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>> WRAP RAGE: Packaging scientists call themplastic


blister packs and clamshells. Consumers call, them Well,
we cant print what consumers call them unless we do it this
way: @#$&%@! You know the feeling. You buy a cool, new
gizmo, and before you can enjoy it, you have to go through
the frustration of prying it loose fromits impossible casing.
Someone out there feels your pain, and has created a day just
for you. Its Particularly Preposterous Packaging Day, and its
this Tuesday. Dont really know how to celebrate it. Maybe
open up a bunch of childproof caps and yell, Ah ha!
>> GAME ON: Every four years, the NFL universe aligns to
give us a battle for the state of Pennsylvania. A figurative
battle for Pennsylvania, that is. There was a real battle for the
state once. It was 149 years ago in Gettysburg, but thats
neither here nor there. The Eagles and Steelers have
a regular season date set for Oct. 7 in the Steel
City. That one will count. The teams also play a
meaningless game this Thursday in Philly. You can
check that out at 7:30 p.m. on FOX 56.
>> LIPCHITZ. HERB LIPCHITZ: Ever
notice that in movies, spies have cool-sounding
names? James Bond. Ethan Hunt. Jason
Bourne. No one ever names the spy Herb Lip-
chitz. Or Melvin Corpuscle. Sadly, the producers
of the Bourne films have squandered a
chance to break the dorky name barrier. Their
new filmThe Bourne Legacy, introduces
us to Aaron Cross, a spy with another
typical spy name who does typical spy
things like going rogue and killing bad guys
in nifty ways. The action flick will be in
theaters this Friday.
>> THE MOUNTAINS AROCKIN: Montage Mountain
has played host to a couple of head-banging, amp-blowing
music acts the last few weeks. With the Vans Warped
Tour and the MayhemFestival eating the mountains
soul. Now, its time for a little down-home, good ol
boy Southern rock with The Allman Brothers Band.
The legendary rockers will be presenting the First
Annual Peach Music Festival beginning this Friday
and running until Sunday. Therell be lots of acts, lots
of stages and lots of good music.
>> LET THE GAMES END: Mathematicians
have calculated that by the time the 2012 London
Olympics are over, there will be 900 medals award-
ed, 300 national anthems played, 34,456 inconse-
quential tweets fromathletes, and 567,987 TV
shots of Michael Phelps mother in the
stands. Alas, the inevitable end to the 2012
Games will be here this Sunday. Closing
ceremonies are set for 8 p.m. (our time) and
will be on NBC. Next Summer Games: Rio
de Janeiro in 2016.
THINGS
YOU NEED
TO KNOW
THIS WEEK
C M Y K
6 09815 10011
WILKES-BARRE, PA MONDAY, AUGUST 6, 2012 50
timesleader.com
The Times Leader
Misty May-Treanor and
Kerri Walsh Jennings beat
Italians Marta Menegatti
and Greta Cicolari 21-13,
21-13 in womens beach
volleyball quarterfinals. On
Tuesday they will play Chi-
nas Xue Chen and Zhang
Xi, which beat Austrian
sisters Stefanie and Doris
Schwaiger 21-18, 21-11. The
Chinese pair has beaten
Walsh Jennings and May-
Treanor three consecutive
times.
USAINBOLT SETS RECORD
Ever the showman, Jamai-
can Usain Bolt kept right on
running after winning the
100-meter run in Olympic
record time for a victory lap
that included high-fives for
front-row fans, a pause to
crouch down and kiss the
track and even a somersault.
Thousands in the crowd
chanted the champions
name: "Usain! Usain! Usain!"
2012 LONDON
OLYMPICS
Medal
count
as of Aug. 5
LONDON 2012 OLYMPICS
China 30 17 14 61
United States 28 14 18 60
Britain 16 11 10 37
South Korea 10 4 6 20
France 8 8 9 25
Italy 6 5 3 14
Kazakhstan 6 0 0 6
Germany 5 10 7 22
Russia 4 16 15 35
Hungary 4 1 3 8
North Korea 4 0 1 5
Netherlands 3 1 4 8
South Africa 3 1 0 4
New Zealand 3 0 4 7
Japan 2 12 13 27
Denmark 2 4 2 8
Romania 2 4 2 8
Belarus 2 2 3 7
Cuba 2 2 1 5
COUNTRY G S B TOT
NBC
Gymnastics - Individual Event
Gold Medal Finals: Mens Still
Rings, Mens Vault and Wom-
ens Uneven Bars; Track and
Field - Gold Medal Finals:
Mens 400M, Mens 400M
Hurdles and Womens Pole
Vault; Beach Volleyball -
Quarterfinal; Mens Diving -
Springboard Qualifying, 8
p.m.-Midnight
Track and Field - Gold Medal
Finals; Cycling - Track Events,
12:35 p.m.-1:35 a.m.
T V S C H E D U L E
INSIDE
A NEWS
Obituaries 2A, 6A
Nation/World 5A
Editorials 7A
B SPORTS
Scoreboard 2B
C CLICK
Birthdays 3C
Television 4C
Puzzles 5C
D CLASSIFIED
Comics 14D
7
7
1
2
5
5
Gunman opens fire, kills 6
in Milwaukee Sikh temple
NATION/WORLD, 5A
Terror in
Wisconsin
Jeff Gordon records
first victory of the season
SPORTS, 1B
Victory on a
rainy raceway
LONG POND What was a
happy day for winning NASCAR
driver Jeff Gordon and his fans
turned into a nightmare at Poco-
no Raceway after one person
was killed and nine others in-
jured by lightning strikes Sun-
day afternoon just after the
Pennsylvania 400 was called
early because of storms.
As race cars were being cov-
ered and fans were trying to get
away from the torrential down-
pours, multiple lightning bolts
struck, two of them injuring 10
fans. One was later pronounced
dead on arrival at Pocono Med-
ical Center in East Stroudsburg.
One of the injury-inducing
strikes occurred in the parking
lot behind the grandstands and
the other was near gate No. 3,
track spokesman Bob Pleban
said.
Pleban said four of those in-
jured were transported to Poco-
no Medical Center. Two had mi-
nor injuries, one had moderate
injuries, and the fourth had crit-
ical injuries and eventually died.
An emotional track President
Brandon Igdalsky, who also ex-
pressed his condolences for the
victims, made the announce-
ment of the fatality at about 7:45
p.m.
Unfortunately, a member of
our raceway family here, a fan,
has passed away, he said.
Two other race attendees
were taken to Geisinger Wyom-
ing Valley Medical Center in
Plains Township, one with mod-
erate injuries and the other with
minor injuries. Three more were
taken to Lehigh Valley Hospital
Center-Cedar Crest in Salisbury
Township, near Allentown. A
tenth person was taken to Le-
high Valley Hospital in Allen-
town and was in critical condi-
tion, Pleban said.
The storm, which anyone
who had access to any weather
website knewwas on its way for
at least 30 minutes, arrived at
about 4:40 p.m., causing NAS-
Lightning kills 1, hurts 9 at race
Multiple bolts hit at Pocono
Raceway as fans stream out.
By ANDREWM. SEDER
aseder@timesleader.com
See LIGHTNING, Page 8A
When Wilkes-Barre Area School Board
voted to pay attorney Ray Wendolowski
$195,000 as solicitor for one year, critics
balked, citingfarlowersolicitorratesinoth-
er school districts.
But areviewof total legal fees spent inar-
eadistrictsinthe2011-12school year shows
that the deal with Wendolowski is not that
faroutof lineif thedistrictavoidsbringing
inother attorneys.
Wendolowski inked a
two-page agreement
with the school board
promising to represent
the district on all legal
matters except reverse
tax appeals cases in
whichthe district argues
a property assessment is
toolow. Wendolowski woulddothosecases
onacontingencyfeebasis, beingpaidonlyif
theappeal is successful.
The $195,000 also covers photocopies,
long-distance phone calls, postage, parale-
gal help, travel and lodging expenses. The
agreement promises no work will be dele-
gated to other attorneys without board ap-
proval, andthereisnolimit onthehoursthe
money pays for, though Wendolowski will
providebills detailinghourlywork.
While Wendolowskis new agreement is
by far the most costly for a solicitor in Lu-
zerneCountyschool districts, it maybethe
most comprehensive. Crestwoods agree-
ment with solicitor Jack Dean is one para-
Legal fees
go beyond
retainers
W-B Areas inclusive solicitor deal
may work if no other lawyers used.
By MARK GUYDISH
mguydish@timesleader.com
Wendolowski
See SOLICITOR, Page 8A
MAN WHO OVERCAME DISASTER COMPETES AGAIN
CHARLOTTE BARTIZEK/FOR THE TIMES LEADER
K
evin Augustine, Trucksville, starts the biking portion of the Wilkes-Barre Triathlon on Sunday. Thirteen
years ago, Augustine was paralyzed for two months, underwent cervical spinal fusion surgery so he
could walk again and spent years rehabbing. On Sunday, Augustine finished second in the Aquabike divi-
sion, for athletes who have suffered injuries that does not include the run. For event coverage, see Page 1B.
One dark night during an ice storm, a
young man drove his fathers relatively
new Mercedes-Benz truck and a load of
glass fromWest Virginia up a steep hair-
pin curve in the George Washington Na-
tional Forest.
He was traveling only about 8 mph,
but the road was slick.
Conrad Baut put the truck in a shal-
low ditch, denting a fender and causing
his sister Karen to tumble from the
trucks berth, down on top of him and
another brother, Gerhard.
Oh, whats Dad going to say? Con-
rad Baut remembers worrying. Im the
first one to christen his truck.
When the trio of siblings reached a
pay phone, they realized their fathers
first concern was that no one was hurt.
His second question was whether the
Truckin for 35 years, 286,726 miles
Mercedes-Benz truck has served
Swoyersville business since 1977.
By MARY THERESE BIEBEL
mbiebel@timesleader.com
See TRUCK, Page 8A
The Baut familys truck has been
in use since 1977. If you still make
use of a vintage item and would
like to share the story with our
readers, contact Mary Therese
Biebel at 570-829-7283 or mbie-
bel@timesleader.com. It doesnt
have to be a truck. Perhaps youre
still using Grandmoms hand-
cranked meat grinder or the kids
are playing with classic Fisher-
Price toys from a generation or
two ago.
HAVE S OME T HI NG OL D?
K
PAGE 2A MONDAY, AUGUST 6, 2012 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
Baldo, Jill
Bonanni, Marianna
Carle, Lynda
Grabosky, Marilyn
Hines, Mary Ellen
Jonas, Patricia
Kuckla, Bertha
Mikowski, Rudolph Jr.
Nervitt, Helen
Pachucki, Adam
Rice, Dorothy
Salitus, Margaret
Sapp, Sandra
Smith, Ryan
Stauch, William
Walter, Theresa
Pages 2A, 6A
OBITUARIES
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 Sundays
Pennsylvania Cash 5
game, so the jackpot will be
worth $325,000.
Lottery officials said 34
players matched four num-
bers and won $472 each;
1,836 players matched three
numbers and won $14.50
each; and 23,767 players
matched two numbers and
won $1 each.
Wednesdays Powerball
jackpot will be worth at least
$212 million because no
player holds a ticket with
one row that matches all
five winning numbers drawn
in Saturdays game.
The winning numbers
were:
19-30-48-53-55
Powerball: 18
LOTTERY
MIDDAY DRAWING
DAILY NUMBER 8-5-1
BIG 4 7-8-9-6
QUINTO 6-7-6-9-7
TREASURE HUNT
08-10-12-22-28
NIGHTLY DRAWING
DAILY NUMBER 1-5-0
BIG 4 7-2-8-7
QUINTO 9-5-9-6-3
CASH 5
06-17-37-38-43
PRASHANT SHITUT
President & CEO
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ldaris@timesleader.com
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Issue No. 2012-219
More Obituaries, Page 6A
J
ill V. Baldo, of Jake Lane, Facto-
ryville, died Friday evening in
the Cancer Treatment Center of
America in Philadelphia.
She was born in Meshoppen on
May 9, 1965, daughter of Richard
Nichols andLinda McLaudNichols,
both of Tunkhannock.
She attended Tunkhannock Area
High School and had been employ-
edby Waynes Automotive Collision
Service Inc. in Tunkhannock as a
secretary. In1977, Jill was amember
of the first girls softball team in
Tunkhannock that went on to win
the first state championship for
Tunkhannock.
Over the years she was instru-
mental in organizing and running
several softball teams in the Tunk-
hannock area serving as president
for the Tunkhannock womens soft-
ball association. Jill was anavidsup-
porter of Tunkhannock youth base-
ball. She served as coach for numer-
ous teams and was an assistant
coach for her sons tee-ball and
squidget baseball teams, and trav-
eled long distances with her sons
community traveling baseball team,
the Titans.
Jill was an avid supporter and ve-
ry passionate about veterans caus-
es and helped out with several fun-
draisers for the military. Jill enjoyed
riding motorcycles and fishing for
salmon in Pulaski, N.Y. and for
muskies on the Susquehanna River.
Jill was always theretohelpcommu-
nity and friends.
Surviving are her husband, Sal
Baldo; son, Jakob, of Tunkhannock;
daughter, Nikki Martin of Tunkhan-
nock; six grandchildren, Dylyn,
Tieler, Jaide, Ashton, Logan and
Chloe; brothers, Dennis, Clint and
Randi Nichols, all of Tunkhannock;
paternal grandmother, Helen Ni-
chols of Tunkhannock.
Funeral services will be held on
Tuesday at 8 p.m. fromthe Sheldon-
Kukuchka Funeral Home Inc., 73 W.
Tioga St., Tunkhannock, with the
Rev Lori Robinson. Private inter-
ment will be in Sunnyside Cemete-
ry, Tunkhannock. Friends may call
at the funeral home on Tuesday
from5 p.m. until the time of service.
In lieu of flowers, memorial con-
tributions may be made to the Can-
cer Treatment Center of America ,
1331 E. Wyoming Ave., Philadel-
phia, PA19124 or the Tunkhannock
Baseball Association, c/o Robert
Barkley, 116 Woodcrest Drive,
Tunkhannock, PA18657.
Online condolences may be sent
to the family at sheldonkukuchka-
funeralhome.com.
Jill V. Baldo
August 3, 2012
B
ertha Ann Kuckla, age 91, of Du-
pont, died Sunday morning at
Wesley Village, Jenkins Township.
She was the widow of Joseph
Kuckla, who passed away February
22, 1962.
She was born in Dupont, daugh-
ter of the late Alexander and Anna
Krzywicki Romasiewicz, and was a
class of 1938 graduate of St. Johns
High School, Pittston. Mrs. Kuckla
was a member of the Sacred Heart
of Jesus Church, Dupont, where she
was past president of the Altar and
RosarySociety. She was a past presi-
dent of the Dupont Little League
Auxiliary, treasurer of the Dupont
Senior Citizens, active with the Girl
Scouts and Boy Scouts, was active
with the Red Cross, where she
earned a10-year service pin, a mem-
ber of the Orchard Lake Auxiliary
and worked as a Majority Inspector
onthe Dupont ElectionBoardof the
Third Ward for over 30 years. She
was the president of The Polish
Womens Alliance, Scranton Coun-
cil 44, for manyyears andGroup267
of Dupont. She was last honored as
the 2010 May Queen by the Polish
Womens Alliance of America.
Surviving are three sons, Joseph
and his wife, Andrea, Old Forge;
Thomas and John, both of Dupont;
a daughter, Nancy George, Dupont;
grandchildren, Adrianna Rup-
precht, Kelly Alexander, Tara Kuck-
la, Jesse James George, Jenna Yan-
chulis; Joseph, Matthew, Peter, Co-
dy, Daniel and John Paul Kuckla; 13
great-grandchildren; one great-
great-granddaughter; sisters Clara
Romasiewicz, Dupont, and Mary
Kilyanek, Duryea; nieces and neph-
ews.
She was preceded in death by
brothers, Alexander, Peter and Jo-
seph Romasiewicz, and sisters Jose-
phine Chiampi, Helen Romasiewicz
and Irene Starinski.
Funeral services will be held
Wednesday at 9:30 a.m. from the
Lokuta-Zawacki Funeral Home, 200
Wyoming Ave., Dupont, with a
Mass of Christian Burial at 10 a.m.
inthe SacredHeart of Jesus Church,
215Lackawanna Ave., Dupont, tobe
celebrated by the Rev. Joseph D.
Verspy, Pastor. Interment will be in
the parish cemetery, Dupont.
Friends may call Wednesday from
8:30 to 9:30 a.m.
Bertha Ann Kuckla
August 5, 2012
SCRANTON -- The sixth an-
nual Railfest returns to the
Steamtown National Historical
Site on Labor Day weekend, of-
fering visitors an array of exhib-
its, demonstrations, and yes,
trains.
This year, the Steamtown site
also announced the grand mar-
shal would Al Boscov, chairman
of Boscovs Department Stores.
Boscov is a longtime support-
er of the Steamtownsite andthe
local community, having been
involved with the construction
of the Mall at Steamtown and
the establishment of the F.M.
Kirby Center for the Performing
Arts in Wilkes-Barre.
As grand marshal, he will
openthis years festivities along-
side Steamtown Superintend-
ent Kip Hagen.
Railfest offerings include
demonstrations such as how to
change the wheels on a locomo-
tive, rides on trolleys and ca-
booses, and exhibits including
model train displays, high-tech
train tracking programs and big
band music, among others.
And there will also be a num-
ber of trains, ranging from icon-
ic locomotives from the early
1900s to the newest models of
today. Some of the trains will be
open for the public to view.
While Railfest is a must-see for
railroad aficionados, Bill Clark,
a park ranger at the Steamtown
site, said there is also a lot here
for families and those who are
just casually interested.
People dont realize how
much of a connection they
(still) have to railroads, Clark
said, noting they are still thriv-
ing today.
Railfest returns
to Steamtown
Al Boscov is grand marshal
of the sites Labor Day
weekend festivities.
By ADITHYA PUGAZHENDHI
Times Leader Intern
Where: 150 S Washington Ave.,
Scranton
When: Sept. 1 and 2, 9 a.m. to 5
p.m.
Entrance fee: $7 for adults 16
and older, free for 15 and under
Additional fees apply for ex-
cursions and train rides.
I F YO U G O
HAZLETON Police said
they are seeking help identifying
a man who was found lying in
Carson Street between Eighth
and Ninth streets and bleeding
from his head at 12:25 a.m.
Saturday.
Police said the man was trans-
ported to a hospital for treat-
ment. He is described as a white
male, between 20 and 30 years
old, approximately 6 feet tall
with a thin build and brown
hair. Anyone with information
about the mans identity is
asked to contact police at 459-
4940 or by dialing 911.
KINGSTON The State Po-
lice Bureau of Liquor Control
Enforcement, Wilkes-Barre,
cited Brew Haus Bar & Grill
LLC Sloppy Joes, 1 Cherry St.,
on charges it violated the state
liquor code by using a loud-
speaker to play music or other
sounds that were audible be-
yond its property line.
WILKES-BARRE City
police reported the following:
Theresa Simmons of Madi-
son Street reported Saturday
her swimming pool was slashed.
Dustin Stougt of South
River Street reported Saturday a
Nintendo 64 video game con-
sole, 30 games and an air condi-
tioner were stolen from his
residence.
HANOVER TWP. -- Stephanie
Kelly, 20, of East Northampton
Street, Wilkes-Barre, reported
the license plate HZH8472 on
her 2003 Toyota Celica was
stolen sometime between
Thursday and Saturday while it
was parked on Lyndwood Ave-
nue.
HANOVER TWP. -- Tony
Huang reported copper con-
densing lines were cut from
several condensing units at the
China House Buffet on Carey
Avenue between Friday night
and Saturday morning, police
said. The theft damaged the
units and inner wiring.
An additional condensing unit
next door was damaged at the
Phoenix Rehabilitation &
Health Services building, police
said.
PLAINS TWP. John Stri-
baugh of Kingston was taken in
to custody Saturday night on a
warrant for criminal trespass,
police said.
Officers responded to the
Relax Inn on state Route 315 at
8:36 p.m. for a report of a do-
mestic disturbance and found
Stribaugh. He was taken to the
Luzerne County Correctional
Facility, police said.
PLAINS TWP. A Scranton
man early Saturday morning
reported he was cut on the leg
when someone punched and
shattered his windshield, police
said.
Judson Roth told police the
injury occurred while he was
sitting in his vehicle in the park-
ing lot of the Twist on state
Route 315. Police responded to
the lot at 2:16 a.m. for a report
of a large disturbance.
Roth did not request medical
treatment, police said.
POLICE BLOTTER
WASHINGTON The relent-
less, weather-gone-crazy type of
heat that has blisteredthe United
States and other parts of the
world in recent years is so rare
that it cant be anything but man-
made global warming, says a new
statistical analysis fromatopgov-
ernment scientist.
The research by a man often
called the godfather of global
warming says that the likeli-
hoodof suchtemperatures occur-
ring from the 1950s through the
1980s was rarer than 1 in 300.
Now, the odds are closer to 1 in
10, according to the study by NA-
SA scientist James Hansen. He
says that statistically whats hap-
pening is not random or normal,
but pure and simple climate
change.
This is not some scientific
theory. We are now experiencing
scientific fact, Hansen told The
Associated Press in an interview.
Hansen is a scientist at NASAs
Goddard Institute for Space
Studies in NewYork and a profes-
sor at Columbia University. But
he is also a strident activist who
has called for government action
to curb greenhouse gases for
years. While his study was pub-
lished online Saturday in the Pro-
ceedings of the National Acade-
my of Science, it is unlikely to
sway opinion among the remain-
ing climate change skeptics.
However, several climate sci-
entists praised the new work.
In a blunt departure frommost
climate research, Hansens study
based on statistics, not the
more typical climate modeling
blames these three heat waves
purely on global warming:
Last years devastating Tex-
as-Oklahoma drought.
The 2010 heat waves in Rus-
sia and the Middle East, which
led to thousands of deaths.
The 2003 European heat
wave blamed for tens of thou-
sands of deaths, especially
among the elderly in France.
The analysis was written be-
fore the current drought and re-
cord-breaking temperatures that
have seared much of the United
States this year. But Hansen be-
lieves this too is another prime
example of global warming at its
worst.
The new research makes the
case for the severity of global
warming in a different way than
most scientific studies and uses
simple math instead of relying on
complex climate models or an
understanding of atmospheric
physics. It also doesnt bother
with the usual caveats about indi-
vidual weather events having nu-
merous causes.
The increase in the chance of
extreme heat, drought and heavy
downpours in certain regions is
so huge that scientists should
stop hemming and hawing, Han-
sen said. This is happening of-
ten enough, over a big enough ar-
ea that people can see it happen-
ing, he said.
Scientists have generally re-
sponded that its impossible to
say whether single events are
caused by global warming, be-
cause of the influence of natural
weather variability.
However, that position has
been shifting in recent months,
as other studies too have con-
cluded climate change is happen-
ing right before our eyes.
The science in Hansens study
is excellent and reframes the
question, saidAndrewWeaver, a
climate scientist at the Universi-
ty of Victoria in British Columbia
who was a member of the Nobel
Prize-winning international pan-
el of climatescientists that issued
a series of reports on global
warming.
But there is boundtobe contin-
ued disagreement. Previous
studies had been unable to link
the two, and one by the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Ad-
ministration concluded that the
Russian drought, which also led
to devastating wildfires, was not
related to global warming.
AP PHOTO
Dr. James E. Hansen, head of the NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies, talks about his conclu-
sions on climate change at his office in New York.
Global warming blamed
NASA scientist says work
shows crazy weather is so
rare that its not random.
By SETH BORENSTEIN
AP Science Writer
AP PHOTO
The Ibardin lake, which provides
drinking water to the southern
French cities of Hendaye, Biria-
tu and Urrugne, is almost dry
due to the recent heat wave,
near the French-Spanish bor-
der.
C M Y K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com MONDAY, AUGUST 6, 2012 PAGE 3A
LOCAL
timesleader.com
LEHMAN TWP.
Cops search for area man
The Pennsylvania State Police
issued an arrest warrant Sunday
night for Charles Richard Conden II
in a home invasion burglary that
occurred early Fri-
day morning at the
Pollock residence
on Huntsville Ide-
town Road, Lehman
Township.
Conden, 19, of
Wright Street, Ed-
wardsville, is also
wanted in an armed
robbery in Ocean City, Md., later
that same day.
Four people, including Sarah Jean
Gryskevicz, 19, of Wilkes-Barre, were
taken into custody in connection
with the robbery, during which shots
were fired, according to Ocean City
police.
Conden was with them in the
vehicle, stolen from Pennsylvania, as
the five sped at a high rate from
police. It crashed and Conden escap-
ed, but police and bystanders appre-
hended the others as they tried to
run away, police said.
Additional charges are forthcom-
ing against Conden, state police said.
He is a white male, 5 feet, 9 inches
tall and 150 pounds. He was last seen
in the Hanover Township area and
was wearing a black hooded top, a
red T-shirt, jeans, red baseball hat
and flip flops.
State police said Conden is consid-
ered armed and extremely danger-
ous. Anyone who comes into contact
with him is asked to immediately call
the Pennsylvania State Police at
Wyoming at 570-697-2000. All in-
formation will be kept confidential.
HAZLETON
Funfest spaces available
There are still spaces available for
the Funfest Craft Show, to be held
Sept. 8 and 9 as part of Funfest
Weekend in downtown Hazleton.
The show offers a potential for
tens of thousands of customers. And
vendors are encouraged to bring
holiday merchandise as the festivals
2012 theme is Christmas in Septem-
ber. The show is open only to craf-
ters who make the items they sell.
Organizers say they will accept en-
tries as long as space is available.
Nonprofits and charities can raise
funds through the Street Fair Funfest
Sept. 9. Food and novelties can be
sold for one set fee in this category.
Print a version of an application at
www.funfestpa.org, or call Funfest at
(570) 455-1509.
HAZLETON
Bullying topic of program
The Greater Hazleton Health
Alliance will present the free educa-
tional program, What Parents Need
to Know about Bullying, from 6
p.m. to 7:30 p.m. Aug. 14 at the Ha-
zleton Health & Wellness Center,
lower level, 50 Moisey Drive.
The program will identify different
types of bullying and provide in-
formation to parents on how to dis-
cuss bullying with their children and
when it is appropriate to involve
school personnel..
First Lt. John Leonard, Hazleton
City Police Department, and James
Caggiano, MD, FAAP, pediatrician,
of Alliance Medical Group Pediatric
Services, will be guest speakers.
Pre-registration is required. Visit
www.ghha.org and register online
through the calendar of events or call
(570) 501-6204. Light refreshments
will be served.
READING
Wanted: Old refrigerator
UGI Utilities Electric Division is
looking for the oldest refrigerator or
freezer recycled in its service area.
The winner of the contest that
ends Aug. 31 will receive a $250
Sears gift card toward the purchase
of any Energy Star products. The
overall state winner will receive a
$1,000 Sears gift card.
UGI customers will receive a $35
incentive to schedule and pick up an
old appliance as part of the contest.
Customers may call 1-877-270-3521
or visit www.theenergyguyatu-
gi.com/recycle to schedule a free
home pickup. Refrigerators and
freezers must be in working condi-
tion and be between 10 and 30 cubic
feet. A $35 check will arrive within
four to six weeks of the pickup.
N E W S I N B R I E F
Conden
LUZERNE COUNTY
Controller Walter
Griffith has had it
with cigarette butts
littering county gov-
ernment property.
He asked county
council Tuesday to
ban smoking on all county property.
If you want to smoke, smoke on
your own property, the controller
said.
A citizen chimed in later in the
council meeting, suggesting the coun-
ty install more ashtrays.
Council didnt act on the matter,
but County Councilman Harry Haas
told Griffith he opposes a smoking
ban.
While you usually have some real-
ly great ideas, I am vehemently op-
posed to taking anything like that
away from our people, Haas said.
He noted the stressful working
conditions he witnessed at the prison
on a recent tour.
If our corrections officers want to
have a smoke on a break, all the pow-
er to them, Haas said.
A tidbit of related history: Smok-
ing was allowed in the county cour-
thouse cafeteria until November
2007, when former commissioners
banned the use of tobacco within 20
feet of all county buildings.
Though the cafeteria ban seems
like a no-brainer today, it was contro-
versial at the time because the eating
area was a coveted indoor haven to
light up. Commissioners had banned
smoking in all county buildings in
1994 but allowed its return in the
cafeteria in 1996 after complaints,
including a loss of business for the
cafeterias nonprofit operator.
County Councilman Rick Morelli
participated in Tuesdays council
meeting via speaker phone, which is
permissible, but Councilwoman
Elaine Maddon Curry complained
when his connection temporarily
ended after the vote for a new council
chairperson.
The vote for chairman was close,
with six of the 11 members picking
Tim McGinley for the leadership
post. Without Morellis vote for
McGinley, council would be locked in
a tie.
Maddon Curry said rules for tele-
phone participation must be estab-
lished because council members
shouldnt be able to vote on one mat-
ter by phone and miss the lions share
of the meeting.
Morelli reestablished connection
for other parts of the meeting and
told Maddon Curry through the
speaker phone that the same rules
should apply to council members
who leave meetings early. Part-time
council members cant always attend
meetings in person with full-time
employment obligations, Morelli said.
A county council committee will
JENNIFER
LEARN-ANDES
L UZE RNE C OUNT Y B E AT
Controller Griffith wants to snuff out smoking on county property
See BEAT, Page 4A
WILKES-BARRE Residents of
South Wilkes-Barre will once again be
partying in the park thanks to the efforts
of a group of volunteers intent on im-
proving their community.
Sponsored by the District A Commit-
tee, the third annual Party in the Park,
set for Sept. 8 in Miner Park off Old Riv-
er Road, promises to be the best outing
yet, complete with music, food, fun and
games for all ages, saidcommittee mem-
ber Rick Gazenski.
Every year we expand. Its really ex-
citing this year, Gazenski said.
We have a car show, a Harley-David-
son (club) and remote-controlled air-
planes and helicopters coming in.
The community gathering is among
several notable activities sponsored by
the District ACommittee, a groupof vol-
unteers whoraise money tofundvarious
community projects within Wilkes-
Barres District A, which encompasses
most of South Wilkes-Barre and Goose
Island.
In the past three years the group has
raised more than $50,000, Gazenski
said. Its projects have included the con-
struction of masonry dugouts at the
South Wilkes-Barre girls softball field;
thereplacement of fencingandrepairs to
bleachers at the South Wilkes-Barre Lit-
tle League field and the purchase and in-
stallationof lightingandparkbenches in
Lafayette Park.
The group is currently finishing up its
latest project the construction of du-
gouts for baseball at Gibby field, located
near the entrance to Barney Farms.
We knowthe city cant provide every-
thing. It just doesnt have the money,
Gazenski said. We wanted to keep the
district safe and keep kids busy. A
group of seven of us decided to raise
funds every year to make this happen.
The projects take a lot of work, but Ga-
zenski saidtherewardinseeingthecom-
munity come together makes it all
worthwhile.
We always get, Youre doing such a
great job, thank you so much. Is there
anything we can do to help?
Party will highlight volunteer efforts
District A Committee expands
events for Sept. 8 outing in W-B.
By TERRIE MORGAN-BESECKER
tmorgan@timesleader.com
See PARTY, Page 8A
Harveys Lake resident Michelle
Boice recently looked up several
property sales in Nanticoke and
was disturbed to find all six signif-
icantly below Luzerne Countys
assessed values.
A Realtor for more than 15
years, Boice was
researching
sales for a wom-
an who received
a government
letter question-
ing why her
aunts home sold
markedly below
the county as-
sessment. The aunts assets were
under review for a nursing home
placement.
The largest gap was on a Noble
Street home that is assessed at
$130,000 and sold for $40,000 in
May 2011.
The five other properties sold
between $40,500 and $49,900 and
had assessments of $53,600,
$69,900, $75,000, $76,100 and
$105,800. The differences be-
tweensales andassessments rang-
ed from19 to 161 percent.
You could do the same study in
any town and find the same thing.
The assessments are ridiculously
off inthis county, saidBoice, a vo-
cal critic of the countys 2009 reas-
sessment.
County Assessment Director
Tony Alu doesnt disagree with
Boices assertion that many values
are off, but said a recent state anal-
ysis of more than 3,200 county
property sales in 2011indicates as-
sessments are still accurate
enough to delay another reassess-
ment.
Property
values
ripped
15-year Realtor Michelle Boice
says recent sales show how off
the mark new assessments are.
By JENNIFER LEARN-ANDES
jandes@timesleader.com
Boice
See BOICE, Page 4A
WILKES-BARRE Kevin Davis re-
fuses to let his past define him.
Although the 1989 Meyers graduate
spent a fewmonths in a correctional fa-
cility shortly after high school, he went
on to complete nursing school and to
work in that field. That determination
has motivatedhimtotakeonyet anoth-
er project: writing, directingandacting
in a film titled Man in Box.
Somanypeoplehavebelievedinme
during my life, said Davis, I truly
want to give back to the Wilkes-Barre
area.
He gives special credit to the teach-
ers and staff at Meyers High School,
who he said provided him with a won-
derful foundation for his future. He
said that during his incarceration, he
rememberedthe words andthe faces of
those who encouraged him and be-
came determined to change his life.
Davis was also diagnosed with colon
cancer in2008, but fought to overcome
the disease and today says he feels
great.
The movie project is a reflection of
the choices that one needs to make in
life and the consequences those choic-
es bring. Davis emphasizes he is not
necessarily trying to make a religious
or moral point, but toget theviewers to
think more deeply about the nature of
life and about their own character.
Davis credits the actors with their
great attitude. Many of them are com-
ing from New York City because they
believe in Davis and the filmhe is craft-
ing. He also lauds the crew members
who have donated their services to see
his vision come to life.
The actors, rehearsing at Arts YOU-
BILL TARUTIS PHOTOS/FOR THE TIMES LEADER
Man in the Box director Kevin Davis of Wilkes-Barre, a 1989 Meyers graduate, instructs the cast at Arts YOUni-
verse in Wilkes-Barre during rehearsal on Sunday afternoon.
Giving back to W-B
Meyers grad set to make film Man In Box in area
By GERI GIBBONS
Times Leader Correspondent
Man in the Box cast members
James OHora of Scranton, left, and
Lorelei Sands of Marshalls Creek
review their lines Sunday.
See DAVIS, Page 8A
C M Y K
PAGE 4A MONDAY, AUGUST 6, 2012 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
N E W S
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40 UPEEL SHRIMP
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40 BUFFALO WINGS
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OVER 20 ROTATING DRAFT BEERS
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3 Dozen Steamed Clams
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$
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6 Dozen Steamed Mussels
The effort to ban the gassing
of stray animals gathered anoth-
er supporter in U.S. Rep. Lou
Barletta.
The Republican congressman
from Hazleton and pet owner
introduced a non-binding reso-
lution Thursday on the practice
with the intent of bringing at-
tention to this cruel manner of
euthanizing an animal.
In a press release, Barletta
said he would
like to see
states such as
Pennsylvania
that permit the
practice to
take action to
make it illegal.
Barletta,
whose family has a dog and two
cats, decried the lack of restric-
tions to prevent an official who
is unable to locate an animals
owner fromtaking it to a facility
to be gassed.
This is unconscionable in
the United States in the 21st
century, he said.
Prior to his resolution, the
state Senate addressed the is-
sue with a bill to ban the use of
carbon dioxide chambers. It
was referred to the Agriculture
and Rural Affairs committee in
March.
Senate Bill 1329 has the sup-
port of the Federated Humane
Societies of Pennsylvania, said
Cindy Stark, vice president of
the organizations executive
board.
Starke, who also is the shelter
manager of the SPCA of Lu-
zerne County in Plains Town-
ship, said gassing is used on a
very limited basis. Intravenous
injection is the recommended
method, she added, and is used
at the local Society for the Pre-
vention of Cruelty to Animals.
Last month, the shelter,
which serves the entire county,
received more than 600 ani-
mals. We take all the animals
that dont have any other place
to go, Starke said.
Pet owners can take a few
simple steps, she explained, to
reduce the number going to
shelters and prevent overpop-
ulation: make sure pets have
identification, spay and neuter
them and keep them under con-
trol.
This is such a preventable
problem, Starke said.
She suggested anyone with
questions about the programs
and services offered at the
SPCA contact it at 570 825-4111.
Barletta: End gassing of animals
Congressman seeks to bring
attention to this cruel manner
of euthanizing an animal.
By JERRY LYNOTT
jlynott@timesleader.com
Barletta
The state benchmark for as-
sessments, known as a common
level ratio, was 109.4 for the
county in 2011. Ratios above the
ideal score of 100 indicate more
properties are selling below as-
sessments.
Reassessment benchmark
Alu wont recommend anoth-
er reassessment unless the ratio
is15percent aboveor below100,
and the countys 2012 ratio
wont be issued until next sum-
mer.
He blames the countys de-
clining sale prices on the slug-
gish real estate market and be-
lieves the score will move closer
to 100 again when the economy
rebounds.
Boice concedes the economy
hurt real estate values but be-
lieves the effect was minimal.
She said the region was largely
insulated from drastic market
swings experienced in Califor-
nia, Arizona, Florida and other
areas.
In our area, property values
increase and decline slow and
steady, she said.
Data fromthe Greater Wilkes-
Barre Association of Realtors
shows real estate transactions
handled by members totaled
$215 million last year, $233 mil-
lion in 2010 and $217 million in
2009.
Association officer Bob Run-
dle, owner of Coldwell Banker
Rundle Real Estate, said the
market is slowly coming back.
He declined to critique the
countys assessments, saying he
doesnt pay a whole lot of atten-
tion to them.
Anassessment is the same as
an appraisal an opinion of val-
ue. You could have three people
analyzing the same property --
all coming up with different fig-
ures, Rundle said.
Cause for appeals
Boice said she wants to make
property owners aware of dis-
parities because they may be
paying more than their fair
share, warranting assessment
appeals.
It makes my blood boil when
anyone in Luzerne County
brags about the accuracy of our
valuations, Boice said. Its
such an injustice.
Alu said another countywide
reassessment is the only correc-
tive option. A revaluation could
reduce assessments due to val-
ue decline, but property owners
may end up paying the same be-
cause taxing bodies would in-
crease millage rates to generate
the same amount of revenue af-
ter reassessment, he said.
The countys last reassess-
ment cost $8 million and was
challenging because the values
had not been updated since
1965. The next revaluation will
be completed in-house and cost
significantly less, officials said.
BOICE
Continued from Page 3A
A review of 10 random property
sales recorded Aug. 2 shows six
sold below the assessed values.
Heres the breakdown by proper-
ty location, with the assessments
followed by the sales prices:
Hazleton -- $82,900, $15,000
Kingston Twp. -- $514,900,
$470,000
Plymouth -- $78,600, $75,000
Pittston Twp. -- $68,900,
$33,000
Butler Twp. -- $206,500,
$130,000
Kingston -- $43,200, $35,000
Exeter -- $117,900, $125,000
Ross Twp. -- $221,300,
$266,000
Hazle Twp. -- $63,100, $95,000
Plains Twp. -- $72,200, $115,000
A S S E S S M E N T
S N A P S H O T
Sept. 4 is the deadline to file
assessment appeals for 2013.
Appeal forms are available at the
assessors office in the county
courthouse annex on River
Street, Wilkes-Barre, or on the
county website, www.luzerne-
county.org (click on departments
and assessor).
The latest property assessments
have been posted on The Times
Leaders free online property
assessment database at www.ti-
mesleader.com (click on the tax
assess icon on the main page).
A S S E S S M E N T
C H A L L E N G E S
meet at 6 tonight in the coun-
cil meeting room on the first
floor of the county cour-
thouse in Wilkes-Barre to
develop a plan to evaluate the
county manager.
County Manager Robert
Lawtons hiring resolution
said he will undergo a goal
evaluation after six months,
or later this month.
Council members may
soon switch to two public
meetings per month, rather
than meeting every Tuesday.
Council members agreed to
cancel Tuesdays work ses-
sion.
Councils new strategic
initiatives committee will
meet at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday in
the courthouse council meet-
ing room.
The committee will recom-
mend proposed ordinances,
code amendments and other
actions within councils juris-
diction. Council members Jim
Bobeck, Linda McClosky
Houck, Edward Brominski,
Eugene Kelleher and Rick
Williams will serve on the
committee.
Lawtons much-awaited
Aug. 14 mid-year financial
report will be streamed live
to the Internet thanks to
Service Electric Cable and
Scott Cannon of Video In-
novations.
Service Electric installed a
camera system inside the
countys Emergency Manage-
ment Agency building several
months ago for live broad-
casts of council meetings on
Channel 19. Cannon handles
the directing and is providing
the live streaming of council
meetings, starting with the
Aug. 14 session, as a commu-
nity service for residents
outside the Service Electric
viewing area.
Lawtons presentation
starts at 6:30 p.m. The
streaming video can be
viewed at videoinnovation-
s.com. The broadcast sched-
ule also is on Cannons web-
site.
BEAT
Continued from Page 3A
PITTSBURGH The Marcel-
lus Shale is about to become the
most productive natural gas field
inthe UnitedStates, according to
new data from energy industry
analysts and the federal govern-
ment.
Though serious drilling only
began five years ago, the sheer
volume of Marcellus production
suggests that in some ways
theres no going back, even as
New York debates whether to al-
low drilling in its portion of the
shale, which also lies under large
parts of Pennsylvania, West Vir-
ginia and Ohio.
The top spot for the Marcellus
doesnt surprise me, said Jay
Apt, a professor of technology at
Carnegie MellonUniversity. But
will it lead to industries that
spring up to use that gas? he
asked, adding that much of the
bounty could also end up being
shipped to Canada, the Gulf
Coast or overseas.
In 2008, Marcellus production
barely registered on national en-
ergy reports. In July, the com-
bined output from Pennsylvania
and West Virginia wells was
about 7.4 billion cubic feet per
day, according to Kyle Martinez,
an analyst at Bentek Energy.
Thats more than double the 3.6
billion cubic feet from last April,
and represents more than 25 per-
cent of national shale gas produc-
tion.
Thats neck-and-neck with pro-
duction from the Haynesville re-
gion in Arkansas and Texas, but
new drilling permits there have
declined sharply.
The Powell Shale Digest, an in-
dustry newsletter based in Fort
Worth, Texas, concluded that a
recent report from the U.S. Ener-
gy Information Agency means it
is reasonable to assume that the
Marcellus has or will soon pass
Haynesville as the top producer.
The Marcellus Shale is a gas-
rich formation of rock thousands
of feet below ground. Advances
in drilling technology made the
shale accessible, which led to a
boom in production, jobs and
profits, and a drop in natural gas
prices for consumers. But there
are also concerns about pollution
and impacts to roads and other
public services.
Apt said having a natural re-
source bounty is one thing, and
using it wisely is another. The
current wholesale price of natu-
ral gas is about $3here, but $12or
more in Europe and Japan.
Its clear people will want to
export the Marcellus gas, Apt
said, adding that such an out-
come could lead to what econo-
mists call the resource curse,
which is when the general pop-
ulation hardly benefits, while a
few get very rich.
But Apt said there are some
hopeful signs, such as the Shell
Oil Co. plantobuilda petrochem-
ical plant to turn Marcellus gas
into other consumer and indus-
trial products including plastics.
Its widely believed that if Shell
moves ahead with plans to build
that $2 billion plant north of
Pittsburgh, other small industri-
es will follow.
For now, it looks like the Mar-
cellus region will be in the top
production spot for several years,
analysts say. While drilling has
slowed, there were still 288 new
well permits issued in May, and
over 1,200 for the first five
months of the year, according to
data fromLCI Energy Insight, an
El Paso firm that tracks national
energy trends.
Martinez noted that several
major Marcellus region pipeline
expansions are scheduled for
completion this fall, which
should allow production to grow
even more, and make it easier to
ship gas to other parts of the
northeast.
That could boost wholesale
prices, he said, and keep energy
companies focusedonthe region.
Long-term, being able to
move the gas out of the region
will give some support to those
prices, Martinez said.
Marcellus Shale is top gas field
The Powell Shale Digest
reports on sheer volume of
production in only five years.
By KEVIN BEGOS
Associated Press
NEW YORK For the physi-
cian in Illinois, the attorney in
Kentucky, the arts editor in Ore-
gon, their Eagle Scout medals
were treasured reminders of
youthful achievement. Yet eachis
parting with his medal out of dis-
mayovertheBoyScouts recently
reaffirmed policy of excluding
gays.
I can no longer maintain any
connection to an organization
which actively promotes such a
bigoted and misguided policy,
Dr. Robert Wise of Chicagowrote
to Scout headquarters in Texas.
Tothat end, I aminterestedinre-
moving all evidence that I was ev-
er a Scout.
Wise, 59, is among several doz-
en former Eagle Scouts who have
taken such steps after the July 17
announcement that the Boy
Scouts of America, after a confi-
dential two-year review, were
sticking with the divisive, long-
standing policy of excluding
openly gay youth and adults as
members andleaders.
Another of the protesters is at-
torney Jackson Cooper, 32, a for-
mer senior patrol leader of Troop
342 in his hometown of Louis-
ville, Ky. In an open letter, he said
he was unsure if any of his fellow
Scouts were gay.
But I doknowthat mynowde-
ceased mother, a lesbian, would
not have been allowed to serve as
a den mother if her orientation
had been public knowledge, he
wrote. The thought that I have
invested such a large part of my
life with an organization that
wouldhaveturnedmyownmoth-
er away breaks my heart.
Also returning his medal was
Martin Cizmar, 31, arts and cul-
ture editor of Willamette Week,
an alternative newspaper in Por-
tland, Ore.
He tweeted the news: Just
mailed my Eagle Scout medal
backtotheBSAtoprotest theban
on gay scouts. Kinda sad, but im-
portant.
In a letter sent to BSA head-
quarters along with the medal,
Cizmar detailed his scouting ca-
reer with a troop in Tallmadge,
Ohio.
Though I did not know at the
time, I was acquainted with a
number of gay Scouts and Scou-
ters (adult leaders), he wrote.
Theywere all great men, loyal to
the Scout Oath and motto and
helpful tothemovement. Thereis
no fair reason they should not be
allowed to participate in scout-
ing.
Also turning in his medal was
former Edwardsville resident
MatthewKerns, whoreceivedthe
award in 2003 just before he turn-
ed 18. He now lives in Jackson-
ville, Fla.
Deron Smith, the Boy Scouts
national spokesman, said there
was no official count at his office
of howmany medals had been re-
turned. He also noted that about
50,000 of the medals are awarded
eachyear.
Were naturally disappointed
when someone decides to return
amedal becauseof this singlepol-
icy, he said. We respect their
right to express their opinion.
Beyond the Eagle Scout pro-
tests, the Boy Scouts reaffirma-
tion of the no-gays policy has
drawncondemnationfromliberal
advocacy groups, newspaper edi-
torialists and others. In Washing-
ton state, Republican gubernato-
rial candidate Rob McKenna, an
EagleScout, joinedhisDemocrat-
ic opponent, Jay Inslee, in sug-
gesting the policy be changed.
The leadership of the Scouts
most influential religious part-
nersnotablytheMormons, Ro-
manCatholics andSouthernBap-
tistsappearstosupportthepol-
icy. Even liberal politicians seem
reluctant topress theissueamida
tensenational electioncampaign.
Despite Scouts actions, gay ban stands
Area native among several
Eagle Scouts protesting policy
by returning their medals.
By DAVID CRARY
AP National Writer
AP PHOTO
Dr. Robert Wise holds his Eagle Scout medal in the Chicago sub-
urb of Oakbrook Terrace, Ill. Wise, 59, is among several dozen
former Eagle Scouts who are relinquishing their medals following
the July 17 announcement that the Boy Scouts of America was
sticking with the divisive, long-standing policy of excluding open-
ly gay youth and adults as members and leaders.
K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com MONDAY, AUGUST 6, 2012 PAGE 5A
N A T I O N & W O R L D
EVANSVILLE, IND.
Romney against stimulus
M
itt Romney is calling for some-
thing dramatic to help the econo-
my recover, but hes not saying exactly
what.
The Republican presidential candi-
date says he opposes another federal
stimulus package and new government
programs. He also says that if the Fed-
eral Reserve were to undertake another
massive program of buying govern-
ment bonds and mortgage-backed
securities, with the goal of driving
long-term interest rates even lower, it
wouldnt help the recovery.
I can absolutely make the case that
now is the time for something dramatic
and it is not the time to grow govern-
ment. Its the time to create the in-
centives and the opportunities for
entrepreneurs and businesses big and
small to hire more people and thats
going to happen, Romney said an
interview aired Sunday on CNNs
State of the Union.
JERUSALEM
Israel upgrades defense
Israel has upgraded its top-tier Ar-
row II missile defense, a Defense Min-
istry official confirmed Sunday, as the
country girds for possible attacks from
Iran and Syria.
Sensors, command and control
equipment and radar have been en-
hanced to improve reach and accuracy,
the official confirmed without elaborat-
ing. He would not say how many Ar-
row II batteries are deployed around
the country and spoke on condition of
anonymity because he was not autho-
rized to discuss the militarys prep-
arations.
Israel has developed a network of air
defense systems to parry various
threats it sees from its enemies, in-
cluding the Arrow, a joint project with
the Boeing Co. in the U.S. that is de-
signed to shoot down incoming mis-
siles launched as far away as Iran.
OKLAHOMA CITY
Evacuation orders lifted
Many Oklahomans forced to leave
their homes because of raging wildfires
were being allowed to return Sunday,
despite some fires continuing to burn.
A monster fire had devoured al-
most 91 square miles and continued to
burn between Mannford and Kellyville
in northeastern Oklahomas Creek
County as light rain and cooler temper-
atures gave firefighters a brief respite
Sunday, said Oklahoma Forestry Ser-
vices spokeswoman Michelle Finch-
Walker.
She described the blaze as hop-
scotching as it burns some areas and
leaves others untouched.
LINCOLN, NEB.
Hot summer kills fish
Thousands of fish are dying in the
Midwest as the hot, dry summer dries
up rivers and causes water temper-
atures to climb in some spots to nearly
100 degrees.
About 40,000 shovelnose sturgeon
were killed in Iowa last week as water
temperatures reached 97 degrees.
Nebraska fishery officials said theyve
seen thousands of dead sturgeon, cat-
fish, carp, and other species in the
Lower Platte River, including the en-
dangered pallid sturgeon. And biol-
ogists in Illinois said the hot weather
has killed tens of thousands of large-
and smallmouth bass and channel
catfish and is threatening the pop-
ulation of the greater redhorse fish, a
state-endangered species.
The fish are victims of one of the
driest and warmest summers in histo-
ry.
I N B R I E F
AP PHOTO
Wildfires threaten power in La Palma
A man looks out from inside a house
threatened by wildfire in La Palma,
Spain. Wildfires fanned by fierce winds
and high temperatures raged across
Spains Canary Islands of La Palma
and La Gomera on Sunday. Flames are
threatening to cut off La Gomeras
phone communications and have
forced the evacuation of hundreds.
BEIRUT Syrian forces threatened
Sunday to mount a decisive battle for
Aleppo even as rebels clawed toward
the citys ancient center under intense
bombardment and strafing from war-
planes. Inthe capital Damascus, militia-
men appeared to step up guerrilla-like
forays incentral districts that were once
firmly in the regimes hands.
The twin fronts reflected the rising
stakes for both sides and a possible sig-
nificant evolution in rebel strategies.
Opposition forces appear to be shifting
toward more hit-and-run strikes in Da-
mascus and elsewhere to tie up Bashar
Assads forces and blur the lines be-
tween rebel and government-held terri-
tory.
The biggest prize of the ambush bri-
gades so far 48 abducted Iranians
brandedas spies by rebels was put on
display ina videothat carrieda warning
that all Iranians in Syria would be cap-
tured or killed because of Tehrans
strong backing for Assad. Iran said
thosecapturedwhentheir bus was com-
mandeered on Saturday were pilgrims
visiting an important Shiite shrine on
the outskirts of Damascus.
The abductions threaten to suck Iran
deeper into Syrias civil war and the
wider political brinksmanship around
the region. Iranclaims it has no fighting
forces aiding Assad, but it has sharply
amplified its criticism of countries sup-
porting the rebels such as neighboring
Turkey and Gulf states led by Qatar and
Saudi Arabia.
In further signs of the growing proxy
nature of Syrias conflict, Iran was
forced to reach out to Turkey and Qatar
withappeals tohelpreturnthe captives.
The daylight hijacking on the main
airport road in Damascus also raises
questions about the regimes ability to
control key parts of the capital and pro-
tect the symbols of Assads power such
as ministries and government offices
already breached once by a bombing
last month that killed four members of
Assads inner circle including his broth-
er-in-law and the defense minister.
The pro-government Al Watan news-
paper said the Syrian army is bracing it-
self for a decisive battle to clear Alep-
po, Syrias largest city, from rebels. It
gave no possible timetable andfor more
than a week, activists have claimed the
government is gearing up for an all-out
offensive on the northern commercial
center another critical battleground
for Assads regime to survive.
Syrian forces keep fighting for Aleppo
Militiamen appeared to step up
guerrilla-like forays in Damascus.
By BRIAN MURPHY
Associated Press
PHOENIXApossible plea deal
in the deadly Tucson shootings that
wounded then-U.S. Rep. Gabrielle
Giffords would send Jared Lee
Loughner toprisonfor therest of his
life, according to a person familiar
with the case.
A court-appointed psychiatrist
will testify Tuesday that Loughner
is competent to enter a plea in the
shooting rampage that killed six
people andinjured13, including Gif-
fords, said the person, who was not
authorizedto discuss the case publi-
cly and spoke on condition of ano-
nymity.
A status conference in the federal
case had already been scheduled for
Tuesday in Tucson.
The person, speaking Saturday
about upcoming events in the case,
said the plan is for Loughner to en-
ter a guilty plea in the murders and
attemptedmurders. The planis con-
tingent on the judge in the case al-
lowing Loughner to enter the plea.
The Los Angeles Times reported
earlier Saturday that Loughner was
set to change his plea.
Bill Solomon, aspokesmanfor the
U.S. attorneys office, said he could
not comment on Loughners case
and the possibility of a guilty plea.
The Pima County attorneys of-
fice, whichhas saidit couldalsopur-
sue state prosecution of Loughner,
declined to comment, said spokes-
woman Isabel Burruel Smutzer.
Loughner had pleaded not guilty
to 49 federal charges stemming
from the Jan. 8, 2011, shooting out-
side a Tucson supermarket where
Giffords was holding a meet-and-
greet with constituents.
Authorities said he shot Giffords,
opened fire on the crowd and was
subdued by bystanders. Giffords
was shot in the head and subse-
quently left Congress to devote her
time to rehabilitation.
Giffords and her husband were
traveling in Europe, and spokeswo-
man Hayley Zachary said Saturday
she had no information on develop-
ments in Loughners case.
Loughner
plea may
bring life
in prison
Suspect in Giffords shooting
negotiating, source says.
By PETE YOST
and PAUL DAVENPORT
Associated Press
PASADENA, Calif. NA-
SAs most high-tech Mars rover
on Sunday zeroed in on the red
planet where it will attempt a
tricky celestial gymnastics rou-
tine during a seven minutes of
terror plummet through the
atmosphere.
The Curiosity rover was
poisedtohit the topof the Mar-
tianatmosphereat13,000mph.
If all goes according to script, it
will be slowly lowered by ca-
bles inside a massive crater in
the final few seconds.
NASA was ready for the Su-
per Bowl of planetary explora-
tion, said Doug McCuistion,
head of the Mars exploration
program at NASA headquar-
ters.
We score and win or we
dont score and we dont win,
said McCuistion.
If all goes well, mission con-
trol at the NASAJet Propulsion
Laboratory should hear a sig-
nal at 10:31 p.m. Pacific (1:30
a.m. Eastern). The space agen-
cy warned that confirmation
could take longer if an orbiting
spacecraft thats supposed to
listen for Curiosity during the
descent is not in the right
place.
Curiositys trajectory was so
accurate that engineers decid-
ed to wave off a last chance to
tweak its position before atmo-
sphere entry.
Sundays touchdown at-
tempt was especially intense
because NASA is testing a
brand new landing technique.
Due to the communication de-
lay between Mars and Earth,
Curiosity will be on autopilot.
Theres also extra pressure be-
cause budget woes have forced
NASA to rejigger its Mars ex-
ploration roadmap.
NASAs high-tech Rover getting ready for 7 minutes of terror
AP PHOTO
A data controller monitors the Mars rover Curiosity from the
Deep Space Networks control room in Pasadena, Calif.
By ALICIA CHANG
AP Science Writer
OAK CREEK, Wis. A gunman opened fire Sunday
and killed six people at a Sikh temple near Milwaukee
before he was killed in an exchange of gunfire with the
first officer to respond to the chaotic scene, authorities
said.
The shootings happened before 10:30 a.m., when wit-
nesses said several dozen people were gathering at the
Sikh Temple of Wisconsin for a service. Hours of uncer-
tainty followed as police in tactical gear and carrying
assault rifles surrounded the temple with armored vehi-
cles and ambulances.
Police in Wisconsin said the FBI will handle the in-
vestigation of shootings at a Sikh temple near Milwau-
kee.
Oak Creek Police Chief John Edwards said the case is
beingtreatedas a domestic terrorismcase andthe FBI is
better equipped to handle that.
A crowd gathered outside as officers descended on
the temple and some spoke of talking or exchanging
text messages with people inside. Some said they had
heard there were multiple shooters, others spoke of
women and children held hostage.
The first official word frompolice was that they didnt
knowhowmany victims or suspects were involved. But
a short time later, after an extensive search of the tem-
ple, authorities said they did not believe there was more
than one shooter.
Jatin Der Mangat, 38, of Racine, said his uncle Sat-
want Singh Kaleka, the temples president, was one of
those shot. Mangat didnt know how serious Kalekas
injuries were.
This is nerve-racking. Noone really knows whats go-
ing on. Nothing like this has ever happened before,
Mangat said. Later, when he learned of the deaths, he
said, It was like the heart just sat down. This shouldnt
happen anywhere.
Greenfield Police Chief Bradley Wentlandt said the
gunman was shot to death by the first officer to arrive at
the temple.
Its unclear how many others were wounded. Wen-
tlandt saidhe hadbeentoldthe officer who shot the sus-
pect andanother personhadbeentakento hospitals. He
said the officer was shot multiple times, but was in sur-
gery and is expected to survive.
The spokeswoman for the area trauma center said
three victims were being treated there, including the of-
ficer in surgery.
Wentlandt did not identify the suspect or say what
might have motivated the shootings. Family members
identified some victims.
AP PHOTO
A man wipes away tears outside the Sikh Temple in Oak Creek, Wis., on Sunday. Seven people, including the
shooter, were killed. The incident is being investigated as an act of domestic terrorism.
7 dead in shooting
Man opens fire at Sikh temple in Wisconsin
By DINESH RAMDE
Associated Press
AP PHOTO
People watch police outside the Sikh Temple in Oak
Creek, Wis., where a shooting took place Sunday.
K
PAGE 6A MONDAY, AUGUST 6, 2012 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
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AZAIN Joseph, funeral 11 a.m.
Monday in the Mamary-Durkin
Funeral Service, 59 Parrish St.,
Wilkes-Barre. Service at 11:30 a.m.
in St. Mary Antiochian Orthodox
Church, Wilkes-Barre.
CIAMPI James, Mass of Christian
Burial 11 a.m. Saturday in St.
Columba Catholic Church, 342
Iron St., Bloomsburg. Friends may
call 10 until time of service.
CRISPELL Ellen, memorial ser-
vice 2 p.m. Aug. 26 in the Forty
Fort United Methodist Church.
DALLEY Mark, funeral noon
Monday in the Thomas P. Kear-
ney Funeral Home Inc., 517 N.
Main St., Old Forge.
DAVIES Mary, memorial service 11
a.m. Saturday in the Mehoopany
Methodist Church.
GRYSKEVICZ Edward, funeral 11
a.m. Wednesday in the John V.
Morris Funeral Home, 625 N.
Main St., Wilkes-Barre. Memorial
funeral Mass at 11:30 a.m. in the
St. Stanislaus Kostka worship site
of St. Andre Bessette Parish
Community, 668 N. Main St.,
Wilkes-Barre. Friends may call
9:30 a.m. until the time of ser-
vice.
HANCZYZ Stanley Sr., funeral 9
a.m. Monday in the Howell-Lussi
Funeral Home, 509 Wyoming
Ave., West Pittston. Mass of
Christian Burial at 9:30 a.m. in
Immaculate Conception Church,
Corpus Christi Parish, West
Pittston.
KING William Jr., funeral 8:45 a.m.
Monday in the Thomas P. Kear-
ney Funeral Home Inc., 517 N.
Main St., Old Forge. Mass of
Christian Burial at 9:30 a.m. in St.
John Neumann Parish-Nativity of
Our Lord Church, 633 Orchard
Ave., Old Forge.
KORSON Ruth, Shiva today and
Tuesday, 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9
p.m., at the Woodlands Inn and
Resort, 1073 Highway 315, Plains
Township.
MASSAKER Laurabelle, memorial
service 2 p.m. Aug. 18 in Vernon
Baptist Church, Tunkhannock.
MONTEL Joseph, blessing funeral
service 10 a.m. Monday in the
Lehman Family Funeral Service
Inc., 689 Hazle Ave., Wilkes-Barre.
Military service to follow in St.
Marys Cemetery, Hanover Town-
ship.
SARTORIO Marco, funeral 9 a.m.
today in the Graziano Funeral
Home, Pittston Township. Mass of
Christian Burial at 9:30 a.m. in St.
Joseph Marello Parish (Our Lady
of Mt. Carmel Church), Pittston.
SHALES RoseMarie, memorial
service 11 a.m. Saturday in Met-
calfe-Shaver-Kopcza Funeral
Home Inc., 504 Wyoming Ave.,
Wyoming. Friends may call 10 a.m.
until the time of service.
ZIOMEK John, celebration of life
9 a.m. Monday in McLaughlins,
142 S. Washington St., Wilkes-
Barre. Funeral Mass at 10 a.m. in
the Church of St. Patrick, Wilkes-
Barre.
FUNERALS
Marianna Bonan-
ni, 90 , of Exeter,
passed away on
Saturday, August
4, 2012 at the
United Metho-
dist Homes, Wes-
ley Village Cam-
pus, Jenkins
Township.
Born in Pascelupo, Italy, she was
the daughter of the late Giovanni and
Celestina Coccetti Sebastianelli.
Marianna was a member of the for-
mer St. Anthony of Padua Church,
where she also worked as the house-
keeper for 34 years.
She also had worked at the former
Consolidated Cigar Co., West Pitt-
ston.
Preceding her in death were her
husband, Angelo Bonanni, in 1989,
and brothers Pasquale and Alessio
Sebastianelli.
Surviving are her daughter, Maria
Bellus, Exeter, anda sister, Maria Pie-
trocarlo, Pittston Township; nephew,
Leonard, and his wife, Lucille Pietro-
carlo, Pittston Township, and a neph-
ew Pasquale and his wife, Maria Se-
bastianelli, Harleysville, Pa.; great-
nieces, Christiana, Maria, Sabrina
and Stephanie, and cousins, Gio Cec-
coni and Albina Cruciani, and Baldi-
no Cruciani.
Funeral services will be held on
Wednesday at 9 a.m. from the Gub-
biotti Funeral Home, 1030 Wyoming
Ave., Exeter, witha Mass of Christian
Burial at 9:30 a.m. at St Anthonys
Church of St. Barbara Parish, Exeter.
Entombment will be in Memorial
Shrine Mausoleum, Carverton.
Relatives and friends may call for
visitation on Tuesday, 6 to 9 p.m., at
the funeral home.
Tosendthefamilyanexpressionof
sympathy or an online condolence,
please visit www.gubbiottifh.com
Memorial contributions may be
made to Childrens Hospital, Phila-
delphia.
Marianna
Bonanni
August 4, 2012
Mary Ellen
Hines, 88, former
resident of Hun-
lock Creek,
passed August 4,
2012, in the
Meadows Nurs-
ing Center, Dal-
las.
She was born
May 14, 1924, in Wilkes-Barre, a
daughter of the late Louise Lane.
Surviving are daughters, Gloria
(Rocky) Hines Crane, Clara Buzinus,
Carol Hines Hunter, Robyn (Fuzzy)
Hines Martin and Patricia Hines
Keefe; sons, Joe Hines, Howard
Hines, Bob Daubert, William Daub-
ert; many grandchildren; great-
grandchildren and great-great-grand-
children (five generations).
She was preceded in death by her
husband, Walter Thomas Hines; son
William (Pickle) Hines; three infant
sons and daughter Rose Marie Hines
Nulton.
Funeral services will be held on
Wednesday, August 8, 2012, at 11a.m.
at the Clarke Piatt Funeral Home
Inc., 6 Sunset Lake Road, Hunlock
Creek, withtheRev. DanBrubaker of-
ficiating. Calling hours will be at the
funeral home on Tuesday, 6 to 8 p.m.
Interment will be in Oakdale Cem-
etery, Hunlock Creek.
The family would like to thank the
staff at the Meadows Nursing Center,
Dallas, for all the kindness shown.
Mary Ellen Hines
August 4, 2012
LYNDA N. CARLE, 64, Dallas,
passed away Saturday, August 4,
2012.
Funeral arrangements are
pending from The Richard H. Dis-
que Funeral Home Inc., 2940 Me-
morial Highway, Dallas.
PATRICIA CLARE JONAS, 76,
of Waterford, Mich., and Lake
Shickshinny, died peacefully Fri-
day, August 3, 2012. She leaves to
celebrate her life three children,
Jan Thomas Jonas of Waterford,
Timothy (Lisa) Jonas of Pepperell,
Mass., and Stephenie (Timothy
Sullivan) Anne Jonas-Sullivan of
Wiesbaden, Germany. She also
leaves behind four grandchildren,
Lauren and Matthew Sullivan, Na-
tia and Nick Jonas; her dearest
friends, Donna Lignon and Pau-
lette Kovach. Patti was raised in
Glen Lyon. She traveled the world
with her late husband, Stephen,
while he served his career in the
Air Force. Upon his retirement,
they both began working for the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania,
Department of Corrections, until
their retirement in 2001.
ACelebrationof her Lifewill be
heldWednesdayat10a.m. at Coats
Funeral Home, Waterford, Mich.
RYAN JOSEPH SMITH, infant
son of Charles and Desiree De-
Long Smith of Swoyersville,
passed away shortly after birth at
the Wilkes-Barre General Hospital
on Wednesday, August 1, 2012.
Surviving, in addition to his par-
ents, are a brother, Michael, and
sister, Abigayle; paternal grand-
parents, Charles Smith and Rose
Youells; and maternal grandpar-
ents, Theresa DeLong and Chris-
tine and Joseph Rowe; numerous
aunts, uncles and cousins.
He was preceded in death by
maternal grandfather, Matthew
DeLong Sr., and maternal grand-
mother, Susan A. Simon.
Arrangements are by the Karl
E. Blight Funeral Home.
R
udolph Rudy Mikowski Jr.,
64, a resident of Trucksville,
passed away unexpectedly on Fri-
day, August 3, 2012, at Geisinger
Wyoming Valley Medical Center,
Plains Township.
He is survived by his beloved
wife, Denise. Together, they cele-
brated their 41st wedding anniver-
sary on July 31.
Born on November 13, 1947 in
Passaic, New Jersey, Rudy was the
son of the late Rudolph Mikowski
Sr. andJulia (Bauernhuber) Mikow-
ski.
Hereceivedhis earlyeducationin
New Jersey and later went on to
study linguistics at Syracuse Uni-
versity.
A United States Air Force veter-
an, Rudy honorably servedhis coun-
ty during the Vietnam era.
Following his military years, Ru-
dy was employed by Verizon, where
he spent more than 30 years work-
ing tirelessly to provide for his fam-
ily up until his retirement.
He was a proud patriot who was
deeply devoted to his family, his val-
ues and his country. Rudys inter-
ests included fishing, gardening,
cooking and playing sports with his
sons. His kind and loving spirit and
selfless values will continue to in-
spire all those whose lives he tou-
ched.
He was known for his quick wit
and his gift for storytelling, which
brought smiles to the faces of many,
during even the most challenging of
times.
Rudy found pleasure in the small-
est of Gods blessings. An animal
lover at heart, he was always there
for a creature in need. Simplicity,
love and trust guided his nature. He
was a great example to all who had
the pleasure of knowing him.
In addition to his loving wife, De-
nise, Rudy is survived by his sons,
Russell Mikowski and his wife, Ma-
ria, of Atlantic Highlands, New Jer-
sey, and Andrew Mikowski, of Lit-
tleton, Colorado; his sisters, Helen
Latrella, of Mine Hill, New Jersey;
Diane Prelich, of Little Egg Harbor,
NewJersey; and Theresa Van Wage-
nen, of Elmwood Park, New Jersey.
In honor of Rudys wishes, no
formal services will be held.
Those closest to him will hold his
memory in their hearts and honor
him in their own special ways.
Arrangements have been entrust-
ed to the care of the Wroblewski Fu-
neral Home Inc., 1442 Wyoming
Avenue, Forty Fort.
For additional information or to
send the family an online message
of condolence, you may visit the fu-
neral home website www.wroblew-
skifuneralhome.com.
In lieu of flowers, a donation can
be made on Rudys behalf to your lo-
cal volunteer ambulance corps,
Paws For Vets (www.pawsforvete-
rans.com), or a charity of your
choice.
Rudolph Rudy Mikowski Jr.
August 3, 2012
M
rs. Dorothy M. Rice, 87, a resi-
dent of Bear Creek Township,
died Friday, August 3, 2012 at her
home following a lengthy illness.
Mrs. Rice was born in Wilkes-
Barre, daughter of the late Robert
andMaryElizabethBulmanOwens,
and was a graduate of GAR High
School, Wilkes-Barre. During World
War II, she was employed as a para-
chute packer for the military at
Wilkes-Barre. She later worked at
the former Fannie Farmer Candy
Shoppe, Public Square; Keystate
Bakery, and prior to her retirement,
for Old River Road Bakery, all of
Wilkes-Barre. She was well-known
through her work by many custom-
ers and friends.
She was a member of Good Shep-
herd Lutheran church, Wilkes-
Barre, andwas a member of the Pro-
ject Circle. She had been a member
of QueenEsther Chapter170, Order
of the Eastern Star, Wilkes-Barre
and was currently as member of
Chapter 90, Order of the Eastern
Star, Wilkes-Barre. She was also a
member of the Chanters Ladies,
IremShrine. Her late husband of 68
years, Walter J. Rice Jr., who died
earlier this year, had been director
of theIremChanters for manyyears.
She was also preceded in death by a
brother, Robert Owens.
Surviving are sons, Walter J. Rice
3rd, Bear Creek Township, andRob-
ert L. Rice and his wife, Catherine,
Avoca; daughter, Mrs. Elayne C.
Jones, and her husband, Griffith,
Bear Creek Township; seven grand-
children and nine great-grandchil-
dren.
Funeral will be held Wednesday
at 10:30 a.m. from the H. Merritt
Hughes Funeral Home Inc., a Gold-
en Rule Funeral Home, 451 North
Main Street, Wilkes-Barre, with ser-
vices at 11 a.m. at Good Shepherd
Lutheran Church, 190 South Main
Street, Wilkes-Barre, with the Rev.
Paul Metzloff, pastor, Holy Trinity
Lutheran Church, Kingston, offi-
ciating. Interment will follow in
Oak Lawn Cemetery, Hanover
Township. Friends may call at the
funeral home Tuesday from 4 to 7
p.m. and Wednesday from 10 a.m.
until going to church.
The family requests that flowers
be omitted and that donations in
Mrs. Rices memory be made to:
Hospice Community Care Division,
Celtic Health Care, 601 Wyoming
Avenue, Kingston, PA18704.
Mrs. Dorothy M. Rice
August 3, 2012
M
argaret (Yasulitis) Salitus, 92,
of Duryea, passed away Satur-
day, August 4, 2012 in Riverside Re-
habilitation and Nursing Center,
Taylor.
She was preceded in death by her
husband, Joseph, who died on Sep-
tember 20, 1964.
Born in Pittston on September
29, 1919, she was the daughter of the
late Stanley and Eva Semonitis You-
savich.
Before retiring, she was employ-
ed by Brook Mfg Co in Old Forge for
approximately 30 years. She was a
member of the former St. Casimirs
Church, Pittston.
She was preceded in death by
three brothers, John, Stanley and
Albert Yousavich; and also three sis-
ters, Mary Yousavich, Anna Talaros-
ky and Alice Johnson.
Surviving are her son and daugh-
ter-in-law, BernardandPeggy Yasul-
itis, Altoona, and also her daughter
and son-in-law, Regina and Freder-
ickCasaia, Duryea; sevengrandchil-
dren, Ralph Riviello, Carol Focarel-
li, Lisa Riviello, Bryan Yasulitis, Dr.
MarkCasaia, MaureenPadavan, Da-
vid Casaia; seven great-grandchil-
dren, Tony Sulla, Lindsay Padavan,
Kyle Casaia, Erin and Joshua Yasul-
itis, Michael and Nicholas Focarelli;
nieces and nephews.
The family would like to thank
Dr. Kenneth Sebastianelli for his ex-
cellent care, as well as the staff at
Riverside Rehabilitation Center, es-
pecially Laureen, andHospice Com-
munity Care.
A Mass of Christian Burial will
be held on Tuesday, August 7, 2012
at 11 a.m. in St. John the Evangelist
Church, WilliamStreet, Pittston. In-
terment will be in Marcy Cemetery,
Duryea.
Funeral arrangements are en-
trusted to the Peter J. Adonizio Fu-
neral Home, 251 William Street,
Pittston. Online condolences may
be made at www.peterjadoniziofun-
eralhome.com.
Margaret (Yasulitis) Salitus
August 4, 2012
S
andraAnnSapp, 49, of Mountain
Top, passed away unexpectedly
onFriday, August 3, 2012, at her par-
ents home in the presence of her
loving parents and the registered
nurse Carol.
Sandra was the daughter of John
and Anna Kuzemko Sapp. She was a
graduate of Crestwood High
School. She was baptized and re-
ceived First Holy Communion in
1971 by Father Andrew Chlystun
Surviving, in addition to her par-
ents, are her brother, John M. Sapp;
several aunts, uncles and cousins.
Special thanks and gratitude to
her Registered Nurse Carol and the
nurses aide Ann of the Maxim
Home Health Care, Wilkes-Barre.
Funeral services will be held
Wednesday, August 8, 2012 at 10
a.m. in Ss. Peter & Paul Ukrainian
Catholic Church, 635 North River
Street, Wilkes-Barre, with her Pas-
tor, the Rev. Father Paul Wolensky,
as celebrant of the Divine Liturgy
and Requiem Service. Interment
will follow in the parish cemetery,
Plains.
Family andfriends may call at the
church from 9:30 a.m. until service
time.
Memorial contributions may be
made to M.S. Society, 1630 Man-
heim Pike Suite 8, Lancaster, PA
17601.
Sandra Ann Sapp
August, 3, 2012
A
dam David Pachucki, 38, of
Jenkins Township, passed
away Saturday, August 4, 2012.
Adam was born in Jersey City
on January 15, 1974 and was the
son of Ronald and Theresa Nenish
Pachucki Sr., who now reside in
the Hudson section of Plains
Township.
Adam was educated in Jersey
City schools and was employed as
a heavy-equipment operator and
mechanic for the Hudson Anthra-
cite Coal Company, Laflin. He was
a devoted Giants fan; enjoyed rid-
ing his ATV and motorcycle, lis-
tening to his favorite music and
fishing with his dad.
He and his wife, the former Jen-
nifer DeMarco, had celebrated
their 15th wedding anniversary
September 29, 2011.
Surviving, in addition to his lov-
ing wife and his parents, are a son,
Adam Jr.; daughters, Paige and
Bonnie Josephine, all at home;
brothers, Ronald and his wife, Lin-
da, Middletown, New Jersey; Da-
vid, New Smithville; nephews,
James, Jason, Matthew, and a
niece, Megan.
Adams funeral will be con-
ducted on Wednesday at 9 a.m.
from the Mark V. Yanaitis Funeral
Home, 55 Stark Street, Plains,
with a Mass of Christian Burial at
9:30 a.m. in Ss. Peter and Paul
Church, Plains. Interment will be
in the parish cemetery, Plains.
Friends may call at the funeral
home on Tuesday, 5 to 8 p.m.
In lieu of flowers, memorial do-
nations to the family are requested
to help Adams family with the fu-
neral expenses. Condolences may
beofferedor directions accessedat
www.yanaitisfuneralhome.com.
Adam David
Pachucki
August 4, 2012
H
elen E. Nervitt, 91, a resident of
Swoyersville, entered into eter-
nal life on Saturday afternoon, Au-
gust 4, 2012, at her residence.
Her belovedhusbandwas the late
Albert F. Nervitt, who passed away
on January 29, 1992.
BornonJune 30, 1921inSwoyers-
ville, Helen was the daughter of the
late Matelos and Eleanor Levan-
dowski.
Helen was raised in Swoyersville
and attended the former Swoyers-
ville High School.
Prior to her retirement, Helen
was employed for many years as a
seamstress in the local garment in-
dustry.
A woman of faith, Helen was a
member of Saint Elizabeth Ann Set-
on Parish, Swoyersville. Additional-
ly, Helen was a member of the Inter-
national Ladies Garment Workers
Union.
Helen enjoyed many things in
life, especially tending to her home
and garden.
Family was the center of Helens
life and she cherished each moment
she had with her loved ones. Her
grandchildren were truly the apple
of her eye. She always held a spe-
cial place in her heart for her grand-
children and she reveled in all of
their academic achievements.
The family wishes toextendtheir
heartfelt thanks to Helens dear
friends, Betty Zukosky and Berna-
dine Hrivnak, for always beingthere
to lend Helen a helping hand.
In addition to her parents, Mate-
los and Eleanor Levandowski, and
her husband, Albert, Helen was pre-
ceded in death by her half-brothers
and half-sisters.
Helen is survived by her brother,
Edward Levandowski, of Fort
Worth, Texas; her son, Ronald
(Lois) Nervitt, of Williamsburg, Vir-
ginia; her daughter, Sharon (John)
Caffrey, of Red Springs, North Car-
olina; her granddaughter, Dr. Jac-
queline Caffrey, of Savannah, Geor-
gia; her grandson, Dr. Douglas (Dr.
Lori Bristow) Caffrey, of Washing-
ton D.C.; her great-granddaughter,
Mackenzie Garner, of Easton, Mary-
land.
Relatives and friends are re-
spectfully invited to attend a Mass
of Christian Burial, which will be
celebrated on Tuesday, August 7,
2012, at 11 a.m. in Saint Elizabeth
Ann Seton Parish, 116 Hughes
Street, Swoyersville, withtheRever-
endJosephJ. Pisaneschi, her pastor,
officiating.
Interment with the Rite of Com-
mittal will follow in Saint Marys
Cemetery, Swoyersville.
There will be no public calling
hours.
Funeral arrangements are en-
trusted to the care of the Wroblew-
ski Funeral Home Inc., 1442 Wyom-
ing Avenue, Forty Fort.
For additional information or to
send the family of Mrs. Helen Nerv-
itt anonline message of condolence,
you may visit the funeral home web-
site www.wroblewskifuneralhome-
.com.
Memorial contributions may be
made in Helens memory to the
American Cancer Society, 712 Keys-
er Avenue, Taylor, PA18517.
Helen E. Nervitt
August 4, 2012
More Obituaries, Page 2A
THERESA WALTER, 62, of
White Haven, diedSunday, August
5, 2012 in the Kindred Hospital,
Wilkes-Barre.
Funeral arrangements are
pending from the Lehman Family
Funeral Service, Inc., 403 Berwick
Street, White Haven. For more in-
formation, visit the funeral home
website at www.lehmanfuneral-
home.com.
M
arilyn A. Grabosky, 73, of Pitt-
ston, passed away Sunday, Au-
gust 5, 2012, at Geisinger Wyoming
Valley Medical Center, Plains Town-
ship.
Born in Pittston, April 5, 1939,
she was the daughter of the late Ha-
rold Spike Collins and Mary Bren-
nan Collins.
Marilyn was a 1957 graduate of
St. Johns High School, Pittston,
where she was a drum majorette.
She was employed as a payroll clerk
at the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Inter-
national Airport prior to retire-
ment. She was a member of Our La-
dy of the Eucharist Parish, Pittston.
Besides her parents, she was pre-
cededindeathby her husband, Rob-
ert Grabosky Sr., in2004andher sis-
ter, Elaine Metroka.
Sheis survivedbyher son, Robert
GraboskyJr., Pittston; her daughter,
Barbara Gregorio, and her husband,
Anthony, Pittston, and several niec-
es and nephews.
The funeral will be held at 9 a.m.
onWednesday, August 8, 2012, from
the Kizis-Lokuta Funeral Home, 134
Church St., Pittston. A Mass of
Christian Burial will be celebrated
by the Rev. Thomas Maloney at 9:30
a.m. at Our Lady of the Eucharist
Parish, North Main Street, Pittston.
Interment will be in St. Mary, Help
of Christians Cemetery, Pittston.
Friends may call Tuesday at the fu-
neral home from 5 to 8 pm.
The family would like to thank
the ICUstaff at Geisinger Wyoming
Valley for their care and compas-
sion.
Marilyn A. Grabosky
August 5, 2012
W
illiam J. Stauch, 54, of West
Wyoming, passed away Friday
evening in the Wilkes-Barre General
Hospital.
Born in Brooklyn, N.Y., he was the
son of Hans and Eva Stauch of Beach
Lake.
He was a graduate of Damascus
High School, class of 1975; Wilkes
College, where he received a bache-
lors degree in business; Penn State,
where he received a bachelors de-
gree in telecommunications engi-
neering; and ITTTechnical Institute,
computer networking. Bill was em-
ployed at the former Techneglas
Corp. of Jenkins Township, and from
1996-2003, he and his wife, Nancy,
owned and operated Dusseldwarfs
Restaurant in Pittston.
Surviving, besides his parents, are
his wife of 23 years, the former Nancy
Bucikowski, and brothers-in-law, An-
drew and John Bucikowski.
Funeral services will be at the
convenience of the family from the
Metcalf- Shaver-Kopcza Funeral
Home Inc., 504 Wyoming Ave.,
Wyoming. There will be no calling
hours.
William J. Stauch
August 3, 2012
K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com MONDAY, AUGUST 6, 2012 PAGE 7A
S E RV I NG T HE P UB L I C T RUS T S I NC E 1 8 81
Editorial
Olympians who dedicate their
lives to athletic excellence should
not be punished when they
achieve it.
U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio
The Florida Republican recently introduced the Olympic Tax Elimination
Act, which would exempt U.S. athletes from paying taxes on their
medals. The U.S. Olympic Committee awards $25,000 for gold, $15,000
for silver and $10,000 for bronze.
T
HERE IS NO doubt
that Mitt Romney is a
great friend and sup-
porter of Israel. Dur-
ing his short but significant vis-
it to the country, the former
Massachusetts governor said
all the right things.
He backed, inter alia, any
and all measures to stop Iran
from building nuclear weap-
ons, Israels right to defend it-
self (adding it is right for
America to stand by you) and
its claimtoJerusalemas its cap-
ital muchtothe chagrinof the
Palestinians.
Hearguedthat Israels securi-
tyis avital national securityin-
terest of the United States and
advocated a strong partnership
between the two countries.
Romney received a warm
welcome from Israeli leaders,
especially Prime Minister Bi-
nyamin Netanyahu, who noted
that they had been friends for
decades.
Netanyahu stressed that in-
ternational sanctions against
Iran, led by the United States,
must be backed by a credible
threat of military action. But
Netanyahu, whose relations
with President Barack Obama
have sometimes been strained,
must be careful not toappear to
be backing Romney. As Israels
leader, he cannot publicly favor
one candidate over another.
Romneys trip to Israel, like
Obamas before the last presi-
dential campaign, clearly won
him friends here and might
boost his chances amongAmer-
ican Jews and perhaps Chris-
tian voters, too.
Both men are friends of Is-
rael; we believe their friendship
will endure, irrespective of who
wins the presidential race. It is
in both their interest and ours.
The JerusalemPost
WORLD OPINION
Romney wins friends
with recent Israel visit
A
MERICAS permis-
sive gun laws, fetish-
ized in their laxness
as the epitome of
American freedom by the pow-
erful National Rifle Associ-
ation, are a commondenomina-
tor in mass shootings around
the world. From Aurora, Colo.,
to Norway to Toronto and Mex-
ico, the stubborn refusal to link
the worldwide availability of
American-supplied semi-auto-
maticweapons, accessories and
ammunition to tragedy after
tragedy is a black mark.
In the case of the suspected
Aurora killer, James E. Holmes
was able to order 6,350 rounds
of various types of ammunition
over the Internet without trig-
gering any alarms. He might as
well have been ordering house-
wares.
His case is similar to that of
the Norwegian mass murderer
Anders Breivik, who killed 76
people a year ago.
In Mexico, which has strict
gun laws, the drug cartels have
armed themselves like a para-
military operation with easily
available American assault
weapons and used them to kill
hundreds of innocent people. In
Canada, a rising tide of Amer-
ican weapons spilling over the
border is defeating the coun-
trys attempts at gun control.
The biggest tragedy, of
course, is in the United States,
where only killings on the scale
of Aurora nowmake the nation-
al news but as many as 15,000
dieingunhomicides everyyear.
The Globe and Mail
Toronto
Gun laws spur tragedy
J
EAN-CLAUDE Juncker,
the president of the Eu-
rogroup organization of
eurozone finance minis-
ters, said that the single curren-
cy had reached a decisive
phase.
In the near three years since
the sovereign debt crisis first
erupted, how many times has
that phrase been trotted out,
only for this slow-motion car
crash to continue?
The evidence is growing that
the eurozones political leaders
are grappling with this crisis
without any democratic man-
date to shore them up. The
most strikingsignof this was an
opinion poll that showed that a
majorityof Germanvoters want
to return to the Deutschmark.
This hardening of opinion
against monetary union is sig-
nificant. It is the voters of Ger-
many who are going to have to
dig the deepest to deliver
whatever it takes. When the
people onwhomthe entire edif-
ice of the single currency is
built want out, it is clear the eu-
ro is facing an existential crisis
that will take far more than fur-
ther fiscal juggling to resolve.
The Telegraph, London
Euro confidence crisis
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
KRZ radio host rallies
for PSU, State College
L
et me start by saying I am not a lifelong
Penn State football fan. Throughout my
radio career, Ive adopted the local
college team as my team. Ive followed and
been a fan of West Virginia, Ohio State,
The Citadel, Colorado State, Central Flor-
ida and of course Penn State.
Theres been a lot of talk of Penn State
football recently in light of the sanctions
dished out by the NCAA. Its not going to
be easy for anyone associated with the
team.
But this is not the time to abandon it.
I think now more than ever you should
be supporting the Nittany Lions. Buy a
ticket. Wear blue and white. Go to a game.
And cheer for the team.
Recently more than 30 players on the
team said they will stay at Penn State and
not transfer to other schools. We take this
as an opportunity to create our own lega-
cy, said senior Michael Mauti. This pro-
gram was not built by one man and its
sure as hell not going to get torn down by
one man.
Well put.
Dont take out the horrendous acts of
one man on the current team.
Get your butt in the seats. Support the
local businesses in State College. They
need you now more than ever.
We still are Penn State!
Rocky Rhodes
Radio host
WKRZ, 98.5 FM
Pittston Township
Reader puts rueful words
in W-B mayors mouth
I
n all of the reports regarding the missing
gasoline in the city of Wilkes-Barre and
the mayors poor recordkeeping, here is
what the mayor did not say:
I screwed up big-time and I apologize to
the citizens of Wilkes-Barre who entrusted
me to run this city.
I failed to follow the most basic of re-
cordkeeping procedures. I did not keep a
log book with odometer readings to sub-
stantiate miles driven for city business as
required by IRS regulations and by the city.
I cannot prove how many miles I drove
on city business or how many gallons of
the gas I pumped into my private car(s)
were for personal use. Worse, I responded
to the story like a spoiled child might
when caught doing something wrong.
I promise the good citizens of Wilkes-
Barre that this will never happen again. I
also apologize for the distraction this has
caused and the cost to the city and state
for any investigations forthcoming. I ac-
cept full responsibility.
Lastly, dont trust any politician who
says, Trust me.
Robert Miller
Forty Fort
Thanks to all who helped
successful Capece benefit
W
e thank the people, too numerous to
acknowledge individually, who con-
tributed to the success of the benefit,
held on July 14 at Tommy Boys restaurant
in Nanticoke, in memory of Joanne Capece
for the Childrens Hospital of Philadelphia.
The generosity and hard work shown by
Tommy Boys personnel, the bands that
performed, the helpers who worked very
hard to assure our success and the people
who contributed to the activities, allowed
us to give a very generous donation to the
hospital.
Our heartfelt gratitude to all of you.
Rose Norczyk
On behalf of the family
of Joanne Norczyk Capece
Hanover Township
Inconsistent NCAA got it
wrong with sanctions
A
s I listen to the pundits and critics
discuss the Penn State University scan-
dal and the NCAA penalties handed
out, Im amazed by the political correct-
ness of all those who endorse these penal-
ties.
The question is this: Who are the vic-
tims of these penalties, which were
brought about by the actions of five or six
executives of Penn State? I contend that
its every Penn State football fan, every
student including the football players of
the past 14 years who were denied their
wins, the families of Penn State students
and, as a matter of fact, every resident of
State College who is blemished by the
NCAAs penalties.
Why arent any of these five or six indi-
viduals suffering a specific penalty directed
at them? In essence, these penalties reflect
negative reinforcement rather than sanc-
tions and directives that might act to rein-
force future controls so that a handful of
people could not control the actions of an
entire university for a crime of this nature.
The pompous announcement by the
NCAA officials only serves to justify politi-
cally correct and overly harsh penalties
applied against a fine university and its
innocent victims, none of whom could
change or control the actions of Jerry
Sandusky and the five or six Penn State
executives.
This is why the NCAA should start polic-
ing itself and strongly monitor and control
the many violations that continuously
occur in NCAA football.
Maybe, if this was done, there would be
less reason to unreasonably issue severe
penalties against innocent victims, as with
Penn State.
Walter Cole
Fairview Township
Pa.s first lady touts
kid-friendly tourism
T
he start of August signals another
school year is just around the corner.
For parents looking for fun ways to get
their children ready to go back to school
and in the learning mindset, I encourage
you to look at Pennsylvanias amazing
collection of museums.
As Pennsylvanias tourism ambassador, it
is my passion to visit and share recom-
mendations on the commonwealths must-
see venues, including the museums, exhib-
its and historical sites that provide chil-
dren with an opportunity to explore and
learn.
History comes to life at the No. 9 Coal
Mine & Museum, located in Lansford at
the foot of the Pocono Mountains. It is the
worlds oldest continuously operated an-
thracite coal mine and welcomes visitors
to travel by train 1,600 feet into the moun-
tainside.
Another must-see attraction, Galetons
Lumber Heritage Museum welcomes fam-
ilies to experience the colorful heritage of
the commonwealths prosperous lumber
era and the life of a woodhick at the
recreated logging camp.
For families with younger children or
those looking for a hands-on experience
that covers a variety of subjects, there are
options across the state. The Johnstown
Childrens Museum at the Heritage Discov-
ery Center encourages children to learn
about Johnstowns geography and history
through exhibits such as The Water Room,
which explores dam building and the ef-
fects of rain on mountains and valleys. The
Childrens Museum in Bloomsburg fea-
tures displays such as the Eastern Wood-
lands Longhouse that invites children to
see how Native Americans lived.
And if youre travelling during the last
few weeks of summer, be sure to check out
the new Kidsylvania roadtrip itineraries
on visitPA.com.
Susan Corbett
First lady of Pennsylvania
Harrisburg
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
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Mail: Mail Bag, The Times Leader, 15
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SEND US YOUR OPINION
C M Y K
PAGE 8A MONDAY, AUGUST 6, 2012 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
N E W S
niverseonNorthFranklinStreet
in Wilkes-Barre, reflect Davis
spirit of commitment tothe pro-
ject and the principles that
guide it. Although volunteers,
the actors show a great deal of
enthusiasmin regard to the pro-
duction.
Davis said the project is not
about making money but rather
about feeling fulfilled and hap-
py. Hesaidhehas always sought
in all his work to help people,
andthefilmisanoffshoot of that
desire to touch peoples lives.
Filming is set to begin Satur-
day in Wilkes-Barre, Kingston
andScranton, further emphasiz-
ing Davis love for the Wyoming
Valley. Filming sites include St.
Stephens Church on South
Franklin Street and Kirby Park.
Davis saidthat uponthefilms
completion he hopes to enter it
in several festivals. He also is
not adverse to his production
ending up on the big screen.
He believes the completed film
will be of such high quality that
it will be appropriate for com-
mercial audiences.
Davis welcomes volunteers
and any area restaurants that
might donate food to help feed
his starving artists.
DAVIS
Continued from Page 3A
BILL TARUTIS/FOR THE TIMES LEADER
Man in the Box cast members Ryan Nage of Taylor, left, Jody
Cain of Kingston, Nyce of Wilkes-Barre, and Rudolph Goodwin
of Wilkes-Barre, practice a scene Sunday.
Man in the Box cast members Nyce, left, Rudolph Goodwin,
both of Wilkes-Barre, and Corey Klinefelter of Forty Fort review
their lines on their cellphones on Sunday.
In addition to the car showand
radio-controlled planes, this
years Party in the Park will again
feature a 5k run/walk and a 3-
on-3basketball tournament. Vari-
ous food vendors will also be on
hand. The American Red Cross
will also hold a blood drive at the
nearby Kistler Elementary
School.
The event
is open to
the public
free of
charge.
The Dis-
trict A
Committee
is a non-
profit orga-
nization. All donations are taxde-
ductible. For more information
on the party or to donate, visit
the District A Committees Web-
site at WBdistrictafund.org.
PARTY
Continued from Page 3A
BILL TARUTIS/FOR THE TIMES LEADER
Members of the Wilkes-Barre District A Fund Committee Steve Barrouk, left, Lonnie Truskowski,
Rick Gazenski, and Dave Lewis discuss plans for Party in the Park at Miner Park in Wilkes-Barre on
Saturday morning. Absent from photo: Sue Greenfield and George Brown.
What: Party in the
Park
When: Sat., Sept. 8,
10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Where: Miner Park,
Old River Road,
Wilkes-Barre
I F YO U G O
graph, setting his retainer at
$18,000 a year for seven hours of
work a month. Additional hours
arebilledat $75per hour upto200
hours and $50 per hour after.
Dallas School Boards motion
reappointingattorneyBenJonesII
as solicitor for this school year at
$39,000 gives no details of what
the work entails. Wyoming Valley
West Business Manager JoeRodri-
guez noted the reappointment of
attorney Michael Hudacek paid
$23,270 last year is typically ap-
proved annually with no written
agreement detailing the work cov-
ered.
Outside counsel costs
Yet ineachof thosecasesthedis-
tricts spent considerably more in
legal feesthanthesolicitorsretain-
er last year. Deans law firm El-
liott Greenleaf & Dean did
$29,961 of billable work beyond
Deans retainer, and the district
spent another $15,459 for legal
work on special-education cases
handled by King, Spry, Herman,
Freund, and Faul. All told, Crest-
woodpaid$63,420inlegal feeslast
year.
In addition to the retainer for
Jones, Dallas paid$83,153 to eight
other lawfirms. Most was for spe-
cial-education cases or labor is-
sues, butthebiggestsinglechunk
$54,015 went to Rosenn, Jenkins
and Greenwald for a protracted
battle with the Northeast Pennsyl-
vaniaSchool DistrictHealthTrust,
aconsortiumof districts formedto
lower health insurance costs. Dal-
las and Pittston Area withdrew
from the trust in 2007 and have
beenfightingtoget what theycon-
tend is their share of a trust sur-
plus. They have been winning the
battle, and could end up reaping
millions, aswell ashavingthetrust
pay district attorney fees.
Pittston Area spent $276,570 in
legal fees last year. Of that, only
$15,286coveredtheretainer for at-
torney Joseph Saporito, who re-
ceived another $12,013 for work
outside the retainer, including tax
claim sales and bond refinancing.
Rosenn, Jenkins and Greenwald
got the largest share of Pittstons
expense, $83,268, but four other
firms were paid a combined
$109,772 for work on special edu-
cation cases.
Those cases arise whena parent
orguardiancontendsthedistrict is
not fulfilling its state and federal
mandates ineducating a child, Ro-
driguez said. Typically, districts
settle out of court, agreeingtopro-
vide services or accommodations
that satisfy the parents. The dis-
trict often ends up paying the fees
for the attorney who represented
the parent as well, Rodriguez
noted.
At WyomingValley West, Rodri-
guez said the district spent
$78,248 beyond Hudaceks retain-
er, almost all of it oneither special-
education settlements or labor is-
sues, most notably the successful
negotiation of three contracts.
Hours add up
Without the type of detailed
agreement Wilkes-Barre struck
with Wendolowski, districts can
end up paying their solicitor more
in billable work than in the retain-
er. In Hazleton Area School Dis-
trict, thecombinedretainer for So-
licitor Christopher Slusser andAs-
sistant Solicitor Ed McNelis last
year totaled $16,544. Yet Slusser
was paid $58,944 above that while
McNelis was paid $17,352 beyond
his retainer. The district spent an-
other $111,597 on 10 other law
firms.
Wyoming Area had a similar,
though less dramatic expenditure
beyond the $20,000 paid for solic-
itor retainer (it changed solicitors
six months into the fiscal year, but
the retainer rate remained the
same). The district paid attorney
Raymond Hassey $11,236 more
than the $10,000 retainer he re-
ceived for six months as solicitor,
and paid the firm of Pugliese, Fin-
negan, Shaffer & Ferentino
$33,156 on top of the $10,000 re-
tainer. WyomingAreaspent anoth-
er $57,289 on eight other law
firms.
Information provided by other
districts was not complete enough
to make full comparisons.
Wendolowskis appointment as
solicitor drew additional fire be-
causehehas servedas assistant so-
licitor for years, with attorney An-
thony Lupas in the solicitors slot.
Lupas resigned last year after a se-
vere fall, and has since been
charged with running an invest-
ment scheme that bilked people
out of at least $6 million over 18
years. The two attorneys operate
separate lawbusinesses.
Public outcry flared when a
Times Leader analysis showed le-
gal fees skyrocketed in Wilkes-
Barre Area in recent years, with
payments to Lupas rising sixfold
over three years. Combined, the
district paidLupasandWendolow-
ski $540,969incalendar year 2011,
with $328,956 of that going to Lu-
pas.
The school boardhireda firmto
conduct a forensic audit of bills
fromLupas and Wendolowski dat-
ingbackto2006; theresultsareex-
pected this month.
SOLICITOR
Continued from Page 1A
truck was still drivable, and it
was. So there were no problems.
More than 30 years and several
cross-country trips later, that
same truck is a champion of
sorts, continuing to deliver
stained glass, statues, steeples
and other products of Baut Stu-
dios Inc. in Swoyersville.
Earlier this year, USAToday re-
ported the average age of a car or
truck in the United States is 10.8
years. Thats a record high, but in
comparison, the Bauts Mer-
cedes-Benz 1116 is a granddaddy
of the road.
Its been part of the family
since December 1977, when the
late Gene Baut bought it from a
Long Island dealership to replace
a 12-year-old Ford truck.
Already a fan of Mercedes-
Benz automobiles, Gene Baut be-
lieved a truck designed by the
same European company would
serve the family business well,
and outlast two or perhaps three
trucks similar to our C550, Con-
rad Baut said.
Logging 286,726 miles so far
and closing in on the 35th anni-
versary of the purchase, the truck
is well on its way to meeting the
upper range of that prediction.
As Conrad Baut wrote in an ar-
ticle for Double Clutch, a maga-
zine published by the Antique
Truck Club of America, The
Mercedes-Benz has carried tens
of thousands of square feet of
stained glass, hundreds of tons of
marble fabrications, numerous
over-sized loads of onion-shaped
churchsteeples, scores of custom
wood and bronze sculptural me-
morials, thousands of church
doors, and has been across the
country several times.
His dad drove it with pride
andprecision, saidConradBaut,
who felt privileged to start driv-
ing it when he was 17. Someday
soon his own sons -- Henry, Peter
and James -- may have a turn at
the wheel, helping out at a busi-
ness they can trace to their great-
great-grandfather Jacob Baut,
who came to America in 1885
from an area that is now Inns-
bruck, Austria.
Over the years, the truck has
transported such artwork as the
Healing Christ sculpture de-
signed and built by Gerhard
Baut, which went to St. Agnes
Medical Center in Philadelphia
in 1985, and the Coal to Dia-
monds sculpture, also designed
by Gerhard Baut, which was in-
stalledat MoheganSunCasinoat
Pocono Downs in Plains Town-
ship in 2008.
Its next plannedexcursionis to
Danbury, Conn., to deliver an on-
ion-shaped cupola designed by
Conrad Baut and Baut Studios
employee Leonard Andes.
But, first, Conrad Baut said,
the truck needs new brakes.
I need a two-chamber master
cylinder, he said, explaining its
gettingharder tofindreplacement
parts, despite the familys pur-
chase years ago of a spare truck
from which several parts have al-
ready been cannibalized.
The truck was refurbished a
few years back, with members of
the Baut family andtheir employ-
ees pitchingintofabricateandre-
place cab sheet metal and under-
structures and rebuild the flat
bed. Theyre all craftsmen,
Conrad said. They knowhowto
work with stained glass and met-
al, and this is an offshoot.
People who have worked to
keep the truck running include
Conrad Baut, his brother Ger-
hard, nephewJacob Baut and sis-
ter Heide Cebrick as well as Mike
Olsen, Gary Walp, Leonard
Andes, Bernard Kriso, Shawn
Wheaton and Brad Lennon.
TRUCK
Continued from Page 1A
BILL TARUTIS/FOR THE TIMES LEADER
Employees of The Baut Studios Inc. with the 1977 Mercedes-Benz truck include, from left: Conrad
Baut, Heide Cebrick, Mike Olsen, Gary Walp and Leonard Andes. Other employees who have helped
refurbish the truck are Gerhard Baut, Jacob Baut, Bernard Kriso, Shawn Wheaton and Brad Lennon.
SUBMITTED PHOTO
The Bauts used their Mercedes-Benz truck to transport a Coal to
Diamonds sculpture to Mohegan Sun in 2008.
CAR officials to throw a yellow
caution flag and eventually call
the race onlap98, 62laps shy of
the advertised total of 160.
Heavy rains and winds
pounded the track as darkness
closed in.. Lightning strikes
were plentiful and thunder
rolled over the Pocono Moun-
tains as the storm moved from
west to east. The track public
address announcer asked fans
to exit the metal grandstands
because of the lightning but on-
ly after the race ended.
As driver Kasey Kahne spoke
to media in a post-race press
conference, word began to
spread among journalists that a
lightning strike at the track had
caused injuries. Shortly after
Kahne left the center, Pleban
confirmed that two people
were struck by lightning and
were taken to a local hospital.
Later he said a third fan was al-
so struck but was treated and
evaluatedby on-site emergency
personnel and released.
An hour later the number of
those injured grew to 10.
Despite the congested traffic
leaving the venue, continued
heavy rain and lightning pre-
vented the use of a helicopter
to transport the victims.
At 4:21 p.m., about 30 min-
utes before the race was offi-
cially called, Pocono Raceway
issued the following warning
on its Twitter and Facebook ac-
counts: ATTENTION FANS:
Severe thunderstorms are in
the area which will produce
high winds and lightning.
Should arrive in 10-15 mins.
At 4:59 p.m., the following
message was posted on the
tracks Twitter and Facebook
pages: ATTENTION FANS:
Be advised, seek shelter as se-
vere lightning and heavy winds
are in our area.
At 5:50 p.m., Igdalsky tweet-
ed: Hoping for the safety of all
the fans that are leaving in this
crazy storm. Please seek shel-
ter as there is a lot of cloud 2
ground lightning.
Race winner Gordon said he
felt for the injured fans and said
he believed he knew exactly
which bolts caused the dam-
age.
There was a huge, huge
crack of lightning; you could
tell it was very close, he said
after he won his first race of the
seasonandrecordsixthall time
at Pocono.
The fans here are so loyal
and so avid, they stick around,
he said. Its so unfortunate.
Youhate tohear somethinglike
that.
Pleban, calling the incident
a very fluid situation, said he
could not release information
on the victims because family
members have not been suffi-
ciently contacted as of Sunday
night. He said more informa-
tion might be available today,
and the track would release
whatever it learns. A supervi-
sor at Pocono Medical Center
said she could not comment
Sunday night.
Sporting News motor sports
reporter Bob Pockrass report-
ed that Kyle Manger, a fan from
New Jersey, said he saw people
hit by the lightning near the
Turn 3 grandstands.
Me and my friend just ran
into our truck during all the
nasty weather, Manger told
the publication. The visibility
was very poor and all of a sud-
den (I) saw a bolt of lightning
right in front of our windshield.
When it became a little
more visible, we saw two bod-
ies next to a destroyed tent
with people scrambling.
Manger said the lightning
strike occurred about five to 10
minutes after the race was
called.
Multiple NASCAR drivers,
fans and U.S. Sen. Pat Toomey
all issued statements or tweets
expressing condolences for the
victims throughout Sunday
night.
LIGHTNING
Continued from Page 1A
C M Y K
SPORTS S E C T I O N B
THE TIMES LEADER MONDAY, AUGUST 6, 2012
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LONGPONDJeff Gordonhas
seen enough black clouds during
a disappointing season by his
standards.
Oddly, some real black clouds
Sunday afternoon may have
brightened the four-time cham-
pions chance toget intothe NAS-
CAR Sprint Cups 10-race Chase
for the title.
Rain along with an accident
that came at the right time al-
lowedGordontopost his first vic-
tory of the season in the Pennsyl-
vania 400 at Pocono Raceway.
The victory was also Gordons
sixth at Pocono, breaking a tie
with Bill Elliott for the most vic-
tories at the track.
Pocono has been a special
place for us, said Gordon, who
won twice at Pocono because
weather shortened the race. We
got a winhere last year. Its beena
very interesting year to say the
least.
NASCAR brought the cars to
pit road on lap 98 because of
weather after a crash on a restart
on lap 91 knocked leader Jimmie
Johnson and second-place Matt
Kenseth from contention.
The accident allowed Gordon
who was running sixth on the
N A S C A R : P E N N S Y LVA N I A 4 0 0
Rainbow winner: Gordon ends drought in rain
AP PHOTO
Jeff Gordon and his daughter Ella gesture after he won a rain-
shortened NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race Sunday at Pocono
Raceway in Long Pond.
The victory moves the former
champion into 12th place in
the Sprint Cup standings.
By JOHN ERZAR
jerzar@timesleader.com
See GORDON, Page 6B
LEHMAN TWP. Known for its tricky
Back Mountain hills and unpredictable
weather, the Wilkes-Barre Triathlon tests
an athletes mettle like no other local ath-
letics event.
Naturally, the race should benefit the
younger runners with fresher legs.
SeanRobbins, 43, andAmy Rummel, 41,
proved that experience triumphs youth.
The pair of quadragenarians raced to first-
place finishes at the 31st running of the
Triathlon on Sunday.
Completely unexpected, said Rum-
mel, of Kalamazoo, Mich. I was not plan-
ning on winning this race. I am 41 years
old, and there were a number of people be-
hind me. I was fully expecting a 20-year-
old or a 30-year-old to kind of sneak up on
me in one of the other heats.
Someone needs to remind Sean that
hes an old man, race official Mark Toret-
sky joked at the awards assembly. And 43-
year-olds arent supposed to win back-to-
back triathlons. Thats amazing.
Robbins crossedthe finishline first over-
all for the second consecutive year. Last
year, the Shavertown resident became the
first Wyoming Valley resident to win the
FRED ADAMS/FOR THE TIMES LEADER
Triathlon champion Sean Robbins is
shown speeding along Alderson Road in
Kunkle.
W I L K E S - B A R R E T R I AT H L O N
Robbins,
Rummel top
strong field
The Shavertown resident repeated
as the overall champion, shaving a
minute off last years winning time.
By JAY MONAHAN
For The Times Leader
See STRONG, Page 7B
LONDON Pulling away from
the pack with every long stride,
UsainBolt crossedthe finishline and
wagged his right index finger.
Yes, hes still No. 1inthe100-meter
dash. Maybe not better thanever, but
Bolt is definitely back.
Only sixth-fastest of the eight run-
ners to the halfway mark Sunday
night, Bolt erased that deficit and
overwhelmed a star-studded field to
win in 9.63 seconds, an Olympic re-
cord that let him join Carl Lewis as
the only men with consecutive gold
medals in the marquee track and
field event at the Summer Games.
Means a lot, because a lot of peo-
ple were doubtingme. Alot of people
were saying I wasnt going to win, I
didnt look good. There was a lot of
talk, Bolt said. Its an even greater
feeling to come out here and defend
my title and show the world Im still
No. 1, Im still the best.
Ever the showman, the Jamaican
kept right on running for a victory
lap that included high-fives for front-
rowfans, a pause tocrouchdownand
kiss the track and even a somersault.
Thousands in the crowd chanted the
champions name: Usain! Usain!
Usain!
Ive said it over the years, that
whenit comes tothe championships,
this is what I do, Bolt said. Its all
about business for me.
Bolts training partner and Jamai-
can teammate, world champion Yo-
hanBlake, wonthe silver in9.75, and
2004 Olympic champion Justin Gat-
linof the U.S. tookthe bronze in9.79.
It just feels good to be back, said
Gatlin, who serveda four-year banaf-
ter testing positive for excessive tes-
LONDON 201 2 OLYMPI C GAMES
SIMPLY USAIN!
Bolt repeats as worlds fastest
AP PHOTOS
Jamaicas Usain Bolt crosses the finish line to win gold in the mens 100-meter final during the athletics Sunday in London.
American Gatlin takes bronze 8 years after gold
By HOWARD FENDRICH
AP Sports Writer
INSIDE
Maroney forced to settle for silver
in vault. Page 4B
Top U.S. womens volleyball team
keeps rolling along. Page 4B
Murray gives host British gold at
Wimbledon. Page 4B
American womens basketball team
ends pool play unbeaten. Page 4B
Todays TV Highlights
8 p.m.-midnight, NBC
Gymnastics: finals in mens still
rings, mens vault, womens uneven
bars. Track and field: gold medal
finals in mens 400m, mens 400m
hurdles, womens pole vault.
See BOLT, Page 5B
LONG POND -- The Sprint
Cup field had seen this be-
fore. After watching Jimmie
Johnson dominate last week-
end to win at the Brickyard,
plenty of drivers expected the
five-time champ to cruise
again in Sundays Pennsylvania
400.
It was still early in the day
when Kyle Busch was forced
back to the garage after blow-
ing out his rear brake rotors,
but he had already seen
enough.
We were
just trying to
keep sight on
the 48 (John-
son). Hes
going to wax
these guys
again today,
Busch predicted.
Thats how it was playing
out. Until one frantic restart
and one heavy storm changed
everything.
Caution flags change
complexion of results
By DEREK LEVARSE
dlevarse@timesleader.com
See FLAGS, Page 6B
Johnson
K
PAGE 2B MONDAY, AUGUST 6, 2012 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
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John Levandowski recorded a
hole-in-one Sunday at the
Wyoming Valley Country Club
on hole 13 at a distance of 130
yards. Witnesses were Jane
Williams and Vince Tassitano.
H O L E - I N - O N E
S P ORT S I N B RI E F
Pittston Area Fall Sports Physicals
will be given Aug. 8 at 9 a.m. at
the Cefalo Center at the high
school.
REGISTRATIONS/TRYOUTS
Fall Baseball and Softball Final
Registrationsfor boys and girls
age five and older will be held at
the following times: Monday,
August 6, 7 8 p.m. Tuesday,
August 7, 6 8 p.m Thursday,
August 9, 5:30 7 p.m. at the
Swoyersville Little League field.
Fee is $30 for ages 5-11 and $50 for
12 and over. Season runs late
August through mid-October. For
more information call Dave @ at
899-3750.
Lackawanna Lightning Softball is
establishing a new14U Fastpitch
Softball travel team for this sea-
son. Tryouts will be held Thursday,
August23 (Registration is at 6
p.m., Tryout starts at 6:30pm) and
Saturday, August 25 (Registration
is at 10 a.m., Tryout starts at 10:30
a.m.). Tryouts will be at Sherwood
Park, Dunmore, PA. To pre-register
or for additional info contact: 14U
Manager Wally Peck at 430-4748
or Administrator Dino Darbenzio
at 650-5159, email: ddarbenz@ya-
hoo.com.
Maximum Impact Sports Training
are now having Springs 2013 Girls
Softball Tryouts. This will be for all
10u, 12u, 14u &16u. These tryouts
will be held from Sunday August 12
until further notice. Please call
822-1134 to reserve your tryout
time and date.
Nanticoke Area Little League will
hold registration for all regular
season returning players from
ages 7-11 for Fall Ball at the Nanti-
coke Field on Monday and Tuesday
from 6-8. The cost is $30 for one
child and $40 for a family. For
more information, call Wade at
406-3162.
PA Fusion Girls Travel Softball
Teams will be holding try outs for
the 2013 season for positions on
the 12U, 14U and 16U softball teams.
Try outs will be held Tuesday,
August 7 and Thursday, August 9
at 6 p.m. at the Nanticoke Area
Little League Field. Call 902-5198
for more info.
Swoyersville Fall Baseball League is
seeking teams. Ages 12 to 14.
League will start play on August
18.Final registration will be Sunday,
August 12.For more info contact AL
at 881-2626
West Side Little League will hold fall
ball registration on Wednesday
August 8 from 5:30-7:30 p.m. at
the Courtdale Borough Building. A
$20 fee will apply. Contact Chris
Matelllo at 760-8593 or Eric Fisher
at 706-6264 for more information.
Wyoming Valley Vipers will be
holding tryouts for the 2013 sea-
son. Tryouts will be held for girls in
age groups of 10U, 12U and 14U.
The first tryout will be held on
Wednesday, August 1 at 6 p.m. at
Kirby Park rear field. The next
tryout will be held on Tuesday,
August 7 at 6 p.m. at the Back
Mountain Little League Field in
Dallas. If you are unable to make
these dates,or for more informa-
tion, please call Steve at 417-7217,
Ed at 417-1119 or Doug at 240-6893.
UPCOMING EVENTS/OTHER
Newport Township Lions Club will
host its 34th Annual Golf Tourna-
ment Aug. 17 at the Mill Race Golf
Club. Format will be captain and
mate and better ball point system.
The tournament begins at 8 a.m.
with a shotgun start. It will feature
$1,500 in cash prizes if 80 golfers
participate. Fee is $130 per team,
which includes green fees, cart,
refreshments and a skins game. A
2012 Ford Focus, donated by Pat
and Dan Delbaso Ford, will be
awarded to the first player to
shoot a hole-in-one. For more
information, call John Zyla at
735-1714.
CAMPS/CLINICS
Holy Redeemer Jr. High Soccer
Team will be holding a soccer
camp from Aug. 6-9 from 9 a.m. to
10:30 a.m. at Coal Street in Wilkes-
Barre. The cost of the camp is $80.
This camp is open to those in
grades 7,8, and 9 are interested in
playing soccer for Holy Redeemer
Jr. High in the fall. To register,
contact Nikki Pekarski at npekar-
ski@gmail.com or 690-1029. Play-
ers must register by Aug. 1 to
obtain a spot.
MMI Tennis will hold its second
session of tennis camp with
USNTR Teaching Pro Don Casseto-
ri and Exercise Science Coach Joe
OBrien Monday August 13 through
Thursday August 16 from 8:30 to
10:30 open to the public. $100 per
player. All levels and ages (over 10)
will be accommodated. The Camp/
Clinic will stress footwork, Doubles
Strategy, Singles Strategy, Tie-
breaker strategy, Positioning,
getting the most out of your game,
as well as the basics. The camp will
be held at the MMI tennis courts
(rain or shine) and will be followed
by practice for MMI Tennis Team
members. Please phone: 498-1443
or 233-4291.
LEAGUES
Swoyersville Fall Baseball and
Softball for boys and girls five and
older registrations will be held
Monday from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m.,
Tuesday from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. and
Thursday from 5:30 p.m. to 7 p.m.
at the Swoyersville Little League
Field. Fee is $30 for ages 5-11 and
$50 for 12 and over. Season runs
from late August through mid-
October. For more information, call
Dave at 899-3750.
MEETINGS
Crestwood High School Cross Coun-
try/Track and Field Booster Club
will hold a meeting Thursday at
6:30 p.m. in the high school cafete-
ria. Any parent of a current or
future cross country/track and
field athlete is welcome to attend
as plans are made for the up-
coming season. For more informa-
tion call 899-1159 or by email
atcometsxc-track@hot-
mail.com.The booster club will also
be holding a car wash fundraiser
on Saturday August 11 in the park-
ing lot of the high school from10
a.m. to 2 p.m. Cost of the car wash
will be $5.
Dick McNulty Bowling League will
hold a reorganization meeting on
Tuesday, August 14 at 7 p.m. at the
Miners-Mills Triangle Club on East
Main Street. The league is an 80
percent handicap league. Bowlers
and teams interested in joining the
league should call Fred Favire at
215-0180 or Windy Thoman at
824-3086. The league gets under-
way August 28.
West Side United Soccer Club will
hold its monthly Parents/Coaches
meeting at 6:30 p.m. today in the
Plymouth Borough building (2nd
floor). All Parents, Coaches, Team
Moms, etc are encouraged to
attend the meeting & help make
West Side SC the best youth sports
organization it can be. For further
info www.WSUSC.org or call Mat-
thew at 779-7785.
Wyoming Area boys or girls in
grades 7 or 8 interested in playing
soccer this fall should attend the
team meeting and conditioning at
10th Street Field today at 3:30 p.m.
For more information, call Coach
Williams at 466-1541.
PHYSICALS
Lake-Lehman High School will
conduct physicals for fall sports at
9 a.m. on the following days:
Wednesday, Aug. 8 all junior high
boys. If you are unable to report on
your scheduled day, you may come
on the next day scheduled for a
boy or a girl. There are new PIAA
sport physical forms this year,
which can be picked up at the high
school office or can be printed
from the Lake-Lehman School
District web site under Athletics.
All physical forms must be signed
prior to the exam by a parent/
guardian. There will be no make-up
exams.
Bulletin Board items will not be
accepted over the telephone. Items
may be faxed to 831-7319, emailed to
tlsports@timesleader.com 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
ORIOLES 8.5 Mariners
TIGERS 8.0 Yankees
INDIANS 8.5 Twins
Rangers 10.5 RED SOX
WHITE SOX 8.5 Royals
Angels 6.5 AS
National League
Braves 8.5 PHILLIES
PIRATES 8.0 Dbacks
Nationals 8.5 ASTROS
BREWERS 8.5 Reds
CARDS 7.5 Giants
PADRES 7.5 Cubs
DODGERS 7.5 Rockies
NFL Pre-Season
Favorite Points Underdog
Thursday
Redskins 2 BILLS
PATRIOTS NL Saints
EAGLES 2.5 Steelers
FALCONS 2.5 Ravens
CHARGERS 2 Packers
BEARS 3 Broncos
Friday
DOLPHINS 2.5 Bucs
BENGALS 1.5 Jets
LIONS 3 Browns
JAGUARS 1 Giants
CHIEFS NL Cards
49ERS 4 Vikings
Saturday
PANTHERS 2 Texans
SEAHAWKS 3 Titans
Sunday
COLTS PK Rams
August 13
RAIDERS 1.5 Cowboys
AME RI C A S L I NE
BY ROXY ROXBOROUGH
L O C A L S P O R T S
31st Annual Wilkes-Barre
Triathlon
RACE RESULTS
1. Sean Robbins, 2:15.59; 2. Timothy Felegie,
2:17.07; 3. Gregory Sullivan; 2:20.01; 4. Joseph
OLeary, 2:21.18; 5. Timothy Straub, 2:21:45; 6.
Duane Hedlund, 2:25.41; 7. William Ruth, 2:26.42;
8. Jude Cooney, 2:26.56; 9. Robert Gould, 2:27.29;
10. Grant Ferrell, 2:27.55; 11. Daniel Kaminstein,
2:29.41; 12. Matthew Nebzydoski, 2:32.11 13. Jar-
rod Baranowski, 2:35.0114. Amy Rummel, 2:35.18;
15. Kenny Quigley, 2:35.22; 16. Nathan Mihal,
2:36.41; 17. Dennis Yonkin, 2:36.47; 18. PaigeKyle,
2:37.21; 19. Michael Bell, 2:38.11; 20. Kristen Kar-
wacki, 2:38.365; 21. Andrew Morgan, 2:38.46; 22.
Justin Loss, 2:38.56; 23. Scott Meuser, 2:39.21; 24.
Mike Adamshick, 2:39.22; 25. William Deemer,
2:39.42; 26. Jerome Washo, 2:41.03; 27. AdamDi-
bartolo, 2:41.21; 28. C Hirst, 2:41.27; 29. John Gat-
triner, 2:42.12; 30. Tim Craven, 2:43.35; 31. Heidi
Weber, 2:45.46; 32. Charles Fino, 2:45.58; 33. Jes-
sica Chesman, 2:46.17; 34. Jimmie Hill, 2:46.37;
35. Joe Maskalis, 2:47.29; 36. Grtaige Border,
2:47.44; 37. JosephOHara, 2:47.54; 38. ErikWalk-
er, 2:48.46; 39. Brian Hilburt, 2:49.04; 40. Ann Zo-
ranski, 4:49.08; 41. Holly Burns, 2:49.46; 42. John
Tulaney, 2:50.30; 43. Brooke OConnor, 2:50.41;
44. William Perrine, 2:50.49; 45. Chris Hyzer,
2:51.04; 46. Alan Ryder, 2:51.09; 47. Charles Eck-
man, 2:51.50; 48. Woody Haydt, 2:52.20; 49. Alex
Spott, 2:53.16; 50. Michel Walker, 2:53.25; 51.
Jared Barilla, 2:53.2; 52. Stephen Taren, 2:53.59;
53. Bob Guzenski, 2:54.02; 54. Robert Urban,
2:54.21; 55. Lou Ciampi, 2:54.30; 56. Kelly
Adamshhick, 2:54.38; 57. Chris Krall, 2:56.30; 58.
Bridget Hotchick, 2:56.46; 59. Philip Maynard,
2:56.47; 60. Earl Marshall, 2:56.56; 61. Erik Weir,
2:57.02; 62. Scott Skammer, 2:57.05; 63. Aaraon
Pickarski, 2:57.20; 64. Matt Bury, 2:57.28; 65. Con
McCole, 2:58.04; 66. Charlene Aquilinma, 2:58.09;
67. Kevin Esh, 2:58.10; 68. Michzel Wilczynski,
2:58.26; 70. Kerry Potter, 2:58.53; 71. Skip Sens-
bach, 2:59.17; 72. Thomas Haverstrite, 2:59.17; 73.
Jesse Bonnice, 2:59.48; 74. Michele Covington,
3:00.03; 75. Joseph Burns, 3:00.14; 76. Dale Wil-
liams, 3:00.36; 77. Bill Ellsworth, 3:00.40; 78. Katlin
OHara, 3:01.09; 79. TaraHedlund, 3:01.58; 80. Joe
Kraus, 3:02.02; 81. Michelle Boisvert, 3:02.41; 83.
Stephen Chronowski, 3:04.03; 84. Deb Barcklow,
3:04.05; 85. Peter Chapla, 3:04.13; 86. Jonathan
Bilbow, 3:04.17; 87. Brian Santangelo, 3:04.41; 88.
Ken Jacob, 3:04.49; 89. Joshua Chaudoin, 3:05.10;
90. Stephanie Gorton, 3:05.20; 91. Lynn Jenkins,
3:05.36; 982. Doug Strave, 3:06.02; 93. Steven
Perry, 3:06.12; 94. Howard Dymond, 3:06.23; 95.
Nicole Sennett, 3:06.37; 96. Nathan Christman,
3:06.56; 97. Peter Eckman, 3:07.16; 98. Stephanie
McCole, 3:07.29; 99. Jocelyn Grier, 3:07.53; 100.
David Depolo, 3:08.20; 101. Paul Murphy, 3:08.20;
102. Brian Donohue, 3:08.40; 103. Bill Firore,
3:08.52; 104. Gregory Martin, 3:09.33; 105. Dave
Grilz, 3:10.12; 106. Steven Doland, 3:10.17; 107.
Phil Pisano, 3:10.34; 108. Ryan Walsh, 3:12.47;
109. Elissa Jaco, 3:12.47; 110. David Schott,
3:12.58; 111. David Ehr, 3:13.13; 112. John Kane,
3:13.23; 113. Russel Stahl, 3:13.52; 114. Michael
Dorbad, 3:14.41; 115. Gregory Herron, 3:14.51; 116.
Matthew Slocum, 3:14.57; 117. Gregory Howe,
3:16.11; 118. Nicholas Lombard, 3:16.26; 119. Mi-
chael Labagh, 3:16.27; 120. Kristen OBrien,
3:16.27; 121. William Zarola, 3:16.30; 122. Gregory
OBriewn, 3:16.47; 123. Kristopher Schmidt,
3:17.14; 124. Liz Naro, 3:18.31; 125. Liydia Ells-
worth, 3:18.40; 126. Patrick Gilhooley, 3:18.40; 127.
Ricki Davis, 3:19.00; 128. Jere Franklin, 3:19.12;
129. Michele Brown, 3:22.41; 130. Rich Weidler,
3:22.432; 131. Drew Gill, 3:23.22; 132. Michael
Pahler, 3:24.07; 133. William Ciaravino, 3:24.08;
134. George Hoffman, 3:24.36; 135. Stephanie Sei-
kierka, 3:24.39; 136. Bob Sherwood, 3:25.37; 137.
Carey Zapusek, 3:25.50; 138. Troy Peters, 3:26.58;
139. Richard Owens, 3:37.25; 140. Chris Lucvas,
3:28.48; 141. Thomas Grattinger, 3:29.10; 142.
John Yohey, 3:29.14; 143. Michael Last 23:31.13;
144. Paul Ziminsky, 3:22.11; 145. David Labagh,
3:33.15; 146. Daniel Ciaraivno, 3:33.18; 147. Sean
McCue, 3:33.47; 148. David Robinson, 3:34.23;
149. Thomas Maheady, 3:35.16; 150. David Bass,
3:35.35; 151. Scott Brinkdopke, 3:35.37; 152. John
Harkins, 3:36.16; 153. Wendy Newton, 3:36.29;
154. Heather McCue, 3:36.53; 155. Kevin Evans,
3:37.34; 156. Erika Strassburger, 3:38.15; 157. An-
thony Piccolo, 3:39.10; 158. Jeffrey King, 3:40.41;
159. Mark Hannon, 3:40.58; 160. Gregg Bluth,
3:41.47; 161. Cynthia Schlosser, 3:43.21; 162. Mau-
reen Posluszny, 3:344.34; 163. Peter Feinstein,
3:45.17; 164. Katherine Strausser, 3:45.50; 165.
Randy Domolky, 3:46.30; 166. Jennifer Flynn,
3:47.48; 167. Kyle Monaghan, 3:48.39; 168. Eliza-
beth Morgan, 3:49.39; 169. Mark OBrien, 3:49.40;
170. Katelyn Brix, 3:49.43; 171. aaron Davis,
3:50.24; 172. Carl Walkewr, 3:52.30; 173. Paul
Kramer, 3:57.25, 174. Denise Thomas, 3:57.32;
175. Johnathon Benson, 4:03.44; 176. Lori Morgan,
4:12.30; 177. Mack Henderson, 4:16.53
Aquabike Results
1. Alec Barchlow, 1:51.00; 2. Kevin Augustine,
1:51.56; 3. Michael Tomalis, 1:54.23; 4. Kurt
Reider1:57.08; 5. Megan Pietraccini, 2:02.49; 6.
Annette Walker, 2:24.49
Award Winners
Top 3 Amateur Males
1. Sean Robbins, 2:15.59; 2. Timothy Felegie,
2:17.07; 3. Gregory Sullivan, 2:20.01
Top 3 Amateur Females
1. Amy Rummel, 2:35.18; 2. Paige Kyle, 2:37.21; 3.
Kristen Karwacki, 2:38.36
Fastest Splits of the Day
Top 5 Male Swim Times
1. Joseph OHara, 21:08; 2. Jude Cooney, 21:40; 3.
Brian Santangelo, 21:47; 4. Duane Hedland, 22:00;
5. Daniel Kaminstein, 23:28
Top 5 Female Swim Times
1. KatlinOHara, 23:23; 2. PaigeKyle, 23:55; 3. Kris-
ten Karwacki, 25:02; 4. Brooke OConnor, 26:14; 5.
Bridget Kotchick
Top 5 Male Bike Times
1. Timothy Straub, 1:04.38; 2. Sean Robbins,
1:04.51; 3. Scott Meuser, 1:06.53; 4. Tomothy Fele-
gie, 1:06.56; 5. Jude Cooney, 1:07.03
Top 5 Female Bike Times
1. Amy Rummel, 1:10.46; 2. Kristen Karwacki,
1:13.03; 3. Kelly Adamshick, 1:13.36; 4. Kerry Pot-
ter, 1:13.41; 5. Paige Kyle, 1:15.07
Top 5 Male Run Times
1. Timothy Felegie, 44:04; 2. Joseph OLeary,
45:15; 3. Sean Robbins, 45:30; 4. Gregory Sullivan,
47:26; 5. Kenny Quigley, 49:08
Top 5 Female Run Times
1. Amy Rummel, 52:54; 2. Heidi Weber, 54:22; 3.
Ann Zoranski, 54:54; 4. Paige Kyle, 56:33; 5. Holly
Burns, 57:27
Age Group Results (Top 3
Winners)
Male 14-19
1. Nathan Christman, 3:06.56; 2. John Kane,
3:13.23; 3. Patrick Gilhooley, 3:18.40(2minutepen-
alty)
Female 14-19
1. Stephanie McCole, 3:07.29; 2. Lydia Ellsworth,
3:18.40
Male 20-24
1. Joseph OHara, 2:47.54; 2. Alex Sptt, 2:53.16; 3.
Jared Barilla, 2:53.28
Female 20-24
1. Katlin OHara, 3:01.09; 2. Kristen OBrien,
3:16.27; 3. Katherine Strausser, 3:45.50
Male 25-29
1. Jimmie Hill, 2:46.37; 2. Philip Maynard, 2:56.47;
3. Erik Weir, 2:57.02
Female 25-29
1. Stephanie Gorton, 3:05.20; 2. Ricki Davis,
3:19.00; 3. Heather McCue, 3:36.53
Male 30-34
1. Grant Farrell, 2:27.55; 2. NathanMihal, 2:36.41; 3.
Justin Loss, 2:38.56
Female 30-34
1. Kelly Adamshick, 2:54.38; 2. Bridget Kotchick,
2:56.46; 3. Charlene Aquilina, 2:58.09
Male 35-39
1. Timothy Straub, 2:21.45; 2. Jude Cooney,
2:26.56; 3. Daniel Kaminstein, 2:29.41
Female 35-39
1. Heidi Weber, 2:45.46; 2. Brooke OConnor,
2:50.41; 3. Kerry Potter, 2:58.53
Male 40-44
1. Robert Gould, 2:27.29; 2. Kenny Quigley,
2:35.22; 3. Andrew Morgan, 2:38.46
Female 40-44
1. Jessica Chesman, 2:46.17; 2. Ann Zoranski,
2:49.08; 3. Lynn Jenkins, 3:05.36
Male 45-49
1. Joseph OLeary, 2:21.18; 2. Duane Hedlund,
2:25.41; 3. Dennis Yonkin, 2:36.47
Female 45-49
1. Holly Burns, 2:49:46; 2. Jocelyn Grier, 3:07.53; 3.
Liz Naro, 3:18.31
Male 50-54
1. Scott Meuser, 2:39.21; 2. Charles Eckman,
2:51.50; 3. Stephen Taren, 2:53.59
Female 50-54
1. Deb Barcklow, 3:04.05; 2. Cynthia Schlosser,
3:43.21; 3. Elizabeth Moran, 3:49.39
Male 55-59
1. Woody Haydt, 2:52.20; 2. Peter Eckman, 3:07.16;
3. Gregory Martin, 3:09.33
Male 60-64
1. WilliamRuth, 2:26.42; 2. Bill Fiore, 3:08.52; 3. Mi-
chael Last, 3:31.13
Male 65-69
1. Howard Dymond, 3:06.23
Male 70-99
1. Carl Walker, 3:52.30
Clydesdales Awards
1. BrianDonahue, 3:08.40; 2. Russel Stahl, 3:13.52;
3. Troy Peters, 3:26.58
Athena Awards
1. Wendy Newton, 3:36.29; 2. Loria Moran, 4:12.30
TEAM RESULTS
1. Off Like a Prom Dress (Egan Mengeringhaus,
Nick Hetro, John Martino), 2:18.34; 2. Ambition
(Adin Greenwald, Daniel Cunningham, George
Dunbar), 2:19.56; 3. ThePink Ribbons (Ashley Tud-
gay, Rob Reddington, Paul Leonard), 2:20.35; 4.
Team DynoMight (Samantha Sabol, David Sabol,
Will Butkiewicz), 2:28.51; 5. Conbricha (Connor
Boyle, BrianGieda, ChaseSusko), 2:29.40; 6. KGB
(Kelly Leighton, Greg Klusewitz, Brian Davidson),
2:30.20 (2 minutes penaly); 7. BMJ Towling (Nina
Fischer, Deedra Forfirio, Michael McAndrew),
2:30.42; 8. Henrys Barriers (Patrick James, Andrew
Lavelle, Daniel Patrick), 2:35.25; 9. The Next Gen-
eration (Shea Bierschmitt, Michael Gatusky, Do-
minic Dockenbu), 2:35.54; 10. Lukas Legacy (Jac-
queline, Luke Lukas, Whitney Lukas), 2:36.05; 11.
Intensity Won (Michelle Fernando, George Lacey,
Sandra Jesse), 2:36.32; 12. Intensity Power (Ales-
sandra Schrief, Kevin Swinksi, Yalor Bowman),
2:37.07; 13. Honey Badgers (Andrew Greenwald,
Charles C. Bernesk, Cheryl Padden), 2:28.30; 14.
Fueled By Cheap American Beer (Eric Schall, Rob-
ert Berry, Paul Manley), 2:39.38; 15. TRI These
Nuts (Mary Stabinsky, Aaron Haydu, Mariann Juris-
ta), 2:40.09; 16. Team GDR ( George Evans, Dean
James, Robert Pembleton), 2:40.57; 17. The Com-
monwealth Medical College (Jen Chao, Sean Wal-
lace, Michelle Junker), 2:41.04; 18. Sugar Spicer
and Everything Nice (Julie Ann Mahle, Jeanine Dy-
mond, Emily Bilbow), 2:41:16; 19. Young and the
Restless (Stephanie Dymond, Arthur Spears, Jen-
nifer Karcuts), 2:42.28; 20. Team Blue Chip (Crys-
tal Oley, Barbara Oley, Robert Oley), 2:42.53; 21.
Team Acceleration (Kathryn Gavlick, Jeff Buratti,
Bernie Gavlick), 2:48.05; 22. American Xpress (Da-
vid Hovey, Joe Ackourey, Cheri Balmer), 2:49:52;
23. Team Lucas (Corrine Lucas, Matthew Lucas,
Grace Lucas) 2:49.52; 24. Kearns/Hunter (John
Kearns, Rob Hunter), 2:51.29; 25. Shackletons
Survivors (Dave Darminer, Devin Rosencrance,
Katina Katen), 2:51.49; 26. Intensity KBB(Kelly Fry,
Barabar Fleming, Blake Donovan), 2:53.36; 27.
Team Trinity (part two)(Christopher ODonn, Jo-
seph McDonough, Nyandusi Omurva), 2:54.05; 28.
Team Thunderbolt (Vincent Palmeri, Joseph Lipa-
rela, Albert Guari), 2:56.18; 29. Bella Donnas (Bar-
bara Bell, Mordecai Bell, Benjamin Bell), 2:56.19;
30. Its a Butchko Thing (Andrea Butchko, John B.
Butchko, John T. Butchko), 2:56.35; 31. Team
Woody (Clarissa King, Woody Wood, Tracy Ches-
man), 2:56.35; 32. Team Bob (Marissa Kraynak,
Ropbert Angeli, TomWalski), 2:57.07; 33. Intensity
Not So Much (Paul Reinert, Ann James, Joseph
Sharon), 2:58.17; 34. DNR(John Dougherty, Diane
Dixon, Theresa Machowski), 3:00.15; 35. WP (Matt
Keanrs, Mike Hosier, Matthew Kearns), 32:00.263;
36. Wonder Women (Julie Pickarski, Shelly Kos-
toff, Lisa Ciampi), 3:00.33; 37. Team Mericle (Sara
Brozen, Molly Wright, Julie Mericle), 3:01.36; 38.
Pilotos Borrahos (Eric McCabe, Ken Bond, Joann
Price), 3:02.56; 39. Najoma (Nancy Gilhooley, Jo-
seph Rother, Mary Ruane), 3:03.00; 40. Dianes
Dogers (Diane Yakus, Ed Buratti, Darlene Reilley),
3:03.12; 41. Team Kelley (McKenzie Kelly, Michael
Kelly), 3:04.23; 42. Intensity 3 (Kaylene Sutkowski,
Douglas Forbes, Gloria Sharon), 3:05.54; 43.
Wayne & Megan (Wayne Devine, Megan Devine),
3:06.10; 44. The Tremendous Trio (Brianne Waldn-
er, Sarah Maheady, Robin Scaramastr), 3:06.24;
45. 3 Hot Mamas (Lauren Kresge, Erika Hilburt, Pa-
tricia Keefer), 3:06.32; 46. Maid Rite Steak (Bruce
Palvec, Herman Johnson, Dave Jones), 3:07.00;
47. TNT (Matt Collins, Kim Hawkins, Heather Ra-
del), 3:10.21; 48. Sallie Girls Tri Harder (Mary Medi-
na, Patti Potomis, Lauren Pollman), 3:11.02; 49. Tri
Again (Yves Greatti, Kenneth Hensel, Joe Haban),
3:12.30; 50. Better Late Than Never (Richard Dou-
glas, BethDePolo, Jill Beddingfiel), 3:13.40; 51. Ma-
ma Bear & the Cubs (Tom Missal, Laura Zdancew-
icz, Tara Zdancewicz), 3:14.07; 52. Celtic Thunder
(Mollie Shannon, Charles McKeown, Erin Finne-
gan), 3:15.01; 53. NFCEast Boys (AlanMcLaughlin,
Spencer Chesman, Michael Jones), 3:15.11; 54.
TeamSnack drawer (David Smith, Steve Kaminski,
Annet Kaminski), 3:18.02; 55. Two Tartans and a
Nittany Lion (Hillary Smith, Jennica Finney, Susan
Anderson), 3:20.46; 56. Young Tart & Old Farts
(Danielle McCole, Amy Scully, Jim McGinn),
3:23.06; 57. Dead Last (Paul Adams, John Metz,
Robert Rave), 3:23.33; 58. TeamAutotraxx (Lauren
Brdlo, Rachel Coffee, Christine Bressi), 3:25.44);
59. TheTri Sistas (KarinGetz, LauraKintner, Chris-
tal Zermane), 3:41.22; 60. Team Amrap (Brian
Reed, Ron Wincek, Doug, Piazza), 3:59.05; 61.
Gelb Relay Team (Lesa Gelb, Felece Gelb Steele,
Johanna Gelb), 4:01.18; 62. Infinite Resistenza
(Jocelyn Hinkle, Cathy Stabski, Kerry Zawadski);
63. Intensity JV (Adam Grzech, John Costello,
James Norton)
W H A T S O N T V
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL
7 p.m.
CSN Atlanta at Philadelphia
ROOT Arizona at Pittsburgh
ESPN N.Y. Yankees at Detroit
OLYMPICS
4 a.m.
NBCSN LIVE: mens basketball, United States
vs. Argentina, Australia vs. Russia; womens soc-
cer, semifinals; womens boxing, quarterfinals;
womens field hockey, United States vs. South Afri-
ca; mens volleyball, Russiavs. Serbia, Italy vs. Bul-
garia; DELAYEDTAPE: mens weightlifting, 105 kg
Gold Medal final; mens shooting: 50m three posi-
tions Gold Medal final, at London
NBC BASKETBALL Mens, United States vs. Ar-
gentina, Australia vs. Russia, Britain vs. China,
Spain vs. Brazil, France vs. Nigeria, Tunisia vs.
Lithuania, at London
9 a.m.
MSNBC LIVE: beach volleyball, quarterfinals;
mens basketball, Spain vs. Brazil; mens water po-
lo, Romania vs. Serbia; wrestling, Greco-Roman
Gold Medal finals; SAME-DAY TAPE: table tennis,
mens and womens team semifinals; mens shoot-
ing, trap Gold Medal final, at London
TELEMUNDO Track and field; mens volleyball;
synchronized swimming, duet; beach volleyball,
quarterfinals, at London (same-day tape)
10 a.m.
NBC SAME-DAY TAPE: track and field; beach
volleyball, quarterfinal; LIVE: mens water polo,
United States vs. Hungary; mens volleyball, United
States vs. Tunisia; SAME-DAY TAPE: equestrian,
teamjumping Gold Medal final; LIVE: cycling, track
events; SAME-DAY TAPE: synchronized swim-
ming, duet; canoeing, sprint, at London
Noon
NBC SOCCER Womens, semifinals, at various
sites
5 p.m.
CNBC Mens boxing, quarterfinals, at London
(same-day tape)
8 p.m.
NBC Gymnastics, individual event Gold Medal
finals: mens still rings, mens vault, womens un-
even bars; track and field, Gold Medal finals: mens
400m, mens 400m hurdles, womens pole vault;
beach volleyball, quarterfinal; mens diving, spring-
board; cycling, track Gold Medal final, at London
(same-day tape)
12 Mid.
TELEMUNDOTrack andfield, GoldMedal finals;
gymnastics, individual event Gold Medal finals;
mens diving, springboard; mens boxing, quarterfi-
nals, at London (same-day tape)
12:35 a.m.
NBC Track and field, Gold Medal finals; cycling,
track events, at London (delayed tape)
T R A N S A C T I O N S
BASEBALL
American League
BOSTON RED SOX Traded OF Jeremias Pine-
da to Minnesota for 3B Danny Valencia and op-
tioned him to Pawtucket (IL).
CLEVELAND INDIANS Designated RHP Jere-
my Accardo for assignment. Selected the contract
of LHP Chris Seddon from Columbus (IL).
DETROIT TIGERS Placed OF Ryan Raburn on
the 15-day DL, retroactive to Aug. 1. Recalled INF
Danny Worth from Toledo (IL).
OAKLANDATHLETICS Placed RHP A.J. Griffin
on the 15-day DL. Optioned OF Michael Taylor to
Sacramento (PCL). Recalled RHP Evan Scribner
and LHP Pedro Figueroa from Sacramento.
TORONTO BLUE JAYS Optioned RHP Jesse
Chavez to Las Vegas (PCL). Recalled RHP Chad
Jenkins fromNewHampshire(EL). Agreedtoterms
with OF Jack Cust on a minor league contract.
National League
CHICAGO CUBS Traded INF/OF Jeff Baker to
Detroit for two players to be named. Selected the
contract of OF Brett Jackson from Iowa (PCL). Re-
called INF Josh Vitters fromIowa. Optioned OF To-
ny Campana to Iowa.
COLORADO ROCKIES Placed LHP Jonathan
Sanchez on the 15-day DL, retroactive to Aug. 4.
Recalled RHP Tyler Chatwood from Tulsa (TL).
Agreed to terms with RHP Eric Junge on a minor
league contract.
HOUSTON ASTROS Assigned RHP Chris De-
venski to Lexington (SAL).
PHILADELPHIAPHILLIESAgreed to terms with
3B Jake Fox on a minor league contract. Released
2B Mike Fontenot.
SAN DIEGO PADRES Recalled RHP Miles Mi-
kolas from Tucson (PCL). Optioned RHP Cory
Burns to Tucson.
FOOTBALL
National Football League
ATLANTA FALCONS Waived RB Robbie Frey.
Signed DT Conrad Obi.
CHICAGO BEARS WR Devin Thomas an-
nounced his retirement.
CINCINNATI BENGALS Signed CB T.J. Heath.
Waived DE Derrick Harvey.
DETROIT LIONS Signed DE Cliff Avril to a one-
year contract and LB Korey Bosworth.
INDIANAPOLIS COLTS Placed LB A.J. Edds
and G Ben Ijalana on injured reserve.
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS Waived FB Ka-
reem Huggins.
PHILADELPHIA EAGLES Signed DE Xavier
Brown. Placed WR Ron Johnson on injured re-
serve.
A U T O R A C I N G
NASCAR
Sprint Cup-Pennsylvania 400
Results
Sunday
At Pocono Raceway
Long Pond, Pa.
Lap length: 2.5 miles
(Start position in parentheses)
1. (27) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 98 laps, 110.8 rating,
47 points, $233,011.
2. (4) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 98, 122.7, 43,
$162,810.
3. (15) Martin Truex Jr., Toyota, 98, 101, 41,
$165,474.
4. (31) Brad Keselowski, Dodge, 98, 98.3, 41,
$148,205.
5. (28) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 98, 88.6, 39,
$155,185.
6. (9) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 98, 102.7, 38,
$136,418.
7. (17) Carl Edwards, Ford, 98, 101.9, 37, $132,226.
8. (19) Clint Bowyer, Toyota, 98, 88.2, 36, $112,849.
9. (11) Regan Smith, Chevrolet, 98, 82.1, 35,
$110,043.
10. (5) Marcos Ambrose, Ford, 98, 85.8, 34,
$111,718.
11. (3) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 98, 85.3, 33,
$94,760.
12. (18) Mark Martin, Toyota, 98, 88.8, 32, $79,385.
13. (14) Joey Logano, Toyota, 98, 72.9, 31, $86,135.
14. (10) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 98, 122.5, 32,
$125,246.
15. (12) Greg Biffle, Ford, 98, 104.5, 29, $85,435.
16. (21) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 98, 72.9, 28,
$120,796.
17. (16) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, 98, 76.2, 28,
$106,043.
18. (13) Aric Almirola, Ford, 98, 66, 26, $111,646.
19. (25) Sam Hornish Jr., Dodge, 98, 67.9, 0,
$115,785.
20. (1) Juan Pablo Montoya, Chevrolet, 98, 77, 25,
$118,926.
21. (26) David Gilliland, Ford, 98, 60.5, 23, $89,668.
22. (23) Jeff Burton, Chevrolet, 98, 63.7, 22,
$112,210.
23. (7) Matt Kenseth, Ford, 98, 110.4, 22, $118,421.
24. (24) David Reutimann, Chevrolet, 97, 56.7, 20,
$72,785.
25. (37) Travis Kvapil, Toyota, 97, 52.1, 19,
$95,418.
26. (22) Landon Cassill, Toyota, 97, 53, 18,
$98,830.
27. (39) Bobby Labonte, Toyota, 96, 50, 17,
$91,868.
28. (32) David Ragan, Ford, 96, 52.9, 16, $81,332.
29. (2) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, accident, 90, 82.4,
16, $113,901.
30. (6) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet, accident, 84, 74.8,
15, $80,760.
31. (41) Jason White, Ford, transmission, 81, 36.8,
0, $76,610.
32. (8) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 80, 103, 13,
$76,435.
33. (20) Kyle Busch, Toyota, accident, 74, 55.9, 11,
$115,443.
34. (36) David Stremme, Toyota, transmission, 43,
37, 10, $67,760.
35. (29) Casey Mears, Ford, brakes, 40, 40.4, 9,
$67,610.
36. (38) Joe Nemechek, Toyota, brakes, 37, 34.7,
0, $67,385.
37. (34) Josh Wise, Ford, brakes, 34, 39.8, 7,
$68,705.
38. (42) Tony Raines, Chevrolet, fuel pump, 31,
29.4, 6, $67,053.
39. (30) Mike Bliss, Toyota, overheating, 29, 29.5,
0, $64,225.
40. (35) J.J. Yeley, Chevrolet, brakes, 27, 32.1, 4,
$64,075.
41. (43) Mike Skinner, Ford, rear gear, 26, 34.2, 3,
$63,925.
42. (40) Reed Sorenson, Toyota, brakes, 10, 28.3,
0, $63,765.
43. (33) Scott Riggs, Chevrolet, brakes, 9, 28.4, 1,
$64,148.
Race Statistics
Average Speed of Race Winner: 139.249 mph.
Time of Race: 1 hour, 45 minutes, 34 seconds.
Margin of Victory: Under Caution.
Caution Flags: 3 for 14 laps.
Lead Changes: 13 among 10 drivers.
Lap Leaders: J.Montoya 1-7;D.Hamlin
8-10;D.Earnhardt Jr. 11-20;J.McMurray
21-23;B.Keselowski 24-31;D.Earnhardt Jr.
32-38;J.Johnson 39-46;M.Kenseth 47;K.Kahne
48;Ku.Busch 49-51;J.Johnson 52-75;M.Kenseth
76-78;J.Johnson 79-90;J.Gordon 91-98.
Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Led, Laps Led):
J.Johnson, 3 times for 44 laps;D.Earnhardt Jr., 2
times for 17 laps;J.Gordon, 1 time for 8 laps;B.Ke-
selowski, 1 time for 8 laps;J.Montoya, 1 time for 7
laps;M.Kenseth, 2 times for 4 laps;J.McMurray, 1
time for 3 laps;D.Hamlin, 1 time for 3 laps;Ku-
.Busch, 1 time for 3 laps;K.Kahne, 1 time for 1 lap.
Top 12 in Points: 1. D.Earnhardt Jr., 744;2. M.Ken-
seth, 739;3. G.Biffle, 738;4. J.Johnson, 736;5.
M.Truex Jr., 694;6. T.Stewart, 691;7. B.Keselow-
ski, 690;8. D.Hamlin, 683;9. K.Harvick, 681;10.
C.Bowyer, 679;11. K.Kahne, 622;12. C.Edwards,
619.
H A R N E S S
R A C I N G
Pocono Downs Results
First - $114,254 Pace 1:51.3
4-Champagne Tonight (To Hall) 3.00 2.60 2.10
2-Sweet Lady Jane (Ja Morrill Jr) 4.80 3.00
5-Sunshine Patriot (Mo Teague) 3.40
EXACTA (4-2) $14.20
TRIFECTA (4-2-5) $56.60
50 CENT TRIFECTA (50 Cent) $14.15
SUPERFECTA (4-2-5-6) $300.20
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (10 Cent) $15.01
Second - $4,500 Pace 1:55.2
6-Doodlebop (Th Jackson) 24.00 9.60 3.60
4-Cannae Barron (Fl Browne) 21.60 7.00
1-Money Paige (Da Dube) 4.20
EXACTA (6-4) $345.20
TRIFECTA (6-4-1) $2,903.60
50 CENT TRIFECTA (50 Cent) $725.90
SUPERFECTA (6-4-1-3) $5,272.40
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (10 Cent) $263.62
DAILY DOUBLE (4-6) $40.20
Third - $114,254 Pace 1:54.0
1-Sweet Talia (Ge Napolitano Jr) 47.40 20.00 8.20
7-Somwherovrarainbow (Mo Teague) 8.20 5.60
2-Antigua Hanover (Ja Morrill Jr) 7.00
EXACTA (1-7) $222.60
TRIFECTA (1-7-2) $1,467.40
50 CENT TRIFECTA (50 Cent) $366.85
SUPERFECTA (1-7-2-6) $25,601.60
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (10 Cent) $1,280.08
Fourth - $9,500 Pace 1:55.2
4-Jones Beach (Mi Simons) 2.80 2.10 2.10
2-Sky Is The Limit (Ma Kakaley) 2.80 2.40
7-Phenomenon (Ma MacDonald) 3.80
EXACTA (4-2) $8.20
TRIFECTA (4-2-7) $40.80
50 CENT TRIFECTA (50 Cent) $10.20
SUPERFECTA (4-2-7-1) $83.60
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (10 Cent) $4.18
Scratched: Tulfra, Rhythm In Art
Fifth - $114,255 Pace 1:54.1
1-Banner Beach Day (Br Sears) 23.80 7.40 3.00
6-Donna Lee (An Miller) 3.20 2.20
4-Southwind Siren (Ge Brennan) 2.60
EXACTA (1-6) $77.00
TRIFECTA (1-6-4) $369.00
50 CENT TRIFECTA (50 Cent) $92.25
SUPERFECTA (1-6-4-3) $591.80
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (10 Cent) $29.59
PICK 3 (1-4-1) $1,983.00
PICK 3 (1-8-1) $1,983.00
Sixth - $12,000 Trot 1:56.3
4-Master Begonia (Ge Napolitano Jr) 4.40 2.80
2.20
8-Bayside Volo (Ma MacDonald) 3.20 2.80
2-Fort Benning (Jo Pavia Jr) 3.40
EXACTA (4-8) $13.40
TRIFECTA (4-8-2) $51.40
50 CENT TRIFECTA (50 Cent) $12.85
SUPERFECTA (4-8-2-7) $494.40
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (10 Cent) $24.72
Seventh - $6,000 Pace 1:55.1
1-Heza Character (Ma Kakaley) 5.80 4.20 2.80
6-Carpe Diem (Ma MacDonald) 12.60 9.60
8-Franklin Vandercam (Th Jackson) 6.80
EXACTA (1-6) $104.60
TRIFECTA (1-6-8) $563.20
50 CENT TRIFECTA (50 Cent) $140.80
SUPERFECTA (1-6-8-2) $2,382.80
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (10 Cent) $119.14
Eighth - $15,000 Trot 1:54.4
1-Celebrity Bombay (Ja Morrill Jr) 3.20 2.60 2.40
5-Definitely Mamie (Da Dube) 3.20 2.60
7-Lets Go Baby Go (An McCarthy) 6.60
EXACTA (1-5) $7.60
TRIFECTA (1-5-7) $75.00
50 CENT TRIFECTA (50 Cent) $18.75
SUPERFECTA (1-5-7-3) $274.80
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (10 Cent) $13.74
Ninth - $6,000 Pace 1:53.0
8-Ccs Lover N (Er Carlson) 20.00 9.60 5.20
2-Chaco Hanover (Ge Napolitano Jr) 3.80 2.60
4-Mountain Rocket (An McCarthy) 4.00
EXACTA (8-2) $94.00
TRIFECTA (8-2-4) $557.00
50 CENT TRIFECTA (50 Cent) $139.25
SUPERFECTA (8-2-4-7) $11,162.00
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (10 Cent) $558.10
PICK 4 (4-1-1-8 (4 Out of 4)) $384.40
Tenth - $21,000 Trot 1:54.1
5-Bambino Hall (Ge Napolitano Jr) 11.00 4.80 2.60
4-Mystery Photo (An Miller) 3.80 2.20
1-Mr Mcrail (Br Sears) 3.80
EXACTA (5-4) $30.20
TRIFECTA (5-4-1) $118.80
50 CENT TRIFECTA (50 Cent) $29.70
SUPERFECTA (5-4-1-6) $207.80
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (10 Cent) $10.39
Eleventh - $11,000 Pace 1:53.2
1-Duel In The Sun (An Miller) 12.80 5.20 4.00
2-Good Day Mate (Br Sears) 2.20 2.10
3-Vavoomster (Ma Kakaley) 6.00
EXACTA (1-2) $32.80
TRIFECTA (1-2-3) $308.60
50 CENT TRIFECTA (50 Cent) $77.15
SUPERFECTA (1-2-3-9) $2,681.40
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (10 Cent) $134.07
Twelfth - $9,500 Pace 1:54.4
5-Fraternity (Da Dube) 3.80 2.60 2.40
3-Beach Terror (Br Sears) 3.20 2.60
6-Lupara (Ma Kakaley) 11.80
EXACTA (5-3) $15.80
TRIFECTA (5-3-6) $184.20
50 CENT TRIFECTA (50 Cent) $46.05
SUPERFECTA (5-3-6-1) $560.40
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (10 Cent) $28.02
PICK 3 (5-1-5) $149.80
Thirteenth - $18,000 Trot 1:54.4
7-M C Felix (Ge Napolitano Jr) 16.60 5.60 4.00
1-Westside Lindy (An Miller) 5.20 3.40
6-Zitomira (Ja Ingrassia) 2.80
EXACTA (7-1) $87.00
TRIFECTA (7-1-6) $371.80
50 CENT TRIFECTA (50 Cent) $92.95
SUPERFECTA (7-1-6-3) $750.60
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (10 Cent) $37.53
Fourteenth - $9,500 Pace 1:55.2
3-Fateful Choice (Ma MacDonald) 4.40 3.20 2.60
7-Magic Tricks (Ty Buter) 7.00 3.60
2-Tims Castoff (Th Jackson) 5.40
EXACTA (3-7) $27.80
TRIFECTA (3-7-2) $204.40
50 CENT TRIFECTA (50 Cent) $51.10
SUPERFECTA (3-7-2-1) $651.00
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (10 Cent) $32.55
LATE DOUBLE (7-3) $130.00
Total Handle-$385,006
O L Y M P I C S
Monday's Olympic Schedule
Athletics
At Olympic Stadium
Mens 800round1, Discus qualifying; Womens100
Hurdles round 1, 1500 round 1, Shot Put qualifying,
5 a.m.
Mens 400 final, 400 Hurdles final; Womens 200
round 1, 400 Hurdles semifinals, 3000 Steeple-
chasefinal, PoleVault final, Shot Put final, 1:50p.m.
Basketball
Olympic Park-Basketball Arena
Men
Australia vs. Russia, 4 a.m.
Tunisia vs. Lithuania, 6:15 a.m.
France vs. Nigeria, 9:30 a.m.
Britain vs. China, 11:45 a.m.
Spain vs. Brazil, 3 p.m.
Argentina vs. United States, 5:15 p.m.
Beach Volleyball
At Horse Guards Parade
Mens quarterfinals (2 matches), 1 p.m.
Mens quarterfinals (2 matches), 5 p.m.
Boxing
At ExCel
Womens Flyweight (51kg); Womens Lightweight
(60kg) and Womens Middleweight (75kg) quarter-
finals, 8:30 a.m.
Mens Lightweight (60kg); Mens Middleweight
(75kg) and Mens Super Heavyweight (+91kg)
quarterfinals, 3:30 p.m.
Canoe (Sprint)
At Eton Dorney, Buckinghamshire
Mens Canoe Single 1000 heats, semifinals; Mens
Kayak Single 1000 heats, semifinals; Mens Kayak
Double1000heats, semifinal; Womens Kayak Four
500 heats, semifinal, 4:30 a.m.
Cycling (Track)
At Olympic Park-Velodrome
Mens Sprint semifinals, finals; Womens Omnium:
flyinglap, 20kmpoints race, eliminationrace; Wom-
ens Sprint quarterfinals, race for 5th-8th places, 11
a.m.
Diving
At Olympic Park-Aquatics Centre
Mens 3-Meter Springboard Prelims, 2 p.m.
Equestrian (Jumping)
At Greenwich Park
Team Jumping: round 2, (medal), 9 a.m.
Field Hockey
Women
At Olympic Park-Hockey Centre
New Zealand vs. Germany, 3:30 a.m.
United States vs. South Africa, 5:45 a.m.
Japan vs. China, 8:45 a.m.
South Korea vs. Belgium, 11 a.m.
Britain vs. Netherlands, 2 p.m.
Argentina vs. Australia, 4:15 p.m.
Gymnastics
At Artistic North Greenwich Arena
Mens Rings final; Mens Vault final; Womens Un-
even Bars final, 9 a.m.
Sailing
At Weymouth and Portland, Dorset
Mens 49er, 470, Laser (medal race); Womens
470, Laser Radial (medal race), 7 a.m.
Shooting
At The Royal Artillery Barracks
Mens 50-meter Rifle 3 Positions qualification and
final; Mens Trap qualification (Day 2) and final, 4
a.m.
Soccer
Women
At Wembley Stadium
France vs. Japan, Noon
At Manchester, England
Canada vs. United States, 2:45 p.m.
Synchronized Swimming
At Olympic Park-Aquatics Centre
Womens Duets free routine, 10 a.m.
Table Tennis
At ExCel
Womens Team semifinal, 5 a.m.
Mens Team semifinal, 9:30 a.m.
Mens Team semifinal, 2 p.m.
Team Handball
Men
At Copper Box
Hungary vs. Serbia, 4:30 a.m.
Argentina vs. Tunisia, 6:15 a.m.
Denmark vs. South Korea, 9:30 a.m.
Iceland vs. Britain, 11:15 a.m.
Spain vs. Croatia, 2:30 p.m.
France vs. Sweden, 4:15 p.m.
Volleyball
Men
At Earls Court
Australia vs. Poland, 4:30 a.m.
Russia vs. Serbia, 6:30 a.m.
Italy vs. Bulgaria, 9:45 a.m.
Britain vs. Argentina, 11:45 a.m.
United States vs. Tunisia, 3 p.m.
Brazil vs. Germany, 5 p.m.
Water Polo
Men
At Olympic Park-Water Polo Arena
Kazakhstan vs. Croatia, 5 a.m.
Greece vs. Australia, 6:20 a.m.
Romania vs. Serbia, 9:10 a.m.
Hungary vs. United States, 10:30 a.m.
Britain vs. Montenegro, 1:20 p.m.
Spain vs. Italy, 2:40 p.m.
Weightlifting
At ExCel
Mens 105kg group B, 10:30 a.m.
Mens 105kg group A (medal), 2 p.m.
Wrestling (Greco-Roman)
At ExCel
Mens 60kg, 84kg and120kg qualifications,
1
8 finals,
quarterfinals, semifinals, 8 a.m.
Mens 60kg, 84kg and 120kg repechage rounds,
bronze and gold medal contests, 12:45 p.m.
C M Y K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com MONDAY, AUGUST 6, 2012 PAGE 3B
M A J O R L E A G U E B A S E B A L L
CINCINNATI A.J. Burnett
remainedundefeatedagainst
the Cincinnati Reds this season
andStarling Marte hit a tie-
breaking two-runtriple inthe
fourthto help the Pittsburgh
Pirates salvage the finale of
their three-game series witha
6-2 winonSunday.
Neil Walker hit a two-run
homer andAll-Star center fiel-
der AndrewMcCutchenadded
a solo shot as second-place
PittsburghstoppedCincinnatis
winning streak at five and
closedwithin4
1
2 games of the
NLCentral leader.
Nationals 4, Marlins1
WASHINGTONStephen
Strasburg (12-5) pitchedthree-
hit ball over six shutout innings
anddrove intwo runs.
Strasburg struck out six and
walkedone, extending his
scoreless streak against the
Marlins to 27 innings. He hit a
two-runsingle inthe secondoff
Ricky Nolasco (8-11) andraised
his batting average to .343 (12
for 35) withsevenRBIs.
Giants 8, Rockies 3
DENVERTimLincecum
wonconsecutive starts for the
first time since April andHun-
ter Pence hadthree RBIs as San
Francisco completeda three-
game sweep andmaintaineda
half-game leadover Los Angeles
inthe NLWest. The Giants had
lost sevenof eight entering the
series.
Dodgers 7, Cubs 6
LOSANGELESHanley
Ramirez linedanRBI single
over a drawn-ininfieldinthe
ninthas the Dodgers completed
a three-game sweep.
Braves 6, Astros1
ATLANTAChipper Jones
hadtwo hits andscoredthe
go-aheadrunona sixth-inning
wildpitchby BudNorris (5-9)
as Atlanta completedan8-2
homestand. Jones addeda
run-scoring double off Xavier
Cedeno inthe seventh.
Phillies 5, Diamondbacks 4
PHILADELPHIARyan
Howardsingledhome the win-
ning runinthe ninthoff Josh
Collmenter (3-3). He hadbeen
ina 5 for 35 slide with20 strike-
outs.
Padres 7, Mets 3
SANDIEGOChase Head-
ley andYonder Alonso eachhit
two-runhomers off rookie Matt
Harvey (1-2). Headleys homer,
his15th, came inthe first in-
ning. Alonso hit his sixthhomer
inthe thirdfor a 5-0 lead.
Cardinals 3, Brewers 0
ST. LOUISKyle Lohse
pitchedsix spotless innings to
earnhis12thwinandthe St.
Louis Cardinals beat the Mil-
waukee Brewers 3-0 onSunday
night for a three-game sweep.
N AT I O N A L L E A G U E R O U N D U P
AP PHOTO
The Pittsburgh Pirates Starling Marte watches his single off
Cincinnati Reds relief pitcher Jose Arredondo in the sixth in-
ning Sunday in Cincinnati. The Pirates won 6-2.
Burnett, Marte
lead Bucs vs. Reds
The Associated Press
NEW YORK Raul Ibanez
homered and drove in three
runs as Freddy Garcia and the
New York Yankees wrapped up
a long and losing homestand
with a win, beating the Seattle
Mariners 6-2 Sunday.
Garcia got his 150th career
victory while Ichiro Suzuki
continued to be a one-hit won-
der for the AL East leaders.
The Yankees won for only
the sixth time in 16 games.
They went 4-5 against Boston,
Baltimore and Seattle on their
longest stay at Yankee Stadium
so far this season.
Tigers 10, Indians 8
DETROIT Miguel Cabre-
ra hit a two-run homer to cap a
five-run rally by Detroit with
two outs in the 10th inning,
giving the Tigers a victory over
Cleveland that sent the Indians
to their ninth straight loss.
With the Indians up 8-5
Chris Perez (0-3) walked Alex
Avila and pinch-hitter Andy
Dirks. Austin Jackson doubled
in a run, Omar Infantes two-
run single tied it and Cabrera
homered to left-center.
White Sox 4, Angels 2
CHICAGO Pinch-hitter
A.J. Pierzynski tied a White
Sox record by homering in his
fifth consecutive game, two-
run drive in the seventh inning
off Jason Isringhausen (3-2)
that put Chicago ahead 3-2.
Red Sox 6, Twins 4
BOSTON Adrian Gon-
zalez hit a two-run homer and
had three RBIs and Carl Craw-
ford added three singles, an
RBI and a leaping catch on his
31st birthday as Boston avoid-
ed a four-game sweep.
Franklin Morales (3-2), tak-
ing Josh Becketts turn in the
rotation after the right-hander
left his previous start with a
back spasm, gave up one run
and three hits in six innings.
Royals 7, Rangers 6
KANSAS CITY, Mo. Er-
rors by shortstop Alberto Gon-
zalez and third baseman Mike
Olt in a three-pitch span al-
lowed the tiebreaking run to
score in the 10th.
With the score 6-6, Michael
Orioles 1, Rays 0
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.
Taylor Teagarden broke out of
a long slide with an RBI double
in the 10th inning.
Joel Peralta (1-4) walked
Mark Reynolds with one out in
the 10th and threw a called
third strike past Omar Quinta-
nilla. Teagarden, in a 1-for-25
slide, lined a two-out drive to
left-center.
Blue Jays 6, Athletics 5
OAKLAND, Calif. Edwin
Encarnacion hit a home run
and drove in two runs, Yunel
Escobar also drove in two runs
and Toronto salvaged a four-
game split.
A M E R I C A N L E A G U E R O U N D U P
Ibanez homers, leads
Yanks over Mariners
The Associated Press
STANDINGS/STATS
S T A N D I N G S
All Times EDT
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division
W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Away
New York...................................... 63 44 .589 5-5 W-1 34-22 29-22
Baltimore ...................................... 57 51 .528 6
1
2 1 6-4 W-2 25-26 32-25
Tampa Bay ................................... 56 52 .519 7
1
2 2 5-5 L-2 29-27 27-25
Boston .......................................... 54 55 .495 10 4
1
2 5-5 W-1 28-32 26-23
Toronto......................................... 53 55 .491 10
1
2 5 4-6 W-2 28-23 25-32
Central Division
W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Away
Chicago ........................................ 59 48 .551 7-3 W-1 29-23 30-25
Detroit ........................................... 58 50 .537 1
1
2 5-5 W-4 31-21 27-29
Cleveland ..................................... 50 58 .463 9
1
2 8 1-9 L-9 27-25 23-33
Minnesota .................................... 47 61 .435 12
1
2 11 7-3 L-1 23-32 24-29
Kansas City.................................. 45 62 .421 14 12
1
2 4-6 W-1 21-32 24-30
West Division
W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Away
Texas.............................................. 63 44 .589 5-5 L-1 34-21 29-23
Oakland.......................................... 58 50 .537 5
1
2 5-5 L-2 32-25 26-25
Los Angeles................................... 58 51 .532 6
1
2 4-6 L-1 30-22 28-29
Seattle ............................................ 51 59 .464 13
1
2 8 8-2 L-1 25-29 26-30
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division
W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Away
Washington.................................. 65 43 .602 6-4 W-2 32-22 33-21
Atlanta........................................... 62 46 .574 3 8-2 W-1 32-26 30-20
New York...................................... 53 56 .486 12
1
2 9 5-5 L-1 26-26 27-30
Philadelphia................................. 49 59 .454 16 12
1
2 5-5 W-2 23-30 26-29
Miami ............................................ 49 60 .450 16
1
2 13 4-6 L-2 27-27 22-33
Central Division
W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Away
Cincinnati...................................... 66 42 .611 8-2 L-1 36-20 30-22
Pittsburgh..................................... 61 46 .570 4
1
2 6-4 W-1 33-16 28-30
St. Louis ....................................... 59 49 .546 7 2
1
2 7-3 W-3 32-21 27-28
Milwaukee .................................... 48 59 .449 17
1
2 13 4-6 L-3 30-26 18-33
Chicago ........................................ 43 63 .406 22 17
1
2 3-7 L-5 27-24 16-39
Houston........................................ 36 73 .330 30
1
2 26 2-8 L-1 25-27 11-46
West Division
W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Away
San Francisco ............................... 59 49 .546 4-6 W-3 32-23 27-26
Los Angeles .................................. 59 50 .541
1
2 3 6-4 W-3 32-23 27-27
Arizona........................................... 55 53 .509 4 6
1
2 6-4 L-2 30-24 25-29
San Diego...................................... 46 64 .418 14 16
1
2 4-6 W-1 24-30 22-34
Colorado........................................ 38 68 .358 20 22
1
2 2-8 L-3 21-37 17-31
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Saturday's Games
Seattle 1, N.Y. Yankees 0
Toronto 3, Oakland 1, 11 innings
Texas 4, Kansas City 2
Detroit 6, Cleveland 1
Baltimore 4, Tampa Bay 0
L.A. Angels 6, Chicago White Sox 5, 10 innings
Minnesota 6, Boston 4
Sunday's Games
Detroit 10, Cleveland 8, 10 innings
N.Y. Yankees 6, Seattle 2
Boston 6, Minnesota 4
Baltimore 1, Tampa Bay 0, 10 innings
Chicago White Sox 4, L.A. Angels 2
Kansas City 7, Texas 6, 10 innings
Toronto 6, Oakland 5
Monday's Games
Minnesota (Diamond 9-5) at Cleveland (McAllister
4-3), 7:05 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees (Nova 10-5) at Detroit (Verlander
11-7), 7:05 p.m.
Seattle (Vargas 12-7) at Baltimore (Tillman 4-1),
7:05 p.m.
Texas (Darvish 11-7) at Boston (A.Cook 2-5), 7:10
p.m.
Kansas City (Mendoza 5-7) at Chicago White Sox
(Sale 12-3), 8:10 p.m.
L.A. Angels (Weaver 14-1) at Oakland (J.Parker
7-5), 10:05 p.m.
Tuesday's Games
Minnesota at Cleveland, 7:05 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees at Detroit, 7:05 p.m.
Seattle at Baltimore, 7:05 p.m.
Texas at Boston, 7:10 p.m.
Toronto at Tampa Bay, 7:10 p.m.
Kansas City at Chicago White Sox, 8:10 p.m.
L.A. Angels at Oakland, 10:05 p.m.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Saturday's Games
Philadelphia 3, Arizona 0
Washington 10, Miami 7
Houston 3, Atlanta 2
Cincinnati 5, Pittsburgh 4
St. Louis 6, Milwaukee 1
San Francisco 11, Colorado 6
N.Y. Mets 6, San Diego 2
L.A. Dodgers 3, Chicago Cubs 1
Sunday's Games
Pittsburgh 6, Cincinnati 2
Philadelphia 5, Arizona 4
Atlanta 6, Houston 1
Washington 4, Miami 1
San Francisco 8, Colorado 3
San Diego 7, N.Y. Mets 3
L.A. Dodgers 7, Chicago Cubs 6
St. Louis 3, Milwaukee 0
Monday's Games
Arizona (Miley 12-6) at Pittsburgh (Bedard 5-12),
7:05 p.m.
Atlanta (Sheets 3-1) at Philadelphia (Worley 6-6),
7:05 p.m.
Washington (E.Jackson 6-7) at Houston (Keuchel
1-4), 8:05 p.m.
Cincinnati (Arroyo 7-6) at Milwaukee (Gallardo 9-8),
8:10 p.m.
San Francisco (M.Cain 10-4) at St. Louis (West-
brook 10-8), 8:15 p.m.
Chicago Cubs (T.Wood 4-7) at San Diego (Stults
1-2), 10:05 p.m.
Colorado (D.Pomeranz 1-6) at L.A. Dodgers (Ca-
puano 10-7), 10:10 p.m.
Tuesday's Games
Arizona at Pittsburgh, 7:05 p.m.
Atlanta at Philadelphia, 7:05 p.m.
Miami at N.Y. Mets, 7:10 p.m.
Washington at Houston, 8:05 p.m.
Cincinnati at Milwaukee, 8:10 p.m.
San Francisco at St. Louis, 8:15 p.m.
Chicago Cubs at San Diego, 10:05 p.m.
Colorado at L.A. Dodgers, 10:10 p.m.
A M E R I C A N
L E A G U E
Yankees 6, Mariners 2
Seattle New York
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Ackley 1b 4 1 1 0 Grndrs cf 4 1 1 0
MSndrs cf 3 1 1 0 Jeter ss 5 1 2 1
JMontr c 4 0 2 2 Cano 2b 5 0 2 0
Jaso dh 2 0 0 0 Teixeir 1b 2 0 1 1
Seager 2b 3 0 1 0 Ibanez dh 4 1 2 3
Thams rf 4 0 0 0
AnJons
ph-dh 1 0 0 0
TRonsn lf 4 0 0 0 Swisher rf 4 0 0 0
Kawsk ss 3 0 0 0 ISuzuki lf 3 0 1 0
Figgins 3b 3 0 0 0 J.Nix 3b 3 0 0 0
CStwrt c 3 3 2 0
Totals 30 2 5 2 Totals 34 611 5
Seattle ................................ 100 010 000 2
New York ........................... 110 112 00x 6
EAckley (3). DPSeattle1. LOBSeattle7, New
York 11. 2BM.Saunders (26), I.Suzuki (17),
C.Stewart (5). HRIbanez (15). SBC.Stewart
(1). SM.Saunders, J.Nix.
IP H R ER BB SO
Seattle
Iwakuma L,2-3 ........ 5 7 4 3 2 4
Kinney ......................
1
3 1 2 2 1 1
O.Perez....................
2
3 2 0 0 1 0
Kelley........................ 1 1 0 0 0 0
Luetge ...................... 1 0 0 0 1 0
New York
F.Garcia W,5-5........ 5 5 2 2 4 2
Logan H,13 .............. 2 0 0 0 0 0
D.Robertson............ 1 0 0 0 1 0
R.Soriano................. 1 0 0 0 0 1
O.Perez pitched to 1 batter in the 7th.
Kelley pitched to 1 batter in the 8th.
HBPby Iwakuma (I.Suzuki). WPF.Garcia.
PBJ.Montero.
UmpiresHome, Angel Campos;First, Jerry Lay-
ne;Second, Vic Carapazza;Third, Larry Vanover.
T3:12. A45,878 (50,291).
Royals 7, Rangers 6
Texas Kansas City
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Andrus ss 5 0 2 2 JDyson cf 4 1 1 0
AlGnzlz ss 0 0 0 0 AEscor ss 3 0 0 0
MiYong 2b 5 0 2 1 L.Cain lf 3 1 1 0
Hamltn cf 5 1 1 0 Butler 1b 4 0 1 1
Beltre dh 4 1 3 1 Hosmer pr 0 1 0 0
Gentry pr-dh 0 0 0 0 S.Perez c 5 0 1 2
N.Cruz rf 4 1 1 0 Francr rf 5 2 2 1
DvMrp lf 5 1 0 0 YBtncr 3b 4 0 0 0
Napoli c 4 0 0 0 B.Pena dh 3 1 1 2
Morlnd 1b 4 1 0 0 Getz 2b 4 1 1 0
Olt 3b 2 1 0 1
Totals 38 6 9 5 Totals 35 7 8 6
Texas............................ 000 500 100 0 6
Kansas City.................. 200 112 000 1 7
No outs when winning run scored.
EAlb.Gonzalez (2), Olt (2), Butler (1), A.Escobar
(13), S.Perez (2). LOBTexas 9, Kansas City 8.
2BMi.Young (17), Hamilton (19), Beltre (22),
S.Perez (6), Getz (9). 3BAndrus (6). HRFran-
coeur (10), B.Pena (2). SBOlt (1), J.Dyson (22),
L.Cain (4). CSOlt (1). SJ.Dyson, A.Escobar.
SFOlt.
IP H R ER BB SO
Texas
D.Holland ................. 6 8 6 6 2 7
Oswalt ...................... 2 0 0 0 0 4
R.Ross ..................... 1 0 0 0 2 1
Kirkman L,0-2.......... 0 0 1 0 1 0
Kansas City
Hochevar ................. 6 4 5 1 1 4
Crow BS,5-7............
1
3 2 1 1 1 0
Collins....................... 1
2
3 0 0 0 1 1
G.Holland W,5-3 ..... 2 3 0 0 2 2
Kirkman pitched to 3 batters in the 10th.
HBPby Hochevar (N.Cruz). WPHochevar.
UmpiresHome, Ted Barrett;First, Marvin Hud-
son;Second, Jordan Baker;Third, Tim McClelland.
T3:26. A22,007 (37,903).
Orioles 1, Rays 0
Baltimore Tampa Bay
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Markks rf 5 0 0 0 DJnngs lf 5 0 0 0
Andino 3b 2 0 1 0 BUpton cf 4 0 1 0
Hardy ss 2 0 0 0 Joyce rf 3 0 1 0
AdJons cf 4 0 0 0 Zobrist 2b 1 0 0 0
Wieters dh 4 0 0 0 Rhyms 2b 2 0 0 0
Ford lf 3 0 1 0
SRdrgz
ph-2b 0 0 0 0
McLoth ph-lf 1 0 0 0 Kppngr dh 4 0 0 0
MrRynl 1b 2 1 0 0 C.Pena 1b 2 0 1 0
Quntnll 2b 4 0 0 0 RRorts 3b 3 0 0 0
Tegrdn c 4 0 1 1 Loaton c 3 0 0 0
Fuld ph 1 0 0 0
EJhnsn ss 3 0 0 0
Totals 31 1 3 1 Totals 31 0 3 0
Baltimore ...................... 000 000 000 1 1
Tampa Bay ................... 000 000 000 0 0
DPTampa Bay 1. LOBBaltimore 6, Tampa Bay
7. 2BFord (2), Teagarden (1), B.Upton (16). SB
R.Roberts (2). CSAndino (4), C.Pena (2). S
Hardy, S.Rodriguez.
IP H R ER BB SO
Baltimore
Mig.Gonzalez .......... 7 2 0 0 4 4
ODay........................ 1 0 0 0 0 1
Patton ....................... 0 1 0 0 0 0
Ayala W,3-3............. 1 0 0 0 1 1
Ji.Johnson S,32-35 1 0 0 0 0 0
Tampa Bay
Price ......................... 8 2 0 0 3 5
Rodney..................... 1 0 0 0 1 0
Jo.Peralta L,1-4 ...... 1 1 1 1 1 1
Patton pitched to 1 batter in the 9th.
UmpiresHome, Tom Hallion;First, Brian ONo-
ra;Second, ChadFairchild;Third, AlfonsoMarquez.
T3:10. A29,530 (34,078).
White Sox 4, Angels 2
Los Angeles Chicago
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Trout lf 3 0 0 1 De Aza cf 4 0 0 0
TrHntr rf 4 0 1 1 Youkils 3b 2 1 1 1
Pujols 1b 4 0 1 0 A.Dunn 1b 3 0 0 0
Trumo dh 2 0 1 0 Konerk dh 4 0 3 0
HKndrc 2b 3 0 1 0
Olmedo
pr-dh 0 1 0 0
Callasp 3b 3 0 1 0 Rios rf 4 0 1 0
MIzturs ss 4 1 2 0 AlRmrz ss 4 0 1 1
Bourjos cf 2 1 1 0 Viciedo lf 3 0 1 0
Iannett ph 1 0 0 0 JrDnks pr-lf 1 1 0 0
BoWlsn c 1 0 0 0 Flowrs c 2 0 0 0
KMorls ph 1 0 0 0 Przyns ph-c 2 1 1 2
Bckhm 2b 3 0 1 0
Totals 28 2 8 2 Totals 32 4 9 4
Los Angeles....................... 000 010 100 2
Chicago.............................. 000 001 21x 4
DPChicago 2. LOBLos Angeles 7, Chicago 7.
2BPujols (31). 3BAl.Ramirez (4). HRYoukilis
(13), Pierzynski (21). CSBeckham (3). S
H.Kendrick, Bo.Wilson 2. SFTrout.
IP H R ER BB SO
Los Angeles
Haren........................ 6 4 1 1 2 4
Isringhausen L,3-2
BS,4-4 ...................... 0 3 2 2 0 0
Williams.................... 1
1
3 2 1 1 1 1
Takahashi ................
2
3 0 0 0 0 2
Chicago
Liriano....................... 5 4 1 1 1 4
N.Jones W,5-0 ........ 2 4 1 1 1 1
Myers H,3 ................ 1 0 0 0 0 1
A.Reed S,19-22 ...... 1 0 0 0 1 2
Isringhausen pitched to 3 batters in the 7th.
HBPby Myers (Trumbo).
UmpiresHome, Dana DeMuth;First, Doug Ed-
dings;Second, Lance Barrett;Third, Paul Nauert.
T2:58. A30,202 (40,615).
Red Sox 6, Twins 4
Minnesota Boston
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Revere cf 3 0 1 1 Ellsury cf 4 1 1 1
Mstrnn rf 4 0 1 0 Crwfrd lf 5 2 3 1
Mauer c 4 0 0 0 Pedroia 2b 4 0 1 0
Wlngh lf 3 1 1 1 AdGnzl 1b 3 1 2 3
Mornea 1b 3 1 0 0 C.Ross dh 4 0 2 1
Doumit dh 4 1 2 2 Sltlmch c 4 0 0 0
Dozier ss 4 0 0 0 Mdlrks 3b 4 0 2 0
ACasill 2b 3 1 0 0 Kalish rf 4 1 1 0
JCarrll 3b 3 0 1 0 Aviles ss 3 1 2 0
Totals 31 4 6 4 Totals 35 614 6
Minnesota.......................... 000 010 003 4
Boston................................ 002 020 11x 6
DPMinnesota 1. LOBMinnesota 5, Boston 8.
2BJ.Carroll (14), Ellsbury (8), Kalish (3). HR
Willingham (28), Doumit (11), Ad.Gonzalez (11).
SBRevere (27), A.Casilla (14), C.Crawford (3),
Middlebrooks (4), Kalish (2). SFRevere, Ellsbu-
ry.
IP H R ER BB SO
Minnesota
Blackburn L,4-7....... 5 9 4 4 0 4
Manship.................... 2 4 1 1 1 0
Perdomo .................. 1 1 1 1 1 1
Boston
F.Morales W,3-2..... 6 3 1 1 3 4
Melancon H,2 .......... 1
2
3 1 0 0 0 2
Breslow....................
1
3 0 0 0 0 0
Padilla....................... 0 2 3 3 1 0
Aceves S,23-29 ...... 1 0 0 0 0 1
Padilla pitched to 3 batters in the 9th.
UmpiresHome, Wally Bell;First, Mike Winters-
;Second, Mark Wegner;Third, David Rackley.
T3:14. A37,019 (37,067).
Blue Jays 6, Athletics 5
Toronto Oakland
ab r h bi ab r h bi
RDavis lf 5 2 2 0 Crisp cf 4 0 1 1
Gose cf 4 2 2 1 JGoms lf 4 1 2 0
Encrnc dh 4 2 2 2 Reddck rf 4 1 1 3
YEscor ss 5 0 1 2 Cespds dh 4 0 0 0
KJhnsn 2b 3 0 2 1 Carter 1b 3 0 0 0
Mathis c 4 0 0 0 Inge 3b 4 1 2 0
YGoms
1b-3b 4 0 0 0 DNorrs c 4 0 1 1
Sierra rf 4 0 2 0 Rosales ss 3 1 1 0
Hchvrr 3b 3 0 0 0 Moss ph 0 0 0 0
Cooper ph-1b 1 0 1 0 Sogard pr 0 0 0 0
JWeeks 2b 3 1 0 0
Totals 37 612 6 Totals 33 5 8 5
Toronto............................... 100 230 000 6
Oakland.............................. 013 000 100 5
DPToronto 2. LOBToronto 7, Oakland 4.
2BR.Davis (14), Gose (3), Encarnacion (21),
Crisp (9), J.Gomes (7), D.Norris (3), Rosales (1).
HREncarnacion (29), Reddick (24). CS
K.Johnson (2). SGose.
IP H R ER BB SO
Toronto
Laffey W,3-2............ 6 6 4 4 1 4
Lyon H,2................... 1 2 1 1 0 3
Loup H,2 ..................
2
3 0 0 0 1 0
Delabar H,4..............
1
3 0 0 0 0 1
Janssen S,14-15..... 1 0 0 0 1 1
Oakland
Milone L,9-9............. 6 9 6 6 1 4
Scribner.................... 2 3 0 0 0 1
Figueroa................... 1 0 0 0 0 1
HBPby Milone (K.Johnson).
UmpiresHome, Phil Cuzzi;First, Greg Gibson-
;Second, Manny Gonzalez;Third, Gerry Davis.
T2:57. A18,308 (35,067).
Tigers 10, Indians 8
Cleveland Detroit
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Kipnis 2b 6 0 0 0 AJcksn cf 6 3 4 1
AsCarr ss 6 2 2 0 Infante 3b 6 3 4 3
Choo rf 5 1 1 1 MiCarr dh 4 1 2 3
JoLopz rf 0 0 0 0 Fielder 1b 3 0 1 2
Duncan lf 0 0 0 0 DYong lf 4 0 0 0
CSantn 1b 4 2 2 1 Berry lf 1 0 0 0
Ktchm 1b 0 0 0 0 JhPerlt ss 4 1 1 0
Brantly cf 4 0 3 1 Boesch rf 4 0 0 0
Hafner dh 5 1 3 3 Laird c 1 0 0 0
Carrer lf-rf 5 1 3 1 Avila c 3 1 1 1
Lillirdg 3b 3 0 0 0 Worth 2b 3 0 0 0
Hannhn 3b 2 1 1 0 Dirks ph 0 1 0 0
Marson c 5 0 2 1
Totals 45 817 8 Totals 39101310
Cleveland................... 201 010 100 3 8
Detroit ......................... 101 110 100 5 10
Two outs when winning run scored.
EAs.Cabrera (14). DPCleveland 2, Detroit 1.
LOBCleveland 9, Detroit 9. 2BAs.Cabrera
(24), Brantley 2 (32), Marson (7), A.Jackson (19),
Infante (1), Jh.Peralta (23). 3BA.Jackson 2 (7).
HRChoo(13), Hafner (11), Carrera(1), Infante(1),
Mi.Cabrera (27). SBAs.Cabrera 2 (4), Carrera
(1). CSCarrera (1), Boesch (3). SFFielder.
IP H R ER BB SO
Cleveland
Seddon..................... 4
1
3 7 4 4 3 2
C.Allen......................
2
3 0 0 0 0 0
Sipp...........................
2
3 0 0 0 0 1
J.Smith .....................
1
3 2 1 1 0 0
Pestano BS,2-2....... 2 0 0 0 0 3
Tomlin....................... 1 1 0 0 2 1
C.Perez L,0-3
BS,3-32....................
2
3 3 5 5 2 0
Detroit
Scherzer................... 5 10 4 4 1 9
Villarreal ...................
2
3 1 0 0 0 2
Coke ......................... 1
1
3 2 1 1 1 1
Dotel ......................... 1 0 0 0 0 1
Benoit ....................... 1
1
3 2 2 2 0 0
D.Downs W,1-0.......
2
3 2 1 1 0 0
J.Smith pitched to 2 batters in the 7th.
HBPby Sipp (Boesch).
UmpiresHome, Joe West;First, Sam Holbrook-
;Second, Andy Fletcher;Third, Rob Drake.
T4:10. A38,007 (41,255).
N A T I O N A L
L E A G U E
Phillies 5, Diamondbacks 4
Arizona Philadelphia
ab r h bi ab r h bi
CYoung cf 4 0 1 0 Schrhlt rf 4 0 0 0
A.Hill 2b 4 0 1 0 Frndsn 3b 4 0 1 0
Kubel lf 4 0 1 0 L.Nix ph 1 0 1 0
Gldsch 1b 4 1 1 1 Utley 2b 4 1 2 1
J.Upton rf 4 1 3 0 Howard 1b 5 0 1 1
CJhnsn 3b 4 1 1 2 Mayrry cf 3 2 1 0
Drew ss 3 1 1 1 DBrwn lf 4 1 2 0
HBlanc c 3 0 0 0 Kratz c 3 0 2 1
MMntr c 1 0 0 0 Mrtnz ss 3 0 0 0
Cahill p 3 0 0 0
Rollins
ph-ss 1 0 0 0
DHrndz p 0 0 0 0 Cl.Lee p 3 0 1 0
Saito p 0 0 0 0 Papeln p 0 0 0 0
GParra ph 1 0 0 0 Pierre ph 1 1 1 0
Cllmntr p 0 0 0 0
Totals 35 4 9 4 Totals 36 512 3
Arizona............................... 030 001 000 4
Philadelphia....................... 020 010 011 5
One out when winning run scored.
ED.Hernandez (1), Howard (3). DPPhiladel-
phia 2. LOBArizona 5, Philadelphia 10.
2BD.Brown (1), Kratz (4). HRGoldschmidt (16),
C.Johnson(11), Drew(1), Utley (7). SSchierholtz.
IP H R ER BB SO
Arizona
Cahill......................... 7 6 3 3 2 6
D.Hernandez
BS,5-7 ......................
2
3 3 1 1 0 1
Saito .........................
1
3 0 0 0 0 0
Collmenter L,3-3.....
1
3 3 1 1 1 0
Philadelphia
Cl.Lee....................... 8 8 4 4 0 5
Papelbon W,3-4...... 1 1 0 0 1 0
WPCahill, D.Hernandez 2.
UmpiresHome, Derryl Cousins;First, Alan Por-
ter;Second, Jim Wolf;Third, Ron Kulpa.
T3:00. A43,741 (43,651).
Dodgers 7, Cubs 6
Chicago Los Angeles
ab r h bi ab r h bi
DeJess rf 3 2 1 0 Victorn lf 5 0 0 0
BJcksn cf 4 1 2 0 M.Ellis 2b 3 2 0 0
Rizzo 1b 4 1 2 3 Kemp cf 3 3 1 0
ASorin lf 5 0 1 2 Ethier rf 5 0 2 2
SCastro ss 4 0 0 0 HRmrz ss 3 1 1 1
WCastll c 5 1 2 1 Loney 1b 2 1 1 0
Valuen 3b 2 0 0 0
JRiver
ph-1b 1 0 0 1
Barney 2b 4 1 1 0 L.Cruz 3b 4 0 2 2
Germn p 2 0 0 0 A.Ellis c 4 0 2 1
AlCarr p 0 0 0 0 Blanton p 1 0 0 0
Maine p 0 0 0 0 League p 0 0 0 0
Vitters ph 1 0 0 0 Choate p 0 0 0 0
Corpas p 0 0 0 0 Guerra p 0 0 0 0
Russell p 0 0 0 0 GwynJ ph 1 0 0 0
LaHair ph 1 0 0 0 Belisari p 0 0 0 0
Camp p 0 0 0 0 HrstnJr ph 1 0 0 0
Jansen p 0 0 0 0
Totals 35 6 9 6 Totals 33 7 9 7
Chicago.............................. 100 001 301 6
Los Angeles....................... 000 013 201 7
One out when winning run scored.
DPLos Angeles1. LOBChicago9, Los Angeles
9. 2BA.Soriano (24), Ethier (29), A.Ellis (11).
HRRizzo (9), W.Castillo (3). SBL.Cruz (2). S
Blanton. SFRizzo.
IP H R ER BB SO
Chicago
Germano.................. 5
1
3 3 2 2 0 3
Al.Cabrera H,1 ........
1
3 0 2 2 2 1
Maine BS,1-1 ..........
1
3 1 0 0 1 1
Corpas H,4 ..............
2
3 1 2 2 1 1
Russell BS,1-3 ........
1
3 1 0 0 1 0
Camp L,2-5.............. 1
1
3 3 1 1 1 1
Los Angeles
Blanton ..................... 6 5 2 2 3 5
League H,1..............
1
3 1 1 1 0 0
Choate H,17.............
1
3 1 2 2 1 0
Guerra BS,5-13.......
1
3 1 0 0 1 1
Belisario H,17.......... 1 0 0 0 1 2
Jansen W,5-3
BS,6-27.................... 1 1 1 1 0 1
HBPby Germano (M.Ellis).
UmpiresHome, Dale Scott;First, Dan Iassogna-
;Second, CB Bucknor;Third, Bill Miller.
T3:29. A42,495 (56,000).
Braves 6, Astros 1
Houston Atlanta
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Altuve 2b 5 0 1 0 Bourn cf 5 0 1 1
MGnzlz ss 3 1 1 0 Prado lf 3 0 1 0
Wallac 1b 4 0 2 0 Heywrd rf 3 1 0 0
Maxwll cf 4 0 2 1 C.Jones 3b 4 1 2 1
SMoore 3b 2 0 0 0 FFrmn 1b 4 1 2 0
MDwns
ph-3b 2 0 0 0 Uggla 2b 4 0 0 0
Pearce lf-rf 2 0 1 0 D.Ross c 3 3 2 1
Bogsvc rf 1 0 0 0 Janish ss 4 0 1 2
JDMrtn ph-lf 2 0 0 0 Medlen p 1 0 0 0
Corprn c 4 0 1 0 Gearrin p 0 0 0 0
BNorrs p 2 0 0 0 Venters p 0 0 0 0
Schafer ph 1 0 0 0 Hinske ph 1 0 0 0
XCeden p 0 0 0 0 Durbin p 0 0 0 0
R.Cruz p 0 0 0 0 Avilan p 0 0 0 0
BFrncs ph 1 0 0 0 JFrncs ph 0 0 0 0
CMrtnz p 0 0 0 0
Totals 33 1 8 1 Totals 32 6 9 5
Houston.............................. 000 001 000 1
Atlanta ................................ 010 003 11x 6
DPHouston1, Atlanta 2. LOBHouston 9, Atlan-
ta 8. 2BMaxwell (9), C.Jones (18). HRD.Ross
(6). SBAltuve (20), Prado (14). CSPearce (1),
Prado (2).
IP H R ER BB SO
Houston
B.Norris L,5-9.......... 6 7 4 4 3 7
X.Cedeno................. 1 1 1 1 1 1
R.Cruz ...................... 1 1 1 1 2 0
Atlanta
Medlen ..................... 5
1
3 5 1 1 2 6
Gearrin BS,1-1........ 0 1 0 0 0 0
Venters W,4-3.........
2
3 0 0 0 1 1
Durbin H,11 .............
2
3 1 0 0 1 0
Avilan H,1................. 1
1
3 1 0 0 0 1
C.Martinez ............... 1 0 0 0 0 2
Gearrin pitched to 1 batter in the 6th.
WPB.Norris, Medlen.
UmpiresHome, James Hoye;First, Jim Joyce-
;Second, Mike DiMuro;Third, Jim Reynolds.
T3:01. A23,474 (49,586).
Padres 7, Mets 3
New York San Diego
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Tejada ss 4 0 2 0 Amarst 2b-lf 4 0 0 0
Vldspn cf 4 0 1 0 EvCarr ss 5 1 1 0
DWrght 3b 4 0 0 0 Headly 3b 3 2 1 2
I.Davis 1b 4 1 1 0 Quentin lf 4 2 2 2
DnMrp 2b 4 0 0 0 Forsyth 2b 0 0 0 0
Bay lf 2 0 0 1 Alonso 1b 4 1 2 2
RRmrz p 0 0 0 0 Venale rf 4 0 1 0
ElRmr p 0 0 0 0 Maybin cf 3 0 1 0
Baxter rf 2 1 0 0 JoBakr c 4 1 2 0
RJhnsn c 2 0 0 0 Marqus p 3 0 0 0
Thole ph-c 1 0 0 0 Thayer p 0 0 0 0
Harvey p 1 0 0 0 Grgrsn p 0 0 0 0
RCeden ph 1 1 1 2 Kotsay ph 1 0 1 1
Acosta p 0 0 0 0 Street p 0 0 0 0
Hairstn lf 1 0 0 0
Totals 30 3 5 3 Totals 35 711 7
New York ........................... 000 002 100 3
San Diego.......................... 203 000 11x 7
EAcosta (1). LOBNew York 2, San Diego 7.
2BTejada (16), I.Davis (18), Ev.Cabrera (14),
Quentin (12), Alonso (31), Maybin (12), Kotsay (6).
3BVenable (6). HRR.Cedeno (3), Headley
(15), Quentin (11), Alonso (6). CSTejada (2).
SFBay.
IP H R ER BB SO
New York
Harvey L,1-2............ 5 8 5 5 1 5
Acosta ...................... 1 0 0 0 1 0
R.Ramirez................ 1
2
3 3 2 2 1 0
El.Ramirez ...............
1
3 0 0 0 0 0
San Diego
Marquis W,5-6......... 6
1
3 4 3 3 1 5
Thayer H,6...............
2
3 0 0 0 0 1
Gregerson H,15 ...... 1 1 0 0 0 0
Street ........................ 1 0 0 0 0 2
PBRo.Johnson.
UmpiresHome, Ed Hickox;First, D.J. Reyburn-
;Second, Mark Carlson;Third, Angel Hernandez.
T2:27. A24,635 (42,691).
Pirates 6, Reds 2
Pittsburgh Cincinnati
ab r h bi ab r h bi
SMarte lf 4 0 2 2 Cozart ss 4 0 0 0
JHrrsn 3b 5 0 2 0 Stubbs cf 3 2 1 1
AMcCt cf 4 1 1 1 Bruce rf 3 0 1 1
GJones rf 5 1 2 0 Ludwck lf 3 0 1 0
Snider rf 0 0 0 0 Frazier 3b 4 0 0 0
Walker 2b 5 2 3 2 Cairo 1b 3 0 0 0
GSnchz 1b 5 1 2 0 Valdez 2b 3 0 0 0
Barajs c 4 0 1 0 Hanign c 3 0 0 0
Barmes ss 5 1 2 0 HBaily p 1 0 0 0
AJBrnt p 4 0 0 0 Arrdnd p 0 0 0 0
Hanrhn p 0 0 0 0 Heisey ph 1 0 0 0
Simon p 0 0 0 0
Paul ph 1 0 0 0
Ondrsk p 0 0 0 0
Totals 41 615 5 Totals 29 2 3 2
Pittsburgh .......................... 020 200 002 6
Cincinnati ........................... 101 000 000 2
ESimon (1), Frazier (5). LOBPittsburgh 12,
Cincinnati 3. 2BBruce (27). 3BS.Marte (1).
HRA.McCutchen (23), Walker (12), Stubbs (14).
SBStubbs (24). CSLudwick (1). SA.J.Bur-
nett.
IP H R ER BB SO
Pittsburgh
A.J.Burnett W,14-3. 8
2
3 3 2 2 3 7
Hanrahan S,32-35 ..
1
3 0 0 0 0 0
Cincinnati
H.Bailey L,9-7.......... 4
2
3 9 4 4 1 3
Arredondo................
1
3 0 0 0 0 1
Simon ....................... 3 3 0 0 0 5
Ondrusek ................. 1 3 2 1 0 2
HBPby Simon (S.Marte), by H.Bailey (Barajas).
UmpiresHome, Todd Tichenor;First, Tony Ran-
dazzo;Second, Bob Davidson;Third, Brian Gor-
man.
T3:06. A38,624 (42,319).
Giants 8, Rockies 3
San Francisco Colorado
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Pagan cf 4 1 0 0 Fowler cf 4 1 0 0
Theriot 2b 5 1 1 0 Rutledg ss 4 0 0 0
MeCarr lf 5 3 2 0 Helton 1b 4 1 1 0
Posey 1b 4 1 2 1 CGnzlz lf 4 1 2 1
Affeldt p 0 0 0 0 Pachec 3b 3 0 2 1
Loux p 0 0 0 0 Colvin rf 2 0 0 0
Pence rf 5 1 2 3 McBrid ph-rf 2 0 1 1
Scutaro 3b 3 1 1 2 WRosr c 3 0 0 0
JaLopz p 0 0 0 0 JHerrr 2b 4 0 2 0
Romo p 0 0 0 0 Chatwd p 0 0 0 0
Belt ph-1b 1 0 0 0 CTorrs p 0 0 0 0
HSnchz c 4 0 2 0 EYong ph 1 0 0 0
BCrwfr ss 4 0 1 0 Belisle p 0 0 0 0
Linccm p 3 0 0 1 MtRynl p 0 0 0 0
Kontos p 0 0 0 0 LeMahi ph 1 0 0 0
Arias 3b 1 0 1 0 EEscln p 0 0 0 0
Totals 39 812 7 Totals 32 3 8 3
San Francisco.................... 200 110 301 8
Colorado ............................ 100 000 101 3
EPacheco (8). LOBSan Francisco 8, Colorado
13. 2BPence 2 (18), Scutaro (19), Helton (16), Pa-
checo(19). 3BMe.Cabrera(10). SBPagan(19),
Me.Cabrera (12). CSArias (1). SChatwood,
C.Torres.
IP H R ER BB SO
San Francisco
Lincecum W,6-11.... 6 5 1 1 5 3
Kontos ...................... 0 0 1 1 2 0
Ja.Lopez ..................
1
3 1 0 0 1 1
Romo H,17 .............. 1
2
3 0 0 0 0 2
Affeldt .......................
2
3 2 1 1 1 0
Loux..........................
1
3 0 0 0 0 0
Colorado
Chatwood L,1-2....... 3
1
3 2 3 1 4 1
C.Torres................... 2
2
3 3 1 1 0 2
Belisle....................... 1 4 3 3 0 1
Mat.Reynolds........... 1 1 0 0 0 0
E.Escalona .............. 1 2 1 1 0 1
Kontos pitched to 2 batters in the 7th.
WPLincecum, Chatwood, C.Torres. PBW.Ro-
sario.
UmpiresHome, Jeff Nelson;First, Bill Welke;Se-
cond, Chris Guccione;Third, Tim Tschida.
T3:30. A28,804 (50,398).
Nationals 4, Marlins 1
Miami Washington
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Petersn lf 4 0 0 0 Lmrdzz 2b 2 1 1 0
Cousins rf 4 0 2 0 Harper cf 4 0 2 0
Reyes ss 4 0 1 0 Zmrmn 3b 5 0 1 0
Ca.Lee 1b 4 1 1 0 LaRoch 1b 3 0 2 2
Dobbs 3b 4 0 2 1 Morse lf 4 0 1 0
Ruggin cf 4 0 0 0 Werth rf 4 1 1 0
DSolan 2b 2 0 0 0 Espinos ss 2 1 0 0
J.Buck c 3 0 0 0 Flores c 4 0 1 0
Nolasco p 2 0 0 0 Strasrg p 2 1 1 2
Gaudin p 0 0 0 0 Berndn ph 1 0 0 0
NGreen ph 1 0 0 0 Stmmn p 0 0 0 0
Cishek p 0 0 0 0 SBurntt p 0 0 0 0
Tracy ph 1 0 0 0
Storen p 0 0 0 0
Totals 32 1 6 1 Totals 32 410 4
Miami .................................. 000 000 100 1
Washington ....................... 040 000 00x 4
DPMiami 1, Washington 1. LOBMiami 5,
Washington 11. 2BCousins (4), Ca.Lee (19),
Dobbs (5). CSLombardozzi (2).
IP H R ER BB SO
Miami
Nolasco L,8-11........ 6 8 4 4 4 4
Gaudin...................... 1 1 0 0 0 1
Cishek ...................... 1 1 0 0 1 1
Washington
Strasburg W,12-5 ... 6 3 0 0 1 6
Stammen.................. 1 2 1 1 0 1
S.Burnett H,25 ........ 1 0 0 0 0 1
Storen S,1-1 ............ 1 1 0 0 0 1
HBPby Nolasco (Espinosa), by Cishek (Lombar-
dozzi).
UmpiresHome, Fieldin Culbreth;First, Lance
Barksdale;Second, Adrian Johnson;Third, Mike
Muchlinski.
T2:48. A30,453 (41,487).
Cardinals 3, Brewers 0
Milwaukee St. Louis
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Aoki rf 4 0 1 0 Schmkr 2b 4 0 1 0
CGomz cf 3 0 1 0 Boggs p 0 0 0 0
Braun lf 4 0 0 0 Motte p 0 0 0 0
ArRmr 3b 4 0 1 0 Craig 1b 4 0 1 1
Hart 1b 4 0 1 0 Hollidy lf 4 0 2 0
RWeks 2b 2 0 1 0 Beltran rf 4 1 1 0
Lucroy c 4 0 0 0 Freese 3b 4 0 2 1
Ransm ss 3 0 1 0 YMolin c 4 0 2 0
Estrad p 2 0 0 0 Jay cf 3 1 0 0
Morgan ph 1 0 0 0
Descals
ss-2b 4 1 3 1
Hndrsn p 0 0 0 0 Lohse p 1 0 0 0
Loe p 0 0 0 0 Mujica p 0 0 0 0
Ishikaw ph 1 0 0 0
Furcal
ph-ss 1 0 0 0
Totals 32 0 6 0 Totals 33 312 3
Milwaukee.......................... 000 000 000 0
St. Louis............................. 010 000 11x 3
EHart (4), Freese (9). DPMilwaukee 2, St.
Louis 2. LOBMilwaukee 9, St. Louis 8. 2BAoki
(19), C.Gomez (14), Craig (20), Holliday (27), Bel-
tran (18), Y.Molina (20). 3BDescalso (5). CS
Y.Molina (2). SLohse.
IP H R ER BB SO
Milwaukee
Estrada L,0-5........... 6 7 1 1 1 2
Henderson............... 1 2 1 1 0 2
Loe............................ 1 3 1 1 0 0
St. Louis
Lohse W,12-2.......... 6 4 0 0 3 6
Mujica H,15.............. 1 1 0 0 0 0
Boggs H,18.............. 1 1 0 0 0 0
Motte S,24-28.......... 1 0 0 0 1 2
UmpiresHome, Mike Everitt;First, Laz Diaz;Sec-
ond, Mike Estabrook;Third, Tim Welke.
T2:53. A40,274 (43,975).
A L T O P T E N
G AB R H Pct.
Trout LAA..................... 86 350 86 121 .346
MiCabrera Det............. 108 428 71 139 .325
AJackson Det .............. 86 338 68 109 .322
Konerko CWS............. 99 369 48 118 .320
Mauer Min.................... 99 366 61 116 .317
Rios CWS.................... 105 405 67 128 .316
Ortiz Bos ...................... 89 320 65 101 .316
Cano NYY.................... 107 420 68 132 .314
Jeter NYY .................... 105 446 61 140 .314
Beltre Tex .................... 103 402 60 125 .311
Home Runs
ADunn, Chicago, 31; Encarnacion, Toronto, 29;
Granderson, New York, 29; Hamilton, Texas, 29;
Trumbo, Los Angeles, 28; Willingham, Minnesota,
28; Bautista, Toronto, 27; MiCabrera, Detroit, 27.
Runs Batted In
MiCabrera, Detroit, 91; Hamilton, Texas, 90; Wil-
lingham, Minnesota, 81; Fielder, Detroit, 79; Pujols,
Los Angeles, 76; ADunn, Chicago, 74; Encarna-
cion, Toronto, 74.
N L T O P T E N
G AB R H Pct.
McCutchen Pit............. 103 386 73 142 .368
MeCabrera SF ............ 104 423 77 149 .352
Votto Cin...................... 86 298 52 102 .342
Ruiz Phi........................ 95 313 47 105 .335
CGonzalez Col............ 98 394 73 129 .327
Posey SF ..................... 97 352 45 115 .327
DWright NYM.............. 105 388 67 126 .325
Holliday StL ................. 105 401 71 130 .324
YMolina StL................. 94 354 44 112 .316
Freese StL................... 98 360 51 112 .311
Home Runs
Braun, Milwaukee, 29; Beltran, St. Louis, 25; Kubel,
Arizona, 23; LaRoche, Washington, 23; McCutch-
en, Pittsburgh, 23; PAlvarez, Pittsburgh, 21; Bruce,
Cincinnati, 21; Holliday, St. Louis, 21.
Runs Batted In
Beltran, St. Louis, 77; Holliday, St. Louis, 76; Braun,
Milwaukee, 74; CGonzalez, Colorado, 73; Kubel,
Arizona, 73; DWright, New York, 72; LaRoche,
Washington, 71.
1908 John Lush threw a six-inning no-hitter
as the St. Louis Cardinals beat the Brooklyn
Dodgers 2-0. It was Lushs second no-hitter
against the Dodgers.
1952 Satchel Paige, 46, became the oldest
pitcher in major league history to pitch a com-
plete game or a shutout when he beat Virgil
Trucks and the Detroit Tigers 1-0 in 12 innings.
1972 Atlantas Hank Aaron hit his 660th and
661st career home runs to break Babe Ruths
record for most home runs with one club. The
661st came in the 10th inning to give the
Braves a 4-3 triumph over the Cincinnati Reds.
1981 As a result of a seven-week strike,
Major League Baseball players approved a
split-season format. The New York Yankees,
Oakland As, Philadelphia Phillies and Los An-
geles Dodgers were declared the first-half
champions and automatically qualified for the
divisional series.
1985 The Major League Baseball Players
Association went on strike.
1986 The Texas Rangers beat the Baltimore
Orioles 13-11 in a record-setting battle of grand
slams. Texas Toby Harrah hit a grand slam in
the second inning before Larry Sheets and Jim
Dwyer connected for grand slams in Balti-
mores nine-run fourth.
T H I S D A T E I N B A S E B A L L
C M Y K
PAGE 4B MONDAY, AUGUST 6, 2012 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
S P O R T S
LONDON 201 2 OLYMPI C GAMES
VOLLEYBALL
US women stay undefeated
LONDON Destinee Hooker
scored 19 points and the undefeated
U.S. womens volleyball team wrapped
up preliminary pool play at the London
Olympics with a straight-set victory
over Turkey on Sunday night.
The top-ranked U.S. team was hurt
in the third set when captain and three-
time Olympian Lindsey Berg appeared
to injure her left ankle.
Foluke Akinradewo added 15 points
in the 27-25, 25-16, 25-19 victory for the
top-ranked United States, which had
clinched the top seed in its pool for the
Tuesday quarterfinals.
Neriman Ozsoy scored 14 for Turkey,
which had to wait until the conclusion
of the late match between Brazil and
Serbia to learn whether it would ad-
vance.
DIVING
China takes top two
spots in 3-meter final
LONDON Wu Minxia won the
womens 3-meter springboard at the
London Olympics on Sunday, earning
the Chinese diver her first individual
gold medal and record-tying sixth
career medal.
Wu led all but one round of the five-
dive final, totaling 414.00 points. She
tied countrywoman Guo Jingjing with
six medals. Wu and partner He Zi also
won the 3-meter synchronized title in
London.
He took the silver with 379.20, giv-
ing China its sixth diving medal of the
games, including five gold after sweep-
ing the synchro events.
Laura Sanchez Soto of Mexico
earned the bronze at 362.40.
BOXING
Campbells win sets off
British medal rush
LONDON Bantamweight Luke
Campbell clinched the dominant Brit-
ish teams first boxing medal of the
London Olympics on Sunday night in a
session marred by a series of unsightly
heavyweight fights that probably will
be decided outside the ring.
Heavyweights Teymur Mammadov
of Azerbaijan and Clemente Russo of
Italy both clutched, grabbed and held
their way through their quarterfinal
bouts at ExCel arena, yet both highly
ranked amateurs won narrow scoring
decisions that surprised fans and en-
raged their opponents.
The fighters from Belarus and Cuba
said theyll protest the decisions in an
Olympics already featuring two over-
turned results.
Amateur boxings governing body
confirmed Belarus has protested Siar-
hei Karneyeus loss to Mammadov. Jose
Larduets Cuban coach says theyll
protest his loss to Russo.
WRESTLING
Irans Soryan wins gold
LONDON Hamid Soryan of Iran
won an Olympic gold medal Sunday in
mens 55-kilogram Greco-Roman wres-
tling.
The five-time world champion beat
Rovshan Bayramov of Azerbaijan 2-0,
1-0 to become the first Iranian to win a
gold medal in Greco-Roman wrestling.
Iran has 30 overall medals in frees-
tyle but had only two, a silver and a
bronze, in Greco-Roman before Sunday.
Bayramov, the defending world
champion, lost in the Olympic final for
the second straight time. He fell to
Nazir Mankiev of Russia in Beijing.
Peter Modos of Hungary and Mingi-
yan Semenov of Russia won bronze
medals.
-- The Associated Press
I N B R I E F
AP PHOTO
The United States Destinee Hooker,
left, gets a hug from teammate Court-
ney Thompson during a womens pre-
liminary volleyball match against
Turkey Sunday in London. The United
States won in three sets.
LONDON McKayla Maroney
didnt need to look at the scoreboard.
Neither did Louis Smith.
The Olympic gold medals they ex-
pected to win were going to someone
else.
It happens. Its gymnastics, Maro-
ney said. You cant be perfect, and
sometimes things dont go as you
planned.
Maroney wound up with a silver on
vault after a rare fall Sunday, while
Smith was on the wrong end of gym-
nastics tiebreak rules for a second
straight Olympics. Despite finishing
with the same score as Krisztian Berki
on pommel horse, the Hungarian got
the gold and Smith the silver because
Berkis execution mark was a tad better.
Still, Smith was hardly going to com-
plain.
Four years after giving Britain its
first Olympic medal in 84 years, he now
has three. Whats more, gymnastics has
become such a big deal in Britain that
the Duchess of Cambridge, formerly
known as Kate Mid-
dleton, had a front-
row seat for the
first day of event fi-
nals. Teammate
Max Whitlock won
the bronze on pom-
mel horse, giving
the British three
medals the same
number they won
from 1908 to 2004,
before the British
renaissance began.
I could have
been standing here
without a medal,
tears running down my face, Smith
said. Ive got a second medal here. Ive
got three Olympic medals. All those
years ago, I never thought Id go to the
Olympics, so Im very happy right
now.
In the other event final, Zou Kai won
his fifth career gold medal, defending
his title on floor exercise. He already
had one gold from Chinas victory in
the mens team competition last week,
and has three more from the Beijing
Games.
Hes got a chance to duplicate his
Beijing three-peat on Tuesday, when he
tries to defend his Olympic title on
high bar.
I was really young and inexperi-
enced in 2008. I was just a kid who fo-
cused on the competition, Zou said.
Im different now and wanted to be on
top of the podium.
So did Maroney.
The defending world champion on
vault was considered pretty much a
lock for the gold medal, which would
have given the U.S. women three in the
first three gymnastics events. Maroney
never makes errors in training or in
competition, and no one in the world
comes close to her execution. She won
her world title last year by almost a
half-point and topped qualifying at
these games by a similar margin.
I wasnt focused on getting a gold
medal, the 16-year-old said. I just
wanted to prove to everybody that I
could hit two vaults and I could try to
do my best for USA.
Maroney still sterling in vault
By NANCY ARMOUR
AP National Writer
UP NEXT
Finals in mens
rings and vault,
and womens
uneven bars.
9 a.m. today
TV: 8 p.m., NBC
WIMBLEDON, England Andy
Murray stood with the Union Jack
drapedover his shoulders, anOlympic
gold medal around his neck, flanked
by the man he had just beaten, Roger
Federer, and basking in the roar of the
Centre Court crowd.
No wonder the often dour Scot-
sman was grin-
ning.
Murray won
one for the home
team Sunday,
beating Federer
6-2, 6-1, 6-4 in the
tennis final at
Wimbledon.
The victory marked a career break-
through for Murray. He has lost all
four of his Grand Slam finals, three
against Federer, includingWimbledon
a month ago.
It has beenthe best weekof myten-
nis career by a mile, Murray said. For
Federer, the drubbingmarkedanother
Olympic disappointment. Playing in
the games for the fourth time, he
sought a victory to complete a career
Golden Slam but settled for silver
his first singles medal.
Dont feel too bad for me, Federer
said. I felt like I wonmy silver, I didnt
lose it. So I feel really happy.
Murray became the first British
man to win the gold in singles since
Josiah Ritchie in 1908. Those games
took place at Wimbledon, too.
In the days first match on Centre
Court, womens singles champion Se-
rena Williams teamed with sister Ven-
us to win their third career doubles
gold medal.
They defeated Andrea Hlavackova
and Lucie Hradecka of the Czech Re-
public 6-4, 6-4.
Murray settled for a silver in mixed
doubles with Laura Robson. They lost
to Victoria Azarenka and Max Mirnyi
of Belarus 2-6, 6-3, 1-0 (8).
Mike Bryan won his second medal
of the weekend when he and U.S.
teammate Lisa Raymond took the
bronze in mixed doubles, which was
back in the Olympics for the first time
since 1924. Bryan and his brother Bob
won gold in mens doubles Saturday.
Maria Kirilenko and Nadia Petrova
of Russia took the bronze in womens
doubles, while Juan Martin del Potro
of Argentina won the bronze in mens
singles.
AP PHOTO
Andy Murray celebrates after de-
feating Roger Federer in the mens
singles gold medal match at Wim-
bledon, in London on Sunday.
Murray
delivers
tennis gold
British star triumphs in final on
hallowed Wimbledon Centre Court.
By STEVEN WINE
AP Sports Writer
LONDONTheAmericanswereat it
again, putting up record numbers in an-
other impressive offensive performance
at the Olympic basketball tournament.
This time it was the U.S. womens
team.
Just days after the U.S. men shattered
the Olympic record for points in a game,
the women tied their Olympic mark in a
114-66 rout of China on Sunday.
Diana Taurasi scored22 as the women
matched the 114 points they scored
against Spain in 1992, but fell well short
of the womens Olympic mark of 128
points set by Brazil in 2004.
China was able to hang with the U.S.
for a quarter behindits ownhot shooting
before the Americans turned the game
into a blowout with a huge second quar-
ter run.
The victory was the Americans 38th-
straight in Olympic
play and gave them
the top seed in the
group for the quar-
terfinals. The U.S.
will meet its north-
ern neighbor Cana-
da on Tuesday.
The other quar-
terfinal matchups
will be undefeated
France against the
Czech Republic;
Australia plays Chi-
na; and Russia will
meet Turkey.
The Americans
(5-0) havent lost a
gameinthepreliminaryroundsince1976
the first time that womens basketball
was played in the Olympics.
Chinagot thescoringstartedearly, hit-
ting10of itsfirst15shots. Chinaled28-25
with 1:25 left in the first quarter after
Song Xiaoyun hit a deep 3-pointer from
way behind the top of the key.
But then the Americans took over and
took off, turning up their defensive pres-
sure.
Taurasi started the spurt with a layup
and Angel McCoughtry converted two
turnovers intoeasylay-ins toendthefirst
quarter.
The U.S. kept the burst going in the
second period getting layup after layup
off turnovers. The defensive pressure
was relentless.
On one play, Taurasi stole the ball at
halfcourt and while diving out of bounds
to save it, flipped it ahead to Lindsay
Whalen for two points drawing a loud
cheer fromthe crowd.
Taurasi hit two more 3s during the
spurt her second made it 52-34 with
3:27 left in the half. The Americans led
61-36 at the break.
AP PHOTO
Chinas Zhao Shuang (7) watches
United States Angel McCoughtry (8)
shoot Sunday in London.
American women break China, match team mark
By DOUG FEINBERG
AP Basketball Writer
UP NEXT
Team USA
vs.
Canada
11:15 a.m.,
Tuesday
TV: Basketball
channel
LONDONTheycall herSixFeet
of Sunshine, but at night in London,
the smile disappears and Kerri Walsh
Jennings turns downright fierce.
She did it again Sunday, when she
and Misty May-Treanor beat Italy in
straight sets to advance to the semifi-
nals in the Olympic beach volleyball
tournament.
I dont want to let our opponents
breathe. I dont want to give them an
edge. I dont want them to feel com-
fortable for one second out there, she
said Sunday night after the win.
You need to have that cutthroat
mentality. Not meanandnot, I want to
hurt you. Its: I respectfully want to
beat you and give you my best game.
Crushyou, yes,shesaid. Not your
soul. Just you, on the court.
The Americans have been crushing
opponents for three Olympiads,
sweepingtothegoldmedals inAthens
and Beijing without even losing a set
32inarowover16games, including
their first twointhe round-robinat the
London Games. Even before that
straight-set streak was snapped on
Wednesday, though, the two-time de-
fendingchampionshadshownsignsof
weakness.
They lost in
Moscowto China
in June, then lost
in straight sets in
Rome to Marta
Menegatti and
Greta Cicolari,
the same Italian
pair they met in
theOlympicquar-
terfinals on Sun-
day night.
I think were a
different team.
We sold the old
team and we
bought a new
team, May-Trea-
nor saidafter win-
ning 21-13, 21-13
in a match so dominating it brought
out tears from Menegatti during a
changeover. She was probably like, I
dont knowwhat todo. Andthatshow
you get teams in trouble.
Menegatti, whos 21, said she grew
upidolizingMay-Treanor. The Italians
have only been playing together for
three years, and their goal had been to
qualifyforthe2016GamesinRiodeJa-
neiro.
Shes a young player, and shell
learn to control her emotions, May-
Treanor said. She has no reason to
hold her head down whatsoever.
In the other quarterfinals, the No. 2
U.S. womens team of Jennifer Kessy
and April Ross beat Czechs Marketa
Slukova and Kristyna Kolokova. The
Americans will play reigning world
champions Juliana and Larissa of Bra-
zil, whobeat Germans SaraGoller and
Laura Ludwig 21-10, 21-19 in the last
match on Sunday night.
May-Treanor and Walsh Jennings
will play Chinas Xue Chen and Zhang
Xi, which beat Austrian sisters Stefa-
nie and Doris Schwaiger 21-18, 21-11
earlier Sunday.
The Chinese pair, which won the
bronze medal in 2008 but did not face
Walsh Jennings and May-Treanor in
Beijing, has beatenthemthreeconsec-
utive times, including a 21-14, 21-14 fi-
nal inMoscowthat was over in34min-
utes.
Ross and Kessy played an extended
first set, witheachsidefightingoff sev-
eral set points before Slukova spiked
one into the net to make it 24-23 and
thenKolokovahit onelong. TheAmer-
icans had a 16-9 lead in the second set
and held on to win 21-18.
AP PHOTO
U.S. Kerri Walsh Jennings, left, and Misty May-Treanor, right, react during their quarterfinal womens beach
volleyball match against Italy on Sunday in London.
US stars showing cutthroat mentality
By JIMMY GOLEN
AP Sports Writer
UP NEXT
May-Treanor/
Walsh
Jennings
vs.
Xue/Zhang
5 p.m. Tuesday
TV: 5:30 p.m.,
MSNBC (joined
in progress)
C M Y K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com MONDAY, AUGUST 6, 2012 PAGE 5B
S P O R T S
NBC Olympics LIVE EXTRA features live streams of every
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3D On Channel 600 | Basketball On Channel 601 | Soccer On Channel 602
LONDON 201 2 OLYMPI C GAMES
LONDONOscarPistorius plannowisto
go evenquicker at the next Olympics.
The double-amputee sprinter said hes set-
ting his sights on Rio de Janeiro in 2016 after
finishinglast inhis 400-meter semifinal at the
Londongames onSunday night.
In 2016, Ill probably be at my peak in Rio.
Im looking forward to that more than any-
thing,hesaid. Hewill turn30inNovemberof
that year.
The South African still expects to run the
4x400 relays here, which start Thursday.
Thenhewill trytodefendhis100, 200and400
titles at the Paralympics.
After that, Pistorius immediate goal is to
break 45 seconds inthe 400.
He ran 46.54 way slower than his career
best of 45.07 in lane 5 on his carbon-fiber
bladesinthe80,000-seat OlympicStadiumon
Sunday, beforeapackedcrowdthatagaingave
hima resounding cheer. His was nearly 2 sec-
onds slower than the winner of his semifinal,
Kirani James of Grenada, the world cham-
pion.
Thefirst double-amputeetocompeteat the
Olympics was undone, as has happenedsoof-
ten, byhis sluggishstart aresult, inpart, of
not havingfeet topushoff against thestarting
blocks.
His reaction time out of the blocks was the
slowest of the 24 semifinalists.
I dont have ankle articulation so the start
is always going to be one of my biggest down-
points in the race, he said. Its just one of
those things that I have to work on, and be as
efficient at top speedas I possibly can.
I believe next year well definitely get un-
der 45, he said.
He said he could do that by further trim-
minghis weight andwithmoretrainingtoim-
provehisabilitytosustainspeedoveralonger
distance. To compensate for his slow starts,
he has to runharder, quicker.
That driftinginthefirst 30metersiswhere
my lack really happens. So for me to match
some of the other guys I
just have to go out very
hard, he said. So Ive
just got tolearnandadapt
that way. Unfortunately,
its just one of those
things.
I didnt run the best
race. I went out very
hard, he said. It wasnt
the best tactic for me. I
would have had to run a
personal best, anyway, if I
wantedtomakethefinal.
Still, with his solo runs
on the London track, he made history and
achievedhis goal of making the semifinal.
It just felt really magical, he said. If I
could predict what it would feel like or imag-
ine beyondmy wildest dreams, this was prob-
ably10 times that.
Tostepout infront of acrowdthismassive,
its a mind-blowing experience, he added.
Ivehadsupport inthelast coupleof dayslike
I have never felt before.
James immediately walked over to Pistori-
us after theraceandaskedtotradenamebibs,
to keep as a souvenir. The pair shook hands
andhugged.
Hes an inspiration for all of us. What he
does... takesalot of courage, just alot of confi-
dence, James said. Hes very special to our
sport.
Hes a great individual andits time we see
himlike that andnot anything else.
Pistoriushadtofight all thewaytocompete
at the games, taking his case to court to force
his way into the most elite opencompetition.
For him to make it to the semifinals and
continue to push, I would like to tell him to
keep his head up and dont get discouraged,
said Chris Brown, a former world indoors
champion, who finished second in Pistorius
heat andadvancedto the final.
Hehadmorepressureonhimthananyone
else, so I give him credit for coming out and
performing under difficult conditions.
Blade Runner plans to be better in Rio
AP PHOTO
South Africas Oscar Pistorius waves after running in the mens 400-meter semifinal
during the athletics competition in the Olympic Stadium on Sunday in London.
Hes just getting started
By JOHN LEICESTER
AP Sports Writer
UP NEXT
4X400 relay
Preliminaries
6:35 p.m.
Thursday
tosterone.
Everyone in the final broke 10
seconds except former world-re-
cord holder Asafa Powell of Ja-
maica, who pulled up with a
groin injury.
At Beijing four years ago, the 6-
foot-5 Bolt electrified track and
field, winning gold medals in
world-record times in the 100,
200 and 4x100 relay some-
thing no man had ever done at an
Olympics. His 100 mark of 9.69
set there, the one that came de-
spitesomeslowingdownfor cele-
bratory chest-slapping, only last-
ed until the next years world
championships, whenhelowered
the record to 9.58.
But The Worlds Fastest Man
had been something less than
Boltesque since then, in part due
to a string of minor injuries to his
back and legs. In 2010, he lost to
Tyson Gay, the American whos a
past world champion and cried
inconsolably after ending up
fourth Sunday in a time (9.80)
that would have been good
enoughtowinevery Olympic100
gold medal other than the past
two.
A false start knocked Bolt out
of the 100 at last years world
championships, creating an
opening for Blake. Then came re-
cent, much-discussed losses to
Blake in the100 and 200 at the Ja-
maican Olympic trials.
The trials woke me up. Yohan
gave me a wakeupcall, Bolt said.
He knocked on my door and
said, Usain, wake up! This is an
Olympic year.
Bolt, a fast runner who likes to
drive fast, too, was involved in a
wee-hours car crash in Kingston
in June not the only auto acci-
dent hes been in. His publicist
played down the seriousness of
the latest episode, but the hand-
wringing in Jamaica intensified
after the poor performances at
the trials a few weeks later.
Bolt never let any of that affect
him in London.
I had to show the world Im
the greatest, he said.
After easing up down the
stretch and basically jogging
through the finish while winning
his semifinal heat earlier Sunday,
he mugged for the cameras and
said, Im back, baby. All day, ev-
ery day.
Then he went out about two
hours later and proved it, run-
ning the second-fastest 100 inhis-
tory.
He came to these Olympics
with the stated intention of be-
coming a living legend.
If he hasnt accomplished that
already, hes sure close. Bolt be-
gins defending his title in the 200
in Tuesdays heats. Hes also part
of Jamaicas 4x100 relay team, of
course, andwouldnt rule out tak-
ing part in the 4x400 this time, as
well.
BOLT
Continued from Page 1B
LONDON Once was
enough. Carmelo Anthony
doesnt want to mess around
against Argentina.
Not after a close call with Lith-
uania.
Anthony, LeBron James, Kobe
Bryant and the rest of the star-
studded U.S. basketball team
have now been tested at the Lon-
don Olympics and admittedly
they werent quite preparedfor it.
The NBAs best players face an-
other challenge Monday night
when they wrap up pool play
against theArgentines, whoat 3-1
arenot tobeoverlooked. Anthony
acknowledged the Americans
might have been caught slightly
off guard by Lithuanias fight in a
five-point victory Saturday.
It was a little bit tighter than
what we expected, Anthony said
before practice Sunday. Lithua-
nia was focused, and it kind of
caught us on our heels. We wont
get caught on our heels again.
Also on Mondays schedule is
the 400-meter final at Olympic
Stadium, a race that will be mis-
sing some its luster: Defending
Olympic champion LaShawn
Merritt is out because of an in-
jured left hamstring he hurt half-
way through Saturdays qualify-
ing heat.
Double-amputeeOscar Pistori-
us wont be there, either. The
South African sprinter nick-
named Blade Runner finished
last in his 400 semifinal heat Sun-
day night.
Across town at O2 Arena,
Olympic all-around champion
Gabby Douglas tries for a third
gymnastics gold medal in the in-
dividual uneven bars the first
of her last two events at the Lon-
don Games. Douglas, who also
helped the U.S. capture its first
Olympic team title since 1996,
competes in the balance beam
Tuesday.
On the
mens side,
American
Sam Mikulak
competes in
Mondays
vault final.
For the
U.S. basket-
ball team,
James is car-
rying the
load and his
countrys
hopes of a
dominant run like the one by the
1992 Dream Team that featured
Magic Johnson, Michael Jordan
and Larry Bird.
JamessaystheU.S. needstoget
backtothebasicsagainst Argenti-
na, which features NBA players
Luis Scola and Manu Ginobili.
We have to defend and we
have to rebound, James said.
Its averygoodteamandwelook
forward to the challenge. They
play as a teamand thats what its
all about.
James teammates and coach
Mike Krzyzewski hope his per-
formance against Lithuania will
provide some momentum going
into their next game.
With the U.S. leading by one
lateagainst Lithuania, Jameshit a
3-pointer, then followed with a
dunk off of a turnover to put his
team ahead 92-86 with 3:41 to
play. The NBA MVP from the
champion Miami Heat also
scoredtwo more baskets over the
final 2:10andwoundupwithnine
of the Americans final 12 points
and 20 in all.
Krzyzewski is also counting on
more from Bryant as the stakes
become higher. He went 1of 7 for
sixpoints, andhadtworebounds,
anassist andthreefoulsin20min-
utes against Lithuania.
The Americans priority is to
lock up a No. 1 seed from their
pool headingintothequarterfinal
rounds, which will be played at
the bigger, and soon-to-be-vacat-
ed, gymnastics venue.
Argentina, meanwhile, is com-
ing off Saturdays 93-79 victory
against Nigeria, a team the U.S.
beat by 83.
USA cant take
this foe lightly
AP PHOTO
United States Carmelo Anthony reacts after making a three-
point shot during a mens basketball game against Nigeria on
Thursday in London.
UP NEXT
Team USA vs.
Argentina
5:15 p.m., today
TV: NBCSN
After a close call in their last
game, the Americans must be
ready for powerful Argentina.
By JANIE McCAULEY
AP Sports Writer
Casey Eichfeld
Going to see some athletics
during one of my last night here. I
cant wait to cheer on Team USA!!!
#InspireLK
***
I have been making the most of
my last days in London! Tuesday I
will fly home to train and then back
to Europe for World Cups 4 and 5!
Im fired up!
Paige Selenski
Some how my dad ended up
watching track and field after our
game with .. Paul McCartney?
***
Crunch crunch crunch .. The
sound of Pringles and Doritos
#fatkids #roomies4life @chewbach
(Claire Laubach)
L O C A L
O L Y M P I A N S
T W E E T S
C M Y K
PAGE 6B MONDAY, AUGUST 6, 2012 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
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restart to take the lead just be-
fore rain began falling.
It stayed that way as a violent
lightning storm hit shortly after
NASCAR red flagged the race.
The event was called about 11
minutes later as fans scattered to
their vehicles. Three fans were
struck by lightning in the main
parking lot behind the grand-
stands.
I can think of a handful of
times we were in position to win
and it didnt go our way for what-
ever reason, Gordon said. To
see this race unfold like it did cer-
tainly makes up for a lot of those
woulda, coulda, shouldas this
year.
The victory moved Gordon to
12th in the drivers standings and
placed him in second for one of
two wild card spots in the chase.
The wild-card berths go to the
two drivers11-20 in the standings
withthe most wins. Kasey Kahne
holds the top spot with two wins.
Gordon wasnt the only driver
who benefitted from the storm.
Kahne finished second, limping
around the track on a flat right
rear tire during the final caution
period.
If it didnt rain and the green
flag would have come out, we
would have ducked into the pits
and been in the 27th spot,
Kahne said.
The accident occurredas John-
son and Kenseth fought for posi-
tion in turn 1. Johnson got into
Kenseth, but was able to recover
andfinished14th. Kensethwasnt
as lucky as his No. 17 Ford spun
and was T-boned by Denny Ham-
lin.
(Johnson) drove in really, re-
ally far and spun out underneath
me and I got wrecked, Kenseth
said.
Hamlin was treated and re-
leased at the infield care center
after complaining of abdominal
pain. He finished 29th, his sec-
ond-worst finish in 15 Pocono
races. Kenseth placed 23rd.
MartinTruexJr. was thirdafter
he avoided the accident as well.
The biggest thingwas nobody
took tires, Menard said. We
were all trying to save fuel be-
cause we knewthe rain was com-
ing. And a lot of guys had stuff all
over their tires. Everybody was
throwing stuff off their tires the
last lap, trying to get them
cleaned up before the restart.
Gordon finished 40th in the
season-opening Daytona 500 and
had been trying to recover from
that andsome other poor finishes
through the first 11 races of the
season. He has finished sixth or
better in the last seven races, in-
cluding Sunday.
Its nice to know that things
can still go our way, Gordon
said. I hate it for (Johnson) and
those guys for what happened.
But we havent had much go our
way this year.
AP PHOTO
Crew members push Ryan Newmans car in a downpour that shortened the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race Sunday at Pocono Race-
way in Long Pond.
Jeff Gordon (24) races side-by-side with Sam Hornish Jr., (22) during the NASCAR Sprint Cup
Series race Sunday at Pocono Raceway in Long Pond. Gordon won the rain-shortened race.
LAP1 The Pennsylvania 400 starts after nearly a two-hour rain delay
with Juan Pablo Montoya on the pole.
LAP 8 Denny Hamlin takes the lead from Montoya. Dale Earnhardt Jr.
is in third after starting eighth.
LAP12 Earnhardt overtakes Hamlin coming of the third turn for the
lead.Start-and-park drivers begin their departure from the race
LAP18 Kyle Busch, running 10th at the time, bangs into the wall to
bring out the first caution. This will also serve as the competition cau-
tion scheduled for lap 20.
LAP 23 Restart with Jamie McMurray, Mark Martin and Brad Keselow-
ski out front. None of those drivers pitted.
LAP 35 The top three are Earnhardt Jr., Jimmie Johnson and Matt
Kenseth.
LAP 49 Earnhardt Jr. goes to the garage with a broken transmission.
LAP 72 Eight laps until the halfway point where the race will be offi-
cial. Dark clouds moving in as Johnson has a 3.5-second lead over
Kenseth.
LAP 80 Halfway point. Johnson leads by 3.4 second followed by
Kenseth, Keselowski, Kurt Busch and Greg Biffle.
LAP 85 Kurt Busch crashes hard into the wall, bring out the second
caution.
LAP 90 Restart. Johnson and Kenseth running one and two get
together going through turn 1. Kenseth and Hamlin have the most dam-
age. Johnson recovers, but loses lead to Jeff Gordon, who was sixth on
the restart.
LAP 93 Still under caution as NASCAR sorts out the running order for
the restart.
LAP 97 Cars being brought to pit road because of rain. Gordon leads.
Kahne, who has a flat right rear, is second. Mart Truex Jr. is third and
Keselowski fourth. Johnson is 14th.
LAP 98 After 11 minutes into a violent lightning storm with blowing,
heavy rain, the race is called by NASCAR with Gordon as the winner.
L A P R E P O R T
GORDON
Continued from Page 1B
Johnsons four-second lead
was wiped out by a caution
flag. On the ensuing restart,
he collided with Matt Kenseth
in turn one, costing him a
second straight trip to victory
lane and dropping him to a
14th-place finish in the rain-
shortened race.
Everyone at Pocono Race-
way knew the race could end
at any moment because of the
rough weather approaching.
So when that final restart
came on lap 98, drivers be-
came especially aggressive,
trying to pull out in front
before the storm hit.
As it turned out, Johnson
had an issue with his right-
rear tire. By the time he real-
ized it, he was already racing
Kenseth into the corner. It
was too late.
When I was cooling my
tires down through the tunnel
coming to the green (flag), I
noticed that something didnt
feel right, Johnson said. I
kept trying to clean the tires
off, and it got a little better.
So I just assumed I had trash
on my tires.
But when I got down into
turn 1, I realized that I had a
right-rear flat. Unfortunate
that we lost the lead there
and we got a couple of cars
in the process. I shouldnt feel
bad about that, but not much
you can do with a right-rear
flat.
Johnson was able to escape
a full crash, but he had no
time to recover the track
position he lost. Kenseth,
meanwhile, slid down toward
the middle of the track and
was hit hard by Denny Ham-
lin, who took the worst of
the crash.
Because of the incident,
Johnsons Hendrick Motor-
sports teammates Jeff Gordon
and Kasey Kahne finished first
and second, respectively.
I dont think it was bad
luck on Jimmies part, Gor-
don said. The car just got
loose. Its crazy. Its abso-
lutely crazy. I could have
easily lost six positions there
instead of making up four or
five.
Knowing that the race was
about to end, all but a hand-
ful of drivers elected to stay
out on the track rather than
hit pit road during the cau-
tion before the last restart.
Brad Keselowski, who ended
up taking fourth place, said
he thought that was the main
reason for the accident.
We just had such a long
yellow that everybodys tires
turned into junk, Keselowski
said. And you know (Johnson
and Kenseth) were the first
ones to get into the corner
with junk tires. I think thats
just the way that it played
out, and thats the way it
goes.
Third-place finisher Martin
Truex Jr. said he doubted he
could have reached that spot
without the chaotic chain of
events at the end.
I mean, those last two or
three good green-flag runs, we
were as fast as anyone. But
we were too far back to run
(Johnson) down, Truex said.
Obviously he probably would
have (won) if we didnt have
a bunch of cautions.
Those guys (on the 48
team) are really good at hit-
ting it right. And they hit it
right more than most. To run
with him, you gotta be on
your game.
FLAGS
Continued from Page 1B
AP PHOTO
Fans leave the stands after the start of the NASCAR Sprint Cup
Series race was postponed due to rain Sunday at Pocono Raceway
in Long Pond.
ROCHESTER, N.Y. A cou-
ple of fly balls lost in lights lead
to three runs for the Indianapo-
lis Indians on Sunday as the
Scranton/Wilkes-Barre Yan-
kees fell 7-2.
Trailing 2-1 in the top of the
eighth inning, the Indians ral-
liedfor five runs. Inadditiontoa
double by Jeff Clement that
right fielder Chris Dickerson
lost in the lights and a single by
Yamaico Navarro that shortstop
Eduardo Nunez could find, the
inning featured an error by sec-
ond baseman Corban Joseph, a
batter hit by a pitch and a wild
pitch.
The Indians added an insur-
ance run in the ninth on a sacri-
fice fly by Matt Hague.
Ramon Ortiz (9-5) suffered
theloss. Theveteranright-hand-
er allowedthree runs onsixhits,
while striking out two and walk-
ing one in seven innings. Rick
VandenHurk (11-3) picked up
the win for the Indians, going
seven innings and allowing two
runs on four hits while striking
out seven.
Dickerson put the Yankees
ahead 1-0 when he led off the
bottomof the first inning with a
home run. It was his fifth of the
season.
The Yankees took advantage
of an Indian fielding miscue as
Brandon Laird reached first
base when the Indians infield
lost his pop up in the sun. Laird
would score on Kosuke Fuku-
domes RBI double.
The Scranton/Wilkes-Barre
Yankees will stay at Frontier
Field and begin a four-game se-
ries with the Rochester Red
Wings on Monday at 7:05 p.m.
Justin Thomas gets the nod for
the Yankees, while Pedro Her-
nandez takes the ball for the Red
Wings.
Indianapolis Yankees
A r h bi A r h bi
dArnaud ss 4 0 0 0 Dickerson rf 3 1 1 1
Tabata cf 4 1 1 0 Joseph 2b 4 0 0 0
Hague 1b 4 1 1 2 Nunez ss 4 0 0 0
Clement dh 5 1 1 2 Mustelier lf 4 0 0 0
Navarro 3b 4 0 1 1 Laird 3b 4 1 2 0
Larish lf 2 1 0 0 Cervelli c 3 0 0 0
Boggs rf 4 0 2 0 Mesa cfr 3 0 0 0
Morales c 2 0 1 0
Fukudome
1b 2 0 1 1
Fryer pr 1 1 0 0
McDonald
dh 3 0 0 0
Hernandez
2b 4 2 2 1
Totals 34 7 9 6 Totals 30 2 4 2
Indianapolis...................... 000 010 051 7
Yankees............................ 110 000 000 2
E Cervelli (5), Joseph (12) LOB Indianapolis 6,
Yankees 4 2B Clement (34), Fukudome (3) HR
Dickerson (5)
IP H R ER BB SO
Indianapolis
VandenHurk (W,
11-3) ......................... 7 4 2 2 2 7
McCutchen.............. 2 0 0 0 0 3
Yankees
Ortiz (L, 9-5) ............ 7 6 3 3 1 2
Wade........................ 0.2 2 3 2 1 0
Claiborne ................. 1.1 1 1 0 0 1
S W B YA N K E E S
Indians light up Yankees 7-2
The Times Leader staff
AKRON, Ohio Keegan Bra-
dley only wanteda chance toget
into a playoff Sunday at Fire-
stone. All it took was a clutch
par, along with a stunning col-
lapse by Jim Furyk, for Bradley
to win the Bridgestone Invita-
tional and wrap up a spot on the
Ryder Cup team.
Bradley closed with a 6-under
64, and the final stroke was the
most important a15-foot putt
to save par froma plugged lie in
the bunker.
Furyk, who led for 71 holes
and looked solid throughout the
final round, choppedupthe18th
hole for a double bogey to throw
away a chance at his first win
since the 2010 Tour Champion-
ship. He missed the green from
the fairway. His chip with one
foot in the sand barely cleared
the bunker and stayed in the
thick collar. He hit a weak chip
to 5 feet, and his bogey putt nev-
er had a chance.
Furyk dropped his putter
when the ball left his blade. He
went fromwhat appearedtobea
certain win to a 69 and a tie for
second with Steve Stricker, who
made four birdies onhis last five
holes for a 64.
Bradley won for the first time
since last year in PGA Cham-
pionship, and now goes to Kia-
wah Island to defend his title
with a lot more confidence.
P R O G O L F
Bradley wins Bridgstone event
The Associated Press
CANTON, OhioDrewBrees
led NewOrleans to a touchdown
on his only series Sunday night,
and the Saints beat the Arizona
Cardinals17-10intheHallofFame
game, officiated by a crew with
collegeexperience.
The game was canceled last
year for the first time in 45 years
because of the NFLs lockout of
players. Laborissuesalsocamein-
toplay inSunday nights game
the seven officials were replace-
ments.
The win completed a good
weekendfortheSaints, whoneed-
edoneafter their roughoffseason
overshadowed by the bounty
scandal. FormerSaintstackleWil-
lieRoaf waspart of thesix-manin-
duction class to the hall on Satur-
daynight.
Arizona quarterback Kevin
Kolb threw an interception and
left withbruisedribs.
Brees sharp, Saints beat Cards
The Associated Press
BETHLEHEM Garrett
Reid, the oldest son of Philadel-
phia Eagles coach Andy Reid,
was found dead Sunday morn-
ing in his room at the clubs
training camp at Lehigh Univer-
sity. He was 29.
The police chief at Lehigh,
Edward Shupp, said a 911 call
was made at 7:20 a.m., and that
Garrett Reid was dead when a
policeman arrived at the cam-
pus dormitory. A cause of death
has not been determined.
There were no suspicious ac-
tivities, Shupp said.
The 29-year-old Reid strug-
gled with drug abuse for years
and was imprisoned for a 2007
high-speed car crash in which
another driver was injured. Po-
lice found heroin, which Reid
admitted to using, and more
than 200 pills in his car. When
he surrendered to begin serving
his sentence in that case, prison
guards found Reid had tried to
smuggle prescription pills into
jail.
Reidseemedtohave rebound-
ed from his problems in recent
times and was assisting the Ea-
gles strength coaches at camp
in an unofficial capacity, a not-
uncommon sort of role for NFL
coaches sons. Many of the
coaches and staff stay in the Le-
high dorms.
In the midst of his legal trou-
bles inhis early 20s, Reidsaidhe
got a thrill out of being a drug
dealer in a lower-income neigh-
borhood just a few miles from
his parents suburban Villanova
mansion.
N F L
Reids son found dead
The Associated Press
C M Y K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com MONDAY, AUGUST 6, 2012 PAGE 7B
S P O R T S
Have you
ever been in a
fantasy football
draft where
some guy
spends a 14th
round pick on a
complete un-
known?
Ha. What a dork, you scoff.
(After first looking up the
meaning of scoff) He doesnt
know what hes doing. Im go-
ing to school this guy. (Insert
evil laugh here)
Five weeks into the season,
where youre 2-3, your dork
friend is 4-1 and that 14th round
pick is a top 15 fantasy player
do you realize: Yeah. Im a
dummy.
You dont have to be a dum-
my. Well, in fantasy football
that is. I cant help you in real
life.
You can avoid such bad picks
by playing a little Draft This
Guy. Not That. The idea is
that you can avoid artery-
clogging bad draft choices for
a more healthy alternative.
When you come to a fork in the
draft day road, just draft this
guy. Not . You get the idea.
DRAFT ANTONIO BROWN,
WR, STEELERS: Things are
aligning quite nicely for Brown
to have a big 2012. First of all,
hes entering his magical,
breakout friendly third year.
With Hines Ward retired and
returning kicks for the Gotham
Rouges, Brown is the unques-
tioned No. 2 receiver. And he
has a good chance to be Pitts-
burghs No. 1. He was already
Ben Roethlisbergers favorite
target near the end of 2011.
NOT DEZ BRYANT, WR,
COWBOYS: Yeah, hes got all
the talent in the world, but he
hasnt shown he knows how to
use it. Despite having WR1
status in Dallas when Miles
Austin was injured in 2011,
Bryant didnt top 100 yards
once, and let Laurent Robinson
become Tony Romos big play
guy. Add in an offseason arrest
and Bryant is close to do not
draft status on my list.
DRAFT C.J. SPILLER, RB,
BILLS: Spiller will start the
season sharing time with Fred
Jackson, but its his potential
late in the season that is in-
triguing. Jackson is an excellent
back, but hes 31 and has never
been a starter for a full season.
Spiller stepped in after Jackson
broke his leg in week 10 last
year and put up huge numbers.
A repeat of 2011 is highly likely.
NOT SHONN GREENE, RB,
JETS: You wouldnt know it by
watching ESPN, but there are
actually other players on the
Jets than Tim Tebow. Greene is
one of those guys, but hes not a
guy you want. Hes the primary
RB on a running team, but his
numbers are just north of me-
diocre. In 16 games last year, he
had four quality fantasy per-
formances. That plain stinks.
DRAFT MIKEL LESHOURE,
RB, LIONS: OK, this is a bit of
a stretch, but hear me out. Yes,
Leshoure is suspended for the
first two games of the season.
And, yes, he missed all of 2011
with a torn Achilles. But hes
the best option the Lions have
at RB. Last years starter Jahvid
Best cant stay healthy, and is
already out indefinitely with a
concussion. When Leshoure
comes back, he should be a nice
piece in a potent offense.
NOT DEANGELO WIL-
LIAMS, RB, PANTHERS: This
is the same Williams who
rushed for 1,500 yards and 20
TDs in 2008. But that was his
one shining moment. Its not
exactly his fault he hasnt recap-
tured his 08 mojo. Hes on a
team that defines the term
running back by committee.
Fellow RBs Jonathan Stewart,
Mike Tolbert and even QB Cam
Newton all get theirs in the
Carolina offense. Williams may
get his, but its not enough for
yours.
DRAFT CARSON PALMER,
QB, RAIDERS: When Palmer
was with the Bengals he was
usually the first QB not named
Peyton Manning taken in fanta-
sy drafts. And hes only 32,
which is younger than Drew
Brees and Tom Brady. So you
know hes got talent, and hes
not past his prime. A midseason
trade to Oakland brought some
mixed fantasy results, but then
again he had to learn a new
system as he went along. Hes
the full-time starter now and
has a nice group of WRs to
throw to, which makes him a
sneaky good pick as your back-
up QB.
NOT ANDY DALTON, QB,
BENGALS: Again, heres proof
that being a good real world QB
does not mean youre a good
fantasy QB. Dalton impressed a
lot of people as a rookie and
even lead the Bengals to the
playoffs. That great if youre a
Cincinnati fan. But hes not a
big numbers guy, and thats
what fantasy owners look for.
He topped 200 yards passing in
just seven games and threw for
more than two TDs in a game
only once. There was a time
when 21 total TDs would have
been impressive, but the NFL is
a passing league now, and Dal-
tons not a big gun.
The players to draft and the ones to bypass
RICH SHEPOSH
F A N T A S Y S P O R T S
Rich Sheposh is a page designer,
editor and neer-do-well who writes
stuff about fantasy sports. If you feel
so inclined, you can reach him at
rsheposh@timesleader.com
DALLAS One stroke from
defeat, Chuck Brand made a
shot thats certain to be talked
about for the ages.
And in the process, he wound
up sinking any hopes for the
completion of an endlessly long
day, and kept the Potentate
Tournament going for days.
Thats just fine with Brand
and his partner Joe Weiscarger,
after Brands miraculous 40-foot
chip for birdie on the 18th and
final hole of regulation sent the
rain-soaked championship
flight finals into a playoff Sun-
day and on to Wednesday at
Irem Country Club.
There was no option, Brand
said of his head-spinner, which
sent gasps around the gallery.
It was either give it a shot,
knock it in or
That was the only option.
Ultimately, it gave tourna-
ment officials no choice but to
wait a few more days to award a
winner.
The duo of Brand and Weis-
carger remained tied with the
team of Jim Breck and John
Mulhern after two playoff holes
Sunday before darkness forceda
continuation of their match.
Itll be picked up with the
third playoff hole between the
teams which number theyll
tee off on will be determined by
tournament officials at 7 p.m.
Wednesday because thats the
soonest the four players can all
free uptheir regular worksched-
ules at the same time.
I was thrilled, definitely ex-
cited, Brand said of his beauty
of a chip. But that was just half
the battle. They had two good
chances at it.
Indeed.
Of the four approach shots of
the 18th hole, Brands was the
only one that didnt reach the
green.
Instead, his landed on an up-
wardhill just beforethelipof the
green, making Brands the most
difficult to sink.
It didnt matter to him.
Brand, who said hes not
known for making such marvel-
ous shots, lifted a strong lob
halfway down the green that
rolled true to the pin much to
the marvel of the 20 or so on-
lookers who walked away talk-
ing about it.
Dont let him kid you, my
partner has an incredible short
game, Weiscarger said.
It thwarted almost certain de-
feat andpreventedthe crowning
of Breck andMulhernas tourna-
ment champions at least on
Sunday.
After playing through rain-
soaked semifinal matches Sun-
day morning, both teams were
tied after the first 10 holes of the
finals when fierce thunder-
storms delayed the match for
two hours.
The course playedevenlong-
er after that, Brand said.
Theres no roll, Weiscarger
said of the soggy grounds. You
hit a shot and the fairways now
are soft. Wherever you hit it, it
stayed.
Over the next couple holes,
Breck and Mulhern took a one-
hole lead and it stayed that way
until the final hole.
After Brand chipped in from
the right, both Breck and Mul-
hern just missed putts within15
feet of the cup that would have
secured their victory.
Then it was on to a couple ex-
tra rounds.
The teams played the first ex-
tra hole by revisiting No. 18,
then moved to the 17th where
daylight faded fast but both had
chances to win.
Both Breck and Weiscarger
narrowly missed putts that
would have given their teams
match-winning birdies, and
Mulhern made a phenomenal
up-and-down for par.
But that was it for the day, as
darkness forced the suspension
of play.
It was too dark to play one
more hole, Weiscarger said.
It got that way whenhis team-
mate didnt want to make a diffi-
cult shot off the 18th green be
his last.
I had a good lie, Brand said,
and it hugged the lip.
P O T E N TAT E G O L F T O U R N A M E N T
BILL TARUTIS/FOR THE TIMES LEADER
Chuck Brand watches his drive at the 10th tee in the semifinals
of the Potentate Golf Tournament at the Irem Temple Country
Club in Dallas Township on Sunday morning.
Victory waits
until Wednesday
By PAUL SOKOLOSKI
psokoloski@timesleader.com
Wilkes-Barre Triathlon. He
clocked in Sunday at a time of 2
hours, 15minutes and59seconds
over a minute faster than the
competition.
This is my favorite race, and
its the one that means the most
to me, Robbins said. Im from
Shavertown, and it almost feels
like my home course. Its thrilling
to win this race two years in a
row.
Competing in the first flight,
Robbins escaped the torrential
downpour that stymied the re-
maining racers.
Robbins stood in16th place fol-
lowing the1.5-kilometer Harveys
Lake swim. He passedhis compe-
tition before the first-quarter
point of the 40-km bike race.
From there, he cycled and ran
alone for the remaining 11-km
stretch to defeat Westons Tim
Felegie.
The running was a grind,
Robbins said. Every mile
seemedtoget worseandworse. It
was humid and sticky. I actually
wish it started raining out so it
could cool down out there. I just
felt uncomfortable out there.
Robbins wonby nearly aniden-
tical margin to his first Triathlon
victory. He won the race by1:08
two seconds longer than last
years mark.
For Rummel, the Wilkes-Barre
Triathlon gold serves as a home-
cominganda revitalizationof her
running career.
The Edwardsville native re-
turned home to compete in the
Triathlonwithnoexpectations of
winning. It marks her first wom-
ens overall victory in five races
since returning fromher 2006 re-
tirement earlier this year.
Well, I never won overall this
year, she said. I am just fresh
out of retirement. Ive been rac-
ing through this season. My last
race was in 2006. Ive been stay-
ing in shape though.
Rummel passed Kristen Kar-
wacki of Macungie in the final
mile to finish the race at 2 hours,
35 minutes and 18 seconds.
When I got off the bike, there
was a girl right with me, Rum-
mel said. She set a mean pace.
She pulled in front of me, and I
thought I lost it. I turned the cor-
ner onthe last mile, andthere she
was so she must have fallen off
the pace quite a bit. I was able to
pass her.
Race conditions proved diffi-
cult for Rummel. In her return
home, she was caught off guard
by the steep hills of the Back
Mountain. Luckily, she said,
Rummel also beat the rain that
caught the second and third race
flights.
Doyouknowwhat is typical? I
forgot how hilly it was here,
Rummel said. Its been a long
time since Ive ranthis kindof ter-
rain. Kalamazoo is not that hilly.
Paige Kyle, of Trucksville,
swam the ninth fastest overall
swim to earn the second-fastest
womens overall time at 2:37.21.
Two-time defending womens
champion Kelly Ciravolo of Sha-
vertown did not compete in the
Wilkes-Barre Triathlon.
Wilkes-Barres Alec Barcklow
won first place in 1:51.00 in the
Aquabike competition. Dallas
Meghan Pietraccini was the top
female finisher in the swimming-
biking classification.
CHARLOTTE BARTIZEK/FOR THE TIMES LEADER
A flurry of athletes surrounded by their splashes of lake water from Harveys Lake begin the swin course for the 31st annual Wilkes-
Barre Triathlon on Sunday morning.
STRONG
Continued from Page 1B
Coming tomorrow
A page of photos of Sundays
triathlon.
Results
Complete results, 2B
LEHMAN TWP. If two is bet-
ter than one, as the saying goes,
thenwhy not three?
The local team of Nick Hetro,
John Martino and Egan Menge-
ringhausentriedits best toanswer
thatquestionSundayattheWilkes-
Barre Triathlon.
The trio left their stamp on the
day when they won they won the
relaydivisionof thetriathlonwitha
time of 2:18:34, officially the third-
fastest time of the entire triathlon,
and what with was unofficially the
most provocative of all relay team
sobriquets.
It feels really good to see it all
come together andwin, saidNick
Hetro, 23, of Fredericksville, who
mannedthebicyclelegforhisteam
Off Like a PromDress.
HetrocombinedwithJohnMar-
tino, 28, of Dallas, and Egan Men-
geringhausen, 19, of Shavertown,
narrowly beat out the relay team
Ambition, which turned in a time
of 2:19:56. Pink Ribbons, winners
of the coed division, finished third
with a time of 2:20:35. Ambitions
and Ribbons times were good for
fourthandsixthfastest, respective-
ly, over the course of the day.
The Dress team attributed its
time to each member taking on
their specialty.
I organized our team, I know
Egan from church and Ive known
Johnas a goodrunner for a while,
Hetro said. Were all strong in our
own disciplines. I train for triath-
lons throughout the year, I know
John enters in a couple of road
races throughout the season and
we both knew Egan is a strong
swimmer.
Hetro turned in the second-fas-
test time in the relays in the bicy-
cling leg with a 1:05:25, coming
over a 24.8-mile course that winds
through Harveys Lake, Noxen,
Kunkle, Dallas Township, Dallas
andJacksonTownship.
Hetros strong performance was
aidedby Martinos time of 44:50 in
therunninglegover awinding6.8-
milecoursethat treatscompetitors
to various inclines and declines
that are challenging enough on a
dryday, unlikeSundayssoggycon-
ditions.
Mengeringhausen, whocontrib-
uted to a district championship
wonbyDallasHighSchool inhisju-
nior year, posted the 26th-fastest
time inthe swimming leg.
While the men of Dress had an
easy time coming together, things
wereabitmorecomplicatedforthe
womens divisionwinners.
Theteamof SugarandSpiceand
Everything Nice won the womens
division with a time of 2:41:16,
thanks in part to the fourth-fastest
timerecordedintheswimmingleg
by a late additionto the team.
I run year round and Jeanine
(Dymond)is, inmyopinion, oneof
the best around here on the bike,
but, wehadtodosomeworktofind
a swimmer this year, said Emily
Bilbow, of FortyFort. Ididswimin
high school, though, so I asked a
formercoachtodosomerecruiting
for me.
Fortunately for Sugar andSpice,
that recruiting paired them with
Julie Ann Mahle, a senior at Holy
Redeemer who last year was the
Wyoming Valley Conferences
coaches choice for the Class 2A
girls swimming MVP. Mahle also
finished14th in the100 backstroke
at the state meet inLewisburg and
swamthe second leg for a 200 free
relayteamthat finishedsixthinthe
same meet.
Mahles swimming leg and Bil-
bows 12th-fastest time in the run-
ning leg helped to combine for a
first-placefinish, whichnowmakes
itaperfectfourwinsinfourtriesfor
Sugar andSpice. Andwhileat least
two-thirdsof theteamwill definite-
ly be backnext year togofor a fifth
win, theirreasonsareformorethan
just to compete.
About twoyears agoI broke my
leg and I couldnt do any running.
WhenI hadtoput that aside it was
really rough for me, Bilbow said.
Thisyear, toseetheteamworkto-
gether and win, sure, its nice, but
its just come to mean so much to
metocomehereyearafteryearand
get to do something I love.
Dymondhappilyechoedthesen-
timent.
The more I do this, the more I
realizeI needtobeapart of it,said
Dymond, of Harding. All the peo-
ple here are just great to each oth-
er.
Off Like a Prom Dress tops among relay teams
By MATTHEWSHUTT
For The Times Leader
C M Y K
PAGE 8B MONDAY, AUGUST 6, 2012 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
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ALMANAC
REGIONAL FORECAST
NATIONAL FORECAST
For more weather
information go to:
www.timesleader.com
National Weather Service
607-729-1597
Forecasts, graphs
and data 2012
Weather Central, LP
Yesterday 85/76
Average 81/61
Record High 94 in 1955
Record Low 45 in 1972
Yesterday 16
Month to date 65
Year to date 633
Last year to date 562
Normal year to date 388
*Index of fuel consumption, how far the days
mean temperature was above 65 degrees.
Precipitation
Yesterday 0.12
Month to date 0.72
Normal month to date 0.61
Year to date 19.83
Normal year to date 22.23
Susquehanna Stage Chg. Fld. Stg
Wilkes-Barre 0.46 -0.12 22.0
Towanda 0.26 -0.09 21.0
Lehigh
Bethlehem 3.07 0.75 16.0
Delaware
Port Jervis 2.61 0.05 18.0
Todays high/
Tonights low
TODAYS SUMMARY
Highs: 77-85. Lows: 52-57. Decreasing
cloudy and pleasant today. Mostly clear
skies tonight.
The Poconos
Highs: 80-85. Lows: 65-70. Morning thun-
derstorms today. Mostly clear skies
tonight.
The Jersey Shore
Highs: 76-82. Lows: 45-59. Mostly sunny
skies today. Mostly clear skies tonight.
The Finger Lakes
Highs: 86-87. Lows: 64-66. Morning thun-
derstorms today. Mostly clear skies
tonight.
Brandywine Valley
Highs: 85-88. Lows: 67-72. Morning thun-
derstorms today. Clearing skies tonight.
Delmarva/Ocean City
Anchorage 60/50/.01 65/51/c 64/52/c
Atlanta 89/73/.00 87/71/t 89/73/t
Baltimore 95/77/.00 87/67/t 89/71/s
Boston 88/72/.00 83/66/t 79/66/s
Buffalo 84/72/.78 78/59/s 82/66/s
Charlotte 90/72/.20 89/72/t 88/71/t
Chicago 83/67/.00 82/68/s 88/72/pc
Cleveland 86/72/.15 78/59/s 81/67/s
Dallas 101/80/.00 102/77/pc 103/80/pc
Denver 96/58/.00 94/64/pc 92/63/pc
Detroit 89/72/.16 80/66/s 84/70/s
Honolulu 85/74/.00 87/73/pc 88/73/s
Houston 94/77/.00 96/77/pc 96/77/pc
Indianapolis 88/70/1.26 87/60/s 90/67/s
Las Vegas 105/83/.00 106/85/pc 108/85/s
Los Angeles 69/62/.00 76/67/pc 78/67/s
Miami 91/81/.00 89/80/t 89/81/t
Milwaukee 79/67/.00 81/65/s 89/68/t
Minneapolis 75/57/.00 87/65/pc 85/64/pc
Myrtle Beach 86/79/.00 85/75/t 87/76/t
Nashville 84/76/.19 89/70/t 91/70/pc
New Orleans 90/75/.27 92/78/t 89/77/t
Norfolk 92/77/.00 89/72/t 87/74/t
Oklahoma City 97/77/.00 102/74/pc 103/75/s
Omaha 84/58/.00 97/69/s 93/70/t
Orlando 90/76/.00 91/75/t 93/76/t
Phoenix 103/89/.00 112/89/pc 112/89/s
Pittsburgh 80/73/.87 78/53/s 84/57/s
Portland, Ore. 88/64/.00 86/61/pc 84/59/pc
St. Louis 91/75/.00 93/68/s 97/70/s
Salt Lake City 97/69/.00 95/68/pc 97/70/s
San Antonio 96/77/.00 100/76/pc 100/75/pc
San Diego 73/67/.00 77/67/pc 78/66/s
San Francisco 67/58/.00 71/54/s 71/55/s
Seattle 88/64/.00 80/58/pc 80/57/pc
Tampa 89/78/.05 90/77/t 92/77/t
Tucson 100/81/.00 105/77/pc 104/78/s
Washington, DC 96/80/.00 87/70/t 89/73/s
City Yesterday Today Tomorrow City Yesterday Today Tomorrow
Amsterdam 73/59/.00 70/59/sh 68/57/sh
Baghdad 108/84/.00 110/81/s 112/82/s
Beijing 90/75/.00 91/77/t 93/75/pc
Berlin 75/59/.00 73/59/sh 71/57/pc
Buenos Aires 61/37/.00 61/47/c 55/50/r
Dublin 63/46/.00 61/52/sh 63/54/sh
Frankfurt 77/63/.00 73/57/sh 73/53/c
Hong Kong 91/82/.00 90/79/pc 90/82/t
Jerusalem 83/68/.00 85/72/s 90/74/s
London 70/54/.00 70/53/t 70/54/sh
Mexico City 75/59/.00 73/53/t 70/53/t
Montreal 88/75/.00 79/61/s 82/68/pc
Moscow 84/64/.00 83/61/pc 88/65/pc
Paris 72/57/.00 70/56/sh 74/60/c
Rio de Janeiro 82/72/.00 75/58/pc 75/58/s
Riyadh 109/91/.00 109/83/s 108/84/s
Rome 88/70/.00 88/68/pc 91/68/pc
San Juan 89/80/.01 88/79/pc 87/79/pc
Tokyo 93/77/.00 83/73/r 85/73/sh
Warsaw 84/59/.00 100/63/pc 76/56/pc
City Yesterday Today Tomorrow City Yesterday Today Tomorrow
WORLD CITIES
River Levels, from 12 p.m. yesterday.
Key: s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sn-snow, sf-snowurries, i-ice.
Philadelphia
87/67
Reading
86/60
Scranton
Wilkes-Barre
82/57
82/57
Harrisburg
86/61
Atlantic City
81/67
New York City
87/67
Syracuse
81/56
Pottsville
84/59
Albany
83/57
Binghamton
Towanda
76/54
80/50
State College
82/58
Poughkeepsie
86/56
102/77
82/68
94/64
96/73
87/65
76/67
66/53
92/69
95/64
80/58
87/67
80/66
87/71
89/80
96/77
87/73
61/52
65/51
87/70
Sun and Moon
Sunrise Sunset
Today 6:04a 8:14p
Tomorrow 6:05a 8:12p
Moonrise Moonset
Today 10:17p 10:55a
Tomorrow 10:47p 11:55a
Last New First Full
Aug. 9 Aug. 17 Aug. 24 Aug. 31
We have another
week filled with
a mix of rain,
thunder, warm
temperatures,
and sun ahead
of us. Today will
start with a mix
of rain and
clouds. Clearing
will begin in the
afternoon as we
warm up to 83
degrees. Tuesday
looks like the
best day of the
week, with low
humidity, sunny
skies and a high
of 85.
Wednesday will
be partly cloudy.
The chance for
afternoon show-
ers and thunder-
storms is possi-
ble. We will have
mostly cloudy
skies on
Thursday and
Friday with the
chance for rain
and thunder-
storms. Saturday
and Sunday look
like they will be
dry with a high
of 80 degrees.
- Michelle Rotella
NATIONAL FORECAST: Showers and thunderstorms will be likely with a cold front from coastal New
England into the Southeast. An area of low pressure will aid in producing showers and thunderstorms
over the Southeast and central Gulf Coast. Scattered thunderstorms will be possible over the Rockies
and into the Southwest.
Recorded at Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Intl Airport
Temperatures
Cooling Degree Days*
Precipitation
TODAY
Partly cloudy,
morning rain and T-
storms
TUESDAY
Sunny
and
nice
85
55
THURSDAY
Cloudy,
rain, T-
storms
85
65
FRIDAY
Cloudy,
rain, T-
storms
80
60
SATURDAY
Partly
cloudy
80
60
SUNDAY
Partly
cloudy
80
60
WEDNESDAY
Cloudy,
late rain,
T-storms
88
63
83

65

C M Y K
CLICK S E C T I O N C
PURCHASE REPRINTS OF THESE PHOTOS AT WWW.TIMESLEADER.COM
THE TIMES LEADER MONDAY, AUGUST 6, 2012
timesleader.com
SUMMIT OF COMMUNITY
HISTORICAL SOCIETIES
CONYNGHAM
BABY PARADE
ZUMBATHON FOR CEOS
DINNERS FOR KIDS
DON CAREY/THE TIMES LEADER
The 2nd Annual County-wide Summit of Community
Historical Societies was held Saturday at the Bear Creek
Clubhouse. The Luzerne County Historical Society and
the Luzerne Foundation -sponsored the all-day event, at
which 16 local historical organizations were represented.
Topics and issues central to each specific group were
discussed. Fromleft, Ruth and TomJesso, with Ann
Lewis
NIKO J. KALLIANIOTIS/FOR THE TIMES LEADER
A baby parade and contest was part of the 60th Annual Conyng-
hamValley Day on Saturday. More than two dozen babies were
entered. Valley Day is the sole fundraising event of the Conyngham
Valley Civic Organization, which financially supports recreational
activities of the community, including the community pool. Ryan
and Michel Hockenbury with their daughter, Michella Marie
BILL TARUTIS/FOR THE TIMES LEADER
The third annual Zumbathon fundraiser was held Sat-
urday at Dankos Fitness Center in Plains Township.
Proceeds benefited the Dinners for Kids program
through the Commission on Economic Opportunities. The
program, founded by David and Edna Tevet, owners of
Ollies, An American Restaurant, in Edwardsville, started
providing healthy meals for about 40 local children and
now serves around 100. Marissa Lipfert of Kingston, left,
and Barbara Nalmy of Forty Fort
DON CAREY/THE TIMES LEADER
KimMcManus and Albert Dragon NIKO J. KALLIANIOTIS/FOR THE TIMES LEADER
Jayme and Kevin Brace with their children, Alexa, left, and Aryanna
BILL TARUTIS/FOR THE TIMES LEADER
Taylor Urbanski of Swoyersville, left, Susan Simmons of
Forty Fort, and Lauren Hannagan of Pringle
DON CAREY/THE TIMES LEADER
Gene and Barb Aichele
NIKO J. KALLIANIOTIS/FOR THE TIMES LEADER
Luke Billig, left, and friend Dan Synoski
BILL TARUTIS/FOR THE TIMES LEADER
Mollie Shannon of Exeter, left, and Wendy Yedlock of
Mountain Top
DON CAREY/THE TIMES LEADER
Scott Hilewski and James Miller
NIKO J. KALLIANIOTIS/FOR THE TIMES LEADER
Sarah Symmonds with her children Elliot and Amelia
BILL TARUTIS/FOR THE TIMES LEADER
Patti Dompkosky, left, and Judy Day, both of Kingston
DON CAREY/THE TIMES LEADER
Jessica Reeder and Lavada Riggins
NIKO J. KALLIANIOTIS/FOR THE TIMES LEADER
Elizabeth Gatti, left, and Eileen Sharp
BILL TARUTIS/FOR THE TIMES LEADER
Joan Blaum, left, and Justus Wanyo, both of Hanover
Township
C M Y K
PAGE 2C MONDAY, AUGUST 6, 2012 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
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Dupont Fire Hall, Dupont, PA
Every Tuesday 8:00 to 9:00
After Lesson Dance until 10:30P.M.
Price: $6 Per Person All Ages Welcome
You DO NOT Need a Partner!
Now Accepting
Composite Decking/Decks Siding
Ceramic Tile Hardwood Flooring
Vinyl Flooring
Kitchen/Bathroom Remodeling Roong
Lifetime Warranty on Shingles
GET YOUR ROOF BEFORE WINTER RETURNS
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Complete Landscape Service
Shrubbery, Top Soil
Retaining Walls
Patios, Sidewalks
Trucking
Snow Removal
Septic Systems Installed
MOCANAQUA: Mocanaqua
Ladies VFW Auxiliary Memo-
rial Post 6434 will meet at 6
p.m. on Wednesday at the
Shickshinny Senior Center.
Alicia is the springer bringer
and Caroline and Alicia will
host.
NEWS FOR
VETERANS
Lt. John W. Gilligan was award-
ed the Navy Commendation
Medal at the conclusion of a
three-year tour of duty on the
USS Pittsburgh, a Los Angeles
class sub-
marine. The
award noted
that as
junior officer
of the deck,
Lt. Gilligan
provided
superior
backup and
maintained tactical control
during several missions crit-
ical to national security. In
addition, Lt. Gilligan was
named the Submarine Squad-
ron Two 2011 Junior Officer of
the Year. He received the Navy
Achievement Medal which
stated that while serving as
the communicator he demon-
strated unique prowess in the
navigation and handling of the
Pittsburgh. Lt. Gilligan is the
son of Martin and Mary Barba-
ra Gilligan of Dallas and is a
2003 graduate of Dallas High
School and a 2007 graduate
of the U.S. Naval Academy. His
next tour of duty will be as an
instructor at the Naval Sub-
marine School in Groton,
Conn.
Navy Seaman Apprentice
Maria Grace G. Burnham,
daughter of Christine M. and
Jack T. Burnham, Hazleton,
recently completed U.S. Navy
basic training at Recruit Train-
ing Command, Great Lakes, Ill.
Burnham completed a variety
of classroom studies and
practical instruction on naval
customs, first aid, firefighting,
water safety and survival and
shipboard and aircraft safety.
The eight-week program
ended with the capstone
event Battle Stations, which is
designed to galvanize the
basic warrior attributes of
sacrifice, dedication, team-
work and endurance and the
core Navy values of honor,
courage and commitment.
Burnham is a 2006 graduate
of North Atlantic Regional
High School, Lewiston, Mich.
NAMES IN THE
MILITARY
Gilligan
Jim Spagnola, director, Luzerne County Veterans Affairs Office, recently spoke to members of the
Luzerne County Community College Veterans Club. Spagnola spoke about the various benefits avail-
able for veterans and the role of the Luzerne County Veterans Affairs Office. Participants, from left,
first row: Machelle Smith, Ashley; Jerome Wilk, Nanticoke, adviser, LCCC Veterans Club; Jim Shovlin,
Mountain Top, adviser, LCCC Veterans Club; and James Norton Jr., Exeter. Second row: Spagnola; Jim
Gill, Nanticoke; Susan Porter-Allen, Mountain Top, president, LCCC Veterans Club; Angel L. Jirau,
Wilkes-Barre; and Dave Kozemchak, Dallas.
Luzerne County Veterans Affairs director addresses LCCC Veterans Club
The Wilkes-Barre Pro-Life Center has a booth at the Farmers
Market which is held from10 a.m. to 3 p.m. every Thursday on
Public Square in Wilkes-Barre until the end of August. Volunteers
assist at the booth by providing Pro-Life materials such as pam-
phlets, bumper stickers, fetal models and pins explaining the Pro-
Life mission. Interested volunteers can call Betty Caffrey at 826-
1819. Some volunteers, from left, first row, are Ada Magni, Meredith
Baker and Olivia Magni. Second row: Pat Umbra.
Pro-Life Center has booth at Farmers Market
The new officers of the board of directors of Childrens Service
Center recently convened for the July board meeting at the
Wilkes-Barre campus. New officers, from left: Sherri Patterson,
chairman, Wilkes-Barre; Ed Coleman, secretary, Tunkhannock;
John Thalenfeld, treasurer, Bear Creek Village; Stephen Barrouk,
vice chairman, Wilkes-Barre; and Mike Hopkins, president, CSC,
Tunkhannock.
New officers for Childrens Service Center meet
The Pittston Memorial Library recently received a contribution of $1,000 from the Luzerne County
Law & Library Association. The gift will be used for continued support of the librarys computer sta-
tions which are available for public use. At the check presentation, from left: Ann Noone, secretary,
Pittston Memorial Library; Mary Pat Scarantino, library board; Anne Hogya, library director; Barbara
Quinn, library board chair; attorney Joseph Saporito, president, Luzerne County Law & Library Associ-
ation; attorney Joseph P. Burke III, association secretary/treasurer; attorney Jackie Musto Carroll,
library board.
Law & Library Association presents donation to Pittston Memorial Library
Perkins Restaurant and Bakery, Tunkhannock, recently donated
$750 to the Wyoming County Cultural Center at the Dietrich Thea-
ter to support free childrens programming. At the check presenta-
tion, from left: Jennifer Jenkins, executive director, Dietrich Thea-
ter; Nancy Aiello, vice president, Dietrich Theater; and Jim Roman,
general manager, Perkins Restaurant and Bakery, Tunkhannock.
Perkins supports free childrens programming
The M&T Charitable Founda-
tion recently entered into a
long-term commitment to the
F.M. Kirby Center for the Per-
forming Arts in support of the
centers Restoring our Past,
Strengthening our Present and
Sustaining our Future cam-
paign. At the check presenta-
tion, from left: Joanie Brenton,
director of membership and
corporate giving, Kirby Center;
Brian Gill, director of devel-
opment, Kirby Center; Marilyn
Santarelli, executive director,
Kirby Center; and Phil Johnson,
regional president, M&T.
M&T Foundation
supports F.M. Kirby
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C M Y K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com MONDAY, AUGUST 6, 2012 PAGE 3C
C O M M U N I T Y N E W S
7
6
9
3
2
3
Gabriel James Cary, son of
Darwin J. and Tonya Cary, Larks-
ville, is celebrating his second
birthday today, Aug. 6. Gabriel is
a grandson of Steve and Carla
Baumgarner, Wellsboro; Berna-
dine Strickler, Millheim; and the
late William J. Cary. He has a
brother, Logan, 9.
Gabriel J. Cary
Patrick Thomas Craig, son of
Rob and Amy Craig, Forty Fort, is
celebrating his second birthday
today, Aug. 6. Patrick is a grand-
son of the late Richard and Ann
Davenport, Shavertown, and
Thomas and Dottie Craig, Forty
Fort. He has a brother, Kenneth,
4.
Patrick T. Craig
Madeline Ava Davies, daughter
of Karen and Jason Davies,
Clarks Summit, is celebrating her
sixth birthday today, Aug. 6.
Madeline is a granddaughter of
Pat and Paul Davies and Irene
and Dan Wisnieski, Shavertown.
Madeline A. Davies
Benjamin F. DeSarro, son of
Molly and Frank DeSarro, Du-
ryea, is celebrating his fourth
birthday today, Aug. 6. Benjamin
is a grandson of Rosalie and
Richard Kerpovich, Edwardsville,
and Jessica and Frank DeSarro,
Moosic. He has a sister, Olivia, 20
months.
Benjamin F. DeSarro
Simone Dee Lorraine Hosey,
daughter of I. J. and Melissa
Hosey, Swoyersville, celebrated
her second birthday Aug. 4.
Simone is a granddaughter of
Rose and Robert I. J. Hosey,
Dallas, and the late Dolores and
Robert Peeler, Larksville. She is a
great-granddaughter of Lorraine
Hosey, Marco Island. Simone has
a sister, Sophie, 3.
Simone D. Hosey
Alaina Skye Raspen, daughter of
Brock and Ashley Raspen, Sweet
Valley, is celebrating her fifth
birthday today, Aug. 6. Alaina is
a granddaughter of Thomas
Raspen and the late Lorraine
Raspen, Sweet Valley. She has a
brother, Bayne, 6.
Alaina S. Raspen
Braylan Brooks Stavitzski, son of
Crystal and Thomas Stavitzski
Jr., Mountain Top, celebrated his
first birthday June 24. Braylan is
a grandson of Thomas Stavitzski
Sr., Hanover Township, and
Patricia Mattioli and Frank and
Virginia Knorek, all of Nanticoke.
He has two brothers, Thomas
John Stavitzski III, 5, and the
late Brooks Bryant Stavitzski.
Braylan B. Stavitzski
Shawn Davis, son of Shawn and
Kelly Davis, Plains Township, is
celebrating his third birthday
today, Aug. 6. Shawn is a grand-
son of Bill and Pat Wunner, Par-
sons, and the late Robert and
Linda Davis, Plains Township.
Shawn Davis
HAPPY BIRTHDAY!
DALLAS: Valentines Jew-
elry, Route 309, is holdinga
fundraiser for the BackMoun-
tainFoodPantryfrom5:30-8:30
p.m. onFridayat the Dallas
store. This charityevent is part
of Valentines 30thanniversary
celebration. Admissionis free.
Refreshments will be served
andthere will be live entertain-
ment. The event includes a
Chinese auction. All proceeds
fromthe auctionwill benefit the
BackMountainFoodPantry.
LARKSVILLE: The Knights
of Columbus of Our Ladyof
Czestochowa Assemblywill
holdits annual picnic fromnoon
to4p.m. onAug. 19at St. John
the Baptist picnic grounds,
Nesbitt Street. Cost is $10per
person. Contact BobGabriesh-
eski at 287-1113for reservations.
Payment canbe made at the
picnic.
SCRANTON: AlliedServices
IntegratedServices recently
announcedWeis Markets as a
major sponsor of the 2012
Ryans RunCampaign.
The Ryans Runcampaignhas
raisedover $340,000intwo
years tosupport services and
equipment that benefit individ-
uals servedbyAlliedServices.
The moneyraisedduringthe
secondyear of the campaign
enabledAlliedServices toin-
vest inrehabilitationtech-
nology.
Tolearnmore about the
campaign, major sponsors and
howtoget involved, visit
www.allied-services.org/ryans-
runor call 348-1407.
IN BRIEF
The Pittston Area Key Club recently assisted the Pittston Kiwanis Club in their semi-annual highway
cleanup as part of an ongoing co-operative effort between the clubs. The group covered Oak Street from
Route 315 to the Pittston By-Pass and included a number of members from each club. Participants, from
left, first row, are Matt Shamnoski, Suraj Pursnani, Shannon Turner, Kristen Fereck, Allie Anastasi, Katrina
Lutecki and Brittany Shearer. Second row: Don Shearer, Ron Faust and Sal Bernardi.
Pittston Area Key Club helps with highway cleanup
Cub Scout Pack 281, sponsored by the Dallas United Methodist Church, recently held two events in
its 2012 Summer Fun Program. The first event was a Bicycle Rally held on June 16 at Kirby Park which
featured a helmet check, bike safety check, bicycle registration and a three-mile ride on the levee trail.
The second event was an outdoor screening of the motion picture The Adventures of Tin Tin held on
July 21 on the lawn at Trinity Presbyterian Church, Dallas. Prior to the film, Boy Scouts from Troop 281
entertained the crowd with camp songs and skits and Cub Scouts and their families enjoyed popcorn,
hot dogs and soda provided by the Trinity Presbyterian Mens Group. The final event of the summer
program will be a Cub Scout Carnival to be held 11 a.m.-2 p.m. on Aug. 18 outside the Dallas United
Methodist Church. The event will feature games, food and a dunk tank. Families with boys in first
through fifth grades interested in finding out more about Cub Scouting are welcome to attend. New
scouts may sign up at the carnival or at school sign-up night from 6:30-8:30 p.m. on Sept. 12 at the
Dallas Elementary School cafeteria. At the Bike Rally (above), from left, are Den Chief David Oley, Da-
vey Janoski, Matthew Oley, Eli Chappell, Maxim Gingo, Tommy Janoski, Den Chief Ivan Gingo and Den
Chief Brian Butler. Movie Night entertainers (below), from left, first row, are Charla Pilger, Jeff Buscher
and Michael Santora. Second row: Mark Chappell, Paul Smith, Danny Burhardt, David Oley, Calvin
Crane, Dylan Pilger, Michael Smith and Richard Oley.
Cub Scout Pack 281 conducts bike rally and film screening
Roger Howell of Howell
Benefit Services received an
award at the Childrens Service
Centers July board of direc-
tors meeting. Howell was hon-
ored as the presenting sponsor
of the Children Service Cen-
ters golf tournament that was
held in June. The tournament
raised $12,500 to help children
and adolescents with emotion-
al and behavioral problems. At
the award presentation, from
left, are Howell and Mike Hop-
kins, president, CSC.
Childrens Service
Center board presents
award to Roger Howell
Editors note: Viewa list
of Volunteer Opportuni-
ties at www.timesleader-
.comby clicking Communi-
ty News under the People
tab. To have your group
listed, visit the United Way
of Wyoming Valleys volun-
teer page at www.united-
waywb.org. For more info,
contact Kathy Sweetra at
970-7250 or kswee-
tra@timesleader.com.
C M Y K
PAGE 4C MONDAY, AUGUST 6, 2012 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
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PG - 105 min.
(12:40), (3:15), 7:20, 9:35
The Watch - R - 110 min.
(12:20), (1:20), (3:10), (3:50), 7:10,
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Step Up Revolution - PG13 - 110
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***Step Up Revolution in RealD 3D
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(1:15), (3:45), 7:40, 10:10
The Dark Knight Rises - PG13 -
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(12:00), (1:00), (1:45), (3:30), (4:15),
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The Dark Knight Rises in DBOX
Motion Seating - PG13 - 165 min.
(12:00), (3:30), 7:00, 10:20
Ice Age: Continental Drift - PG -
105 min.
(1:20), (3:30), 7:00, 9:15
The Amazing Spider-Man in RealD
3D - (PG13) - 140 min.
(1:05), (4:05), 7:10, 10:05
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Avoid the lines: Advance tickets available from Fandango.com
Rating Policy Parents and/or Guardians (Age 21 and older) must
accompany all children under 17 to an R Rated feature
*No passes accepted to these features.
**No restricted discount tickets or passes accepted to these features.
***3D features are the regular admission price plus a surcharge of $2.50
D-Box Motion Seats are the admission price plus an $8.00 surcharge
First Matinee $5.25 for all features (plus surcharge for 3D features).
Free Family Film Festival
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For a full schedule of movies for the
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(XD) (PG-13)
11:20AM 2:05PM 4:50PM 7:35PM 10:20PM
AMAZING SPIDERMAN, THE (3D) (PG-13)
11:40AM 5:15PM 10:40PM
AMAZING SPIDERMAN, THE (DIGITAL)
(PG-13)
1:55PM 7:40PM
BEASTS OF THE SOUTHERN WILD
(DIGITAL) (PG-13)
12:10PM 2:30PM 4:50PM 7:10PM 9:45PM
BRAVE (3D) (PG)
2:40PM 8:15PM
BRAVE (DIGITAL) (PG)
11:30AM 5:10PM 10:45PM
DARK KNIGHT RISES, THE (DIGITAL)
(PG-13)
11:00AM 12:00PM 12:55PM 1:50PM 2:45PM
3:35PM 4:35PM 5:30PM 6:25PM 7:20PM
8:10PM 9:10PM 10:05PM
DIARY OF A WIMPY KID: DOG DAYS
(DIGITAL) (PG)
11:05AM 12:15PM 1:25PM 2:35PM 3:45PM
4:55PM 6:05PM 7:15PM 8:25PM 9:35PM
10:45PM
ICE AGE: CONTINENTAL DRIFT (3D) (PG)
11:50AM 4:40PM 9:20PM
ICE AGE: CONTINENTAL DRIFT (DIGITAL)
(PG)
2:20PM 7:00PM
MAGIC MIKE (DIGITAL) (R)
11:15AM 4:20PM 10:10PM
MOONRISE KINGDOM (DIGITAL) (PG-13)
2:00PM 7:30PM
SAVAGES (2012) (DIGITAL) (R)
1:45PM 7:45PM
STEP UP REVOLUTION (3D) (PG-13)
12:50PM 3:20PM 5:50PM 8:20PM 10:50PM
STEP UP REVOLUTION (DIGITAL) (PG-13)
11:35AM 2:10PM 4:35PM 7:05PM 9:40PM
TED (DIGITAL) (R)
11:20AM 2:15PM 5:05PM 7:50PM 10:25PM
TO ROME WITH LOVE (DIGITAL) (R)
10:55AM 4:45PM 10:40PM
TOTAL RECALL (2012) (DIGITAL) (PG-13)
12:15PM 1:10PM 3:00PM 3:55PM 5:45PM
6:40PM 8:30PM 9:25PM
WATCH, THE (DIGITAL) (R)
11:55AM 1:05PM 2:25PM 3:40PM 5:00PM
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News World
News
News-
watch 16
Inside
Edition
Bachelor Pad Ice cream-themed obstacle
course. (N) (CC) (TV14)
(:01) The Glass
House (N) (TV14)
News (:35)
Nightline

Dragnet
(TVPG)
Dragnet
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Good
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Good
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Sanford &
Son
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All in the
Family
All in the
Family
News-
watch 16
Seinfeld
(TVPG)
Close for
Comfort
Close for
Comfort
6
News Evening
News
News Entertain-
ment
How I Met 2 Broke
Girls
2 Broke
Girls
Mike &
Molly
Hawaii Five-0 (CC)
(TV14)
News at
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Letterman
<
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Nightly
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Wheel of
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The Cotton Club


(4:00)
Criminal Minds The
Fox (TVPG)
Criminal Minds (CC)
(TV14)
Criminal Minds
Derailed (TVPG)
Criminal Minds Cults.
(CC) (TVPG)
Criminal Minds (CC)
(TV14)
#
News Evening
News
Entertain-
ment
The
Insider (N)
How I Met 2 Broke
Girls
2 Broke
Girls
Mike &
Molly
Hawaii Five-0 (CC)
(TV14)
News Letterman
)
King of
Queens
How I Met How I Met King of
Queens
Law & Order: Special
Victims Unit
Law & Order: Special
Victims Unit
The 10
News
(:35) The
Office
(:05) TMZ
(N)
(:35)
Excused
+
Family
Guy (CC)
Family
Guy (CC)
Two and
Half Men
Two and
Half Men
Perez Hilton All
Access (TVPG)
Remodeled (CC)
(TVPG)
PIX News at Ten
Jodi Applegate. (N)
Seinfeld
(TVPG)
Seinfeld
(TVPG)
1
Two and
Half Men
Two and
Half Men
Big Bang
Theory
Big Bang
Theory
Law & Order: Special
Victims Unit
Law & Order: Special
Victims Unit
Phl17
News
Friends
(TVPG)
30 Rock
(TVPG)
30 Rock
(TV14)
AMC
Basic (5:30) (R, 03) John Travolta,
Connie Nielsen, Samuel L. Jackson. (CC)
Behind Enemy Lines (PG-13, 01) Owen Wil-
son, Gene Hackman, Gabriel Macht. (CC)
The Sum of All Fears (PG-
13, 02) Ben Affleck. (CC)
AP
Dirty Jobs Reindeer
Farm (TVPG)
Call of
Wildman
Call of
Wildman
Call of
Wildman
Call-Wild-
man
Call-Wild-
man
Call of
Wildman
Gator Boys (CC)
(TVPG)
Call of
Wildman
Call-Wild-
man
ARTS
Criminal Minds (CC)
(TV14)
Criminal Minds
Memoriam (TV14)
Longmire (CC)
(TV14)
Longmire 8 Sec-
onds (CC) (TV14)
Longmire (CC)
(TV14)
(:01) Longmire (CC)
(TV14)
CNBC
(5:00) XXX Summer Olympics Boxing. (N
Same-day Tape)
Secret
Lives of
BMW: A Driving
Obsession
Amer.
Greed
American Greed Mad Money
CNN
(4:00) The Situation
Room (N)
Erin Burnett Out-
Front (N)
Anderson Cooper
360 (N) (CC)
Piers Morgan
Tonight (N)
Anderson Cooper
360 (CC)
Erin Burnett OutFront
COM
Always
Sunny
(:24)
Tosh.0
Colbert
Report
Daily
Show
(7:56)
Futurama
South
Park
Always
Sunny
Always
Sunny
Always
Sunny
Always
Sunny
Daily
Show
Colbert
Report
CS
SportsNite
(N)
Phillies
Pregame
MLB Baseball Atlanta Braves at Philadelphia Phillies. From Citi-
zens Bank Park in Philadelphia. (N Subject to Blackout)
SportsNite (N) (Live)
(CC)
State-
Union
Net
Impact
CTV
To the
Heights!
Catholic
Way
Daily
Mass
The Holy
Rosary
The Journey Home
(TVG)
Genesis
to Jesus
Solemn
Novena
World Over Live Vaticano Women of
Grace
DSC
Gator Boys Gators
Gone Wild (TVPG)
Gator Boys (CC)
(TVPG)
Gator Boys (CC)
(TVPG)
Off the
Hook
Off the
Hook
Gator Boys (CC)
(TVPG)
Off the
Hook
Off the
Hook
DSY
Phineas
and Ferb
(TVG)
Good
Luck
Charlie
Radio Rebel (12) Debby
Ryan, Sarena Parmar, Adam
DiMarco. (CC)
(:40) Jes-
sie (CC)
(TVG)
(:05)
A.N.T.
Farm
Babysit-
ters a
Vampire
Shake It
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Good
Luck
Charlie
Jessie
(CC)
(TVG)
Good
Luck
Charlie
E!
15 Awesomest Boy
Bands (TV14)
E! News (N) Keeping Up With the
Kardashians
Keeping Up With the
Kardashians
Keeping Up With the
Kardashians
Chelsea
Lately
E! News
ESPN
SportsCenter (N)
(Live) (CC)
MLB Baseball New York Yankees at Detroit Tigers. From Com-
erica Park in Detroit. (N Subject to Blackout) (Live) (CC)
Baseball Tonight (N)
(Live) (CC)
SportsCenter (N)
(Live) (CC)
ESPN2
NFL32 (N) (Live) (CC) NFL Live (N) (CC) Film
Room
NFL
Yearbk
Film
Room
NFL
Yearbk
2012 World Series
of Poker
2012 World Series
of Poker
FAM
Bunheads (CC)
(TV14)
Secret Life of the
American Teenager
Secret Life of the
American Teenager
Bunheads (N) (CC)
(TV14)
Bunheads (CC)
(TV14)
The 700 Club (CC)
(TVG)
FOOD
Diners,
Drive
Diners,
Drive
Diners,
Drive
Diners,
Drive
Diners,
Drive
Diners,
Drive
Diners,
Drive
Diners,
Drive
Diners,
Drive
Diners,
Drive
Mystery
Diners
Diners,
Drive
FNC
Special Report With
Bret Baier (N)
FOX Report With
Shepard Smith
The OReilly Factor
(N) (CC)
Hannity (N) On Record, Greta
Van Susteren
The OReilly Factor
(CC)
HALL
Little House on the
Prairie (CC) (TVG)
Little House on the
Prairie (CC) (TVG)
Little House on the
Prairie (CC) (TVG)
Little House on the
Prairie (CC) (TVG)
Frasier
(TVPG)
Frasier
(TVPG)
Frasier
(TVPG)
Frasier
(TVPG)
HIST
Pawn
Stars
Pawn
Stars
Pawn
Stars
Pawn
Stars
Pawn
Stars
Pawn
Stars
American Pickers
(CC) (TVPG)
Pawn
Stars
Pawn
Stars
(:01) Picked Off (CC)
(TVPG)
H&G
Property
Virgins
Property
Virgins
Love It or List It (CC)
(TVG)
Love It or List It
Milne (CC) (TVG)
Love It or List It (N)
(CC) (TVG)
House
Hunters
Hunters
Intl
Love It or List It
McPherson (TVG)
LIF
Trading Spouses:
Meet New Mommy
Trading Spouses:
Meet New Mommy
Trading Spouses:
Meet New Mommy
Spanglish (PG-13, 04) Adam Sandler, Ta Leoni. A
housekeeper works for a chef and his neurotic wife. (CC)
MTV
Ridicu-
lousness
Ridicu-
lousness
(:14) Ridiculousness
(TVPG)
Ridicu-
lousness
Ridicu-
lousness
Teen Wolf Fury
(TV14)
Teen Wolf Battle-
field (N) (TV14)
Teen Wolf Battle-
field (TV14)
NICK
Victorious Victorious Figure It
Out (N)
Splatalot
(N) (TVG)
Victorious Victorious Hollywood Heights
(N) (CC) (TVPG)
George
Lopez
George
Lopez
Friends
(TVPG)
Friends
(TVPG)
OVAT
Thin Air: A Spenser
Mystery (5:00) (00)
Restora-
tion
Restora-
tion
The Lost World (01) Bob Hoskins, James Fox, Tom
Ward. British adventurers discover dinosaurs in 1911. (CC)
Dune (PG-13, 84)
, Sting (CC)
SPD
NASCAR Race
Hub (N)
Pass Time Pass Time Gearz (N) Gearz
(TVG)
Hot Rod
TV
Hot Rod
TV
Truck U
(N) (TVG)
Truck U
(TVG)
Gearz Gearz
(TVG)
SPIKE
Worlds Wildest
Police Videos (CC)
Worlds Wildest
Police Videos (CC)
Worlds Wildest
Police Videos (CC)
Worlds Wildest
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Worlds Wildest
Police Videos (N)
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Police Videos (CC)
SYFY
Blade
Runner
The Fifth Element (PG-13, 97) Bruce Willis.
A New York cabby tries to save Earth in 2259.
Warehouse 13 All
hands on deck. (N)
Alphas Harken and
Hicks rescue Kat.
Warehouse 13 All
hands on deck.
TBS
King of
Queens
King of
Queens
Seinfeld
(TVPG)
Seinfeld
(TVPG)
Family
Guy (CC)
Family
Guy (CC)
Family
Guy (CC)
Family
Guy (CC)
Family
Guy (CC)
Family
Guy (CC)
Conan (N)
TCM
Cry of Battle (6:15) (63) Van Heflin,
Rita Moreno. Premiere.
3:10 to Yuma (57) Van
Heflin, Glenn Ford. (CC)
Johnny Eager (9:45) (42) Robert
Taylor, Lana Turner. (CC)
The
Prowler
TLC
Four Houses (CC)
(TV14)
Four Houses (CC)
(TVPG)
Four Houses ... And
Golden Rhino
Four Houses (CC)
(TV14)
Four Houses (N) (CC)
(TVPG)
Four Houses ... And
Golden Rhino
TNT
The Mentalist (CC)
(TV14)
The Mentalist Red-
line (TV14)
The Closer Last
Rites (TV14)
The Closer Armed
Response (TV14)
Perception Messen-
ger (N) (TV14)
The Closer Armed
Response (TV14)
TOON
Regular
Show
World of
Gumball
Advent.
Time
Advent.
Time
Regular
Show
Annoying
Orange
King of
the Hill
King of
the Hill
American
Dad
American
Dad
Family
Guy (CC)
Family
Guy (CC)
TRVL
Bizarre Foods With
Andrew Zimmern
Man v.
Food
Man v.
Food
Bizarre Foods Amer-
ica (TVPG)
Bizarre Foods Amer-
ica (N) (TVPG)
Hotel Impossible (N)
(CC) (TVPG)
Hotel Impossible
(CC) (TVG)
TVLD
(:13) M*A*S*H (CC)
(TVPG)
(6:52)
M*A*S*H
(:24)
M*A*S*H
Home
Improve.
Home
Improve.
Love-Ray-
mond
Love-Ray-
mond
Love-Ray-
mond
Love-Ray-
mond
King of
Queens
King of
Queens
USA
NCIS Cover Story
(CC) (TVPG)
NCIS: Los Angeles
Hunted (TV14)
WWE Monday Night RAW Lesnar returns to haunt HHH as both
prepare for SummerSlam. (N) (Live) (CC)
National Treasure:
Book of Secrets
VH-1
Love & Hip Hop:
Atlanta (TV14)
Love & Hip Hop:
Atlanta (TV14)
Love & Hip Hop:
Atlanta (N) (TV14)
Single Ladies (N)
(TV14)
Love & Hip Hop:
Atlanta (TV14)
Single Ladies (TV14)
WE
Charmed Witch
Trial (CC) (TVPG)
Charmed Morality
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Golden
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Girls
WGN-A
30 Rock
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30 Rock
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Americas Funniest
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Americas Funniest
Home Videos (CC)
Americas Funniest
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WGN News at Nine
(N) (CC)
Americas Funniest
Home Videos (CC)
WYLN
Lets Talk Rehabili-
tation
Topic A: Live at Five Legally
Speaking
Storm
Politics
WYLN
Kitchen
Legislative
Rpt.
Late Edition Classified Beaten
Path
YOUTO
Kipkay TV Kipkay TV Kipkay TV Kipkay TV Digivan-
gelist
Digivan-
gelist
The X-Files F.
Emasculata (TV14)
PREMIUM CHANNELS
HBO
The Rite (PG-13, 11) Anthony Hop-
kins. A skeptical seminary student attends
a school for exorcists. (CC)
The Newsroom An
anonymous source.
(CC) (TVMA)
Green Lantern (PG-13, 11) Ryan
Reynolds, Blake Lively. A test pilot joins a
band of intergalactic warriors. (CC)
In Time (PG-13,
11) Justin Tim-
berlake. (CC)
HBO2
Millions (5:35) (PG,
04) Alexander
Nathan Etel.
Little Fockers (7:15) (PG-13, 10)
Robert De Niro. The whole clan arrives for
the Focker twins birthday. (CC)
True Blood Eric plots
his escape. (CC)
(TVMA)
The Newsroom An
anonymous source.
(CC) (TVMA)
Underworld (R,
03) Kate Beckin-
sale. (CC)
MAX
Lost
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Jurassic
Larry Crowne (6:45) (PG-13, 11)
Tom Hanks. A middle-aged man goes
back to college after losing his job. (CC)
Kung Fu Panda 2 (PG, 11)
Voices of Jack Black,
Angelina Jolie. Premiere. (CC)
The Birdcage (R, 96) Robin Wil-
liams. A sons engagement throws a kink
into a gay couples life. (CC)
MMAX
Water for Ele-
phants (5:10) (PG-
13, 11) (CC)
Bull Durham (7:15) (R, 88) Kevin
Costner. A baseball groupie gives pointers
to a brash young pitcher. (CC)
Dinner for Schmucks (PG-13, 10)
Steve Carell. Comic misadventures follow
a mans encounter with a buffoon.
Sex
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Cancun
The
Cooler

SHO
The Game (5:50) (R, 97) Michael
Douglas. A businessman takes part in an
unusual form of recreation. (CC)
Red (PG-13, 10) Bruce Willis, Morgan
Freeman. The CIA targets a team of former
agents for assassination. (CC)
Weeds
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Episodes
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Web
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Weeds
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(TVMA)
STARZ
Confessions of a
Dangerous Mind
Starz Stu-
dios
Midnight in Paris (7:20) (PG-
13, 11) Owen Wilson.
The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo (R, 11)
Daniel Craig, Rooney Mara. (CC)
Straw
Dogs
6 a.m. FNC FOX and Friends(N)
7 a.m. 3, 22 CBS This Morning
Author Doug Fine; singer Joe Walsh;
actor Woody Harrelson. (N)
7 a.m. 56 Morning News with Web-
ster and Nancy
7 a.m. 16 Good Morning America
Steve Carell; Spike Lee; Chris Powell;
iPad accessories. (N)
7 a.m. 28 Today Reports from the
Olympics. (N)
8 a.m. 56 Better Celebrity-style
weddings on a budget; a hair make-
over. (N) (TVPG)
9 a.m. 3 Anderson American Idol-
castoff; a Long Island woman com-
municates with the dead; actress
Niecy Nash. (TVG)
TV TALK TODAY
C M Y K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com MONDAY, AUGUST 6, 2012 PAGE 5C
D I V E R S I O N S
UNIVERSAL SUDOKU
MINUTE MAZE
W I T H O M A R S H A R I F & T A N N A H H I R S C H
CRYPTOQUOTE
GOREN BRIDGE
B Y M I C H E A L A R G I R I O N & J E F F K N U R E K
JUMBLE
B Y H O L I D A Y M A T H I S
HOROSCOPE
CROSSWORD
PREVIOUS DAYS SOLUTION
HOW TO CONTACT:
Dear Abby: PO Box 69440, Los Ange-
les, CA 90069
For more Sudoku go to www.timesleader.com
O N T H E W E B
Dear Abby: My girl-
friend Vivians son
Kirk is 22 and very
immature. I love Viv-
ian with all my heart,
and I get upset when
Kirk verbally abuses
her. I try not to say
anything because I feel its not my
place because hes not MY son.
Kirk hasnt worked in two years.
He walks into his mothers house and
takes whatever he wants food,
toothpaste, rolls of toilet paper, etc.
He wont help her around the house,
mow the lawn or wash a dirty dish he
has used. And he lives rent-free in one
of the duplexes his mother bought.
Vivian is hard-working and self-sup-
porting. Shes also tired of her sons
lack of motivation and how he takes
her for granted.
I know a mother doesnt want to
see her child go hungry, but where do
you draw the line?
Fed Up in Texas
Dear Fed Up: Vivian should draw
the line at the front door. By tolerat-
ing her sons disrespectful behavior
she is doing him no favors. Unless he
actively looks for a job, stops help-
ing himself to her property and does
something to repay her generosity,
she should stop helping him. What
shes doing is crippling her son, who
may be in need of counseling.
Dear Abby: Please inform your read-
ers not to invite people to showers if
theyre not invited to the wedding.
I was invited to a shower and found
out I wasnt invited to the wedding. I
was upset, but imagine how mortified
I felt when I was told that if some of
the invited guests sent back a refusal,
THEN I would be invited to the wed-
ding. I would have preferred to have
been told, Id love to have you, but
we just cant afford to invite all of the
lovely people we would like.
I know this isnt the first time
youve mentioned something like this
in your column, but it amazes me
how insensitive people can be.
Second String, Bradford, Mass.
Dear Second String: Being told we
are at the top of the B list makes
us feel really wanted, doesnt it? If
people would take just a moment to
consider how their words and deeds
affect others, what a kinder, gentler
world this would be.
For the record: People who will not
be invited to the wedding should not
be asked to attend a bridal shower.
Dear Abby: My divorced daughter
stretched her food budget to sur-
prise me with my favorite double
cheese pizza with black olive topping.
After everyone had eaten, I eyed the
leftovers and decided to help out by
gorging on the extra slices.
My subsequent gallstone attack did
not hurt as much as my oldest grand-
daughters query: Grandpa, why did
you force yourself to finish the pizza?
Mommy promised us it would be our
snack tomorrow.
Gluttonous guests should not as-
sume that leftovers are fair game.
S.G. in Laguna Woods
Dear S.G.: How true. Wisdom and
good manners dictate that noth-
ing should be taken from the hosts
kitchen without permission. I have re-
ceived more than one letter over the
years describing a refrigerator raid
in which the guest wound up with a
sandwich loaded with what turned
out to be pet food.
DEAR ABBY
A D V I C E
Grown-up son enjoying free ride has little reason to get up and go
To receive a collection of Abbys most
memorable and most frequently re-
quested poems and essays, send a busi-
ness-sized, self-addressed envelope, plus
check or money order for $3.95 ($4.50 in
Canada) to: Dear Abbys Keepers, P.O.
Box 447, Mount Morris, IL 61054-0447.
(Postage is included.)
ARIES (March 21-April 19). You
have people around you who
love you, but they will appreci-
ate you more if you expand your
team a bit. As an added bonus,
your loved ones will sense their
competition and treat you better.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20). There
is no use in wanting to get a zig
out of a thing that clearly likes to
zag. Youll save yourself a lot
of time and effort by paying
attention to the nature of things.
GEMINI (May 21-June 21). While
there are times when being a
perfectionist means the differ-
ence between getting what you
want and not getting it, in most
instances, perfectionism isnt
realistic, necessary or useful.
CANCER (June 22-July 22). This
is the point at which its best to
stop planning, because you wont
realize what you dont know or
dont have until you take action.
Trust that being in action will
show you what you need.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). Youve
been known to perform for your
friends and family as a kind of
gift. There are special events
coming up that you could make
even better.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Be care-
ful not to fritter your time away
on things that ultimately will
make no difference. Much falls
into that category today, which
makes this a fine time to ask
yourself: What really would make
a difference to me?
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). Waiting
patiently pays off, but can cause
great discomfort for someone as
busy as you. Occupy yourself in
some way.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21).
Fortuitous meetings and chance
encounters are in store. As you
interact with supportive people
who want to see you succeed,
youll start thinking of your-
self as the person you want to
become.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21).
Your favorite conversations
include some talk about noth-
ing and everything and a dash
of intriguing news, all sprinkled
with laughter and garnished with
the spirit of kidding around.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19).
Drawing is a form of medita-
tion that could help you solve
a problem today. Possessing a
talent for drawing is irrelevant.
If you can drag a pencil across a
page, you can express yourself
through drawing.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). You
will live the concept of the Latin
phrase amor fati or love of
fate. You not only accept what
is; you find whats beautiful and
lovable about it, and you invest
your highest and best attention
in it.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). Putting
first things first seems like it
should be a no-brainer, but youll
be surprised at the odd, mean-
ingless details being mistaken
for truly important matters.
TODAYS BIRTHDAY (Aug. 6).
Your year will be defined not
only by what you do, but also by
whom you are with. Your social
fun will be especially fulfilling
this month. Next month brings
an excellent creative project
your way. Your lucky numbers
are: 5, 7, 20, 18 and 31.
C M Y K
PAGE 6C MONDAY, AUGUST 6, 2012 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
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TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com MONDAY, AUGUST 6, 2012 PAGE 1D
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2008 Ford Escape XLT .........................$15,999
2006 Suzuki Forenza Wgn......................$5,999
2006 Ford Mustang GT ........................$18,950
2008 Jeep Wrangler UL Sahara ............$23,999
2009 Jeep Wrangler Sport ...................$20,999
2009 Lexus RX250 AWD.......................$33,999
2009 Mercedes-Benz C300 4Matic.........$26,999
2007 Mercedes-Benz CLK550 Conv.........$27,999
2007 Nissan Murano S AWD.................$16,999
2005 Nissan Murano SE AWD...............$13,599
1999 Pontiac Grand Prix GTP .................$5,000
2008 Subaru Outback Limited..............$15,999
2010 Suzuki Kisashi AWD ....................$15,999
2006 Volkswagen Jetta 2.5..................$11,750
1971 Plymouth Road Runner ................$27,000
2009 Nissan Sentra 2.0FE+ .................$12,949
2007 Toyota Camry Hybrid ...................$13,999
2005 Nissan Sentra 34K Miles ...............$9,999
1553 Main Street, Peckville, PA 18452
PRESTIGE
ONE AUTO
WEBUY
VEHICLES!
Call Dan Lane @ 570-489-0000
*Tax, tags & license fees not included.
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
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 $500 CASH!!
DRAWINGTO BE HELD LAST DAY
OF EACH MONTH
www.wegotused.com
100
ANNOUNCEMENTS
110 Lost
ALL JUNK
VEHICLES
WANTED!!
CALL ANYTIME
HONEST PRICES
FREE REMOVAL
CA$H PAID
ON THE SPOT
570.301.3602
BEST PRICES
IN THE AREA
CA$H ON THE $POT,
Free Anytime
Pickup
570-301-3602
570-301-3602
CALL US!
TO JUNK
YOUR CAR
BUYING
USED
VEHICLES
Call
Vitos & Ginos
949 Wyoming Ave,
Forty Fort, PA
288-8995
120 Found
All Junk
Cars &
Trucks
Wanted
Highest
Prices
Paid In
CA$H
FREE
PICKUP
570-574-1275
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!
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
135 Legals/
Public Notices
QUIET TITLE
NOTICE IS HEREBY
GIVEN TO Friday
Ajayi, his heirs and
assigns that on Feb-
ruary 2, 2012, Mid-
Atlantic Acquisi-
tions, Inc. com-
menced an action
against you to No.
1242 of 2012 which
you are required to
defend, to quiet title
of lands described
as follows: ALL
THAT CERTAIN lot
located at 274 Stan-
ton Street, including
any improvements
thereon situated in
the City of Wilkes-
Barre, Luzerne
County, Pa. Also
known as, Luzerne
County, Pennsylva-
nia, taxing parcel
number(s) I9NE
2014026-73, being
more fully described
in a Deed among
the land records of
the county and state
set forth above in
Deed Book 3006
Page 105013.
Richard C. Frank,
Esquire, Attorney
Id 312661.
1933 State Route
903, Jim Thorpe, PA
18229
570-325-8400
QUIET TITLE
NOTICE IS HEREBY
GIVEN TO Any
Unknown Heirs of
Marcella Birge that
on February 2, 2012,
Mid-Atlantic Acqui-
sitions, Inc. com-
menced an action
against you to No.
1252 of 2012 which
you are required to
defend, to quiet title
of lands described
as follows: ALL
THAT CERTAIN lot
located at 249 S.
Sherman Street,
including any
improvements
thereon situated in
the City of Wilkes-
Barre, Luzerne
County, Pa. Also
known as, Luzerne
County, Pennsylva-
nia, taxing parcel
number(s) I9NE
2025007-73, being
more fully described
in a Deed among
the land records of
the county and state
set forth above in
Deed Book 1391
Page 277.
Richard C. Frank,
Esquire, Attorney
Id 312661.
1933 State Route
903, Jim Thorpe, PA
18229
570-325-8400
LEGAL NOTICE
TOWNSHIP OF
JENKINS
NOTICE OF
CANCELLATION
PUBLIC WORK
SESSION
MEETING
NOTICE IS HEREBY
GIVEN that the
Jenkins Township
Board of Super-
visors has cancelled
the Public Work
Session for Wed-
ensdy, August 8th,
2012 scheduled to
begin at 6:30pm.
The cancelling of
this Public Work
Session is due to
prior commitments
of the Board of
Supervisors.
Robert T. Jones
Township Manager
135 Legals/
Public Notices
QUIET TITLE
NOTICE IS HEREBY
GIVEN TO John Buli
and Mary Buli, their
heirs and assigns,
that on February 2,
2012, Mid-Atlantic
Acquisitions, Inc.
commenced an
action against you
to No. 1254 of 2012
which you are
required to defend,
to quiet title of lands
described as fol-
lows: ALL THAT
CERTAIN lot located
at 59 Fern Drive,
including any
improvements
thereon situated in
the Township of
Wright, Luzerne
County, Pa. Also
known as, Luzerne
County, Pennsylva-
nia, taxing parcel
number(s)
M8S1006007-64,
being more fully
described in a Deed
among the land
records of the coun-
ty and state set
forth above in Deed
Book 1974 Page
958.
Richard C. Frank,
Esquire, Attorney
Id 312661.
1933 State Route
903, Jim Thorpe, PA
18229
570-325-8400
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
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Youre in bussiness
with classified!
QUIET TITLE
NOTICE IS HEREBY
GIVEN TO Pamela
Carter, her heirs
and assigns that on
February 17, 2012,
Mid-Atlantic Acqui-
sitions, Inc. com-
menced an action
against you to No.
1876 of 2012 which
you are required to
defend, to quiet title
of lands described
as follows: ALL
THAT CERTAIN lot
located at 51 Fulton
Street, including any
improvements
thereon situated in
the City of Pittston,
Luzerne County, Pa.
Also known as,
Luzerne County,
Pennsylvania, taxing
parcel number(s)
E11NE3008023-72,
being more fully
described in a Deed
among the land
records of the coun-
ty and state set
forth above in Deed
Book 1964 Page
514.
Richard C. Frank,
Esquire, Attorney
Id 312661.
1933 State Route
903, Jim Thorpe, PA
18229
570-325-8400
135 Legals/
Public Notices
QUIET TITLE
NOTICE IS HEREBY
GIVEN TO Grace R.
Pfuntner, her heirs
and assigns that on
February 2, 2012,
Mid-Atlantic Acqui-
sitions, Inc. com-
menced an action
against you to No.
1251 of 2012 which
you are required to
defend, to quiet title
of lands described
as follows: ALL
THAT CERTAIN lot
located at 209 E.
Spring Street,
including any
improvements
thereon situated in
the City of Nanti-
coke, Luzerne
County, Pa. Also
known as, Luzerne
County, Pennsylva-
nia, taxing parcel
number(s) J7NE
4026024-42, being
more fully described
in a Deed among
the land records of
the county and state
set forth above in
Deed Book 2113
Page 691.
Richard C. Frank,
Esquire, Attorney
Id 312661.
1933 State Route
903, Jim Thorpe, PA
18229
570-325-8400
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
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QUIET TITLE
NOTICE IS HEREBY
GIVEN TO Thomas
Scatena that on
April 3, 2012, Mid-
Atlantic Acquisi-
tions, Inc. com-
menced an action
against you to No.
4203 of 2012 which
you are required to
defend, to quiet title
of lands described
as follows: ALL
THAT CERTAIN lot
located at 9 North
Street, including any
improvements
thereon situated in
the Township of
Plains, Luzerne
County, Pa. Also
known as, Luzerne
County, Pennsylva-
nia, taxing parcel
number(s) G10SE
2005010-50, being
more fully described
in a Deed among
the land records of
the county and state
set forth above in
Deed Book 3001
Page 247831.
Richard C. Frank,
Esquire, Attorney
Id 312661.
1933 State Route
903, Jim Thorpe, PA
18229
570-325-8400
135 Legals/
Public Notices
QUIET TITLE
NOTICE IS HEREBY
GIVEN TO Thomas
Scatena that on
April 3, 2012, Mid-
Atlantic Acquisi-
tions, Inc. com-
menced an action
against you to No.
4203 of 2012 which
you are required to
defend, to quiet title
of lands described
as follows: ALL
THAT CERTAIN lot
located at 9 North
Street, including any
improvements
thereon situated in
the Township of
Plains, Luzerne
County, Pa. Also
known as, Luzerne
County, Pennsylva-
nia, taxing parcel
number(s) G10SE
2005010-50, being
more fully described
in a Deed among
the land records of
the county and state
set forth above in
Deed Book 3001
Page 247831.
Richard C. Frank,
Esquire, Attorney
Id 312661.
1933 State Route
903, Jim Thorpe, PA
18229
570-325-8400
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
QUIET TITLE
NOTICE IS HEREBY
GIVEN TO Peter
Sunday and Anna
Sunday, their heirs
and assigns that on
February 2, 2012,
Mid-Atlantic Acqui-
sitions, Inc. com-
menced an action
against you to No.
1244 of 2012 which
you are required to
defend, to quiet title
of lands described
as follows: ALL
THAT CERTAIN lot
located at 671 ADJ
Tunnel Road, includ-
ing any improve-
ments thereon situ-
ated in the Township
of Dennison,
Luzerne County, Pa.
Also known as,
Luzerne County,
Pennsylvania, taxing
parcel number(s)
M1100 A07A-13,
being more fully
described in a Deed
among the land
records of the coun-
ty and state set
forth above in Deed
Book 679 Page 170.
Richard C. Frank,
Esquire, Attorney
Id 312661.
1933 State Route
903, Jim Thorpe, PA
18229
570-325-8400
135 Legals/
Public Notices
QUIET TITLE
NOTICE IS HEREBY
GIVEN TO Any
Unknown Heirs of
Ann Swithers a/k/a
Anna Swithers that
on February 2, 2012,
Mid-Atlantic Acqui-
sitions, Inc. com-
menced an action
against you to No.
1250 of 2012 which
you are required to
defend, to quiet title
of lands described
as follows: ALL
THAT CERTAIN lot
located at 15 Ridge
Street, including any
improvements
thereon situated in
the Borough of Ash-
ley, Luzerne County,
Pa. Also known as,
Luzerne County,
Pennsylvania, taxing
parcel number(s)
I9SE4006016-01,
being more fully
described in a Deed
among the land
records of the coun-
ty and state set
forth above in Deed
Book 1810 Page
923.
Richard C. Frank,
Esquire, Attorney
Id 312661.
1933 State Route
903, Jim Thorpe, PA
18229
570-325-8400
150 Special Notices
ADOPT
A caring, married
couple promises a
secure future, love,
and a happy home
near beaches and
great schools.
Expenses paid.
Allison & Joe
877-253-8699
www.allisonjoe.com
ADOPT: A lifetime
of endless love.
Secure future
awaits your new-
born. EXPENSES
PAID. Kim & Tim
800-407-4318
Inspired by the
Chinese culture,
red wedding
dresses are
becoming more
popular.
bridezella.net
Looking for that
special place
called home?
Classified will address
Your needs.
Open the door
with classified!
FOSTER PARENT(S)
NEEDED
IMMEDIATELY
for teens or sibling
groups.
Compensation,
training, and 24
hour on-call sup-
port provided.
Please call
FRIENDSHIP
HOUSE (570) 342-
8305 x 2058.
Compensation up
to $1200.00 per
month per child.
150 Special Notices
All Junk
Cars &
Trucks
Wanted
Highest
Prices
Paid In
CA$H
FREE
PICKUP
570-574-1275
BUYING BUYING
JUNK
VEHICLES &
Heavy
Equipment
NOBODY PAYS MORE! NOBODY PAYS MORE!
HAPPY TRAILS
TRUCK SALES
570-760-2035
570-542-2277
6am to 9pm
330 Child Care
DAYCARE
In my Kingston
home. Licensed.
Ages 15 months to 6
years.
570-283-0336
MOTHERS HELPER
Do you need time
for yourself?
Then allow me to
do your light house-
keeping, watch the
kids or run errands
for you. Please call
570-852-3474
Kingston area.
References
available.
Private child
care in my home,
or at yours. Seeking
5 days a week.
Monday thru Friday
570-655-1897
380 Travel
SUMMER GETAWAYS!
Ocean City, NJ
8/8
Murder Mystery
Comedy Show
w/lunch @
Moshulu 8/13
Gettysburg Tour
8/18
Washington DC
8/18
NY State Fair
8/25
Book of
Mormon
8/11
Yankees vs
Rangers 8/14
1-800-432-8069
380 Travel
ATLANTIC CITY
8/26 $39.
NYC WED. $34
AUG 15, 22, 29
JERSEY BOYS
PHANTOM OF
THE OPERA
MAMA MIA
$99 Bus and show
SAN GENARO
9/15, 9/19, 9/22
$36
DOVER RACE 9/30
P P I T T ST ON I T T ST ON P PARK ARK / R / R I DE I DE
RAI NBOW TOURS RAI NBOW TOURS
489- 4761 489- 4761
Take
Advantage
of
CRUISE SPECIALS
Carnival Miracle to
Bahamas
Departs NY
09/19/2012
8 nights from
$506.00 p/p
******************
New Years Eve
Sailing
Enchantment of the
Seas
Departs Baltimore
12/29/2012
From $766.00 p/p
*****************
Valentines Day
Celebration
Explorer of the
Seas
Departs NJ
02/10/2013
From $577.00 p/p -
Senior Special
Call
Tenenbaums
Travel
288-8747
Collect cash, not dust!
Clean out your
basement, garage
or attic and call the
Classified depart-
ment today at 570-
829-7130!
WHERE CAN WHERE CAN
YOU SEE YOU SEE A.. A..
$5 MILLION
MANSION
INDIAN
RESERVATION
MUSEUM
....and more
Southampton
Long Island
Sat. Aug., 18
Not your usual
Washington DC
Sept 29 & 30
For More Info
Call Anne
570-655-3420
anne.cameo
@verizon.net
CAMEO HOUSE
BUS TOURS
406 ATVs/Dune
Buggies
HAWK `11 125CC
Auto, key start, with
reverse & remote
control. $700. OBO
570-674-2920
HAWK 2011 UTILITY ATV
NEW!! Full size
adult ATV. Strong 4
stroke motor. CVT
fully automatic
transmission with
reverse. Electric
start. Front & rear
luggage racks.
Long travel suspen-
sion. Disc brakes.
Dual stage head
lights. Perfect for
hunters & trail rid-
ers alike. BRAND NEW
& READY TO RIDE.
$1,995 takes it
away.
570-817-2952
Wilkes-Barre
TOMAHAWK`11
ATV, 110 CC. Brand
New Tomahawk
Kids Quad. Only
$695 takes it away!
570-817-2952
Wilkes-Barre
409 Autos under
$5000
BUICK `01
CENTURY CUSTOM
53k, immaculate
condition, garage
kept, A/C, power
windows, CD,
cruise control,
power drivers seat
and power locks.
New tires, must see
to appreciate!
$4600 firm.
(570)675-0039
409 Autos under
$5000
08 Pontiac
Grand Prix
64,000 miles,
reduced price,
must sell! $9,995
95 Buick
Lesabre
4 door, 97k Ice
cold AC. A steal
at this price
$2,495
02 Pontiac
Sunfire
102k, 5 speed
stick shift, cold
air $3,795
01 Ford
Explorer XLT
Leather, moon-
roof, cold air,
124k, $4,295
99 Plymouth
Grand Voyager
1 owner, 106k,
$3,495 Same as
Caravan.
00 Chevy
Blazer
2 door, Z71 pack-
age, 58,000
miles, $5,995
03 S10 Pickup
2 wheel drive,
new inspection,
$3,495
94 Jeep
Grand
Cherokee
Limited
New brakes and
ball joints, front
and rear, nice
truck! $3,295
01 Buick
Century
Custom, 4 door,
122k, $2,995
97 Saturn SC
Coop 5 speed,
122k, new timing
chain, new tires,
save gas now!
$2,895
ALL VEHICLES
ARE
INSPECTED
AND
WARRANTED
Boat? Car? Truck?
Motorcycle? Air-
plane? Whatever it
is, sell it with a
Classified ad.
570-829-7130
CHEVROLET `99
S-10 PICK-UP
Silver,
85,000 miles,
excellent condition,
covered bed.
$3800
570-822-7657
Travel
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
PAGE 2D MONDAY, AUGUST 6, 2012 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
135 Legals/
Public Notices
135 Legals/
Public Notices
250 General Auction 250 General Auction
INVITATION FOR BIDS
The Municipality of Kingston in corporation
with the Luzerne County Office of Commu-
nity Development, will receive Bids for the
2012 Community Block Development Pro-
gram, Mercer Avenue Pump Station Reha-
bilitation Project, generally comprised of
the replacement of three (3) existing
stormwater pumps and all incidental work
related thereto until 11:00 A.M. (local time)
on the 20th day of August, 2012 at the
Kingston Municipal Building located at 500
Wyoming Avenue, Kingston, PA 18704-
3681. The Bids will be publicly opened and
read aloud immediately thereafter.
A pre-Bid conference will be held at 11:00
a.m. on Friday, August 10, 2012 at the
Kingston Municipal Building located at 500
Wyoming Avenue, Kingston. Representa-
tives of OWNER and ENGINEER will be
present to discuss the Project. Bidders
are encouraged to attend and participate
in the conference.
CONTRACT DOCUMENTS, including
DRAWINGS and PROJECT MANUAL, may
be examined and obtained at Borton-Law-
son Engineering, Inc., 613 Baltimore Drive,
Suite 300, Wilkes-Barre, PA 18702-7903.
CONTRACT DOCUMENTS may be exam-
ined at the Administrative Offices of the
Municipality of Kingston (same address as
above) and the Northeastern Pennsylvania
Contractors Association, Inc., 1075 Oak
Street, Suite 3, Pittston, PA 18640.
PROJECT MANUAL is in one binding and
DRAWINGS are bound separately. Bidders
may secure DRAWINGS and a PROJECT
MANUAL upon payment of sixty dollars
($60.00). (Please add $10.00 for U.S. Mail
delivery or $20.00 for FedEx delivery with-
out a FedEx account.) All construction
work is included in one Prime Contract.
Checks shall be made payable to Borton-
Lawson, and will not be refunded. Bidders
and Sub-Bidders, such as Sub-Contrac-
tors and Materialmen, may secure addi-
tional CONTRACT DOCUMENTS upon pay-
ment of forty dollars ($40) per PROJECT
MANUAL and three dollars ($3) for each
DRAWING.
Each BID, when submitted, must be
accompanied by a "Bid Security" which
shall not be less than ten percent (10%) of
the amount of the BID.
The Labor Standards, Wage Determination
Decision and Anti-Kickback regulations
(29CFR, Part 3) issued by the Secretary of
Labor are included in the contract docu-
ments of this project and govern all work
under the contract. The contractor must
comply with the minimum rates for wages
for laborers and mechanics as determined
by the Secretary of Labor in accordance
with the provisions of the Davis-Bacon and
Related Acts.
Non-discrimination in Employment-Bid-
ders on this work will be required to com-
ply with the Presidents Executive Order
11246 and will be required to insure that
employees and applicants for employment
are not discriminated against on the basis
of their race, color, national origin, sex,
religion, age, disability or familial status in
employment or the provision of services.
In addition to EEO Executive Order 11246,
Contractors must also establish a 6.9%
goal for female participation and a 0.6%
goal for minority participation in the aggre-
gate on-site construction work force for
construction contracts in excess of
$10,000 as per the notice of requirement
for affirmative action as contained in the
contract documents. Attention is called to
Section 3 of the Housing and Urban Devel-
opment Act of 1968, 12 USC 179 LU and
the Section 3 clause and regulations set
forth in 24 CFR, Part 135.
In compliance with Executive Order 11625
and 12138, the successful bidder must uti-
lize to the greatest extent feasible, minor-
ity and/or women-owned businesses
located in the municipality, county or gen-
eral trade area.
The Municipality of Kingston does not dis-
criminate on the basis of race, color, natu-
ral origin, sec, religion, age, disability or
familial status in employment or the provi-
sion of services.
The Municipality of Kingston is an Equal
Employment Opportunity Employer.
The successful Bidder will be required to
furnish and pay for a satisfactory Perfor-
mance Bond and a Labor and Material
Payment Bond.
The Municipality of Kingston reserves the
right to reject any or all Bids and to waive
informalities in the Bidding.
BIDS may be held by OWNER for a period
of not to exceed seventy-five (75) days
from the date of the opening of BIDS for
the purpose of reviewing the BIDS and
investigating the qualifications of Bidders,
prior to awarding of the CONTRACT.
For The Municipality of Kingston:
Paul Keating, Administrator
BID NOTICE
Sealed bids and/or request for propos-
als (RFPs) will be received by Mr. Anthony
Ryba, Secretary, Hazleton Area School
District, 1515 West 23rd Street, Hazle
Township, Pennsylvania 18202-1647, until
11:00 A.M., Tuesday, August 14, 2012,
for the following:
1) Hazleton Area High School Water
Leakage Improvements Project -
Phase III (Bid)
2) Printing Services (Bid)
3) Purchase & Installation of ADA
Pool Chair Lifts (Bid)
4) Purchase & Installation of a
Milling Machine (Bid)
5) Purchase & Installation of a
Sprayer Simulator (Bid)
Public Bid / RFP Opening:
Date: Tuesday, August 14, 2012
Time: 11:05 A.M.
Location: HASD Administration Building
First Floor Conference Room
1515 West 23rd Street
Hazle Township, PA
18202-1647
A copy of the specifications for these
bids/contracts/RFPs may be obtained at
the office of the undersigned or call (570)
459-3111 ext. 3106. In addition, bids /
RFPs may be obtained off of the school
district website (http://www.hasdk12.
org/webbids). Questions regarding the
bid specifications should be directed via
email to Robert J. Krizansky (krizanskyr
@hasdk12.org).
All proposals must be submitted in a
sealed envelope, which shall be plainly
identified as a bid and/or RFP. Where indi-
cated, bids / RFPs shall be accompanied
by a certified check or bid bond in an
amount specified within the specifications
of the proposal to be drawn in favor of the
Hazleton Area School District. Emailed or
faxed bids will not be accepted.
The Hazleton Area School District
reserves the right to accept or reject any
or all bids / RFPs received and the right to
waive any informalities.
/s/ Anthony Ryba
Secretary / Business Manager
MULTIPLE ESTATES
ANTIQUES, COLLECTIBLES
& GENERAL MERCHANDISE
AUCTION
TRAVERS AUCTIONS
56 Dorchester Dr., Dallas, PA
Tuesday, August 7, 2012
Inspection: 3:30 PM Start Time: 5:00 PM
ANTIQUES (including furniture)
COLLECTIBLES CONTEMPORARY
FURNISHINGS - GENERAL
MERCHANDISE JEWELRY,
BOX LOTS + MUCH MORE!!
Visit us at: www.auctionzip.com (ID #2280)
or www.traversauctions.com
or call 570.674.2631
Travers Auction Barn: RH926
Auctioneer: Steve Traver AU3367L
10% Buyers Premium
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
Mention this ad
when you call!
DIVORCE No Fault
$295 divorce295.com
Atty. Kurlancheek
800-324-9748 W-B
Free Bankruptcy
Consultation
Payment plans.
Carol Baltimore
570-822-1959
310 Attorney
Services
B A N K R U P T C Y
DUI - ARD
SOCIAL SECURITY
DISABILITY BENEFITS
WORKERS COMP
Free Consultation
25+ Years Exp.
Joseph M.
Blazosek
570-655-4410
570-822-9556
blazoseklaw.com
SOCIAL SECURITY
DISABILITY
Free Consultation.
Contact Atty. Sherry
Dalessandro
570-823-9006
AUTO
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
468 Auto Parts
All Junk
Cars &
Trucks
Wanted
Highest
Prices
Paid In
CA$H
FREE
PICKUP
570-574-1275
472 Auto Services
$ WANTED JUNK $
VEHICLES
LISPI TOWING
We pick up 822-0995
472 Auto Services
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
12/31/12
WANTED
Cars & Full Size
Trucks. For prices...
Lamoreaux Auto
Parts 477-2562
To Place Your Ad, Call 829-7130
409 Autos under
$5000
FORD 95 F150
4x4. 1 Owner. 91K.
4.8 engine, auto.
Runs great. New
paint, stake body
with metal floor.
570-675-5046.
Leave message,
will return call.
$4990.
409 Autos under
$5000
HYUNDAI 03
ELANTRA GS
Black. 1 owner.
Non-Smoker. Fan-
tastic Fuel Econo-
my! Florida car
(CLEAN). Freshly
Serviced. 112K
miles. $3300. Call
(570) 822-3005.
409 Autos under
$5000
CADILLAC `94
DEVILLE SEDAN
94,000 miles,
automatic, front
wheel drive, 4
door, air condi-
tioning, air bags,
all power, cruise
control, leather
interior, $3,300.
570-394-9004
GRAND MARQUIS
99 GS
Well maintained,
Smooth riding,
4.6L, V8, RWD,
Auto, Power
windows, power
locks, New
Inspection,
Serviced,
Silver over blue.
Good tires
$3,750
Call 823-4008
JEEP `97
GRAND CHEROKEE
LAREDO
4x4, low mileage,
all options, 6 cyl.
Excellent. $2,875
Call 570-309-7230
KIA `00
SPORTAGE EX
4wd, dark green,
75,000 miles,
leather interior, A/C,
pb, pl, ps and pw
asking $2000
call 570-332-4884
NISSAN 95
PATHFINDER
4 door, auto, XE
4WD, 143,000 mi,
runs good, body
very good, no rust,
garage kept, $3200
neg. 570-455-2705
between
10am and 7pm
412 Autos for Sale
AUDI `01 A6
4.2 Engine, good
condition, per kelly
blue book, Quatro
awd, abs 4 wheel,
navigation system,
integrated phone,
plus all standard
Audi options, super
clean, garage kept,
recently inspected.
If you ever wanted
an Audi, heres
your opportunity!
Asking $5200.
570-678-5618 or
570-574-3441
BUICK `97 LESABRE
Limited. V6. 4 door,
silver exterior, grey
interior, fully equip-
ped, power every-
thing. 94k original
miles. Snow tires
included. Currently
inspected. Family
car. $2900.
570-675-2468
CADILLAC `08 DTS
Fully loaded, 14,000
miles, automatic, all
power, leather
interior, showroom
condition. Silver.
$25,000. Call Mike
570-779-4351
CADILLAC 00 DTS
Tan, satellite
radio, leather,
moon roof, loaded
excellent
condition. 136k
miles. $4,995.
570-814-2809
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 03 IMPALA
V6, Very clean
car! $3,995
570-696-4377
DODGE `07 CALIBER
SXT
Steel blue, power
windows & locks,
90,000 miles, runs
great. $6,800
570-466-1044
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
08 CHEVY AVEO
red, auto, 4 cyl
07 BUICK LACROSSE
CXL, black, V6
07 BUICK LUCERNE
CXL, silver, grey
leather
06 LINCOLN ZEPHYR
grey, tan leather,
sun roof
06 MERCURY MILAN
PREMIER, mint
green, V6, alloys
05 HYUNDAI SONATA
GLS, blue, sun-
roof, 79K miles
05 CHEVY IMPALA
silver, alloys, V6
04 NISSAN MAXIMA LS
silver, auto,
sunroof
03 MITSUBISHI ECLIPSE
GS blue sunroof
49,000 miles
03 AUDI S8 QUATTRO,
mid blue/light grey
leather, naviga-
tion, AWD
02 FORD ESCORT SE
red, auto, 4 cyl
01 VOLVO V70 STATION
WAGON, blue/grey,
leather, AWD
00 BMW 323i
silver auto
73 PORSCHE 914
green & black, 5
speed, 62k miles,
$12,500
SUVS, VANS,
TRUCKS, 4 X4s
09 DODGE JOURNEY
blue, 3rd seat,
AWD
08 DODGE NITRO
SXT orange,
auto, 4x4
08 FORD ESCAPE XLT
SILVER, V6, 4X4
06 INFINITY QX56
Pearl white, tan
leather, Naviga
tion, 3rd seat, 4x4
06 DODGE RAM 1500
QUAD CAB, Black,
V8, 4x4 truck
06 FORD EXPLORER
XLT, black, 3rd
seat, 4x4
06 CHEVY TRAILBLZAER
LS, SILVER, 4X4
05 FORD FREESTAR SE,
white, 7 pax mini
van
05 CADILLAC SRX
black, leather, V6,
AWD
05 HYUNDAI TUSCON LX
green auto, AWD
05 DODGE DURANGO
LTD Black, grey
leather, 3rd seat,
4x4
05 JEEP LIBERTY
RENEGADE Blue,
5 speed, V6, 4x4
05 DODGE DAKOTA
CLUB CAB SPORT,
blue, auto, 4x4
truck
04 MITSUBISHI
OUTLANDER XLS
red, auto, 4 cyl.,
AWD
04 FORD ESCAPE XLT
silver, 3rd seat,
4x4
04 NISSAN XTERRA XE
blue, auto, 4x4
04 CHEVY TAHOE LT
4x4 Pewter, grey
leather, 3rd seat
04 CHEVY AVALANCHE
Z71, green, 4 door,
4x4 truck
04 JEEP GRAND
CHEROKEE OVERLAND
graphite grey,
2 tone leather,
sunroof, 4x4
02 CHEVEY TRAILBLAZ-
ER LT, silver, V6,
4x4
02 FORD F150
SUPERCAB XLT
silver, 4x4 truck
01 DODGE RAM 1500
QUAD CAB SPORT,
red, V8, 4x4 truck
01 DODGE DURANGO
SLT grey, 3rd seat
79,000 miles. 4x4
01 FORD F150 XLT
white, super cab,
4x4 truck
01 FORD F150 XLT
Blue/tan, 4 door,
4x4 truck
00 DODGE RAM 1500
QUAD CAB SPORT,
green, V8, 4x4
truck
00 CHEVY 1500
SILVERADO X-CAB
green, 4x4 truck
99 FORD EXPLORER
SPORT 2 door
black, 4x4
99 NISSAN PATHINDER
gold, V6, 4x4
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
FORD `01
FOCUS ZX3
Auto, air, alloys,
power window &
door locks, 85,000
miles. Great vehicle
for student. $3,995.
570-498-7036
412 Autos for Sale
06 Dodge
Stratus SXT 6 cyl,
AT-AC $7,899
2011 Mitsubishi
Endeavor 4x4,
20k, Factory War-
ranty $18,799
11 Ford Escape
XLT, 4x4, 26k,
Factory Warranty,
6 Cylinder
$19,099
11 E250 Cargo
AT-AC cruise, 15k,
factory warranty
$17,899
11 Nissan Rogue,
AWD, 27k Factory
warranty
$17,599
05 HONDA CRV EX
4x4 65k, title.
$12,799
06 FORD FREESTAR
62k, Rear air A/C
$7,899
03 F250 XL
Super Duty only
24k! AT-AC,
$7,599
01 LINCOLN TOWN
CAR Executive 74K
$5,399
11 Toyota Rav 4
4x4 AT
only 8,000 miles,
alloys, power sun-
roof. new condition.
Factory warranty
$21,599
CROSSROAD
MOTORS
570-825-7988
700 Sans Souci
Highway
W WE E S S E L L E L L
F O R F O R L L E S S E S S ! ! ! !
TITLE TAGS
FULL NOTARY
SERVICE
6 MONTH WARRANTY
DODGE 02
VIPER GTS
10,000 MILES V10
6speed, collec-
tors, this baby is
1 of only 750 GTS
coupes built in
2002 and only 1 of
83 painted Race
Yellow it still wears
its original tires
showing how it
was babied. This
car is spotless
throughout and is
ready for its new
home. This vehicle
is shown by
appointment only.
$39,999 or trade.
570-760-2365
FORD 02 MUSTANG
GT CONVERTIBLE
Red with black
top. 6,500 miles.
One Owner.
Excellent Condi-
tion. $17,500
570-760-5833
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
LEOS AUTO SALES
93 Butler St
Wilkes-Barre, PA
570-825-8253
Kia Sedona 04
7 Passenger Van
Leather, air, CD,
sunroof, 6 cylinder,
auto, very good
condition. $3,850
Mercury Tracer
98 4 cylinder, 4
door, auto. $1,550
Current Inspection
On All Vehicles
DEALER
MERCEDES 00 E_320
Showroom condi-
tion; was $50K new;
no winters, flawless
with all options. Sil-
ver/Gold. 94k miles.
$9,995.
570-262-1223.
MERCURY `79 ZEPHYR
6 cylinder
automatic.
52k original miles.
$1500.
570-899-1896
412 Autos for Sale
VITOS
&
GINOS
949 Wyoming
Ave, Forty Fort
288-8995
09 Mercedes
GL450 7 passen-
ger. Too many
options to list. 30K
miles. Garage
kept. Creme puff.
$47,800
04 Nissan
Armada 7 pas-
senger. 4wd.
Excellent condi-
tion. $11,900
93 UD Tow Truck
with wheel lift.
64k. $10,000
96 Jeep, Grand
Cherokee, 4
wheel drive, 4
door, runs excel-
lent
$3,995
95 Buick Park Ave
54k. $3,995
96 Plymouth
Voyager 82k
$3,495
99 Chevy
Cavalier, 89k. 4
door. $2,495
00 Chevy S10
Blazer. 4 door.
4wd. Red.
$2,795
96 Nissan Maxi-
ma, V6, 4 door,
air, auto, sun-
roof. 103K.
$3,495
Junk
Cars &
Trucks
wanted.
Cash paid.
LEXUS `05 RX 330
All wheel drive,
Champagne tan,
navigation, backup
camera, lift gate,
ivory leather with
memory, auto, 3.3
liter V6, regular
gas, garaged,
brand new condi-
tion, all service
records. 6 disc CD.
Private seller with
transferable 1 year
warranty, 96K.
REDUCED to
$16,590.
570-563-2731
Selling your
Camper?
Place an ad and
find a new owner.
570-829-7130
WANTED!
ALL
JUNK
CARS!
CA$H
PAID
570-301-3602
MERCURY `03 SABLE
LS PREMIUM
4 door, one owner.
6 cyl, 3 liter, 4
speed auto. All
power, ABS, moon
roof & remote.
73,000 miles, very
dependable. $4,550
570-333-4827
PONTIAC `06 GRAND
PRIX GXP
80,000 miles, auto-
matic, front wheel
drive, 4 door, all
power, sun/moon
roof. $11,000
(570)855-2062
PONTIAC `86
FIREBIRD
Black, V6, very
clean. 61K. Garage
kept, fully main-
tained & recently
inspected. $16,000
570-474-9866 or
570-332-2487
412 Autos for Sale
MARZAK MOTORS
601 Green Ridge St, Scranton
9 9 9 9 9 9 9
00 Ford Taurus
Station Wagon
Silver, grey leather
interior, 132,000
miles, all options
work. $2,599
99 GMC Sierra
Pickup
4x4, extended cab,
bed cap, gray,
132,000 miles
$4,795
00 Ford Windstar
Minivan
3rd row seat, rear
A/C, gray, 132,000
miles $2,699
00 FORD WIND-
STAR LX
3rd seat, ice cold
air, 132,000 miles
$2,695
LINCOLN 02
TOWNCAR
Signature series,
Silver, grey leather
interior, 99,000
miles, runs great
$4,795
05 CHEVY AVEO
Silver, 4 door, grey
cloth interior, A/C,
re-built transmission
with warranty, 4 cyl.
79,000 miles
$4,995
02 Mercury
Mountaineer
all wheel drive,
green exterior, tan
leather interior, lots
of options,
$4,500
03 Mazda 6
5 speed, yellow with
grey interior, 4 door,
loaded with options.
$4,295
Warranties Avail-
able
9 9 9 9 9 9 9
570-445-5622
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
VW 10 JETTA
15,900 miles, stan-
dard transmission.
Garage kept, white
with sunroof. $15K
570-387-8639
415 Autos-Antique
& Classic
CHEVROLET `76
PICKUP
4 Cylinder
Very Good
Condition!
NEW PRICE
$2,500.
570-362-3626
Ask for Lee
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
CORVETTE 64
CONVERTIBLE
327 NOM manual 4
speed transmission,
red/black interior,
ps, pb, teakwood
wheel, original
owner 25 years.
$38,000. 883-4443
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. Priced to Sell!
$23,000.
Call 570-825-6272
421 Boats &
Marinas
FISHING BOAT.
Like new. 16 1/2
Trophy Fiberglass.
25 HP Johnson
motor, 48 lb
thrust, trolling
motor with foot
control. Recharg-
er, pedestal front
seat, carpeted
floor. Live well,
storage compart-
ment. Excellent
condition. $4500.
570-675-5046
after 12 noon
421 Boats &
Marinas
YAMAHA
WAVERUNNER
GP800R
2001 2 cylinder
2stroke 784cc
Less than 20
hours of use
Recently serviced
New battery New
spark plugs
No cracks or
fades in seat
Included Yamaha
GP800Cover and
single PWC trailer
Must pick up
$4500.00
Call 570 313 7744
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
FORD `70 F350
Dual rear wheels,
360 V8, 4 speed,
standard transmis-
sion, 10 foot cube
box. New tires, runs
good, 52,000 miles.
$1,000 call
570-388-2464
439 Motorcycles
12 BRAND NEW
SCOOTER
All ready to ride,
electric start, auto-
matic transmission,
disk brakes, rear
luggage trunk,
under seat storage,
around 100 mpg,
fully street legal, all
ready to go! only
$1,595. Call
570-817-2952
99 HARLEY FHLT
27,000 miles,
excellent condition,
detachable tour
pack, $7,800. Call
570-678-3790
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
HONDA 98 ST1100
Black, 2 new tires
and fork seals, Tour
pak. excellent con-
dition. $4,200.
570-675-1982
KAWASAKI 07 EX 650
Ninja, blue, low
miles, garage kept,
excellent condition.
$3,000.
570-704-8254
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
SUZUKI 12
BOULEVARD LS650
Under 100 miles
and 400 lbs, must
sell. Serious
inquiries only. Many
Extras $5,000 firm.
570-855-5084
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
EXPEDITION 03 37U
CUMMINS 300 DIESEL
PUSHER
19,000 miles,
2 slides, 8 kw Gen.
2 Air conditioners,
Microwave-Convect
Oven, 4 door ref-
with automatic ice
maker, heated hold-
ing tanks,
Corian counter
tops, 2 TV- sur-
round sound, cherry
cabinets, ice maker,
washer/dryer.
Sleeps 6. Queen
beds, back up
camera, recently
inspected, garaged
in winter. $64,500
570-288-2649
FOREST RIVER`08
5TH WHEEL
Model 8526RLS
Mountain Top,PA
$18,500
570-760-6341
442 RVs & Campers
PACE ARROW VISION
99 M-36 B (FORD)
Type A gas, 460
V10 Ford. Excellent
condition, 11,000
miles. I slide out, 2
awnings, 2 color
flat screen TVs.
Generator, back up
camera, 2 air con-
ditioners, micro-
wave/convection
oven, side by side
refrigerator with ice
maker, washer/
dryer, queen size
bed, automatic
steps. $29,900.
570-288-4826 or
570-690-1464
SOUTHWIND `93
30 fully equipped
RV. Nice condition.
Sleeps 6. At Camp-
ground with lake
rights. $13,495
Negotiable. Call
570-379-2102
451 Trucks/
SUVs/Vans
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
CHEVY 99 BLAZER
4x4, Absolutely
Like new! $3,995
Call For Details!
570-696-4377
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
DODGE 04
DURANGO
1 owner, leather
sunroof, 3rd row
seat $6,995
Call For Details!
570-696-4377
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. $3,995
Call For Details!
570-696-4377
FORD 73 F350
Stake Body Truck
55,000 Original
miles - garage
kept, only 2 own-
ers, hydraulic lift
gate, new tires,
battery and brakes.
Excellent condition.
No rust. Must see.
$4900 or best offer
Call 570-687-6177
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
FORD 00
EXPLORER XLT
EXTRA CLEAN!
4X4.
$3,995.
570-696-4377
451 Trucks/
SUVs/Vans
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
FORD 03
EXPLORER XLT
4X4, leather,
sunroof, like new!
$5,995
570-696-4377
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
FORD 03
EXPLORER XLT
4X4, leather,
sunroof, like new!
$5,995
570-696-4377
JEEP 02 GRAND
CHEROKEE LAREDO
6 cylinder 4 WD, air
conditioning power
windows, door
locks, cruise, dual
air bags, tilt wheel,
AM/FM/CD. keyless
remote. 130k miles.
$5400.
570-954-3390
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
JEEP 04 GRAND
CHEROKEE LOREDO
4x4, 6 cyl, 1
Owner, Extra
Clean SUV!
$5,995
Call For Details!
570-696-4377
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
MAZDA 01
B3000
4x4, 5 speed,
extra clean truck
$3,995
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
NISSAN `04
PATHFINDER
ARMADA
Excellent condition.
Too many options to
list. Runs & looks
excellent. $10,995
570-655-6132 or
570-466-8824
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
SATURN 04 VUE
Front wheel drive,
4 cyl, 5 speed,
sunroof, clean,
clean SUV! $4,995
Call For Details!
570-696-4377
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com MONDAY, AUGUST 6, 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
HOURS: Monday Thru Thursday 8:00am - 7:00pm
Friday & Saturday 8:00am - 5:00pm
1-888-307-7077
*All Leases Payments based on 24 mos with 10,000 miles per year, $3,000. Cash or trade down plus tax, tags & 1st payment due @ signing. All Factory rebates applied. See dealer for details.
Residual Values: A-$19,269 B-$17,132.40 C-$21,885 D-$21,372.75
We Service
ALL
Motor Vehicles
Just Ask
STAN!
Just Ask
STAN!
State Inspection
Must Present Coupon Prior To Service. Expires 8/31/12 Av.
$.99
Lube Oil Filter
Must Present Coupon Prior To Service. Expires 8/31/12 Av.
$24.95
Rotate & Balance
Must Present Coupon Prior To Service. Expires 8/31/12 Av.
$24.95
Emissions Inspection
Must Present Coupon Prior To Service. Expires 8/31/12 Av.
$24.95
Coolant System Services
Must Present Coupon Prior To Service. Expires 8/31/12 Av.
$89.95
Automatic Transmission Service
Must Present Coupon Prior To Service. Expires 8/31/12 Av.
$124.95
Call today 876-2100
Some restrictions apply. See dealer for details.
Bad Credit - No Credit
We Make It Simple
2 WAYS TO PURCHASE
YOUR NEXT CAR
TOLL
FREE 1-855-313-LOAN (5626)
or
ONLINE @ www.ApproveMyCredit.com
An Eynon Buick GMC Dealership
NEW CARS
USED CARS
04 JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE 4X4 Special Edition....
$
7,995
06 JEEP LIBERTY SPORT 4X4 One Owner ....................
$
8,995
03 GMC YUKON DENALI AWD...............
$
10,900
11 HYUNDAI ACCENTS (4 Available) .......
$
13,995
11 TOYOTA YARIS SEDANS.....................
$
14,900
09 CHEVY MALIBU LT............................................
$
14,995
10 DODGE CALIBERS (2 Available) ........
$
14,995
10 CHRYSLER SEBRING (2 Available). From
$
14,995
10 VW BEETLE COUPE..........................................
$
15,900
11 DODGE AVENGER SXT..............................
$
16,900
12 FORD E-150 CARGO VAN...................
$
19,900
11 JEEP LIBERTY SPORT 4X4...................
$
19,900
11 NISSAN ROGUE AWD................................
$
19,900
11 HYUNDAI SANTA FE AWD..................
$
20,900
11 DODGE CHALLENGER................................
$
22,900
11 MAZDA CX-7 AWD..........................................
$
23,900
11 CHEVY TRAVERSE LT AWD..................
$
26,995
12 NISSAN MAXIMA 16K Miles...............................
$
25,995
11 NISSAN ALTIMA 23K Miles ..................................
$
17,995
11 TOYOTA COROLLA 27K Miles..........................
$
16,995
05 GMC ENVOY 4X4 78K Miles.................................
$
12,995
08 DODGE RAM 2500 QUAD CAB 4X4 83K Miles .
$
18,995
09 JEEP WRANGLER X 4X4 50K Miles.............
$
18,900
08 PONTIAC TORRENT AWDS Choose From 2 From
$
14,995
NEW 2012 BUICK
LACROSSE SDN
$
328
Stk#2020,
Convenience Pkg,
V6 Engine
NEW 2012 BUICK
VERANO SDN
Stk#2084,
4 Cyl,
Power Options
NEW 2012 GMC SIERRA
1500 EXT CAB 4X4
Stk#1984, 5.3L V8, SLE Pkg, Power Tech Pkg
NEW 2012 GMC
TERRAIN AWD
Stk#2079, SLE-2 Pkg,
Convenience Pkg,
Chrome Wheels
LEASE
FOR
PER
MO.
A
$
192
LEASE
FOR
PER
MO.
B
$
395
LEASE
FOR
PER
MO.
C
$
313
LEASE
FOR
PER
MO.
D
1339N. River Street,
Plains, PA. 18702
829-2043
www.jo-danmotors.com
J
O
-
DAN
MOTORS
TAX AND TAGS ADDITIONAL We Now Offer Buy Here-Pay Here!
LOWDOWN PAYMENT CLEAN, INSPECTED VEHICLES
6 MO. WARRANTY ON ALL VEHICLES FULL SERVICE DEPARTMENT
We Service ALL Makes & Models
Family Owned & Operated for over 40 years
08 CHEVY TRAILBLAZER LT
Maroon, 50K Miles, Sunroof, P. Seat . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
$
17,995
08 MERCURY SABLE
Light Blue, Only 16K Miles! Nicely Equipped. . . . . . . . . . .
$
15,995
08 DODGE MAGNUM
White, PDL, PWL, Cruise, CD . . . . .. . . . .. . . . .. . . . .. . . . .. . . . .. . . . .. . . .
$
13,995
08 HYUNDAI ENTOURAGE
Gold, 7 Pass. , Rear A/C, Very Nice . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
$
12,995
07 JEEP LIBERTY
Green, PW, PDL, Tilt, Cruise. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
$
12,995
07 DODGE CALIBER
Orange Met. , 4 Cyl. , Nicely Equipped. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
$
10,495
03 CHEVY S-10 BLAZER LS
Pewter, 4 Dr. , Only 32K Miles. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
$
9,995
08 PONTIAC G5
Red, Cpe. , 5-Speed, Spoiler. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
$
9,995
04 FORD MUSTANG
Dark Red, 40th Anniversary, 5 Speed. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
$
7,995
90 CHRYSLER LEBARON CONV.
White, 1 Owner, V6, Only 29K Miles . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . .. . . . . . . .. . . . . . . ..
$
7,995
S
O
L
D
S
O
L
D
7
6
7
6
5
9
197 West End Road, Wilkes-Barre, PA 18706
825-7577
YOMING VALLEY
AUTO SALES INC. AAA
SERVICED, INSPECTED, & WARRANTIED
FINANCING AVAILABLE
www.WyomingValleyAutos.com
MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM
SIZZLING SUMMER SALE
2003 CHEVY MALIBU
LS
PW, PDL, P. Seat, Moonroof, 85K
ONLY
$
5,950
2001 VW CABRIO
CONVERTIBLE
Auto, Leather, Gorgeous
ONLY
$
4,250
2007 CHEVY COBALT
LS
Sharp, A/C, AM/FM, 79K
ONLY
$
6,900
2002 DODGE NEON
ES
PW, AM/FM, 77K
ONLY
$
4,775
2005 MAZDA 3
5 Spd., Moonroof, Only 78k
Miles, Super Sharp!
ONLY
$
8,995
1995 HONDA DEL SOL
REMOVABLE HARDTOP
A True Classic, Sharp Red
ONLY
$
3,450
2005 MAZDA 3
CONVERTIBLE
A t L th G
Selling Your Car?
Well run your ad until the vehicle is sold
Call Classied at 829-7130
PAGE 4D MONDAY, AUGUST 6, 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
FORD BONUS REBATE............. 1,500
FMCC REBATE........................... 1,000
OFF LEASE REBATE................. 1,000
COCCIA DISCOUNT OFF MSRP..... 1,601
6.2LV8, XL Decor Group, Snow Plow Pkg.,
Electronic Locking Axle, Speed Control,
Sliding Rear Window, Stabilizer Pkg.,
Trailer Brake Controller,
Pwr. Equipment Group,
CD, Tilt Wheel, Air,
FORD REBATE........................................ 2,000
FORD BONUS REBATE.............................. 500
FMCC REBATE........................................ 1,000
OFF LEASE REBATE............................... 1,000
TRADE IN REBATE................................... 750
CHROME PKG DISCOUNT OFF MSRP............... 1,500
COCCIA DISCOUNT OFF MSRP.................. 2,166
XLT, Auto., 18 Chrome Wheels, Drivers Pkg., SYNC, ABS,
40/20/40 Split Seat, Convenience Pkg., Keyless Entry with
Keypad, Fog Lamps, Pwr. Seat, Pwr. Sliding Rear Window,
CD, Trailer Tow Pkg., Sirius Satellite Radio, Chrome Pkg.,
Pwr. Equipment Group, Chrome Step Bar, Cruise
FORD BONUS REBATE........................... 1,000
OFF LEASE REBATE............................... 1,000
COCCIA DISCOUNT OFF MSRP..................... 186
All Wheel Drive, 3.5L Engine, MyFord
Display, Auto. Climate Control, Pwr.
Mirrors, 17 Steel Wheels, Keyless
Entry, MyKey, PL, PW, CD,
Cruise Control,
24
Mos.
STX, 3.7LV6, Auto., ABS, 17 Aluminum
Wheels, 40/20/40 Split Seat, Decor
Pkg., Cruise, Cloth Seat, Air,
Pwr. Equipment Group
FORD REBATE........................... 2,000
FMCC REBATE........................... 1,000
OFF LEASE REBATE................. 1,000
TRADE IN REBATE...................... 750
COCCIA DISCOUNT OFF MSRP..... 1,101
FORD REBATE........................... 1,000
FORD BONUS REBATE................ 500
FMCC REBATE........................... 1,000
OFF LEASE REBATE................. 1,000
COCCIA DISCOUNT OFF MSRP..... 1,101
24
Mos.
Front Wheel Drive,
Air, AM/FM Radio,
Auto., Anti-Theft
Sys., Anti-Lock Brakes
Sys., Front & Side Airbags,
Wire Mesh Bulkhead,
Cargo Management Pkg.
MOS.
APR
FORD REBATE........................... 1,500
FMCC REBATE........................... 1,000
OFF LEASE REBATE................. 1,000
TRADE IN REBATE...................... 750
XLWORK PKG DISCOUNT OFF MSRP.. . 500
COCCIA DISCOUNT OFF MSRP........ 501
3.7V6, XL Plus Pkg., Cruise Control,
CD, MyKey Sys., Pwr. Equipment
Group, Pwr. Mirrors,
40/20/40 Cloth Seat,
XL Decor 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 8/31/12.
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 8/31/12.
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 8/31/12.
*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 8/31/12.
*Tax and tags extra. Security Deposit waived. All factory rebates applied **Lease payments based on 24 month lease 21,000 allowable miles. First months payment, $595 Bank Fee, and $2,500 down payment (cash or trade) due at
delivery. See salesperson for details. All payments subject to credit approval by the primary lending source, Tier 0 rate. Special APR financing cannot be combined with Ford cash rebate. BUY FOR prices are based on 72 month at $18.30 per month per $1000
financed with $2,500 down (cash or trade). Photos of vehicles are for illustration purposes only. Coccia Ford is not responsible for any typographical errors. No Security Deposit Necessary. See dealer for details. Sale ends
M
O
S.
APR
PLUS
FORD REBATE.............................. 1,500
FORD BONUS REBATE................ 1,000
FMCC REBATE................................. 750
OFF LEASE REBATE.................... 1,000
FORD REGIONAL DISCOUNT OFF MSRP.. . 195
COCCIA DISCOUNT OFF MSRP.......... 941
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 8/31/12.
All Wheel Drive, XLT, Safety Canopy, Side Impact Safety
Pkg., Pwr. Drivers Seat, Auto., PW, PDL, CD, Air, Fog
Lamps, Privacy Glass, Roof Rack, 16 Alum. Wheels,
Sirius Satellite Radio, Keyless Entry, Rear Cargo
Convenience Pkg.,
FORD REBATE............................................... 500
FORD COMMERCIAL ACCOUNT REBATE.................... 375
OFF LEASE REBATE.................................. 1,000
COCCIA DISCOUNT OFF MSRP......................... 420
MOS.
APR
Pwr. Windows, PDL, Air, Advance Trac
with Roll Stability Control, Remote
Keyless Entry, MyFord, Convenience
Group, Auto. Headlamps, Reverse
Sensing System, CD Player
MOS.
APR
MOS.
APR
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com MONDAY, AUGUST 6, 2012 PAGE 5D
551 Other
548 Medical/Health
533 Installation/
Maintenance/
Repair
554 Production/
Operations
522 Education/
Training
548 Medical/Health
533 Installation/
Maintenance/
Repair
554 Production/
Operations
522 Education/
Training
548 Medical/Health
533 Installation/
Maintenance/
Repair
Do you have what it takes to lead and
provide the highest level of quality care?
Then we want to hear from you!
We provide our employees with a comfortable and stable work place,
great pay and amazing benets. Our Per Diem shifts offer exibility
so you are able to balance your personal life and career. Apply with us
today to jump start your future!
395 Middle Road, Nanticoke
To apply or to learn about our nursing
employment opportunities
Call 877-339-6999 x 1
Email resumes to Jobs@horizonhrs.com
Or visit us and apply in person
LPNs - Per Diem
All Shift Openings
RNs - Part Time Weekends
& Per Diem
CNAs - Full & Part Time
All Shift Openings
ELECTRONICS/
TELEMETERING TECHNICIAN
UGI Penn Natural Gas is seeking an experienced elec-
tronics technician for the Gas telemetry department to
maintain the natural gas measurement and control
system instrumentation and equipment. Associate
Degree in electronics, computer science, or equivalent
work related experience, Knowledge of electronic
circuitry, network communications,
24 hour callout availability.
Good mathematical/analytical skills.
Send resume and salary requirements to:
UGI PNG
Human Resources
UGI Penn Natural Gas
One UGI Center
Wilkes-Barre, PA 18711
E.O.E. AA M/F//V
MANUFACTURING
NI GHT SHI FT NI GHT SHI FT
MACHINE OPERATORS NEEDED
$9.00/hour to start.
60-90 day evaluation with $ increase $
based on YOUR performance, attendance
etc. Benefit Package includes: Medical,
Dental, Vision, Life Insurance, Vacation,
Holiday pay PLUS
Full-time 12 hour shifts on alternating
3 & 4 day work weeks.
Every other weekend a must.
Previous mfg. experience preferred.
Some heavy lifting.
Accepting applications at
AEP INDUSTRIES, INC.
20 Elmwood Ave.
Crestwood Industrial Park
Mountaintop, PA 18707
Grullony@aepinc.com
EOE We are a drug free workplace.
DALLAS SCHOOL DISTRICT - EOE
www.dallassd.com
ATHLETICS
* Middle School Soccer - Head Coach
* Middle School Soccer - Assistant Coach
* 7th Grade Girls Basketball Coach
* Assistant Varsity Cheerleading Coach
DEADLINE: August 10, 2012 or until posi-
tion filled EOE. For clearance information and
to download a district application, refer to the
Employment page of the district web site,
www.dallassd.com. Application packets
include: letter of interest, district application,
resume, recommendations , current Act 34, 151
and 114 clearances and any other supporting
materials to:
Ms. Nancy Roberts Athletic Director
Dallas High School
PO Box 2030 Dallas, PA 1861
548 Medical/Health
566 Sales/Business
Development
548 Medical/Health
566 Sales/Business
Development
548 Medical/Health
Rehab Aide
Enthusiastic individual who enjoys interaction with the
senior population and those in need to provide assistance
transporting our residents within the facility along with
some clerical work within the department.
Physical &
Occupational Therapists
Per Diem Opportunities available for
PA licensed PTs and OTs
Great Pay & Flexibility
395 Middle Road, Nanticoke
To apply or to learn about our nursing
employment opportunities
Call 877-339-6999 x 1
Email resumes to Jobs@horizonhrs.com
Or visit us and apply in person
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
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
KEN WALLACES
VALLEY CHEVROLET
601 KIDDER STREET, WILKES-BARRE, PA
821-2772 1-800-444-7172
MONDAY-THURSDAY 8:30-8:00pm; FRIDAY 8:30-7:00PM; SATURDAY 8:30-5:00pm
EXIT 170B OFF I-81 TO EXIT 1. BEAR RIGHT ON BUSINESS ROUTE 309 TO SIXTH LIGHT. JUST BELOW WYOMING VALLEY MALL.
Find the vehicle
you want to buy
from your mobile
device!
SCAN HERE >
www.valleychevrolet.com
Starting
At Only
OR BUY
FOR
PER
MONTH
$
13,900
* $
179
*
*Price plus tax & tags. #Z2712 - Buy Payment of $149 plus tax per month, 72 months @ 3.9% APR, $2500 cash or trade down with approved credit. Low APR to well qualied buyers. Prior use daily rental on select vehicles. Pictures for illustration only. Not responsible for typographical errors.
30
Hwy
MPG
OPEN FOR
BUSINESS!
Pardon Our Dust.
LOW MILES
MOST EQUIPPEDWITH:
3.6L SIDI V6 6 Speed
Automatic Transmission
Dual Zone Air Conditioning
AM/FM CD Power Windows
Power Door Locks 1 Owner
Rear Spoiler Power Mirrors
SOME EQUIPPEDWITH:
Remote Starter System Sunroof
Front Bucket Heated Seats Leather
Power Driver & Passenger Seats 6-way
OnStar Turn-by-Turn Navigation
XM Satellite Radio
25
To Choose
From
1.9
%
APR
Available To Well
Qualifed Buyers
As Low As
2008 - 09 - 10 - 11 - 12 Chevy
Impala LS LT LTZ
451 Trucks/
SUVs/Vans
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
SATURN 06 ION-3
5 speed,sunroof, 1
owner, like new!
$4,995
Call For Details!
570-696-4377
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!
457 Wanted to Buy
Auto
BUYING
USED
VEHICLES
Call
Vitos & Ginos
949 Wyoming Ave,
Forty Fort, PA
288-8995
503 Accounting/
Finance
Accounts Payable and
Accounts Receivable
Local company
looking to fulfill com-
panys growing
needs. Hiring two
additional staff
members. Accounts
Payable and
Accounts Receiv-
able clerks. Candi-
dates should have 2
years of general
accounting experi-
ence, be proficient
in Microsoft Excel
and Word, and pay
attention to detail.
Individuals should
have strong com-
munication skills
both verbal and
written, and be able
to work in a team
environment.
Duties include but
are not limited to:
- Follow up, collec-
tion and allocation
of payments
- Carry out billing,
collection and
reporting activities
- Reconciling of cus-
tomer or vendor
accounts
- Contacting cus-
tomers or vendors
in regards to pay-
ments/notices
- Data entry in com-
pany software
- Accept other
responsibilities as
assigned.
Employer offers a
competitive wage
and benefits pack-
age.
nickie@
gocolours.com
509 Building/
Construction/
Skilled Trades
EXPERIENCED
CARPENTER
Part time, possible
Full time.
(570) 793-5501
518 Customer
Support/Client Care
CSR
RFM Services is
looking for a Cus-
tomer Service Rep-
resentative with
mathematical skills
in the Wilkes-Barre
area. Experience
helpful, but will train
the right candi-
dates. Fax resume
to 570-517-5003.
522 Education/
Training
Needed at our
Wilkes-Barre, Dallas &
Mountain Top
Locations.
CALL 570-905-3322
ASK FOR LAKE GEMZIK
OR EMAIL RESUME TO:
LGEMZIK@
BUILDINGBLOCKS
LEARNINGCENTER.COM
ChildCare Teachers
538 Janitorial/
Cleaning
CLEANING PERSON
Needed for busi-
ness. Evening hours
(6pm-?) and week-
ends. $10/hour. Part
time or full time
hours available.
Employment refer-
ences required.
Call 570-823-7907
for an interview.
542 Logistics/
Transportation
DRIVERS
Independent
Contractor
Opportunities
For owners/opera-
tors with 2002 or
newer Cargo Vans
for courier services.
Must have cell
phone and GPS.
Work is dispatched
out of Wilkes-Barre
Pa. Ask about our
sign on bonus.
Please call
484-768-1483 or
www.aexdrivers.net
542 Logistics/
Transportation
GENERAL
SCHOOL BUS DRIVERS
West Side, semi re-
tired & home mak-
ers welcome, will
train. 570-288-8035
VAN DRIVER
Part Time van driver
needed for elderly
and handicapped
transportation
program.
Monday through
Friday.
20-25 hours/week,
$8.00/hr.,no bene-
fits. Hours vary
depending upon
schedule. Must
have clean driving
record and no
criminal
background.
Call Volunteers of
America
825-5261 EOE
548 Medical/Health
FULL TIME RN
Full Time experi-
enced RN able to
perform IV therapy
and assist physician
in clinical setting.
CPR, ACLS
required.
Candidates must
enjoy working with
patients in a fast
paced environment.
Occasional travel to
area satellite
offices. Competitive
salary & benefits.
APPLY ONLINE:
www.icare
specialists.com
SUBMIT RESUME:
HR Dept.
703 Rutter Ave.
Kingston, PA 18704
Fax: 570-287-2434
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
IN-HOME CAREGIVER
Parkinsons patient
with Trach. Start @
$10.25/hour. Home
care experience or
nursing training
required. In Dallas.
35 daytime hours/
week, schedule
negotiable. Reply by
email: homeaide
18612@gmail.com
548 Medical/Health
PART TIME
MEDICAL ASSISTANT
For busy physician
office in the Hazle-
ton area. Some
evening hours.
Must be flexible.
Please mail resume
to: 631 Airport Road
Suite 101, Hazleton
PA 18202, email to
paincare56@yahoo.
com or fax to
(570) 861-8205
Per diem all shifts
for CNA, LPN & RN
Apply in person at
Summit
50 N. Pennsylvania
Avenue, or contact
Karen Coleman at
570-825-3488
or email
karen.coleman@
goldenliving.com
EOE M/F/D/V
RN SUPERVISOR
Full Time 11-7
LPN/RN
Full Time 3-11
BAYLOR NURSE LPN/RN
Weekends 7a-7p & 7p-7a
RN, PART TIME
Registered Nurse
needed for a busy
medical office. No
evenings. No bene-
fits. Must be punc-
tual and willing to
perform all office
tasks.
jobnumber12@aol.com
551 Other
ANIMAL CARE
KUNKLE KENNEL, LLC
Looking for experi-
enced KENNEL
ASSISTANTS
Apply in person or
Call 570-675-1111
or email kunkle
kennels@epix.net
Preppy Pet Suites
Immediate
Opening for
EXPERIENCED
GROOMER
PREPPY PET SUITES
APPLY IN PERSON
OR FAX RESUME TO:
570-270-3720
245 North
Sherman Street
Wilkes-Barre
551 Other
CITY OF PITTSTON
Part Time Firefighter
The City of Pittston
is seeking applica-
tions for part-time
firefighter-appara-
tus operators for
the City of Pittston
Fire Department.
Applications are
available at the City
Clerks Office, City
Hall, 35 Broad St.,
Pittston, PA during
regular business
hours from 9:00
A.M. until 4:00 P.M.
Monday through Fri-
day except Holi-
days. Applications
will be accepted
until the positions
are filled.
THE CITY OF PITTSTON
IS AN EQUAL OPPORTU-
NITY EMPLOYER.
Looking for that
special place
called home?
Classified will address
Your needs.
Open the door
with classified!
554 Production/
Operations
PRODUCTION
SUPERVISOR
Cornell Iron Works,
a leading and grow-
ing manufacturer of
Security Closure
Products, is seeking
a qualified Produc-
tion Supervisor for
our Mountaintop
manufacturing facili-
ty. Duties include
managing the daily
manufacturing
activities in order to
meet company
goals. The Supervi-
sor will also be
responsible for
maintaining quality
standards, imple-
menting safety poli-
cies and proce-
dures, facilitating
process improve-
ments, and training.
The ideal candidate
will have a minimum
of 3-5 years super-
visory experience in
a manufacturing
environment. Must
be detail oriented
and have strong
organizational and
problem solving
skills. Strong com-
munication and
interpersonal skills
are required.
Exceptional leader-
ship skills are a
must.
Cornell Iron Works
offers a great work
environment with a
competitive benefit
program including
health insurance,
dental, vision,
401(k), life insur-
ance, tuition reim-
bursement, paid
vacation and oppor-
tunity for advance-
ment.
Interested candi-
dates should apply
in person, email
their resume and
salary history to
janiney@cornell
iron.com, or mail to:
Cornell Iron Works
Crestwood
Industrial Park
24 Elmwood Ave.
Mountaintop, PA
18707
www.
cornelliron.com
(No phone calls,
please)
Equal Opportunity
Employer
566 Sales/Retail/
Business
Development
A AVON-ST VON-STAR ART T T TODA ODAY Y
www.startavon.
com/mlevalley
888-286-6743
RETAIL SHOWROOM
ASSISTANT
Computer literate
with good people
skills. Part time.
Personnel@efo
furniture.com
SALES
Business to busi-
ness sales person
wanted. Experience
a must. Sell adver-
tising for use in the
bar and restaurant
business. Full time
position. Great pay.
Email resume to:
adsonaglass
@gmail.com
SALES OPPORTUNITY
DelBaso Ford is now
accepting applica-
tions for Sales Posi-
tions. We are look-
ing for an energetic,
self-motivated indi-
vidual to join our
award winning
organization.
Apply in person to:
249 Market Street
Kingston
Email: PatandDans
@aol.com or
Call 570-288-4501
SAMS CLUB SAMS CLUB
Hiring part time
positions for:
Cashiers
Overnight Merchandiser
Bakery
Meat Department
Cart Associates
Please apply online
at SamsClub.com or
at the Kiosk in the
Club.
441 WILKES-BARRE
TOWNSHIP BOULEVARD
570-821-5500
LINEUP
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INCLASSIFIED!
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A yard or garage sale
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is the best way
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Youre in bussiness
with classified!
573 Warehouse
SALES WAREHOUSE
ASSOCIATE
Saturdays, 8 hours.
Work with cus-
tomers. Good math
skills. Ability to lift 50
lbs. Knowledge of
doors, windows,
molding, etc.
Call 570-258-0998
600
FINANCIAL
610 Business
Opportunities
Seamstress
wanted
Would you like to be
able to set your
own hours while
owning your own
business? & Joining
forces with an
already established
boutique.. Call Sally
for details.
570-675-4634
610 Business
Opportunities
JAN-PRO
COMMERCIAL
CLEANING OF
NORTHEASTERN PA
Concerned
about your
future?
BE YOUR OWN BOSS
Work Full or
Part time
Accounts
available
NOW
throughout
Luzerne &
Lackawanna,
Counties
We guarantee
$5,000. to
$200,000
in annual billing.
Investment
Required
Were ready
Are you?
For more info
call
570-824-5774
Jan-Pro.com
630 Money To Loan
We can erase
your bad credit -
100% GUARAN-
TEED. Attorneys
for the Federal
Trade Commission
say theyve never
seen a legitimate
credit repair opera-
tion. No one can
legally remove
accurate and timely
information from
your credit report.
Its a process that
starts with you and
involves time and a
conscious effort to
pay your debts.
Learn about manag-
ing credit and debt
at ftc. gov/credit. A
message from The
Times Leader and
the FTC.
700
MERCHANDISE
702 Air
Conditioners
AIR CONDITIONERS
2 portable 14,000
btu. $325 each or
both for $600.
570-820-9904
706 Arts/Crafts/
Hobbies
CIRCUIT PERSONAL
ELECTRIC CUTTER
by Provo Craft. New
never used. Bonus
cartridge & DVDs
also Ultimate Cre-
ative Series DVDs
never opened with
custom storage
box. All for $175.
570-357-4025
708 Antiques &
Collectibles
COINS Washington
quarters 1932-P
1935-P; 1936P;
1936D; 1939P;
1940D. $80.
570-287-4135
DOLL. Shirley Tem-
ple Silver Screen
Series - HEIDI. In
original box, perfect
condition. $100.
570-239-1638
708 Antiques &
Collectibles
INDY PEDAL CARS
(2) 1 Marlboro Indy
pedal car $100. 1 AJ
Foyt black Copen-
hagen Indy pedal
car, $100. both
excellent condition.
570-696-3988
LIONEL TRAIN SET
$150. bUDDY L ride
on dump truck 25 l
1958 $90. Railroad
lamp PDH $40. HO
steam with passen-
ger cars $45.
570-735-1589
710 Appliances
Why Spend
Hundreds on
New or Used
Appliances?
Most problems
with your appli-
ances are usually
simple and
inexpensive 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
CONVECTION OVEN
Wolfgang Puck digi-
tal, with additional
accessories. Never
used, parts still in
plastic. Comes with
manual. Bought for
$199. asking $50.
Call 570-388-3026
or 570-328-0659
Gas Dryer (large
cap.) Speed Queen
good condition.
$85.00 call 570-
328-2046
REFRIGERATOR
Whirlpool 18 cu. ft.
$100. Whirlpool
washer, good con-
dition $100. Sharp
microwave, large
good condition $25.
570-825-4336
712 Baby Items
STROLLER J. Mason
Navy blue with stor-
age underneath &
canopy. Folds easi-
ly. $5. 333-4325
716 Building
Materials
DELTA TOILET tank
fill valves, new in
box never opened
total of 11 pieces all
for $15. 735-6638
HOT WATER
HEATER 40 gallon 9
year warranty, natu-
ral gas, 40,000 btu,
new in box paid
$495. sell for $275.
firm 570-457-7854
SLIDING GLASS
DOORS with alu-
minum frames for
bath tub $25.
570-824-7743
720 Cemetery
Plots/Lots
MT. ZION
CEMETERY
Luzerne County,
Exeter Twp. 4 plots.
$300 each.
513-382-0070
726 Clothing
COAT black, long
leather, very good
condition $35.
570-287-6329
REFEREE pants and
shirts. (5) $10-$14,
shirts, (5) $8.
SHOES, black $10 &
$20. Sleeveless
shirts, $3, Leather
bag, $10.
570-252-8295
730 Computer
Equipment &
Software
DELL DIMENSION
2400 tower. New
160gb harddrive.
fresh windows xp
installation. 1 gb
ram. microsoft
office 2007. usb
mouse/keyboard
included. delivery
available. $65.
570-654-0574.
732 Exercise
Equipment
STATIONARY exer-
cise bike Ergome-
ter, very good con-
dition $40.
570-693-1288
TREADMILL NEW
$300 obo.
570-362-0076
742 Furnaces &
Heaters
HEATERS VENT
FREE propane or
natural gas heaters,
new in box with
warranty. 20,000
btu $199. 30,000
btu $270. they have
thermostats & blow-
ers. Heaters can be
mounted on wall or
free standing on
floor. Call 570-675 -
0005 after 6:00 PM
744 Furniture &
Accessories
ARMOIRE with 2
drawers, $35.
Dresser, 4 drawers,
$25, or both for
$50. Slider Rocker,
$25. Bar Stool with
back, $5.
570-823-0881
BAR STOOLS. (4)
beige leather and
cherry wood. Pier
One. Immaculate
condition. $350
570-814-1316
BEDROOM SUITE
Queen sleigh bed,
dresser, armoire,
nightstand. Excel-
lent condition.
$950 Neg. 388-1106
CHAIR, arm over-
size, new $75.
570-655-9472
CHAIRS, (2)
Genuine
leather, cus-
tom made
recliners.
Taupe color,
like new. $550
each. SOFA,
CHAIR,
OTTOMAN, 3
TABLES, great
for den. Wood
and cloth, all in
excellent condi-
tion. $450.
Call after 12 noon
570-675-5046
CHINA CABINET,
$400. DESK, $125.
SEWING MACHINE,
$50. 570-578-0728
COUCH
80x32
$25. 570-829-2082
DINING TABLE
oblong highback
with 4 chairs $200.
TV STAND with
wheels and glass
doors $35.
570-696-3988
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
KITCHEN DINING
SET. Solid oak, 6
chairs. Leaf to
expand table. Good
condition. $250
OBO. 570-714-5386
LIVING ROOM SET 3
piece, reclining
couch, reclining love
seat, beige & green
reclining rocker.
Very good condition.
$200. New
boxspring, queen
size, beauty rest,
cant get upstairs
$50. 283-5619
$ $ $ $ $
Mattress
A Queen Size
Pillow Top Set
Still in Plastic
Must Sell!!!
$150
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
Metal outdoor table
with five chairs $35
Cherry end table
$25
570-262-4421
NIGHT STAND,
maple $6. 6 sets of
twin sheets, $12.
China Hutch medi-
um wood Mediter-
ranean style $40.
A/C large, used one
season. $65. Also,
2 wool womens
jackets, 1 reversible.
$12. each. 570-
822-9617570-822-
9617 after 11 am.
PATIO DINING SET 4
sling spring chairs
with 4 round glass
top table, very good
condition. $125.
La z boy maroon
color rocker reclin-
er, very good con-
dition. $225.
570-714-4350
ROCKER, yellow
pine. New. $30.
(570)489-2675
SOFA BED. Queen,
6ft long. $75 OBO
570-693-1918
STORM DOOR 32
white 6 panel storm
door with screen &
glass door. Excell-
ent condition $150.
570-696-3988
TABLE LAMP Orien-
tal Chinese woman
1960s ceramic, pink
-white-gold. $35.
Collector spoons 17
different, must take
all $35. 696-1927
WATERBED KING
Size, currently set
up. $250.
Call (570) 714-3693
LINEUP
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is the best way
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Youre in bussiness
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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 6D MONDAY, AUGUST 6, 2012 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
KEN WALLACES
VALLEY CHEVROLET
601 KIDDER STREET, WILKES-BARRE, PA
821-2772 1-800-444-7172
MONDAY-THURSDAY 8:30-8:00pm; FRIDAY 8:30-7:00PM; SATURDAY 8:30-5:00pm
EXIT 170B OFF I-81 TO EXIT 1. BEAR RIGHT ON BUSINESS ROUTE 309 TO SIXTH LIGHT. JUST BELOW WYOMING VALLEY MALL.
Find the vehicle
you want to buy
from your mobile
device!
SCAN HERE >
www.valleychevrolet.com
MOST EQUIPPEDWITH:
2.4L DOHC 4-Cyl
w/VVT 6 Speed Automatic Transmission
3.0L DOHC V6 SIDI
6 Speed Automatic Transmission
Front Bucket Seats Remote Keyless Entry
OnStar w/Turn-By-Turn Navigation
Fog Lamps XM Satellie Radio
Power Windows Power Door Locks
Tinted Glass Power Seats
A/C - Automatic Climate Control
17 Forged Aluminum Wheels
Bluetooth Luggage Rack Rails
Blowout
Price
Starting At
$
23,999
*
#Z2729; *Price plus tax & tags. LOW APR to well qualied buyers. Prior use daily rental on select models. Pictures for illustration only. Not responsible for typographical errors.
LOW MILES
1.9
%
APR
FOR 36 MONTHS
To Well
Qualifed Buyers
As Low As
LS LT
4
TO CHOOSE
FROM
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
551 Other
566 Sales/Business
Development
551 Other
566 Sales/Business
Development
551 Other
566 Sales/Business
Development
Earn Extra Cash
For Just A Few
Hours A Day.
Deliver
Available routes:
( No Col l ect i ons)
To start earning extra cash or to
nd a route near you call Rosemary:
570-829-7107
Duryea
$560 Monthly Prot + Tips
146 daily / 147 Sunday
Adams Street, Blueberry Hill Development,
Cherry Street, Columbia Street, McAlpine Street
Pittston Township
$765 Monthly Prot + Tips
144 daily / 142 Sunday / 155 Sunday Dispatch
Flag Street, Market Street, Frothingham Street,
Parnell Street, Sunrise Drive, Winter Street, Broad Street
Plymouth
$1060 Monthly Prot + Tips
194 daily / 245 Sunday
Blair Street, Davenport Street, Franklin Street,
Orchard Street, Coal Street, W. Main Street, North Street
Hunlock Creek
MOTOR ROUTE
$1300 Monthly Prot + Tips
203 daily / 243 Sunday
Golf Course Road, Hartman Road, Main Road,
Old Tavern Road, Prichards Road
Shickshinny/Mocanaqua
$420 Monthly Prot + Tips
84 daily / 96 Sunday
East Butler Street, West Union Street, West Butler Street,
Hill Street, Italy Street, Jeanette Street
Hughestown/Pittston
$420 Monthly Prot + Tips
108 daily / 110 Sunday
1st Street, Center Street, Grifth Street, Division Street,
Lambert Street, Searle Street
We currently offer these employment opportunities:
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 publications 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.
AN INVITATIONTO JOIN OUR
ADVERTISING SALESTEAM!
AREYOUATELEPHONE PROFESSIONAL?
The Times Leader an Impressions Media property, has part time
positions available in our Classifed Dept.
Qualifed applicant will have be goal oriented, able to work within
daily deadlines, have solid computer and internet knowledge,
superior verbal and written communication skills, excellent typing
and grammar skills, a high energy level and an eagerness to
learn.
Compensation includes base pay plus monthly commission.
If you meet these requirements and want to start an exciting new
career send your resume to lbyrnes@timesleader.com
CLASSIFIED
No telephone calls please.
We are an equal opportunity employer committed to diversity in the workplace.
748 Good Things To
Eat
PICK YOUR OWN
BLUEBERRIES!
8am to 8pm
Closed Sundays
Sickler Blueberry
Farm - Vernon
570-333-5286
570-333-4944
NO PETS IN THE
FIELD!!
756 Medical
Equipment
WHEEL CHAIR
excellent condition
$50. 570-905-4818
756 Medical
Equipment
WHEEL CHAIR.
Electric, Pride
Mobility Jet 3. Never
used. All original
paperwork, still in
delivery pack. Paid
over $5700, asking
$500. 824-6594
LINEUP
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INCLASSIFIED!
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A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
758 Miscellaneous
All Junk
Cars &
Trucks
Wanted
Highest
Prices
Paid In
CA$H
FREE
PICKUP
570-574-1275
BINDERS. (1) sports
cards, (1) Pokeman
cards and pencil
sharpeners. Too
much to list. $75 for
all OBO.
570-288-4651
CANES made from
slippery maple
trees, all handles
different, many
shapes & heights,
$5. each. Over 200
Christmas & house-
hold items includes
trees, lights, orna-
ments, figurines,
vases, flowers,
knick-knacks, lug-
gage, exercise
machine & more for
$60. Electric sewing
machine $5. STOVE,
coal/wood. $550
570-735-2081
CAR TOP CARRIER
Sears, hard shell,
new in box, never
used $125. Great
Buy. 570-457-7854
CEILING FAN
antique brass $20.
White outdoor patio
light $25. Bread-
maker with manual
$20. White bath-
room cupboard with
glass shelves $15.
Chrome wall mount
bathroom light fix-
ture $10. 822-8788
CLOTHING, boys,
over 45 items name
brand, L/XL, 14-18
$40 for all. SHOES,
womens, (Skech-
ers) size 9, new or
barely worn. 4 pair,
$40 for all., Mens
Zig Tech Sneakers,
size 11, never worn,
$20. FIGURINES,
Precious Moments,
no boxes, 7 for $50.
570-237-1583
FISH TANK.
20.5x14x10.5,
includes 30 stand,
light and all acces-
sories. $25 OBO
570-693-1918
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.
GARAGE SALE
LEFTOVERS AMCOR
portable 10,000 BTU
air conditioner. Paid
over $400 used 3
summers $100.
Graco stroller, blue
$10. 570-823-7540
GRILL large George
Foreman, 1 yr old
asking $10. Brand
new toaster in box
$8. Macaroni
machine all attach-
ments $5. 4 small
Lenox dishes $3. 6
glass compote $3.
Large scarfs $1.
each. Christmas &
Halloween .50 to $1.
Set of yellow flower
dishes, service for
8, like new $8. 2
new folding umbrel-
las $2. each.
570-824-2571
HORSE. Radio Flyer
Liberty Spring Horse
with Sound option.
$100. DOORS vari-
ous, $25 each,
FENCING, $150.
570-288-8689
758 Miscellaneous
BEST PRICES
IN THE AREA
CA$H ON THE $POT,
Free Anytime
Pickup
570-301-3602
570-301-3602
CALL US!
TO JUNK
YOUR CAR
LAMPS, parlor
stand, (2) $15 each,
MOVIE, Gong show,
$10, WINDOWS, (5)
storm, $10 each,
TIRES, Various
brands and sizes.
$20 to $100. SKATE-
BOARD, $5, PVC
pipe, $10. MOTOR,
Chevy 350, $300,
Chevy Caprice parts
$40 each.
570-740-1246
LEFT OVER
GARAGE SALE
ITEMS
2 boxes of books,
paperback & hard-
cover, $20 each,
Mens clothing,
large 17 pieces,
$25, X-large, 9
pieces, $10. Girls
14, 14/16, 16, 42
pieces $45. Jr.
Girls, medium,
large, and extra
large 37 pieces,
$40. All like new.
TV, 19 Curtis Math-
es w/remote $15,
TV, 26 GE
w/remote. $20.
2 person sleeping
bag, like new $30.
570-474-6028
MERCHANTS
VILLAGE
MERCHANTSVILLAGE.COM
(Former Walmart
Building)
Oak St., Pittston
COME SHOP COME SHOP
WITH US! WITH US!
3 ACRES INSIDE
AIR CONDITIONED
Huge, Huge
Inventory
FOOD ITEMS
Huge Selection
1/2 Price!
BABY ITEMS
diapers by the
case
BEAUTY ITEMS
Make-Up
CLEANING ITEMS
ELECTRONICS
HOUSEHOLD ITEMS
HEALTHCARE
TOOLS
Food Court
570-891-1972
PERSONAL ELEC-
TRONIC COMPUT-
ER, new, never used
bonus cartridge, 3
bonus dvds, & ulti-
mate creative
series dvds with
custom storage
box. all unopened,
$175.570-357-4025
SCOOTER Q Linkl
$975. firm. 144
miles only, automat-
ic transmission After
6 pm 570-288-6925
760 Monuments &
Lots
CEMETERY LOT
in Memorial Shrine
Park of Northeast-
ern Pennsylvania,
Wyoming.
Burial lot #229,
graves 1-2-3, in the
Crown Hill section.
Valued at more
than $1,500; for
sale at $600.
570-735-2877
762 Musical
Instruments
DRUM SET, 5 piece,
$300.
570-655-9472
762 Musical
Instruments
***** PIANO *****
++++ KAWAI ++++
Continental Concer-
to
Like Brand New
Ebony upright
$1985.
ph 570-675-4655
PIANO. Story &
Clark console with
bench. $100 OBO
750-239-1638
PIANO. Upright.
Primrose by
Sohmer. Includes
bench. $500
570-675-6911
Reel to Reel tape
deck, with 35 reel to
reel tapes $300.
570-655-9472
766 Office
Equipment
SAFCO 5 drawer
steel flat file file plus
base, excellent con-
dition $700.
570-287-5921
772 Pools & Spas
KREEPY KRAULY
automatic pool
cleaner for sale for
$200. Unit is com-
plete with 40 of
hose & used only 3
times.570-735-5381
776 Sporting Goods
BIKE, Mongoose
Mountain, $50.
GOLF CLUBS, Call-
away, $40. MAGA-
ZINE collection. $1
each. FISHING
POLES, $40.
570-655-9472
GOLF CLUBS. Youth
set with bag (2sets)
$30, FILE CABINET,
4 drawer, great
shape $30, MONEY
COUNTING
MACHINE, Royal
Soveriegn, $40
570-262-7923
RODS & REELS,
Shakespeare com-
bos with line 1 each
Micron Spin & 1
each ProAM $20
each & large tackle
box $5.
570-735-6638
ROLLER BLADES:
Mens roller blades
size 11 $10. Harley
Davidson snow sled
$10. Fisher Price
Super Wagon $25.
570-822-6258
SKI RACK Bar-
recrafters Sierra
SX-ll. Adjusts to 40-
52. Holds 5 pairs
skis or 2 snow-
boards. Never used.
$20. 570-709-1288
778 Stereos/
Accessories
STEREO, console
model 8 track/ cas-
sette, record player
& radio. (combo)
good condition.
Tapes included $50.
570-822-9617 after
2pm.
784 Tools
REELCRAFT TW
8460 Oxygen
Acetylene Dual
Retractable Welding
Hose Reel. Paid
$350 for sale $125.
570-822-6869
786 Toys & Games
KITCHEN SET childs
deluxe Step By Step
less than 2 years
old, includes all
pieces. Extremely
clean & hardly used.
H.44, W.48 D.14.
Paid over $200,
asking $90 OBO
570-407-9893
788 Stereo/TV/
Electronics
GARMEN GPS sys-
tem brand new still
in box $100. call
570-696-3988
TVS Super Buy, 61
color projection
screen with remote
control, works great
with no known inter-
nal or external prob-
lems. $250. 32 sil-
ver Sanyo flat
screen color with
remote control,
works great with no
known internal or
external issues.
$150. 903-5824;
email leelee1300
@yahoo.com
796 Wanted to Buy
Merchandise
$ ANTIQUES BUYING $
Old Toys, model kits,
Bikes, dolls, guns,
Mining Items, trains
&Musical Instruments,
Hess. 474-9544
BUYING SPORT CARDS
Pay Cash for
baseball, football,
basketball, hockey
& non-sports.
Sets, singles &
wax. Also buying
comics.
570-212-0398
VITOS
&
GINOS
Wanted:
ALL
JUNK
CARS &
TRUCKS
Highest
Prices
Paid!!
FREE PICKUP
288-8995
WANTED
JEWELRY
WILKES BARREGOLD
( 570) 48GOLD8
( 570) 484- 6538
Highest Cash Pay-
Outs Guaranteed
Mon- Sat
10am- 6pm
Cl osed Sundays
1092 Highway 315 Blvd
( Pl aza 315)
315N . 3 mi l es af t er
Mot orworl d
We Pay At Least
80% of the London
Fix Market Price
for All Gold Jewelry
Visit us at
WilkesBarreGold.com
Or email us at
wilkesbarregold@
yahoo.com
London PM
Gold Price
Aug. 1st - $1,602
800
PETS & ANIMALS
805 Birds
PINEAPPLE CONURES
Hand fed, hand
raised, tame, sold
elsewhere for $399.
On sale for $190 for
one, $300 for two.
Call 570-472-3914
810 Cats
CATS & KI TTENS
12 weeks & up.
All shots, neutered,
tested,microchipped
VALLEY CAT RESCUE
824-4172, 9-9 only
FREE GREY CAT
3 year old male.
Neutered, up to
date on shots, fully
declawed and a
great friend.
(570) 899-8731
810 Cats
KITTEN. FREE. `10
week old orange
Tabby. Healthy, very
playful & loving.
Needs a good
home. 852-9850
KITTENS - FREE. To
a good home.
Ready in 2 weeks.
3 kittens, 3 weeks
old. 2 females grey
stripe Tabby, 1 male
yellow stripe Tabby.
All are healthy, very
playful and loving.
570-852-9850
Renmars123
@aol.com
KITTENS FREE (6)
all black, free to
good homes.
570-693-1088
KITTENS free to go
homes. 3 male 2
female. Tiger stripes
and tiger w white.
829-2031 ask for
Rose
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.
BEAGLE PUPPIES AKC
champion blood-
lines. 1st shots
dewormed males
$200 each.
570-735-5541
BERNESE MOUNTAIN
DOG PUPS AKC
3 Females. Vet
checked, vaccinat-
ed, dewclaws, de-
wormed + more.
Pet/Show. Ready
8/6. 570-654-0615
BLACK LAB PUPPY
Female. Approxi-
mately 8 mos. old.
No shots, good with
kids. Very playful.
99% housebroken.
FREE to good
home. 570-371-9141
570-357-3525
CAVALIER KING
CHARLES SPANIEL
PUPPIES
Registration Avail-
able, Health Certi-
fied. From
$700 to $1,500
HAVANESE PUPPIES
All colors, both
genders available
$700 to $1,300
www.willowspring
cavaliers.com
215-538-2179
CHIHUAHUA PUPS
1 female, $375 2
males $325
Vet checked. Great
lap dogs.
570-648-8613
ITALIAN CANE CORSO
Mastiff Puppies
ICCF Registered &
ready to go! Par-
ents on premises.
Blue. Vet Checked
Price Reduced!
570-617-4880
LAB PUPS
AKC. English.
Black & Choco-
late. Big, blocky
heads. Stocky.
Laid back tem-
perament. All
health clearances.
Ready now.
570-549-6800
www.emlabradors
.com
815 Dogs
ROTTWIELER PUPPIES
Extra large, ACA
registration, 3 gen-
eration pedigree.
All shots & tails
docked. Mom &
Dad on premises.
Ready to go. $400.
570-204-7745
SHIH-TZU PUPPIES
Parents on premises
$500
570-436-3792
Poms, Husky, Labs,
Yorkies, Puggles,
Chihuahuas, Pugs
Dachshund, Goldens,
Shepherds, Dober-
mans, Shih-Tzus
570-453-6900
570-389-7877
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!
YORKIE PUPS
Tiny, registered.
Teddy Bear Faced
$800-$950
Vet checked &
dewormed
Ready 8/18/12
570-436-5083
845 Pet Supplies
PUPPY VARI KEN-
NEL CAGE $25.
570-675-3328
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.
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
ASHLEY
This charming 3
bedroom has a
modern eat in oak
kitchen, hardwood
floors in Living room
& Dining Room,
Modern bath,
enclosed rear porch
overlooking a deep
yard, with parking.
MLS 12-2305
Priced to Sell,
$55,000
Ann Marie Chopick
570-760-6769
(570) 288-6654
906 Homes for Sale
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
S
O
L
D
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
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
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
756 Medical
Equipment
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!
Looking for Work?
Tell Employers with
a Classified Ad.
570-829-7130
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
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in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
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with classified!
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com MONDAY, AUGUST 6, 2012 PAGE 7D
906 Homes for Sale
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
PRICE REDUCED
$285,000
Call Geri
570-696-0888
BEAR CREEK
REDUCED $13K
Exclusive privacy
with this 61 acre 3
bedroom, 2 bath
home with vaulted
ceilings and open
floor plan. Elegant
formal living room,
large airy family
room and dining
room. 322 sq. ft 3
season room open-
ing to large deck
with hot tub. Mod-
ern eat in kitchen
with island, gas fire-
place, living room,
and wood burning
stove basement.
Oversize 2 car
garage. This stun-
ning property
boasts a relaxing
pond and walking
trail. Sit back and
enjoy the view!
MLS 12-2085
$425,000
Sandy Rovinski
EXT 25
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
BEAR CREEK
NEW LISTING!
Spacious traditional
Cape Cod home sit-
uated on 7.6 acres.
Country like setting,
yet minutes to
downtown major
highway access
and Geisinger.
Home features 4-5
bedrooms, family
room, 2 baths,
hardwood floors
and a 2-car garage.
#12-2627 $199,900
Karen Ryan
283-9100 x14
696-2600
EXETER
OPEN HOUSE
Sunday
12pm-5pm
362 Susquehanna
Avenue
Completely remod-
eled, spectacular,
2 story Victorian
home, with 3 bed-
rooms, 1.5 baths,
new rear deck, full
front porch, tiled
baths & kitchen,
granite counter-
tops,.All cherry
hardwood floors
throughout, all new
stainless steel
appliances & light-
ing. 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
570-899-8877
570-654-1490
DALLAS
94 Grandview Ave.
Medallion Home
3 bedrooms, 2
bathrooms,. Large
family room with
gas fireplace, 3
zone gas heat,
central air, walking
distance to Dallas
School Systems.
Priced to Sell.
$172,000 Call
(570)674-5505
906 Homes for Sale
DALLAS
95 JACKSON ST.
Great Low Cost Util-
ities, Taxes and no
Water bill. Your own
fresh Water well.
Bath on each floor,
3 Good sized Bed-
rooms, Paved Drive
leading to an over-
sized Garage.
Owner Motivated.
MLS 12-2006
$179,000
570-675-4400
DALLAS
Attractive 7 year old
2-story with eat-in-
kitchen, oak cabi-
nets, granite coun-
tertops, island & tile
floor. Master bed-
room with solid
cherry hardwood
floor, walk-in closet
& master bath. Dual
fireplace. Gas heat/
central air. Three
car garage. Home
Protection Plan.
$279,900
Sandra Gorman
570-696-5408
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-696-1195
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
$94,900
Jay A. Crossin
Extension 23
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
DALLAS
Looking for a ranch
in the Back Moun-
tain? Come and
preview this remod-
eled two or three
bedroom, one bath
home. New Pergo
flooring, updated
kitchen with stain-
less steel appli-
ances, off street
parking. MLS #12-
1213 $99,900
Call Kathy Murray
570-696-6403
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!
DALLAS
MANY POSSIBILI-
TIES! 4,000+ sq.ft.
well maintained
home with 4 Bed-
rooms, 2 Baths, 2
kitchens and 2 story
unfinished addition,
garage, on 2 lots.
Can be finished for
3 unit rental income
or country store.
$153,000.
Jeannie Brady
ERA BRADY
ASSOCIATES
570-836-3848
DALLAS
Private & beautiful
lovely brick chalet
on 11.85 acres.
Custom brick work,
tongue & groove
interior & oversized
3 car garage.
Features whirlpool
tub, heated sun-
room, kitchen island
& hickory cabinets,
laundry room. Base-
ment is plumbed &
ready to finish.
MLS# 12-817
$315,000
Call Ken Williams
Five Mountain
Realty
570-542-8800
906 Homes for Sale
DALLAS
Small one story
home on 9.5 acres,
home is a fixer
upper, no steps,
home has mold.
Private driveway off
of Jake Moore
Road, grown in by
brush. $150,000
MLS# 12-2114
Call Michael Nocera
SMITH HOURIGAN
GROUP
570-696-5412
Looking for that
special place
called home?
Classified will address
Your needs.
Open the door
with classified!
DALLAS
The Greens at New-
berry Estates. Condo
with special view of
golf course & ponds.
3 bedrooms. Family
room. 5 1/2 baths on
2 floors. 4,000 sq. ft.
living area. 12-1480
$449,900
Besecker Realty
570-675-3611
DALLAS
Two story home
with solar system,
2 car detached
garage. Private
driveway. Property
is also for lease.
MLS# 12-1822
$189,000
Michael Nocera
570-357-4300
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-696-5412
DALLAS
Built in 2004, this
delightful home is
centrally located in
Dallas. Very well
maintained with
central air, large
yard, 23 x 13 living
room with gas fire-
place, gas hot
water baseboard
heat (1st and 2nd
floors). In addition
electric heat
pumps/central AC
to save on gas bills
if you desire....radi-
ant heat in base-
ment floors...2 1/2
baths and 3 bed-
rooms...This Dallas
home is ready to
welcome its
new owners!
Directions: Rte 415
towards Harveys
Lake. Left on W
Center Hill Rd,
house is on left.
MLS# 12-2362
$209,900 Call
Charlie Boyek
570-430-8487
CENTURY 21
SIGNATURE
PROPERTIES
570-675-5100
DURYEA
$125,000
REDUCED
PRICE!!!
MOTIVATED
SELLERS!!!
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
DURYEA
$53,000
412 New St.
Motivated Seller.
Great starter home
on large lot. Sys-
tems newer, but
needs cosmetic
updating. Ready to
make to your liking!
MLS 12-1732
Call Kevin Sobilo
570-817-0706
906 Homes for Sale
DURYEA
1107 Spring Street
Superb two story
with 3 bedrooms & 1
baths. Hardwood
floors, gas heat,
vinyl siding, large
yard with garage.
Call Jim for details.
Offered at $169,500
Towne & Country
Real Estate Co.
570-735-8932 or
570-542-5708
DURYEA
226 Church St.
$109,000
Four square home
with large rooms
and old world fea-
tures in the wood-
work and stained
glass. A must see
home. MLS #12-
2596. For more
information and
photos visit
atlasrealtyinc.com.
Call Charlie
829-6200
VM 101
DURYEA
429 New St.
A marriage of old
world charm and
modern touches
blend together in
this home. Tasteful,
high level renova-
tions throughout.
Central air, finished
attic, possible 4th
bedroom. New
plumbing, electrical,
back deck. Lots of
storage. Lovely
neighborhood.
MLS 12-2087
$158,900
David
Krolikowski
570-288-0770
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
DURYEA
705 Blueberry Lane
Large 4 bedroom
Bi-level with large
master bedroom
with sliding glass
doors leading to
private deck. Mod-
ern kitchen with
skylights, skylights
also in master bath.
Dining room with
sliding glass doors
to deck. Large cor-
ner lot with
attached 2 car
garage ready to
move right in.For
more info and pho-
tos visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-2379
$244,900
Call Fred
570-817-5792
DURYEA
IS TWO BEDROOMS
ENOUGH FOR YOU?
Quaint & Quiet reno-
vated two bedroom
features new trendy
large tiled Kitchen,
hardwood floors in
living room, formal
dining room & bed-
rooms. New tiled
bath with jetted tub
to de-stress in. Two
porches, yard &
plenty of parking.
New furnace, hot
water heater (with
warranty) & new
100 amp box. Great
starter home or
someone looking to
down size. Solid
Buy! Taxes are not
accurate. Owner is
a Realtor. $84,900
11-4472. Please call
Michele Hopkins
570-540-6046
DURYEA
NEW PRICE!!!!!
$24,900
621 Donnelly St.
2 bedroom, 1
car garage, gas
heat. Already
furnished with
furniture. 1/2
double. For
more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc. com
MLS 12-1042
Call Tom
570-262-7716
P
E
N
D
I
N
G
906 Homes for Sale
DURYEA
REDUCED
$59,900
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
Sorry, cash buy-
ers only!
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
DURYEA
REDUCED
619 Foote Ave.
Fabulous Ranch
home with 3
bedrooms, 2
baths, ultra
modern kitchen
with granite
counters, heat-
ed tile floor and
stainless appli-
ances. Dining
room has Brazil-
ian cherry
floors, huge
yard, garage
and large yard.
Partially finished
lower level. Built
for handicap
accessibility
with exterior
ramp, interior
hallways and
doorways. 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
P
E
N
D
I
N
G
Collect cash, not dust!
Clean out your
basement, garage
or attic and call the
Classified depart-
ment today at 570-
829-7130!
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
DURYEA TOWNHOME
3 year old town-
home in gated com-
munity of Forest
Heights with pool.
Cathedral ceilings &
skylights, air, cherry
floors & cabinets,
granite countertops,
fireplace, 3 bed-
rooms with 1st floor
master bedroom &
walk in closet. 2.5
tiled baths, waterfall
sinks in master bath
& powder room. All
season sun porch &
large private patio.
Full basement. End
unit with 2 car
garage.
$309,000.
570-479-1084
EDWARDSVILLE
3 bedroom, 1.5
bath, sunroom, 2
patios, single home.
$50,000 Call
570-283-3489
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!
$83,000
Call
Christine Kutz
570-332-8832
906 Homes for Sale
EXETER
Modern, clean, neat
as a pin! Bi-level
with 3 bedrooms
and 2 baths. Quality
construction in
every room. Poplar
hardwood floor in
the dining room. Tile
in kitchen, both
bathrooms and
laundry/storage
area. Family room
with natural gas fire-
place. Lots of sum-
mer remains to
enjoy lounging on
the 26x12 cedar
deck and swimming
in the pool. A great
neighborhood, low
traffic area, located
on a dead-end
street. Nothing to
do but move in and
enjoy. For more
information and to
view the photos go
to: www.prudential-
realestate.com and
enter PRU2A8T2 in
the Home Search.
Listed at $167,900.
MLS #12-2654. Call
today for your
appointment.
Mary Ellen Belchick
696-6566
Walter Belchick
696-2600 ext. 301
696-2600
EXETER TWP.
311 Lockville Road
Stately brick 2
story, with in
ground pool,
covered patio,
finished basement,
fireplace and wood
stove, 3 car
attached garage
5 car detached
garage with
apartment above.
MLS# 11-1242
$659,000
Please call Donna
570-613-9080
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
FORTY FORT
1908 Wyoming
Avenue
Plenty of TLC is
reflected in this
attractive 3 bed-
room, 1 bath home
in a convenient
location. Offers for-
mal living room/din-
ing room & family
room with sliding
doors to large rear
deck & a great level
lot. MLS# 11-2083
Only $99,000
Call Barbara Metcalf
570-696-0883
FORTY FORT
77 Wesley St.
$84,900
Classic 4 square
home in desirable
neighborhood. Four
bedrooms, nice old
woodwork, stained
glass and built ins
plus 3 car garage
on extra deep lot.
MLS #12-2612. For
more information
and photos, visit
atlasrealtyinc.com.
Call Charlie
829-6200
VM 101
FORTY FORT
Grand Victorian
Over 2800 square
feet in this one of a
kind property on a
corner lot. Property
featuring 4 bed-
rooms, formal dining
room, large living
room with gas fire-
place, family room
with pellet stove,
modern baths, front
and side porches. A
Must see property!
MLS# 12-1559
NEW PRICE
$199,900.
Call Florence
570-715-7737
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-474-6307
906 Homes for Sale
HANOVER TWP
15 Martin Street
Well Cared for 2
Story Boasting 3
Bedrooms, Full
bath, off street
parking and a large
side yard. 12-1832
$79,900
Call Pat Guesto
570-793-4055
CENTURY 21
SIGNATURE
PROPERTIES
570-675-5100
HANOVER TWP.
$119,900
22 Allenberry Drive
Move right in! Cen-
tral air, hardwood
floors, central
stereo system. Gas
heat under $700
yearly expenses. 2
bedrooms, 1 car
garage. For more
info and photos
visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com.
MLS 12-2739
Call Tom
570-262-7716
HANOVER TWP.
2 Betsy Ross Drive
Warmly inviting 3
bedroom, 2.5 bath
Tudor. Striking high-
lights in this beauti-
ful home include
custom blinds, man-
icured lawn, deck,
patio and 3-season
porch. Entertain in
the finished walk-
out basement with
wet bar or relax by
the pool! Outstand-
ing quality!
Call Pat Guesto
570-793-4055
CENTURY 21
SIGNATURE
PROPERTIES
570-675-5100
HANOVER TWP.
40 Downing St.
Great 3 bedroom
family home on a
beautifully land-
scaped lot, close to
parks and schools.
2 car attached
garage, pool,
fenced in yard with
lots of room to run!
MLS 12-2567
$129,900
John Shelley
570-702-4162
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
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
Looking to buy a
home?
Place an ad here
and let the
sellers know!
570-829-7130
HANOVER TWP.
LIBERTY HILLS
63 Betsy Ross Dr.
Great home in a
great neighbor-
hood. Very well
cared for 2 story
with 3 bedrooms,
family room and 2.5
baths. Nice yard
with landscape
lighting, 2 car
garage. Central air,
central vac, patio
awning, 1st floor
laundry.
Everything you will
need here
MLS 12-2192
$205,000
Call Connie
570-821-7022
EILEEN R.
MELONE REAL
ESTATE
570-821-7022
906 Homes for Sale
HANOVER TWP.
New Construction.
Lot #2, Fairway
Estates. 2,700
square feet, tile &
hardwood on 1st
floor. Cherry cabi-
nets with center
island. $399,500.
For more details:
patrickdeats.com
570-696-1041
Job Seekers are
looking here!
Where's your ad?
570-829-7130 and
ask for an employ-
ment specialist
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 PRICE
REDUCED! $77,900
Karen Altavilla
283-9100 x26
696-2600
HARDING
$249,900
1385 Mt. Zion Rd.
Great country set-
ting on 3.05 acres.
Move in condition
Ranch with 3 bed-
rooms, 2 baths,
inground swimming
pool, hardwood
floors. Finished
basement with wet
bar. 2 car garage,
wrap around drive-
way. For more info
and photos visit:
www.atlasrealty-
inc.com
MLS 12-2270
Call Tom
570-262-7716
HARDING
Youll Experience
Country Living in this
move in ready ranch
situated on almost
an acre of lush
landscaping just
minutes away from
every thingthere is
new carpet in living
& dining rooms, 3
bedrooms with
double closets,
large fully appli-
anced eat in
kitchen, first floor
laundry, 1.5 baths,
central air, lower
level recreation
room, large work-
shop for do it your-
selfers or contrac-
tors, and an over-
sized 2.5 car
garage with wrap-
around driveway
which provides
plenty of parking for
guests....$175,000
MLS #12-2773
Call Pat today @
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-287-1196
HARDING
PRICE REDUCED
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
$69,900
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
906 Homes for Sale
HARVEYS LAKE
323 State Route 2
Surrounded by
mature woodland
and pasture... Bor-
dered by Sorber
Mountain Creeks,
this 3 Bedroom 2
bath Country Ranch
offers a great
retreat and tranquil
lifestyle. Only min-
utes to Game Lands
and Pennsylvania's
Largest Natural
Lake. 12-1729
$136,000
Mark T. Bond
CENTURY 21
SELECT GROUP
570-352-8874
HARVEYS LAKE
Richard Lane
2 story, 3 bedroom,
1 bath home at rear
of Lake Side Drive
between Pole #s
125 and 126 on
Richard Lane. Lake
view, from front
wrap around porch
and 2 of the bed-
rooms and rear
yard. Also includes
33.3 ft of shoreline
with dock & lawn
area. Home in need
of updating and
repairs and is being
sold as is.
MLS 12-1607
$179,900
Michelle T. Boice
570-639-5393
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
HARVEYS LAKE- FSBO
LAUNCH YOUR
JET SKI OR
KAYAK
from your private
dock! Quiet set-
ting. Year-round or
summer-only home
with oversized 2-
car garage on
nearly 1/2 acre.
Two bedrooms
eat-in kitchen, liv-
ing room, den/
study, bath & sun
porch near Pole
141.570-885-4748.
$195,000. No real-
tors please.
HAZLETON
139 S. Laurel St
Spacious Brick
Ranch waiting for
your personal
touch. Hardwood
floors, well-thought
out storage in every
room. Quality work-
manship, well main-
tained. It's time to
enjoy this home with
it's large rooms,
greenhouse & nice
yard! Convenient
location. 12-2352
$124,900
Darcy J. Gollhardt
Realtor
570-262-0226
CLASSIC
PROPERTIES
570-718-4959
Ext. 1352
HUNLOCK CREEK
Beautifully main-
tained Cape Cod
features 3 bed-
rooms & one and a
half baths. Hard-
wood floors in living
& dining rooms,
foyer and first floor
bedroom. Newly
remodeled kitchen &
bathroom. Lots of
storage. New roof
installed in 2010.
Breakfast nook with
built-in table and
benches. Enclosed
porch, above ground
pool and deck.
MLS #11-2706
$144,900
Call Tracy
McDermott
Realty
570-696-2468
HUNLOCK CREEK
HUNTING/FISHING HUNTING/FISHING
RETREA RETREAT T
Spectacular,
remodeled, two
story house situat-
ed on 110 wooded
acres. Its an out-
doors persons
dream come true.
Featuring a 20+
acre fishing lake &
four small ponds,
woods & fields with
deer, turkey, bear &
grouse. Home
boasts breathtaking
views of the lake &
woods. Perfect for
Hunt Club or very
special home.
Serious, pre-quali-
fied inquiries only.
Asking $575,000.
Call Jim Stachelek
Prudential
Keystone
Properties
215-896-8860
906 Homes for Sale
HUNLOCK CREEK
Lovely Ranch home
on 1.42 acres.
Features 3 bed-
rooms, full bath, 1/2
bath, kitchen, living
room with fireplace,
dining room, den &
laundry room on
Main floor. Kitchen,
family room with
fireplace, 3/4 bath &
storage room on
Lower Level. Newer
roof, siding, sofit &
gutters plus some
newer carpeting,
pergo flooring, cen-
tral air & whole
house fan, 2 car
garage & paved
driveway. 12-1010
$176,900
Ken Williams
570-542-8800
Five Mountains
Realty
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!
HUNLOCK CREEK
Rustic country
home with 7 acres,
off Rt. 29 near Moon
Lake. 3 bedroom, 2
bath. Large kitchen
& living room. Sun-
room. 2 car garage.
2 story barn with
fenced in pasture.
This property also
comes with sepa-
rate septic well,
electric, carport &
shed. $235,000.
570-506-5986
JENKINS TWP
21 Spring Street
Lovely Home in a
quiet area. Newly
painted, new roof
and windows. 2
large bedrooms 1
full bath, 1 half bath.
MLS 12-2625
$89,900
Call Pat Guesto
570-793-4055
CENTURY 21
SIGNATURE
PROPERTIES
570-675-5100
JENKINS TWP.
$54,000 $54,000
1252 Main St.
3 Bedrooms
1 Bath.
Finished Walk-Out
Basement.
Single Car
Garage.
Call Vince
570-332-8792
JENKINS TWP.
$69,000
1717 River Road
Completely remod-
eled home with new
siding, windows
and modern kitchen
& bath. New floor-
ing, walls, heat and
electric. Move right
in. Off street park-
ing in rear. For
more info and pho-
tos visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-2232
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
JENKINS TWP.
297 Susquehannock
Drive
Traditional 4 bed-
room home with 2.5
baths, 2 car
garage. Large ard
with deck and
retractable awning.
Above ground pool,
1st floor laundry. .
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com.
MLS 12-945
$254,900
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
Collect cash, not dust!
Clean out your
basement, garage
or attic and call the
Classified depart-
ment today at 570-
829-7130!
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!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
PAGE 8D MONDAY, AUGUST 6, 2012 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
906 Homes for Sale
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
Price Reduced
$375,900
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.
Taxes appealed
and lowered con-
siderably for year
2013. For more
info and photos
visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-723
$399,900
Call Terry
570-885-3041
Angie
570-885-4896
HUNLOCK CREEK
Immaculate 3 bed-
room ranch on
beautiful 1.3 acre
lot. Modern kitchen
& baths, hardwood
floors, private patio.
Finished lower level
with bar area.
MLS# 12-2033
$154,300
Call Jill Hiscox at
570-696-0875
KINGSTON
157 Division St.
OWNER SAYS SELL!
This property has
great positive cash
flow. 1st floor 2
bedroom and
upstairs is 2 floors
with 3 bedrooms
total. 1st floor has
new drywall & insu-
lation, gas heat,
new tile tub sur-
round, kitchen
counters and car-
pet. 2nd apt. has
newer kitchen & is
all electric. Sepa-
rate utilities and off
street parking in
rear. Taxes are
currently being
appealed.
MLS 12-1771
$89,900
Mark R. Mason
570-331-0982
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
To place your
ad Call Toll Free
1-800-427-8649
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
906 Homes for Sale
KINGSTON
299 Rutter Ave.
Large and well
maintained duplex
on corner lot in
Kingston. 2 bed-
rooms each unit,
separate gas heat
and off street park-
ing for multiple
cars. New roof,
water heater and
freshly painted
exterior. A really
nice property.
MLS 12-2447
$139,900
Mark R. Mason
570-331-0982
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-287-0770
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
Beautiful well-main-
tained 3 level, 2.5
bath townhome in
very desirable loca-
tion. Many upgrades
include a spacious,
custom bathroom
with large closets,
custom window
treatments, built-in
wall microwave in
kitchen, new roof,
and new garage
door. Plenty of stor-
age, and a possible
3rd bedroom on 1st
level. MLS 12-175
$132,900
Call Mary Danelo
570-704-8000
Coldwell Banker
Rundle Real Estate
570-474-2340
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
KINGSTON
DUPLEX
2 bedrooms down,
1 upstairs, off-street
parking. Nice neigh-
borhood. $79,500.
Call 570-704-9446
KINGSTON
Located within 1
block of elementary
school & neighbor-
hood park this spa-
cious 4 bedrooms
offers 1450 sq. ft of
living space with
1.75 baths, walk up
attic, and partially
finished basement.
Extras include gas
fireplace, an in-
ground pool with
fenced yard, new
gas furnace & more.
11-823
Reduced
$99,900
Ann Marie Chopick
570-760-6769
570-288-6654
P
E
N
D
I
N
G
KINGSTON
A must see. Steel &
concrete construc-
tion put together
this exceptional 4
bedroom 5 bath
home. Great loca-
tion & fenced yard,
property features
maple hardwood
floors, tile baths,
cherry kitchen cabi-
nets, unique bronze
staircase, & much
more. MLS#12-531
$299,500 Call
Julio 570-239-6408
or Rhea
570-696-6677
906 Homes for Sale
KINGSTON
REDUCED
281 Reynolds St.
3 story single family
with 4 bedrooms,
2.5 baths and lots
of space! Lovely
entrance foyer, 3rd
floor with large
room, could be 5th
bedroom plus a full
tile bath. Fenced in
back yard and
much more.
MLS 12-1863
$119,900
Jay A. Crossin
Ext. 23
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0776
KINGSTON
REDUCED
80 Bennett St.
Great Kingston
location on a dou-
ble lot. Close to
schools, shopping,
restaurants and
public transporta-
tion. Potential of 2
additional bed-
rooms on 3rd floor.
Partially finished
basement.
MLS 12-2346
$109,900
John Shelley
570-702-4162
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-287-0770
KINGSTON
This 3 bedroom
home offers modern
kitchen, with Corian
counters accented
by marble back-
splash, central air,
fenced rear yard
with deck and patio.
Off street parking
for 2 to 4 cars. Cus-
tom shutters on the
first floor windows
along with natural
woodwork and
hardwood floors
give this home a
charm you are sure
to love!
#12-1997 $134,900
Jill Jones 696-6550
LAFLIN
$129,900
111 Laflin Road
Nice 3 bedroom,
1.5 bath Split Level
home with hard-
wood floors, 1 car
garage, large yard
and covered patio
in very convenient
location. Great curb
appeal and plenty
of off street park-
ing. Rt. 315 to light
@ Laflin Rd. Turn
west onto Laflin Rd.
Home is on left.
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-2852
Keri Best
570-885-5082
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
LAFLIN
Beautiful well main-
tained 4 bedroom,
2.5 bath split level in
desirable Oakwood
Park development.
Large marble entry
foyer, large living
room with stone
fireplace, dining
room that opens to
deck. Eat in kitchen
with all appliances
overlooking family
room / office area.
First floor laundry
room and powder
room, master bed-
room with master
bath and jet tub.
Hardwood floors.
Finished lower level.
2 car attached
garage. Security
system & intercom.
Large corner lot.
MLS 12-2705
$275,000
Call Monica
570-714-6113
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-287-1196
906 Homes for Sale
LAFLIN
ONE OF A KIND
Completely & taste-
fully updated &
remodeled Town-
house with unique
kitchen with snack
bar & dining area,
den, concrete
patio overlooking
treed/landscaped
planters. Excellent
condition! A must
see! Near Casino
and Interstate.
$125,000 MLS# 12-
2792 Call Marie
Montante,
(570) 881-0103
LARKSVILLE
467 E. State St.
Well kept home in a
nice neighborhood.
Close to new Ele-
mentary School and
bus stop. New roof
and off street
parking.
MLS 12-2342
$71,000
Charles J.
Prohaska
EXT. 35
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-287-0770
LAUREL RUN
OASIS in your own
back yard!! This
house have every-
thing, 3 bed, 3 full
baths and 1 3/4
bath. 2+ acres, your
own rec room,
screened in porch,
modern kitchen with
granite countertops,
and a 32x16 heated
pool. Amazing set-
ting in a great area
very private setting
MLS 12-2326
$329,900
Call / text Donna
Cain 570-947-3824
or Tony
570-855-2424
LAUREL RUN
Great home in a
great location.
Looking for a private
rural feeling home
but still close to
everything.. This is
your place. 3 bed-
room, hardwood
floor, carport, above
ground pool, quiet
setting and so much
more. Too many
reasons to see the
inside?? Call Today!
MLS 12-2384
$81,900
Call / text Donna
Cain 570-947-3824
or Tony
570-855-2424
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
LEHMAN
1341 Mountain View
Drive
360 degree view-
Enjoy panoramic
views from this
stunning, 3 bed-
room, 2 bath hide-
away cradled on 9
acres only 20 min-
utes from town. In
unique natural set-
ting high on a hill, it
offers vistas worthy
of professional pho-
tographers. Offering
formal living
room/dining room,
with lovely modern
kitchen/baths and 2
family rooms. Over-
sized 3 car
detached garage +
3 car attached.
Inground heated
pool with cabana
sure to please all
family members.
Zoned agricultural-
horses welcomed,
take a look today.
MLS# 12-1800
$289,900
Call Barbara Metcalf
570-696-0883
906 Homes for Sale
LUZERNE
109 Carpenter St.
Completely reno-
vated. New roof,
windows, kitchen
and bathroom.
Freshly painted
interior and exterior
with fabulous mod-
ern colors. Great
area and low,
low taxes!
MLS 12-2055
$99,500
Kelly Connolly-
Cuba
EXT. 37
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
LUZERNE
146 Kelly St.
Well kept home
with garage in rear.
Move in condition.
New roof and hot
water heater. Easy
access to Cross
Valley and shop-
ping. Out of flood
zone. 200 amp
service.
MLS 12-1801
$119,900
Donald Crossin
570-288-0770
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
Looking for that
special place
called home?
Classified will address
Your needs.
Open the door
with classified!
LUZERNE
523 Bennett St.
Older well kept
home with off street
parking. Roof 5
years old. New win-
dows on 2nd floor
and walk up attic
for lots of storage
or added
bedrooms.
MLS 12-2699
$79,000
Donald Crossin
570-288-0770
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
LUZERNE
663 Bennett St.
Great 2 bedroom
on a nice street.
Lovely yard with
alley access in rear,
driveway in front.
MLS 12-2701
$60,000
Shelby Watchilla
570-782-6969
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-287-0770
MOUNTAIN TOP
46 Farmhouse Rd.
OPEN HOUSE
SUN., AUG. 5TH
1 TO 3
REDUCED!
MOTIVATED
SELLER
Lovely 10 room vinyl
sided ranch home,
with 2.5 modern
baths, formal dining
room, gas heat,
central air, 2 car
garage & large
deck. Lower level
consists of 2 large
recreation rooms.
Office, half bath and
workshop. Lower
level all ceramic
tiled floors. MLS#
12-1359
$282,900
Call Florence
570-715-7737
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-474-6307
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
906 Homes for Sale
MOUNTAIN TOP
Nestled on just
under an acre just
minutes from 81S
this colonial offers
2194 sq. ft. of living
area plus a finished
basement. Enjoy
your summer
evenings on the
wrap around porch
or take a quick dip in
the above ground
pool with tier deck.
The covered pavil-
ion is ideal for pic-
nics or gatherings
And when the winter
winds blow cuddle
in front of the gas
fireplace and enjoy
a quiet night.
MLS 11-2260
Priced to Sell,
$179,900
Ann Marie Chopick
570-760-6769
(570) 288-6654
MOUNTAIN TOP
Spacious 3 bed-
room, 1 3/4 bath
split level on a
beautifully land-
scaped 1 acre lot.
Large sunroom &
recreation room
with fireplace and
wet bar.
$205,000
Call
Christine Kutz
570-332-8832
MOUNTAIN TOP
130 CHURCH ROAD
The feel of a true
colonial home with
double entry doors
off the foyer into the
living room and din-
ing room. Spacious
kitchen breakfast
area, family room
leading to a fenced
rear yard. 3-season
room with cathedral
ceiling. Hardwood
floors, fireplace,
recently remodeled
2.5 bath and 2-car
garage. Located on
3.77 acres, all the
privacy of country
living yet conve-
niently located.
MLS#12-165
$183,900
Jill Jones 696-6550
Prudential:
696-2600
Collect cash, not dust!
Clean out your
basement, garage
or attic and call the
Classified depart-
ment today at 570-
829-7130!
NANTICOKE
$34,900
715 Maple St.
Handymans dream.
NOT a nightmare. A
little paint, carpet-
ing and water lines
and this house is
good to go. Large
yard. 2 bedrooms.
For mor info and
photos visit: www.
atlasrealtyinc.com.
MLS 12-2332
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
ATLAS REALTY,
INC.
570-829-6200
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
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.
REDUCED
$47,500
Call John Vacendak
570-735-1810
www.capitol-
realestate.com
for additional
photos
NANTICOKE
25 W. Washington
Move right into this
very nice 3 bed-
room, 1 bath home.
Lots of natural
woodwork and a
beautiful stained
glass window.
Newer kitchen
appliances and w/w
carpeting. Supple-
ment your heating
with a recently
installed wood pel-
let stove. This home
also has a one car
detached garage.
MLS 12-2171
$76,000
John Polifka
570-704-6846
FIVE MOUNTAINS
REALTY
570-542-2141
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
NANTICOKE
3 bedroom, 1 bath.
Nice opportunity for
a starter home or
investment proper-
ty. Original columns,
moldings, and lead-
ed glass windows
are intact.
Reduced $30,000
CALL CHRISTINE
KUTZ
570-332-8832
NANTICOKE
409 Union St.
This home has
good bones. New
windows, furnace,
newer addition,
tons of renovations.
Needs to be
cleaned out.
Bring it back!
MLS 12-2216
$92,500
David
Krolikowski
570-287-0770
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-287-0770
NANTICOKE
Large three bed-
room brick ranch
located on the out
skirts of Nanticoke.
You'll fall in love with
the spacious open
floor plan! Large
sunken Living room,
tiled kitchen with
black appliances
included, formal
Dining room, bath
with tiled garden tub
& shower, lots of
closet space, fin-
ished basement
with fireplace, three
quarter bath / laun-
dry room. On a quiet
dead end street.
Back yard is cur-
rently under going
beautiful landscape
redesign. $139,000
12-2629
Please call
Michele Hopkins
570-540-6046
906 Homes for Sale
NANTICOKE
REDUCED
114 W. Union St.
Large home with 3
bedrooms, 8
rooms, yard with
garage and off
street parking. 2
bathrooms. Nice
condition. Loads of
potential. For more
into and photos
visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com.
MLS 12-2096
$55,000
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
Looking to buy a
home?
Place an ad here
and let the
sellers know!
570-829-7130
NANTICOKE
REDUCED!
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,
whole house water
filter and beautiful
hard wood floors.
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.
MLS 12-1401
$64,900
John W. Polifka
Five Mountains
Realty
570-542-2141
570-704-6846
NANTICOKE
Very nice 2 story
with many updates
is in ''move-in''
condition with new
heating system,
central air, newer
roof, yard & 1 car
detached garage.
Directions: Main St.,
Nanticoke to
Market, 3 stop
signs to left on E.
Union, home on left
MLS# 12-2048
PRICE REDUCED!
$65,000
Call Lynda
(570) 696-5418
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-696-1195
NEWPORT TWP.
4 Overlook Drive
Great split level
home in Whitney
Point development,
formerly Ridgeview.
This home has 3
bedrooms, 1.5
baths, 2 car
garage, large deck,
and lower level
family room with a
bar and coal stove.
Heat your house all
winter long with
about $150 worth of
coal!
MLS# 12-2548
$175,000
Call John Polifka
570-704-6846
Five Mountains
Realty
570-542-2141
NUANGOLA LAKE
28 Lance Street
Very comfortable 2
bedroom home in
move in condition.
Great sun room,
large yard, 1 car
garage. Deeded
lake access.
Reduced $107,000
MLS # 11-2899
CALL KATHIE
(570) 288-6654
906 Homes for Sale
PITTSTON
$109,000
Own a Historical
Gem!!! This home
was built in 1907
and is STILL in
near original condi-
tion. All the wood-
work, glass and
light fixtures are
there, all you have
to do is modernize
the mechanical sys-
tems. Never ruined
by a cheap remodel
and the woodwork
was never painted
over. Dont take my
word for it, go on
line and check out
the photos at
www.atlasrealty-
inc.com. If you like
classic features
youll love this
home!
MLS 12-2781
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
PITTSTON
12 Laflin Road
Like new spacious
3 bedroom, 2.5
bath end unit town-
house, Sliding doors
to deck off of living
room/dining room.
Master suite with
vaulted ceiling,
modern kitchen,
laundry on 2nd
floor. Roof and
water heater are
new. Convenient
location and out of
flood zone
MLS 12-938
$169,900
Donald Crossin
570-288-0770
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
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
193 Market St.
Great starter home,
excellent potential.
Very nice neighbor-
hood, nice
corner lot.
MLS 12-2869
$69,500
David
Krolikowski
570-288-0770
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
PITTSTON
45-47 Swallow St.
3 units include dou-
ble block home
with additional sin-
gle family home in
rear. Double block
has 3 bedrooms
and 1 bath on each
side. Single home
has 1 bedroom and
1 bath. Vinyl siding
and off street park-
ing. All utilities paid
by tenants except
sewer. Great
income.
MLS 12-1989
$119,000
Call Terry
570-885-3041
Angie
570-885-4896
Find Something?
Lose Something?
Get it back where it
belongs
with a Lost/Found ad!
570-829-7130
PITTSTON
81 Cliff St.
Move in ready,
freshly painted, 2
story home. Private
driveway, screened
in back porch. Nice-
ly landscaped. 4
bedrooms.
Must see!
MLS 12-2124
$85,000
Call Melissa
570-237-6384
906 Homes for Sale
LivingInQuailHill.com
New Homes
From $275,000-
$595,000
570-474-5574
PITTSTON
REDUCED
$39,900
110 Union St.
Fixer upper with 3
bedrooms, new
roof, gas heat.
Great lot 50 x 173.
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-1513
Call Tom
570-262-7716
PITTSTON
REDUCED
$39,900
110 Union St.
Fixer upper with 3
bedrooms, new
roof, gas heat.
Great lot 50 x 173.
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-1513
Call Tom
570-262-7716
ATLAS REALTY,
INC.
570-829-6200
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
S
O
L
D
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
PITTSTON TWP.
110 Front St.
This well-maintained
3 bedroom, 1.5
baths bilevel home
is in move in condi-
tion. Spacious eat-in
kitchen with custom
cabinets, tile floor
and counters.
Unique lower level
family room with
wood burning fire-
place, office space.
laundry/bath combo.
Plenty of storage
including an 8X6
cedar closet. Out-
door space has
covered patio,
columned carport
and well manicured
partially fenced
yard. Detached
large garage.
For more info &
photos, go to
www.atlasrealty-
inc.com
NEW PRICE
$189,900
MLS# 12-2053
Call Angie at
570-885-4896
Terry at
570-885-3041
PITTSTON TWP.
4 Bedroom
Colonial Home in
Pocono Ridge
Estates. Large 2
Car Garage,
Paved Driveway,
Electric Heat &
Central Air, 1.5
Baths, Large Eat in
Kitchen & Dining
Room. Double
Deck with Hot Tub.
Low Taxes.
$219,000 Call
570-212-1404
To place your
ad Call Toll Free
1-800-427-8649
Collect cash, not dust!
Clean out your
basement, garage
or attic and call the
Classified depart-
ment today at 570-
829-7130!
Collect cash, not dust!
Clean out your
basement, garage
or attic and call the
Classified depart-
ment today at 570-
829-7130!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
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
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com MONDAY, AUGUST 6, 2012 PAGE 9D
906 Homes for Sale 906 Homes for Sale
906 Homes for Sale 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
Branch Bank or
Credit Union
FOR RENT
For Rental Information Call:
1-570-287-1161
www.lippiproperties.com
New Bridge Center
960 Sq. Ft.
480 Pierce St.,
Kingston
10
3

Night
Deposit
906 Homes for Sale
PITTSTON
Growing family
needs this house
sold! Beautiful
inside and out, this
3 bedroom, 2 bath
hoe features many
improvements such
as central air, new
kitchen, oversized
bath and fenced-in
yard. Local tax is
only $36/year.
Located on a dead-
end street with low
traffic volume.
#12-95 $159,900
Paul Pukatch
696-6559
570-283-9100
PITTSTON
Completely
renovated in 2008,
This two-story sits
on a private alley
lot. Central air and
maple hardwood
floors throughout.
$98,000
Call Ed Appnel
570-817-2500
570-654-1490
PLAINS
14 Pine Road
Lovely brick home in
great development.
Hardwood floors, 2
car garage, newer
roof, large laundry
room with office
space, covered
back porch, large
Family room on first
floor with fireplace,
possible 3rd Bed-
room over garage.
12-2688.
$198,000
Call Nancy Answini
Gilroy Real Estate
570-288-1444
Job Seekers are
looking here!
Where's your ad?
570-829-7130 and
ask for an employ-
ment specialist
PLAINS
16 Birch Street
Great home in Hud-
son Gardens. 4
Bedrooms, 2 1/2
baths, central a/c,
new roof & win-
dows, newly paint-
ed, screened porch,
family room with
fireplace and bar.
12-2688
$172,000
Call Nancy Answini
Gilroy Real Estate
570-288-1444
906 Homes for Sale
PLAINS
1610 Westmin-
ster Road.
DRASTIC PRICE
REDCTION
Paradise found!
Your own per-
sonal retreat,
small pond in
front of yard,
private setting
only minutes
from everything.
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
S
O
L
D
Need to rent that
Vacation property?
Place an ad and
get started!
570-829-7130
PLAINS
5 Odonnell St.
$114,900
Great starter home
in convenient loca-
tion. Bi-Level. 3
bedrooms with
hardwood floors, 1
and 3/4 bathrooms
and 1-car heated
garage. Near VA
Hospital, casino,
highways, etc.
atlasrealtyinc.com
MLS # 12-2622
Directions: Travel-
ing South on RT 315;
Left on Mundy St;
Left on Bear Creek
Blvd; Left on ODon-
nell St. Home is on
the right.
Call Keri Best
570-885-5082
PLAINS
REDUCED
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
$139,900
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
906 Homes for Sale
PLYMOUTH
308 Stephanie
Drive
Attractive Brick
Front Ranch with 3
Bedrooms, gas
heat, Sunroom,
attached garage,
large yard, shed.
Hardwood floors
under rugs. Great
location. New win-
dows. Basement
can easily be fin-
ished. Well Main-
tained. MLS# 12-
1911
PRICE REDUCED
$139,900
Call Nancy Palumbo
570-714-9240
PLYMOUTH
Nice 2 story home
sits high & dry on
side of Plymouth
Mountain. Large eat
in kitchen, living
room, dining room,
oil hotwater base-
board heat. Nice
yard, wrap around
porch.
Directions: Main
Street, Plymouth to
Coal Street, over
small bridge to 1st
hard left onto Smith
Row-house on
right. MLS# 12-2256
$50,000
Call Lynda
(570) 696-5418
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-696-1195
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 $24,900
Ann Marie Chopick
570-760-6769
570-288-6654
PRINGLE
2 story, 3 bedroom
home. New bath,
new furnace & new
central air, all appli-
ances included.
Hardwood floors
downstairs, carpet
upstairs. Great
yard. Out of the
flood zone. Nice
neighborhood. By
appointment only.
Call 570-287-1029
SHAVERTOWN
CHARM is what you
will find in this home.
Beautiful original
rustic floors, warm
coal fire place,
option of having 1st
floor bedroom, den,
office, your own
personal get away
space. whatever
you need. Come put
your personal
touches in this great
value. Sold as is
inspection for buy-
ers information only.
MLS 12-2152
$69,900
Call / text Donna
Cain 570-947-3824
or Tony
570-855-2424
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
906 Homes for Sale
SHAVERTOWN
NEW PRICE!!!
Well maintained
raised ranch in
Midway Manor.
Good size level
yard with shed.
Large sunroom /
laundry addition.
Lower level family
room with wood
stove. $139,900
Call
Christine Kutz
570-332-8832
SHICKSHINNY
130 Marvin Rd.
Fantastic LOG
HOME W/GREAT
VIEWS**from Rear
Deck, 4 Bedrooms 2
Bath on 1.55 Acres.
Beautiful Landscap-
ing. 12-1489
$199,000
570-675-4400
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
It's that time again!
Rent out your
apartment
with the Classifieds
570-829-7130
SHICKSHINNY LAKE
Lake Front Property
at Shickshinny
Lake!!! 4
Bedrooms, 2.75
baths, 2 kitchens,
living room, large
family room. 2 sun-
rooms, office &
laundry room. Plus
2 car attached gar-
age with paved
driveway, AG pool,
dock & 100' lake
frontage. $382,500.
MLS #12-860
Call Kenneth
Williams
570-542-2141
Five Mountains
Realty
SHICKSHINNY
LAKE
Price Reduced!
The best of both
worlds. If you crave
privacy, consider
this 4 bedroom, 3
bath raised ranch
on a 4.96 acre
wooded lot. A tree
lined driveway
leads to this spa-
cious 3,300 square
foot home. MLS#
12-1407 only
$185,000
Adjoining 1+ acre
with deeded lake
front available for
$50,000. Call
Barbara Metcalf
570-696-3801
SHICKSHINNY
LAKE
Price Reduced!
The best of both
worlds. If you crave
privacy, consider
this 4 bedroom, 3
bath raised ranch
on a 4.96 acre
wooded lot. A tree
lined driveway
leads to this spa-
cious 3,300 square
foot home. MLS#
12-1407 only
$185,000
Adjoining 1+ acre
with deeded lake
front available for
$50,000. Call
Barbara Metcalf
570-696-3801
906 Homes for Sale
SHICKSHINNY
REDUCED!!!!
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
$150,000
Jackie Roman
570-288-0770
Ext. 39
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
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
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
SUGARLOAF
Beautiful well kept
home in a great
area. Plenty of room
for all your needs.
Hardwood floors
under the carpet.
30,000 btu Fp in liv-
ing room. Need to
relax, sit on the 11.8
x 21 ft deck and just
enjoy your sur-
roundings. This
home has so much
to offer.
MLS 12-1872
$157,750
Call / text Donna
Cain 570-947-3824
or Tony
570-855-2424
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
REDUCED!
4 Oliver Road
Located in the back
part of Oliver Road
in a very private part
of North Lake in
Sweet Valley. Yearn-
ing to be restored,
lake front cape cod
in a very tranquil
setting was formerly
used as a summer
home. MLS 11-2113
$93,500
Jay Crossin
CROSSIN
REAL ESTATE
570-288-0770
ext. 23
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
187 Shoemaker St.
Adorable 3 bed-
room, 1 bath, Cape
Cod. Completely
remodeled inside
and out. Hardwood
floors throughout,
duct work in place
for central air instal-
lation. Back yard
deck for summer
cook outs and
much, much more.
Not a drive by!
MLS 12-1595
$142,500
Jay A. Crossin
EXT. 23
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
SWOYERSVILLE
689 Main Street
2 bedroom home on
large lot with bonus
efficiency apart-
ment. Large living
room, eat in kitchen,
screened porch.
Freshly painted and
new flooring. See
www.craiglslist.org
$69,000. Call
570-696-3368
SWOYERSVILLE
Large yard, quiet
neighborhood. 2
bedrooms, dining &
living rooms, unfin-
ished basement.
$51,000. Call
(570)704-9446
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
$195,000
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
with classified!
TRUCKSVILLE
157 Carverton Rd.
Enjoy country living
with scenic views
just minutes from
309. This 2,030 sq
ft Colonial offers an
oak kitchen with
new Jennaire gas
range, family room
with fireplace lead-
ing to a spacious
rear deck, Formal
dining room, 4 bed-
rooms and 2/1/2
baths plus a 2 car
garage. The base-
ment has a work
shop area and can
easily be turned into
additional living
area. $195,000
Ann Marie Chopick
570-760-6769
(570) 288-6654
TRUCKSVILLE
REDUCED!!
221 Maple St.
Beautiful 4 bed-
room Back Mtn.
home with natural
woodwork, pocket-
doors, ceiling fans
& great light. Sit on
1 or 2 screened
rear porches and
enjoy awesome
views or sit on your
front porch in this
great neighbor-
hood! Dont forget
the above ground
pool with deck.
MLS 12-1699
$149,900
John Shelley
570-702-4162
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
906 Homes for Sale
TRUCKSVILLE
REDUCED!!
221 Maple St.
Beautiful 4 bed-
room Back Mtn.
home with natural
woodwork, pocket-
doors, ceiling fans
& great light. Sit on
1 or 2 screened
rear porches and
enjoy awesome
views or sit on your
front porch in this
great neighbor-
hood! Dont forget
the above ground
pool with deck.
MLS 12-1699
$149,900
John Shelley
570-702-4162
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
TUNKHANNOCK
Oakwood Lake
Estates
Brand new 2011
Redman 3
bedrooms, 2 baths,
propane heat, A/C.
$42,000 Call
(908)227-6707
WAPWALLOPEN
18 Circle Ave.
Relax and enjoy the
beautiful view of Lily
Lake right from
your sunroom in
this quiet lake com-
munity. Entire home
redone In 2005,
beautiful hardwood
floors, central air,
skylights, coal
stove, small pond
and so much more.
Perfect for all year
round or a week-
end/summer get-
away. Off street
parking for
2 vehicles.
MLS 12-1892
$145,000
Shelby Watchilla
570-762-6969
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
WAPWALLOPEN
Vinyl resided, new
shingles in 2008,
quiet location with
level, open ground.
Replacement
windows, new well
pump.
MLS #12-760
$52,900
Call Dale
570-256-3343
Five Mountains
Realty
Looking for that
special place
called home?
Classified will address
Your needs.
Open the door
with classified!
WEST NANTICOKE
OPEN HOUSE
Sunday, August 5th,
2pm-4pm
Tilbury Terrace
69 Tilbury Ave
All brick, 3 bedroom
ranch, large
wooded lot, large
rooms with
beautiful
Parquet hardwood
floors, plaster
walls/ceilings, full
walk-up floored
attic, full
basement with
concrete walls &
floor, wine cellar,
washer/dryer,
workshop areas,
2 car attached
garage.
Quiet, friendly
neighborhood,
$179,000.
ROTHSTEIN
REALTORS
1-888-244-2714
WEST NANTICOKE
TILBURY TERRACE
Tilbury Avenue
Superb 3 bedroom
single. Hardwood
floors, fireplace,
garage. Well main-
tained. Great Neigh-
borhood. Affordable
at $209,500.
Towne & Country
Real Estate Co.
570-735-8932
570-542-5708
WEST PITTSTON
$49,900
329 Wyoming Ave.
Flooded in Sept.
2011, being sold as
is. Great potential in
this 4 bedroom 2
3/4 bath house. Off
street parking. For
more info and pho-
tos visit:
www.atlasrealty-
inc.com
MLS 12-716
Call Tom
570-262-7716
906 Homes for Sale
WEST PITTSTON
$72,000
3 bedroom, one
bath home with
extra large kitchen.
Has newer gas fur-
nace. Was not
flooded in Sept.
2011. Why rent
when you can own
your own home?
Interest rates will
probably never be
lower. If youre
employed and have
good credit dont
wait, buy now! For
more info and pho-
tos visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-2837
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
WEST PITTSTON
510 Fourth St.
A nice 2 story, 3
bedroom home in
the Wyoming Area
school district. Cor-
ner lot. Out of the
flood zone.
MLS 12-1616
$79,000
Jackie Roman
EXT 39
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
WEST PITTSTON
Great Rancher in
move-in condition,
3 bedroom, hard-
wood floors, mod-
ern eat-in kitchen,
garage, no flood.
PRICE REDUCED!
$152,000 12-1399
Call Nancy Answini
Joe Gilroy
Real Estate
570-288-1444
WEST PITTSTON
Split level, stone
exterior, multi-tiered
deck, bluestone
patio, flood dam-
aged, being sold as
is condition.
$73,500
CALL DONNA
570-613-9080
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
WEST PITTSTON
Townhouse For
Sale!
-Across from Blue
Ribbon-
1, 800 square feet.
Large eat-in kitchen
tile throughout,
granite counter-
tops, walk-out
deck, living room
with hardwood
floors, fully finished
basement with gas
fireplace & sliding
glass doors to
patio, 2nd floor
laundry. 2 bed-
rooms, 2 1/2 bath-
rooms with tile,
central air condi-
tioning/gas heat.
Asking $172,000
Please call Marissa
@ 570-430-9324 if
interested!
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
$169,900
Louise Laine
283-9100 x20
570-283-9100
906 Homes for Sale
WEST WYOMING
OPEN HOUSE
Sunday Aug 5th
12:00 to 1:30
688 8th Street
Unique design,out-
standing crafts-
manship and quality
finishes make this
home a must see!
Move in ready fea-
turing a modern
kitchen with hand-
crafted cabinets
and stainless steel
appliances. Living
room with hard-
wood floors opens
to the dining room
which boasts a fab-
ulous brick and
stone fireplace.
Game room with
french doors lead
to a private patio
and fenced in yard
with an above
ground pool with a
deck. Two gener-
ous sized bed-
rooms and two
baths on the sec-
ond floor. Family
room with built-in
lighted display
cases and bath
on the lower level.
Private driveway
leads to 1 car
garage with stor-
age loft, and addi-
tional parking.
MLS 12-2032
$174,900
Call Mary
696-0729
WEST PITTSTON
NEW LISTING!
Beautifully restored
Cape Cod located
on a lovely tree
lined street. Ultra
modern kitchen has
granite counter
tops, tiled floors
and washer dryer
hook-up. Three
bedrooms, 2 baths,
new gas furnace,
water heater and
electrical. Quality
laminate flooring
throughout first
floor. Large master
bedroom suite on
2nd floor has a
walk-in closet, a
cedar closet and
adjoining
office/exercise
room or a 4th
bedroom.
#12-2753 $149,900
Karen Bernardi
283-9100 x31
696-2600
WHITE HAVEN
Nice home with
double lot in Hickory
Hill community.
Great bi-level with
open floor plan and
plenty of space for
all your needs.
Serene wooded lot
and a stream that
run trough it. Make
this your seasons
home or your per-
manent place to call
home. House sold
as is,Inspections for
buyers information
only. MLS 12-2385
$107,900
Call / text Donna
Cain 570-947-3824
or Tony
570-855-2424
Collect cash, not dust!
Clean out your
basement, garage
or attic and call the
Classified depart-
ment today at 570-
829-7130!
WHITE-HAVEN
501 Birch Lane
Beautiful 4 bed-
room, 3 bath. Enjoy
the amenities of a
private lake, boat-
ing, basketball
courts, etc. The
home has wood
floors and carpeting
throughout. French
doors in the kitchen
that lead you out to
the large rear deck
for entertaining. The
backyard has 2 utili-
ty sheds for storage
MLS 12-1695
$179,900
Call Karen
Coldwell Banker
Rundle Real Estate
570-474-2340
906 Homes for Sale
WHITE HAVEN
Priced to sell in
Woodhaven
Estates! This well
maintained home
located in the Crest-
wood School District
offers features such
as, covered deck
and lower deck
leading to the pool,
ductless A/C, zoned
heating system,
oversized heated 2-
car garage in addi-
tion to the built-in
garage. Finished
lower level with
recreation room,
workshop and
bath laundry area.
The list goes on,
come and take a
look! Owners are
ready to move, are
you?
MLS#12-872
$199,900
Jill Jones direct:
696-6550
696-2600
WILKES BARRE
120 Darling Street
MOVE IN READY
Just listed!
Only $42,000
Cheaper than rent.
Gas heat, small
yard, 2 bedrooms
plus additional
flex room. Updated
kitchen and bath.
Screened in
porches.
Great home!
Looking for offers!
MLS# 12-2321
Call Theresa
Vacendak directly @
650-5872
for showing or
information.
CENTRAL
REAL ESTATE
(570) 822-1133
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
3 plus bedroom
home on Logan St.
in Wilkes Barre with
off street parking,
fenced-in yard and
newer furnace and
water heater. Great
potential on third
floor. Replacement
windows, double
lot, close to
shopping.
#12-2005 $67,000
Paul Pukatch
696-6559
696-2600
WILKES-BARRE
$139,900
51 Flood Drive
Parsons Manor
Beautiful Town-
house in great con-
dition. Very spa-
cious with large
rooms, one car
garage and base-
ment storage. 3
bedrooms.
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-2292
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
WILKES-BARRE
$76,500
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
Colleen Turant
570-237-0415
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
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
To place your
ad Call Toll Free
1-800-427-8649
PAGE 10D MONDAY, AUGUST 6, 2012 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
906 Homes for Sale
WILKES-BARRE
(Riverside Park)
Corner of Dagobert
and Gordon Ave.
2 bedroom modular
rancher (large mas-
ter bedroom) with a
20x 22 family room
and a woodburner.
Paneled interior.
10x12 three season
porch. Carport. 2
driveways. Many
extras.(FHA: $2,380
down, $381/month,
3.875% interest,
30 years.) $68,000
MLS# 12-2092
Ask for Bob Kopec.
Humford Realty, Inc.
570-822-5126
WILKES-BARRE
Need a huge home
with dual func-
tion??? look here,
we have it for you.
This large 5 bed-
room home with
plenty of space and
rooms to personal-
ize however you
need. Updated
kitchen, wood floors
and nice yard. This
home is zoned Resi-
dential with com-
mercial function!
This is a one stop
shop home. Don't
miss out.
MLS 12-2215
$128,900
Call / text Donna
Cain 570-947-3824
or Tony
570-855-2424
WILKES-BARRE
Beautiful large
ranch in a great
area of Wilkes-
Barre, Lovely River-
side park. This brick
ranch offers a 2 car
garage, serene
backyard with in-
ground pool, large
rooms, finished
lower level with
kitchen and bar,
screened in porch,
family room and on
just about a half
acre. Come take a
look at your new
home! House sold
as is, inspection for
buyer information
only. MLS 12-2451
$220,000
Call / text Donna
Cain 570-947-3824
or Tony
570-855-2424
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
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
$25,900
Call / text Donna
Cain 570-947-3824
WILKES-BARRE
13 Darling St.
OPEN HOUSE
SUN. AUG. 5
12-1:30pm
Beautifully main-
tained 2-story home
with 3 bedrooms
and 1 and 3/4 bath-
rooms. Oak floors
throughout with
chestnut woodwork.
Cherry kitchen,
stained glass win-
dows, french doors,
fireplace and a 3-
season porch all sit-
uated in a country-
like setting in the
heart of the city.
Huge attic can be
converted into mas-
ter suite or 4th or
5th bedroom. Off
street parking. Con-
venient location.
Nothing to do but
move in! Must see.
atlasrealtyinc.com
MLS #12-2620
$99,900
Directions: Travel-
ing south on North
River Rd; Left at
light at Courthouse
onto West North St,
Left onto Darling St.
Home is in the right.
atlas realtyinc.com
Call Keri Best
570-885-5082
906 Homes for Sale
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
Looking to buy a
home?
Place an ad here
and let the
sellers know!
570-829-7130
WILKES-BARRE
173 Austin Ave.
Completely remod-
eled home in the
Parsons section of
Wilkes-Barre.
Updates include
high efficiency gas
furnace and electric
hot water heater,
kitchen w/laundry,
drywall, paint,
recessed lights,
doors, tile, carpet,
Pergo flooring, and-
windows.
MLS 12-2566
$85,000
John Shelley
570-702-4162
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
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
240 Sheridan St.
Cute home just
waiting for your
personal touch.
Looking to down-
size? Well this is
the one for you.
2nd floor could be
finished, along with
the basement. If
you are a handy-
man you have to
see this home.
MLS 12-1481
$42,000
Roger Nenni
EXT 32
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
WILKES-BARRE
302 Parrish St
Warm and Wel-
come! This lovely
well maintained
home features 3
bedrooms with
large closets, spa-
cious kitchen and
low taxes! 12-2296
$44,200
Brenda Suder
570-332-8924
RE/MAX
PRECISION
PROPERTIES
570-824-9800
WILKES-BARRE
37 Lynch Lane
Add some TLC and
this large 2 story
home could be the
gem it once was.
Off street parking, 3
bedrooms, 1.5
baths. Priced to sell
in quiet neighbor-
hood. Being sold in
as is condition.
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com.
MLS 12-2634
$38,500
Call Michele
570-905-2336
906 Homes for Sale
WILKES-BARRE
38 Westminster St.
Very good condition
one story home
with off street
parking & nice yard.
2 year old roof, new
stove & fridge
included along with
clothes washer &
dryer. Large living
room, dining room
& eat-in kitchen.
Full, dry concrete
basement, could be
finished. Gas heat.
$ 64,400.
MLS# 12-2605.
Directions: Carey
Ave. or S. Main to
either Wood or
Hanover to
Westminster.
Call Jim Banos
570-991-1883
Coldwell Banker
Rundle Real
Estate
WILKES-BARRE
46 Barney Street
Well - maintained
three bedroom
home with a large
yard. Great starter
home! 12-2390
$64,500
Darcy J. Gollhardt
Realtor
570-262-0226
CLASSIC
PROPERTIES
570-718-4959
Ext. 1352
WILKES-BARRE
60 Saint Clair St
Great 4 bedroom
home with new
kitchen, furnace and
bath. Laundry room
off kitchen. Newer
windows and roof.
Hardwood on first
floor. Off street
parking. Older one
car garage. Walk up
attic. MLS 11-1478
$59,000
Call Nancy Answini
570-237-5999
JOSEPH P. GILROY
REAL ESTATE
570-288-1444
Find Something?
Lose Something?
Get it back where it
belongs
with a Lost/Found ad!
570-829-7130
WILKES-BARRE
70 McLean Street
$99,900
Very nicely updated
& maintained 2
story home, 3 bed-
rooms, 1 bath, 4-
season sunroom
with huge backyard
& deck. Newer car-
peting, off street
parking & security
system. ONE YEAR
HOME WARRANTY.
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-2886
Keri Best
570-885-5082
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
74 Regent St.
1/2 double with 3
bedrooms, new
bathroom, front
steps, carpeting,
shed and fence.
Extra storage in
walk up attic. Move
in condition.
MLS 12-2972
$44,000
Jay A. Crossin
EXT 23
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0776
906 Homes for Sale
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
Beautifully main-
tained 3 story home,
features hardwood
floors, built-in cabi-
net, five plus bed-
rooms, office, 3
bathrooms and
stained glass win-
dows. All measure-
ments are approxi-
mate. 12-1081
$99,900
Call Tracy
McDermott
Realty
570-696-2468
WILKES-BARRE
Beautifully main-
tained double block
on large landscaped
lot. Newer roof and
windows, hard-
wood under carpet,
ceiling fans, plaster
walls and ample off
street parking. Live
in one side and let
rent from other side
help pay your mort-
gage. Must see!
$108,000
Call
CHRISTINE KUTZ
for details
570-332-8832
Job Seekers are
looking here!
Where's your ad?
570-829-7130 and
ask for an employ-
ment specialist
WILKES-BARRE
Convenient city
living on almost one
acre corner lot.
Beautiful views,
quiet street. Home
has large room
sizes & wrap
around porch.
Additional enclosed
porch in back, fin-
ished basement
with kitchen, bath &
bar which could be
used as separate
apartment. Two car
detached garage.
Private property.
Must see
to appreciate!
MLS # 12-1651
$107,000
Call Jill Hiscox
570-696-0875
WILKES-BARRE
For sale by owner
Located in Wilkes
Barre city.
65 Reno Lane
Currently rented
with a great tenant.
Entire home was
remodeled 10
years ago, including
new plumbing,
electric, drywall,
and is appraised
at $55,000.
Features 3 bed-
rooms, 1.5 baths,
6 rooms total.
Partial unfinished
basement, with
gas heat, and yard
with wood deck.
All this for $40,000
Great investment
property.
owner will help with
closing!! Rent
income is $650.00
agents welcome.
Call 570-814-3666
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
NEW! HUGE!
Remodeled 4 bed-
room, 2 story home,
previously had 3
additional bedrooms
on heated 3rd floor,
gas fireplace,
fenced yard, eat in
kitchen, large
rooms. A must see!
Only $75,900.
Deremer Realty
570-477-1149
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.
$59,900
CALL
CHRISTINE KUTZ
570-332-8832
WILKES-BARRE
Nicely remodeled
fully rented Duplex,
near schools, hospi-
tal, parks & bus
route. Separate utili-
ties and off street
parking. MLS 12-
599 $96,500.
CLASSIC
PROPERTIES
570-793-9449
Call Steve Shemo
570-718-4959
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
WILKES-BARRE
NOW REDUCED
332 Academy St.
Charming 3 bed-
room Ranch with
unique upgrades
including polished
concrete counter-
tops in kitchen, and
a lovely built in gas
fireplace in living
room. Up to date
landscaping, fenced
in yard and above
ground pool
and hot tub.
MLS 12-2441
$99,900
Jay A. Crossin
EXT. 23
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
$54,900
Jay A. Crossin
570-288-0770
Ext. 23
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
WILKES-BARRE
REDUCED
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
$74,900
Donald Crossin
570-288-0770
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
WILKES-BARRE
REDUCED
60 Kulp St.
3-4 bedroom, 2
story home with
well kept hardwood
floors throughout.
Private driveway
with parking for 2
cards and nearly all
replacement win-
dows. MLS 11-2897
$59,900
Jay A. Crossin
Ext. 23
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
906 Homes for Sale
WILKES-BARRE
REDUCED!
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
$72,000
Jay A. Crossin
Ext. 23
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
WILKES-BARRE
REDUCED!
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
$59,900
Jay A. Crossin
570-288-0770
Ext. 23
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
WILKES-BARRE
REDUCED!
45 Marlborough Ave
Nice brick front
Ranch on corner
lot. 3 bedrooms, 1
full and (2) 1/2
baths. Finished
basement, breeze-
way to 2 car
garage. Fenced
yard and central air.
MLS 12-1612
New price
$105,000
Mark R. Mason
570-331-0982
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
WILKES-BARRE
ROLLING MILL HILL
Well cared for 3
bedroom, 1.5 bath
single home. Eat in
kitchen, off street
parking, garage.
Newer roof, win-
dows, gas heat, 3
season porch. Spa-
cious attic, private
fenced in yard.
Move in condition.
$85,000.
Call 570-823-8418
WILKES-BARRE
NEW LISTING!
Large home that is
bright and open.
Newly remodeled
kitchen and bath-
rooms. Home has 3
bedrooms, living
room, dining room
and a laundry room
on 1st floor. Plenty of
room for off-street
parking in back of
the large lot. Pergo
flooring throughout
the lower level, new
tile backsplash in
the main bathroom.
#12-2524 $64,900
Call Chris Jones to
schedule your
showing! 696-6558
696-2600
WILKES BARRE
Well maintained 3
bedroom home with
1.5 baths. Home
has newly remod-
eled kitchen with
Brazilian cherry
hardwood floors.
Pantry off kitchen
that leads to new
bath. In-ground
pool. 2-car
detached garage.
#12-2545 $129,900
Call Christine
Pieczynski
696-6569
696-2600
906 Homes for Sale
WILKES-BARRE
Looking for a home
with 5 bedrooms
or mother in-law
apartment, this is
the home for you!
This property has
many amenities, a
privacy rear fence
with a concrete
rear patio (23
x23), large stor-
age building (23 x
18). Off-street
parking for 2 vehi-
cles, rear porches
on 2nd and 3rd
floor. Home has 9
rooms, 2 modern
baths, 2 modern
kitchens with plenty
of cabinets.
Replacement win-
dows, newer roof,
natural woodwork
in living room and
dining room. Prop-
erty is close to all
amenities including
playground across
the street, Dan
Flood School,
Coughlin High
School, General
Hospital, Kings
College, churches
and shopping.
#12-1763 $69,900
Louise Laine
283-9100 x20
570-283-9100
WILKES-BARRE
Nice, clean 3 bed-
room, 6 room home
in very good condi-
tion, parking at rear
for 3+ vehicles,
newer rear porch
with trees shading
porch. Side lot is
nicely landscaped,
2nd floor has rear
porch off bedroom.
Large storage area
on 2nd floor which
can be converted to
a 2nd bathroom.
Replacement win-
dows throughout,
natural woodwork
on 1st floor and
stairs. Kitchen
remodeled with new
stove and dish-
washer.
#12-2213 $59,000
Louise Laine
283-9100 x20
696-2600
WILKES-BARRE
NEW LISTING!
Convenient location!
Near General Hos-
pital. Large kitchen
and spacious living
room highlight this
two-story home.
Double wide lot with
detached garage
and driveway. Home
has a newer roof
and furnace and a
nice backyard with
plenty of room. Call
today to see this
home!
#12-2523 $49,900
Chris Jones
696-6558
696-2600
Looking for that
special place
called home?
Classified will address
Your needs.
Open the door
with classified!
WYOMING
REDUCED 50K!!!
573 Coon Road
This 100+ year old
Victorian comes
with a lot of ameni-
ties inside and out
on 6 acres of Coun-
try living. Indoor
pool, wine cellar,
patio, 4 car garage
and much more.
Property is being
sold as is.
MLS 12-1676
$329,000
Shelby Watchilla
570-762-6969
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
YATESVILLE
41 Pittston Ave.
$74,900
Cute little home
in very nice
neighborhood
with 4 bed-
rooms, large
yard and 2 car
garage. MLS
#12-2614. For
more informa-
tion and photos,
visit
atlasrealtyinc.co
m
Call Charlie
829-6200
VM 101
S
O
L
D
906 Homes for Sale
ZIONS GROVE
Modern, 1 bed-
room loft town-
house in gated
community, sleeps
4; taxes $400/year.
Maintenance fee
$70/month. Asking
$35,000 or rent for
$500/month. 5 min-
utes to Hazleton, 1
mile to Eagle Rock
Resort.
570-824-6887
or 570-793-9390
HOMES FOR SALE
5 Homes left. 3 in
Nanticoke, 2 in
Edwardsville. Price
ranging from
$20,000 to $37,000
Call 516-216-3539
Leave Message
909 Income &
Commercial
Properties
ASHLEY
100 Ashley St.
Well maintained 3
unit building with
extra $50 per
month from garage
with electric. Off
street parking for 4
cars and fenced in
yard. Back porches
on both levels. Fully
rented. Let rental
income pay for this
property. Must see!
MLS 12-1746
$109,000
Debbie McGuire
570-332-4413
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
ASHLEY
110 Ashley St.
Very nice duplex
with off street park-
ing and nice yard.
Enclosed porch on
1st floor and 2 exits
on 2nd. Fully rent-
ed. Great return on
your investment.
Rent pays your
mortgage. Dont
miss out
MLS 12-1745
$89,000
Debbie McGuire
570-332-4413
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
ASHLEY
2 story commercial
property for sale.
4,200 square feet
building. $35,000,
or best offer. Call
570-592-3575,
leave message.
AVOCA
$79,900
129 Lampman St.
Side by side double
block home with 3
bedrooms each
side, separate utili-
ties. Includes 2
extra lots. For more
info and photos
visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-2253
Call Tom
570-262-7716
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
BEAR CREEK
$149,900
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
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
909 Income &
Commercial
Properties
DUPONT
$79,900
100 Lincoln St.
MULTI FAMILY
3 bedroom
home with
attached apart-
ment and beau-
ty shop. Apart-
ment is rented.
For more info
and photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-941
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
P
E
N
D
I
N
G
DUPONT
$89,900
238 Main St.
Multi Family Invest-
ment Property
Great opportunity
for the experienced
investor. Property is
large with parking
for at least 9 cars.
Extra lot, one office
and 2 apartments.
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-2315
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
DURYEA
$39,900
93 Main St.
Four units. 3 resi-
dential and one
storefront.Great
corner location,
flood damaged
home being sold as
is. For more info
visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-1948
Call Tom
570-262-7716
EDWARDSVILLE
33-37 Church St.
4 unit investment
property close to
shopping and bus
routes.Off street
parking and large
yard. Includes 2
laundry rooms.
MLS 12-2383
$119,000
Debbie McGuire
570-332-4413
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
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
909 Income &
Commercial
Properties
FORTY FORT
107 River St.
Large 3 unit apart-
ment building with
off street parking
for several cars.
3rd floor newly
remodeled. Hard-
wood floors. Large
yard, newer furnace
and great location.
Fully rented. Good
investment
propertY.
MLS 12-2017
$199,000
Debbie McGuire
570-332-4413
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
FORTY FORT
1301 Murray St.
2 family duplex.
Fully rented.
Vinyl sided, 2
car garage, off
street parking.
For more info
and photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-2028
$118,000
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
P
E
N
D
I
N
G
JENKINS TWP.
$154,900
55 1/2 Main St.
Newer side by side
double with sepa-
rate utilities, 2 bed-
rooms, 1.5 baths
each side. Buy with
3 1/2% down and
low FHA mortgage
rate if you live in
one side. For more
info and photos
visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-1851
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
KINGSTON
100 Union St.
Great location in
high traffic area.
Completely remod-
eled and updated.
Professional space.
Move in ready with
office furniture
included in price.
Reception area, eat
in kitchen and
outside deck.
MLS 12-2784
$85,000
John Shelley
570-702-4162
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!
KINGSTON
299 Rutter Ave.
Large well main-
tained Duplex on a
corner lot in
Kingston. 2 bed-
rooms each unit,
separate gas heat
and off street park-
ing for multiple
cars. New roof,
water heater and
freshly painted
exterior. A really
nice property!
MLS 12-2447
$139,900
Mark R. Mason
570-331-0982
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
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.
$325,000
Bob Kopec
HUMFORD REALTY
570-822-5126
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with 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 MONDAY, AUGUST 6, 2012 PAGE 11D
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
Collect cash, not dust!
Clean out your
basement, garage
or attic and call the
Classified depart-
ment today at 570-
829-7130!
KINGSTON
7 Hoyt St
Nice duplex zoned
commercial, can be
used for offices as
well as residential.
All separate utilities.
Keep apt. space or
convert to commer-
cial office space.
Adjacent lot for sale
by same owner.
MLS 11-2176
$79,900
Jay A. Crossin
CROSSIN
REAL ESTATE
570-288-0770
ext. 23
KINGSTON
REDUCED
140 Wyoming Ave.
Location, Location,
Location! Great
space in high traffic
area. Was used for
professional busi-
ness with a gun
shop occupying a
small portion of the
building. Only the
gun shop is occu-
pied. OSP for
approximately
11 cars.
MLS 12-1735
$299,000
Shelby Watchilla
570-762-6969
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
5770-288-0770
KINGSTON
REDUCED
341 Wyoming Ave.
3 story Victorian
located in a high
exposure area. Has
all the lovely signa-
ture woodwork of a
grand Victorian of
yesteryear! Can be
restored for use as
a residential home
or a landlord invest-
ment. Currently
subdivided into mul-
tiple office spaces
and 2 apartments.
MLS 12-617
REDUCED
$169,900
Jay A. Crossin
Ext. 23
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
KINGSTON
REDUCED
388 Schuyler Ave.
Well cared for
Duplex in great
location. 1st floor
has new bathroom
and large kitchen,
2nd floor has all
new carpeting and
long term tenant.
Large lot and off
street parking for 2
cars. Separate fur-
naces and electrici-
ty, Make an offer!
MLS 12-1125
$94,900
Call Shelby
Watchilla
570-762-6969
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
KINGSTON
REDUCED!
155 Sharpe St.
Nice duplex with
separate electric
and water. Off
street parking in
rear. Also listed as
residential. See list
#12-609 for addi-
tional photos.
MLS 12-605
$74,900
Jay A. Crossin
Ext. 23
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
909 Income &
Commercial
Properties
LEHMAN TWP
3000 Square Foot
Building zoned
commercial
available for lease.
Located in high
traffic area. Parking
for 20 cars.
MLS# 12-1452
PRICE REDUCED!
$1500/month
Call Barbara Metcalf
570-696-0883
NANTICOKE
109-111 Welles St.
2 properties for the
price of o ne! A 3
unit apartment
building and a
detached 2 bed-
room home. Apart-
ment building con-
sists of a 3 bed-
room 1/2 double
and two 3 room
apartments. Sepa-
rate utilities. Elec-
tric heat in rear
home. Bran new
roof and other
updates.
MLS 12-2015
$119,000
Debbie McGuire
570-332-4413
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
NANTICOKE
130-132 E. State St.
Nice four units with
1-3 bedroom, 1-2
bedroom, 2-1 bed-
rooms. All appli-
ances plus coin
operated washer
/dryer. Newer rub-
ber roof with sever-
al new windows.
Gas furnace and
hot water heaters,
fully occupied. City
license and occu-
pancy
permits issued.
$145,000
Call 570-542-5610
NANTICOKE
191-195 W. Grand St.
Very nice, well
maintained, resi-
dential/commercial
property. 4 beauti-
ful, large apart-
ments, 2 bedrooms
each with appli-
ances including air
conditioners and
washer/dryers,
hardwood floors.
Four commercial
units with over
head doors. New
roofs and windows.
Gas furnace and
hot water heater.
City license and
occupancy permits
issued. $350,000
Call 570-542-5610
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
NANTICOKE
COMMERCIAL OR
RESIDENTIAL
PRICE REDUCED!
Desirable invest-
ment opportunity
building consist of a
vacant storefront
which can be used
for commercial pur-
poses or remodeled
into another apart-
ment. Other units
consists of a 3 room
apartment and a 6
room, 3 bedroom
unit. Close proximity
to LCC. Newer roof
and furnace, hard-
wood floors, off-
street parking,
corner lot.
#11-04019 $39,900
Karen Ryan
283-9100 x14
696-2600
PITTSTON
65 1/2 Center
St.
Two homes on
one lot. Both
rented. Great
income poten-
tial. For more
info visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-1898
$72,000
Call Tom
570-262-7716
S
O
L
D
909 Income &
Commercial
Properties
PITTSTON
68 William St.
Great investment
property with 3
units and separate
utilities. Each unit
has 2 entrances
and washer hook
up. Roof is 5 years
old. For more info
visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com.
MLS 12-1897
$69,900
Call Tom
570-262-7716
PITTSTON
Duplex. Aluminum
siding, oil heat, semi
- modern kitchens,
long term tenant. On
a spacious 50 x
150 lot. Motivated
Seller. REDUCED.
$33,260
Ann Marie Chopick
570-760-6769
570-288-6654
PITTSTON
FOR SALE
5 Unit
Money Maker
Available immedi-
ately. Fully rented,
leases on all five
units. Separate
utilities, new roof
in 2007, 3 new
gas furnaces, off
street parking for
6 vehicles, 3 bay
garage. Over
$29,000 in rents.
A true money
maker for the
serious investor.
Must Sell!
$140,000.
Call Steve at
(570)468-2488
Looking to buy a
home?
Place an ad here
and let the
sellers know!
570-829-7130
PITTSTON
PRICED
REDUCED
NEW PRICE
$79,900
35 High St.
Nice duplex in great
location, fully occu-
pied with leases.
Good investment
property. Separate
utilities, newer fur-
naces, gas and oil.
Notice needed to
show. For more info
and photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 11-3222
Call Tom
570-262-7716
PLYMOUTH
155 E Walnut St.
Good investment
property knocking
on your door. Don't
miss out, come and
see for yourself.
Also included in the
sale of the property
is the lot behind the
home. Lot size is
25X75, known as
147 Cherry St.
$82,000
MLS# 10-2666
Call Karen
Coldwell Banker
Rundle Real Estate
570-474-2340
PLYMOUTH
259 Shawnee Ave.
6 unit property with
one 2 unit building
and a 4 unit apart-
ment building. The
2 unit property has
been completely
rebuilt from frame
up in 2010! Very
good condition 4
unit building has
many updates also.
MLS 12-2016
$269,000
Debbie McGuire
570-332-4413
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
909 Income &
Commercial
Properties
SHAVERTOWN
NEW LISTING!
COMMERCIAL
LEASE
30 Carverton Road,
Historic Back
Mountain church
with modern
updates ready for
your professional
office, retail,
antique or craft
store. The possibili-
ties are many;
property is Zoned
B-1. Beautiful tiled
entry foyer leads
to the
reception/cashier
area and a waiting
room or additional
retail space. Along
the center open
hallway (with vault-
ed ceiling) are five
private
offices/rooms, each
measuring approxi-
mately 10x10.
There is a storage
room and half-bath.
The lower level has
its own entry (also
accessed from the
1st floor) and
includes an open
office area, a
16x13 private
office, a room for a
mini-kitchen/break
room, another half
bath and more stor-
age. The building is
heated with a 2-
zone gas system
and has a Trane
High Efficiency air
conditioning sys-
tem. The property
has parking adja-
cent to the building
and directly across
the street (a total of
32 spaces with 3
designated for
handicap parking).
This unique proper-
ty is listed at
$1500/month. Ten-
ant will be responsi-
ble for gas, electric
and water utilities,
along with their fur-
niture, equipment
and liability insur-
ance. The owner
will pay taxes,
DAMA sewer and
basic trash/recy-
cling expense and
insurance on the
building. Photos and
other information
about this property
are available online
at www.poggi-
jones.com. CLICK
on the link for Com-
mercial and invest-
ment properties
and enter 12-2089
in the MLS Search.
For additional infor-
mation or to sched-
ule an appointment
please contact Wal-
ter or Mary Ellen
Belchick at 696-
6566 or email
mebelchick@poggi-
jones.com
696-2600
SHEATOWN
230 Robert St.
5 unit investment
property. Remod-
eled in 2008. Four 1
bedroom units and
one 2 1/2 bedroom
unit. Off street
parking for 3 cars
and a private drive-
way for unit #2.
Property has a
community
laundry room.
MLS 12-2382
$219,000
Debbie McGuire
570-332-4413
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
Find Something?
Lose Something?
Get it back where it
belongs
with a Lost/Found ad!
570-829-7130
WEST PITTSTON
134 Ann St.
Nice duplex in a
great neighbor-
hood. Low mainte-
nance. Investors:
Money maker right
from the start. Unit
2 is owner occu-
pied, rent is pro-
jected.
MLS 12-575
$119,000
David
Krolikowski
570-288-0770
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
WEST PITTSTON
134 Ann St.
Nice Duplex in a
great neighbor-
hood. Low mainte-
nance investors.
Money maker right
from the start. Unit
2 is owner occu-
pied. Rent is
projected.
MLS 12-575
$119,000
David
Krolikowski
570-288-0770
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
909 Income &
Commercial
Properties
WILKES-BARRE
103 W. Chestnut St.
3 unit investment
property. Complete-
ly remolded in 2010
including new
plumbing and elec-
trical service. Each
unit has a laundry
room. Large fenced
yard and
fully rented.
MLS 12-2381
$119,000
Debbie McGuire
570-332-4413
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
WILKES-BARRE
150 Dana St.
Completely remod-
eled! Modern 5 unit
property with hard-
wood flooring and
ceramic tile in
kitchens and baths.
New furnace in
2009. Secure build-
ing. Fully rented.
Large concrete
basement for
Owners storage,
part of which could
be used as an effi-
ciency. All services
separate. Utilities
included in rent for
#5 only. Great
money maker
MLS 12-1740
$319,000
Debbie McGuire
570-332-4413
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
WILKES-BARRE
399-401 Madison St
Fully occupied and
maintained 4 unit
building in nice sec-
tion of Wilkes-Barre
close to General
Hospital, schools
and public trans-
portation.
MLS 12-2460
$99,500
John Shelley
570-702-4162
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
WILKES-BARRE
62 Hutson St.
Duplex in good con-
dition Fenced in
yard and back
screened porch.
Fully rented. Prop-
erty pays for itself
with $$$ left over.
Take a look NOW!
MLS 12-1747
$59,000
Debbie McGuire
570-332-4413
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
WILKES-BARRE
70-72 Sullivan St.
Well maintained 4
unit property with
enclosed back
porches and off
street parking for 4
cars. Fully rented.
New roof in 2008.
Great investment.
Make an appoint-
ment now!
MLS 12-1748
$179,000
Debbie McGuire
570-332-4413
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
WILKES-BARRE
97 Kado St.
Duplex on nice cor-
ner lot in quiet
neighborhood. A lit-
tle TLC needed.
Could easily be
converted to a sin-
gle family.
Motivated seller.
MLS 12-1867
$84,900
Donald Crossin
570-288-0770
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
909 Income &
Commercial
Properties
WYOMING
PRICE REDUCED!
$154,900
285 Wyoming
Ave.
First floor cur-
rently used as a
shop, could be
offices, etc.
Prime location,
corner lot, full
basement. 2nd
floor is 3 bed-
room apartment
plus 3 car
garage and
parking for
6 cars. For
more informa-
tion and photos
go to www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS #10-4339
Call Charlie
VM 101
P
E
N
D
I
N
G
912 Lots & Acreage
BENTON TOWNSHIP
12.87 acres with
well and in ground
septic system.
Spring. 1000 trout
stream. 60% clear,
40% wooded. Nat-
ural gas lease.
$150,000. Call
570-925-6018
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
1+ acres on Bunker
Hill Road. Great
views - builder of
your choice. Septic
and Well required -
Seller will provide
perc test.
MLS #11-268
$59,500 Call Rhea
at 570-696-6677
DALLAS TOWNSHIP
63 acres with about
5,000 roadfront on
2 roads. All Wood-
ed. $385,000. Call
Besecker Realty
570-675-3611
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
EDWARDSVILLE
Great opportunity!
Affordable lot in nice
neighborhood just
waiting for a home.
Close to schools,
shopping, etc. Pub-
lic sewer & water.
11-3767 $14,900
Call Mary Carrano
at 570-977-9047
COLDWELL
BANKER RUNDLE
REAL ESTATE
570 474-2340
HARDING
REDUCED
$24,900
Mt. Zion Road
One acre lot just
before Oberdorfer
Road. Great place
to build your
dream home
MLS 11-3521
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
JENKINS TOWNSHIP
Prestigious
Highland Hills
Development
.88 Acres. $75,000
570-947-3375
KINGSTON
302-304 Wyoming
Avenue
One of the only
commercial building
lots available on
Wyoming Ave.
Make this extremely
busy site the next
address of your
business.
MLS 08-1872
$89,000
Jay A. Crossin
EXT. 23
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
912 Lots & Acreage
KINGSTON
401-403 Main St.
3 lots together. 2 in
Kingston (nice cor-
ner paved lot) 1 in
Edwardsville
(40x60) potential to
build with parking or
parking for 20-48
vehicles.
MLS 12-1465
$75,000
John Shelley
570-702-4162
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
LAFLIN
$32,900
Lot#9
Pinewood Dr
Build your new
home in a great
neighborhood. Con-
venient location
near highways, air-
port, casino and
shopping
156 X 110 X 150 X 45
DIRECTIONS Rt 315
to laflin Rd; make
left off Laflin Rd onto
Pinewood Dr. Lot is
on corner of
Pinewood Dr. and
Hickorywood Dr.
MLS 11-3411
atlas realtyinc.com
Call Keri Best
570-885-5082
LAND LIQUIDATION
30 Mile Views
2 Acres $39,900
5 Acres $59,900
Estate sized proper-
ties at cookie cutter
prices, #1 School
District in Area,
Priced to Sell,
Finance with Only
10% Down, No Time
Frame To Build.
Call (570) 245-6288
LARKSVILLE
Nice country setting
close to town for
your new home!
Lot is 75 x 107
with an existing
12 x 20 shed.
$15,000
CALL
CHRISTINE KUTZ
570-332-8832
Doyouneedmorespace?
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in classified
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LEHMAN
9 Acres on Lehman
Outlet Road. 470
front, over 1,000
deep. Wooded.
$150,000. Call
Besecker Realty
570-675-3611
MOOSIC
BUILDING LOT
$29,900
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
MOUNTAIN TOP
5.4 acres in
Glendale Manor.
Walking distance to
Crestwood High
School. Is already
subdivided into six
lots . Perfect for a
private custom
home site or for
development.
Call Christine Kutz
570-332-8832.
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 TWP.
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 $17,000.
Call 570-714-1296
LivingInQuailHill.com
New Homes
From $275,000-
$595,000
570-474-5574
912 Lots & Acreage
SHICKSHINNY LAKE
Location, Location,
Location
A most unique &
desirable property.
This is an opportu-
nity to purchase
a centrally
situated lot with an
unmatched view of
this beautiful lake.
If you are looking
for that special
building site, this is
it! MLS# 11-1269
$179,900
Call Dale Williams
Five Mountains
Realty
570-256-3343
Looking for that
special place
called home?
Classified will address
Your needs.
Open the door
with classified!
SHICKSHINNY
Nice 1 acre building
lot situated in a
country setting
amidst mountains,
ponds and farm-
lands. An ideal rural
setting for your
dream home!
#12-2631 $18,500
Karen Ryan
283-9100 x14
696-2600
SHICKSHINNY
Beautiful 2.6 acre
building lot located
in a setting
of mountains,
pastures and
farmlands. An ideal
country setting to
build your dream
home!
#12-2632 $29,900
Karen Ryan
283-9100 x14
696-2600
SWEET VALLEY
Grassy Pond Road
6.69 wooded acres.
Great building site
and/or ideal hunting
property. No utili-
ties. $70,000.
Call Pat Doty
570-394-6901
McDermott Real
Estate
570-696-2468
TRUCKSVILLE
187 Skyline Drive
2 + acres with 2
subdivided lots set
in the woods with
awesome views.
Great location and
all utilities. Build
your dream
home(s).
MLS 12-1988
$99,900
John Shelley
570-702-4162
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
WANAMIE
2 Miner Ave.
Looking to build?
Check this lot out!
This is on the edge
of a hill and has a
great view. 440
acres corner of
Belles and Miner
MLS 12-1007
$14,900
Roger Nenni
EXT. 32
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
WHITE HAVEN
Route 115
Nice level building
lot right in front of
the golf course!
Close to I-80 & PA
Turnpike. $14,500
Louise Gresh
570-233-8252
CENTURY 21
SELECT GROUP
570-455-8521
WILKES-BARRE
57 Fulton St.
Nice residential
area. Lot for sale -
3080 square feet.
MLS 12-1762
$5,000
Kelly Connolly-
Cuba EXT. 37
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
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
915 Manufactured
Homes
SWEET VALLEY
Exceptionally nice 3
bedroom, 2 bath
mobile home
nestled on a 1.8
acre lot. Attractive
eat-in kitchen,
all appliances
included. Large
living room &
laundry. Enjoy
breezes on your
screened porch.
One owner.
MLS # 12-2457
$74,900
Barbara Metcalf
570-696-0883
938 Apartments/
Furnished
WILKES-BARRE
FULLY FURNISHED 1
BEDROOM APARTMENT
Short or long term
Excellent
Neighborhood
Private Tenant
Parking
$600 includes all
utilities. No pets.
570-822-9697
WILKES-BARRE
VICTORIAN
CHARM
34 W. Ross St.
Fully furnished,
1 bedroom, All
appliances and
most utilities
included. Secure,
private off street
parking. Historic
building is non
smoking/no pets.
Base rent
$700/mo. Securi-
ty, references
required. View at
houpthouse.com.
570-762-1453
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
ASHLEY
2nd floor. 2 bed-
rooms. Porch.
Appliances. Gas
heat. Electric hot
water. $495 + utili-
ties & security.
Water, sewer &
garbage paid. Cred-
it / background
check. Quiet ani-
mals - cleaning fee.
Call 570-823-6060
AVOCA
1,2&3 bedroom
apartments, all in
good condition, no
pets. $525 to $700
+ security.
Call 570-328-3773
AVOCA
3 rooms includes
heat, hot water,
water, garbage &
sewer + appliances,
washer/dryer hook-
up, off street park-
ing. Security. No
pets. $480/month.
570-655-1606
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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
EXETER
Nice one bedroom
first floor apartment
with extra room in
basement. Washer
hookup. Heat & hot
water included in
rent. References &
security required.
Non Smoking. $650
per month. Call
Nancy Answini
Gilroy Real
Estate
570-237-5999
EXETER
Senior Apartments
222 SCHOOLEY AVE.
EXETER, PA
Accepting appli-
cations for 1 bed-
room apartments.
Quality apart-
ments for ages
62 and older.
Income limits
apply. Rent only
$450 month.
*Utilities Included
*Laundry Facilities
*On Site
Management
*Private parking
Call for appointment
570-654-5733
Equal Housing
Opportunity
EXETER
TOWNHOUSE
Wildflower Village
Like New! 3 bed-
room, 1.5 bath, liv-
ing room, large din-
ing/kitchen area,
Full basement and
deck. $690/mo +
utilities. No Pets
570-696-4393
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
FORTY FORT
1 BEDROOM, 2ND
FLOOR APT
Very nice, quiet,
clean, great neigh-
borhood. Hardwood
floors, air, 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
All utilities included.
Clean 4 room 2nd
floor. Appliances.
Covered parking.
Non smoking, cat
considered, starting
at $700/month.
570-714-2017
FORTY FORT
Newly renovated,
great neighbor-
hood. 2nd floor.
Non smoking. Oak
composite floors,
new wall-to-wall
carpeting in bed-
rooms. 4 paddle
fans, large bath
with shower.
Stove, new fridge
& dishwasher. Off
street parking,
coin-op laundry.
$600 + gas, elec-
tric & water. Ref-
erences required,
no pets.
570-779-4609 or
570-407-3991
FORTY FORT
AMERICA
REALTY
RENATLS
570-288-1422
Call for specifics
REMODELING
IN PROCESS!
1 bedrooms
$625 + utilities;
2 bedrooms
$575 to $750
+ utilities. All
deluxe, built-ins,
some fireplaces,
carports, en-
closed porches.
No Pets, No
Smoking,
2 YEAR LEASES,
EMPLOYMENT
VERIFICATION.
GLEN LYON
Modern 2 bed-
room, washer/dryer
hook up, yard.
Garbage included.
$420/month + utili-
ties & 1 month
security
Call 570-542-2118
HANOVER TOWNSHIP
Two 1st floor, 1 bed-
room apartments.
All utilities included.
No pets. $600 + 1
month security.
(908) 964-1554
HANOVER TWP
BRESLAU
6 room apt. includes
heat & water $700
month + utilities &
security & refer-
ences. Refrigerator
& stove included.
Parking available.
570-287-8766
HANOVER TWP.
2 to 3 bedrooms, 1
bath, refrigerator &
stove, washer/
dryer, single car
detached garage,
gas heat, no pets.
$825/month +
electric & 1
month security.
570-760-0612
HARVEYS LAKE
1 or 2 bedroom,
LAKE FRONT apart-
ments. Wall to wall,
appliances, lake
rights, off street
parking. No Pets.
Lease, security &
references.
570-639-5920
KINGSTON
1 bedroom
PRIME location,
QUIET + spacious.
Yard, porch,
storage,
washer/dryer
hookup. No pets,
No smoking, No
Section 8. $475 +
utilities with
discount. 574-9827
KINGSTON
1st floor, spacious,
attractive, 2
bedroom, living
room/den, Dining
Room, large
kitchen, AC, wash-
er/dryer, gas heat,
QUIET/SAFE. Ideal
for SENIOR
DOWNSIZING.
$695 + utilities after
discount.
No smoking, No
pets, No Section 8.
Other Kingston
apartments
available. 574-9827
KINGSTON
2 Deluxe 3 BR
apts. 1st floor, 2
baths plus. 2nd
floor 1.5 baths &
den plus. All
appliances,
washer/dryer
included. Carpet-
ed, A/C, garage,
no pets/smoking,
lease.
(570)287-1733
KINGSTON
2nd Floor, 1
Bedroom, 1 Bath,
Kitchen,
living room,
Washer & Dryer
next to post office,
off street parking
$500 + utilities,
water & sewer
included, 1
year lease
security & refer-
ences, no pets,
no smoking
Call 570-822-9821
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
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ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
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in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
PAGE 12D MONDAY, AUGUST 6, 2012 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
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 Arts.
3 Bedroom
Townhomes
Gas heat included
FREE
24 hr. on-site Gym
Community Room
Swimming Pool
Maintenance FREE
Controlled Access
Patio/Balcony
and much more...
570-288-9019
1 & 2 BR
Apts
2 & 3 BR
Townhomes
Wilkeswood
Apartments
www.liveatwilkeswood.com
570-822-2711
Landlords
Find Good Tenants
Handle ProblemTenants
Free Rental Advertising
Landlord Forms and More
Stop In or Call with any Questions or to Set up your Free Online Rental Ad.
Online Rental Ad &Landlord Forms with
Ad Set-up All FREE Coupon
Thurs &Fri.. 2 to 8pm Sat &Sun.. 12 to 5pm: (570) 829-1702
Support & Rental Services
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
KINGSTON
3 bedroom, 1 bath,
large living room,
nice kitchen, laun-
dry room with
washer/dryer hook-
up. 3rd floor com-
pletely finished (not
for use as a bed-
room). Our compa-
ny prides itself on
offering very clean
homes! This home
has newer wall-to-
wall carpeting,
fresher paint
throughout, remod-
eled bathroom and
more.
$795/mo + 1.5 mo
security deposit +
utilities; no pets; no
smoking; credit
check, background
check.
908.246.9434
KINGSTON
399 - 401 Elm Ave.
Quiet convenient-
neighborhood.
Newly remodeled
apartments. 2nd
floor, 2 bedroom
apts. $600 each +
utilities NO PETS,
No section 8 hous-
ing. References and
security required.
570-301-2785
KINGSTON
72 E. 72 E. W Walnut alnut St. St.
2nd floor. Located in
quiet neighborhood.
Kitchen, living room,
dining room. Sun-
room. Bath. 3 bed-
rooms; 2 large & 1
small. Lots of clos-
ets. Built in linen
closet & hutch.
Hardwood and car-
peted floors. Fire-
place. Storage
room. Yard. Washer
/ dryer, stove /
fridge. Heat and hot
water included.
Available Now.
One year lease+
security. $950
570-283-4370
KINGSTON
800 Block Market
Street. Ground
level, 1st floor, 2
bedroom, refriger-
ator & stove. $670
to $720/month,
includes utilities
Security & refer-
ences. Call Jim at
570-288-3375 or
visit www.dream
rentals.net
LINEUP
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INCLASSIFIED!
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KINGSTON
Modern 2 bedroom
1 bath. Second floor.
$600 + utilities.
Call Darren
570-825-2468
KINGSTON
Nice 4 bedroom,
2nd floor. Kitchen
newly remodeled.
Gas heat, w/d
hookup, large living
room with nice front
porch. $650 plus
security and utili-
ties. References
required. Call
570-714-2431
Extension 137
KINGSTON
Nice neighborhood,
John St. 1st floor.
modern, 1 bedroom,
clean, freshly paint-
ed. Off street park-
ing, 2 porches.
$575 includes heat,
fridge, stove w/d.
No dogs/smoking.
Lease, security
570-545-6057
KINGSTON
Townhouse
conveniently locat-
ed on residential
street, ultra mod-
ern, 3 bedroom, 1.5
bath, large eat-in
kitchen, central air,
gas heat, off street
parking, outside
maintenance pro-
vided, heat & utili-
ties by tenant, no
pets, no smoking, 1
year lease, and 1
month security. Call
ROSEWOOD REAL ROSEWOOD REALTY TY LLC LLC
570-287-6822
KINGSTON
Wyoming Avenue
2nd floor, 1 bed-
room, appliances,
laundry room. $490
+ electric. Security
& references.
No pets.
570-696-1600
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
LARKSVILLE
2 bedroom, 1 Bath
$725. Double Secu-
rity. Brand New
Hardwood & Tile
Floors. Dishwasher,
Washer/Dryer. Must
see to appreciate!
Quality, Affordable
Housing.
BOVO Rentals
570-328-9984
VISIT
US
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 1/2 DOUBLE
3 bedrooms, nice
neighborhood. Off
street parking. $625
Call 570-441-4101
LUZERNE
3 bedrooms, 1 bath,
washer/dryer
hookup, off-street
parking, no pets,
yard. $650/month +
1 month security &
utilities. Call
570-817-0410
LUZERNE
Available 09/01/12
2nd floor, small 1
bedroom. Gas
heat. $435. Some
utilities included.
Lease, security. No
pets. 570-220-6533
after 6pm
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
Opportunity. 570-
474-5010 TTY711
This institution is an
equal opportunity
provider and
employer.
NANTICOKE
2 bedroom, wall to
wall carpet, off-
street parking, $495
per month+ utilities,
security, lease.
HUD accepted. Call
570-687-6216
or 570-954-0727
NANTICOKE
East State Street
Immaculate 2 bed-
room apartment on
1st floor. All appli-
ances. New car-
pets, washer/dryer
hook-up, Ample
storage. Backyard.
No smokers, no
pets. $585 per
month includes
water, garbage
and sewer.
Call (570) 239-2741
NANTICOKE
Modern 1 bedroom,
washer/dryer
hookup, fridge &
range. Water
sewer, garbage &
off street parking
included. $450/mo.
No pets. Call
570-735-3479
NANTICOKE
Roomy, 2 bedroom,
new carpeting,
clean. $520/month,
+ utilities, security &
references.
Garbage included.
Section 8 Approved
Call 570-815-2265
NANTICOKE/SHEATOWN
121 Thomas Street
1 bedroom, 2nd
floor, eat-in kitchen
with appliances,
shared yard
and porch, wash-
er/dryer hook-up
$375 + security,
no pets,
no smoking
Tenant pays elec-
tric, water, and oil
heat & garbage.
$375/per month,
Call (570)814-1356
PARSONS
2nd floor, 2 bed-
rooms, washer,
dryer, fridge, stove
& heat included.
$685/month +
security. no pets.
Call
570-332-9355
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
KINGSTON
2 BEDROOM
LUXURY
APARTMENT WITH
A PARK VIEW.
this totally renovat-
ed & gutted space
is within walking
distance to down-
town Wilkes-Barre
& Kirby Park
brand new every-
thing! Tiled eat in
kitchen, tiled bath,
ceiling fans, clos-
ets, & a screened
porch $795/month
includes heat
Call Pat Today!!!
Smith Hourigan
Group
570 287-1196
PITTSTON
2nd floor, 2 bed-
rooms, living room,
eat in kitchen.
Stove, garbage dis-
posal, fridge, wash-
er & dryer included.
Carpeted & newly
painted, air. 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 bedrooms, 1
bath, living room,
dining room, full
kitchen, laundry
room, off street
parking, 1st floor,
landlord pays
garbage, available
immediately
$650/month Call
Steve at
(570)468-2488
PITTSTON
3 room apartment,
2nd floor, wall to
wall carpet, off
street parking.
Enclosed porch.
$450/month + utili-
ties & security. No
pets. 570-655-1222
PITTSTON
CLEAN & SPACIOUS
4 room apt. 2nd
floor, stove &
refrigerator, off
street parking.
Water, sewer &
garbage included.
Non smokers & no
pets. $575/month.
570-655-2567
PITTSTON
Large 1 bedroom
apartment, wash-
er/dryer hookup,
water, sewer &
heat included, $675
per month. 1st
months, last
months + deposit.
Call 570-443-0770
PITTSTON
Large 3 bedroom
2nd floor apartment.
Includes refrigera-
tor, range, washer
dryer hookup.
Sewer & trash.
$575 + security.
Call Bernie
1-888-244-2714
PITTSTON
MUST SEE!
1st floor, 2 bed-
room, quiet area.
No Pets. No smok-
ing. $525/month +
security & utilities.
Call 570-357-1383
PITTSTON TOWNSHIP
1 bedroom. Stove,
fridge. Laundry
hookup. 1 year
lease. No pets.
$375 + utilities. Call
570-237-0968
PLAINS
2 bedroom, 2nd
floor, off street
parking, large living
space, washer/
dryer hook up.
$450/month + utili-
ties. No pets or
smoking. Call
570-820-8822
PLAINS
Modern 2nd floor
2 bedroom. 1 bath,
Kitchen with
appliances. new
carpeting. Conve-
nient location. No
smoking. No pets.
$550/month plus
utilities.
570-714-9234
PLAINS
Newly remodeled,
2 bedrooms, 1
bathroom, off-
street parking, gas
heat, washer/dryer
& gas hook-up. No
pets. for further
details, Call
(570)823-8035 or
(570)822-4701
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
PLYMOUTH
Large, spacious 1 or
2 bedroom. Appli-
ances and utilities
included. Off street
parking. $595. Call
570-704-8134
PLYMOUTH
Newly renovated 2
bedroom. 1st floor.
Kitchen appliances,
w/d, heat hot water
and sewer included.
Air, small fenced in
yard, Borough
inspected. First, last
security. $700/mo
570-332-7332
570-287-3935
SUGAR NOTCH
Very spacious,
sprawling & nice 6
room apartment in
nice building. 1,215
sq. ft. overall. Has
5 closets & large
linen closet in a
very large bath-
room. Gas heat,
water, cooking gas
& sewer all includ-
ed. Close to I-81,
mall & only 3 miles
to Central
Wilkes-Barre.Lease.
$685/monthly.
570-650-3803
WEST PITTSTON
1 bedroom, stove &
dishwasher, wash-
er/dryer hookup,
off-street parking,
totally remodeled.
Water paid.
$550/month, plus
utilities, 1st & secu-
rity. 570-299-7103
WEST PITTSTON
2 bedroom half dou-
ble. 2 baths. Stove,
fridge. Laundry
hookup. No pets. 1
year lease. $575 +
utilities. Call
570-237-0968
WEST PITTSTON
2 bedroom luxury
apartment. Living
room, kitchen. Cen-
tral Air. Off Street
parking. All appli-
ances included.
570-430-3095
WEST PITTSTON
Out of flood area
Charming, large,
4 rooms,
2nd floor, living
room, den, new
eat in kitchen, all
appliances
Includes heat, off
street parking, w/d
hookup, garbage.
$585/month, lease
and security
570-328-0784
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
WILKES BARRE TWP
1 bedroom, wall
to wall carpet,
separate
kitchen/living room,
tenant pays utilities.
$480 + security. Call
570-401-9124
WILKES-BARRE
Mayflower
Crossing
Apartments
570.822.3968
2, 3 & 4
Bedrooms
- Light & bright
open floor plans
- All major
appliances included
- Pets welcome*
- Close to everything
- 24 hour emergency
maintenance
- Short term
leases available
Call TODAY For
AVAILABILITY!!
www.mayflower
crossing.com
Certain Restrictions
Apply*
WILKES-BARRE /
KINGSTON
Efficiency 1 & 2
bedrooms. Includes
all utilities, parking,
laundry. No pets.
From $390 to $675.
Lease, security
& references.
570-970-0847
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
WILKES-BARRE /
PARSONS
Spacious 3 bed-
room 3rd floor
apartment. Large
eat-in kitchen. Close
to casino. $700 /
month + water &
cooking gas. Call
570-793-9449
WILKES-BARRE
1st floor, Convenient
location, Out of
flood zone, 2 bed-
room, living room,
washer/dryer
hook-up, heat
& water included.
Yard, lease,
$635/month, 1st,
last, security, refer-
ences and back-
ground check.
No pets.
(570)822-4302
WILKES-BARRE
307-309 South St E.
2 bedroom apart-
ment, available
now, 1 bath, new
carpet, ceramic tile
in kitchen & bath,
6x8 porch, landlord
pays heat & water.
NO HOOKUPS, NO
PETS. $650 /month,
1st month & securi-
ty required.
Call Manny
718-946-8738 or
917-295-6254
WILKES-BARRE
6 rooms, 1 bath.
fridge, stove,Wash-
er & Dryer hookup.
$525 + utilities +
security. ALSO 1
large bedroom, 1st
floor, fridge, stove
$450 + utilities.
Section 8 accepted
CALL 570-301-8200
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
Parsons Section
2nd floor, 1 bed-
room, wall to wall,
new stove & fridge.
Heat, hot water,
sewer & trash
included. $475. No
pets. Non smoking.
References & secu-
rity. 570-823-0864
or 570-817-1855
WILKES-BARRE
Renovated One
Bedroom
216 Carlisle St.
Available 8/1. May
be used as two
bedroom. New
refrigerator, stove.
New floors,
carpets. Ceiling
fans. Fresh paint.
$600 mo. $600
security. Call 215-
565-6761 or email
alexandervending
@gmail.com
WILKES-BARRE SOUTH
SECURE BUILDINGS
1 & 2 bedroom
apartments.
Starting at $440
and up. References
required. Section 8 OK
570-357-0712
WILKES-BARRE
Spotless Large 2
bedroom, lots of
storage, dishwash-
er, $725/ month
includes all utilities
except electric. No
pets. Lease. Refer-
ences. Security.
570-709-8183
WILKES-BARRE
STUDIO NEAR WILKES
Lots of light, wood
floors. Summer only
ok. $425. All utilities
included. No pets.
570-826-1934
WILKES-BARRE TWP.
1-3+ Bedrooms
Wyoming Valley
Apartments
aptsilike.com
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WILKES-BARRE
Walking distance to
Wilkes University,
minutes from Kings
Newly renovated.
Most utilities includ-
ed. Professional on
site management.
Off street parking.
Starting at $515.
866-466-0501 or
leasing-cumberland
@rentberger.com
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
WILKES-BARRE
1 bedroom
water included
2 bedroom
water included
2 bedroom
single family
5 bedroom
large
2 bedroom,
heat & water
included
3 bedroom, half
double, immacu-
late condition
3 bedroom
single
PITTSTON
Large 1
bedroom water
included
AVOCA
3 Bedroom,
water included
HANOVER TWP.
2 Bedroom half
double
McDermott &
McDermott
Real Estate
Inc. Property
Management
570-821-1650
(direct line)
Mon-Fri. 8-7pm
Sat. 8-noon
WILKES-BARRE/NORTH
N. WASHINGTON ST.
2 BEDROOM
AVAILABLE NOW!!
Recently renovated,
spacious, wood
floors, all kitchen
appliances included,
parking available.
2 bedroom $500 +
utilities. Call Agnes
570-793-9449
570-540-5312
WYOMING
Clean & efficient 1st
floor 1 bedroom.
Includes stove,
fridge, sewer &
garbage. Laundry
facilities. Private
setting. Security &
references. No
pets, non smoking.
$535/month. Call
(570) 466-4176 or
(570) 388-6468
944 Commercial
Properties
ASHLEY
Beauty Salon, 400
square feet, ample
parking, 350.00 +
utilities. Call 570-
824-5586 leave
message.
DOLPHIN PLAZA
Rte. 315 2,400 Sq.
Ft. professional
office space with
beautiful view of
Valley & Casino.
will divide
office / retail
Call 570-829-1206
KINGSTON
183 Market St.
Office space avail-
able in beautifully
renovated profes-
sional building.
Great high traffic
location! 2 separate
offices with large
reception area.
Bonus use of con-
ference room
MLS 12-1049
$1000 per month
Mark R. Mason
570-331-0982
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
MODERN OFFICE
SPACE
WEST PITTSTON
OFF STREET
PARKING INCLUDED
Suite 1725 sq ft
Utilities included
Suite 21,450 sq ft
Utilities included
Units are unfinished
& can be fit out to
your specifications.
Call: 570-655-3329
Extension 2 -
Margie
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
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
$1,000/MONTH
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. Call
Charlie
570-829-6200
944 Commercial
Properties
RETAIL / OFFICE
1188 Wyoming Ave
Forty Fort, PA
This unique 2,800
Sq Ft. interior (Circa
1879), Features 10
Ceilings, Distinctive
chandeliers, Two
fireplaces. French
door entrances.
Large parking lot.
Handicap accessi-
ble. Central a/c,
Hardwood floors.
Signage is perfectly
positioned on the
179 frontage. Over
15,000 vehicles
pass daily. Call
570-706-5308
315 PLAZA
1,750 SQ. FT. &
2,400 SQ.FT
OFFICE/RETAIL
570-829-1206
WILKES BARRE
228 Wilkes-Barre
Twp. Blvd.
Prime retail or
office space in a
highly active shop-
ping plaza in close
proximity to Price
Shopper and Weg-
man's, 1500 sq. ft.
available in end
unit.Plenty of park-
ing. Prominent
marquee signage
available.
$1250/month Call
Geri,570-696-0888
Lewith & Freeman
R.E. 570-696-2075.
WILKES-BARRE
16-18 Linden St.
Professional office
space for lease
near General Hospi-
tal. Ideally suited for
medical offices.
Other possible uses
would include a deli
style restaurant.
MLS 12-1052
$1200 per month
Mark R. Mason
570-331-0982
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
WILKES-BARRE
BEST $1 SQ. FT.
LEASES YOULL
EVER SEE!
Warehouse, distri-
bution, storage,
light manufacturing.
Gas heat,
sprinklers,
overhead doors,
parking for 30 cars.
Yes, that $1 sq.ft.
lease!
We have 9,000
sq.ft., 27,000 sq.ft.,
and 13,000 sq. ft.
Can combine.
There is nothing
this good!
Call Larry @
570-696-4000 or
570-430-1565
950 Half Doubles
DUPONT
Completely remod-
eled, modern 2 bed-
room 1/2 double.
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
570-899-8877
HUGHESTOWN
Clean & bright 2
bedroom 1/2 double
in a quiet residential
neighborhood.
Off street parking.
Stove included.
Washer/Dryer
hookup. No pets.
No smoking.
$625/month + utili-
ties & security. Ref-
erences required.
Available Aug 1.
570-760-9323
KINGSTON
76 S. Landon Ave.
3 bedrooms, newly
renovated, all appli-
ances, washer /
dryer hookup, no
pets. Spacious
rooms, great loca-
tion! $700/month +
utilities & 1 month
security. Available
September.
570-881-5747
NANTICOKE
2 BEDROOMS
Fresh paint. New
carpet & flooring.
New fridge & stove.
Washer/dryer
hookup. Large
fenced yard. Attic,
basement. $600/
month plus utilities.
First, last, security
and 6 month lease.
OPEN HOUSE Sat-
urday August 11
from 10am to 2pm
or call for a show-
ing 570-821-0841
NANTICOKE
4 rooms, 2
bedrooms, 1 bath.
$465/month +
security & utilities.
Sewer and trash
included.
570-735-0258
PLAINS
Spacious, modern 2
bedroom. Wall to
wall carpeting,
bath, living room,
kitchen with all
appliances, off
street parking.
$600 + utilities, 1st
& last months rent
& security.
Absolutely no pets!
570-823-4116
570-417-7745
570-417-2737
950 Half Doubles
SWOYERSVILLE
Large, newly
remodeled 3 bed-
room. Stove, dish-
washer, washer/
dryer hook up, off
street parking. No
pets. $600/month +
utilities. Call
570-301-7723
WEST PITTSTON
4 Nassau St.
HALF DOUBLE
3 bedrooms, 2
baths, living room,
kitchen, dining
room, off street
parking, quiet
neighborhood-
Wyoming Area
School District. NO
PETS, NO SMOK-
ERS, $625/ + utili-
ties & security
Call Mike
570-760-1418
WEST PITTSTON
MAINTENANCE FREE!
One block to ele-
mentary school.
3 Bedrooms.
Off-Street Parking
No Smoking.
$700 + utilities,
security, last month.
570-885-4206
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
WILKES-BARRE
3 bedroom 1/2 dou-
ble. Nice neighbor-
hood. Wall/wall car-
pet. Washer/dryer
hookup. Fenced
Yard. No Pets. No Pets.
$700 + utilities.
Security & refer-
ences. Call after 5.
570-822-8657
WILKES-BARRE
994 Scott St.
Large 1/2 double, 3
bedrooms, 1 bath.
Electric heat.
$600/mo + utilities
& security. Credit
and criminal check
required No Dogs
or smoking.
570-696-1592
WILKES-BARRE
Academy Street
Well maintained in
move-in condition. 6
room house with 3
bedrooms & 1 1/2
baths. Gas forced
air heat. No pets. 1
year lease. Credit
check.$625 + utili-
ties & security. Call
908-510-3879
953Houses for Rent
BACK MOUNTAIN
Vi l l age at Greenbri ar
Carefree living in
gated community.
1340-sf condo with
2 bedrooms, 2
baths, 1-car
garage. $1,375/
month, plus utili-
ties. Maintenance
fee included in rent.
One year lease
required.
Amenities include:
swimming pool,
tennis court and
clubhouse.
570-690-1120
BACK MTN
3 Bedroom, 1 bath
Ranch with a Fin-
ished Basement
and lots of storage.
Indoor Heated Pool
and New Kitchen
Cabinets and appli-
ances. Large Yard.
$ 750 per month +
utilities + security
deposit.
570-335-6079
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
DALLAS
19 Richard Drive
Great 3 bed, 2
bath townhome
with open kitchen &
wonderful deck -
$1,250/month
plus utilities.
MLS#11-64
570-696-3801
Call Margy
570-696-0891
953Houses for Rent
DALLAS
8 Lackawanna
Avenue
5 bedroom house,
2 full baths,
$1500/month plus
utilities. Call Steve
at 973-580-5296
DRUMS
BEACH MOUNTAIN LAKES
3 bedrooms, 2.5
baths, A/C, fire-
place, rec room
$1200/per month,
plus utilities, Call
(570)793-4262
EXETER
Wildflower Village
3 bedroom Town-
house, end unit with
garage. Gas heat
heat, central
a/c,kitchen with
appliances.Hard-
wood floors, fenced
yard. No smoking,
Approved pets
allowed with securi-
ty $1200/mo + utili-
ties + security.
570-407-3600
HARDING
Single Family Home
6 rooms & bath,
no pets or smoking.
$550/month, plus
utilities & security.
Call 570-388-2675
or 570-388-6860
HARVEYS LAKE
Charming single
family home. 2 bed-
rooms plus office.
Large kitchen.
$1200/mo + utilities.
Lake access includ-
ed. Year lease and
credit check.
Call Mark
570-406-8195
HARVEYS LAKE
3300 Square foot
lake front home,
has 4 bedrooms, 4
baths, modern
kitchen, living room
with fireplace that
opens to dining
room. Sitting room
in the corner off the
kitchen.
$2,250/month +
utilities. Call Kevin
at 696-5420
SMITH HOURIGAN
570-696-1195
Harveys Lake
Recently updated
house, 5 bed-
rooms, 2 baths,
washer/dryer
hook-up, large
living/family room,
1200/month +
utilities and $1200
security deposit.
Call Nancy @
570-639-5688
HUDSON
SINGLE HOUSE
2 bedrooms, 1 bath,
stove, washer/
dryer hookup.
$675/month, plus
utilities &
1 month security.
570-825-5451
HUNLOCK CREEK
Executive 2 story
quality 4 bedroom
home on 18 wooded
acres in private set-
ting. Quality con-
struction with too
many features to
list. $1500/month +
utilities. 1 year lease
required.
Call Dale for
Specifics.
570-256-3343
FIVE MOUNTAINS
REALTY
INKERMAN
JENKINS TWP.
HOUSE FOR RENT
3-BEDROOMS,
1 BATH WASHER,
DRYER HOOKUP,
LARGE YARD
OFF STREET
PARKING
$575.00 PER
MONTH + UTILITIES.
SECURITY & LEASE
REQUIRED
570-735-1047
953Houses for Rent
KINGSTON
near school, 3 bed-
rooms, 1.5 baths, all
appliances, fenced
yard, off street
parking, deck,
beautiful home.
$975/month, 1st,
last & security.
Senior discount.
Call 570-714-3693
MOUNTAINTOP
Available
September 1st. 3
bedrooms, 1 bath,
Dining room,
washer/dryer
included. Small pets
negotiable, no cats.
$900/per month+
utilities. Background
check, security
deposit, Call
570-868-3585
PITTSTON
2 bedrooms,
1 bath, newly
remodeled, all new
carpeting, wash-
er/dryer hookup,
off-street parking.
$650/per month
plus security, tenant
pays utilities. Call
570-883-1463,
570-654-6737 or
570-362-4019
PLAINS
2 bedrooms, 1.5
baths, off street
parking, yard/patio
$800/per month
Call 570-823-4503
SHAVERTOWN
Beautiful, meticu-
lous contemporary
1 bedroom. Gas
heat, air, fully fur-
nished, fireplace,
hardwood & tile
flooring, carpeting.
Carport & lovely
garden. Most
utilities included.
$1,000/month.
Please call
570-881-0320
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special place
called home?
Classified will address
Your needs.
Open the door
with classified!
MOUNTAINTOP
S. Mountain Blvd.
Brick ranch with
living & dining
rooms, kitchen, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths
& 2 car garage. I
year lease
required.
$1,2000/month +
utilities. Call Dave
@ 570-474-6307 or
570-715-7750
Smith Hourigan
Group
WEST PITTSTON
1/2 double, 7 rooms
& bath, hardwood
floors, natural wood
work, garage. Great
neighborhood. Non-
smokers. No pets.
Call 570-655-2195
WILKES-BARRE
3 bedroom house,
large backyard,
$700 per month
plus utilities. Call
570-817-3191
WILKES-BARRE
3 bedrooms, close
to Kings and
downtown. Includes
range & fridge.
$695/month, first,
last & security.
Tenant pays heat,
electric & water.
Call
718-877-7436 or
718-791-5252
WILKES-BARRE
Safe
Neighborhood
Two 2-3 bedroom
properties
$595-$625
Plus all utilities,
security & back-
ground check.
No pets.
570-766-1881
WILKES-BARRE TWP.
Behind VA hospital.
65 Northampton
Court. 3 bedroom
1.5 bath Townhouse
Sunroom, kitchen
appliances, parking
$800 + utilities.
570-497-6060
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com MONDAY, AUGUST 6, 2012 PAGE 13D
To Place Your Professional Services Ad, 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
LINE UP
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IN CLASSIFIED!
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
ALL OLDERHOMES
SPECIALIST
825-4268.
Remodel / repair,
Windows
& Doors
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
PR BUILDERS
Any and all types of
remodeling from
windows to design
build renovations.
Handyman
Services also,
Electric, Plumbing,
Building.
PA license 048740
accepts Visa &
Mastercard
call 570-826-0919
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
CHIMNEY REPAIRS
Parging. Stucco.
Stainless Liners.
Cleanings. Custom
Sheet Metal Shop.
570-383-0644
1-800-943-1515
Call Now!
1039 Chimney
Service
COZY HEARTH CHIMNEY
ALL CHIMNEY
REPAIR
Chimney Cleaning,
Rebuilding, Repair,
Stainless Steel
Lining, Parging,
Stucco, Caps, Etc.
Free Estimates
Senior Discounts
Licensed-Insured
1-888-680-7990
570-840-0873
1042 Cleaning &
Maintainence
Connies Cleaning
15 years experience
Bonded & Insured
Residential Cleaning
Connie Mastruzzo
Brutski - Owner
570-430-3743 570-430-3743
Connie does the
cleaning!
HOUSEKEEPING
I am dependable &
professional. Flexible
rates and hours.
Supplies provided.
References Available
570-357-1951
Northeast Janitorial
Services,LLC
Commercial and
Residential
Cleaning.
FREE ESTIMATES
570-237-2193
1054 Concrete &
Masonry
A STEP-UP MASONRY
Brick, block, con-
crete, pavers. Spe-
cializing in stone.
Free Estimates.
Licensed & Insured.
Senior Discount. Call
570-702-3225
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.
Call for summer
special.
Discounts for vets
& seniors
570-696-3488 or
570-239-2780
D. Pugh
Concrete
All phases of
masonry &
concrete. Small
jobs welcome.
Senior discount.
Free estimates.
Licensed & Insured
288-1701/655-3505
H O S CONSTRUCTION
Licensed - Insured
Certified - Masonry
Concrete - Roofing
Quality
Craftsmanship
Guaranteed
Unbeatable Prices
Senior Citizen
Discounts
Free Estimates
570-574-4618 or
570-709-3577
JM OLEJNICK
MASONRY
All phases of con-
crete, masonry &
construction. Free
Estimates. Licensed
& Insured. Call
570-288-6862
Wi l l i ams & Franks I nc
Masonry - Concrete
Brick-Stonework.
Chimneys-Stucco
NO JOB TOO
SMALL
Damage repair
specialist
570-466-2916
1057Construction &
Building
DOUBLE D DOUBLE Ds s
Best Best
Construction Co Construction Co
General
Contractors. We do
all types of work,
including concrete,
stucco, sidewalks,
patios, & all general
construction.
We do it all
Call anytime at
570-991-7670 or
570-690-2642 and
ask for Dave.
FATHER & SON
CONSTRUCTION
Interior & Exterior
Remodeling
Jobs of All Sizes
570-814-4578
570-709-8826
1057Construction &
Building
G&J Welding &
Pressure Washing
Mobile Service
ICC Bumpers for
trucks & trailers
Headache racks &
bed rails for pickups
570-855-8364
GARAGE
DOOR
Sales, service,
installation &
repair.
FULLY
INSURED
HIC# 065008
CALL JOE
570-735-8551
Cell 606-7489
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
Foundations, land
clearing, driveways,
storm drainage,
blacktop repair, etc.
Free Estimates
570-332-0077
1099 Fencing &
Decks
DECK BUILDERS
Of Northeast
Contracting Group.
We build any type,
size and design,
concrete, patios,
driveways, side-
walks. If the deck
of your choice is
not completed with-
in 5 days, then your
deck is free!
570-338-2269
1105 Floor Covering
Installation
HARDWOOD FLOOR
REFINISHING &
INSTALLATION
Recoat your hard-
wood floors starting
at $1.25 / SQ FT
Free Estimates
570-793-4994
1129 Gutter
Repair & Cleaning
GUTTER CLEANING
Window Cleaning
Pressure washing
Insured
570-288-6794
1132 Handyman
Services
DO IT ALL HANDYMAN
Painting, drywall,
plumbing & all types
of interior & exterior
home repairs.
570-829-5318
VICTORY
HANDYMAN
SERVICE
You Name It, We
Can Do it.
Over 30 Years Expe-
rience in General
Construction
Licensed & Insured
570-313-2262
1135 Hauling &
Trucking
A A C L E A N I N G
A1 Always hauling,
cleaning attics, cellar,
garage, one piece or
whole Estate, also
available 10 &20 yard
dumpsters.655-0695
592-1813or287-8302
AAA CLEANING
A1 GENERAL HAULING
Cleaning attics,
cellars, garages.
Demolitions, Roofing
&Tree Removal.
FreeEst. 779-0918or
542-5821; 814-8299
A.S.A.P Hauling
Estate Cleanouts,
Attics, Cellars,
Garages, were
cheaper than
dumpsters!.
Free Estimates,
Same Day!
570-822-4582
1135 Hauling &
Trucking
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
Property & Estate
Cleanups, Attics,
Cellars, Yards,
Garages,
Construction
Sites, Flood
Damage & More.
CHEAPER THAN
A DUMPSTER!!
SAME DAY
SERVICE
Free Estimates
570-301-3754
Mikes $5-Up
Junk, trash from
houses & garage.
Top to Bottom
826-1883 472-4321
1156 Insurance
HEY HEY BOOMERS BOOMERS
CHECK CHECK THIS THIS
OUT!! OUT!!
Turning 65?
Going on
Medicare? Need
Medicare Supple-
ment Insurance?
We also offer
long/short term
care coverage,
life insurance,
and annuities for
nursing home
care that pay
6.7%
You have ques-
tions, we have
answers!
570-580-0797
www www.babyboom .babyboom
broker broker.com .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
JAYS LAWN SERVICE
Summer clean-ups,
mowing, mulching
and more!
Free Estimates
570-574-3406
TOUGH BRUSH
& TALL GRASS
Mowing, edging,
mulching, shrubs &
hedge shaping.
Tree pruning. Gar-
den tilling. Summer
Clean Ups. Weekly
& bi-weekly lawn
care.
Fully Insured.
20+ years experience
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
1183 Masonry
ATIES CONSTRUCTION
50 Years Experience
Stone mason, stuc-
co, pre-cast stone,
paving, custom
cover & design.
570-301-8200
STEVE WARNER
Masonry/Concrete
Custom Work
Small Jobs &
Repairs. Free esti-
mates. Lic. & Ins.
570-561-5245
1183 Masonry
OLD TIME MASONRY
Voted #1
MasonryContractor
Let A Real
Mason Bid Your
Project!
Brick, Block,
Concrete, Stone,
Chimney &
Stucco Repair,
Retaining Walls,
Patio & Pavers,
Stamped &
Colored
Concrete, etc.
Fully Insured.
570-466-0879
oldtimemasonry.com
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
ALL PHASE
PAINT COMPANY
Aluminium Siding
Refinishing Experts
You Name It, We
Know How
to Paint It!
Over 30 Years
Experience
570-313-2262
AMERICA
PAINTING
Interior/Exterior.
20 years experi-
ence. Insured.
Senior Discount
570-855-0387
JACOBOSKY JACOBOSKY
P PAINTING AINTING
Power Washing,
Quality Painting,
Affordable prices,
$50.00 off with
this ad.
Free Estimates.
570-328-5083
Lairds Renovation
& Remodeling
Painting and power-
washing, We repair
chimneys-custom
design, no job too
big or too small
Wyoming,PA
Plaster patch, dry-
wall repair. We fix
cracks. Fully
insured, 25 years
experience
570-693-1793 cell
570-690-8536
M. PARALI S PAI NTI NG
Int/ Ext. painting,
Power washing.
Professional work
at affordable rates.
Free estimates.
570-288-0733
Serra Painting
Book Now For
Summer & Save. All
Work Guaranteed
Satisfaction.
30 Yrs. Experience
Powerwash & Paint
Vinyl, Wood, Stucco
Aluminum.
Free Estimates
You Cant Lose!
570-822-3943
WITKOSKY PAINTING
Interior
Exterior,
Free estimates,
30 yrs experience
570-826-1719,
570-288-4311 &
570-704-8530
1213 Paving &
Excavating
L&M BLACKTOPPING
Driveways, excavat-
ing & resurfacing.
Free Estimates.
Fully insured. Call
Ron 570-290-2296
1213 Paving &
Excavating
DRIVEWAYS
PARKING LOTS
ROADWAYS
HOT TAR & CHIP
SEALCOATING
Licensed and
Insured. Call
Today For Your
Free Estimate
570-474-6329
Lic.# PA021520
Mountain Top
PAVING & SEAL
COATING
Patching, Sealing,
Residential/Comm
Licensed & Insured
PA013253
570-868-8375
1237Professional &
Business
PERSONAL
ASSISTANT
Will provide
superior execu-
tive support by
assisting in
scheduling &
coordinating
complex busi-
ness/social cal-
endars, event
planning, and
travel plans for
busy executives
or families. Over
20+ years in cor-
porate, non-prof-
it, and govern-
ment arenas.
570-406-4092
1252 Roofing &
Siding
ABSOLUTELY FREE
ESTIMATES
E-STERN CO.
30 year architec
tural shingles. Do
Rip off & over the
top. Fully Insured
PA014370
570-760-7725 or
570-341-7411
EVERHART
CONSTRUCTION
Roofing, siding,
gutters, chimney
repairs & more.
Free Estimates,
Lowest Prices
570-855-5738
GILROY
Construction
Your Roofing
Specialist
Free Estimates
No Payment
til Job is
100% Complete
570-829-0239
H O S CONSTRUCTION
Roofing specialist,
call today and
save $$$
570-574-4618
J & F
CONSTRUCTION
All types of roofing.
Repairs & Installation
25 Years Experience
Licensed/Insured
Free Estimates
Reliable Service
570-855-4259
J.R.V. ROOFING
570-824-6381
Roof Repairs & New
Roofs. Shingle, Slate,
Hot Built Up, Rubber,
Gutters & Chimney
Repairs. Year Round.
Licensed/Insured
FREE Estimates
*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
SUMMER ROOFING
McManus
Construction
Licensed, Insured.
Everyday Low
Prices. 3,000
satisfied customers.
570-735-0846
1297 Tree Care
Tree Stump
Removal
Stump grinding,
$45 each for 10 or
more. Tree cut-
down, $150. Call
570-594-1385
1339 Window
Service
PJs Window
Cleaning &
Janitorial
Services
Windows, Gutters,
Carpets, Power
washing and more.
INSURED/BONDED.
570-283-9840
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953Houses for Rent
WYOMING
TOWNHOUSE
2 bedrooms, 1.5
baths, living/dining
combination, refrig-
erator & stove,
washer/dryer
hookup, off-street
parking, no pets.
Gas heat with
central air. Front &
back porches.
$675/month + utili-
ties, security &
1st month.
570-655-8928
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
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
Let the Community
Know!
Place your Classified
Ad TODAY!
570-829-7130
Room for rent. $300
per month, plus utili-
ties. Please call
570-817-7817
944 Commercial
Properties
944 Commercial
Properties
971 Vacation &
Resort Properties
971 Vacation &
Resort Properties
DALLAS
COMMERCIAL
BUILDING
FOR LEASE
3593 MEMORIAL HIGHWAY
(RT. 415)
2625 SF BUILDING
GREAT OPPORTUNITY FOR
OFFICE OR BUSINESS
SOME UTILITIES INCLUDED
AVAILABLE 9/1/12
CALL JOHN 690-0610
BLACK LAKE, NY
Come relax & enjoy
great fishing & tran-
quility at its finest.
Housekeeping
cottages on the
water with all the
amenities of home.
NEED A VACATION? Call Now!
(315) 375-8962 www.blacklake4fish.com
daveroll@blacklakemarine.com
$50 off Promotion Available Now!
F U N N I E S MONDAY, AUGUST 6, 2012 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
SALLY FORTH
CLASSIC PEANUTS
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FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
GET FUZZY
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PICKLES
PARDON MY PLANET
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TUNDRA

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