,
off-street parking
for 8 w/ possibility.
of much more in
rear. Great for
Beauty/Nail Salon,
Fitness Studio,
Shop, and Garage
type businesses.
Call
CHRISTINE KUTZ
for more
information.
570-332-8832
LINEUP
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INCLASSIFIED!
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in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
To place your
ad Call Toll Free
1-800-427-8649
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!
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
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!
PAGE 8D WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 2012 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
906 Homes for Sale
DURYEA
97 Chittenden St.
Flood damaged
home with new fur-
nace, electric box,
water heater, out-
lets and switches.
1st floor gutted but
already insulated
and ready for
sheetrock. 2nd floor
has 4 bedrooms
and bath with dou-
ble sinks. Large
yard. For more info
and photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com.
MLS 12-1225
$69,900
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
DURYEA
NEW PRICE!!!!!
621 Donnelly St.
Great starter home,
already furnished,
newer roof and
vinyl windows.
Move right into this
2 bedroom, 1/2
double home.
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc. com
MLS 12-1042
$29,900
Call Tom
570-262-7716
LINEUP
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INCLASSIFIED!
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in classified
is the best way
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Youre in bussiness
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DURYEA
REDUCED
619 Foote Ave.
Fabulous Ranch
home with 3 bed-
rooms, 2 baths,
ultra modern
kitchen with granite
counters, heated
tile floor and stain-
less appliances.
Dining room has
Brazilian cherry
floors, huge yard,
garage and large
yard. Partially fin-
ished lower level. If
youre looking for a
Ranch, dont miss
this one. For more
info and photos
visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com.
MLS 11-4079
$149,900
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
DURYEA REDUCED!
38 Huckleberry Ln
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
$309,860
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
EXETER
530 Cherry
Drive
Spacious 2 bed-
room townhome
with hardwood
floor, gas heat,
central air, end
unit with one
garage. All
appliances,
move in condi-
tion.
For more info
and
photos visit:
www. atlasreal-
tyinc.com
MLS 12-712
$169,900
Call Tom
570-262-7716
P
E
N
D
I
N
G
906 Homes for Sale
EXETER
908 Primrose Court
Move right into this
newer 3 bedroom,
1.5 bath Townhome
with many
upgrades including
hardwood floors
throughout and tiled
bathrooms. Lovely
oak cabinets in the
kitchen, central air,
fenced in yard, nice
quiet neighborhood.
MLS 11-2446
$117,900
Call Don Crossin
570-288-0770
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-287-0770
EXETER
Nice size 4 bed-
room home with
some hardwood
floors, large eat in
kitchen with break-
fast bar. 2 car
garage & partially
fenced yard. Close
to everything!
$89,000
Call
Christine Kutz
570-332-8832
EXETER
OPEN HOUSE
Sunday
12pm-5pm
362 Susquehanna
Ave
Completely remod-
eled, spectacular,
2 story Victorian
home, with 3 bed-
rooms, 1.5 baths,
new rear deck, full
front porch, tiled
baths and kitchen,
granite counter-
tops, all Cherry
hardwood floors
throughout, all new
stainless steel
appliances and
lighting, new oil fur-
nace, washer dryer
in first floor bath.
Great neighbor-
hood, nice yard.
$174,900 (30 year
loan, $8,750 down,
$887/month, 30
years @ 4.5%)
100% OWNER
FINANCING
AVAILABLE
Call Bob at
570-654-1490
EXETER REDUCED
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 cov-
ered patio. For
more informa-
tion and photos
visit: www.
atlasrealtyinc.co
m
MLS 11-2850
$179,900
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
S
O
L
D
EXETER
REDUCED
908 Primrose Court
Move right into this
newer 3 bedroom,
1.5 bath Townhome
with many
upgrades including
hardwood floors
throughout and tiled
bathrooms. Lovely
oak cabinets in the
kitchen, central air,
fenced in yard, nice
quiet neighborhood.
MLS 11-2446
$119,900
Call Don Crossin
570-288-0770
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-287-0770
EXETER TWP.
NEW PRICE
$699,000
311 Lockville Rd
Stately brick 2 story,
with in-ground pool,
covered patio, fin-
ished basement,
fireplace, wood
stove, 3 car att-
ached garage, 5 car
detached garage
with apartment
above.
MLS#11-1242
Call Joe or Donna,
613-9080
906 Homes for Sale
FORTY FORT
CHEAPER THAN
RENT!
38 Oak Street. Spa-
cious 1/2 double
block. Living room /
dining room combo.
3 bedrooms on sec-
ond floor, 3 on the
third. 1 1/2 baths. lst
floor laundry. 3
porches. Large yard
with loads of park-
ing. Aluminum sid-
ing. Concrete drive-
way. Many extras!
MLS # 12-711. Con-
ventional financing.
($2,995 down,
$325, month. 4
1/4% interest, 30
years. $59,900.
Bob Kopec
HUMFORD REALTY
570-822-5126
HANOVER
Great multi-family
home. Fully rented
double block offers
large updated
rooms, 3 bedrooms
each side. Nice
location. MLS 11-
4390 $129,900
Call/text for Details.
Donna Cain
570-947-3824
HANOVER
TOWNSHIP
3 bedrooms, 2
baths, finished
basement,
screened patio,
new paint & carpet.
Move in condition.
$139,900. Call
570-301-9590
HANOVER TWP
Very well main-
tained 2-story home
with 6 rooms, 3
bedrooms, large
eat-in kitchen and
1.5 baths. This home
also has a first floor
laundry room, duct-
less air conditioner,
gas steam heat and
a fenced in yard
with a shed. This
home is in move-in
condition just wait-
ing for you to move
into. Make an
appointment today!
#11-4433 $79,900
Karen Altavilla
283-9100 x28
Prudential:
696-2600
HANOVER TWP.
10 Lyndwood Ave
3 Bedroom 1.5 bath
ranch with new win-
dows hardwood
floors finished base-
ment 2 car garage
and a finished base-
ment. MLS 11-3610
$139,900
Call Pat Guesto
570-793-4055
CENTURY 21
SIGNATURE
PROPERTIES
570-675-5100
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
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the directions!
HANOVER TWP.
19 Lee Park Ave.
Well kept 3 bed-
room, 1 1/2 bath
single with eat in
kitchen, 1st floor
laundry area, w/w,
ceiling fans, full
concrete basement.
Gas heat. Home
sits on large lot with
2 car detached
garage and off
street parking.
MLS 12-541
$79,900
ANTONIK &
ASSOCIATES,
INC.
570-735-7494
Ext 304
Patricia Lunski
570-814-6671
906 Homes for Sale
HANOVER TWP.
20 Dexter St.,
Nice starter
home with shed -
M MOVE OVE-I -IN N R READY EADY! !
3 bedroom. Fenced
yard. Security sys-
tem. Roof 2006.
Hanover Area
Schools. This home
would be eligible for
the LUZERNE COUNTY
GROWING
HOMEOWNERS
INITIATIVE. Seller will
help with closing
cost expenses.
MONTHLY PAYMENT
$191 ON A 30 YEAR
MORTGAGE- HOW CAN
YOU BEAT THAT?
MLS #11-3023
Reduced
$35,000
Call Tracy Zarola
570-696-0723
HANOVER TWP.
476 Wyoming St.
Nice 3 bedroom
single home. Gas
heat. Convenient
location. To settle
estate. Reduced to
$34,900
Call Jim for details
Towne & Country
Real Estate Co.
570-735-8932 or
570-542-5708
Job Seekers are
looking here!
Where's your ad?
570-829-7130 and
ask for an employ-
ment specialist
HANOVER TWP.
78 Luzerne St.
Not a drive-by.
Move right into this
sparkling clean,
bright and cheery
1/2 double. All new
floor coverings and
freshly painted inte-
rior. 2 zone gas hot
water baseboard
heat. W/d hookups
in basement which
has a concrete
floor. All measure-
ments are
approximate.
MLS 12-1129
$45,000
Call Michelle T.
Boice
570-639-5393
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
HANOVER TWP.
95 Pulaski St.
Large home on
nice sized lot.
Newer windows,
walk up attic. 3
bedrooms, nice
room sizes,
walk out base-
ment. Great
price you could
move right in.
For more info
and photos visit:
www. atlasreal-
tyinc.com
MLS 11-4554
$39,900
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
S
O
L
D
HANOVER TWP.
Ext r aor di nar y
Quality Built
4000+ Square
Foot Home the
rear yard with stone
patio backs up to
the 8th Fairway of
the Wyoming Valley
Country Club!
Theres a custom
cherry eat-in kit-
chen with island,
formal living and
dining rooms with
hardwood floors,
1st Floor Family
Room with Vermont
Stone fireplace and
wet bar, 1st floor
Master Suite with
His & Her Dressing
and Powder Rooms
opening to a tiled
master bath with
jetted tub and sepa-
rate tiled shower;
Second floor has 3
additional Bed-
rooms with walk in
closets, 2 full baths
and large attic for
storage; Gigantic
Lower Level Family
Room has a stone
fireplace, seated
bar area with sink &
mirrored back-
splash, workout
area, & powder
room. Stunning
landscaping sur-
rounds this beautiful
home with an indoor
and outdoor speak-
er system, over-
sized 2 car garage
& underground
sprinkler system.
MLS #11-994
$385,000.
Call Pat today @
Century 21 Smith
Hourigan Group
570-287-1196
906 Homes for Sale
HANOVER TWP.
NEW LISTING
Two-story brick
home originally built
in the 1860swarm
and fuzzy is the feel-
ing as you enter this
gracious homeThe
living room is now a
pool room. Den
with Pergo flooring
and stunning fire-
place with built-in
bookshelves. Dining
room with hard-
wood floors, eat-in
kitchen, second
floor has 3 spacious
bedrooms, gas
heat, large fenced
yard.
#12-1426 $197,600
Maribeth Jones
696-6565
Prudential:
696-2600
HANOVER TWP.
REDUCED
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
$175,000
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
HANOVER TWP.
SOLD
285 Lyndwood Ave.
Brick 3 bedroom
Ranch with full fin-
ished basement.
Home features
large modern
kitchen, 3 nice size
bedrooms, all with
closets, hall coat
closet, w/w, mod-
ern bath, ceiling
fans, fenced yard.
Private driveway,
newer furnace.
Assessed value and
taxes recently
reduced!
MLS 12-222
$86,000
Patricia Lunski
570-814-6671
Antonik &
Associates, Inc.
570-735-7494
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
HANOVER
Multi-family. large 3
unit building, beauti-
fully updated apart-
ments. Two 3 bed-
room apartments &
one efficiency
apartment. Great
location also offers
street parking. This
is a must see.
$139,900. MLS 11-
4389. Call/text for
Details Donna Cain
570-947-3824
HANOVER TWP.
ATTENTION CAR
BUFFS!
4-car garage and
house. Garage has
updated roof,
house has beautiful
woodwork, spa-
cious room sizes, 3
bedrooms, possible
4th on third floor.
Windows are lead-
ed and stained
glass. Pay your
mortgage with
garage rental or
store your col-
lectibles. #11-4133
$75,000
Maribeth Jones
696-6565
Prudential:
696-2600
906 Homes for Sale
HARDING
2032 ROUTE 92
Great Ranch home
surrounded by
nature with view of
the river and extra
lot on the river.
Large living room
and kitchen remod-
eled and ready to
move in. Full unfin-
ished basement, off
street parking.
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-79
$78,900
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
HARVEYS LAKE
4 bedroom Cape
Cod, 3 car garage,
pool, with 64 feet.
of lakefront.MLS#
12-1636
$599,900. call
Stephen @ 814-4183
JJ Mantione
Appraisal & Realty
Group Inc.
HARVEYS LAKE
Dallas School
District.
Wooded and private
Bi-Level. This home
features 1 car
garage, 3 bed-
rooms, 1 3/4 bath &
nice updates. plenty
of room on your pri-
vate 2 acre lot.
Call for details.
$166,000
Call Cindy King
570-690-2689
www.cindykingre.com
570-675-4400
HARVEYS LAKE
Ridge Ave
Modern 2 story
home on 1+ acre.
Duplex. Excellent
starter home,
retirement home,
or investment
property public
sewer,deep well.
asking $109,900
570-287-5775
or 570-332-1048
HARVEYS LAKE
Nice country home
with almost a full
acre of land. 1 mile
from Harveys Lake.
Home offers some
new windows, new
copper piping and
updated electric cir-
cuits. Come relax in
the nice screen
porch. MLS 12-476
$148,000
Call Tony
570-855-2424
HUGHESTOWN
REDUCED
189 Rock St.
Spacious home
with 4 bed-
rooms and large
rooms. Nice old
woodwork,
staircase, etc.
Extra lot for
parking off Ken-
ley St.
For more info
and photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-3404
$89,900
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
P
E
N
D
I
N
G
JENKINS TWP
1252 Main St.
3 Bedrooms
1 Bath
Finished Walk-Out
Basement
Corner Lot
Single Car
Garage
$57,900
Call Vince
570-332-8792
906 Homes for Sale
JENKINS TWP.
2 W. Sunrise Drive
PRICED TO SELL!
This 4 bedroom has
2 car garage with
extra driveway,
central air, veranda
over garage, recre-
ation room with
fireplace and wet
bar. Sunroom
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-296
$199,900
Call Tom
570-262-7716
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
JENKINS
TWP.
297 Susquehannock
Drive
Traditional 4 bed-
room home with 2.5
baths, 2 car
garage, private
yard with above
ground pool. Large
deck with
retractable awning.
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com.
MLS 12-945
$254,900
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
JENKINS TWP.
4 Orchard St.
3 bedroom
starter home
with 1 bath on
quiet street.
For more info
and photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-254
$69,900
Call Tom
570-262-7716
P
E
N
D
I
N
G
JENKINS TWP.
4 Widener Drive
A must see home!
You absolutely must
see the interior of
this home. Start by
looking at the pho-
tos on line. Fantas-
tic kitchen with
hickory cabinets,
granite counters,
stainless steel
appliances and tile
floor. Fabulous
master bathroom
with champagne
tub and glass
shower, walk in
closet. 4 car
garage, upper
garage is partially
finished. The list
goes on and on. For
more info and pho-
tos visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com.
MLS 12-210
$389,900
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
JENKINS TWP.
Highland Hills
8 Patrick Road
Magnificent custom
built tudor home
with quality
throughout. Spa-
cious 4 bedrooms,
3.5 baths, 2 story
living room with
fireplace and library
loft. Dining room,
family room and 3
season sunroom
which overlooks
professionally land-
scaped grounds
with gazebo and
tennis/basketball
court. Lower level
includes recreation
room, exercise
room and 3/4 bath.
Enjoy this serene
acre in a beautiful
setting in Highland
Hills Development.
Too many amenities
to mention. For
more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-723
$399,900
Call Terry
570-885-3041
Angie
570-885-4896
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 thru-
out, enjoy the priva-
cy of deck & patio
with fenced yard.
MLS 11-2841
$123,000
Call Arlene Warunek
570-650-4169
Smith Hourigan
Group
(570) 696-1195
Looking for that
special place
called home?
Classified will address
Your needs.
Open the door
with classified!
KINGSTON
38 W. Walnut St.
Charming 4/5 bed-
room with 1.5
baths. Beautifully
appointed kitchen
w/granite counter
tops, cherry cabi-
nets and hardwood
floors. Gas fireplace
in living room, lead-
ed glass windows
in living room and
dining room. Nice
back deck, 2 car
garage and 4 sea-
son front porch.
MLS 11-4103
$179,900
Jay A. Crossin
EXT. 23
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
KINGSTON
431 Chestnut Ave.
Charming 2 story
single family home
with upgrades,
including new
kitchen cabinets,
furnace, hot water
heater, 200 amp
electric, 2 car
detached garage.
Walk up attic for
additional storage
space. MLS 11-4106
$129,900
Jay A. Crossin
EXT 23
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
KINGSTON
MOTIVATED SELLER
REDUCED!
76 N. Dawes Ave.
Use your income
tax rebate for a
downpayment on
this great home
with modern
kitchen with granite
counters, 2 large
bedrooms,
attached garage,
full basement could
be finished, sun
porch overlooks
great semi private
yard. A great house
in a great location!
Come see it!
. For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-41
$115,000
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
KINGSTON TWP
573 Carverton Rd
Privacy & serenity!
This 40 acre estate
features living room
with fireplace &
hardwood floor;
family room with
vaulted ceiling &
fireplace; 1st floor
master bedroom &
bath with jetted tub
& stall shower; pan-
elled den; dining
room with stone
floor & skylight; 3
additional bedrooms
& 2 baths. Central
Air, 3 outbuildings.
REDUCED
$695,000
MLS 11-4056
Call Nancy Judd
Joe Moore
570-288-1401
906 Homes for Sale
LAFLIN
13 Fordham Road
Totally remodeled
custom brick ranch
in Oakwood Park.
This home features
an open floor plan
with hardwood
floors, 2 fireplaces,
kitchen, formal living
& dining rooms,
family room, 4 bed-
rooms, 4 baths,
office with private
entrance, laundry
room on first floor,
tons of closets and
storage areas,
walk-up attic, great
finished basement
with fireplace, built-
in grill, in-ground
pool, cabana with
half bath, an over-
sized 2-car garage
& a security system.
Renovations include
new: windows, gas
furnace, central air,
electrical service,
hardwood floors,
Berber carpeting,
freshly painted,
updated bathrooms
& much, much,
more. Laflin Road to
Fordham Road, on
right. $399,700
Call Donna
570-613-9080
LARKSVILLE
125 W. Luzerne Ave.
3 bedrooms with
first floor bath and
family room. Roof,
vinyl siding, heating
system, second
floor windows and
insulation all
installed in 2005. 40
x 109 lot. Private
driveway. MLS # 12-
1437. Only $49,900.
Ask for Bob Kopec,
Humford Realty, Inc.
570-822-5126
LUZERNE
459 Bennett St.
Very nice 5 bed-
room, 2 story home
in nice area of
Luzerne. Off street
parking for 4 cars.
1st floor master
bedroom & laundry.
Replacement win-
dows on 2nd floor.
5 year young full
bath. Modern
kitchen w/breakfast
bar, oak cabinets.
Basement always
DRY! All measure-
ments approximate
MLS11-3745
$122,900
Debbie McGuire
570-332-4413
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
LUZERNE
Large, spacious
home, ultra modern
kitchen, new win-
dows, carpet &
bath. Off-street
parking, gas heat &
hardwood floors.
Large open floor
plan. Must See!
MLS #12-958
$105,000
Call Lynda Rowinski
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-696-5418
MOUNTAIN TOP
Beautiful 3 bed-
room, 2 3/4 bath,
with hardwood
floors under carpet
& 2nd kitchen in
lower level for
entertaining.
screened porch,
landscaped yard,
heated workshop &
much more!
$179,900
Call Christine Kutz
570-332-8832
MOUNTAIN TOP
Greystone Manor.
Ten year old home
with attached apart-
ment. 3 bedrooms,
2.5 baths. Kitchen,
living room, dining
room & den. Apart-
ment has 1 bed-
room, bath, living
room, dining room,
private entrance. 3
car garage, front
porch, large decks.
Total 2,840 square
feet. On cul-de-sac.
Call BOB RUNDLE
for appointment.
COLDWELL BANKER
RUNDLE REAL ESTATE
570-474-2340,
Ext. 11
906 Homes for Sale
MOUNTAINTOP
9 Anne Street
Modern bi-level, 3
bedroom, 1.5 bath,
tile kitchen and bath
floor. New appli-
ances, new 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 $199,900 OBO
570-823-4282 or
570-823-7540
MOUNTAINTOP
Beautiful and great
condition, spacious
4 bedroom, 2.5
bath traditional 2
story home situated
on a large level
nicely landscaped
lot. Newer kitchen.
Crestwood Schools.
Features large
cedar walled 3 sea-
son room with sky-
light and doors to
large deck, Family
room with fireplace,
formal dining and
living rooms, 1st
floor laundry, & gas
HWBB heat.
MLS# 12-1065
$238,000. Call Pat.
Direct line
715-9337.
Lewith & Freeman
Real Estate
570-474-9801
MOUNTAINTOP
Move right into this
beautiful 4 bedroom
home in desirable
Rockledge develop-
ment. Many
upgrades & fea-
tures including mod-
ern kitchen with
granite countertops,
22x20 great room,
2 fireplaces, new
paint, carpet, gor-
geous 2 tier deck
& much more.
$245,000. For more
information or to
schedule a viewing
please Call
570-242-5381
MOUNTAINTOP
OPEN HOUSE
SUNDAY
12:00 - 1:30PM
29 Valley View Dr.
MOTIVATED SELLER
Modern kitchen and
bath. Tile floors.
Corner lot with
deck overlooking
spacious yard.
Great neighbor-
hood. Conveniently
located. Easy to
show. Call for an
appointment today
MLS#11-2500
$174,900
Julio Caprari:
570-592-3966
MOUNTAINTOP
VACANT LAND
333 OAKMONT LANE
1.15 acre, level lot,
#254, on
cul-de-sac, in
Laurel Lakes.
Underground elec-
tric, phone & cable.
Ready for your new
home in 2012!
MLS# 11-4465
$35,500
Call Christina Kane
570-714-9235
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
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the directions!
MOUNTAIN TOP
LOCATION LOCA-
TION LOCATION!
Beautiful home in
Alberdeen Acres,
hole 7 of Blue Ridge
Golf Course. 1.84
acres of serenity.
Large 4 bedroom
home with great
deck to relax on and
enjoy your sur-
roundings. Come
make this your pri-
vate retreat today.
$259,900. MLS 12-
1627. For more
information or to
schedule a showing
call or text Donna
570-947-3824 or
Tony 570-855-2424
Looking for that
special place
called home?
Classified will address
Your needs.
Open the door
with classified!
To place your
ad Call Toll Free
1-800-427-8649
Find Something?
Lose Something?
Get it back where it
belongs
with a Lost/Found ad!
570-829-7130
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!
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 2012 PAGE 9D
906 Homes for Sale 906 Homes for Sale
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
New Bridge Center
480 Pierce Street
Ofcenter250
250 Pierce Street
Ofcenter270
270 Pierce Street
Park Ofce Building
400 Third Ave.
Ofcenter220
220 Pierce Street
KINGSTON OFFICENTERS
www.lippiproperties.com
906 Homes for Sale
NANITCOKE
3 bedroom, 1 bath.
Nice opportunity for
a starter home or
investment proper-
ty. Needs work, but
columns, moldings,
and leaded glass
windows are intact.
Reduced $40,000
CALL CHRISTINE
KUTZ
570-332-8832
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
NANTICOKE
$49,900
136 East Ridge St.
A great home fea-
tures 3 bedrooms,
plenty of closet
space, modern eat
in kitchen with
great appliances,
living room with
wood pellet stove,
large family room, 1
1/2 modern bath-
rooms, washer/
dryer hook-up, sec-
ond floor has all new
replacement
windows, exterior
has aluminum sid-
ing, stain glass win-
dow on new front
porch, new above
ground pool, fenced
in level yard, Plenty
of off street parking,
A+ today. Never
worry about park-
ing, its always there.
Great location, best
price home in
today's market,
Shown by appoint-
ment only, to quali-
fied buyers.
Call John Vacendak
CAPITOL REAL
ESTATE
570-735-1810
www.capitol-
realestate.com
for additional
photos
NANTICOKE
1/2 DOUBLE
Great starter home
in nice area. Close
to schools and
recreation. Large 3
season porch with
cabinetry, great for
entertaining. New
plumbing, lots of
light & huge walk
up attic for storage
or rec room.
$35,000
Call CHRISTINE
KUTZ
570-332-8832
906 Homes for Sale
NANTICOKE
143 W. Broad St.
Nice 2 story home
with 3 bedrooms
1.5 baths, fenced
yard, newer furnace
with 3 zones and
newer 200 amp
electrical service.
This home has an
attached Mother in
Law suite with a
separate entrance.
This can easily be
converted to a 1st
floor master bed-
room with a
master bath.
MOS 12-1401
$69,900
John W. Polifka
Five Mountains
Realty
570-542-2141
570-704-6846
Collect cash, not dust!
Clean out your
basement, garage
or attic and call the
Classified depart-
ment today at 570-
829-7130!
NANTICOKE
182 Robert Street
Nice single or
duplex. Gas heat.
Detached garage.
This home is high
and dry, and avail-
able for immediate
occupancy. Call
Jim for details.
Affordable @
$104,900
TOWNE &
COUNTRY R.E.
570-735-8932
570-542-5708
NANTICOKE
214 West Ridge St
Great 2 story home,
freshly painted and
carpeted, large
rooms. Don't miss
out on this great buy
and to own a home
of your own. 12-1302
$69,900
Call Karen
Coldwell Banker
Rundle Real Estate
570-474-2340
NANTICOKE
294-296
EAST STATE ST
Beautiful woodwork
highlights the Victo-
rian influenced 3
bedroom home fea-
turing hardwood
floors, pocket &
transoms doors,
shuttered windows,
crown molding &
large bay window.
Plus a 2+ bedroom
unit with newer
kitchen to help pay
mortgage.
MLS 12-674
$89,000
Call Arlene Warunek
570-650-4169
Smith Hourigan
Group
(570) 696-1195
906 Homes for Sale
NANTICOKE
415 Jones Street
Adorable home with
charm & character.
4 bedrooms, 1.5
baths, eat-in kit-
chen, formal dining
room, family room
with gas fireplace.
3 season room,
fenced in yard with
rear deck & shed.
$119,000
MLS#12-498
Michael Nocera
570-357-4300
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-696-5412
NANTICOKE
Get ready for your
outdoor entertain-
ing!! Fenced &
beautifully land-
scaped lot with
huge rear Trex
decks and newer
above ground pool.
Plenty of off-street
parking & detached
2-car oversized
garage. 2 Story has
3 bedrooms, formal
dining room & mod-
ern kitchen with
corian counters &
oak cabinets. MLS#
12-457
$117,900
Call Deb
Roccograndi at
570-696-6671
NANTICOKE
Motivated seller!
Affordable 3 bed-
room 2 story home.
Features a study on
1st floor, or could
be a 4th bedroom.
Semi modern
kitchen, includes
appliances "as is",
gas heat, full base-
ment. MLS#12-1107
Asking $52,000.
Call Pat at
715-9337.
Lewith & Freeman
Real Estate
570-474-9801
NEWPORT TWP.
5 bedroom Contem-
porary has a vaulted
ceiling in living room
with fireplace. Hard-
wood floors in din-
ing & living rooms.
1st floor master
bedroom with walk
in closet. Lower
level family room.
Deck, garage, sep-
arate laundry.
$257,500
MLS#12-170
Call Joe Moore
570-288-1401
NORTH LAKE
Inviting home with
90 of lakefront &
wonderful enclosed
dock. The huge
great room features
a vaulted ceiling,
hard wood floors,
handsome stone
fireplace, built-in
cabinets & long win-
dow seat with offer-
ing lake view. Mod-
ern kitchen with
large pantry for
entertaining, Master
suite opens to 3
season room, also
lakefront. 2nd floor
guest rooms are
oversized. MLS#
11-2954 $328,500
Call Rhea
570-696-6677
Looking to buy a
home?
Place an ad here
and let the
sellers know!
570-829-7130
PITTSON
8 rooms, 4 bed-
rooms & bath, eat-in
kitchen, formal din-
ing room, new win-
dows, gas heat.
MLS # 11-4369
$74,500
Call Donna
570-613-9080
906 Homes for Sale
PITTSTON
175 Oak Street
New furnace,
3 bedrooms, 1.5
baths, 1st floor
laundry room, 3
season porch,
fenced yard and off
street parking.
MLS#12-721
$84,900
Call Patti
570-328-1752
Liberty Realty
& Appraisal
Services LLC
PITTSTON
Johnson St.
Great home, move
in ready, with 3
bedrooms, 1.5
baths, large yard
with lots of outdoor
living space. Hard-
wood floors, gas
fireplace, modern
eat in kitchen. New
gas furnace, roof
and windows. For
more info and pho-
tos visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com.
MLS 12-328
$139,900
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
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on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
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the directions!
LivingInQuailHill.com
New Homes
From $275,000-
$595,000
570-474-5574
PITTSTON
REDUCED
168 Mill St.
Large 3 bed-
room home with
2 full baths. 7
rooms on nice
lot with above
ground pool. 1
car garage. For
more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-3894
$79,000
Tom Salvaggio
570-262-7716
P
E
N
D
I
N
G
PITTSTON
REDUCED
238 S. Main St.
Ten room home
with 4 bedrooms, 2
baths, 2 car
garage, great drive-
way, central air,
large yard. A must
see home!
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-477
$129,900
Call Tom
570-262-7716
PITTSTON REDUCED
31 Tedrick St.
Very nice 3 bed-
room with 1
bath. This house
was loved and
you can tell.
Come see for
yourself, super
clean home with
nice curb
appeal. For
more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-3544
Reduced to
$76,900
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
P
E
N
D
I
N
G
906 Homes for Sale
PITTSTON
REDUCED!
95 William St.
1/2 double home
with more
square footage
than most single
family homes. 4
bedrooms, 1.5
baths, ultra
modern kitchen
and remodeled
baths. Super
clean. For more
information and
photos visit
www.atlas
realtyinc. com
MLS 11-2120
$54,900
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
P
E
N
D
I
N
G
PITTSTON TWP.
REDUCED
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
$154,900
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
PITTSTON TWP.
REDUCED
38 Frothingham
St.
Four square
home with loads
of potential and
needs updating
but is priced to
reflect its condi-
tion. Nice neigh-
borhood. Check
it out. For more
info and photos
visit: www.
atlasrealtyinc.co
m
MLS 11-3403
$54,900
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
P
E
N
D
I
N
G
PLAINS
117 Mara Lane
Beautiful townhome
in EXCELLENT con-
dition with many
upgrades including
hardwood floors,
huge deck, upgrad-
ed light fixtures &
appliances. MLS#
12-1336 $204,000
Call Tracy Zarola
570-696-0723
PLAINS
1610 Westminster
Road.
DRASTIC PRICE
REDUCTION
Paradise found!
Your own personal
retreat, small pond
in front of yard, pri-
vate setting only
minutes from every-
thing. Log cabin
chalet with 3 bed-
rooms, loft, stone
fireplace, hardwood
floors. Detached
garage with bonus
room. Lots to see.
Watch the snow fall
in your own cabin
in the woods.
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com.
MLS 11-319
$279,900
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
906 Homes for Sale
PLAINS
63 Clarks Lane
3 story Townhome
with 2 bedrooms, 3
baths, plenty of
storage with 2 car
built in garage.
Modern kitchen and
baths, large room
sizes and deck.
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com.
MLS 11-4567
$144,900
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
Find Something?
Lose Something?
Get it back where it
belongs
with a Lost/Found ad!
570-829-7130
PLAINS
86 St. Marys St.
Nice 3 bedroom, 1
bath Single in Plains
with large modern
kitchen, master
bedroom with dou-
ble closets, beauti-
ful woodwork, w/w,
ceiling fans, attic,
porches, shed,
gas heat.
MLS 10-3939
$68,000
ANTONIK &
ASSOCIATES,
INC.
570-735-7494
Ext. 304
Patricia Lunski
570-814-6671
PLYMOUTH
Fixer upper on a
deep large lot, close
to everything. Home
offers off street
parking, 4 bed-
rooms, laundry
room and 1 full bath.
Brand new furnace
installed last year.
Great investment
opportunity here
don't pass it by this
house has lots of
potential. Seller
says bring all offers.
MLS 12-367
$30,000
Contact Tony,
570-855-2424 for
more information or
to schedule your
showing.
PLYMOUTH
Roomy 2 bedroom
single with eat-in
kitchen, tile bath,
gas heat & 2 car
detached garage.
Priced to sell at
$33,000
MLS 11-2653
Ann Marie Chopick
570-760-6769
570-288-6654
PLYMOUTH
This 4 bedroom 2
story has a full bath
on the 1st floor and
rough in for bath on
2nd floor. An
enclosed side patio
from the kitchen
dinette area & side
drive are a big plus.
MLS 12-553
Only $27,900
Ann Marie Chopick
570-760-6769
570-288-6654
SAND SPRINGS
Great price! 4 bed-
rooms, 3 baths, only
3 years old. Located
in Sand Springs Golf
community. Master
bath & second floor
laundry. Kitchen has
granite counter tops
and stainless steel
appliances. Base-
ment can be easily
finished with walk-
out sliding doors.
Why pay new con-
struction prices?
Save thousands!
Home is cleaned &
ready for occupan-
cy! MLS#12-775
$209,900
Paul Pukatch
696-6559
696-2600
906 Homes for Sale
SHAVERTOWN
1195 Sutton Road
Attractive, well-
maintained saltbox
on 2 private acres
boasts fireplaces in
living room, family
room & master bed-
room. Formal dining
room. Large Florida
room with skylights
& wet bar. Oak
kitchen opens to
family room. 4 bed-
rooms, 3 1/2 baths.
Finished lower level.
Carriage barn.
PRICE REDUCED
$425,000
MLS# 10-3394
Call Joe Moore
570-288-1401
SHAVERTOWN
122 Manor
Move right in to this
comfortable, well
maintained home.
Newer roof and
beautiful wood floor.
Make this home
yours in the New
Year!
MLS# 11-4538
$165,000
Jolyn Bartoli
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-696-5425
SHAVERTOWN
57 Sara Drive
Bright & open floor
plan. This 7 year old
home offers
premium finishes
throughout, beauti-
ful kitchen with
granite tops, walk-
out lower level fin-
ished with 3/4 bath
- french doors out
to private 1.16 acre
lot.
MLS# 12-1617
$432,000
Call Geri
570-696-0888
SHAVERTOWN
Wonderful home in
convenient location
features spacious
formal rooms, beau-
tiful hardwood
floors, & grand
stone fireplaces.
Kitchen opens to
bright sunroom/
breakfast area. 4
large bedrooms,
office & 2 baths on
2nd floor. Charming
wrap around porch
offers views of large
property with
mature oak and
pines. MLS#11-528
$499,000
Call Rhea
570-696-6677
SHAVERTOWN
Well maintained
raised ranch in
Midway Manor.
Good size level
yard with shed.
Large sunroom /
laundry addition.
Lower level family
room with wood
stove. $155,000
Call
Christine Kutz
570-332-8832
SHICKSHINNY
119 West Union
Street
Out of flood zone!
Large, 2 story frame
with 2, three bed-
room apartments.
Off street parking,
Large, dry base-
ment, oil heat, large
front porch and
yard, also 4 room
rented cottage,
with garage in the
rear of the same
property. $85,000.
Great home and/or
rental.
Call 570-542-4489
SHICKSHINNY
3 bedroom, 2.5
bath log sided
Ranch on almost 2
acres. Lower level
is 3/4 finished.
Reduced! $195,000
MLS-11-4038
Five Mountains
Realty
570-542-2141
906 Homes for Sale
SHICKSHINNY
408 Cragle Hill Rd.
This is a very well
kept Ranch home
on 6 acres, central
air, rear patio and 1
car garage. This is
a 3 parcel listing.
MLS 11-4273
$157,900
Jackie Roman
570-288-0770
Ext. 39
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
SHICKSHINNY
Great new con-
struction on 2 acres
with 1 year builders
warranty! 2 story
home, 4 bedrooms,
2.5 baths, master
with whirlpool tub,
living room with gas
fireplace, dining
room with tray ceil-
ing, kitchen, break-
fast room & laundry
room. 2 car att-
ached garage, open
porch & rear deck.
$275,000
MLS 11-2453
Five Mountains
Realty
570-542-2141
SHICKSHINNY
Very nice Ranch
home with 4 bed-
rooms, 2 full baths,
kitchen, dining room
& living room. Plus
propane fireplace in
living room, french
doors in dining room
and large deck with
a view. $159,900
MLS 12-287
Five Mountains
Realty
570-542-2141
SWEET VALLEY
5411 Main Road
Commercial zoned
property on busy
corner. Country
Colonial home with
detached 2 car
garage, with addi-
tional office space
and entrance door.
Perfect property for
home based busi-
ness. Eat in kitchen
with brick gas fire-
place, large dining
room and living
room with coal
stove. Finished
basement with 2
rooms & 1/2 bath.
Old fashioned root
cellar off the
kitchen. Large
paved parking area.
MLS 11-2554
$188,000
570-675-4400
SWEET VALLEY
If you crave privacy,
consider this stun-
ning, 3 bedroom,
2.5 bath, 2 story
traditional cradled
on a 2 acre lot.
Ultra modern
kitchen with break-
fast area, great
room with cathedral
ceiling & fireplace,
formal dining room
& bonus room over
2 car garage. Only
$299,000.
MLS# 12-679
Call Barbara
Metcalf
570-696-0883
LEWITH &
FREEMAN
570-696-3801
SWEET VALLEY
Nice country bi-level
on 40 acres with 3
bedrooms, 1.5
baths, kitchen, living
room, family room,
office & laundry
room, plus attached
oversized 2 car
garage with work-
shop, rear deck & 3
sheds. Bordering
state game lands.
$319,900.
MLS-11-1094
Five Mountains
Realty
570-542-2141
SWEET VALLEY
Totally remodeled 3
bedroom, 2 bath
home on 1 acre with
large family room on
lower level. property
has small pond and
joins state game
lands. Reduced!
$129,900 Could be
FHA financed.
MLS# 11-4085
Five Mountains
Realty
570-542-2141
906 Homes for Sale
SWOYERSVILLE
129 Townsend St.
Wonderful home in
great neighbor-
hood. Relax in the
pool after a hard
day of work.
Property offers the
opportunity to have
your own Beauty
Shop (equipment
negotiable), or
expand your living
space. Buyer
responsible for con-
firming zoning for
business. All
measurements
approximate.
MLS# 12-833
$200,000
Jolyn Bartoli
570-696-5425
SWOYERSVILLE
New Listing!
3 bedrooms, 1 bath
home on double lot.
One car garage,
two 3 season
porches, security
system & attic just
insulated.
$90,000.
Call
Christine Kutz
570-332-8832
SWOYERSVILLE
OPEN HOUSE
Sunday
12pm-5pm
52 Barber Street
Beautifully remod-
eled 3 bedroom, 1
bath home in the
heart of the town.
With new carpets,
paint, windows,
doors and a mod-
ern kitchen and
bath. Sale includes
all appliances:
refrigerator, stove,
dishwasher, washer
and dryer. Nice yard
and superb neigh-
borhood. Priced to
sell at $89,900 or
$433.00 per month
(bank rate; 30
years, 4.25%, 20%
down). Owner also
willing to finance
100% of transaction
with a qualified
cosigner. Call Bob at
570-654-1490
SWOYERSVILLE
REDUCED!!! REDUCED!!!
78 Maltby Ave.
Wonderful family
home in a great
neighborhood. A
large master suite
and family room
addition make this
home a must see!
There is an
inground pool and
attached in-law
suite.
MLS 11-4572
$210,000
Call Kelly
Connolly-Cuba
EXT. 37
Crossin Real
Estate
570-288-0770
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
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SWOYERSVILLE
Spacious 4 bed-
room colonial on 40
x 150 lot with private
drive, gas heat,
modern kitchen and
1.5 baths. French
doors between liv-
ing room and formal
dining room plus an
entrance foyer with
wood stair case and
Hardwood floors.
MLS 12-1304
$44,270
Ann Marie Chopick
570-760-6769
570-288-6654
906 Homes for Sale
TAYLOR
Featured on
WNEPs Home &
Backyard. Move
right into this 3
bedroom, 2 bath
immaculate home
with custom maple
eat in kitchen,
stainless steel
appliances, hard-
wood floors,
Jacuzzi tub, 2 fire-
places, abundance
of storage leading
outside to a private
sanctuary with
deck/pergola & Koi
pond. Off street
parking. MUST SEE.
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-733
$189,900
Call Keri
570-885-5082
TRUCKSVILLE
3 bedroom, 2 bath
double wide in nice
neighborhood.
Many updates.
Landscaped &
fenced yard with
large deck & koi
pond! Reduced
$75,000.
Call Christine
Kutz
570-332-8832
WAPWALLOPEN
Vinyl resided, new
shingles in 2008,
quiet location with
level, open ground.
Replacement
windows, new well
pump.
MLS #12-760
$64,900
Call Dale
570-256-3343
Five Mountain
Realty
WEST PITTSTON
225-227 Boston Ave
Double block.
Wyoming Area
schools. Out of flood
zone. 1 side rented
to long term tenant
at $525 /month.
Other side remod-
eled - move in or
rent at $650/month.
3 bedrooms each
side, gas furnaces,
sunrooms, large
yard. $149,000. Call
570-357-0042
WEST PITTSTON
DOUBLE BLOCK
OUT OF
FLOOD ZONE
3 bedrooms each
side, modern kit-
chens with birch
cabinets, lower level
recreation room on
one side. 3 season
porches overlooking
semi-private yard.
New roof in 2011.
$145,000
570-654-3755
Looking for that
special place
called home?
Classified will address
Your needs.
Open the door
with classified!
WEST PITTSTON
Wonderful, cozy
home on a corner
lot with in-ground
pool, yard and car-
port. Home is
across from Fox hill
Country Club.
$120,000
MLS# 12-755
Jolyn Bartoli
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-696-5425
Line up a place to live
in classified!
To place your
ad Call Toll Free
1-800-427-8649
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
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with classified!
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
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A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
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!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
PAGE 10D WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 2012 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
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)
100% OWNER
FINANCING
AVAILABLE
Call Bob at
570-654-1490
WEST WYOMING
REDUCED
550 Johnson St.
Nicely landscaped
corner lot sur-
rounds this brick
front Colonial in
desirable neighbor-
hood. This home
features a spacious
eat in kitchen, 4
bedrooms, 4 baths
including Master
bedroom with mas-
ter bath. 1st floor
laundry and finished
lower level. Enjoy
entertaining under
the covered patio
with hot tub, rear
deck for BBQs and
an above ground
pool. Economical
gas heat only $1224
per yr. For more
info and photos
visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-157
$249,900
Call Michele
Reap
570-905-2336
WEST PITTSTON
Nice double block,
not in the flood area!
3 vehicle detached
garage, off-street
parking for 4 vehi-
cles, front & rear
porches, patio,
fenced yard, nice &
private. Home also
has central air, #410
is updated & in very
good condition,
modern kitchen &
bath. Kitchen has
oak cabinets, stain-
less steel refrigera-
tor, center aisle, half
bath on 1st floor &
4th bedroom on 3rd
floor. Both sides
have hardwood
floors on 2nd floor.
MLS#12-737
$175,000
Louise Laine
283-9100 x20
Forty Fort Office
283-9100
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
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A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
WILKES-BARRE
Come invest your
time for a great
return. Fixer Upper
in a nice location,
nice neighborhood
out of the flood
zone. Offers 4 bed-
rooms and a beauti-
ful large lot. Dont
miss out Call for
your showing today.
MLS 12-432
$29,900
Call / text Donna
Cain 570-947-3824
WILKES-BARRE
16 Sullivan St.
Large 5 bedroom
home with a newer
roof, new gas fur-
nace, modern
kitchen and baths.
Close to
Central City.
MLS 12-1171
$60,000
Charles J.
Prohaska
Ext. 35
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
906 Homes for Sale
WILKES-BARRE
168 Blackman St
Nice maintained
large double on a
corner lot. Seller
willing to pay $2500
toward closing cost,
and $500 toward
paint. Great invest-
ment opportunity
live on one side and
rent the other. Extra
room in the attic on
both sides. Taxes
are being
reassessed.
$79,900
MLS# 12-675
Call Pat Doty
570-696-2468
WILKES-BARRE
19 Lawrence St.
Very well kept 3
bedroom, 1.5 bath 2
story with family
room, enclosed
back porch and
fenced in back
yard. Nice layout
with lots of closet
space. Modern
kitchen, laundry 1st
floor. Replacement
windows and much
more!
MLS 12-1325
$77,000
Jay A. Crossin
Ext. 23
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
WILKES-BARRE
2 Story, 3 bed-
rooms, 1 & 1/2 bath
single family. Large
eat-in kitchen, 1st
floor laundry, hard-
wood floors, newer
furnace & water
heater, 1 car
garage. Off street
parking. Quiet one
way street.
$49,900
MLS 11-4171
Call Jim Banos
Coldwell Banker
Rundle
570-991-1883
WILKES-BARRE
210 Academy St.
Large grand home.
Open concept
downstairs, 1 st
floor laundry, lots of
closet space,
fenced in back
yard, extra large
driveway. Garage
with floor pit, auto
garage door open-
er. 60 amp subpan-
el, walk up attic.
Loads of potential.
MLS 12-1268
$115,000
David
Krolikowski
570-288-0770
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
WILKES-BARRE
285 Blackman St
Great property.
Priced to sell quickly
and in move-in con-
dition! Easy access
to Interstate 81 &
shopping! 11-3215
$36,500
570-675-4400
WILKES-BARRE
35 Hillard St.
Hardwood floors,
fenced in yard,
large deck. Off
street parking. 3
bedroom home with
1st floor laundry.
Move in condition.
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-1655
$76,500
Colleen Turant
570-237-0415
906 Homes for Sale
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
46 Bradford St.
Pride of ownership
everywhere. 3 bed-
rooms, 1 bath, large
yard, off street
parking. Ready
to go!
MLS 12-1508
$69,900
Kevin Sobilo
570-817-0706
WILKES-BARRE
484 Madison St.
Well kept home
with finished base-
ment. Move in con-
dition with plenty of
rooms, new Pergo
floors on 2nd floor
and fenced in yard.
Newer roof and fur-
nace approximately
10 years old.
MLS 12-1291
$84,900
Donald Crossin
570-288-0770
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
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
77 Schuler St.
Newly renovated
with new windows,
door flooring, etc.
Goose Island
gem. Large home
with 3 bedrooms,
2.5 baths, screened
in porch overlook-
ing fenced in yard,
driveway, laminate
floors throughout.
Fresh paint, move
in condition. For
more info and pho-
tos visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-845
$99,900
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
WILKES-BARRE
89 Conwell Street
Well maintained 2
story home with a
finished lower level
and a gas fireplace.
New carpets and a
walk-up attic, great
for storage.
$60,000
MLS# 11-4529
Call Michael Nocera
SMITH HOURIGAN
GROUP
570-696-5412
WILKES-BARRE
Handyman Special
Extra large duplex
with 7 bedrooms, 2
baths, fireplace,
screened porch, full
basement and 2 car
garage on double
lot in Wilkes-Barre
City. $58,000.
ERA BRADY
ASSOCIATES
570-836-3848
906 Homes for Sale
WILKES-BARRE
Heights Section
Well maintained 2
story home, family
owned for 60+
years. Move in con-
dition. 3 bedrooms,
1 bath, living room,
dining room with
washer & dryer
hook-up. gas heat,
recently replaced
windows, front and
back porches,
fenced in yard,
close to elementary
& high school.
$51,900
Call 570-823-2726
Leave message if
no answer.
WILKES-BARRE
Just on the market
this 2 story offers a
modern kitchen,
formal dining room,
1st floor laundry
plus 2/3 bedrooms
On 2nd floor.
Affordably priced at
$ 27,900
MLS 12-50
Ann Marie Chopick
570-760-6769
570-288-6654
WILKES-BARRE
Nice 3 bedroom, 1
bath home, with 3
season porch and
detached 1 car
garage. Good
starter home in
well established
neighborhood.
Family owned for
many years.
$65,000
CALL
CHRISTINE KUTZ
570-332-8832
WILKES-BARRE
NOW REDUCED
298 Lehigh Street
Lovely 2 story with
new roof, furnace,
water heater, new
cabinets and appli-
ances. Whole house
newly insulated.
Nice deck and
fenced-in yard. Call
Chris at 570-885-
0900 for additional
info or to tour.
MLS 11-4505
$75,000
CROSSIN
REAL ESTATE
570-288-0770
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
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
PRICE REDUCED
115 Noble Lane
3 bedroom, 2 bath
end unit townhome
with finished lower
level. Natural gas
fireplace, 3 tiered
deck, newer roof,
cul de sac. For
more info and pho-
tos visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-1006
$59,900
Call Tom
570-262-7716
906 Homes for Sale
WILKES-BARRE
To Settle Estate
$56,900
REDUCED!
Offer Needed!
314 Horton Street
Wonderful home, 6
rooms. 3 bedrooms,
1 1/2 baths, two-
story, living room
with built-in book-
case, formal dining
room with entrance
to delightful porch.
Eat-in kitchen. Pri-
vate lot, detached
garage. A must see
home. MLS 11-2721
New Price $56,900
GO TO THE TOP...
CALL
JANE KOPP
REAL ESTATE
570-288-7481
WYOMING
527 Dennison St.
Charming brick
Tudor home in won-
derful neighbor-
hood. Hardwood
floors, cherry cabi-
nets, solid wood
doors only begin to
describe this
delightful home.
Motivated Seller!
MLS#12-1227
$225,000
Jolyn Bartoli
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-696-5425
WYOMING
DOUBLE BLOCK
Easily converts to
single home. New
roof, electric,
windows & 2 car
garage. Remod-
eled. 66 x 100 feet,
fenced lot,
$120,000.
570-693-2408
WYOMING
Fall in love with this
gorgeous brick
home just a few
minutes from town.
spacious rooms, a
view of the country-
side, a fenced in-
ground pool, gaze-
bo with electric,
spacious recreation
room with wet bar,
curved oak stair-
case, beautiful
French doors and a
fireplace in the
kitchen are just
some of the fea-
tures that make this
home easy to love.
MLS# 12-443
$600,000
Jolyn Bartoli
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-696-5425
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
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
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
909 Income &
Commercial
Properties
BEAR CREEK
1255 Laurel Run Rd.
Bear Creek Twp.,
large commercial
garage/warehouse
on 1.214 acres with
additional 2 acre
parcel. 2 water
wells. 2 newer
underground fuel
tanks. May require
zoning approval.
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-208
$179,900
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
Collect cash, not dust!
Clean out your
basement, garage
or attic and call the
Classified depart-
ment today at 570-
829-7130!
DUPONT
100 Lincoln St.
MULTI FAMILY
3 bedroom home
with attached
apartment and
beauty shop. Apart-
ment is rented. For
more info and pho-
tos visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-941
$82,900
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
EDWARDSVILLE
Lawrence St.
Nice 3 unit property.
Lots of off street
parking and bonus 2
car garage. All units
are rented. Great
income with low
maintenance.
$139,900
MLS# 10-2675
Call Karen
Coldwell Banker
Rundle Real Estate
570-474-2340
FORTY FORT
1012 Wyoming Ave.
SUPER LOCATION
Needs work. Priced
to sell. Great for
your small business
or offices. Very high
traffic count. Prop-
erty is being sold IN
AS IS CONDITION.
Inspections for buy-
ers information only.
Property needs
rehab.
MLS 11-4267
$84,900
Roger Nenni
570-288-0770
Ext. 32
Crossin Real
Estate
570-288-0770
HUGHESTOWN
115 New St.
Office building
with over 2600
sq. ft. can be
divided for up to
3 tenants with
own central air
and utilities and
entrances. New
roof. 20-25
parking spots in
excellent condi-
tion.
For more info
and photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-607
$249,900
Call Tom
P
E
N
D
I
N
G
KINGSTON
366 Pierce Street
(corner lot). 1,300
sq. ft. concrete
block commercial
building on a 90 x
145 lot. Central air
conditioning. Paved
parking for 25 cars.
Presently a pizza
business, but land
can be used for
multiple uses (bank
building, offices,
etc.).
MLS 12-1279.
$350,000
Bob Kopec
HUMFORD REALTY
570-822-5126
909 Income &
Commercial
Properties
KINGSTON
64-66 Dorrance St.
3 units, off street
parking with some
updated Carpets
and paint. $1500/
month income from
long time tenants.
W/d hookups on
site. MLS 11-3517
$99,900
Call Jay A.
Crossin
Ext. 23
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
LAFLIN
33 Market St.
Commercial/resi-
dential property
featuring Ranch
home with 3 bed-
rooms, newly
remodeled bath-
room, in good con-
dition. Commercial
opportunity for
office in attached
building. For more
info and photos
visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-3450
Reduced
$149,900
Call Tom
570-262-7716
LEASE SPACE
Kingston Wellness
Center / profession-
al offices.
-Modern Decor and
Loft Style Offices
-Four Lane Street
Frontage
-100+ Parking
-Established
Professional &
Wellness Businesses
On-Site
-Custom Leases
Available
-Triple Net
Spaces Available:
600SF, 1400SF,
2610SF, and
4300SF.
4300SF Warehouse
Space available
Built to Suit.
Call Cindy
570-690-2689
www.cindykingre.com
570-675-4400
MOUNTAINTOP
110 North
Mountain Blvd.
OFFICE OR
RETAIL SPACE
Great Location!
Total 3,000
square feet on
two levels. High
visibility, plenty of
parking, garage
in rear.
$295,000.
570-474-2993
Looking to buy a
home?
Place an ad here
and let the
sellers know!
570-829-7130
NANTICOKE
REDUCED
414 Front St.
Move right into this
modern office build-
ing featuring 4
offices, receptionist
office, large confer-
ence room, modern
kitchen, storage
room, full base-
ment, central air,
handicap access. 2
car garage and 5
additional off street
parking spaces.
This property is also
available for lease.
Lease price is
$675/mo + $675
security deposit.
Tenant pays all
utilities. Sells for
$85,900
Call John Polifka
570-704-6846
5 Mountains
Realty
42 N. Main St.
Shickshinny, PA
570-542-2141
WILKES-BARRE
57 Carey Ave.
Good investment
property. 4 apart-
ments needing a lit-
tle TLC. Two 1 bed-
room apartments.
One 2 bedroom and
one 3 bedroom.
Separate water and
electric. For more
info and photos
visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-1026
$79,900
Call Tom
570-262-7716
909 Income &
Commercial
Properties
WYOMING
171 Susquehanna
Avenue
Well kept home on
beautiful street in a
desirable neighbor-
hood. Very large
rooms, hardwood
floors, fenced yard,
1 car garage. All
measurements
approximate.
MLS# 12-1079
$65,000
Call Tracy Zarola
570-696-0723
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
BEAR CREEK
39 Wedgewood Dr.
Laurelbrook Estates
Lot featuring 3.22
acres with great
privacy on cul-de-
sac. Has been perc
tested and has
underground utili-
ties. 4 miles to PA
Turnpike entrance.
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-114
$64,900
Call Tom
570-262-7716
DALLAS
$129,900
SPECTACULAR
WATER VIEW!
2 acres overlooking
Huntsville
Reservoir. Building
site cleared but
much of woodlands
preserved. Perc &
site prep done.
Call
Christine Kutz
570-332-8832
DALLAS AREA
3 lots. 70 x 125.
City water and
sewer, gas avail-
able. $36,500
per lot.
570-675-5873
Job Seekers are
looking here!
Where's your ad?
570-829-7130 and
ask for an employ-
ment specialist
DURYEA
196 Foote Avenue
Corner lot, border-
ing Foote Ave and
McAlpine St. Com-
mercial zoning.
$10,000 or best
offer. Please Call
610-675-9132
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
HARDING
Mt. Zion Road
One acre lot just
before Oberdorfer
Road. Great place
to build your
dream home
MLS 11-3521
$29,900
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
912 Lots & Acreage
HARVEYS LAKE
2 ACRES
$35,000
WOODED LAND.
Call Cindy
570-690-2689
www.cindykingre.com
570-675-4400
HUGHESTOWN
Cleared lot in Stauf-
fer Heights. Ready
for your dream
home just in time
for Spring!
MLS 12-549
$32,500
Call Kevin Sobilo
570-817-0706
MOOSIC
BUILDING LOT
Corner of Drake St.
& Catherine,
Moosic. 80x111
building lot with
sewer & water
available, in great
area with newer
homes. Corner lot.
For more details
visit www.atlasreal-
tyinc.com.
MLS #12-1148.
Call Charlie
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
MOUNTAIN TOP
Beautiful 2.66 Acre
building lot/lake
view. Public sewer
& natural gas. Use
any builder!
Call Jim
for private showing.
$126,500.00
570-715-9323.
MOUNTAIN TOP
Beautiful 2.66 Acre
building lot/lake
view. Public sewer
& natural gas. Use
any builder!
Call Jim
for private showing.
$126,500.00
570-715-9323.
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
Newport Township
LOTS LOTS - - LOTS LOTS - - LOTS LOTS
1 mile south of
L.C.C.C.
210 frontage x 158
deep. All under-
ground utilities, nat-
ural gas. GREAT
VIEW!! $37,500
2 LOTS AVAILABLE
100 frontage x 228
deep. Modular
home with base-
ment accepted.
Each lot $17,500.
Call 570-714-1296
LivingInQuailHill.com
New Homes
From $275,000-
$595,000
570-474-5574
PITTSTON
Prime Location on
Route 315 Great
visibility, 1.25 acres
with 300 of road
frontage. LAND
LEASE Call for
details MLS 11-
3571 Rhea Simms
570-696-6677
PITTSTON TWP.
Beautiful lot in
Pocono Ridge
Estate. 1.14 acres
with a view!
MLS 12-1313
$48,500
Call Kevin Sobilo
570-817-0706
912 Lots & Acreage
SHICKSHINNY
Level *7.5 acres*
building lot with a
mountain view.
Great for horses or
organic farming.
MLS 12-306
$59,000
570-675-4400
TUNKHANNOCK
Approximately 4
acres. Perk Tested
& Surveyed. Well
above flood level.
Mountain View.
Clear land. $45,000.
Bill 570-665-9054
WYOMING
FIRST ST.
4 building lots each
measuring 68x102
with public utilities.
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-439
$39,900 EACH
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
915 Manufactured
Homes
EAST MOUNTAIN RIDGE
(Formerly Pocono
Park) and San Souci
Park. Like new, sev-
eral to choose from,
Financing&Warranty,
MobileOneSales.net
Call (570)250-2890
938 Apartments/
Furnished
WILKES-BARRE
Furnished 1 bed-
room executive
apartment. All brand
new. Spacious eat in
kitchen. 2 TVs pro-
vided, leather sofas.
Too many amenities
to list. $700. Call
570-899-3123
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
AVOCA
Modern & spacious
1st floor, wall to wall
carpet. Appliances,
washer & dryer
hookup.
Off street parking.
Security, no pets.
$450 month.
570-655-1606
DALLAS
1 bedroom, 1st floor
1 bedroom.
$650/month all
inclusive. W/w car-
peting. Security,
No Pets.
570-690-1591
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 $12,400.
570-675-6936,
8 am-4 pm, Mon-Fri.
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
HANDICAP ACCESSIBLE
DUPONT
219 Main Street
Very nice 1st floor, 1
bedroom with new
bathroom, modern
kitchen, hardwood
floors, fresh paint,
off street parking.
Call Darren
570-825-2468
DUPONT
Completely remod-
eled, modern 2 bed-
room townhouse
style apartment.
Lots of closet
space, with new
carpets and com-
pletely repainted.
Includes stove,
refrigerator, wash-
er, dryer hook up.
Nice yard & neigh-
borhood, no pets.
$595 + security. Call
570-479-6722
DUPONT
Totally renovated 5
room apartment
located on 1st floor.
Partially furnished,
brand new fridge/
electric range, elec-
tric washer & dryer.
Brand new custom
draperies, Roman
shades, carpeting/
flooring & energy
efficient windows. 1
bedroom with large
closet, living room,
laundry room, stor-
age room, base-
ment & large front
porch. Easy access
to I-81, airport &
casino. Off street
parking. No smok-
ing. $600 + utilities
& security. Call
570-762-8265
To place your
ad Call Toll Free
1-800-427-8649
To place your
ad Call Toll Free
1-800-427-8649
Line up a place to live
in classified!
Looking for that
special place
called home?
Classified will address
Your needs.
Open the door
with classified!
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 2012 PAGE 11D
To Place Your Professional Services Ad, Please Call 829-7130
CALL AN EXPERT
CALL AN EXPERT
Professional Services Directory
1006 A/C &
Refrigeration
Services
STRISH A/C
Ductless / Central
Air Conditioning
Free Estimates
Licensed & Insured
570-332-0715
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
570-606-8438
ALL OLDERHOMES
SPECIALIST
825-4268.
Remodel / repair,
Porches, decks
& steps
DAVE JOHNSON
Expert Bathroom &
Room Remodeling,
Carpentry & Whole
House Renovations.
Licensed &Insured
570-819-0681
NICHOLS CONSTRUCTION
All Types Of Work
New or Remodeling
Licensed & Insured
Free Estimates
570-406-6044
ROOFING, SIDING,
DECKS, WINDOWS
For All of Your
Remodeling Needs.
Will Beat Any Price
25 Yrs. Experience
Ref. Ins. Free Est.
570-332-7023
Or 570-855-2506
Shedlarski Construction
HOME IMPROVEMENT
SPECIALIST
Licensed, insured &
PA registered.
Kitchens, baths,
vinyl siding & rail-
ings, replacement
windows & doors,
additions, garages,
all phases of home
renovations.
Free Estimates
570-287-4067
SPRING
BUILDING/
REMODELING?
Call the
Building Industry
Association
for a list of
qualified members
call 287-3331
or go to
www.bianepa.com
1039 Chimney
Service
A-1 ABLE
CHIMNEY
Rebuild & Repair
Chimneys. All
types of Masonry.
Liners Installed,
Brick & Block,
Roofs & Gutters.
Licensed &
Insured
570-735-2257
CAVUTO
CHIMNEY
SERVICE
& Gutter Cleaning
Free Estimates
Insured
570-709-2479
1039 Chimney
Service
CHIMNEY REPAIRS
Parging. Stucco.
Stainless Liners.
Cleanings. Custom
Sheet Metal Shop.
570-383-0644
1-800-943-1515
Call Now!
COZY HEARTH CHIMNEY
ALL CHIMNEY
REPAIR
Chimney Cleaning,
Rebuilding, Repair,
Stainless Steel
Lining, Parging,
Stucco, Caps, Etc.
Free Estimates
Licensed &
Insured
1-888-680-7990
570-840-0873
1042 Cleaning &
Maintainence
HOUSE CLEANING
We would love to
clean your home.
We clean around
your schedule.
We clean weekly,
bi-weekly, and
monthly. We also
do one time clean-
ing. Call Eddie
570-677-0344 or
online at www.
empresacleaning.
com
1054 Concrete &
Masonry
DEMPSKI
MASONRY
& CONCRETE
All Phases
Licensed & Insured
No job too small.
Free Estimates.
570-824-0130
DempskiMasonry.com
B.P. Home Repairs
570-825-4268
Brick, Block,
Concrete, Sidewalks,
Chimneys, Stucco.
New Installation &
Repairs
C&C MASONRY &
CONCRETE
Absolutely free
estimates. Masonry
& concrete work.
Specializing in foun-
dations, repairs and
rebuilding. Footers
floors, driveways.
570-766-1114
570-346-4103
PA084504
COVERT & SONS
CONCRETE CO.
Give us a call,
well beat
them all!
570-696-3488 or
570-239-2780
Wi l l i ams & Franks I nc
Masonry - Concrete
Brick-Stonework.
Chimneys-Stucco
NO JOB TOO
SMALL
Damage repair
specialist
570-466-2916
WYOMING VALLEY
MASONRY
Concrete, stucco,
foundations,pavers,
retaining wall sys-
tems, dryvit, flag-
stone, brick work.
Senior Citizen Dis-
count.570-287-4144
or 570-760-0551
1057Construction &
Building
H-D Contracting
Flooring, siding,
decks & more.
Any size job.
Call Salvatore
570-881-2191
1057Construction &
Building
FATHER & SON
CONSTRUCTION
Interior & Exterior
Remodeling
Jobs of All Sizes
570-814-4578
570-709-8826
FS CONSTRUCTION
Specializing in all
types of home
improvements,
complete remodel-
ing from start to fin-
ish, additions, roof-
ing, siding, electrical
and plumbing, all
types of excavation
& demolition, side-
walks and concrete
work, new home
construction, with
new model on dis-
play. Free esti-
mates, licensed,
insured. Call Frank
at 570-479-1203
GARAGE
DOOR
Sales, service,
installation &
repair.
FULLY
INSURED
HIC# 065008
CALL JOE
570-735-8551
Cell 606-7489
Russ Keener
Construction
Windows, doors,
siding, porches,
decks, kitchen,
baths, garages, &
more. All home
maintenance. Free
estimates,
Fully Insured
PA079549
570-336-6958
1078 Dry Wall
MIRRA
DRYWALL
Hanging & Finishing
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
EXCAVATING/MODULAR HOMES
Custom excavating,
foundations, land
clearing, driveways,
storm drainage,
blacktop repair, etc.
570-332-0077
Skidster/Backhoe
With Operator
I can help make
your spring projects
a little easier. Fully
Insured. Reasonably
Priced.
Free Estimates.
Stan 570-328-4110
1099 Fencing &
Decks
ACTION FENCE
SPRING SALE:
Discounts on wood,
vinyl, chain link, alu-
minum and more!
Call today for a
FREE ESTIMATE!
1-888-FENCE-80
1099 Fencing &
Decks
DECK BUILDERS
Of Northeast
Contracting Group.
we build any type,
size and design,
staining & power-
washing. If the deck
of your choice is not
completed within 5
days, your deck is
free!
570-338-2269
1105 Floor Covering
Installation
ETERNITY
FLOORING
*Hardwood
*Laminate
*Ceramic
*Porcelain
Installations
570-820-0233
Free Estimates
PA 089377
1129 Gutter
Repair & Cleaning
GUTTER CLEANING
Window Cleaning
Pressure washing
Insured
570-288-6794
1132 Handyman
Services
#1 FOR ALL YOUR
CONSTRUCTION
NEEDS
Interior & exterior
painting. All types
of remodeling.
Front and back
porches repaired
& replaced
Call 570-991-5301
All Your Home
Repair Needs No
Job Too Small
Licensed &
Insured
Free Estimates
Russells Property
Maintenance
570-406-3339
DO IT ALL HANDYMAN
Painting, drywall,
plumbing & all types
of interior & exterior
home repairs.
570-829-5318
Marks
Handyman
Service
Give us a call
We do it all!
Licensed &Insured
570-578-8599
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
Mikes $5-Up
Removal of Wood,
Trash and Debris.
Same Day Service.
826-1883 793-8057
1135 Hauling &
Trucking
AAA CLEANING
A1 GENERAL HAULING
Cleaning attics,
cellars, garages.
Demolitions, Roofing
&Tree Removal.
FreeEst. 779-0918or
542-5821; 814-8299
AFFORDABLE
Junk removal
cleanups,
cleanouts, Large or
small jobs. Fast
free estimates.
(570) 814-4631
Let the Community
Know!
Place your Classified
Ad TODAY!
570-829-7130
ALL KINDS OF
HAULING & JUNK
REMOVAL
SPRING CLEAN UP!
TREE/SHRUB TREE/SHRUB
REMOV REMOVAL AL
DEMOLITION DEMOLITION
Estate Cleanout Estate Cleanout
Free Estimates
24 HOUR
SERVICE
SMALL AND
LARGE JOBS!
570-823-1811
570-239-0484
ALWAYS READY
HAULING
Moving, Deliver-
ies, Property &
Estate Cleanups,
Attics, Cellars,
Yards, Garages,
Construction
Sites, Flood
Damage & More.
CHEAPER THAN
A DUMPSTER!!
SAME DAY
SERVICE
Free Estimates
570-301-3754
CASTAWAY
HAULING JUNK
REMOVAL
823-3788 / 817-0395
S & S HAULING
& GARBAGE
REMOVAL
Free estimates.
Clean out attics,
basements, estates
& more.
570-472-2392
1156 Insurance
NEP NEPA A LONG LONG
TERM CARE TERM CARE
AGENCY AGENCY
Long Term/Short
Term Care
Products
Life Insurance
Tax Deferred
Annuities
Medicare Supple-
ment Plans
Dental/Vision
Estate Planning
Ideas
570-580-0797
FREE CONSULT
www nepalong www nepalong
termcare.com termcare.com
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
BITTO
LANDSCAPING &
LAWN SERVICE
26 years
experience,
landscape designs,
retaining walls,
pavers, patios,
decks, walkways,
ponds, lighting,
seeding, mulch, etc
Free Estimates.
570-288-5177
Brizzys
Arbor Care &
Landscaping
Tree trimming,
pruning & removal.
Stump grinding,
Cabling. Shrub and
hedge sculpting
and trimming.
Spring cleanup,
retaining walls
and repair.
Free Estimates
Fully Insured
570-542-7265
CO$T CO$T U LE$$ U LE$$
LANDSCAPING
Specializing in
Grass Cutting,
Trimming of Shrubs
& Hedges,
& Mulching
Call for estimates
570-239-4011
JAYS LAWN SERVICE
Spring clean-ups,
mowing, mulching
and more!
Free Estimates
570-574-3406
ONEILS
Landscaping, Lawn
Maintenance,Clean-
ups, shrub trimming,
20 years experience.
Fully Insured
570-885-1918
TOUGH BRUSH,
mowing, edging,
mulching, shrubs,
and hedge
trimming, tree prun-
ing, garden tilling,
Spring clean up.
Accepting new
customers this
season. Weekly &
bi-weekly
lawn care.
Fully Insured.
Free Estimates
570-829-3261
TREE REMOVAL
Stump grinding, Haz-
ard tree removal,
Grading, Drainage,
Lot clearing, Stone/
Soil delivery. Insured.
Reasonable Rates
570-574-1862
1165 Lawn Care
GRASS CUTTING
Affordable, reliable,
meticulous. Rates
as low as $20.
Emerald Green
570-825-4963
YARD CLEAN UP
Attics & Basements
Complete clean ups
Garden tilling
Call for quotes
570-954-7699 or
570-926-9029
1183 Masonry
CONCRETE
& MASONRY
Brick, block, walks,
drives, stucco, stone,
chimneys and
repairs.
570-283-5254
1189 Miscellaneous
Service
VITOS
&
GINOS
Wanted:
ALL
JUNK
CARS &
TRUCKS
Highest
Prices
Paid!!
FREE PICKUP
288-8995
1195 Movers
BestDarnMovers
Moving Helpers
Call for Free Quote.
We make moving easy.
BestDarnMovers.com
570-852-9243
1204 Painting &
Wallpaper
AMERICA
PAINTING
Interior/Exterior.
20 years experi-
ence. Insured.
Senior Discount
570-855-0387
JACOBOSKY
PAINTING
Interior, & Exterior
Painting, $50.00 off
with this ad. Call
570-328-5083
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
Spring & Save. All
Work Guaranteed
Satisfaction.
30 Yrs. Experience
Powerwash & Paint
Vinyl, Wood, Stucco
Aluminum.
Free Estimates
You Cant Lose!
570-822-3943
WITKOSKY PAINTING
Interior
Exterior,
Free estimates,
30 yrs experience
570-826-1719,
570-288-4311 &
570-704-8530
1213 Paving &
Excavating
DRIVEWAYS
PARKING LOTS
ROADWAYS
HOT TAR & CHIPS
SEALCOATING
Licensed and
Insured. Call
Today For Your
Free Estimate
570-474-6329
Lic.# PA021520
Keystone Paving
& Seal Coating
Services
Free Quotes. Resi-
dential / Commer-
cial. Parking lots /
drivewaysdrainage
landscaping hot
tar asphalt paving
seal coating. 10%
off for spring!
570-906-5239
1213 Paving &
Excavating
Mountain Top
PAVING & SEAL
COATING
Patching, Sealing,
Residential/Comm
Licensed & Insured
PA013253
570-868-8375
1228 Plumbing &
Heating
CARL
KRASAVAGE & SON
Heating, Plumbing,
& Air Conditioning.
No job too big or
small. Let our expe-
rience & knowledge
work for you.
Free Estimates.
Call
570-288-8149
1234 Pressure
Washing
PRESSURE WASHING
Decks, siding, roof /
gutter cleaning &
patios. Serving the
Lackawanna &
Luzerne County
areas. Call
570-883-1495
1252 Roofing &
Siding
EVERHART
CONSTRUCTION
Roofing, siding,
gutters, chimney
repairs & more.
Free Estimates,
Lowest Prices
570-855-5738
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
Emergency Calls*
Jim Harden
570-288-6709
New Roofs &
Repairs, Shingles,
Rubber, Slate,
Gutters, Chimney
Repairs. Credit
Cards accepted
FREE ESTIMATES!
Licensed-Insured
EMERGENCIES
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
SPRING ROOFING
McManus
Construction
Licensed, Insured.
Everyday Low
Prices. 3,000
satisfied customers.
570-735-0846
1297 Tree Care
GASHI AND SONS
TREE SERVICE
AND STUMP
REMOVAL.
Fully Insured.
570-693-1875
Tree Removal
& DAVID
WAYNE
PAINTING
Interior/Exterior
QUALITY WORK
AT A FAIR PRICE
570-762-6889
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
EXETER
1st floor. 3 rooms +
bat h. Appl i ances
included & some
utilities. $520 +
electric, security &
references. No
pets, no smoking.
570-574-9561 or
570-696-3523
EXETER
2 bedrooms, 1 bath,
refrigerator &
stove, washer/dryer
hook-up, no pets,
no smokers.
$575/month, plus
utilities, security &
background check.
Call 570-655-3809
FORTY FORT
1 BEDROOM APT
Very nice, clean,
great neighbor-
hood, hardwood
floors, a/c, washer
/dryer with newer
appliances, stor-
age, 1st/last/securi-
ty with one year
lease. References
required. $650 +
utilities.
Water/sewer by
owner, no pets,
non-smoking.
Call 202-997-9185
for appointment
FORTY FORT
2nd floor, 4 rooms,
wall to wall carpet,
heat, public water,
sewer & recycling
fees included. Tile
bathroom with
shower. Attic &
yard. Stove & fridge
furnished. Washer /
dryer hookup. Good
location, off street
parking, No pets. 1
year lease & securi-
ty, $650. Call
570-655-0530
FORTY FORT
Lovely 2 bedroom,
2nd floor on River
St. Living room, din-
ing room, kitchen
and bath. W/d
hookup in base-
ment. Garage.
$550/mo + utilities
No Pets
570-288-0770
FORTY FORT
Nice, quiet neigh-
borhood. First floor,
spacious living room
with working fire-
place, bedroom with
2 closets. New
kitchen with stove,
fridge & lazy Susan.
Laundry room off
kitchen with washer
/ dryer, bath / show-
er. Off street, lighted
parking. Lease,
security, refer-
ences. Gas heat &
all utilities by tenant.
Absolutely no pets.
$600. Call
570-714-5588
FORTY FORT
Ransom Street, 1st
floor, 1 bedroom,
dining room, oak
hardwood floors,
central air, range &
fridge included. Off
street parking.
$585/month utilities
by tenant. Security,
references, lease,
pets maybe? Hand-
icapped accessible
570-287-5775 or
570-332-1048.
HANOVER TWP.
3 bedrooms, 1.5
bath, no pets. $725
+ utilities, 1st months
security deposit.
Call 570-417-3427
KINGSTON
1st Floor, recently
renovated, 2 bed-
rooms, with washer
& dryer hook-up,
$650 per month,
plus utilities, water
and sewer included.
Off street parking.
Call 570-443-0770
KINGSTON
2 bedroom 1 bath.
$575/month, sepa-
rate utilities. Private
backyard. Laundry
hookups. Stove and
refrigerator includ-
ed. Sorry, no pets.
Scott Zoepke
Trademark Realty
570-814-0875
KINGSTON
2 bedroom. $675/
month. Includes gas
heat. Security &
references required
No pets. Call
570-288-4200
KINGSTON
3 bedroom 1 bath.
$700/month. Sepa-
rate utilities, laundry
hookups, stove and
refrigerator includ-
ed. Small pets
negotiable. Call
Scott Zoepke
Trademark Realty
570-814-0875
KINGSTON
399 -401 Elm Ave.
Newly remodeled
apartments. 1st
floor, 3 bedroom,
$850 + utilities. 2nd
floor, (2) 2 bedroom
$600 + utilities. NO
PETS, No section 8
housing. Refer-
ences and
security required.
570-301-2785
KINGSTON
795 Rutter Ave
Screened porch,
kitchen downstairs
with appliances,
washer & dryer,
upstairs living room,
bedroom & bath-
room. $510/month +
utilities. No pets.
570-417-6729
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
KINGSTON
Beautiful, over-
sized executive
style apartment
in large historic
home. Two bed-
rooms, one bath,
granite kitchen,
hardwood floors,
dining room, liv-
ing room, base-
ment storage,
beautiful front
porch, washer/
dryer. $1,200
monthly plus util-
ities. No pets. No
smoking. Call
570-472-1110
KINGSTON
Freshly painted, 2
bedrooms, refriger-
ator & stove, wash-
er/dryer & water
provided, off-street
parking, no pets,
$525/month + heat,
electric &
security deposit.
Call (570)417-2919
KINGSTON
Modern 2 bedroom
1 bath. Second floor.
$600 + utilities.
Call Darren
570-825-2468
KINGSTON
Modern, spacious,
2nd floor, 2 bed-
room with off street
parking. Gas heat,
A/C laundry in unit,
no pets, no smok-
ing. Screened porch
$750 + utilities
Call 570-714-9234
KINGSTON
Nice area. Modern,
clean, 1 bedroom,
2nd floor. Recently
painted. Refriger-
ator & stove, wash-
er/ dryer hook up,
off-street parking,
no dogs. $550/
month & security,
includes heat, water
& sewer.
570-545-6057
KINGSTON
PETS PETS ALLOWED! ALLOWED!
Modern 1 bedroom
on the park
between Market &
Pierce Bridges.
$555/mo + electric
washer/dryer in apt.
Air, Dishwasher,
Free Internet,
Parking, Storage.
Call Jeff at
570-822-8577
KINGSTON
Recently renovat-
ed 2 bedroom. Liv-
ing room & dining
room. Convenient
off street parking.
All new appli-
ances. Water &
sewer included.
$560 + utilities,
security & refer-
ences. No pets, no
smoking. Call
570-239-7770
KINGSTON
Very clean, large 1
bedroom apart-
ment, discounted
rent for tenant with
excellent credit.
Only $400 + utilities,
no smoking, no
pets, no section 8.
Call 570-287-4047
KINGSTON/PRINGLE
Totally remodeled,
clean, 1 bedroom
half double (apart-
ment size). All new
stainless appliances.
Backyard, large
driveway. No pets.
$625 + utilities &
security. Call Fadwa,
570-574-1818
LARKSVILLE
AVAILABLE
IMMEDIATELY
Cute and clean 2
bedroom, off street
parking, w/d
hookup, eat in
kitchen. Immacu-
late. $435 + utilities.
1 mo. security. NO
DOGS 845-386-1011
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
1 bedroom. Quiet,
nice neighborhood.
Off street parking.
Heat included. $525
Call 570-441-4101
LUZERNE
378 Miller St.
Recently remod-
eled, 1st floor. 1
bedroom, living
room, large modern
kitchen with stove.
New bath, clean
basement, laundry
hookups. Enclosed
porch, parking. No
pets/smoking.
$500/mo. includes
heat and water.
570-288-9843
LUZERNE
4 room apartment,
1 bedroom, 1 bath,
refrigerator and
stove provided,
washer/dryer
hookup, carpeting
off-street parking,
no pets. $500/
month, plus utilities,
1 month security
570-406-2789
MINERS MILLS
2 bedroom apart-
ment. First floor.
Includes water,
sewer & trash. $500
+ security.
Call Bernie
888-244-2714
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
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
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 Openings!
Find Something?
Lose Something?
Get it back where it
belongs
with a Lost/Found ad!
570-829-7130
NANTICOKE
1st floor. 1 bed-
room. ALL UTILI-
TIES INCLUDED!
Off street parking.
Fresh paint.
NO PETS
$525 + security
570-477-6018
leave message
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
NANTICOKE
314 Prospect St.
Convenient 1st floor,
1 bedroom, non-
smoker, large clos-
ets. Freshly paint-
ed & new carpet-
ing. New ceiling
fans, new modern
kitchen & tile bath.
New windows.
Heat & hot water
included.
Washer/dryer hook
up, stove & refrig-
erator provided.
No pets. $595.
570-287-4700
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
NANTICOKE
Spacious 1 bed-
room 1st floor. New
carpeting, gas
range and fridge
included. Garage
parking, no dogs.
References and
security required.
$450/mo. Water,
sewer, garbage fee
incl. Tenant pays
gas and electric
570-696-3596
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
30+
DAY
BEING
REMODELED
NORTH
WILKES-BARRE
FIRST FLOOR
Spacious
1 bedroom with
aesthetic fire-
places, new
kitchens, wall-
to-wall, built in
appliances &
MORE. APPLI-
CATION/EMPLO
YMENT VERIFI-
CATION being
considered NO
PETS/SMOKING
2 YEARS @
$625+ UTILITIES.
MANAGED!
America Realty
288-1422
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
PITTSTON
144 Carol St.
2nd floor, 4 rooms,
stove, washer dryer
hook up.
$425/month, tenant
pays utilities,
570-498-2665
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
PITTSTON
2 bedrooms, 1st
floor. Stove, fridge,
w/d hookup provid-
ed. $550/mo.,
includes sewer &
refuse. Utilities by
tenant. NO PETS
Call Charlie
570-829-1578
PITTSTON
2 or 3 bedroom, 1st
floor, full kitchen.
Heat included, no
pets. $650 + 1
month security. Call
570-451-1038
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
2nd floor, 2 bed-
room, refrigerator &
stove, washer/
dryer hookup, no
pets. $475/month,
+ gas heat, water,
garbage & electric,
1st month &
security. 1 year
lease.
570-655-0290 or
570-313-0181
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
PITTSTON
2nd floor, 2 bed-
rooms, living room,
eat in kitchen.
Stove, garbage dis-
posal, fridge, wash-
er & dryer included.
Carpeted & newly
painted, A/C. Trash
& sewer paid. Off
street parking for 1
car. No smoking. No
pets. $575 + utilities,
security & 1st
month.
570-696-1485
Leave Message
PITTSTON
3 rooms, 1 large
bedroom, com-
pletely renovated,
corian counters, off
street parking.
$550/per month.
Utilities by tenant.
Call 570-654-5387
Line up a place to live
in classified!
PLAINS
Available June 1st.
3 room apartment,
1st floor, off street
parking, no pets, no
smoking. $550/
month includes heat
& water. Security &
1 year lease.
570-820-3906
570-899-6710
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
SUGAR NOTCH
Spacious, com-
pletely remodeled,
1st floor, 2 bedroom
apartment. Large
kitchen, appliances
included. Tenant is
responsible for own
utilities. $475/month
570-235-4718
SWOYERSVILLE
All new, 2 bed-
rooms, 1 bath.
stove, dishwasher
microwave, wash-
er/dryer hookup.
Off-street parking,
no pets. $560/
month, + utilities,
references, lease &
security.
(570) 301-7723
To place your
ad Call Toll Free
1-800-427-8649
SWOYERSVILLE
Newly remodeled 1
bedroom studio
apartment with
large living room,
kitchen & bath. Wall
to wall carpet. Off
street parking. All
utilities paid except
electric. $595 +
security. Call
570-287-3646
WEST PITTSTON
203 Delaware Ave.
1st floor. 4 rooms,
no pets, no smok-
ing, off street park-
ing. Includes heat,
water, sewer,
fridge, stove, w/d.
High security bldg.
570-655-9711
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
WEST PITTSTON
Large 2 bedroom,
2nd floor . Hard-
wood floors,
balcony, heat & hot
water included.
$775/month + secu-
rity. No smoking.
570-947-9340
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
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 $12,400.
570-655-6555,
8 am-4 pm,
Monday-Friday.
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
HANDICAP ACCESSIBLE
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
WILKES-BARRE
Mayflower
Crossing
Apartments
570.822.3968
2, 3 & 4
Bedrooms
- Light & bright
open floor plans
- All major
appliances included
- Pets welcome*
- Close to everything
- 24 hour emergency
maintenance
- Short term
leases available
Call TODAY For
AVAILABILITY!!
www.mayflower
crossing.com
Certain Restrictions
Apply*
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PAGE 12D WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 2012 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
IN THE HEART OF WILKES-BARRE
1 BEDROOM
APARTMENTS AVAILABLE
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
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
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
for Move In
Specials.
570-288-9019
1 & 2 BR
Apts
2 & 3 BR
Townhomes
Wilkeswood
Apartments
www.liveatwilkeswood.com
570-822-2711
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
WILKES-BARRE
1 bedroom, and
also a 3 bedroom
apartment for rent,
newly remodeled,
with stove, fridge,
washer & dryer
hookup. $425 and
$625 plus utilities
and security.
Call 570-301-8200
Collect cash, not dust!
Clean out your
basement, garage
or attic and call the
Classified depart-
ment today at 570-
829-7130!
WILKES-BARRE
1 bedroom. Heat &
hot water included.
$550 month +
security required
973-879-4730
WILKES-BARRE
155 W. River St.
1 bedroom, some
appliances included,
all utilities included
except electric,
hardwood floors,
Pet friendly. $600.
570-969-9268
WILKES-BARRE
1st floor 3 bedroom,
2 bath apartment.
Off street parking.
First / Last & securi-
ty required. Leave
message. Call
570-817-0601
WILKES-BARRE
APARTMENTS
FOR RENT!
425 S. FRANKLIN ST.
For lease. Available
immediately, wash-
er/dryer on premis-
es, no pets. We
have studio & 1 bed-
room apartments.
On site parking.
Fridge & stove pro-
vided. 24/7 security
camera presence
and all doors elec-
tronically locked.
Studio - $450. 1
bedroom - $550.
Water & sewer paid.
One month security
de-posit. Call
570-793-6377 or
570-208-9301 after
9:00 a.m. to sched-
ule an appointment.
Or email
shlomo_voola
@yahoo.com
wilkesliving.com
WILKES-BARRE
COUNTRY LIVING
IN THE CITY
2 bedrooms,
modern, well insu-
lated, Stove, fridge,
washer, dryer, park-
ing, deck. No dogs
Near Cross Valley.
$485 + utilities.
570-417-5441
WILKES-BARRE
Kings College
Campus
3 Large Bedrooms,
living room, wall to
wall, large kitchen &
bath with tile floors.
Stove, fridge, heat,
water & off street
parking included.
Shared yard. $900 +
security. Thats only
$300 per person.
570-823-0589
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
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
WILKES-BARRE
1 bedroom apart-
ment, 2nd floor.
Stove, fridge, heat &
hot water included.
Attic Storage. Car-
peted. No pets.
Nice, safe area. Call
570-823-7587
WILKES-BARRE
Nice, 3 bedroom,
1st floor apartment.
Close to Wilkes-Uni-
versity and down-
town Wilkes-Barre.
Modern eat in
kitchen, basement
laundry + large stor-
age area. $725 +
gas and electric.
Call 570-793-9449
WILKES-BARRE
NORTH, 777 N.
Washington St.
1 bedroom, 1 bath,
2nd floor. Off-
street parking.
Garbage removal
included. $450
/month, + utilities.
Call 570-288-3438
WILKES-BARRE SOUTH
Nice neighborhood.
1st floor, 2 bedroom.
Wall to wall carpet.
Off street parking.
Washer/dryer. $575
+ 1 month security,
references & credit
check. No pets.
(570) 574-2249
WILKES-BARRE SOUTH
SECURE BUILDINGS
1 & 2 bedroom
apartments.
Starting at $440
and up. References
required. Section 8 ok.
570-357-0712
WILKES-BARRE
Wilkes-University
Campus
Studio, 1 & 2 bed-
room. Starting at
$400. All utilities
included. No pets.
570-826-1934
WILKES-BARRE TWP
3 bedroom. Includes
heat, all appliances,
washer / dryer, off
street parking, back
yard. $725 + security.
570-704-8134
WILKES-BARRE
VICTORIAN CHARM
34 W. Ross St.
1 bedroom, 2nd
floor. Most utilities
included. Historic
building is non
smoking/no pets.
Base rent $700/mo.
Security, references
required. View at
houpthouse.com.
570-762-1453
WYOMING
1st floor, 2 bed-
room, stove, fridge,
washer/dryer
included. Secure,
lighted, ample park-
ing, small pet ok.
$550 + utilities.
570-357-1138
WYOMING
Available
immediately
2nd floor. Bright &
cheery. One bed-
room. Quiet build-
ing & neighborhood.
Includes stove,
refrigerator, heat,
water, sewer &
trash. No
smoking. No pets.
Security, references
$595/month
Call (570) 609-5133
WYOMING
Updated 1 bedroom.
New wall to wall
carpet. Appliances
furnished. Coin op
laundry. $550. Heat,
water & sewer
included. Call
570-687-6216 or
570-954-0727
944 Commercial
Properties
BUILDING FOR RENT
Located in
Kingston. Small &
efficient - can be
shop, office or
storage. Central Air
& Electric. $350/mo.
570 287-3985
944 Commercial
Properties
Commercial Lease
Courtdale location
Ideal for:
Veterinarian Office
Manufacturing /
Industrial Space
Storage Space
1000 SF - 5000 SF
Space Available.
5000 SF Warehouse
Space with loading
docks, office, heat,
and plumbing. $3.60
- $12 sf/yr + NNN,
lease negotiable.
Call Cindy King
570-690-2689
www.cindykingre.com
570-675-4400
DOLPHIN PLAZA
Rte. 315
1,000 &
3,800 Sq. Ft.
WILL DIVIDE
OFFICE / RETAIL
Call 570-829-1206
PITTSTON
COOPERS CO-OP
Lease Space
Available, Light
manufacturing,
warehouse,
office, includes
all utilities with
free parking.
I will save
you money!
PITTSTON
OFFICE SPACE
Attractive modern
office space. 2
suites available.
Suite A-4 offices,
plus restroom and
storage includes
utilities, 700 sq. ft.
$650/month
Suite B-2, large
offices, 2 average
size offices, plus
restroom and stor-
age plus utilities,
1,160 sq. ft.
$1000/month
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
RETAIL BUILDING
WILKES-BARRE TWP
12,000 sf. Route
309. Exit 165 off I81.
570-823-1719
Looking for that
special place
called home?
Classified will address
Your needs.
Open the door
with classified!
315 PLAZA
1,750 SQ. FT. &
3,400 SQ.FT
OFFICE/RETAIL
570-829-1206
WEST PITTSTON
OFFICE SPACE
Containing Six
separate offices, 1
large meeting
room. Segregated
bathrooms. Kitch-
enette. Total
recent renovation.
Great location. Lot
parking in rear.
$3,500 monthly.
570-299-5471
950 Half Doubles
ALDEN
Available Now!!!
1st floor includes
living room, dining
room, kitchen, bath
and sunroom. 2nd
floor has 3 bed-
rooms. Large
fenced yard, with
25x25 paved
patio. Off street
parking, front and
side porches. All
appliances; stove,
fridge, dishwasher,
microwave above
stove, w/d. Gas
heat. Included is
garbage, sewage
and basic cable.
$700 /mo + utilities.
1 month security
and references
570-735-2989
570-510-2023(C)
DALLAS
298 Upper
Demunds Road
AVAILABLE NOW!
2 bedroom, 1.5
bath. W/d hookup,
yard maintenance
trash, water, sewer
included. Off street
parking, No pets.
$800/mo + 1 month.
security 991-0051
EDWARDSVILLE
3 minutes to Cross-
valley Expressway &
shopping. 2 bed-
rooms, 1 bath,
kitchen, dining, liv-
ing rooms & base-
ment. Washer/dryer
hook-up. Newly re-
modeled, 1,200 sq.
ft. No smoking or
pets. $600/month,
+ utilities, 1st month
& security.
Call 570-603-7338
HANOVER TWP.
221 Boland Ave.
1 bedroom.
$325+ utilities
Call Mark at
(570) 899-2835
(917) 345-9060
950 Half Doubles
KINGSTON
$695/month. New
bath, kitchen, living
room, dining, 2 1/2
bedrooms. Water,
sewer & recycling
included. Gas fire-
place. New flooring,
ceiling fans. Wash-
er/dryer hook up.
Lease & security.
Call after 6 pm.
570-479-0131
KINGSTON
3 bedroom, 1 bath,
1st floor laundry,
new carpeting and
paint. $590 + utilities
570-814-3838
KINGSTON
TOWNSHIP
Available immedi-
ately. 2 bedrooms, 1
bathroom, back-
yard, front porch,
large kitchen, $570
per month, Call
570-357-0712
Kingston,
3 BEDROOM, 1
bath in Kingston;
$500/month; gas
heat; being shown
Saturday, 5/12
from 10am to 2pm;
applications avail-
able at that time;
bring credit report,
current pay stub;
security deposit
$500; ready for
occupancy after
5/13; 949-322-
7780 for further
info; small pets
considered.
NANTICOKE
Large 1/2 Double, 3
bedrooms, large
kitchen, fenced in
yard. $550 per
month + utilities.
Garbage & mainte-
nance fees includ-
ed. No Pets, 1
month security
deposit. Refer-
ences. Available
May 1st. 477-1415
PITTSTON
119 Lambert St.
Spacious 3 bed-
room, 1 1/2 baths,
cherry kitchen, lots
of closets, base-
ment, yard. Refer-
ences + 2 months
security. $700
month + utilities.
570-947-7887
PITTSTON
Remodeled 3 bed-
room double block.
Fenced yard. Pool.
$700. Includes
garbage, sewer &
heat. First / last
months rent +
security. No pets.
References. Avail-
able May 7. Call
570-954-0655
PITTSTON TWP.
MAINTENANCE FREE!
2 Large Bedrooms.
Off-Street Parking
No Smoking.
$600 + utilities,
security, last month.
570-885-4206
PLAINS
2 bedroom,
modern quiet,
w/w, w/d
hookup, gas
heat. $500.
No pets.
Security & lease.
570-332-1216
570-592-1328
WILKES-BARRE
1/2 double. 3 bed-
rooms. Wall to wall
carpeting, washer /
dryer hookup.
Fenced in yard.
$475 plus utilities
and security. Call
570-472-2392
953Houses for Rent
BACK MOUNTAIN
JACKSON TWP.
3 bedroom home
on Hillside Road.
$650/mo + utilities.
Lake Lehman
School District.
No pets.
Call American
Asphalt Paving Co.,
at 570-696-1181,
ext. 243 between
7:00AM and 3PM
Monday -Friday
DALLAS
FOR SALE
OR RENT
Single home in
gated retirement
village. 3 bedroom,
2 bath, 2 car
garage. Granite
countertops, hard-
wood floors, gas
fireplace, appli-
ances included.
Quiet 55 plus com-
munity. No Pets.
One year lease.
$1675/mo + utilities
& security. Monthly
maintenance fee
included.
570-592-3023
HARDING
Mt. Zion Road
6 rooms and bath,
stove provided,
washer/dryer hook-
up, no pets or
smoking. $650/
month, plus utilities,
& security deposit.
Call 570-388-2675
or 570-388-6860
HUNLOCK CREEK
2,000 square foot
home,In walking dis-
tance to Moonlake
park. Home has 3
Bedrooms, fireplace
recreation room,
utility room, furnace
room. 2 car garage.
Nice, Quiet neigh-
borhood, large lot.
$1200 per month.
Sewage and water
included. Call
570-675-4313
570-301-3322
953Houses for Rent
KINGSTON
3 bedrooms, tiled
bath & kitchen, car-
peting throughout,
finished basement
room, refrigerator
& stove, off-street
parking, no pets,
Fenced yard &
shed. $800/month,
+ utilities, last &
security.
570-256-0984
NANTICOKE
Desirable
Lexington Village
Nanticoke, PA
Many ranch style
homes. 2 bedrooms
$900 + electric only
SQUARE FOOT RE
MANAGEMENT
866-873-0478
SWOYERSVILLE
Completely remod-
eled Large 2 story, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths,
single family home
including refrigera-
tor, stove, dish-
washer & disposal.
Gas heat, nice yard,
good neighbor-
hood,. Off street
parking. Shed. No
pets. $995 / month.
570-479-6722
WILKES-BARRE
Safe
Neighborhood
One 3 Bedroom
$625
One 2 bedroom
$585
Plus all utilities, ref-
erences & security.
No pets.
570-766-1881
956 Miscellaneous
HARVEYS LAKE
Seasonal Rental.
1/1, full kitchen,
enclosed boat slip
with Deck on Lake.
$1250 per month,
utilities included.
Call Stephen @
570-814-4183
962 Rooms
KINGSTON HOUSE
Nice, clean
furnished room,
starting at $340.
Efficiency at $450
month furnished
with all utilities
included. Off
street parking.
570-718-0331
ROOM WANTED
55+ male, Pittston
area. Would be
there 11am Monday
through 1am on Fri-
day. 732-803-8786
LINEUP
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INCLASSIFIED!
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in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
965 Roommate
Wanted
MOUNTAIN TOP
Male homeowner
looking for
responsible male
roommate to
share house. Min-
utes away from
Industrial Park. Off
street parking.
Plenty of storage.
Furnished room.
Large basement
with billiards and
air hockey. All utili-
ties included.
$425. Call Doug
570-817-2990
971 Vacation &
Resort Properties
BRANT BEACH, LBI,
NEW JERSEY
4 bedrooms, 2
baths, sleeps 10. 1
block to the beach
1/2 block to the bay.
Front porch, rear
deck, all the con-
veniences of home.
Many weeks still
available.
$1,000 to $1,950.
Call Darren Snyder
570-696-2010
Marilyn K. Snyder
Real Estate, Inc.
570-696-2010
HARVEYS LAKE
Furnished Summer
Home. Weekly and/
or Monthly. Starting
June to end of
August. Washer &
dryer. Free boat
slips. Wireless inter-
net. 570-639-5041
974 Wanted to Rent
Real Estate
HARVEYS LAKE
BOATHOUSE with
bathroom facility
wanted to rent
June, July & August
Call 609-613-0981
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