Académique Documents
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Our Lady of Victory
HARVEYS LAKE
Our Lady of Victory Harveys Lake continues to host the
Annual Six Month Devotion to Our Lady of Fatima
This months service will take place on THURSDAY,
SEPTEMBER 13TH AT 7:00 PM, the Devotions will continue to
be held on the 13th of each month through October 13th.
The Devotions to Our Lady of Fatima consist of
The Rosary, Beautiful Marian Hymns and Benediction.
For Further Information Call 639-1535
Handicap Parking & Access is Available
715 Wyoming Avenue, Kingston 288-6459
$20 OFF A STANDARD CAR SERVICE
Boat & Car Reconditioning
Trim and Upholstery
Paintless Dent Removal
Offer expires 10/31/12.
Childrens Service Center, which is
celebrating its 150th anniversary this
year, recently held a picnic for the
staff of the Wilkes-Barre campus on
South Franklin Street. Awards were
presented for years of service to the
organization. Award winners, from
left, first row: Shirley Engle, 5 years;
Maryann Wynn, 15 years; Alice Roma-
nelli, Support Service Award; Melisa
Naylor, 5 years; and John Padilla, 5
years. Second row: Mary Ann Kaskus,
15 years; Barbara Mattey, 15 years;
Kim Lawall, 20 years; Roseanna
Kozich, 20 years; and Erin Parry,
Direct Service Award. Third row:
Carolanne Stiefel, 15 years, and Linda
Nowak, 15 years. Fourth row: Nancy
Kozemko, 15 years; Gert Landmesser,
5 years; Alison Simola, 3 years; Re-
becca Ciliberto, 5 years; and Jackie
Ratchford, 5 years. Fifth row: Kath-
leen Casterline, 3 years; Brandi Mar-
tenas, 5 years; Anne Sebo, 3 years;
Britni Yenchak, 5 years; and Evelyn
Kelly, 15 years. Sixth row: Mike Hop-
kins, president, Childrens Service
Center, and Dan Leco, 15 years.
Childrens Service Center
marks 150th anniversary
Students at Holy Redeemer High School spent many hours over the summer planning activities and events for incoming freshmen and
transfer students. Members of the schools Student Leadership Council, St. Michaels Society and other volunteers helped coordinate an
event for the Class of 2016, transfer students and their parents. They also planned an orientation day for new students and helped coor-
dinate their first school day. The summer agenda also included planning activities for the upcoming school Spirit Week, Meet the Teachers
Night, Catholic Schools Week, homeroom representative elections, Student Leadership constitution review and update, induction ceremo-
nies and recruitment and leadership programs. Student volunteers, from left, first row: Cornelia Chmil, Hanover Township; Bethany Chmil,
Hanover Township; Mary Pat Blaskiewicz, West Pittston; and Christopher Pawlenok, Mountain Top. Second row: Meghan Burns, Wilkes-
Barre; Kelsey Crossin, Plains Township; and Audrey Zavada, Forty Fort. Third row: Cody Januszko, Wilkes-Barre; Michael Morrison, Dallas;
Michael Kozik, Laflin; Matthew Nicholas, Courtdale; Connor Mulvey, West Pittston; Matthew Lyons, Forty Fort; Michael Conlon, Inkerman;
Michael Booth, vice principal for student life and SLC and St. Michaels Society advisor; and Conlan McAndrew, Mountain Top.
Student leaders at Redeemer welcome new students
LEHMAN: A dozen licensed
massage therapists recently par-
ticipated in the Penn State
Wilkes-Barre Northern Tier Cen-
ters workshop, Massage Team
Techniques for Post-Athletic
Recovery. This workshop provid-
ed seven continuing education
hours for licensed massage ther-
apists and is comprised of two
parts, classroominstruction and
practicum. An encore of the Mas-
sage TeamTechniques workshop
for licensed massage therapists
will be held from6-9 p.m. on
Tuesday. Registration fee is $30.
To register call John Swayze at
268-7777.
PITTSTON: The San Cataldo
Society of Pittston is sponsoring
its annual bus trip on Sept. 22 to
the San Gennaro Festival in New
York City. Cost is $30 per person.
Seats are limited. For tickets and
more information, call Grace
Scarantino at 655-9377.
PLYMOUTH: Wyoming Valley
West High School is offering
Learn to Swim lessons begin-
ning today at either 3 p.m. or 4
p.m. in the high schools pool.
For class details visit
www.wvwaquatics.com. Quick
information can be obtained by
leaving a message at 510-5600.
WILKES-BARRE: Luzerne
County Community College will
offer courses for the fall semester
in Wilkes-Barre. Students can
register for courses in Wilkes-
Barre at the colleges Corporate
Learning Center at 2 Public
Square.
Courses scheduled to be offered
in Wilkes-Barre include account-
ing, biological science, chemistry,
criminal justice, earth science,
microcomputers, speech, English,
history, business law, keyboard-
ing, algebra, education, first year
experience, college reading and
study skills, math, medical termi-
nology, nutrition and wellness,
paralegal, psychology, sociology,
philosophy, Spanish and others.
Both day and evening classes
are offered at the colleges Corpo-
rate Learning Center. Classes for
the fall semester will begin in
Wilkes-Barre on Sept. 17 and end
on Dec. 7.
For more information, call the
LCCC Corporate Learning Center
at 822-6156, or email dmanzo@lu-
zerne.edu.
WILKES-BARRE: Unitys
World Day of Prayer will be held
at noon on Thursday at Unity: A
Center for Spiritual Living, 140 S.
Grant Street. A potluck luncheon
will followthe service.
There will be live-streaming
fromUnity Village of Unitys
World Day of Prayer and Silent
Unity Prayer Service. Free park-
ing is available on South Grant
Street and in the parking lots
behind the church off of Bethel
Lane.
All faiths are welcome. For
more information, call 824-7722
or email unitynepa@epix.net.
WILKES-BARRE: The
McCann School of Business and
Technology, 264 Highland Park
Blvd., is holding a Fall Fest Career
Kickoff Party from8 a.m. to 8
p.m. on Tuesday.
There will be tailgating fun
with food, games and prizes.
Tours of the campus will be given
and there will be a Patriot Day
Memorial ceremony at 12:30 p.m.
Players fromthe NEPA Miners
football teamwill be available
from6-8 p.m. for a meet and
greet. Members of the staff will be
on hand to discuss the many
career opportunities available at
the school.
To make a reservation, call
235-2200.
IN BRIEF
Monday
PLAINS TWP.: The Plains Parks and
Recreation Board, 6:30 p.m., at the
Birchwood Hills Park Office.
Thursday
WARRIOR RUN: The Ladies Aid
Society of Warrior Run Welsh
Presbyterian Church, 7 p.m., at the
church, 390 Chestnut Street. All
members are encouraged to
attend.
Sept. 19
HANOVER TWP.: The Pi Beta Gam-
ma Club of Wyoming Valley, 6 p.m.,
at Vino Dolce, Sans Souci Parkway.
Meeting arrangements are being
made by Maryann Smith, chair-
person, and Terry DeLuca and
Susan Najaka. Upcoming fall pro-
jects will be discussed. New mem-
bers and guests welcome.
MEETINGS
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2012 PAGE 9B
P E O P L E
7
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pierce counseling associates, p.c.
Helping you and your loved ones cope with lifes difcult issues.
382 Pierce St., Kingston 570.288.7231
Carol S. Greenwald, NCC, LPC Sally Alinikoff, NCC, LPC
Adolescents and Children Caregivers Chronic Illness Family Counseling
Grief and Bereavement Counseling Lifecycle Changes Relationship Issues
Helping you to cope with the death of a child
A Support Group For Grieving Parents
Pierce Counseling is forming a support group for
parents mourning the death of a child.
Thurs., Oct. 4 at 7:00pm
Sessions are 90 minutes
Group size is limited
Visa/Mastercard & most
insurances accepted
www.moawv.com
For further information please call us or visit us online at:
The Wilkes-Barre Tractor Supply Company store was one of the top
two stores in Pennsylvania in supporting the 4-H youth program
through the Paper Clover donation program. The store received the
Regional Champion Award for having one of the top five highest
transaction percentages for Paper Clover donations in its region;
District Champion Award for the highest transaction percentage in its
district; and Class Champion Award for achieving at least a 15 percent
transaction percentage and raising a minimum of $300 in donations.
4-H is the youth development education program administered
through Penn State University for children ages 5 to 18. The program
enables children to have fun, meet new people, learn new life skills,
build self confidence, learn responsibility and set and achieve goals.
For more information on the 4-H program in Luzerne County, contact
Donna Grey, Penn State Extension, at 825-1701, 602-0600 or 1-888-
825-1701. At the check presentation, from left: Rose White, employee,
Wilkes-Barre Tractor Supply; Christy Harrison, assistant store manag-
er; Joe Gesek, employee; Grey; Sarah Smith, employee; and Tom
Stephenson, store manager.
Tractor Supply top contributor to donation program
Wilkes-Barre Academys Books and Poetry Club recently selected
its winners of the annual Poetry Month Contest. Winners, from left,
first row: Lauren Lightner, first place; Cody Belles, first place; Olivia
Andress, second place; and Sushmita Udoshi, second place. Second
row: Megan Purcell, third place; Bailey Flannery, first place; and Reed
Karaska, second place.
Poetry Month Contest winners named at Academy
Thirty-eight students recently completed the physician assistant studies masters degree program at Kings College and received
their degrees at the annual summer commencement ceremonies. The students in this class had an average GPA of 3.71 and spent
almost 90,000 hours seeing patients during their clinical rotations of the professional phase of the program. Upon successful com-
pletion of the Physician Assistant National Certifying Exam, graduates can practice in almost any field of medicine. Graduates, from
left, first row, are Kaitlyn Hefferan, Audrey Reighard, Kimberly Kleinberger, Chelsea Keehfuss, Anna Domday, Katie Sopp, Jamie Wool-
folk and Jessica Sekelski. Second row: Elyssa Nieddu, Carly Morcom, Ashley Keramas, Adraine Cimino, Colleen Hoeg, Christine Cowell,
Shannon Hoffman, Sara Hunter and Laura Provenzano. Third row: Nicole Fonos, Jenna Schappell, Sarah Cordani, Lindsay Smith,
Megan Yetter, Chelsey Spadt, Jacquelyne Dalczynski and Victoria Posatko. Fourth row: Colleen Lizewski, Brendan Hartman, Kristen
Piazza, Theodore Siskovich, Jillian Tallarico and Daniel Carducci. Fifth row: Michael Dana, Megan Devine, Zachary Leonard, Julie
Edwards, Allison Pamlayne and Andrew Hunadi. Jennifer Posner also received a degree.
Students earn physician assistant masters degrees
Misericordia University teacher education ma-
jors recently received their fall student teaching
assignments during an orientation program. The
program prepares the undergraduates for class-
room observation and instruction in several re-
gional school districts and outside the region.
Students participating in the program, first row
from left: Callie Whitesell, Hunlock Creek; Caressa
Crownover, Hughesville; Carolyn Kaminski, King-
ston; and Alyssa Cipriano, Hazleton. Second row:
Kelly Pelcher, Bloomingdale, N.J.; Ryan Stowinsky,
Bayville, N.J.; Eric Yashinski, Pittston; Joslyn Orr-
son, Edwardsville; Tara Matlock, Harveys Lake;
Samantha Stanton, Old Forge; and Alayna Snyder,
Wilkes-Barre.
Misericordia education students
start fall teaching assignments
Plymouth High School Class of 1962 held its 50th anniversary reunion on July 28 at the Apple Tree
Terrace, Newberry Estates, Dallas. At the event, from left, first row, are Jack Prothero, Delores Karwaski
Krasnavage, Donna Ogen Buckley, Sherry Evans Norberg, Sally Cooper Bolesta, Juday Valunas Barr, Beth
Nealon Sims and Bill Pinkowski. Second row: Sandy Simonitis McCaffrey, Dave Dugan, John Gbur, Sam
Smulyan, Donna Dwyer McClymont, Nancy Morgan Gibbons, David Davis and Donna Henness Griego.
Third row: James OBoyle, Theresa Wilson Hettinger, Beth Kocher Ferraro, Elaine Schultz, Carol Ripa
Oliver, Janice Karpinski Felix and Dwight Heffinger. Fourth row: Frank Dodson, Stuart Thomas, Ed Yarmel,
Bill Lewis, Howie Amdur and Rick Pascoe. Fifth row: Walt Narcum, Frank Nice and Jack Cebrick.
Plymouth Class of 62 holds 50th reunion
C M Y K
PAGE 10B SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2012 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
C M Y K
SPORTS S E C T I O N C
THE TIMES LEADER SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2012
timesleader.com
CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. -- Of course it was
raining.
Clouds have hung over Penn State for
months. That the skies opened up before their
final drive was fitting.
Sam Ficken had already missed three field
goals. Had an extra point blocked. And now
there was rain. And fans screaming at him as
loud as they could still manage, chanting his
uniform number -- Nine-ty-Sev-en! -- in their
best sing-song tone.
The noise intensified. The snap was low. The
kick hooked wide left.
Penn State fell to 0-2.
Not a fourth quarter rally nor four forced
turnovers was enough to get Bill OBrien his
first win. Virginia slipped and stumbled around
the field for four quarters but scored in the final
90 seconds for a 17-16 win.
Matt McGloin, returning froma mid-game el-
bow injury, led the Lions down the field in the
two-minute offense to give his team a shot to
winwithone secondleft onthe clock, but a fifth
miss on a kicking play on the afternoon -- this
one from 42 yards out -- sunk the team.
Its never always about the kicker, OBrien
said. The kicker is always the one to get
blamed, but its the whole operation -- the snap,
the hold, the kick. We have totake a lookat that.
Theres no substitute for hard work.
Well have togobackas a staff andtalkabout
it, but Sam is our kicker.
WithAnthony Fera havingtransferredtoTex-
as following the NCAA sanctions on the pro-
PENN STATE FOOTBAL L
Fickens nightmare
Four missed FGs, blocked extra point doom Lions
AP PHOTOS
Penn State linebacker Gerald Hodges (6) reacts to a missed Penn State field goal in the final seconds of a 17-16 loss to Virginia on Saturday in Char-
lottesville, Va.
Sam Ficken walks off the field after
missing a field goal in the final
seconds of the teams 17-16 loss to
Virginia.
17
VIRGINIA
16
PENN STATE
PSUs chance to win sails wide
By DEREK LEVARSE
dlevarse@timesleader.com
See PSU, Page 6C
SELINSGROVE The Crestwood
teamgathered together again, well after
their final game at the Selinsgrove Tour-
nament, for a commemorative photo.
They had balloons spelling out 600
in gold. They had a poster. They all had
smiles. Then the voice of one of the
Comets rang out above the commotion:
What about Mrs.
G?
Coach Elvetta Gem-
ski walked over to the
gathering and took her
place with her team.
With a 7-0 victory over
Mifflin County on Sat-
urday, she became the
third high school field
hockey coach in state
history and the sixth
inthe nationtorecord
600 wins in a career.
This is a wonderful
opportunitytostopand
reflect on all the sup-
port and all the won-
derful people who have
been a major part of my
life. Gemski said. I
love coming back each
year (which shes done
each year since 1976)
and putting a team to-
gether. I respect what
these players do and all
the work they put in.
And we have some fun
along the way.
Despite the rain,
heavy at times in-
cluding during the on-
field celebration after
the milestone, Gemski
clutched a bouquet of
flowers given to her by her team. Ten
minutes after the game, then20, she still
held the gift.
The milestone meant a lot to her. The
gift fromher teamseemed to mean even
more.
FAMILYFIRST: When you look at a
Crestwood roster, theres always a few
H . S . F I E L D H O C K E Y
Comets
Gemski
reaches
No. 600
Long-time Crestwood coach records
milestone victory with a pair of wins
at the Selinsgrove Tournament.
By JOHN MEDEIROS
jmedeiros@timesleader.com
See GEMSKI, Page 9C
This is a
wonderful
opportuni-
ty to stop
and reflect
on all the
support
and all the
wonderful
people
who have
been a
major part
of my
life.
Elvetta Gemski
Crestwood
coach
WILKES-BARRE TWP.
Fromthe beginning of Saturdays
game, it was evident that Kings
wasnt going to get pushed
aroundbyWidener likeit was last
time.
The Monarchs came out and
dominated the Pride for the first
15minutes of theMACopener for
both teams and had the 25th-
ranked team in the country, ac-
cording to d3football.com, trail-
ing by six points.
But then Widener showed why
it is ranked and
that the young
Monarchs have
a little further to
go. The pride
scored 41 unan-
swered points
and took advan-
tage of some key Monarchs mis-
cues in a 41-6 win at McCarthy
Stadium.
Our kids played really well
and they were executing early
on, Kings coach Jeff Knarr said.
LOCAL COL L EGE FOOTAL L
CHARLOTTE BARTIZEK/FOR THE TIMES LEADER
Kings wide receiver Dan Kempa pulls in a pass for a first down
against Widener early in the game Saturday at McCarthy Stadi-
um.
Just too much Pride
for Monarchs to handle
See MONARCHS, Page 6C
By DAVE ROSENGRANT
drosengrant@timesleader.com
41
WIDENER
6
KINGS
Two much
bigger defend-
ers were wait-
ing for Tyler
Hartranft at
the end of his
17-yard quar-
terback scram-
ble, but he put his head down
and took the punishing hit.
Because he believed it would
help Kings College win the
game.
Kris Matthews spent a whole
afternoon in the secondary
chasing hard after supremely
talented and more athletic
athletes.
Because he also had faith it
would pay off in victory.
Those types of efforts didnt
help the lowly Kings College
football team upset a powerful
Widener team ranked No. 25 in
the nation by d3football.com.
But someday soon, such
conviction will result in suc-
Believing is the first step
for optimistic Monarchs
PAUL SOKOLOSKI
O P I N I O N
See BELIEVE, Page 6C
PAGE 2C SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2012 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
BUILDING TRUST
The Times Leader strives to
correct errors, clarify stories and
update them promptly. If you
have information to help us
correct an inaccuracy or cover
an issue more thoroughly, call
the sports department at 829-
7143.
S P O R T S
868-GOLF
260 Country Club Drive, Mountaintop
www.blueridgetrail.com
Tuesday thru Friday
Play & Ride for Just
$
33.00
Weekday Special
Must Present Coupon.
One coupon per foursome. Cannot be used in
tournaments or with any other promotion. ST
Monday Special $32
Senior Day Mon-Thurs $28
Ladies Day Thursday $28
Weekends After 1 p.m. $36
GPS CART INCLUDED
27 Unique Holes
One Breathtaking Course
Pinnacle
Rehabilitation
Associates
Kevin M. Barno, MPT K. Bridget Barno, PT
Sharon Marranca, MPT Hal Glatz, MPT
Maria Hall, PTA William Montross, MPT
520 Third Ave.
Kingston
Most Insurances Do Not Require A Referral
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Massage Therapy Now Available
201 S. Main St.
Pittston
602-1933
NEW
LOCATION!
Feel Better, Hit It Further
and Win Your Match!
Treatment for all golf injuries or any
injury that is affecting your game
Golf specic exibility and
strengthening programs available
Most insurances do not require a referral
for physical therapy
GOLF COURSE
(570) 222.3525
See website or call for
TWILIGHT and SPECIALS
Wednesday Special
Excluding Holidays & August 1
7-11AM 18 holes and cart
$22.00!
Regular $34.00
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140 S. Wyoming Ave. Kingston, PA 18704 570.486.6676
Apparel Firearms
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A l Fi
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AreYou Suffering With Pain, Tingling, or
Numbness inYour Feet or Ankles?
Have you been diagnosed
with Peripheral/Diabetic Neuropathy?
You May Be A Candidate For
Our Newest Treatment...
Increasing blood ow to the nerves and feet allows
the nerves to heal...returning the feet to normal!
NEUROPATHY CENTER
250 PIERCE STREET SUITE 108 KINGSTON (570) 287-5560
Michele Holincheck, MSPT Dane Kozlevcar, MSPT
www.nervetreatmentcenter.com
FREE
Neuropathy Consultation
NON-SURGICAL TREATMENT!
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ALL JUNK CARS &
TRUCKS WANTED
VITO & GINO
288-8995
Forty Fort
Highest Prices Paid In Cash.
Free Pickup. Call Anytime.
Monday, Sept. 10th | 4pm - 9pm
Including
Clearance
Items
F
R
E
E
S
K
A
T
E S
H
A
R
P
E
N
IN
G 4
-9
P
M
Plaza 315
Wilkes-Barre
(Across from the
Woodlands)
570-208-2446
One Night Only!
Dont miss it!
P.C.W.S. PRO-WRESTLING
OR fnd us on Facebook
@ Pennsylvania Classic
Wrestling Superstars
September 15, @ 7pm
National Guard Armory 490 E Main St. Nanticoke
for Ticket info
CALL
570-889-5043
that live in the Dallas School
District are eligible to play. Any
questions please contact Scott at
675-1324.
Kings College Aquatics Swimming
will offer lessons Wednesday
nights from Oct. 10 to Nov. 14. Each
session will run from 5:30 to 6:10
p.m. The cost is $60 per-child,
which includes six 40-minute
lessons. Families registering more
than one child will pay a discount-
ed price of $50 for each additional
child. For more information or to
register for the program, call Mike
Labagh, Kings Assistant Swim
Coach, at 208-5900 ext. 5758 or
email him at michaella-
bagh@kings.edu
NEPA Wolfpack Fastpitch Softball
will hold tryouts today at the
North Pocono High School Softball
field for 10u from noon to 2p.m.,
12u from 2 - 4 p.m. and 14u from 4 -
6 p.m. For more information, email
Rob for 10u at rjleuthe@veri-
zon.net, Trevor for 12u at hafn-
er32@aol.com or Shawn for14u at
softballhawleys@yahoo.com.
Wyoming Valley CYC is now accept-
ing registrations for Fall 2012 swim
classes. Classes are offered for all
ages, weekday afternoons and
Saturday mornings. For more
information call Jeni at 823-6121
ext. 292.
UPCOMING EVENTS/OTHER
Meyers High School Girls Soccer
Booster Club will hold a Happy
Hour Fundraiser on Friday Sept. 28
at Senunas Bar from 7 - 9 p.m. It
will include music, baskets, guest
bartender, 50/50 prize, and bas-
kets.
Wyoming Valley Flames Girls Fast-
pitch Softball is holding their 1st
annual Golf Tournament on Friday
Sept. 14 at W-B Municipal Golf
Course. Format is Captain & Crew
with an 8:30am start. There will be
awards and door prizes, along with
lunch that will be included. Entry
fee is $75 per golfer, Hole sponsor-
ships still available, for reserva-
tions or information please contact
Tommy at 709-8211 or Hank 328-
2643.
CAMPS/CLINICS
Jerry Greeley, the Kings College
baseball coach, will host training
and games at the Wyoming Valley
Sports Dome during September
and October. The program, which
is open to all area players ages
8-12, will run from 5:30-8:30 p.m.
on Monday and Thursday nights
beginning Sept. 10. For more in-
formation, email base-
ball@kings.edu
LEAGUES
Dick McNulty Bowling League
needs one team to fill the Tuesday
night Winter Bowling League. It is
a mens league with an 80%
handicap and starts at 6:30 p.m. at
Chackos Family Bowling Center on
Wilkes-Barre Boulevard. Interested
bowlers can call Winday Thoman
at 824-3086 or Fred Favire at
215-0180.
Maximum Impactis having an Ad-
vance Softball Hitting Clinic every
Sunday from1:30 - 3p.m. Also,
Spring Travel Softball Tryouts are
on Sunday at 10 p.m. Please call
822-1134 to sign up.
MEETINGS
Crestwood Football Booster Club
will meet Sept. 12 at 7 p.m. at
Tonys Pizza. Parents of all players
are welcome.
Kingston/Forty Fort Little League
will be meet Monday, at 7 p.m.at
the Kingston Recreation Center. All
interested members are encour-
aged to attend.
South Wilkes Barre Mini Football
League will hold its monthly meet-
ing on Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the
Riverside. All football players and
cheerleaders parents please
attend.
REGISTRATIONS/TRYOUTS
Crestwood Ice Hockey Club will have
sign-ups for the 2012 2013 teams
Sept. 17 at 7 p.m. in the Crestwood
High School cafeteria. All players
from 5th grade through 12th grade
are welcome. For more informa-
tion, call Paul Eyerman at 650-1783
or email him at proof2@aol.com.
Dallas Youth Basketball will be
holding sign ups for a winter
basketball league on Tuesday, and
Thursday from 6 - 9 p.m. at Wycal-
lis Elementary School Cafeteria. All
students from grades 3-8 grade
Bulletin Board items will not be
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BUL L E T I N BOARD
BASEBALL
Favorite Odds Underdog
American League
RED SOX 9.0 Blue Jays
ORIOLES 9.0 Yankees
RAYS 8.0 Rangers
WHITE SOX 9.0 Royals
TWINS 9.5 Indians
ANGELS 7.0 Tigers
As 7.0 MARINERS
National League
Braves 8.0 METS
REDS 8.0 Astros
PIRATES 8.5 Cubs
NATIONALS 8.5 Marlins
PHILLIES 8.5 Rockies
CARDS 8.5 Brewers
PADRES 7.0 Dbacks
Dodgers 7.0 GIANTS
NFL
Favorite Points Underdog
BEARS 10 Colts
Eagles 9 BROWNS
JETS 3 Bills
SAINTS 9.5 Redskins
Patriots 6.5 TITANS
VIKINGS 4 Jaguars
TEXANS 13 Dolphins
LIONS 8.5 Rams
Falcons 3 CHIEFS
PACKERS 5.5 49ers
Panthers 2.5 BUCS
Seahawks 2 CARDS
BRONCOS 1 Steelers
Monday
RAVENS 7 Bengals
RAIDERS 1 Chargers
TENNIS
U.S. Open
Women's Final
S. Williams -$500/
+400
V. Azarenka
AME RI C A S L I NE
BY ROXY ROXBOROUGH
L O C A L
C A L E N D A R
TODAY'S EVENTS
COLLEGE FIELD HOCKEY
Wilkes vs. Consolation/Championship Game, 11
a.m./1:30 p.m.
MEN'S COLLEGE SOCCER
Marietta at Kings, 12 p.m.
Albright at Wilkes, 2 p.m.
Misericordia at Alvernia, 3:30 p.m.
WOMEN'S COLLEGE SOCCER
Dickinson at Wilkes, noon
MEN'S COLLEGE TENNIS
Wilkes at Muhlenberg Tournament, All Day
MONDAY, SEPT. 10
H.S. FOOTBALL
Holy Cross at Holy Redeemer, 6:30 p.m.
H.S. FIELD HOCKEY
Hazleton Area at Coughlin
Holy Redeemer at Lake-Lehman
Honesdale at Wallenpaupack
Nanticoke at Delaware Valley
Wyoming Area at Crestwood
Wyoming Seminary at Dallas
Wyoming Valley West at Dallas
H.S. GOLF
Pittston Area at Hazleton Area
Dallas at Wyoming Valley West
Tunkhannock at Crestwood
Coughlin at Berwick
Hanover Area at Meyers
GAR at MMI Prep
Lake-Lehman at Wyoming Area
Nanticoke at Holy Redeemer
H.S. BOYS SOCCER
Pittston Area at MMI Prep
Berwick at Tunkhannock
Wyoming Area at Holy Redeemer
H.S. GIRLS SOCCER
Tunkhannock at Berwick
Coughlin at Hazleton Area
Holy Redeemer at Wyoming Area
GAR at Wyoming Seminary
MMI Prep at Pittston Area
Nanticoke at Lake-Lehman
Dallas at Wyoming Valley West
H.S. GIRLS TENNIS
Holy Redeemer at Hazleton Area
Berwick at Wyoming Valley West
Wyoming Seminary at Coughlin
Wyoming Area at Crestwood
Tunkhannock at Dallas
MMI Prep at Hanover Area
Pittston Area at GAR
H.S. GIRLS VOLLEYBALL
Dallas at Pittston Area
MMI Prep at Coughlin
Tunkhannock at Wyoming Valley West
Berwick at Meyers
Nanticoke at Wyoming Area
WOMEN'S COLLEGE VOLLEYBALL
Valley Forge Christian at Wilkes, 6 p.m.
Marywood at Misericordia, 7 p.m.
Wilkes at Baptist Bible, 8 p.m.
TUESDAY, SEPT. 11
H.S. FIELD HOCKEY
GAR at Tunkhannock
Meyers at Berwick
Montrose at Elk Lake
Pittston Area at Hanover Area
H.S. BOYS SOCCER
Crestwood at Meyers
Dallas at Hazleton Area
Hanover Area at Wyoming Seminary
Nanticoke at Lake-Lehman, 7 p.m.
H.S. GIRLS SOCCER
Meyers at Crestwood
H.S. GIRLS VOLLEYBALL
North Pocono at Hazleton Area
Holy Redeemer at Lake-Lehman
GAR at Crestwood
Hanover Area at Delaware Valley
COLLEGE FIELD HOCKEY
Muhlenberg at Kings, 7 p.m.
Alvernia at Misericordia, 7 p.m.
MEN'S COLLEGE GOLF
PSU Wilkes-Barre at PSU Mont Alto Invitational, 11
a.m.
MEN'S COLLEGE SOCCER
Baptist Bible at Wilkes, 7 p.m.
WOMEN'S COLLEGE VOLLEYBALL
LCCC at Northampton/Manor, 6 p.m.
W H A T S O N T V
AUTO RACING
7:30 a.m.
SPEEDFormulaOne, GrandPrix of Italy, at Mon-
za, Italy
3 p.m.
SPEED Rolex Sports Car Series, Sports Car
Festival, at Salinas, Calif.
GOLF
6:30 a.m.
TGC European PGA Tour, KLM Open, final
round, at Hilversum, Netherlands
Noon
TGC PGA Tour, BMW Championship, final
round, at Carmel, Ind.
2 p.m.
NBC PGA Tour, BMW Championship, final
round, at Carmel, Ind.
TGC LPGA, Kingsmill Championship, final
round, at Williamsburg, Va.
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL
1 p.m.
SNY Atlanta at N.Y. Mets
1:30 p.m.
ROOT Chicago Cubs at Pittsburgh
WQMY Colorado at Philadelphia
YES N.Y. Yankees at Baltimore
8 p.m.
ESPN L.A. Dodgers at San Francisco
MOTORSPORTS
2 p.m.
SPEED FIM World Superbike, race 1, at Nuer-
burg, Germany (same-day tape)
6 p.m.
SPEED FIM World Superbike, race 2, at Nuer-
burg, Germany (same-day tape)
11 p.m.
SPEEDAMAPro Racing, at Millville, N.J. (same-
day tape)
NFL FOOTBALL
1 p.m.
CBS Buffalo at N.Y. Jets
FOX Philadelphia at Cleveland
4 p.m.
CBS San Francisco at Green Bay
8:15 p.m.
NBC Pittsburgh at Denver
TENNIS
11 a.m.
ESPN2 U.S. Open, mens semifinal, David Fer-
rer vs. Novak Djokovic, at New York
4 p.m.
CBS U.S. Open, womens championship, Victo-
ria Azarenka vs. Serena Williams, at New York
T R A N S A C T I O N S
BASEBALL
Major League Baseball
MLBSuspended Chicago Cubs C Steve Cleven-
ger one game and fined himan undisclosed fine for
his aggressive actions and fighting during the
bench-clearing incident in the bottom of the sixth
inning of a Sept. 6 game against Washington.
FOOTBALL
National Football League
CHICAGO BEARSPromoted RB Armando Allen
fromthe practice squad. Waived LBPatrick Trahan.
Terminated the contract of RB Lorenzo Booker.
DENVERBRONCOSReleasedQBCalebHanie.
Promoted DT Sealver Siliga from the practice
squad.
JACKSONVILLE JAGUARSActivated RB Maur-
ice Jones-Drew. Waived RB Keith Toston.
NEW ORLEANS SAINTSReinstated DE Will
Smith to the active roster. Terminated the contracts
of WR Adrian Arrington and FB Korey Hall. Placed
OT Marcel Jones on injured reserve.
SEATTLE SEAHAWKSSigned TE Sean
McGrath to the practice squad. Released WR Jer-
maine Kearse from the practice squad. Released
LB Matt McCoy from injured reserve with an injury
settlement.
B A S E B A L L
Minor League Baseball
International League Playoffs
(x-if necessary)
First Round
(Best-of-5)
Pawtucket 3, Yankees 1
Wednesday, Sep. 5: Pawtucket 7, Yankees 4
Thursday, Sep. 6: Pawtucket 3, Yankees 2
Friday, Sep. 7: Yankees 4, Pawtucket 3
Saturday, Sep. 8: Pawtucket 7, Yankees 1
Charlotte 2, Indianapolis 1
Wednesday, Sep. 5: Charlotte 8, Indianapolis 1
Thursday, Sep. 6: Charlotte 14, Indianapolis 13
Friday, Sep. 7: Indianapolis 8, Charlotte 0
Saturday, Sep. 8: Indianapolis at Charlotte, late
x-Sunday, Sep. 9: Charlotte at Indianapolis, 2:15
p.m.
Eastern League Playoffs
(x-if necessary)
First Round
(Best-of-5)
Bowie 2, Akron 1
Wednesday, Sep. 5: Bowie 4, Akron 2
Thursday, Sep. 6: Bowie 7, Akron 5
Friday, Sep. 7: Akron 4, Bowie 3
Saturday, Sep. 8: Bowie at Akron, late
x-Sunday, Sep. 9: Bowie at Akron, 7:05 p.m.
Trenton 2, Reading 1
Wednesday, Sep. 5: Reading 4, Trenton 2
Thursday, Sep. 6: Trenton 4, Reading 1
Friday, Sep. 7: Trenton 3, Reading 1
Saturday, Sep. 8: Reading at Trenton, PPD.
Sunday, Sep. 9: Reading at Trenton, 4:05 p.m.
G O L F
European PGA-KLM Open
Scores
Saturday
At Hilversumsche Golf Club Course
Hilversum, Netherlands
Purse: $2.27 million
Yardage: 6,906;Par: 70
Third Round, Leading Scores
Pablo Larrazabal, Spain ..................69-65-64198
Scott Jamieson, Scotland ................68-64-66198
Graeme Storm, England..................63-66-69198
Gonzalo Fernandez-Castano,
Spain ..................................................67-65-66198
Peter Hanson, Sweden....................66-66-67199
Richie Ramsay, Scotland.................71-66-64201
Danny Willett, England.....................66-69-66201
Henrik Stenson, Sweden.................68-70-64202
Nicolas Colsaerts, Belgium.............70-65-67202
Marcus Fraser, Australia..................69-68-66203
Lorenzo Gagli, Italy ..........................69-67-67203
Simon Thornton, Ireland ..................71-64-68203
Bernd Wiesberger, Austria..............68-71-65204
Richard Sterne, South Africa ..........70-68-66204
Martin Kaymer, Germany.................65-71-68204
Shiv Kapur, India ..............................67-67-70204
Darren Fichardt, South Africa .........70-67-68205
Anders Hansen, Denmark ...............70-67-68205
Garth Mulroy, South Africa..............71-65-69205
Bradley Dredge, Wales.................... 69-66-70-205
T E N N I S
U.S. Open Results
Saturday
At The USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis
Center
New York
Purse: $25.5 million (Grand Slam)
Surface: Hard-Outdoor
Singles
Men
Championship
Andy Murray (3), Britain, def. Tomas Berdych (6),
Czech Republic, 5-7, 6-2, 6-1, 7-6 (7).
Junior Singles
Boys
Semifinals
Filip Peliwo (2), Canada, def. Yoshihito Nishioka,
Japan, 6-4, 6-0.
LiamBroady (13), Britain, def. Kaichi Uchida(8), Ja-
pan, 6-1, 6-1.
Girls
Semifinals
Anett Kontaveit (12), Estonia, def. Victoria Duval,
United States, 6-2, 7-6 (4).
Samantha Crawford, United States, def. Antonia
Lottner (4), Germany, 3-6, 6-1, 6-2.
Junior Doubles
Boys
Championship
Kyle Edmund, Britain, and Frederico Ferreira Silva
(8), Portugal, def. Nick Kyrgios and Jordan Thomp-
son (6), Australia, 5-7, 6-4, 10-6 tiebreak.
Girls
Championship
Gabrielle Andrews and Taylor Townsend (4), Unit-
edStates, def. BelindaBencic, Switzerland, andPe-
tra Uberalova (2), Slovakia, 6-4, 6-3.
F O O T B A L L
High School Football
WYOMING VALLEY
CONFERENCE
Division 4A........................... W L PF PA CP
Wyoming Valley West .......... 1 1 42 42 8
Williamsport ........................... 0 1 21 40 0
Hazleton Area ....................... 0 2 0 60 0
Division 3A........................... W L PF PA CP
Coughlin................................. 2 0 45 0 17
Berwick................................... 2 0 89 21 16
Crestwood ............................. 1 1 42 68 8
Dallas ..................................... 0 2 21 56 0
Pittston Area.......................... 0 2 0 71 0
Tunkhannock......................... 0 2 6 66 0
Division 2A-A....................... W L PF PA CP
Lake-Lehman ........................ 1 1 63 50 8
Nanticoke............................... 1 1 44 34 8
Northwest (A) ........................ 1 1 59 31 7
Wyoming Area ...................... 1 1 34 24 7
Meyers ................................... 1 1 47 42 6
Holy Redeemer ..................... 0 1 15 45 0
GAR........................................ 0 2 7 63 0
Hanover Area ........................ 0 2 26 99 0
NOTE: CP is Championship Points toward the divi-
sional title.
Teams get nine points for defeating a Class 4A op-
ponent, eight for a Class 3A opponent, seven for a
Class 2A opponent and six for a Class A opponent.
The teamwith the most Championship Points is the
division winner.
Friday's Results
Coughlin 17, Hazleton Area 0
Dunmore 29, GAR 0
Lackawanna Trail 51, Hanover Area 12
Lake-Lehman 49, Montrose 0
Crestwood 21, North Pocono 20
Old Forge 42, Meyers 7
Scranton 43, Pittston Area 0
Berwick 41, Pottsville 0
Susquehanna 16, Northwest 14
West Scranton 38, Tunkhannock 6
Williamsport at Mifflin County, sus. lightning
Wyoming Area 28, Mid Valley 12
Delaware Valley 35, Wyoming Valley West 14
Saturday's Results
Nanticoke 36, Col-Montour Vo-Tech 0
Abington Heights 28, Dallas 7
Holy Cross at Holy Redeemer, ppd.
Monday's Games
Holy Cross at Holy Redeemer, 6:30 p.m.
Williamsport at Mifflin Co., 5 p.m.,completion of
game suspended Friday.
Friday, Sept. 14
(All games 7 p.m.)
Coughlin at Western Wayne
Crestwood at Pittston Area
Dallas at Berwick
Delaware Valley at Hazleton Area
GAR at Carbondale
Holy Redeemer at Old Forge
Lackawanna Trail at Meyers
Lakeland at Hanover Area
Scranton at Wyoming Valley West
Susquehanna at Nanticoke
Tunkhannock at Montrose
Wyoming Area at Lake-Lehman
Saturday, Sept. 15
Northwest at Holy Cross, 1 p.m.
Williamsport at Abington Heights, 1 p.m.
College Football Scores
EAST
Albany (NY) 35, Robert Morris 10
Bloomsburg 30, Edinboro 14
Boston College 34, Maine 3
Delaware 38, Delaware St. 14
Dickinson 24, Juniata 17
Duquesne 17, Dayton 7
Endicott 66, Castleton St. 14
Georgetown 13, Wagner 10
Hobart 28, Geneva 7
Indiana 45, UMass 6
Johns Hopkins 34, Susquehanna 7
Lehigh 35, CCSU14
Lycoming 24, Delaware Valley 14
Maryland 36, Temple 27
Monmouth (NJ) 41, Rhode Island 6
Muhlenberg 21, Franklin & Marshall 0
NC State 10, UConn 7
Rochester 17, Thiel 7
Rutgers 26, Howard 0
Shepherd 34, American International 7
Southern Cal 42, Syracuse 29
St. Francis (Pa.) 39, Bryant 28
St. John Fisher 28, Washington & Jefferson 24
W. New England 35, Westfield St. 10
Widener 41, King's (Pa.) 6
Lebanon Valley 47, Misericordia 7
MIDWEST
Albion 22, Wheaton (Ill.) 21
Baldwin-Wallace 45, Bluffton 13
Bethel (Minn.) 21, Wartburg 0
Carroll (Wis.) 30, Ripon 24
Cent. Missouri 31, NW Missouri St. 21
Central 17, Augustana (Ill.) 10
Coe 34, Cornell (Iowa) 14
Concordia (Moor.) 38, Buena Vista 14
Concordia (St.P.) 34, Minn.-Crookston 24
Crown (Minn.) 35, Mac Murray 28
Elmhurst 31, Trine 13
Gustavus 35, Simpson (Iowa) 26
Illinois College 53, Grinnell 20
Illinois St. 31, E. Michigan 14
Illinois Wesleyan 53, Alma 7
Indiana St. 44, Quincy 0
Iowa St. 9, Iowa 6
Kalamazoo 29, Manchester 28
Kansas St. 52, Miami 13
Kenyon 31, Earlham14
Lake Forest 20, Lawrence 16
Loras 28, Rockford 14
Macalester 17, Concordia (Wis.) 13
Marian (Ind.) 31, Siena Heights 3
Mary 31, Augustana (SD) 25
Miami (Ohio) 30, S. Illinois 14
Michigan 31, Air Force 25
Michigan St. 41, Cent. Michigan 7
Michigan Tech 51, Tiffin 15
Millikin 49, Hope 20
Minn.-Morris 10, Martin Luther 0
Minnesota 44, New Hampshire 7
Monmouth (Ill.) 31, Beloit 14
Northwestern (Minn.) 49, Westminster (Mo.) 7
Northwood (Mich.) 28, Walsh 16
Notre Dame 20, Purdue 17
Ohio St. 31, UCF 16
Peru St. 48, Culver-Stockton 21
Rice 25, Kansas 24
SW Minnesota St. 32, Northern St. (SD) 30
Saginaw Valley St. 37, Malone 14
Sioux Falls 45, Minn. St.-Moorhead 10
South Dakota 31, Colgate 21
St. Johns (Minn.) 31, Wis.-Eau Claire 28
St. Norbert 31, Knox 20
St. Olaf 31, DePauw10
St. Scholastica 35, Eureka 10
St. Thomas (Minn.) 43, Wis.-River Falls 9
Trinity (Ill.) 42, Concordia (Mich.) 0
Urbana 34, Seton Hill 31
W. Illinois 27, Indianapolis 17
Wayne (Neb.) 20, Minot St. 6
William Penn 31, Luther 9
Wis. Lutheran 38, Olivet 14
Wis.-Platteville 52, Dubuque 35
Wis.-Stout 31, Jamestown 0
Youngstown St. 59, Valparaiso 0
SOUTH
Alabama 35, W. Kentucky 0
Clark Atlanta 20, Lane 17
Clemson 52, Ball St. 27
Cumberlands 55, Cumberland (Tenn.) 13
Emory & Henry 45, Maryville (Tenn.) 36
Gettysburg 48, Ursinus 7
Hampden-Sydney 42, Christopher Newport 20
Jacksonville 31, Charleston Southern 10
Kentucky Christian 33, Bluefield South 14
Lindsey Wilson 53, Pikeville 36
Louisville 35, Missouri St. 7
Mississippi St. 28, Auburn 10
Rhodes 20, Washington (Mo.) 17, OT
South Carolina 48, East Carolina 10
Tennessee 51, Georgia St. 13
VMI 24, Chowan 17
Virginia 17, Penn St. 16
Virginia Tech 42, Austin Peay 7
Wake Forest 28, North Carolina 27
Washington & Lee 28, Sewanee 6
Wingate 37, Albany St. (Ga.) 9
Winston-Salem 30, Concord 22
SOUTHWEST
Florida 20, Texas A&M17
Henderson St. 47, McKendree 24
S. Arkansas 56, Texas College 0
Tulsa 45, Tulane 10
UTSA 27, Texas A&M Commerce 16
FAR WEST
BYU 45, Weber St. 13
California 50, S. Utah 31
Montana Tech 37, Carroll (Mont.) 20
N. Colorado 40, Mesa St. 3
Oregon St. 10, Wisconsin 7
Sacramento St. 30, Colorado 28
South Florida 32, Nevada 31
Toledo 34, Wyoming 31
Washington St. 24, E. Washington 20
S O C C E R
Major League Soccer
EASTERN CONFERENCE
....................................... W L T Pts GF GA
Sporting Kansas City..15 7 5 50 34 24
New York......................13 7 7 46 46 39
Houston........................12 7 9 45 40 33
Chicago ........................13 8 5 44 35 31
Columbus.....................12 9 6 42 33 32
D.C. ...............................12 10 5 41 43 38
Montreal .......................12 14 3 39 43 46
New England ............... 7 14 7 28 35 38
Philadelphia................. 7 13 5 26 25 30
Toronto FC................... 5 16 6 21 30 48
WESTERN CONFERENCE
....................................... W L T Pts GF GA
x-San Jose ...................16 6 5 53 56 33
Seattle...........................13 6 8 47 43 28
Real Salt Lake.............14 11 4 46 38 33
Los Angeles.................13 11 4 43 48 40
Vancouver ....................10 11 7 37 29 37
FC Dallas ..................... 8 12 9 33 34 38
Colorado....................... 9 17 2 29 36 41
Chivas USA ................. 7 12 7 28 21 41
Portland ........................ 7 14 6 27 27 46
NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie.
x- clinched playoff berth
Wednesday's Games
New England 2, Columbus 0
Colorado 3, Portland 0
Thursday's Games
Houston 1, Real Salt Lake 0
Saturday's Games
Seattle FC 2, Chivas USA1
Wednesday, Sept. 12
Chicago at Toronto FC, 7 p.m.
Friday, Sept. 14
Houston at Sporting Kansas City, 8:30 p.m.
Colorado at Los Angeles, 11 p.m.
Saturday, Sept. 15
Philadelphia at Toronto FC, 1 p.m.
Seattle FC at Portland, 3:30 p.m.
Columbus at New York, 7 p.m.
New England at D.C. United, 7:30 p.m.
Montreal at Chicago, 8:30 p.m.
Vancouver at FC Dallas, 8:30 p.m.
San Jose at Chivas USA, 10:30 p.m.
B A S K E T B A L L
Women's National Basketball
Association
EASTERN CONFERENCE
W L Pct GB
x-Connecticut ................ 20 8 .714
x-Indiana......................... 18 9 .667 1
1
2
Atlanta............................. 15 14 .517 5
1
2
Chicago.......................... 11 16 .407 8
1
2
New York ....................... 11 17 .393 9
Washington.................... 5 23 .179 15
WESTERN CONFERENCE
W L Pct GB
x-Minnesota ................. 23 4 .852
x-Los Angeles.............. 20 9 .690 4
x-San Antonio .............. 17 10 .630 6
Seattle ........................... 12 14 .462 10
1
2
Phoenix......................... 7 20 .259 16
Tulsa ............................. 6 21 .222 17
x-clinched playoff spot
Friday's Games
Phoenix 91, Connecticut 82
Los Angeles 96, Washington 68
Chicago 92, New York 83
Minnesota 97, Atlanta 93, OT
Indiana 82, San Antonio 78
Saturday's Games
Seattle at Tulsa, late
Today's Games
Minnesota at San Antonio, 3 p.m.
Washington at Atlanta, 3 p.m.
Los Angeles at New York, 4 p.m.
Chicago at Connecticut, 5 p.m.
Phoenix at Indiana, 6 p.m.
Canadian Football League
EAST DIVISION
W L T Pts PF PA
Montreal.................................... 6 4 0 12 273 310
Toronto ..................................... 6 4 0 12 255 253
Hamilton.................................... 3 7 0 6 297 339
Winnipeg................................... 2 7 0 4 176 296
WEST DIVISION
W L T Pts PF PA
B.C. ........................................... 7 3 0 14 270 181
Calgary ..................................... 6 4 0 12 268 254
Edmonton................................. 5 5 0 10 239 205
Saskatchewan.......................... 4 5 0 8 242 182
Friday's Game
Calgary 20, Edmonton 18
Saturday's Games
Toronto 45, Hamilton 31
B.C. 43, Montreal 10
Today's Game
Saskatchewan at Winnipeg, 1 p.m.
B O X I N G
Fight Schedule
Sept. 13
At Las Vegas (ESPN2), Jessie Vargas vs. Aaron
Martinez, 10, welterweights; Luis Cruz vs. Casey
Ramos, 10, light welterweights.
Sept. 14
At Harrahs, Chester, Pa., Victor Vasquez vs. Naim
Nelson, 10, for the Pennsylvania State lightweight
title.
Sept. 15
At Bamberg, Germany, Yoan Pablo Hernandez vs.
Troy Ross, 12, for Hernandezs IBF cruiserweight
title; Dominik Britsch vs. Roberto Santos, 12, mid-
dleweights.
At Thomas & Mack Center, Las Vegas (PPV), Ser-
gioMartinez vs. JulioCesar Chavez Jr., 12, for Cha-
vezs WBC middleweight title; Rocky Martinez vs.
Miguel Beltran, 12, for the vacant WBO junior light-
weight title; Matthew Macklin vs. Joachim Alcine,
10, middleweights.
At MGMGrand, Las Vegas (SHO), Canelo Alvarez,
vs. Josesito Lopez, 12, for Alvarezs WBC super
welterweight title; Jhonny Gonzalez vs. Daniel
Ponce De Leon, 12, for Gonzalezs WBC feather-
weight title; Marcos Maidana vs. Jesus Soto Ka-
rass, 12, junior middleweights; Leo Santa Cruz vs.
Eric Morel, 12, for Santa Cruzs IBF bantamweight
title.
Sept. 21
At Bethlehem, Pa. (NBCSN), Gabriel Rosado vs.
Charles Whittaker, 12, IBF junior middleweight
eliminator; Ronald Cruz vs. Antwone Smith, 12, for
Cruzs WBC Continental Americas welterweight ti-
tle; Gabriel Campillo vs. Sergey Kovalev, 10, light
heavyweights.
At Chumash Casino, Santa Ynez, Calif. (SHO),
Jhonatan Romero vs. Efrain Esquivas, 10, junior
featherweights.
Sept. 22
At Glasgow, Scotland, Ricky Burns vs. Kevin Mitch-
ell, 12, for Burns WBO lightweight title.
At Wroclaw, Poland, Krzysztof Wlodarczyk vs.
Francisco Palacios, 12, for Wlodarczyks WBCcrui-
serweight title.
Sept. 29
At Hamburg, Germany, Alexander Povetkin vs. Ha-
sim Rahman, 12, for Povetkins WBA World heavy-
weight title; Kubrat Pulev vs. Alexander Ustinov, 12,
IBF heavyweight eliminator and for Pulevs Europe-
an heavyweight title.
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2012 PAGE 3C
N F L S U N D A Y
S T A N D I N G S
All Times EDT
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
East
W L T Pct PF PA
Buffalo........................................ 0 0 0 .000 0 0
Miami .......................................... 0 0 0 .000 0 0
New England............................. 0 0 0 .000 0 0
N.Y. Jets .................................... 0 0 0 .000 0 0
South
W L T Pct PF PA
Houston...................................... 0 0 0 .000 0 0
Indianapolis ............................... 0 0 0 .000 0 0
Jacksonville............................... 0 0 0 .000 0 0
Tennessee................................. 0 0 0 .000 0 0
North
W L T Pct PF PA
Baltimore.................................... 0 0 0 .000 0 0
Cincinnati ................................... 0 0 0 .000 0 0
Cleveland................................... 0 0 0 .000 0 0
Pittsburgh................................... 0 0 0 .000 0 0
West
W L T Pct PF PA
Denver........................................ 0 0 0 .000 0 0
Kansas City................................ 0 0 0 .000 0 0
Oakland...................................... 0 0 0 .000 0 0
San Diego .................................. 0 0 0 .000 0 0
NATIONAL CONFERENCE
East
W L T Pct PF PA
Dallas ....................................... 1 0 0 1.000 24 17
Philadelphia............................. 0 0 0 .000 0 0
Washington ............................. 0 0 0 .000 0 0
N.Y. Giants .............................. 0 1 0 .000 17 24
South
W L T Pct PF PA
Atlanta ........................................ 0 0 0 .000 0 0
Carolina...................................... 0 0 0 .000 0 0
New Orleans.............................. 0 0 0 .000 0 0
Tampa Bay................................. 0 0 0 .000 0 0
North
W L T Pct PF PA
Chicago...................................... 0 0 0 .000 0 0
Detroit......................................... 0 0 0 .000 0 0
Green Bay .................................. 0 0 0 .000 0 0
Minnesota.................................. 0 0 0 .000 0 0
West
W L T Pct PF PA
Arizona....................................... 0 0 0 .000 0 0
San Francisco............................ 0 0 0 .000 0 0
Seattle......................................... 0 0 0 .000 0 0
St. Louis ..................................... 0 0 0 .000 0 0
Wednesday's Game
Dallas 24, N.Y. Giants 17
Sunday's Games
Indianapolis at Chicago, 1 p.m.
Jacksonville at Minnesota, 1 p.m.
Miami at Houston, 1 p.m.
New England at Tennessee, 1 p.m.
Washington at New Orleans, 1 p.m.
Atlanta at Kansas City, 1 p.m.
Buffalo at N.Y. Jets, 1 p.m.
St. Louis at Detroit, 1 p.m.
Philadelphia at Cleveland, 1 p.m.
Seattle at Arizona, 4:25 p.m.
San Francisco at Green Bay, 4:25 p.m.
Carolina at Tampa Bay, 4:25 p.m.
Pittsburgh at Denver, 8:20 p.m.
Monday's Games
Cincinnati at Baltimore, 7 p.m.
San Diego at Oakland, 10:15 p.m.
Thursday, Sep. 13
Chicago at Green Bay, 8:20 p.m.
Sunday, Sep. 16
Tampa Bay at N.Y. Giants, 1 p.m.
New Orleans at Carolina, 1 p.m.
Arizona at New England, 1 p.m.
Minnesota at Indianapolis, 1 p.m.
Baltimore at Philadelphia, 1 p.m.
Kansas City at Buffalo, 1 p.m.
Cleveland at Cincinnati, 1 p.m.
Houston at Jacksonville, 1 p.m.
Oakland at Miami, 1 p.m.
Dallas at Seattle, 4:05 p.m.
Washington at St. Louis, 4:05 p.m.
Tennessee at San Diego, 4:25 p.m.
N.Y. Jets at Pittsburgh, 4:25 p.m.
Detroit at San Francisco, 8:20 p.m.
Monday, Sep. 17
Denver at Atlanta, 8:30 p.m.
T V G A M E S
Today
1 p.m., WYOU-22
Buffalo Bills at New York Jets
1 p.m., WOLF-56
Philadelphia Eagles at Cleveland Browns
4 p.m., WOLF-56
San Francisco 49ers at Green Bay Packers
8:30 p.m., WBRE-28
Pittsburgh Steelers at Denver Boncos
Monday
7 p.m., ESPN
Cincinnati Bengals at Baltimore Ravens
10:30 p.m., ESPN
San Diego Chargers at Oakland Raiders
CLEVELAND Vince Young
dubbed themthe DreamTeam
last year. Hes gone, and so is a
nickname that proved to be fool-
ish.
It never fit the Eagles.
I really didnt think much of
that either, Philadelphia coach
Andy Reid said of a moniker that
turned into a punch line.
One season after talk of a Su-
per Bowl title proved to be pre-
sumptuous and preposterous,
the Eagles, who needed a four-
game winning streak just to re-
ach .500 and in doing so may
have saved Reids job, believe
they again have a championship-
caliber team.
Owner Jeffrey Lurie thinks so.
He recently said an 8-8 record
this season would not be accept-
able, and Reid likes howhis boss
is thinking.
Thats not what we are shoot-
ing for, so Imall in on that, said
Reid, who will beginhis14thsea-
son with Philadelphia on Sunday
against the Browns. Jeffrey and
I have a goodrelationshipandwe
keep everything out on the table
and thats why we have had this
thing going for 14 seasons.
For himto have a 15th, the Ea-
gles need to be a redeem team.
They staggered out of the
blocks in 2011, following a win
over St. Louis in the opener with
four straight losses. Despite an
offensethat producedafranchise
record for yards with quarter-
back Michael Vick and an All-
Star cast of playmakers busting
off biggains by the boatload, Phi-
ladelphia finished second in the
NFC East, missed the playoffs
and entered the off-season deter-
mined not to repeat the same
mistakes.
Theres pressure to win, may-
be more than ever.
We want to go out and repre-
sent as best as we can as players
for this team, Vick said. Were
going to go out here and make it
happen. Were all playing for
coach, for Mr. Lurie, and for one
another.
Vick appears to be fully reco-
vered froman injured thumb and
bruised ribs, which limited him
to just 12 snaps during the exhi-
bition season. He didnt even
make the trip to Cleveland for
Philadelphias 27-10 win over the
Browns on Aug. 24, when back-
up QB Nick Foles threw two
touchdown passes. Vicks health
is the key for Philadelphia, as al-
ways.
I feel good going into this
game, Vick said earlier this
week. I feel like Im100 percent,
and I dont really have any nag-
ging injuries. I think Im fully re-
covered. The last two weeks
have really helped me get there.
Im just ready to go.
Thats not what the Browns
wanted to hear.
Theyll bemissingthreedefen-
sive starters linebackers Chris
Gocong (injured) and Scott Fuj-
ita (just off suspension) andtack-
le Phil Taylor and will have
their hands full trying to contain
Vick, who can take a busted play
and make it magical.
Hes a superstar, said
Browns coach Pat Shurmur, who
begins his second season amid
an ownership change. He can
have a bad play, and then all of a
sudden its a touchdown. Thats
what makes him extremely dan-
gerous. He can do it with his feet
from outside the pocket. He
throws the ball extremely well.
He can beat you with his arm in
the pocket; thats what makes
him very, very dangerous.
Danger looms everywhere for
the Browns, who have gone 1-12
in season openers since return-
ing to the NFL as an expansion
team in 1999.
With one of the leagues
youngest rosters 15 rookies,
one first-year and 11 second-year
players and a daunting sched-
ule, Cleveland could be in for an-
other long year. But Shurmur,
who went 4-12 last season, likes
his squad. Hes confident the
Browns, despite gloomy predic-
tions from experts, will improve
as the season rolls along.
Philadelphia sets out to be Super team
Philadelphia Eagles
at Cleveland Browns
1 p.m., today WOLF-56
By TOMWITHERS
AP Sports Writer
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. Its Tebow
Time for the NewYork Jets, and Super Marios
bigdebut for the BuffaloBills.
Tim Tebow and Mario Williams, two of the
NFLs highest-profile players, switched teams
this offseason and are hoping to have huge im-
pactsstartingwiththeregular-seasonopener
at MetLife StadiumonSunday.
I reallydont get nervous, but it does feel like
my rookie year all over again, said Williams,
whosignedasix-year, $100milliondeal withthe
BillsinMarchaftersixyearsinHouston. Itdoes
feel likeI gotdraftedagain. Imprettysureitll be
a little bit, a little anxiety, but
itll be fine.
TheBillsarebankingonthe
fact that Williams will add a
big-time boost to their de-
fense, wreaking havoc on op-
posing quarterbacks every
Sunday and helping Buffalo
improve a defense that man-
agedjust 29 sacks last season.
Youkindof sit backandgo,
whew, Jets coach Rex Ryan
said. Hes a tremendous play-
er. Your first thought is youre
going against him, then you
think, He does get to play
New England twice, so thats kind of a good
thing. If wecansurvive, hopefullyNewEngland
will strugglewithhim. Thatsit. Itslike, Whew.
Theconference, ourleagueisgettingbetter. You
steal one of the top pass rushers in the game.
Clearly, you think, Oh man. You hope that he
doesnt gointoour division, but here he is.
And, soisTebow, thepopularbackupquarter-
backwhose role inNewYorks offense has been
kept mostly under wraps all offseason to keep
defenses on their toes. Tebowwill work in new
offensive coordinator Tony Sparanos wildcat
packages andas the personal punt protector on
special teams.
Beyond that, anybodys guess is as good as
Buffalos.
If youget somebodythat canthrowthe foot-
ball and still be able to run it effectively, he cre-
ates aprobleminthewildcat, Bills coachChan
Gailey said. And thats what you are trying to
do. Youre trying to find that guy that can just
keep themhonest enough in the wildcat where
theycant just throweverybodyright ontheline
of scrimmage. Thats what Tebows proven he
cando.
Super Mario,
Tebowmania
ready to debut
Bills defensive star and Jets backup
quarterback are ready to take the field
with their new teams for season opener.
By DENNIS WASZAK Jr.
AP Sports Writer
New York Jets
at
Buffalo Bills
1 p.m., today
WYOU-22
AP PHOTO
Quarterback Tim Tebow will make his New
York Jets debut today.
DENVER When the four-time
MVPwith the four-time surgically re-
pairednecktakes the fieldtonight for
the Denver Broncos opener against
the Pittsburgh Steelers, it will have
been 1 year, 8 months and 2 days
since Peyton Mannings last mea-
ningful snap.
What a long, strange journey its
been.
Mannings march began with an ir-
ritated nerve in his neck that got
worse and eventually weakened his
throwing arm, leading to a series of
operations that forced himto miss all
of the 2011 season.
Without him, the Indianapolis
Colts nosedived and then decided to
rebuildfromtoptobottom, including
selecting Stanford quarterback An-
drew Luck with the top pick in the
draft.
So, they cut Manning loose on
March 7, marking the end of an era, a
14-year alliance between the team
that drafted himNo. 1overall and the
QB who brought Indianapolis from
football irrelevance to the 2007 Su-
per Bowl title and a second appear-
ance in the NFL championship game
three years later.
A thousand miles away, Denver
was Tim Tebows turf. But manage-
ment wasnt completely sold on the
exalted but erratic passer for whom
coachJohnFoxhaddustedoff the old
read-option offense last season.
Two weeks after he stood along-
side Colts owner JimIrsay at an emo-
tional farewell news conference,
Manning was standing next to John
Elway, the powerful pair of Super
Bowl winners talking about hoisting
another Lombardi Trophy, this time
together. And soon.
While that quest begins in earnest
Sunday night, it had its roots in Den-
ver long before Manning ever
dreamed hed be wearing the orange-
mane mustang on his helmet instead
of the horse shoe.
Shortly after signing with the
Broncos, Manning visited Coors
Field with wide receiver Eric Decker
and revealed that he had worked out
with his buddy, Rockies first base-
man Todd Helton, during the NFL
lockout last year.
While Manning, who unseated
Helton as the starting quarterback at
the University of Tennessee in the
mid-1990s, was rehabbing from neck
surgery, Helton helped arrange for
him to use the Rockies facilities to
work out.
Hes a great friend, Manning said
that day at the ballpark. What he did
for me last year, allowing me to use
this facility, use the trainers to work
out as part of my rehab process. Ive
come a long way ... They were a big
part of it. The whole Rockies organi-
zation, I cant thank themenough for
opening their doors to me last year
when I certainly was an outsider. Ill
always be indebted to them.
Mannings right triceps had atro-
phied after one of his neck surgeries.
He told the NewYork Times recently
that when he went with Helton and a
Rockies trainer to an indoor batting
cage at Denvers downtown ballpark,
the first pass he threw to Helton
nose-dived so much that Helton ac-
tually thought he was just goofing
around.
He was dead serious. His arm was
shot, his future in football in doubt.
A few days later, an MRI revealed
that Manning needed spinal fusion
surgery. Nobody realized it at the
time, but Mannings days in Indy
were numbered.
F EATURED MATCHUP: STEEL ERS AT BRONCOS
AP PHOTO
When the four-time MVP takes the field Sunday night for the Broncos opener against the Pittsburgh Steelers,
it will have been 1 year, 8 months and 2 days since Payton Mannings last meaningful snap.
Peyton set for return
Manning returns to field for first
time in more than a year when
the Broncos face the Steelers.
By ARNIE STAPLETON
AP Pro Football Writer
Pittsburgh Steelers
at Denver Broncos
8:30 p.m., today WBRE-28
2 0 1 1 A F C
L E A D E R S
Final
Quarterbacks
Att Com Yds TD Int
Brady, NWE.............. 611 401 5235 39 12
Schaub, HOU............ 292 178 2479 15 6
Roethlisberger, PIT.. 513 324 4077 21 14
Rivers, SND.............. 582 366 4624 27 20
Mat. Moore, MIA....... 347 210 2497 16 9
Hasselbeck, TEN..... 518 319 3571 18 14
Flacco, BAL............... 542 312 3610 20 12
C. Palmer, OAK........ 328 199 2753 13 16
Dalton, CIN................ 516 300 3398 20 13
Fitzpatrick, BUF ........ 569 353 3832 24 23
Rushers
Att Yds Avg LG TD
Jones-Drew, JAC ..... 343 1606 4.68 56 8
R. Rice, BAL.............. 291 1364 4.69 70t 12
A. Foster, HOU ......... 278 1224 4.40 43 10
McGahee, DEN......... 249 1199 4.82 60t 4
Ry. Mathews, SND... 222 1091 4.91 39 6
Re. Bush, MIA........... 216 1086 5.03 76t 6
Benson, CIN.............. 273 1067 3.91 42 6
S. Greene, NYJ......... 253 1054 4.17 31 6
Chr. Johnson, TEN... 262 1047 4.00 48t 4
M. Bush, OAK ........... 256 977 3.82 44 7
Receivers
No Yds Avg LG TD
Welker, NWE............. 122 1569 12.9 99t 9
R. Gronkowski,
NWE........................... 90 1327 14.7 52t 17
B. Marshall, MIA ....... 81 1214 15.0 65t 6
Bowe, KAN................ 81 1159 14.3 52t 5
Hernandez, NWE...... 79 910 11.5 46 7
St. Johnson, BUF...... 76 1004 13.2 55 7
R. Rice, BAL.............. 76 704 9.3 52 3
Wayne, IND............... 75 960 12.8 56t 4
N. Washington, TEN 74 1023 13.8 57 7
M. Wallace, PIT ........ 72 1193 16.6 95t 8
Scoring
Touchdowns
TD Rush Rec Ret Pts
R. Gronkowski,
NWE.......................... 18 1 17 0 108
R. Rice, BAL............. 15 12 3 0 90
A. Foster, HOU........ 12 10 2 0 72
Green-Ellis, NWE.... 11 11 0 0 66
Jones-Drew, JAC.... 11 8 3 0 66
Tolbert, SND............ 10 8 2 0 60
2 0 1 1 N F C
L E A D E R S
Final
Quarterbacks
Att Com Yds TD Int
A. Rodgers, GBY...... 502 343 4643 45 6
Brees, NOR............... 657 468 5476 46 14
Romo, DAL................ 522 346 4184 31 10
Stafford, DET............ 663 421 5038 41 16
E. Manning, NYG ..... 589 359 4933 29 16
M. Ryan, ATL............ 566 347 4177 29 12
Ale. Smith, SNF........ 446 274 3150 17 5
Cutler, CHI ................ 314 182 2319 13 7
Vick, PHL................... 423 253 3303 18 14
C. Newton, CAR....... 517 310 4051 21 17
Rushers
Att Yds Avg LG TD
M. Turner, ATL.......... 301 1340 4.45 81t 11
L. McCoy, PHL.......... 273 1309 4.79 60 17
Gore, SNF ................. 282 1211 4.29 55 8
M. Lynch, SEA.......... 285 1204 4.22 47 12
S. Jackson, STL........ 260 1145 4.40 47t 5
B. Wells, ARI ............. 245 1047 4.27 71 10
Forte, CHI .................. 203 997 4.91 46 3
A. Peterson, MIN...... 208 970 4.66 54 12
Murray, DAL .............. 164 897 5.47 91t 2
DeA. Williams, CAR . 155 836 5.39 74t 7
Receivers
No Yds Avg LG TD
R. White, ATL............ 100 1296 13.0 43 8
J. Graham, NOR....... 99 1310 13.2 59 11
Ca. Johnson, DET.... 96 1681 17.5 73t 16
Harvin, MIN ............... 87 967 11.1 52t 6
Sproles, NOR............ 86 710 8.3 39 7
Pettigrew, DET.......... 83 777 9.4 27 5
Cruz, NYG................. 82 1536 18.7 99t 9
Fitzgerald, ARI .......... 80 1411 17.6 73t 8
Colston, NOR............ 80 1143 14.3 50 8
T. Gonzalez, ATL...... 80 875 10.9 30 7
Scoring
Touchdowns
TD Rush Rec Ret Pts
L. McCoy, PHL ........ 20 17 3 0 120
Ca. Johnson, DET... 16 0 16 0 96
Jor. Nelson, GBY.... 15 0 15 0 90
C. Newton, CAR...... 14 14 0 0 84
M. Lynch, SEA......... 13 12 1 0 78
A. Peterson, MIN..... 13 12 1 0 78
Bradshaw, NYG....... 11 9 2 0 68
C M Y K
PAGE 4C SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2012 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
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B A S E B A L L
BALTIMOREThe Orioles
continuedtheir long-ball on-
slaught against the Yankees,
hitting three home runs off CC
Sabathia ina 5-4 victory Sat-
urday night that movedBalti-
more back into a tie atop the AL
East withNewYork.
Mark Reynolds, LewFord
andJ.J. Hardy homeredfor the
Orioles, who have won11of 15
overall andnine of the last 13
against the Yankees. Witha
victory Sunday, Baltimore will
winthe seasonseries (10-8) for
the first time since1997.
Trying to secure a victory for
Joe Saunders (2-1), Baltimore
closer JimJohnsonentered
witha 5-3 leadinthe ninth. He
promptly gave up three straight
singles, the last a bunt by Derek
Jeter, to loadthe bases withno
outs.
Nick Swisher drove ina run
witha forceout before Mark
Teixeira hit into a game-ending
double play.
White Sox5, Royals 4
CHICAGODayanViciedo,
Tyler Flowers andPaul Konerko
eachhomeredto back Chris
Sales six solidinnings andlead
the Chicago White Sox to a 5-4
winover the Kansas City Royals
onSaturday.
Sale (16-6) scatteredfive hits
andstruck out six over six in-
nings. He allowedsix baserun-
ners inthe first three innings
before settling downto retire
the last 10 batters he faced.
Rangers 4, Rays 2
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.
Rookie JuricksonProfar hit a
tiebreaking RBI double inthe
10thinning, helping the Texas
Rangers beat the Tampa Bay
Rays.
Geovany Soto hada two-out
double to deep center off Kyle
Farnsworth(1-4). Profar then
made it 3-2 whenhe drove in
pinch-runner Leonys Martinon
his hit past a diving Carlos Pena
downthe first-base line.
Twins 3, Indians 0
MINNEAPOLISCole
DeVries pitchedsix scoreless
innings to winhis thirdstraight
start andthe Minnesota Twins
beat the ClevelandIndians.
Joe Mauer hadanRBI single
andJoshWillinghamaddeda
sacrifice fly ina two-runthird
inning for Minnesota, which
hadlost four of its past five
games.
A M E R I C A N L E A G U E R O U N D U P
ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Baltimore Orioles Mark Reynolds, right, is greeted by third
base coach DeMarlo Hale after his home run during the second
inning of a game against the New York Yankees on Saturday.
Orioles pull even
with Yanks again
The Associated Press
SAN FRANCISCO Hanley
Ramirez hit a go-ahead RBI
double in the top of the ninth
and Los Angeles trimmed a
game off their division deficit
with a 3-2 win over NL West-
leading San Francisco on Sat-
urday.
Adrian Gonzalez led off the
ninth with a triple against
Jeremy Affeldt (1-2), then Ra-
mirez came through with a
double to the gap in right-
center. That was the Dodgers
first hit in 15 tries this series
with runners in scoring posi-
tion.
Ronald Belisario (5-1)
pitched out of trouble in the
eighth for the victory, helping
Los Angeles snap a four-game
losing streak to San Francisco.
Buster Posey hit an RBI
single in the first and Brandon
Belt added a go-ahead RBI with
a groundout in the eighth for
the Giants, who lead the Dodg-
ers by 4
1
2 games.
Nationals 7, Marlins 6
WASHINGTON Pinch-
hitter Corey Brown singled to
drive in Ian Desmond with
Washingtons winning run in
the bottom of the 10th.
After Adam LaRoche singled
off Chad Guadin (3-2) to open
the inning, Desmond singled
him to third and Danny Espino-
sa was intentionally walked to
load the bases. After a forceout
at home, Brown blooped a
single to right.
Drew Storen (2-1) pitched a
scoreless 10th inning for the
win.
Braves 11, Mets 3
NEW YORK Kris Medlen
extended Atlantas scoreless
streak to 31 innings its best
string in more than 20 years
and slumping Brian McCann
drove in four runs with four
hits.
A tornado touched down in
Queens about 15 miles away
several hours before the game.
Dark, ominous clouds swept in
later, causing a 75-minute rain
delay after the sixth inning.
Cubs 4, Pirates 3
PITTSBURGH Jeff Sa-
mardzija pitched the Cubs first
complete game in his final start
of the season and Chicago beat
the fading Pittsburgh Pirates.
David DeJesus singled in
Welington Castillo with two
outs in the eighth for the go-
ahead run after Pittsburgh had
tied the game at 3 in the bot-
tom of the seventh.
Reds 5, Astros 1
CINCINNATI Bronson
Arroyo extended his personal
winning streak to five games,
Jay Bruce and Brandon Phillips
hit solo home runs and the
first-place Cincinnati Reds
bounced back from a frustrat-
ing loss with a win over the
last-place Houston Astros.
Brewers 6, Cardinals 3
ST. LOUIS Aramis Rami-
rez had three hits, including his
22nd home run, to lead the
Milwaukee Brewers to a win
over the St. Louis Cardinals.
Ricky Weeks added a solo
home run and Ryan Braun
went 3 for 5 with a run scored
for Milwaukee. Carlos Gomez
went 2 for 4 and drove in two
runs. Ramirez, who also walk-
ed twice, reached base all five
times he batted and scored
twice.
N AT I O N A L L E A G U E R O U N D U P
Dodgers move closer
to Giants in the West
The Associated Press
STANDINGS/STATS
ROCHESTER, N.Y. The sea-
son-long road trip of the Scran-
ton/Wilkes-Barre Yankees has
come to an end.
At last.
The Yankees, whose vagabond
existence didnt get in the way of
them capturing the IL North Di-
vision crown, ran out of road Sat-
urday, when they suffered a 7-1
season-ending loss to the Paw-
tucket RedSox inGame 4 of their
semifinal set at Frontier Field.
Playoff participants for the
fourth time in five years, the Yan-
kees were upended by the IL
wildcard winning Paw Sox, who
will face the winner of the Indi-
anapolis/Charlotte semifinal set
for the league championship.
That the Yanks, who drew just
442 in the last of their 48 games
played at Frontier Field, func-
tioned as well as they did while
PNC Field underwent extensive
renovations is a story that has
caused jaws to drop all over the
baseball world.
To try to write another chapter
to the tale, the Yankees, who
were already short on starting
pitching, turned to journeyman
lefthander Vidal Nuno, a 25-year-
old who was making his Triple-A
debut.
Nunos swan song came after
just 1
2
3 innings.
After strolling through an un-
eventful opening inning, Nuno
was raked by the PawSox for sev-
en runs in the second.
The Paw Sox loaded the bases
withnone away, andall three run-
ners eventuallyscored, onerunat
a time.
The crushing blowcame when
Pawtucket third baseman Danny
Valencia blasted a three-run
homer to left, which ended Nu-
nos night, and for all practical
purposes, the Yankees remarka-
ble sojourn.
It happened pretty quick,
SWB skipper Dave Miley said. I
didnt think there was going to be
a whole lot of trouble, and then it
snowballed. But youve got to tip
youre hat to Figgy.
By that, Miley meant Pawtuck-
et starter Nelson Figueroa who
hitched on for part of that ride
while making 17 appearances
while with the Yanks earlier this
year held his former mates to
just two hits throughout his eight
inning stint.
Whenateamreleases you, Fi-
gueroa said, youput that chipon
your shoulder and carry it for a
little while. You always want to
prove youre not done. I knew I
wasnt done by a long shot.
The first of those a fourth so-
lo homer by Corban Joseph ac-
countedfor all of the Yankee scor-
ing.
Figueroa went on to fan eight
Yankees while walking just one.
However by that time, reflec-
tion on the Yankees memorable
campaign could begin.
There were a lot of questions
inspringtraining, veterancatch-
er Gustavo Molina said, so you
prepared for that. You had to take
everything with you. For the first
two months, you still thought
about it. But after that, you only
had one choice, and that was to
play baseball.
Molina admitted that keeping
track of time and location was a
challenge.
Pawtucket Yankees
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Hazelbaker
dh 4 0 1 1 Russo 3b 4 0 0 0
Thomas 2b 4 1 0 1 Joseph 2b 4 1 1 1
Linares lf 3 1 1 1 Mustelier lf 4 0 0 0
Valencia 3b 4 1 1 3 Murton 1b 4 0 0 0
LaRoche 1b 4 1 1 0 Mesa cf 3 0 0 0
Brentz rf 3 1 2 0 Garner rf 3 0 0 0
Butler c 4 1 1 0 Romine c 2 0 0 0
Repko cf 3 0 1 0 Pena ss 3 0 1 0
Hee ss 4 1 1 1
McDonald
dh 3 0 0 0
Lin dh 1 0 0 0
Totals 34 7 9 7 Totals 30 1 2 1
Pawtucket ............................ 070 000 000 7
Yankees............................... 000 100 000 1
ELaRoche(1) LOBPawtucket 3, Yankees 32B
Brentz (2) HR Valencia (1), Joseph (1)
IP H R ER BB SO
Pawtucket
Figueroa (W, 1-0) .... 8 2 1 1 8 1
Wilson........................ 1 0 0 0 0 0
Yankees
Nuno (L, 0-1) ............ 1.2 7 7 7 1 1
Perez ......................... 3.1 2 0 0 0 4
Meloan....................... 2 0 0 0 1 2
Rondon...................... 2 0 0 0 1 1
S W B YA N K E E S
Road ends
for Yanks
in Game 4
Scranton/Wilkes-Barres
season of travel crashes
in seven-run second inning.
By DAN HICKLING
For the Times Leader
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
Baltimore........................................ 78 61 .561 7-3 W-1 39-31 39-30
New York ....................................... 78 61 .561 3-7 L-1 41-28 37-33
Tampa Bay..................................... 76 63 .547 2 2 6-4 L-1 38-32 38-31
Boston............................................ 63 76 .453 15 15 1-9 L-2 32-39 31-37
Toronto........................................... 62 75 .453 15 15 5-5 W-2 34-34 28-41
Central Division
W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Away
Chicago ........................................ 75 63 .543 4-6 W-1 41-28 34-35
Detroit ........................................... 73 64 .533 1
1
2 4 4-6 L-1 43-28 30-36
Kansas City.................................. 62 77 .446 13
1
2 16 4-6 L-1 31-38 31-39
Cleveland ..................................... 59 80 .424 16
1
2 19 4-6 L-1 32-37 27-43
Minnesota .................................... 57 82 .410 18
1
2 21 5-5 W-1 26-41 31-41
West Division
W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Away
Texas ............................................. 83 56 .597 6-4 W-1 43-25 40-31
Oakland.......................................... 77 60 .562 5 7-3 W-1 42-30 35-30
Los Angeles .................................. 75 63 .543 7
1
2 2
1
2 9-1 W-4 37-29 38-34
Seattle ............................................ 67 72 .482 16 11 5-5 L-1 36-34 31-38
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division
W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Away
Washington.................................. 86 53 .619 8-2 W-1 44-26 42-27
Atlanta........................................... 80 60 .571 6
1
2 6-4 W-4 40-32 40-28
Philadelphia................................. 67 71 .486 18
1
2 6
1
2 6-4 W-2 33-37 34-34
New York...................................... 65 74 .468 21 9 5-5 L-2 30-37 35-37
Miami ............................................ 62 78 .443 24
1
2 12
1
2 3-7 L-1 32-37 30-41
Central Division
W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Away
Cincinnati...................................... 84 56 .600 6-4 W-1 44-27 40-29
St. Louis ....................................... 74 65 .532 9
1
2 3-7 L-3 42-29 32-36
Pittsburgh..................................... 72 66 .522 11 1
1
2 4-6 L-2 42-29 30-37
Milwaukee .................................... 69 70 .496 14
1
2 5 7-3 W-2 41-28 28-42
Chicago ........................................ 53 86 .381 30
1
2 21 4-6 W-2 34-34 19-52
Houston........................................ 43 96 .309 40
1
2 31 3-7 L-1 28-40 15-56
West Division
W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Away
San Francisco ............................... 78 61 .561 6-4 L-1 39-31 39-30
Los Angeles .................................. 74 66 .529 4
1
2
1
2 5-5 W-1 38-33 36-33
Arizona........................................... 68 71 .489 10 6 4-6 L-1 33-34 35-37
San Diego...................................... 65 74 .468 13 9 6-4 W-3 34-33 31-41
Colorado........................................ 56 81 .409 21 17 4-6 L-3 30-41 26-40
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Friday's Games
N.Y. Yankees 8, Baltimore 5
Tampa Bay 3, Texas 1, 11 innings
Toronto 7, Boston 5
Cleveland 7, Minnesota 6
Kansas City 7, Chicago White Sox 5
L.A. Angels 3, Detroit 2
Oakland 6, Seattle 1
Saturday's Games
Chicago White Sox 5, Kansas City 4
Baltimore 5, N.Y. Yankees 4
Minnesota 3, Cleveland 0
Texas 4, Tampa Bay 2, 10 innings
Toronto at Boston, (n)
Detroit at L.A. Angels, (n)
Oakland at Seattle, (n)
Sunday's Games
N.Y. Yankees (F.Garcia 7-6) at Baltimore (Britton
5-1), 1:35 p.m.
Toronto (Villanueva 7-5) at Boston (Buchholz11-5),
1:35 p.m.
Texas (Oswalt 4-2) at Tampa Bay (Shields 13-8),
1:40 p.m.
Cleveland (Kluber 1-3) at Minnesota (Vasquez 0-1),
2:10 p.m.
Kansas City (Guthrie 4-3) at Chicago White Sox
(H.Santiago 3-1), 2:10 p.m.
Detroit (A.Sanchez 2-4) at L.A. Angels (Greinke
4-2), 3:35 p.m.
Oakland (Milone 11-10) at Seattle (Vargas 14-9),
4:10 p.m.
Monday's Games
Cleveland at Minnesota, 8:10 p.m.
Detroit at Chicago White Sox, 8:10 p.m.
Oakland at L.A. Angels, 10:05 p.m.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Friday's Games
Chicago Cubs 12, Pittsburgh 2
Philadelphia 3, Colorado 2
Miami 9, Washington 7, 10 innings
Atlanta 3, N.Y. Mets 0
Houston 5, Cincinnati 3
Milwaukee 5, St. Louis 4, 13 innings
San Diego 6, Arizona 5
San Francisco 5, L.A. Dodgers 2
Saturday's Games
Washington 7, Miami 6, 10 innings
Atlanta 11, N.Y. Mets 3
L.A. Dodgers 3, San Francisco 2
Chicago Cubs 4, Pittsburgh 3
Colorado at Philadelphia, ppd., rain
Cincinnati 5, Houston 1
Milwaukee 6, St. Louis 3
Arizona at San Diego, (n)
Sunday's Games
Colorado (D.Pomeranz 1-8) at Philadelphia (Cloyd
1-1), 1 p.m., 1st game
Atlanta (Hanson 12-8) at N.Y. Mets (C.Young 4-7),
1:10 p.m.
Houston (E.Gonzalez 1-0) at Cincinnati (Cueto
17-7), 1:10 p.m.
ChicagoCubs (Rusin0-2) at Pittsburgh(Locke0-1),
1:35 p.m.
Miami (Nolasco 11-12) at Washington (E.Jackson
9-9), 1:35 p.m.
Milwaukee (Marcum 5-4) at St. Louis (J.Kelly 5-6),
2:15 p.m.
Arizona (Corbin 5-6) at San Diego (Werner 1-1),
4:05 p.m.
Colorado(Undecided) at Philadelphia(Undecided),
6:35 p.m., 2nd game
L.A. Dodgers (Kershaw12-8) at San Francisco (Zito
10-8), 8:05 p.m.
Monday's Games
Miami at Philadelphia, 7:05 p.m.
Pittsburgh at Cincinnati, 7:10 p.m.
Washington at N.Y. Mets, 7:10 p.m.
Chicago Cubs at Houston, 8:05 p.m.
Atlanta at Milwaukee, 8:10 p.m.
San Francisco at Colorado, 8:40 p.m.
St. Louis at San Diego, 10:05 p.m.
N A T I O N A L
L E A G U E
Braves 11, Mets 3
Atlanta New York
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Bourn cf 6 0 1 0 Baxter rf 3 0 0 0
RJhnsn cf 0 0 0 0
Hairstn
ph-rf 1 0 0 0
Prado ss-3b 6 1 3 2 DnMrp 2b 3 0 0 0
Heywrd rf 5 1 1 0 Acosta p 0 0 0 0
C.Jones 3b 3 0 0 1 Famili p 0 0 0 0
Janish ss 1 0 0 0 RRmrz p 0 0 0 0
FFrmn 1b 5 1 1 1 Lutz ph 1 0 0 0
Uggla 2b 3 3 3 0 ElRmr p 0 0 0 0
McCnn c 5 3 4 4 DWrght 3b 4 2 2 0
Constnz lf 5 1 2 1 I.Davis 1b 3 0 1 0
Medlen p 2 0 1 1 Duda lf 4 0 2 2
JFrncs ph 1 0 0 0 Tejada ss 4 0 0 0
Avilan p 0 0 0 0 Vldspn cf 3 0 1 0
Hinske ph 1 1 1 1 Thole c 2 0 0 0
Gearrin p 0 0 0 0 Nickes ph-c 2 0 1 0
Hefner p 0 0 0 0
Hmpsn p 0 0 0 0
FLewis ph 1 0 0 0
RCarsn p 0 0 0 0
RCeden
ph-2b 3 1 1 1
Totals 43111711 Totals 34 3 8 3
Atlanta.............................. 014 021 201 11
New York......................... 000 110 010 3
EDan.Murphy (15). DPAtlanta 1, New York 1.
LOBAtlanta 10, New York 6. 2BBourn (23),
Heyward (27), McCann (13), Medlen (1), Duda (12).
HRMcCann (19), Hinske (2), R.Cedeno (4). S
Medlen.
IP H R ER BB SO
Atlanta
Medlen W,8-1.......... 6 4 2 2 2 3
Avilan ........................ 2 4 1 1 0 1
Gearrin ..................... 1 0 0 0 0 3
New York
Hefner L,2-6 ............ 2
2
3 8 5 5 2 1
Hampson..................
1
3 0 0 0 0 0
R.Carson.................. 2 2 2 2 1 1
Acosta ...................... 1 1 1 1 0 0
Familia...................... 1 4 2 2 0 1
R.Ramirez................ 1 0 0 0 1 0
El.Ramirez ............... 1 2 1 1 0 3
WPHefner, Acosta.
UmpiresHome, Manny Gonzalez;First, Greg
Gibson;Second, Phil Cuzzi;Third, Gerry Davis.
T3:02 (Rain delay: 1:15). A25,603 (41,922).
Cubs 4, Pirates 3
Chicago Pittsburgh
ab r h bi ab r h bi
DeJess rf 4 0 2 1 Holt 2b 4 1 1 0
Valuen 3b 3 0 0 1 SMarte lf 3 0 0 0
Rizzo 1b 4 0 1 0 AMcCt cf 3 1 0 0
ASorin lf 5 1 1 1 GJones 1b 3 0 0 0
Mather lf 0 0 0 0 PAlvrz 3b 4 0 2 2
SCastro ss 3 0 1 0 Presley rf 4 0 0 0
WCastll c 4 1 2 0 Barmes ss 3 0 0 0
Barney 2b 4 0 1 0 GSnchz ph 1 0 0 0
Smrdzj p 3 0 0 0 Barajs c 3 0 0 0
Campn cf 3 2 2 0 JHrrsn pr 0 1 0 0
McKnr c 0 0 0 0
JMcDnl p 2 0 0 0
Watson p 0 0 0 0
JHughs p 0 0 0 0
Clemnt ph 1 0 1 1
Grilli p 0 0 0 0
Resop p 0 0 0 0
Totals 33 410 3 Totals 31 3 4 3
Chicago.............................. 011 010 010 4
Pittsburgh .......................... 200 000 100 3
ES.Castro (23). DPPittsburgh 1. LOBChica-
go 10, Pittsburgh 4. 2BW.Castillo (9), Campana
(6), P.Alvarez (23). HRA.Soriano (27). SBDe-
Jesus (7), Rizzo (3), S.Castro (23), Campana (27).
CSS.Castro (13). SSamardzija, S.Marte. SF
Valbuena.
IP H R ER BB SO
Chicago
Samardzija W,9-13. 9 4 3 2 1 9
Pittsburgh
Ja.McDonald ........... 5
2
3 7 3 3 2 2
Watson .....................
2
3 1 0 0 1 1
J.Hughes..................
2
3 0 0 0 0 1
Grilli L,1-5 ................ 1 2 1 1 1 1
Resop....................... 1 0 0 0 0 0
HBPby Samardzija (A.McCutchen), by Resop
(S.Castro), by Ja.McDonald (Rizzo).
T2:56. A35,661 (38,362).
Dodgers 3, Giants 2
Los Angeles San Francisco
ab r h bi ab r h bi
M.Ellis 2b 4 0 2 0 Pagan cf 4 0 0 0
Victorn cf 3 0 1 1 Scutaro 2b 2 1 1 0
AdGnzl 1b 4 1 1 0 Sandovl 3b 4 0 1 0
HRmrz ss 4 0 2 1 Posey c 3 1 2 1
Ethier rf 2 0 0 0 Pence rf 3 0 0 0
L.Cruz 3b 4 0 0 0 Arias ss 3 0 0 0
JRiver lf 3 0 1 0 Belt 1b 4 0 0 1
Cstllns pr-lf 0 1 0 0 GBlanc lf 3 0 2 0
A.Ellis c 2 0 0 0 M.Cain p 2 0 0 0
Capuan p 2 1 1 0 SCasill p 0 0 0 0
BAreu ph 0 0 0 0 Affeldt p 0 0 0 0
Belisari p 0 0 0 0 Mota p 0 0 0 0
League p 0 0 0 0 HSnchz ph 1 0 0 0
Totals 28 3 8 2 Totals 29 2 6 2
Los Angeles....................... 000 001 011 3
San Francisco.................... 100 000 100 2
DPLos Angeles 2, San Francisco 2. LOBLos
Angeles 3, San Francisco 7. 2BVictorino (24),
H.Ramirez (27), J.Rivera (14), Scutaro (27), Posey
(33), G.Blanco (12). 3BAd.Gonzalez (1). CS
H.Ramirez 2 (7), Ethier (2). SA.Ellis, Pence,
M.Cain. SFVictorino.
IP H R ER BB SO
Los Angeles
Capuano................... 7 5 2 2 3 3
Belisario W,5-1........ 1 0 0 0 2 1
League S,2-2........... 1 1 0 0 0 0
San Francisco
M.Cain...................... 7
1
3 6 2 2 2 5
S.Casilla...................
2
3 0 0 0 0 0
Affeldt L,1-2.............
1
3 2 1 1 1 0
Mota..........................
2
3 0 0 0 0 0
WPM.Cain 2.
Marlins 9, Nationals 7
Miami Washington
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Petersn lf 4 2 1 0 Werth rf 5 1 1 0
Ruggin cf 5 2 2 0 Harper cf 5 0 1 0
Reyes ss 6 2 3 3 Zmrmn 3b 5 1 2 2
Stanton rf 5 1 2 2 LaRoch 1b 4 1 1 0
Ca.Lee 1b 4 0 1 2 Morse lf 5 1 2 2
Dobbs 3b 6 1 3 0 Dsmnd ss 5 1 3 0
DSolan 2b 5 0 2 1 Espinos 2b 5 1 1 1
Gaudin p 0 0 0 0 KSuzuk c 4 1 1 1
Cishek p 0 0 0 0 Strasrg p 0 0 0 0
Brantly c 3 1 1 1 CBrwn ph 1 0 0 0
JaTrnr p 3 0 0 0 Duke p 1 0 0 0
Zamrn p 0 0 0 0 Lmrdzz ph 1 0 1 0
Webb p 0 0 0 0 Matths p 0 0 0 0
MDunn p 0 0 0 0 Storen p 0 0 0 0
Kearns ph 1 0 1 0 Tracy ph 1 0 0 0
ARams p 0 0 0 0 Clipprd p 0 0 0 0
DMrph 2b 1 0 0 0 McGnzl p 0 0 0 0
Berndn ph 1 0 0 0
Totals 43 916 9 Totals 43 713 6
Miami ............................ 212 100 000 3 9
Washington.................. 200 000 310 1 7
ED.Solano (3). DPWashington1. LOBMiami
12, Washington 9. 2BStanton (29), Ca.Lee (24),
Dobbs (11), Kearns (5), LaRoche (28), Desmond
(28), Espinosa (33), K.Suzuki (3). 3BReyes 2
(11), Zimmerman (1). HRStanton (31), Brantly (2),
Zimmerman (19), Morse (13). SBD.Solano 2 (7),
Brantly (1). SFCa.Lee 2.
IP H R ER BB SO
Miami
Ja.Turner.................. 6 4 2 2 1 3
Zambrano................. 0 3 3 3 0 0
Webb H,9.................
1
3 1 0 0 0 0
M.Dunn H,17...........
2
3 0 0 0 0 1
A.Ramos BS,1-1..... 1 2 1 1 0 1
Gaudin W,3-1 .......... 1 0 0 0 1 1
Cishek S,13-17 ....... 1 3 1 1 1 3
Washington
Strasburg ................. 3 6 5 5 3 2
Duke ......................... 4 3 1 1 2 3
Mattheus................... 1 2 0 0 0 2
Storen....................... 1 2 0 0 0 0
Clippard L,2-4..........
2
3 3 3 3 1 0
Mic.Gonzalez ..........
1
3 0 0 0 0 0
Reds 5, Astros 1
Houston Cincinnati
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Pareds 2b 5 0 0 0 BPhllps 2b 3 1 2 1
FMrtnz rf 2 1 2 0 Heisey cf 5 0 0 0
BBarns ph-rf 1 0 0 0 Votto 1b 3 1 2 0
Wallac 1b 4 0 0 0 Cairo pr-1b 0 0 0 0
Maxwll cf 3 0 1 1 Ludwck lf 4 0 0 0
JCastro c 3 0 0 0 Bruce rf 3 2 1 1
JDMrtn lf 4 0 2 0 Frazier 3b 2 1 0 0
Dmngz 3b 4 0 2 0 Hanign c 3 0 1 1
Greene ss 3 0 1 0 WValdz ss 4 0 1 1
Bogsvc ph 1 0 0 0 Arroyo p 3 0 0 0
BNorrs p 2 0 0 0 Marshll p 0 0 0 0
FRdrgz p 0 0 0 0 HRdrgz ph 1 0 1 0
JSchafr ph 1 0 0 0 Broxtn p 0 0 0 0
XCeden p 0 0 0 0
JValdz p 0 0 0 0
MDwns ph 1 0 1 0
Totals 34 1 9 1 Totals 31 5 8 4
Houston.............................. 100 000 000 1
Cincinnati ........................... 011 003 00x 5
EFe.Rodriguez (1), B.Phillips (5). DPCincinnati
2. LOBHouston 9, Cincinnati 9. 2BF.Martinez
(5), Votto (37). HRB.Phillips (16), Bruce (33).
SBB.Phillips (12), Cairo (4). CSJ.D.Martinez
(2).
IP H R ER BB SO
Houston
B.Norris L,5-12........ 5
1
3 6 5 5 2 4
Fe.Rodriguez...........
2
3 1 0 0 1 2
X.Cedeno.................
2
3 0 0 0 0 1
J.Valdez ................... 1
1
3 1 0 0 2 0
Cincinnati
Arroyo W,12-7......... 7 7 1 1 2 5
Marshall ................... 1 0 0 0 1 1
Broxton..................... 1 2 0 0 0 1
HBPby X.Cedeno (Votto), by B.Norris (Frazier).
A M E R I C A N
L E A G U E
Orioles 5, Yankees 4
New York Baltimore
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Jeter ss 5 1 3 0 Markks rf 2 1 1 0
Swisher rf 5 0 0 1 McLoth pr-lf 1 0 1 0
Teixeir 1b 4 0 1 0 Andino 2b 4 0 0 0
AlRdrg dh 3 1 1 2 Hardy ss 4 1 2 2
Cano 2b 3 0 1 0 AdJons cf 4 1 1 0
RMartn c 3 1 1 0 MrRynl 1b 3 1 1 1
ENunez pr 0 0 0 0 Ford lf-rf 4 1 2 2
CStwrt c 0 0 0 0 Machd 3b 4 0 0 0
AnJons lf 2 0 0 0 StTllsn dh 3 0 0 0
Grndrs ph-cf 2 0 0 0 Tegrdn c 3 0 0 0
ISuzuki cf-lf 4 1 2 1
J.Nix 3b 2 0 0 0
ErChvz ph-3b 2 0 1 0
Dickrsn pr 0 0 0 0
Totals 35 410 4 Totals 32 5 8 5
New York ........................... 110 000 011 4
Baltimore............................ 021 002 00x 5
DPBaltimore 1. LOBNew York 8, Baltimore 5.
2BTeixeira (27), I.Suzuki (22), McLouth (9), Har-
dy (27), Ad.Jones (32). HRAl.Rodriguez (17),
Hardy (19), Mar.Reynolds (21), Ford (3). SBFord
(1). SFAl.Rodriguez.
IP H R ER BB SO
New York
Sabathia L,13-5....... 6
1
3 8 5 5 0 5
Eppley ...................... 1
2
3 0 0 0 1 1
Baltimore
J.Saunders W,2-1... 5
1
3 5 2 2 2 2
ODay H,10 .............. 1
2
3 0 0 0 0 3
Strop H,24................
2
3 2 1 1 1 1
Matusz H,2...............
1
3 0 0 0 0 0
Ji.Johnson S,42-45 1 3 1 1 0 0
HBPby Sabathia (Markakis).
T3:12. A46,067 (45,971).
Rangers 4, Rays 2
Texas Tampa Bay
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Kinsler 2b 4 0 0 0 Fuld lf 4 0 1 1
Andrus dh 4 1 2 0 BUpton cf 4 0 1 0
Hamltn cf-lf 3 1 1 3 Zobrist ss 4 0 0 0
Beltre 3b 5 0 1 0 Longori 3b 4 0 0 0
N.Cruz rf 4 0 0 0 Joyce rf 4 0 0 0
MiYong 1b 4 0 0 0 Scott dh 4 0 0 0
Morlnd 1b 0 0 0 0 Kppngr 1b 2 1 1 0
DvMrp lf 3 0 0 0 Thmps pr 0 1 0 0
Gentry cf 0 0 0 0 Loaton c 0 0 0 0
Soto c 4 0 2 0 BFrncs ph 1 0 0 0
LMartn pr 0 1 0 0 RRorts 2b 2 0 0 0
LMrtnz c 0 0 0 0 JMolin c 2 0 0 0
Profar ss 4 1 1 1
C.Pena
ph-1b 2 0 0 0
Totals 35 4 7 4 Totals 33 2 3 1
Texas............................ 000 200 000 2 4
Tampa Bay ................... 000 001 010 0 2
EKinsler (16). DPTampaBay 2. LOBTexas 6,
Tampa Bay 4. 2BSoto (5), Profar (2). HRHamil-
ton (40). SBB.Upton (29), Thompson (3). CS
Andrus (9), Fuld (2).
IP H R ER BB SO
Texas
Darvish..................... 8 2 2 1 2 8
Mi.Adams W,5-3 ..... 1 1 0 0 0 0
Nathan S,31-32 ....... 1 0 0 0 1 2
Tampa Bay
Archer....................... 7 4 2 2 2 11
Jo.Peralta................. 1 0 0 0 0 0
Rodney..................... 1 0 0 0 0 2
Farnsworth L,1-4 .... 1 3 2 2 1 1
HBPby Farnsworth (Hamilton), by Archer (Hamil-
ton). WPDarvish.
UmpiresHome, Mike Estabrook;First, Larry Va-
nover;Second, Jerry Layne;Third, Bill Miller.
T3:05. A18,702 (34,078).
White Sox 5, Royals 4
Kansas City Chicago
ab r h bi ab r h bi
L.Cain cf 5 1 2 0 Wise cf 4 0 1 0
AEscor ss 3 0 2 1 AlRmrz ss 4 0 1 1
AGordn lf 4 0 0 0 Viciedo lf 4 1 2 1
Butler 1b 4 0 1 1 JrDnks lf 0 0 0 0
S.Perez dh 4 0 1 0 Konerk 1b 3 1 1 1
Francr rf 4 0 0 0 Rios rf 4 0 0 0
Mostks 3b 4 1 2 0 Przyns dh 4 1 1 0
B.Pena c 4 0 1 1 Flowrs c 2 1 1 2
TAreu pr 0 1 0 0 Olmedo 3b 4 0 0 0
Giavtll 2b 4 1 2 1 Bckhm 2b 3 1 1 0
JDyson pr 0 0 0 0
Totals 36 411 4 Totals 32 5 8 5
Kansas City ....................... 001 000 012 4
Chicago.............................. 101 201 00x 5
DPChicago 1. LOBKansas City 6, Chicago 7.
2BA.Escobar (27), Moustakas (31), Giavotella
(5), Al.Ramirez (23), Beckham (22). HRViciedo
(20), Konerko (22), Flowers (7). SBA.Escobar
(28), J.Dyson (26).
IP H R ER BB SO
Kansas City
B.Chen L,10-12....... 6 6 5 5 2 6
Mazzaro ................... 1 2 0 0 1 0
Jeffress..................... 1 0 0 0 1 2
Chicago
Sale W,16-6............. 6 5 1 1 1 6
Crain......................... 1 0 0 0 0 2
Myers........................
1
3 3 1 1 0 0
Thornton H,23.........
2
3 0 0 0 0 2
A.Reed S,26-30 ...... 1 3 2 2 0 2
UmpiresHome, Mark Carlson;First, Angel Her-
nandez;Second, Ed Hickox;Third, Chris Conroy.
T2:48. A26,227 (40,615).
Brewers 6, Cardinals 3
Milwaukee St. Louis
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Aoki rf 4 0 0 0 Jay cf 5 0 1 0
RWeks 2b 5 1 1 1 MCrpnt rf 2 0 1 0
Braun lf 5 1 3 0
Chamrs
pr-rf 2 0 1 1
ArRmr 3b 3 2 3 1 Hollidy lf 3 0 0 0
Hart 1b 4 1 2 1 Craig 1b 4 0 1 0
Lucroy c 5 1 3 0 YMolin c 3 1 0 0
CGomz cf 4 0 2 2 Freese 3b 3 1 2 0
Bianchi ss 3 0 0 0 Kozma ss 1 0 1 0
Fiers p 2 0 1 1 Schmkr 2b 3 0 0 1
TGreen ph 1 0 0 0
Descals
ss-3b 4 0 1 1
LHrndz p 0 0 0 0 Westrk p 1 0 0 0
FrRdrg p 0 0 0 0 RJcksn ph 1 0 0 0
Farris ph 1 0 0 0 Rosnthl p 0 0 0 0
Hndrsn p 0 0 0 0 BryAnd ph 1 1 1 0
Ishikaw ph 0 0 0 0 SFrmn p 0 0 0 0
Mldnd ph 1 0 0 0 Beltran ph 1 0 0 0
Axford p 0 0 0 0 Salas p 0 0 0 0
VMarte p 0 0 0 0
Rzpczy p 0 0 0 0
Totals 38 615 6 Totals 34 3 9 3
Milwaukee.......................... 021 000 102 6
St. Louis............................. 010 000 110 3
ESchumaker (3), Freese (13). DPMilwaukee1,
St. Louis 1. LOBMilwaukee 12, St. Louis 10.
2BAr.Ramirez (44), Craig (29), Freese (24), Koz-
ma (1). 3BChambers (2). HRR.Weeks (17), Ar-
.Ramirez (22). SBC.Gomez (32), Bry.Anderson
(1). CSBraun (7). SC.Gomez, Bianchi. SF
Schumaker.
IP H R ER BB SO
Milwaukee
Fiers W,9-7.............. 5 5 1 1 3 5
Li.Hernandez H,2.... 1 1 0 0 0 0
Fr.Rodriguez H,27.. 1 2 1 1 0 2
Henderson H,8........ 1 1 1 1 1 1
Axford S,27-35........ 1 0 0 0 1 1
St. Louis
Westbrook L,13-11. 5 7 3 3 4 2
Rosenthal................. 2 4 1 1 1 3
S.Freeman............... 1 0 0 0 0 0
Salas.........................
1
3 2 2 2 0 1
V.Marte.....................
1
3 2 0 0 0 0
Rzepczynski ............
1
3 0 0 0 0 1
Indians 7, Twins 6
Cleveland Minnesota
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Choo rf 5 0 3 1 Revere cf 5 1 1 1
Kipnis 2b 4 2 1 0 EEscor 2b 3 0 0 0
AsCarr ss 2 0 0 0 MCarsn ph 1 0 0 0
CSantn c 5 1 0 0 Mauer c 3 2 1 0
Brantly cf 3 2 2 1 Wlngh dh 3 1 2 3
Canzler dh 4 1 3 3 Mornea 1b 2 0 0 1
Ktchm 1b 5 0 1 1 Doumit lf 4 0 0 0
Rottino lf 3 0 0 0 Parmel rf 3 0 0 1
CPhlps ph 0 0 0 1 Plouffe 3b 3 0 1 0
Carrer lf 1 0 0 0 ACasill pr 0 1 0 0
Hannhn 3b 5 1 2 0 Flormn ss 4 1 2 0
Totals 37 712 7 Totals 31 6 7 6
Cleveland........................... 000 220 300 7
Minnesota.......................... 013 000 011 6
EFlorimon (5). DPMinnesota 2. LOBCleve-
land 11, Minnesota 5. 2BKipnis (18), Hannahan
(13), Willingham 2 (28), Plouffe (14). HRCanzler
(1). SBChoo (18), Kipnis (27). CSKipnis (7).
SE.Escobar. SFMorneau, Parmelee.
IP H R ER BB SO
Cleveland
J.Gomez................... 3 3 4 4 3 3
D.Huff W,1-0............ 3
1
3 0 0 0 0 4
J.Smith H,18............
2
3 1 0 0 1 1
Pestano H,35........... 1 2 1 1 0 0
C.Perez S,35-39..... 1 1 1 1 0 1
Minnesota
Hendriks................... 5 8 4 4 3 2
T.Robertson L,1-2 .. 1 0 2 1 2 0
Al.Burnett .................
1
3 3 1 1 1 0
Waldrop.................... 1
2
3 1 0 0 2 1
Perkins ..................... 1 0 0 0 0 0
T.Robertson pitched to 2 batters in the 7th.
WPWaldrop.
UmpiresHome, Dan Iassogna;First, Dale Scott-
;Second, David Rackley;Third, D.J. Reyburn.
T3:21. A30,111 (39,500).
T H I S D A T E I N
B A S E B A L L
Compiled by PAUL MONTELLA
Sept. 9
1914 George Davis of the Boston Braves pitched
a 7-0 no-hitter against the Philadelphia Phillies.
1922 Baby Doll Jacobson hit three triples to lead
the St. Louis Browns to a 16-0 victory over the De-
troit Tigers.
1936 The New York Yankees clinched their
eighth American League pennant with a double-
header sweep of the Cleveland Indians, 11-3 and
12-9. The Yankees finished 19
1
2 games ahead of
the Detroit Tigers for the largest margin in teamhis-
tory.
1945 Dick Fowler of the Philadelphia Athletics
pitched a1-0 no-hitter against the St. Louis Browns
in the second game of a doubleheader.
1948 Rex Barney of the Brooklyn Dodgers
pitched a 2-0 no-hit victory against the New York
Giants on a rainy day at the Polo Grounds.
1965 Sandy Koufax of the Los Angeles Dodgers
tossed his fourth no-hitter, a perfect game, against
theChicagoCubs. Koufax fanned14inthe1-0victo-
ry while Cubs pitcher Bob Hendley allowed one hit
a double by Lou Johnson.
1987 Nolan Ryan struck out 16 to pass 4,500 for
his career as the Houston Astros beat the San Fran-
cisco Giants 4-2. Ryan struck out 12 of the final 13
batters and fanned Mike Aldrete to complete the
seventh for his 4,500th strikeout.
1992 Robin Yount became the 17th player to re-
ach 3,000 hits in the Milwaukee Brewers 5-4 loss to
the Cleveland Indians. Yount singled to right center
off Clevelands Jose Mesa in the seventh inning.
1998 The New York Yankees officially clinched
the AL East title, the earliest in AL history, beating
the Boston Red Sox 7-5. The Yankees improved to
102-41 20
1
2 games ahead of second-place Bos-
ton.
2001Barry Bonds hit three home runs to give him
63 for the season. The third homer was a three-run
shot in the11th inning lifting San Francisco over the
Colorado Rockies 9-4. Bonds broke Roger Maris
record of 61 for most homers in a season by a left-
handed hitter.
2003Tomas Perez andJasonMichaels hit grand
slams as Philadelphia routed Atlanta 18-5.
2004 Joe Randa had six hits and tied a major
league record with six runs, and Alex Berroa hit a
three-run homer and drove in a career-high five
runs in Kansas Citys 26-5 victory over Detroit in the
first game of a doubleheader. Randa became the
first AL player to have six hits and six runs in the
same nine-inning game.
2006 Brandon Webb pitched a one-hitter to lead
Arizona to a 3-0 victory over St. Louis.
2007 Milwaukee became the third teamin major
league history to open a game with three straight
home runs when Rickie Weeks, J.J. Hardy and
Ryan Braun connected off Cincinnatis Phil Duma-
trait in a10-5 victory. Weeks and Braun each hit two
home runs and J.J. Hardy homered and hit two dou-
bles all in the first four innings.
Todays birthdays: Michael Bowden, 26;Brett Pill,
28;Edwin Jackson, 29;Todd Coffey, 32.
PAGE 6C SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2012 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
S P O R T S
cess for the downtrodden Mon-
archs.
They really believe that.
We made some major steps,
said Matthews, a sophomore
defensive back from Connecti-
cut.
Were getting there, said
Hartranft, a sophomore quarter-
back from Blue Mountain High
School who made his first col-
lege start Saturday. Were
definitely on our way.
Little more than two minutes
into the second half against
Widener, the Monarchs were on
their way to another defeat, a
41-6 whipping that dropped
them to 0-2 on the season and
2-20 under third-year coach Jeff
Knarr.
But this one was a tougher
battle than what the scoreboard
said.
Consider:
Kings held a 6-0 lead min-
utes into the second quarter.
It could have been 10-0 if not
for a failed extra point and a
44-yard field goal attempt that
died at the crossbar.
That lead would have lasted
longer if not for a poor punt
that actually lost two yards on a
windy day, setting Widener up
30 yards from the end zone for
its first touchdown drive.
And before that errant punt,
the Kings defense held Widen-
er without a first down on its
first four possessions.
We came here, we were
trying to win, Matthews said.
It showed.
Kings was within 14-6 late in
the first half and still had an
outside shot at a comeback late
in the third quarter, driving to
Wideners 34-yard line before
the scoring march stalled
along with all Monarchs hopes
of victory.
Widener, they went to an-
other gear, Knarr said. Our
guys, we might not have anoth-
er gear yet.
What the Monarchs do have
right now is optimism.
They are certain things will
get better because they can feel
themselves progressing rapidly.
We could see major improve-
ment from what I saw last year,
to spring ball, to now, Har-
tranft said. It felt really good to
be up on a nationally-ranked
team. We feel like we can play
with anybody.
At least for awhile.
We did much better this
year (against Widener) than
last year, said Matthews, not-
ing that the Pride put a 70-0
pasting on Kings a year ago.
Were improving every single
day. If we keep working, were
going to be up there in the
MAC.
Dont laugh.
Its not hard to see the Mon-
archs working their way up the
MAC standings, as long as they
keep playing as if they have a
chance to get all the way to the
top.
They believe in themselves,
Knarr said. Thats something,
when we got here, I dont be-
lieve was here. They came out
and they didnt let a nationally-
ranked team intimidate them.
They believe good things are
going to come.
Those good things didnt
come as fast or didnt last as
long as the Monarchs had
hoped against a high-caliber
opponent.
But there was enough to
suggest success, if not superior-
ity, it just around the corner.
Paul Sokoloski is a Times Leader
sports columnist. You may reach him
at 970-7109 or email him at psoko-
loski@timesleader.com.
BELIEVE
Continued from Page 1C
They fought for 60 minutes and
thats all you can ask for. We have
to keep getting better in practice
with execution. You cant fault
them for the effort thats for
sure.
Kings wanted to keep Pride
(2-0) quarterbackChris Haupt off
his game by forcing him to make
quick throws. In the first quarter,
thats exactly what the Monarchs
did forcing Widener and the 25-
year-old former professional
baseball player to punt three
times on the first three drives.
Meanwhile, the Monarchs
(0-2) were putting together some
offensive punch. On their first
drive, theyfell inches short of tak-
ing a three-point leadas a 44-yard
field goal try hit the crossbar and
bounced out. Two drives later,
the Monarchs wouldnt be denied
taking a 6-0 lead when Kyle
McGrath registered his first ca-
reer touchdown with 3:32 left in
the first. They were two kicks
away from being up by 10 on the
Pride.
We were feeling good, Knarr
added. But they are a good team
and went into another gear.
Kings was also playing this
well on defense without two top
players, as linebackers Ryan
Cordingly and Jake Ksiaziewicz
sat out with injuries.
Defensively you have two
guys that youcount on, andwhen
theyre down the young guys are
playing and they played well.
They held their own, the coach
said.
But in the second quarter,
against a whipping wind, the
Monarchs ran into problems.
On a fourth-and-25 with Kings
lined up to punt, the kick netted
minus-2 yards giving Widener ex-
cellent field position. The Pride
took over on the Kings 30 and
they scored their first TD to take
a 7-6 lead with 11:59 left in the
second quarter when Haupt con-
nected on his first of three scor-
ing strikes.
Then Widener got a little luck
on its next drive. Haupt found
Anthony Davis for a 35-yard con-
nection. Linebacker Ryan Kelly
stripped the ball at the 2, but Da-
vis jumped on the loose pigskin
in the end zone for a 14-6 lead.
Haupt threw his second scor-
ing strike of the quarter later in
the period putting the Pride
ahead 21-6 at the break.
Wideners defense was also
keepingthe Monarchs incheckat
this point grabbing a pair of inter-
ceptions and stripping the ball
away for a touchdown holding
Kings to just 43 total yards in the
second half.
Theywere committedtomak-
ing us throwputting nine guys in
the box and that created some
problems trying to throw, Knarr
noted.
Tyler Hartranft played three-
plus quarters at QB for Kings as
Bryant Klein, who had been shar-
ing snaps behind center was out
with an injury. Hartranft played
well going16-for-35 for 118 yards.
Kris Matthews paced the Kings
defense with nine tackles, includ-
ing one for a loss, a forced fumble
and a fumble recovery.
Widener 41, King's 6
Widener ................................ 0 21 14 6 41
Kings .................................... 6 0 0 0 6
First Quarter
KINGS McGrath 2 run (kick failed) 3:32
Second Quarter
WIDE Davis 8 pass from Haupt (McFadden
kick) 11:59
WIDE Davis fumble recovery in end zone
(McFadden kick) 6:17
WIDE Morrison 19 pass from Haupt (McFad-
den kick) 3:21
Third Quarter
WIDE LaFate 35 run (McFadden kick) 12:53
WIDE Pergolese 8 pass from Haupt (McFad-
den kick) 3:35
Fourth Quarter
WIDE Ditmer 45 fumble recovery (pass
failed) 11:28
TeamStatistics Widener King's
First downs ........................... 14 15
Rushes-yards....................... 28-91 39-36
Passing.................................. 238 124
Total Yards ........................... 329 160
Comp-Att-Int ......................... 17-31-0 17-37-3
Sacks by-Yards Lost ........... 8-42 2-14
Punts-Avg.............................. 5-36.6 8-25
Fumbles-Lost ....................... 3-2 3-1
Penalties-Yards ................... 11-125 2-21
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
RUSHING WIDE, LaFate 4-41, Morrison 4-26,
Campbell 7-18, Getz 2-6, Pergolese 3-5, Quattel-
baum 1-4, Haupt 5-3, TEAM 2-(minus-12). KINGS,
McGrath 14-27, Duncan 1-21, Goimbert 5-19, Wil-
liams 2-2, Hehre 2-(minus-1), Hartranft 15-(mi-
nus-32).
PASSING WIDE, Haupt 15-29-0-205, Camp-
bell 2-2-0-33. KINGS, Hartranft 16-35-2-118, Hehre
1-2-1-6.
RECEIVING WIDE, DePasquale 4-41, Davis
3-60, Schlegel 2-45, LaFate 2-22, Pergolese 2-15,
Locotos 1-33, Morrison 1-19, Ragona 1-3, Wrieth
1-0. KINGS Kempa 4-62, Sanders 4-23, Henry 3-
20, McGrath 2-1, Buford 1-10, Mitchell 1-6, Kudlacik
1-4, Goimbert 1-(minus-2).
INTERCEPTIONS WIDE, Rodriguez 2, Burns
MISSED FIELD GOALS KINGS, Williams
(short)
MONARCHS
Continued from Page 1C
CHARLOTTE BARTIZEK/FOR THE TIMES LEADER
Kings running
back Kyle McGrath
(32) is taken down
by Widenors Leroy
Wesley on Sat-
urday at McCarthy
Stadium.
ANNVILLE Misericordia
continues to make history.
Jeff Puckett, Dean Lucchesi
and Juwan Petties-Jackson will
all have their name in the Cou-
gars record book for being part of
a first.
Even though the team lost to
Lebanon Valley 47-7 in its first
MACgame on Saturday, the Cou-
gars scored their first touchdown
andnettedtheir first interception
in school history.
Quarterback Puckett and wide
receiver Lucchesi combined on
the first score when Puckett
foundhis wideout intheendzone
from1-yard out. The TD came at
the 5:14 mark of the third quarter
capping a 5-play, 77-yard drive
that cut the Flying Dutchmens
lead to 34-7.
Petties-Jackson showed the
teams improvement on defense
after a70-point loss aweekagoby
grabbing an interception on the
games first drive. The pick came
as the Flying Dutchmen were
driving down the field, and the
freshman caught the ball in the
end zone.
The Cougars didnt fare so well
on Lebanon Valleys second
drive, as the Dutchmen drove 85
yards for a touchdown and a 7-0
lead. That was the score after the
first quarter, a far cry from last
weeks 22-0 score after the first.
LebanonValley (2-0) pulledaway
by halftime scoring three touch-
downs in the second quarter to
open a 28-0 advantage.
Puckett topped100 yards pass-
ing for the second straight week.
On Saturday, he went 14-of-23 for
109 yards and again didnt throw
an interception.
In fact, the entire Misericordia
didnt turn the ball over for the
second time while nabbing a
takeaway and they now have a
plus-2 turnover margin through
two games.
Tailback Cody Lamoreaux
closed in on 100 yards, rumbling
for 75 on just nine attempts, in-
cluding a 47-yard run. Paul Brace
ledthe teaminreceiving, hauling
in six catches for 45 yards.
The Cougars will make history
once again next week when they
play the first football game on
campus by hosting Widener.
Lebanon Valley 47, Misericordia 7
Misericordia.......................... 0 0 7 0 7
Lebanon Valley.................... 7 20 13 7 47
First Quarter
LV Miller 22 pass from Kyte (Fakete kick),
4:53
Second Quarter
LV Fink 3 run (Fakete kick), 8:42
LV Zeigler 24 pass from Murphy (kick failed),
4:27
LV Fink 2 run (Fakete kick), :42
Third Quarter
LV Kain 18 run (Fakete kick), 7:17
MIS Lucchesi 1 pass from Puckett (Clemson
kick), 5:14
LV King 2 run (pass failed), 3:30
Fourth Quarter
LV Kirchner 1 run (Fakete kick), 6:36
TeamStatistics Miseri LebVal
First downs ............................. 14 29
Rushes-yards......................... 35-135 49-235
Passing.................................... 109 318
Total Yards ............................. 244 533
Comp-Att-Int ........................... 14-24-0 19-28-1
Sacks by-Yards Lost ............. 0-0 4-22
Punts-Avg................................ 7-36.1 2-32
Fumbles-Lost.......................... 0-0 0-0
Penalties-Yards ..................... 4-20 6-60
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
RUSHING MIS, Puckett 11-21, Washo 2-4,
Pheasant 1-(-8), Lamoreaux 9-75, Custodio 5-6,
Delgado 6-38, Team 1-(minus-1). LV, Kain 4-31,
Kyte 1-10, Murphy 2-11, King 5-23, Zeigler 1-12, Ri-
chard 2-9, Richmond 5-22, Panichi 12-73, Gething
4-3, Heisey 6-33, Fink 5-24, Kirchner 1-1, Colletts
1-(-17).
PASSING MIS, Puckett 14-23-0-109, Washo
0-1-0-0, Pheasant 0-0-0-0. LV, Kyte 13-20-1-173,
Murphy 6-8-0-145.
RECEIVING MIS, Kowalski 1-4, Brace 6-45,
Barber 1-17, Johnson 2-21, Rowe 2-14, Lucchesi
1-1, Stelzer 1-7. LV, Miller 5-81, McIntyre 4-27, Zei-
gler 4-82, Sweeper 1-6, Panichi 2-8, Heisey 1-57,
Myers 1-16, Smith 1-41.
INTERCEPTIONS Petties-Jackson.
MISSED FIELD GOALS None.
L O C A L C O L L E G E F O O T B A L L
Misericordia makes
a little history in loss
The Times Leader staff
gram, Ficken remains Penn
States best option on field goals.
And with that in mind,
OBrien and his players defend-
ed the sophomore kicker with-
out hesitation after the game.
Samdidnot lose us this game
whatsoever, McGloin said.
I just told him that this isnt
his fault, junior guard John Ur-
schel said. We winas a team, we
lose as a team. And one player
doesnt make or break the game.
One play doesnt make or break
the game. Were all responsible
as a team for this loss.
The man had a point.
Fickens line was certainly
tough to look at. He finished 1-
of-5 on field goals, missing from
40, 38 and even 20 yards before
the 42-yarder at the end of the
game. He was 1-of-2 on extra
points.But there was an uglier
stat for Penn State.
The defense managed to force
four turnovers, all deepinVirgin-
ia territory. On the ensuing four
drives, the offense managed just
three points on a net of minus-14
yards.
All we can do is our job, se-
nior linebacker Michael Mauti
said. Everybodys responsible
for their job. And thats all I can
really say about that.
Mauti did his job as well as
anyone, leadingthe teamintack-
les for a second straight week
with nine. He had a hand in two
of the four turnovers, stripping
tight end Paul Freedman on a
completion on Virginias first
play from scrimmage. In the
fourth quarter, he scooped up a
fumble on a sack by Deion
Barnes at the Cavaliers 17.
That led to Fickens lone make
of the day, hitting a line drive
from 32 yards out. OBrien ini-
tiallyhadhis offenselineuptogo
for it, but he called timeout and
sent Ficken out to give it a shot.
Defensive tackle Jordan Hill
had an interception and line-
backer Gerald Hodges recovered
a botched snap for the other two
turnovers. Neither led to any
points.
Penn State had trailed 10-7 to
open the fourth quarter. But
McGloin hooked up with Allen
Robinson (10 catches, 89 yards)
for a 30-yardscore, the first of the
sophomores career to put the Li-
ons on top.
The ensuing extra point was
blocked, but a Ficken field goal
made it 16-10 with 11 minutes to
play.
As many big plays as the de-
fensecameupwith, however, the
unit continued to struggle on
third downs. A week after Ohio
converted11-of-12thirddowns in
the second half, Virginia made it
7-of-9 after halftime.
Three came on the decisive
drive as quarterback Michael
Rocco scrambled to his left and
found tight end Jared McGee be-
fore Penn States safeties did for
a 44-yard gain.
On third-and-goal from the 6,
Rocco connected with McGee
again for the tying touchdown.
The winning score -- the extra
point -- was good.
Penn State ................................ 7 0 0 9 -- 16
Virginia ...................................... 0 3 7 7 -- 17
FIRST QUARTER
PSU -- Kyle Carter 8-yard pass from Matt
McGloin (Sam Ficken kick), 8:33. Drive: 17 plays,
75yards, 6:27. Comment: Itsfar frompretty, but the
Lionsoffenseatonesfor last weeksdudof asecond
half by scoring a touchdown after what felt like an
eternity for the opening drive. It includes a pair of
fourth-down conversions, including one in Penn
State territory. On third-and goal, McGloin has plen-
ty of time to wait for his tight end to come across the
formation and sit down in the middle of the Virginia
zone for his first career touchdown. PENN STATE
7, VIRGINIA 0.
SECOND QUARTER
UVA -- Drew Jarrett 46-yard field goal, 3:56.
Drive: 10plays, 50yards, 4:20. Comment: Virginias
defense keeps the Cavaliers in it early as the of-
fense does everything in its power to hand Penn
State points. After defensive tackle Jordan Hill gets
an interception, the Cavaliers turn Penn State away
a second time as Ficken misses a 38-yard field
goal. The offense finally grinds into motion as quar-
terback Michael Roccoleads theteamintoPSUter-
ritory. Adrian Amos snuffed out a screen pass for a
loss, forcingJarrett tomakeacareer longkick. PSU
7, UVA 3.
THIRD QUARTER
UVA -- Jeremiah Mathis 1-yard pass from Mi-
chael Rocco (Jarrett kick), 9:22. Drive: 11 plays, 77
yards, 5:38. Comment: Virginia gets the ball first af-
ter halftimeandtheCavaliers proceedtoput togeth-
er their best drive of the game. Rocco has success
looking for his tight ends down the seam, with Jake
McGeemakingabiggrabinthemiddleof thefield. It
goes as smoothly as anythingtheCavaliers drawup
all day, including the score -- a second-and-goal
play-action call that freed up the jumbo package
tight end for an easy six points. UVA 10, PSU 7.
FOURTH QUARTER
PSU -- Allen Robinson 30-yard pass from
McGloin (kick blocked), 13:10. Drive: 5 plays, 45
yards, 1:33. In their first six trips inside the Virginia
35-yard line, the Lions managed just seven points.
The defense had forced three turnovers in Virginia
territory, leading to zero points. Finally, the Lions
are able to convert after a poor punt gave themthe
ball at the Hoos 45. A double move allows Robin-
son to streak wide open. He lays out for the pass,
hauls it in and keeps both hands underneath it.
Landing on the ball knocked the wind out of him, but
he held on for the score, his first career touchdown.
But, of course, the kicking woes continue as Fick-
ens extra point is blocked. PSU 13, UVA 10.
PSU-- Ficken 32-yard field goal, 10:55. Drive: 4
plays, 3yards, 1:23. Comment: Just bizarre. For the
fourth time in the game, the Lions come up with a
turnover in Virginia territory. With the Cavs subbing
in Phillip Sims at quarterback, Deion Barnes comes
around the right tackle and slaps the ball free, with
Michael Mauti scooping it up at the 18-yard line.
Same old story for the offense, which cant capital-
ize. Bill OBrien initially lines up to go for it on fourth
down before calling a timeout and changing his
mind. Fickens kick is more of a line drive this time,
but it goes through the uprights for the first time.
PSU 16, UVA 10.
UVA -- Jake McGee 6-yard pass from Rocco
(Jarrett kick), 1:28. Drive: 12 plays, 86 yards, 6:36.
Comment: Just whenit appears theLions aregoing
to pull out an ugly win, things fall apart. Fired up and
pinning Virginia to a third-and-16. Rocco scrambles
left and the Lions safeties lose track of McGee, who
comes open for a gain of 44. Thats the spark the
Hoos needed, as they convert two more huge third
downs. The last one is third-and-goal and McGee
slips into an open space in the front of the end zone
and secures the bullet pass for the winning score.
McGloinleads PennStateintopositionfor thewinin
the final 90 seconds, but Fickens fourth missed
field goal of the day sails wide left. UVA17, PSU16.
PSU UVa
First downs............................ 19 14
Rushes-yards ....................... 42-121 25-32
Passing.................................. 209 263
Comp-Att-Int.......................... 21-43-0 23-36-1
Return Yards......................... 13 0
Punts-Avg. ............................. 3-41.7 4-42.5
Fumbles-Lost ........................ 0-0 3-3
Penalties-Yards.................... 3-24 10-70
Time of Possession ............. 31:47 28:13
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
RUSHINGPennSt., Day 18-47, Dukes 10-30,
Carson 1-19, Bench 3-18, Zordich 2-5, McGloin
4-3, Zwinak 3-2, Team 1-(minus 3). Virginia, Parks
9-26, P.Jones8-14, Rocco6-2, P.Sims1-(minus4),
Team 1-(minus 6).
PASSINGPenn St., McGloin 19-35-0-197,
Bench 2-7-0-12, Team0-1-0-0. Virginia, Rocco 21-
33-1-258, P.Sims 2-3-0-5.
RECEIVINGPenn St., Robinson 10-89, Car-
ter 4-33, Kenney 3-50, Day 1-17, Kersey 1-9, Leh-
man 1-7, Zwinak 1-4. Virginia, Jennings 5-68,
McGee 4-99, P.Jones 4-14, Terrell 2-23, Parks 2-
20, Scott 2-14, Ti.Smith 1-12, Freedman 1-10,
Swanson 1-2, Mathis 1-1.
PSU
Continued from Page 1C
AP PHOTO
Penn State wide receiver Allen Robinson (8) makes a touchdown
catch during the second half Saturday against Virginia in Char-
lottesville, Va.
CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. --
Bill OBrien said before the sea-
son that Paul Jones would play.
He just didnt say at which posi-
tion.
When Matt McGloin was
forced into the locker roomin the
second quarter with an elbow
injury, it was not Jones who took
the field to replace him, but true
freshman Steven Bench.
The reason, OBrien said after
the game, was because Jones had
been practicing at Penn States
F tight end position.
Jones, once one of the coun-
trys highest-rated signal-callers
coming out of high school, will
still practice at quarterback as
well. But as the third-stringer.
Bench was the No. 2 quarter-
back, OBrien said after Penn
States 17-16 loss on Saturday.
Jones is going to play some
F-tight end for us and hell still
play quarterback. We do that at
practice and next week keep
playing Paul at both positions.
It wasnt something the Lions
advertised. Jones remains listed
as a quarterback by the teamand
indeed warmed up for the game
by throwing passes rather than
catching them..
More telling, though, was
when Penn State lined up with
their full units for practice snaps
and Bench was under center with
the second-teamoffense.
The first clue may have come
on Wednesday, as Jones report-
edly was not wearing the tradi-
tional red no-contact jersey like
the rest of the quarterbacks.
When he showed up at the
game Saturday, he had switched
his number -- again -- fromNo. 7
back to No. 13.
Jones did not get in the game
at either position and is still
waiting for his first career snap at
the college level. He redshirted in
2010 and was sidelined in 2011
for academic reasons.
Bench, meanwhile, played well
enough in his cameo.
The rookie fromGeorgia com-
pleted his first pass attempt
before going1-for-6 afterward for
a total of 12 yards. But he also
picked up18 yards on the ground
and steered the offense to three
first downs on the final drive of
the first half.
Hes doing a heck of a job and
thats why I went with Bench as
the No. 2 quarterback, OBrien
said. I thought he did some
good things, especially at the end
of the first half. Hes never really
ever run a two-minute drive
before, just a couple in practice.
Overall I think he did a heck
of a job for his first time playing.
Infirmary report
McGloin sported a sleeve on
his right elbowin the second half
and had it iced up after the game.
On consecutive drives, the
senior banged the elbowoff of
the helmet of a pass rusher while
his armwas coming forward to
throw. The second time sent him
to the sideline grimacing, and,
eventually into the locker room.
X-rays were negative, and
McGloin said he did not expect
to miss any time going forward.
Nothing a little ice and Mo-
trin cant fix, he said.
McGloin returned to the side-
line at the start of the second
half. OBrien sent Bench in to
start the drive before giving
McGloin the call on third down,
which he converted.
Making his first career start,
tailback Derek Day left the game
in the third quarter with a shoul-
der injury and did not return. He
had his left armin a sling after
the game and said he would be
reevaluated back in State Col-
lege.
Starting tailback Bill Belton,
recovering froman ankle injury
suffered in the second half of the
loss to Ohio, did not make the
trip to Charlottesville.
Day finished with a game-high
47 yards on18 carries in his
place, outgaining Virginia on the
ground as a team(32 yards).
Curtis Dukes took over the
bulk of the carries after Day left,
running for 30 yards.
Travel roster set
Penn State brought a total of
nine true freshmen on the 70-
man travel roster, including
Wyoming Valley Conference
standout Eugene Lewis.
Lewis remains listed as a sec-
ond-teamer at wide receiver on
Penn States depth chart, though
OBrien has said they will try to
redshirt him.
He was joined by fellowclass-
mates Bench, CBDaQuan Davis,
TEJesse James, DTAustin John-
son, DBJordan Lucas, TBAkeel
Lynch, Valley Viewgrad LB
NyeemWartman and WRTrevor
Williams.
Davis, James, Lucas, Wartman
and Williams all appeared in the
opener. Bench made his debut.
Wartman appeared on special
teams against the Cavaliers but
went to the locker roomin the
second quarter with an undis-
closed injury.
Lineup shuffle has
QB Jones in motion
AP PHOTO
Virginia quarter-
back Michael
Rocco (16) is
sacked by Penn
State linebacker
Mike Hull (43)
during the sec-
ond half of Sat-
urday in Char-
lottesville, Va.
Virginia won
17-16.
By DEREK LEVARSE
dlevarse@timesleader.com
P S U N O T E S
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2012 PAGE 7C
S P O R T S
WRIGHT TWP. Alyssa
Shaver and Carisa Bevan re-
corded one goal each in a low-
scoring bout to lead Wyom-
ing Valley West to a 2-1 victo-
ry over Crestwood on Satur-
day in a high school girls soc-
cer match.
Summer McDonnell con-
tributed to the win with an
assist.
Natalie Sulkowski scored
the lone goal in the effort for
Crestwood.
Wyoming Valley West....................... 1 1 2
Crestwood.......................................... 0 1 1
First half: 1. WVW Alyssa Shaver, 32:48.
Second half: 2. CRE Natalie Sulkowski
(Allie Kachel), 36:20 3. WVW Carisa Bevan
(Summer McDonell), 17:20.
Shots: WVW 25, CRE 16; Saves: WVW 10
(Paige Heckman), CRE 15 (Meg White); Cor-
ners: WVW 2, CRE 4.
Tunkhannock 9,
MMI Prep 0
Cheyenne Brown scored
three goals and had an assist
in Tunkhannocks shut out of
MMI Prep.
MMI Prep ........................................... 0 0 0
Tunkhannock ..................................... 4 5 9
First half: 1. TUNK, Cheyenne Brown; 2.
TUNK, Meagan Wrubel (Brown); 3. TUNK,
Brown; 4. TUNK, Aly Wilbur (Wrubel).
Second half: 5. TUNK, Brown; 6. TUNK,
Wrubel (Haley Melan); 7. TUNK, Cassie Wer-
ner; 8. TUNK, Casey Madden; 9. TUNK, Melan
(Katie Proulx) .
Shots: MMI 0, TUNK 15; Saves: MMI 6
(Alex van Hoekelen), TUNK 0 (Brittany Sickler,
Mya Toczko); Corners: MMI 0, TUNK 12.
Hanover Area 3,
Nanticoke 1
Kayla Keating scored two
goals in the Hanover Area vic-
tory.
Linday Lane recorded the
only score for Nanticoke.
Hanover Area..................................... 0 3 3
Nanticoke ........................................... 0 1 1
Second half: 1. HAN, Kayla Keating, 45:00; 2.
HAN, Caitlyn Bogart (Larissa Bannon), 48:00;
3. HAN, Keating; 4. NAN, Lindsay Lane (Alyssa
Gurzynski), 75:00.
Shots: HAN 14, NAN 9; Saves: HAN 5
(Ciera Gensel), NAN 8 (Shelby Divers); Cor-
ners: HAN 4, NAN 4.
Wyoming Area 4,
Wyoming Seminary 1
Sam Acacio recorded two
goals in the Wyoming Area
win.
Lily Williams notched the
only score for Wyoming Sem-
inary.
Wyoming Seminary........................... 2 2 4
Wyoming Area................................... 1 0 1
First half: 1. WA, Valerie Bott (Myiah Custer),
17:00; 2. WA, Sam Acacio, 23:00; 3. SEM, Lily
Williams, 35:00.
Second half: 4. WA, Jenn Bone, 50:00; 5.
WA, Acacio, 73:00.
Shots: SEM 7, WA 15; Saves: SEM 10
(Morrison), WA 4 (Jordan Chivacci); Corners:
SEM 1, WA 3.
H.S. BOYS SOCCER
Holy Redeemer 5, GAR 1
Brandon Leahigh scored
three first half goals to lead
Holy Redeemer to the win.
Bre Mosier scored the only
goal for GAR.
Holy Redeemer ................................. 3 2 5
GAR.................................................... 1 0 1
First half: 1. HR, Brandon Leahigh (Chris
Pawlenok), 34:55; 2. HR, Leahigh (Pawlenok),
29:03; 3. HR, Leahigh (Pawlenok), 10:21; 4.
GAR, Bre Mosier (Madisen Nichol), 8:52.
Second half: 5. HR, Tyler Kukoski (Alex
Kotch), 33:46; 6. HR, Kenny Rexer (Leahigh),
16:11.
Shots: HR 19, GAR 9; Saves: HR 8 (Ian
McGrane, Brandon Pavilitus), GAR 1 (Tony
Tlatenchi); Corners: HR 3, GAR 3.
Wyoming Seminary 6,
Wyoming Area 2
Five goals by Henry Cornell
and four assists by Benedikt
Buerk helped give Wyoming
Seminary the win.
Mark OMalley and Zac
Sypniewski each scored for
Wyoming Area.
Wyoming Area................................... 5 1 6
Wyoming Seminary........................... 1 1 2
First half: 1. SEM, Henry Cornell (Malcolm
Lumia), 34:00; 2. SEM, Cornell (Benedikt
Buerk), 32:48; 3. SEM, Sami El-Mashtoub,
26:17; 4. SEM, Cornell (Buerk), 23:50; 5. WA,
Zac Sypniewski, 18:20; 6. SEM, Cornell
(Buerk), 2:23.
Second half: 7. SEM, Cornell (Buerk),
36:52; 8. WA, Mark OMalley (Charley John-
son), 27:21.
Shots: WA 6, SEM 11; Saves: WA 6 (Aa-
ron Carter), SEM 4 (Riku Kaizaki); Corners:
WA 1, SEM 2.
H.S. VOLLEYBALL
Dallas 3, MMI Prep 2
Dallas rallied from a two-
game deficit to defeat MMI
Prep behind 17 service points
from Marlee Nelson on Friday
night.
Kirsten Young led the Dal-
las effort with 15 service
points of her own.
Dallas................................ 23 22 25 25 15 3
MMI Prep ......................... 25 25 16 20 9 2
DAL: Marlee Nelson 3 kills, 1 block, 9 digs, 17
service points, 10 aces; Sarah Payne 6 kills, 6
digs, 4 service points, 1 ace; Tanner Englehart
16 kills, 5 blocks, 6 digs, 4 service points, 2
aces; Rachel Olszewski 4 kills 3 blocks, 1 dig,
3 service points, 1 ace.
MMI: Kirsten Young 8 kills, 2 blocks, 6 digs,
15 service points, 6 aces; Kayla Karchner 8
kills, 2 blocks, 6 digs, 8 service points, 2 aces;
Kristen Purcell 7 kills, 2 blocks, 6 digs, 12 ser-
vice points, 2 aces.
North Pocono 3, Meyers 0
Kayla Perez had fours as-
sists and Amanda Dower had
two kills in the North Pocono
victory from Friday evening.
Summer Bearrouk led the
effort for Meyers with 12 digs.
Meyers...................................... 20 17 14 0
North Pocono........................... 25 25 25 3
NP: Kayla Perez 5 aces, 4 assists; Amanda
Downer 3 aces, 2 kills.
MEY: Summer Bearrouk 12 digs, 5 kills, 2
aces; Brandilee Soto 9 digs, 4 kills, 5 service
points.
H.S. FIELD HOCKEY
Holy Redeemer 2,
Wyoming Area 1
Greta Ell and Marnie Kus-
kavich each scored in the vic-
tory.
Sally Deluca recorded the
Wyoming Area goal.
Holy Redeemer ................................. 1 1 2
Wyoming Area................................... 0 1 1
First half: 1. HR, Greta Ell, 18:08.
Second half: 2. HR, Marnie Kuskavich,
12:04; 3. WA, Sally Deluca (Bree Bednarski),
9:43.
Shots: HR 10, WA 8; Saves: HR 5 (Kelly
Shandra), WA 14 (Lexi Coolbaugh); Corners:
HR 12, WA 4.
H.S. GIRLS WATER POLO
Souderton 11,
Wyoming Valley West 6
Desiree and Nicole Holena
each scored three goals in the
Wyoming Valley West loss to
Souderton on Saturday
Wyoming Valley West ................ 1 2 2 1 6
Souderton .................................... 3 4 2 2 11
WVW Scores: Desiree Holena 3, Nicole Hole-
na 3.
H.S. BOYS WATER POLO
Souderton 10,
Wyoming Valley West 7
Cory Hamlin scored four of
Wyoming Valley Wests seven
goals Saturday in the effort
against Souderton.
Wyoming Valley West ................ 1 1 3 2 7
Souderton .................................... 2 2 5 1 10
WVW Scores: Cory Hamlin 4, Andrew Green-
wald, Michael Yeninas, Sean McQueen.
COLLEGE WOMENS
VOLLEYBALL
Misericordia 3, Randolph 2
Misericordia beat Ran-
dolph at the Catholic Univer-
sity Invitational by scores of
26-24, 25-21, 17-25, 29-31, 15-
11.
Cailin McCullion had 11
kills and 15 digs, while Kat
LaBrie added 16 kills.
Catholic 3, Misericordia 0
Misericordia University fell
to Catholic by scores of 25-
20, 25-11, 25-19 at the Cathol-
ic University Invitational.
Kat LaBrie had nine kills,
and Calin McCullion had six
kills and 16 digs.
COLLEGE WOMENS
SOCCER
Misericordia 2,
Susquehanna 0
Scores by Sam Helmsetter
and Erin Roberts led the Mi-
sericordia womens soccer
team to a win at Susquehanna
on Saturday afternoon.
Wilkes vs. Baptist Bible,
ppd.
The Wilkes womens soccer
team led 4-0 at the half at
Baptist Bible College, but in-
clement weather forced the
final 45 minutes to be called
off.
The game will not count in
the standings and any stats
accumulated in the contest
are void.
COLLEGE MENS SOCCER
Misericordia 2, Albright 0
Andy Bush and Nick Fergu-
son scored first-half goals to
lift the Misericordia mens
soccer team to a win over Al-
bright on the first day of the
Crusader Classic at Alvernia.
COLLEGE FIELD HOCKEY
Washington College 3,
Wilkes 2
Wilkes was defeated by
Washington College on Satur-
day afternoon in the opening
round of the Salisbury Invita-
tional.
Olivia Dworak and Kaitlyn
Bevans scored for the Lady
Colonials.
Juniata 3, Kings 2
The Kings field hockey
team was unable to overcome
Juniata on the final day of the
Misericordia Invitational on
Saturday in Dallas.
Scores were made by Kim
Howanitz and Alyssa Mo-
naghan in the effort for
Kings.
L O C A L R O U N D U P
Spartans triumph
on Bevans tally
The Times Leader staff
SOUTH BEND, Ind.
Tommy Rees came off the
bench to lead Notre Dame on
a last-minute, winning drive
Saturday as the No. 22 Irish
got a 27-yard field goal from
Kyle Brindza with seven sec-
onds to go and beat Purdue
20-17.
Rees, who was suspended
for the opener last week be-
cause he was involved in a
skirmish with police at a par-
ty in May, relieved starter Ev-
erett Golson late in the fourth
quarter.
Purdue (1-1) had tied the
game at 17-17 when Caleb Ter-
Bush threw a 15-yard TD pass
to Antavian Edison with 2:12
left, the score set up by Josh
Johnsons recovery of a Gol-
son fumble. Golson was shak-
en up on the play and had
trouble gripping the ball, so
the Irish turned to Rees, who
started 12 games last season.
Rees connected on key
third down passes of 10 yards
to John Goodman and 21
yards to Robby Toma to get
Brindza in position for the
game-winning kick. Notre
Dame is 2-0 for the first time
since 2008.
Golson, in his home debut,
completed 21 of 31 for 289
yards with a TD and ran for
another but he was sacked
five times during a sloppy
game that featured 16 penal-
ties eight on each team.
Coach Brian Kelly said Gol-
son would start next week at
Michigan State.
The Boilermakers alternat-
ed TerBush, who started after
being suspended last week for
violating teamrules, and Rob-
ert Marve.
After Johnson recovered
Golsons fumble at the Notre
Dame 15, Marve was sacked
and shaken up and TerBush
re-entered the game and
found Edison on a fourth-
down pass to tie it.
With the game tied at 7-7 at
the half, Golson found 6-foot-6
tight end Tyler Eifert for pas-
ses of 22 and 25 yards on the
Irishs first series of the third
quarter and that carried them
to the 3, where he tossed a TD
pass to TJ Jones for a 14-7
lead.
TerBush tried to avoid a
rush by Notre Dames Shel-
don Day on the next series
and threw an off-balance pass
that was picked off by Bennett
Jackson. After Jacksons 11-
yard return put the ball at the
Boilers 20, Notre Dame had
to use a timeout with the play
clock running down before
settling for Brindzas 30-yard
field goal that made it 17-7.
AP PHOTO
Notre Dames Kyle Brindza kicks the game-winning field
goal fromthe hold of Ben Turk in the closing seconds
against Purdue in South Bend, Ind., on Saturday. Notre
Dame won 20-17 to move its record to 2-0.
Rees rescues Notre Dame
in victory over Purdue
By RICK GANO
AP Sports Writer
CORVALLIS, Ore. Sean
Mannion threw for 276 yards
and a touchdown, Oregon
States defense smothered Wis-
consins Montee Ball and the
Beavers upset the No. 13 Badg-
ers 10-7 on Saturday.
Mannion connected with
Brandin Cooks on a 20-yard
touchdown on the opening drive
of the second half to give the
Beavers a 10-0 lead then turned
it over to the Oregon State (1-0)
defense that forced two turn-
overs and held Ball to 61 yards
rushing.
The win snapped Wisconsins
33-game non-conference win-
ning streak, the second-longest
in the country behind LSU.
Wisconsin finished with 207
yards and only 35 on the
ground. It was the lowest total
yardage for Wisconsin in five
years. The previous non-confer-
ence loss for Wisconsin (1-1)
came early in the 2003 season
when the Badgers lost to UNLV.
Alabama 35,
Western Kentucky 0
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. AJ
McCarron passed for 219 yards
and matched his career high
with four touchdown passes to
lead No. 1 Alabama to a win
over Western Kentucky.
McCarron had two scoring
tosses apiece to Christion Jones
and Kevin Norwood in a per-
formance that was more about
big plays than consistent, mus-
cle-flexing dominance for the
top-ranked Crimson Tide (2-0).
The Hilltoppers (1-1) were 40-
point underdogs and the sand-
wich opponent between top 10
opponents Michigan and No. 8
Arkansas.
A running game that pro-
duced 232 yards against the
Wolverines took a back seat to
McCarron and the capitalistic
defense. McCarron completed
14 of 19 passes and played all
but the final series.
USC 42, Syracuse 29
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J.
Matt Barkley threw a career-best
six touchdown passes, and Rob-
ert Woods was spectacular with
200 all-purpose yards and two
scores, to help No. 2 Southern
California shake free of Syra-
cuse.
The rare trip to the northeast
for the Trojans was choppy at
times, and Syracuses hurry-up
offense kept USC working hard
for four quarters at MetLife
Stadium.
Ryan Nassib and Syracuses
hurry-up offense kept things
close with consecutive touch-
downs in the third quarter to
make it 21-16 heading into the
fourth. Nassib finished with 327
yards passing, two touchdown
passes and a touchdown run.
South Carolina 48,
East Carolina 10
COLUMBIA, S.C. Dylan
Thompson completed 21 of 37
passes for 330 yards and three
touchdowns to help No. 9 South
Carolina (2-0) beat East Car-
olina.
Thompson started the game
in place of the injured Connor
Shaw, and left little doubt coach
Steve Spurrier made the right
choice to let Shaw rest.
Michigan State 41,
Central Michigan 7
MOUNT PLEASANT, Mich.
Andrew Maxwell threw for
275 yards and two touchdowns,
and No. 11 Michigan State
cruised to a win over Central
Michigan.
The Spartans (2-0) scored 10
points in the final minute of the
first half to take a 24-0 lead.
Michigan State was playing at
Central Michigan (1-1) for the
first time, part of a decade-long
series of games against the
Chippewas, Eastern Michigan
and Western Michigan.
LeVeon Bell had 70 yards on
18 carries with two touchdowns,
shouldering a lighter load after
carrying 44 times for 210 yards
in Michigan States opener
against Boise State. The Spar-
tans havent allowed an offen-
sive touchdown this season.
Clemson 52, Ball State 27
CLEMSON, S.C. DeAndre
Hopkins caught three touch-
down passes, Andre Ellington
rushed for two scores and Spen-
cer Benton kicked a 61-yard field
goal to set an Atlantic Coast
Conference record in No. 12
Clemsons victory over Ball
State.
Ellingtons two short TD runs
helped the Tigers (2-0) get off to
a fast start, and Tajh Boyd found
Hopkins for touchdown passes
of 13, 34 and 15 yards in the
second period to help increase
the lead to 35-10. Benton fin-
ished the Tigers 45-point half
with his record-setting kick as
time ran out.
Ohio St. 31, UCF 16
COLUMBUS, Ohio Brax-
ton Miller became the first Ohio
State quarterback to rush for
three touchdowns in 34 years
and he passed for another score
to lead the 14th-ranked Buck-
eyes to a 3victory over Central
Florida.
A week after setting a school
quarterback record with 161
rushing yards in a 56-10 win
over Miami (Ohio), Miller ran
for 141 yards on 27 carries. His
number kept coming up after
starting running back Carlos
Hyde left with a first-half knee
injury.
Virginia Tech 42,
Austin Peay 7
BLACKSBURG, Va. Virgin-
ia Tech used two big plays in the
punt return game to overcome a
lethargic offensive start and the
No. 15 Hokies beat Austin Peay.
Kyshoen Jarretts 46-yard punt
return set up a 2-yard touch-
down run by Michael Holmes to
give the Hokies a 7-0 lead.
Michigan 31, Air Force 25
ANN ARBOR, Mich. De-
nard Robinson ran for 218 yards,
threw for 208 and scored four
times to help No. 19 Michigan
hold off Air Force for a win.
Robinson became the first
player in major college football
since at least 1996 to have at
least 200 yards rushing and 200
passing in three games, accord-
ing to STATS LLC.
Kansas State 52, Miami 13
MANHATTAN, Kan. Col-
lin Klein threw for 210 yards and
ran for 71 more, accounting for
four touchdowns and leading
No. 21 Kansas State to a rout of
Miami.
John Hubert added 106 yards
rushing and a touchdown, and
Daniel Sams added two scores
on the ground as the Wildcats
(2-0) rolled up 498 yards of total
offense while holding Miami to
262.
Louisville 35,
Missouri State 7
LOUISVILLE, Ky. Teddy
Bridgewater kept No. 23 Louis-
villes offense clicking by pass-
ing for a career-high 344 yards
and two touchdowns, while the
defense stifled Missouri State in
a rout.
Florida 20, Texas A&M17
COLLEGE STATION, Texas
Mike Gillislee ran for 83
yards and two touchdowns and
No. 24 Florida shut down Texas
A&Ms offense in the second
half in a win in the Aggies first
Southeastern Conference game
after moving from the Big 12.
Florida trailed 17-10 at half-
time after a first half where
Texas A&Ms offense under new
coach Kevin Sumlin pretty
much did what it wanted.
Things changed in the second
half as the Gators clamped
down and forced punts each of
A&Ms six possessions after the
break.
Maryland 36, Temple 27
PHILADELPHIA Perry
Hills threw two touchdowns and
ran for one to help Maryland
beat Temple.
Embarrassed by the Owls in a
31-point loss last season, the
Terrapins (2-0) nearly blew a
23-point lead at halftime. Hills
had all three of his scores in the
half to help Maryland race to a
26-3 lead. The Owls stormed
back in the second half but ran
out of time and big plays.
Indiana 45, Massachusetts 6
FOXBOROUGH, Mass. Tre
Roberson scored on runs of 50
and 39 yards before leaving with
an apparent left leg injury, and
Indiana spoiled Massachusetts
first home game as a Football
Bowl Subdivision member with
a win.
Minnesota 44,
New Hampshire 7
MINNEAPOLIS MarQueis
Gray threw for two touchdowns
and ran for two more by half-
time, and Minnesota finally
enjoyed an easy victory over an
FCS-level opponent by beating
New Hampshire.
Iowa State 9, Iowa 6
IOWA CITY, Iowa Steele
Jantz threw for 241 yards and
the games only touchdown and
Iowa State beat Iowa for its first
win in Iowa City in 10 years.
Jake Knotts interception with
1:11 left sealed the win for the
Cyclones (2-0), whose defense
held Iowa to just 304 yards of
offense.
LSU 41, Washington 3
BATON ROUGE, La.
Alfred Blue rushed for 101 yards,
including a 21-yard score, and
No. 3 LSU racked up 242 yards
on the ground in a victory over
Washington.
Power runner Kenny Hilliard
added a pair of short touch-
downs and fullback J.C. Cope-
land powered through for anoth-
er score for LSU (2-0), which
basically ran at will while av-
eraging nearly 5 yards per carry.
Oregon 42, Fresno State 25
EUGENE, Ore. Kenjon
Barner ran for 201 yards and
three touchdowns to lead No. 4
Oregon to a victory over Fresno
State.
DeAnthony Thomas ran for
102 yards and two additional
scores for the Ducks (2-0), who
sprinted to a 35-6 lead in the
first half before the Bulldogs
were able to slow them a bit in
the second. Redshirt freshman
quarterback Marcus Mariota
completed 19 of 27 passes for
166 yards and a touchdown.
Oklahoma 69, Florida A&M13
NORMAN, Okla. Damien
Williams ran for 156 yards and
four touchdowns in a record-
setting Owen Field debut, Ken-
ny Stills added 120 yards receiv-
ing and a score, and No. 5 Okla-
homa beat Florida A&M.
Williams rushing total was
the most for a player in his first
game at the Sooners home
field, and he became only the
fourth player at the school to
eclipse 100 yards rushing in
each of his first two games.
Adrian Peterson was the last to
do it, in 2004.
Florida State 55,
Savannah State 0
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. EJ
Manuel passed for three touch-
downs in the opening seven
minutes and sixth-ranked Flor-
ida States defense held lower-
division Savannah State to 28
yards on its way to a victory in a
game called in the third quarter
because of lightning.
The Seminoles bolted to a
35-0 lead in the first quarter as
Manuel completed 11 of 13 pas-
ses for 161 yards and five differ-
ent Seminoles scored touch-
downs. Manuel didnt play after
the opening quarter.
TCU 56, Grambling St. 0
FORT WORTH, Texas
Casey Pachall threw three
touchdowns passes after No. 20
TCU had already scored touch-
downs on special teams and
defense in the first 7 minutes of
a victory over Grambling State.
C O L L E G E F O O T B A L L R O U N D U P
Beavers surprise
No. 13 Badgers
The Associated Press
PAGE 8C SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2012 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
S P O R T S
Players Lost: Jenna Lutchko, Summer Lenti-
ni, Julie Barry, Eryn Harvey
Players Added/Retained: Becca Elmy, Dana
Schneider, Mykela Pacurariu, Julia DeMiller, Da-
nielle Adcock, Alia Sod, Jackie Marrouquin
Coach'sOutlook: This teamis oneof thehar-
dest working and most motivated teams I have ev-
ery coached and Imso proud of the progress they
have made. Im very excited about this season, I
think they are going to do well.
Crestwood
Coach: Scott Lenio
2011 Record: 11-2 in WVC, WVC 3A cham-
pions
Keys Players Lost: Mary Kate Coulter, Corey
Gallagher
Keys Players Added/Retained: Kiana
Thompson, Christina Perry, Claire McCallick,
Alexandra Kintz, Rebecca Price, Grace Hao
Coach's Outlook: We have returning experi-
ence in the on, two and three singles positions as
well as a number of one doubles sport. We need
out number two doubles spot to help us out in the
tight matches. Wewouldliketobecompetitivefor a
playoff spot in the AAA division.
Dallas
Coach: Dominic Ross
2011 Record: 11-2 in WVC
Key Players Lost: Melissa Tucker, Chloe
Alles
Key Players Added/Retained: Dana Yu,
Bridget Boyle, Grace Schaub, Courtney Sickle,
Kajal Patel
GAR
Coach: Abdullah Azad
2011 Record: 0-13 in WVC
Players Lost: Jessica Pacheco, Anissa Bath-
tom
Players Added/Retained: Raquel Sosa, Idu-
ku Aka-Ezoue, Vanessa Castillo, Diane Lopez
Coach's Outlook: Imjust looking to build my
team for our future.
Hanover Area
Coach: Terry Schnee
2011 Record: 2-11 in WVC
Key Players Lost: Marsha Geiser
KeyPlayersAdded/Retained: Kati McManus,
Leise House, Emily Rinehimer, Gabby Keating
Coach's Outlook: Im looking for more com-
petitive individual match ups within the team. Im
very pleased with the growth the players are show-
ing and hopefully thatll translate into more wins for
us.
Hazleton Area
Coach: Amber Corrado
2011 Record: 8-5 in WVC
Key Players Lost: Megan Hudock, Amanda
Pliska
Key Players Added/Retained: Erika Grula
Coach's Outlook: I basically have the inner
players, my whole team consisting of first years.
Very beginning group. I have mainly juniors.
Holy Redeemer
Coach: Joe Suchocki2011 Record: 12-1 in
WVC
Key Players Lost: Emily Suchocki, Ally Muth,
Shaina Dougherty
Key Players Added/Retained: Fallyn Boich,
Nell Chmil, Beth Chmil, Tricia Harenza, Megan
McGraw, Leanne Tabit, Emily Kabalka
Coach's Outlook: Have a good winning sea-
son and make the playoffs
MMI Prep
Coach: Mark Dryfoos
2011 Record: 5-8 in WVC
Key Players Lost: Devan McCarrie, Englysh
Handlong
Key Players Added/Retained: Gabriella Lo-
bitz, Stephanie Pudish, Antonia Diener, Gaby
Becker, Claire Sheen, Carrie Bandirska, Jacqui
Meuser, Kelsey Donaldson, Katelyn, McGuire, So-
prina Guarnari, Haley Kirschner
Coach's Outlook: Were just getting to know
each other and see where we go from here. We
have pretty darn good teamand we have some in-
juries and as soon as our players get healthy well
be in great shape.
Pittston Area
Coach: Kim Collins
2011 Record: 3-10 in WVC
KeyPlayersLost: AnnaPodrasky, AliciaCho-
pyak, Haliegh Zurek
Key Players Added/Retained: Miranda Wa-
runek, Mikhaela Moher, Elaina Menchelli, Sara
OHop
Tunkhannock
Coach: Jeff Underwood
2011 Record: 3-10 in WVC
Key Players Lost: Hope Murray, Jessica Mur-
ley, Sisile Maruzzeli
Key Players Added/Retained: Marlena
Chesner, Becky Mills, Jennifer Grasso, Jill Patton,
Morgan Drumgell, Prutha Patell
Coach's Outlook: Were just looking to have
a fun season. Were being competitive and we
want to be competitive.
Wyoming Area
Coach: Tiffany Callio
2011 Record: 3-10 in WVC
Players Lost: Lisa Chihorak, Brina Platt, Emily
Lukasavage, Alisha Pizano, Alex Romano
Players Added/Retained: Valerie Bott
Coach's Outlook: We have a very young in-
experience team. The first fewmatches we have to
see where were at but Im hoping to get a couple
wins. Theyve been practicing and working very
hard, so hopefully we can pull out some wins.
Wyoming Seminary
Coach: Mike Balutanksi
2011 Record: 12-1 in WVC
Key Players Lost: Madison Nardone
Key Players Added/Retained: Anita Ghosh,
Nathalie Joanlanne, Emma Spath, Alaina Schuk-
raft, Jane Henry, Sheena Syal
Wyoming Valley West
Coach: Jim Zimmerman
2011 Record: 7-6 in WVC
Key Players Lost: Cathy Byrnes
Key Players Added/Retained: Christa Tal-
pash, Devin Ryman, Laura Monto, Gillian Pajor,
Emily Coslett
Coach's Outlook: I just want to improve after
every match and I think that will happen with these
girls. They really enjoy playing and they work hard,
so we should be getting better as the season pro-
gresses.
The girls tennis season is offi-
cially underway, and with vol-
leyball, field hockey, and now
girls soccer all in the fall lineup,
some tennis teams have seen a
drastic change inreturningplay-
ers.
For the Crestwood Comets
however, one key player would
never consider leaving her
team.
Kristi Bowman, 16, a junior at
Crestwood, has been playing
tennis since she was 6 years old
and enjoyed a spectacular sea-
sonlast year. Shewent undefeat-
ed in singles competition dur-
ing the regular season, going
13-0 and helping lead her team
to a 12-3 record and a Wyoming
Valley Conference 3A title.
Bowman has said that tennis
is her only sporting interest and
that focus has helped her going
into every season. Because she
is not a multi-sport athlete,
Bowman uses her time year
round to continually look to im-
prove her game.
I really like playing tennis,
its the only sport I play, Bow-
man said. It keeps me focused
onwhat I have todoandit keeps
me focused on the upcoming
season.
Bowman said that practicing
throughout the year not only
helps her physically but also
mentally by helping her keep a
positive attitude.
Although she has enjoyed in-
dividual success, she cares more
about how her team does and
gives her teammates her unend-
ing support. Her goals going in-
tothis seasonwere tobetter her-
self from last year and help the
team make a deep playoff run.
I was undefeated last year
and I would like to stay unde-
feated but Im just going to take
every match one at a time and
see how I do, Bowman said. I
think that the whole team
would like to make it to districts
again because we all had a lot of
funlast year. I just want todomy
best to help my team reach that
goal.
This season, Bowmanis 7-0in
singles play. Teammates Britta-
ny Stanton and Melanie Kobela
also sport 7-0 singles records.
Berwick
Coach: Trinell Bull
2011 Record: 5-8 in WVC
Key Players Lost: Jessica Dennis, Shea Vol-
kel, Brooke Warton, Kenzie Goulstone
KeyPlayersAdded/Retained: Kasey Bacher,
Julia Fonte, Whitley Culver, Erica Robbins, Dallas
Hess
Coach's Outlook: Imlooking to develop their
skills because I have so many beginner girls. Ever-
day there is improvement and some of the doubles
players from last year may be playing singles so
that will be new for them.
Coughlin
Coach: Teresa Popielarski
2011 Record: 9-4 in WVC
H . S . G I R L S T E N N I S C A P S U L E S
AIMEE DILGER/THE TIMES LEADER
Kristi Bowman of Crestwood hits the ball back to Emily Rine-
himer during their opening match of the season. Bowman is
undefeated again this season.
Comets junior
starts perfect again
Kristi Bowman is unbeaten
in her last 20 Wyoming
Valley Conference matches.
By JIMMY FISHER
For The Times Leader
DALLAS The violent wind
blew the heavy rain nearly side-
ways at times Saturday after-
noon. Fans held tightly to um-
brellas, some of which blew in-
side out when greeted with big-
ger gusts.
Certainly, the conditions as
poor as they have been for high
school football in quite some
time gave Dallas a built-in ex-
cuse for the lack of offense. After
all, the Mountaineers like to
pass, and throws tend to sail or
die in this type of weather.
First-year coach Bob Zaruta,
though, cited other reasons for
the 28-7 loss to Abington
Heights. The reasons often men-
tioned by other coaches after
losses mistakes and missed op-
portunities.
It probably affected our pass-
ing game more (than Abing-
ton), Zaruta said, but we had
trouble running the ball, too. I
wouldnt use the weather as any
excuse.
One big mistake came on the
ensuing kickoff after Dallas took
a 7-0 lead on a 31-yard touch-
down pass from Ryan Zapoticky
to Darik Johnson at 2:56 of the
first quarter.
Abington kick returner Nate
Hollander droppedthe kickoff at
the7-yardline, pickeduptheball
and blasted through the heart of
Dallas special teams for a touch-
down.
Another came late in the third
quarter. Abington receiver J.C.
Showgot past the Dallas second-
ary, hauling in a 55-yard touch-
down pass for a 21-7 lead. The
throwbyquarterbackDantePas-
qualichio came at one of the
brief periods where the wind
wasnt rippingthroughthe stadi-
um.
The missed opportunities for
Dallas (0-2) came mainly in the
second quarter with Abington
leading 14-7.
Abington (2-0) fumbled away
the ball on three consecutive
drives, all inside its territory.
The first fumble popped into
the arms of Dallas linebacker
Kris Roccograndi in the back-
field, but he was unable to elude
the only Comet between him
and the end zone as he tried to
get his footingonthesoggyfield.
That drive ended at the Abing-
ton 32 on downs.
The Mountaineers pulled off a
successful fake punt after the
second Abington fumble. Suc-
cessful until the Comets reco-
vered a fumble at the end of the
run.
An interception by Pasquali-
chio at the goal line erased the
possible damage of Abingtons
third fumble.
We havent beenable to make
the big plays when we need to,
Zaruta said. Were not seizing
the opportunities. Theyre there,
but were not taking advantage.
A lot of times, we create the sit-
uation, but unfortunately we
havent been able to cash in.
And Abington did to score its
last touchdown with 7:38 left in
the fourth quarter. The Comets
took advantage of a short punt
andDallas inability tosniff out a
screen pass on a fourth-and-7 on
the 11-play, 32-yard drive.
The weather is one thing you
cant control, Abington coach
Joe Repshis said. We came
down here today focused on
playing a football game knowing
the conditions were the way
there were. We wantedtobe able
to control the ball, run the ball,
kindof quickenthegameandget
some points on the board and
put them in position where they
had to play from behind.
The Comets did that, putting
pressure on Dallas to throw in
the elements. And while Zapot-
icky and receivers Johnson and
Jason Simonovich make up one
of the WVCs more potent pass-
ing attacks, the trio couldnt find
continuity. Zapoticky finished 8-
of-17 for 126 yards, Simonovich,
the Mountaineers top returning
pass catcher from last year,
snagged a 6-yard pass on the
third play of the game but noth-
ing afterward.
Abington Heights 28, Dallas 7
Abington Heights................... 7 7 7 7 28
Home....................................... 7 0 0 0 7
First Quarter
DAL Darik Johnson 31 pass from Ryan
Zapoticky (Ryan Kozloski kick), 2:56
AH Nate Hollander 93 kickoff return (Ryan
Patrick kick), 2:40
Second Quarter
AH Dante Pasqualichio 2 run (Patrick kick),
10:46
Third Quarter
AH J.C. Show 55 pass from Pasqualichio
(Patrick kick), 2:32
Fourth Quarter
AH Jerry Langan 1 run (Patrick kick), 7:38
TeamStatistics Abington Dallas
First downs.......................... 9 12
Rushes-yards ..................... 36-90 35-26
Passing................................ 87 126
Total Yards.......................... 177 152
Comp-Att-Int ....................... 5-11-0 8-18-1
Sacked-Yards Lost ............ 1-5 4-32
Punts-Avg............................ 3-38.3 6-31.7
Fumbles-Lost...................... 4-3 3-1
Penalties-Yards.................. 2-30 4-32
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
RUSHING Abington, Quinn Karam 14-56,
Pasqualichio 6-7, Sean Rock 3-12, Langan 6-21,
Sean Gilhooley 1-0, Alosha Fox 2-2, team 4-(mi-
nus-8). Dallas, Kris Roccograndi 18-36, Zapoticky
15-27, Johnson 1-(minus-1), team 2-(minus-37).
PASSING Abington Pasqualichio 5-11-0-87.
Dallas, Zapoticky 8-17-1-126, Johnson 0-1-0-0-0.
RECEIVING Abington, Simon Williams 1-(mi-
nus-3), Karam 1-13, Hollander 1-7, Show 1-55,
Langan 1-15.
INTS Abington, Pasqualichio.
MISSED FGS none.
HI GH SCHOOL FOOTBAL L : WEEK TWO
FRED ADAMS PHOTOS/FOR THE TIMES LEADER
Abington Heights Nathan Hollander has his jersey grabbed by Dallas cornerback Ryan Kozloski
during a high school football game Saturday in Dallas.
Errors send Dallas to 0-2
By JOHN ERZAR
jerzar@timesleader.com
Dallas quarterback Ryan Zapoticky runs around the end as
Abington Heights linebacker Joe Dietz tries to make the tackle
during Saturdays game.
Holy Cross vs. Holy
Redeemer
postponed
Weather forced the
postponement of Saturday
nights Holy Cross at Holy
Redeemer football game
scheduled for Wilkes-Barre
Memorial Stadium. The game
will be played at 6:30 p.m.
Monday at the stadium.
Also on Monday, Williamsport
will travel to Mifflin County to
complete a game suspended
Friday night due to lightning.
The resumption will begin at 5
p.m. with Mifflin County
leading 27-6 in the second
quarter.
It probably affected
our passing game more
(than Abington),but we
had trouble running the
ball, too. I wouldnt use
the weather as any ex-
cuse.
Bob Zaruta
Dallas coach
SOUTH CENTRE TWP. -- Af-
ter a disappointing effort against
Lackawanna Trail last week, Nan-
ticokes defense made sure the re-
sults would be much different
this week. The Trojans registered
seven quarterback sacks and al-
lowed just 109 total yards in a
36-0 shutout of Columbia-Mon-
tour Vo-Tech.
"They played well," Nanticoke
coach Ron Bruza said of his de-
fense. "We prepared well. We had
a tough loss last week with some
mental mistakes and big plays
that hurt us. So we tried to elim-
inate them. We played very well,
and Im happy with our perform-
ance up front. Our defense just
executed."
After picking up just one first
down on its opening drive, the
Trjoans offense would come to
life. Nanticoke would score on its
next three possessions, and its
defense and special teams would
also put points on the board.
Quarterback J.T. Levanadow-
ski got things started when he
scored on a 5-yard run with 4:49
left in the opening period. Nanti-
coke put the game away in the
second quarter with a huge 24-
point outburst that was started
by their defense with a safety.
On the ensuing free kick, Pat
Hempel fielded the ball at his 26
and was off to the races. The ju-
nior running back scored on a 74-
yard touchdown return, making
it 14-0.
"Hes a threat," Bruza said of
Hempel. "Weve worked really
hard on our special teams, and as
you could see (on Saturday) it
showed."
Columbia-Montour Vo-Tech
(0-2) would fail to mount any se-
rious scoring threats until late in
the game. The Nanticoke defense
pressured quarterback Dylan
Larkin all afternoon, and the
Rams were held to 59 yards rush-
ing on 38 attempts.
Nanticoke (1-1) continued to
build the lead before halftime.
Hempel would hit pay dirt on a
49-yard scoring run that finished
off a short, two-play scoring
drive. Three minutes later, Leva-
nadowski, on a fourth-and-2 play,
would break through the Rams
defense on a quarterback sneak
that resulted in a 60-yard touch-
down.
As an off-and-on heavy rain fell
and winds gusted in the second
half, the game got a bit sloppy.
But Nanticoke found the end
zone one more time midway
through the fourth quarter when
Maurice Wood scored on a 1-yard
run.
Nanticoke............................ 6 24 0 6 36
Vo-Tech .............................. 0 0 0 0 0
First Quarter
NAN J.T. Levenadowski 5 run (run failed), 4:49
Second Quarter
NAN Team safety
NAN Pat Hempel 74 free kick return (run failed)
10:56
NAN Hempel 49 run (Brandon Meck run), 7:48
NAN Levandowski 60 run (Hempel run), 1:39
Fourth Quarter
NAN Maurice Wood 1 run (run failed), 5:16
TeamStatistics Nanticoke CMVT
First downs .......................... 9 6
Rushes-yards...................... 40-219 38-59
Passing................................. 25 50
Total Yards .......................... 254 109
Comp-Att-Int ........................ 2-5-0 3-15-0
Sacks-Yards Lost ............... 2-18 7-43
Punts-Avg. ........................... 4-30.5 4-21.3
Fumbles-Lost ...................... 1-1 3-2
Penalties-Yards .................. 10-72 3-20
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
RUSHING NAN, Pat Hempel 13-92, J.T. Levena-
dowski 8-63, Blake Balderrama 4-27, Brandon Meck
3-13, MauriceWood5-12, RonKotz2-9, MikeCoala-
tosti 4-4, Team 1-(-1); CMVT, Bobby Christiansen
14-32, Tylere Temple 4-30, Nick Kocan 3-16, Bobby
Schechterly 1-10, Connor Johnson 2-0, Team 1-(-
12), Dylan Larkin 13-(-17).
PASSING NAN, Levenadowski 2-5-0-25; CMVT,
Larkin 3-15-0-50.
RECEIVING NAN, Nate Siese 1-15, Kyle Garvish
1-10; CMVT, Colton Appleman 3-50.
Nanticoke
defense
shears VT
By JUSTIN BEITER
For The Times Leader
CARMEL, Ind. The BMW
Championship turned into golfs
version of an All-Star game
Saturday with Phil Mickelson
making 10 birdies to share the
lead with Vijay Singh, and a host
of other proven players lined up
behind them Saturday at
Crooked Stick.
Mickelson shrugged when
asked about all the stars on the
leaderboard, only because he
figured his name wasnt at the
top and there was still work to
be done. That was before Singh
had his only three-putt of the
tournament from about 45 feet
on the last hole that made him
settle for a 69.
They were at 16-under 200
going into a final round loaded
with possibilities.
Rory McIlroy, going for his
second straight FedEx Cup
playoff win and his PGA Tour-
leading fourth of the year, bird-
ied the 18th to salvage an ordi-
nary day with a 69. He was one
shot behind with Lee West-
wood, a former world No. 1 who
made all five of his birdies on
the back nine for a 68.
Dustin Johnson, who has
finished no worse than fourth in
the other two playoff events,
had a 67 and was in the group
two shots behind that included
Adam Scott and Robert Garri-
gus, who is trying to play his
way into the FedEx Cup finale
at East Lake in two weeks.
KINGSMILL CHAMPIONSHIP
WILLIAMSBURG, Va.
Paula Creamer moved into
position to end a two-year victo-
ry drought, shooting a 6-under
65 to take a two-stroke lead into
the final round of the Kingsmill
Championship.
The nine-time LPGA Tour
winner chipped in for birdie on
the par-4 13th in her bogey-free
round on Kingsmills River
Course. She had a 16-under 197
total, the lowest 54-hole score in
the history of the event.
Second-round leader Jiyai
Shin was second after a 69. She
also is winless since 2010.
Dewi Claire Schreefel and
Danielle Kang were 12 under.
Schreefel had a 69, and Kang
shot 70.
Second-ranked Staci Lewis
was 11 under along with Ai
Miyazato.
P R O G O L F
Mickelson ties Singh for drivers seat at BMW
The Associated Press
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2012 PAGE 9C
S P O R T S
Once I tackled the hill, I never
looked back, so I wasnt sure
whether anyone was coming up
on me or not, Shoemaker said.
But, I was OKandheldonfor the
win.
Solomon, 32, of MountainTop,
won the female division in 20:36.
She outracedsecond-place finish-
er, Abbie Kearns, 21, of Scranton
and a student at the University of
Scranton, by 54 seconds.
It went well, saidSolomon. I
broke my arm about five weeks
ago and just recently had my cast
removed. So my training, of late,
has been kind of iffy. But I was
OK. It was pretty congested over
the first mile. I took control after
the first mile I broke away. After
that, I just started picking off
guys who were running ahead of
me en route to the finish.
John Major, 49, of Scranton,
won the First Male Cancer Survi-
vor to Finish the Run award,
clocking in at 26:26. And Karen
Gannon, 44, of Honesdale, won
the First Female Cancer Survivor
to Finish the Run award with a
26:35-time.
SCRANTONJakeShoemaker
and Nadalie Solomon led a field
of about 550 runners, capturing
overall maleandfemalehonors in
the Race for the Cure 5K Run on
Saturday at Courthouse Square
in downtown Scranton.
Shoemaker, 27, of Philadel-
phia, broke the tape in 17 min-
utes, 22 seconds. He outran sec-
ond-place finisher, Mark Arzie,
16, of Scott Township, by 40 sec-
onds.
Everyone started fast, said
Shoemaker, who ran track and
cross country in high school, but
not at the college level. I just
tried to keep an even pace. I took
control at around mile 1. Thats
when I pulled in front. After that,
I just tried to settle into a good
rhythm. I just tried to keep an
even pace and save energy for the
hill at Coopers (bar and restau-
rant).
The Philadelphian was given a
heads up about the hill at Coop-
ers by his sister-in-law, Jen Kin-
cel, who lives in Olyphant.
Jim Boettger, 62, of Duryea re-
ceived the overall male award in
the 5K walk, finishing in 37:05.
Marisa Naughton, 45, of Scran-
ton, wontopfemale honors inthe
walk, clocking in at 39:11. Aman-
da Jarrow, 25, of Jessup, was the
first femalecancer survivor tofin-
ish, clocking in at 38:56.
This years race, according to
Dolly Woody, executive director
of the Susan G. Komen Founda-
tion for Northeastern Pennsylva-
nia, drew around 6,500 (about
550 runners andthe rest walkers)
participants and raised around
$200,000, between sponsors and
participants.
Last year, between the race
and other events, we were able to
fund around $270,000 for educa-
tion, screening and treatment
grants to non-profit organiza-
tions throughout 16 counties in
Northeastern Pennsylvania,
said Woody. And it looks like
were going to reach our goal of
$275,000 for this years race.
Woody said, Its all about the
hope coming together. The en-
ergy and spirit of the day is out-
standing. This race is the largest
5K cause-related event in north-
eastern Pennsylvania. And were
close to our goal.
Seventy-five percent of the
money from the event stays in
northeastern Pennsylvania. The
other 25 percent go for breast
cancer research.
Scranton Race for the Cure results
5K Run
Overall Male Winner: Jake Shoemaker, 27,
Philadelphia, 17:22
Overall Female Winner: Nadalie Solomon, 32,
Mountain Top, 20:36
First Male Cancer Survivor to Finish: John
Major, 49, Scranton, 26:26
First FemaleCancer Survivor toFinish: Karen
Gannon, 47, Honesdale, 26:35
5K Walk
Overall Male Winner: JimBoettger, 62, Duryea,
37:05
Overall Female Winner: Marisa Naughton, 45,
Scranton, 39:11
First Male Cancer Survivor to Finish: None
First Female Cancer Survivor to Finish:
Amanda Jarrow, 25, Jessup, 38:56
Field: 550(run), 5,950(walk). Starter andtiming:
Insta Results. Results: Steve Hill. Race director: Mi-
chele Tierney. Susan G. Komen Foundation Exec-
utive Director for Northeastern Pennsylvania: Dolly
Woody.
Schedule
Sunday, Sept. 16: Scranton Lupus Loop 5K
Run/Walk at Nay Aug Park at 11 a.m. Info: 1 (888)
99-LUPUS or Lupus Foundation Pocono/Northeast
Branch, 558-2008 or www.lupuspa.org
Saturday, Sept. 22: Wyoming Valley Striders
End of Summer 10K Run (final leg of Striders Triple
Crown) at Kirby Park at 9 a.m. Info: Vince Wojnar,
474-5363.
Sunday, Oct. 7: SteamtownMarathon, startingat
Forest City Regional High School at 8 a.m. and fin-
ishing at Courthouse Square, downtown Scranton.
Info: 345-3481.
Sunday, Oct. 14: Jewish Community Center of
Wyoming Valleys Benjamin August Memorial 3 Mile
Run/Walk at the JCC, S. River Street, Wilkes-Barre
at 9 a.m. Info: Bill Buzza, 824-4646.
R U N N I N G
JASON RIEDMILLER / FOR THE TIMES LEADER
Womens winner Nadalie Solomon of Mountain Top reached the
finish line in 20:36 on Saturday.
JASON RIEDMILLER / FOR THE TIMES LEADER
Jake Shoemaker of Philadelphia was the overall winner, breaking
the tape in 17:22 on Saturday.
Cure event won by Philadelphian
By ROBERT MINER
For The Times Leader
Thanks to
high school
football keep-
ing me extra
busy at work
and the spotty
weather weve
had the last
few weeks, Ive hardly had a
chance to get on my bike at
all.
But the good people at the
Wilkes-Barre YMCA and Lu-
zerne County Bikes and Walks
may just have the answer for
me.
The two are combining for
Y Cycle Sundays, a series of
four morning rides to areas of
interest in the Wyoming Valley
and Hazleton.
We do Y Walk Wednesdays
to increase peoples physical
activity and so people have fun
and get used to walking
around downtown, said Mi-
chelle Schasberger, of the
Wilkes-Barre YMCA and Lu-
zerne County Bikes and Walks.
The bike rides seemed like a
logical extension of the walks,
according to Schasberger.
Todays ride will leave the
parking lot across from the
YMCA on Northampton Street
in Wilkes-Barre at 9:30 a.m. It
will take River Street and the
levee system to Barney Farms
and the Wyoming Valley Sani-
tary Authority in Hanover
Township.
Once at the WVSA, an offi-
cial will give a brief talk about
the Authority and what it does
for the Wyoming Valley.
(Heres a hint: its a dirty
job, but somebody has to do
it.)
The total trip should be
about four miles. A good dis-
tance for someone just starting
out.
Its (a good distance) for a
beginner interested riding in a
group, Schasberger said.
There really arent that many
group rides for beginners.
Most of them start at 25
miles and that can be a little
daunting.
Schasberger added that the
rides are great opportunties
for families to get out together.
OK, Im certainly not a be-
ginner, but I did say I havent
ridden that much lately.
The rides will continue
through September, ending
with a ride in the Hazleton
area on Oct. 3.
Survey underway
In addition to planning
rides, Luzerne County Bikes
and Walks is also busy track-
ing pedestrians and cyclists in
downtown Wilkes-Barre.
With the help of students
from Kings College and
Wilkes University, the group
was counting the number of
walkers and riders at several
points downtown today. The
process will continue through-
out the week.
They take their counts in
the morning, at lunch time
and early evening.
They then use the numbers
to look for changes in patterns
of use in the area and to com-
pare our area to other parts of
the country.
According to Schasberger,
the aim of the project is to see
how people are using the
downtown area.
One thing they learned, we
have a busy downtown.
A lot of people say Down-
town Wilkes-Barre is dead,
Schasberger said. Our down-
town is very far from being
dead.
This is the third year the
group has down the count.
Numbers from pervious years
are available on the groups
website.
If you are interested in help-
ing, contact Schasberger at
714-1953.
Race results
Richard Meekers string of
victories finally came to an
end.
The former Plymouth resi-
dents streak of 14 victories
ended at the USA Cyclings
Masters Road Nationals in
Bend, Ore.
No shame for Meeker here,
though. He finished second in
the 50-59 road race Thursday
night.
David Novaks fall season
at Lindsey Wilson College has
begun.
Novak, a sophomore from
Tunkhannock, was on his
mountain bike at the Red
Hawks Romp in Wild Rose,
Wisc., earlier this month. He
finished 10th in the short track
cross country race and 13th in
the cross country event.
Luke Lukas, of Courtdale,
competed in the Green Moun-
tain Stage Race in Vermont
recently.
Lukas best finish in the
four-day event was 56th in the
junior division criterium.
Great opportunity
in planned rides
JOE SOPRANO
C Y C L I N G S C E N E
Y Ride Sundays
Schedule
Today, River Street and
Levee Trail to Wyoming Valley
Sanitary Authority and
Barney Farms
Sept. 16, Levee Trail to
Kmart in Edwardsville
Sept. 23, Levee Trail to
Forty Fort Airport
Oct. 3, Hazleton YMCA to
Greater Hazleton Rail Trail
All rides start at 9:30 a.m.
For more information, go to
the Luzerne County Bike and
Walks website at
http://www.golcbw.org.
Joe Soprano writes about cycling
for The Times Leader. His Cycling
Scene column appears every other
Sunday. Reach him at jsopra-
no@timesleader.com or 570-829-
7164.
MADRID Alberto Conta-
dor kept the overall leaders red
jersey and is closing in on his
second Spanish Vuelta title af-
ter Denis Menchov won Satur-
days punishing 20th stage.
Alejandro Valverde and Joa-
quin Rodriguez, Contadors
closest pursuers in the general
classification, finished ahead of
the Spanish leader but the dif-
ference wasnt enough to close
the gap.
Contador finished 4 minutes,
15 seconds behind Menchov to
run his overall time to 82:14:52,
which was 1:16 quicker than
Valverde and 1:37 ahead of Ro-
driguez before Sundays last
stage, a largely processional 71-
mile ride into Madrid.
Contador is on the verge of a
fifth major victory to go with a
pair of Tour de France titles
and the 2008 Giro dItalia,
which he won before his first
Vuelta victory later that same
year.
Yes, now the Vuelta is prac-
tically won, the Madrid native
said. It has been very difficult
and weve had to hold our head
high and our legs strong.
On the bending climb to the
weather station atop the Bola
del Mundo, Contador was just
in front of Valverde and Rodri-
guez as the peloton eased from
smooth pavement to an uneven
surface as throngs of fans
choked the road.
Rodriguez made a late dash
as the riders dug in and the pe-
loton slowed to a crawl at
times while navigating the 23
percent angled climb to the fin-
ish.
C YC L I N G : S PA N I S H V U E LTA
Menchov wins 20th leg;
Contador set for victory
The Associated Press
last names that are familiar.
An older sister used to be a
Comet perhaps. Or, after 37 sea-
sons, a mom used to play for
Gemski.
Its very special strong
words extremely special,
Gemski said. It makes you feel
wonderful to be around that kind
of energy and excitement (from
the players). And the parents are
a large, crucial part of the journey
every year.
I think its tradition, its the
love of the game, assistant coach
and former standout goalie Lissa
Munley said. For her, winning
comes second, everything else
comes first.
Keeping all the girls, not cut-
ting anyone, said assistant
coach Patsy Moratori, another
former Comet star. Thats differ-
ent from everyone else. They all
get a chance. I respect that.
She does say hockey is your
main focus during the season.
But outside of the season, she
wants the girls to play basketball
or softball. Thats another thing,
too. We dont do much in the off-
season.
CHANGE IN THE AIR: The
days of offsides calls, no self-
starts, shots from outside the cir-
cle and limited substitutions are
all in the past. Gemski remem-
bers them, but they are all erased
from her playbook.
Shes changed with the
game, said Moratori, who
played at Crestwood in the 1980s
before starring at Connecticut.
Some coaches just want to do it
the oldschool way. She sees what
theyre doing in college and else-
where, and adapts.
Shes really changing with the
times, said Munley, who played
collegiately at Iowa. Shes learn-
ing to live in (the players) world.
They dance before a game and
thats OK. Thats something my
class didnt do.
BY THE NUMBERS: Crest-
wood has won four state cham-
pionships and 18 District 2 titles
under Gemski.
The Comets have had 133 col-
lege players, with 39 being
named team captains. Twenty
Crestwood alums are currently
playing collegiately and two
more are head coaches.
Gemski has a dozen 20-win
seasons to her credit (including
the last three) and just two losing
seasons in her 27 seasons. One
was her programs first season in
1976, when the Comets were 5-
6-2. The other came in 1979,
meaning it has been 32 seasons
since her last sub-.500 record.
ADMIRED BY ALL: Gem-
ski, a Hall of Famer, is still a leg-
end at her alma mater.
Shes a great supporter of
Temple, head coach Amanda
Janney said last month. Coach
Gemski and her husband come
down when they can. They love
to talk Temple football and field
hockey. Six hundred wins is a
great accomplishment.
It wasnt that long ago that the
Comets coach was earning trib-
utes for half that many wins.
People dont understand how
difficult it is to start up and main-
tain a programat such a high lev-
el, Berwick football coach Ge-
orge Curry said of Gemski in
1997, whenbothcoaches reached
300 wins. Anyone who can do
that is doingsomethingtruly out-
standing.
WHATITMEANS: Theplay-
ers knew this win was coming
and their first goal for the season
was to make it happen.
We definitely want to win it
for her, junior forward Marissa
Surdy said Thursday after Crest-
wood beat Dallas. We really
want to get it for her Saturday. It
would mean a lot to us, too.
For Gemski, she can look back
at a program born as a club team
in 1973 and is now a national
powerhouse 600 wins later.
Its just a matter of a love for a
sport, Gemski said. And Ive
been fortunate enough to be sur-
rounded by so much support at
the beginning of it all. So many
embraced the program in the
early stages and now it is just on-
going.
Crestwood 1, Selinsgrove 0
Crestwood.................................................... 0 1 1
Selinsgrove .................................................. 0 0 0
Second half: 1. CRE, Ashleigh Thomas (Han-
nah Ackers), 12:27.
Shots: CRE 10, SEL 1; Saves: CRE 1 (Dallas
Kendra), SEL 9 (Madeline Troppe); Corners: CRE
7, SEL 6.
Crestwood 7, Mifflin Co. 0
Crestwood.................................................... 4 3 7
Mifflin Co....................................................... 0 0 0
First half: 1. CRE, Ashleigh Thomas (Morgan
Kile), 28:50; 2. CRE, Marissa Surdy, 18:41; 3. CRE,
Surdy (Maury Cronauer), 15:15; 4. CRE, Hannah
Ackers (Chandler Ackers), 9:19.
Second half: 5. CRE, Sarah Wodarczyk (H.
Ackers), 27:04; 6. CRE, Kile, 9:51; 7. CRE, KaraJar-
miolowski (Wodarczyk), 4:50.
Shots: CRE 15, MIF 9; Saves: CRE 7 (Dallas
Kendra), MIF 4 (Jordan Myers); Corners: CRE 6,
MIF 7.
W L T Coach School State First year
797 66 56 Nancy Williams Shore Regional N.J. 1970
763 73 34 Susan Butz-Stavin Emmaus Pa. 1976
665 69 46 Angela Tammaro Greenwich Academy Conn. 1963
648 96 34 Linda Kreiser Lower Dauphin Pa. 1977
630 85 75 Cheryl Poore Harwich, Monomoy Mass. 1969
600 120 23 Elvetta Gemski Crestwood Pa. 1976
578 82 42 Nancy Cole Centereach, Ward Melville N.Y. 1970
569 137 44 Karen Klassner Wyoming Seminary Pa. 1972
567 Maurene Polley Villa Maria Pa. 1968
556 Debby Watson Villa Duchesne, Barat Academy Mo. 1973-2005,
2009-
Compiled from topofthecircle.com and other sources
All-time winninest coaches
GEMSKI
Continued from Page 1C
STAN GEMSKI/SPECIAL TO TIMES LEADER
The Crestwood
Comets gather as
a team for a photo
with their coach,
Elvetta Gemski,
third from left,
outside Selins-
grove High School
to mark the
coachs 600th
career victory, a
7-0 win over Mif-
flin County on
Saturday.
PAGE 10C SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2012 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
S P O R T S
OUTDOORS
THE STANLEY COOP-
ER SR. CHAPTER
OF TROUT UNLIM-
ITED will hold its
monthly member
meeting on Tuesday,
Sept. 11 at 7:30 p.m.
in the VFW Anthra-
cite Post 283 in
Kingston. The meet-
ing is free and open
to the public. For
more information on
the chapter, visit
www.sctu.org.
THE WYOMING VAL-
LEY CHAPTER OF
DUCKS UNLIMITED
will hold its annual
banquet on Thursday,
Sept. 20 from 5:30
p.m. to 11:30 p.m. at
the Best Western
East Mountain Inn in
Wilkes-Barre. Dinner
is at 7 p.m. and an
auction will be held
at 8 p.m. Tickets are
$55 single, $75 per
couple, and incude a
one-year member-
ship to Ducks Unlim-
ited. For more in-
formation contact
Jack McDermott at
446-8847.
NESCOPECK STATE
PARK will hold a
work day on Sat-
urday, Sept. 29 from
9 a.m. to noon. The
event will be held in
recognition of Na-
tional Public Lands
Day, and work in-
cludes landscaping,
trail trimming, litter
pickup and work in
the parks nature
classroom. Volun-
teers are needed. For
more information or
to register, call 403-
2006.
The state Department
of Conservation and
Natural Resources
will host a bus tour
highlighting seven
sites throughout
Luzerne County that
showcase a variety of
management tech-
niques such as ripar-
ian buffers, rain
gardens, parking lot
bio-infiltration, grass
parking pads, green
roofs, pollinator
gardens, native
grassland meadows,
community gardens
and more.
The tour, which was
also organized by
Penn State Cooper-
ative Extension and
PA Environmental
Council, will be held
from 9 a.m.-5 p.m.,
on Sept. 20. Partici-
pants will begin at
the Kirby Park Nat-
ural Area in Wilkes-
Barre, where they
will board a charter
bus and travel to the
Plains Animal Hospi-
tal, Lands at Hillside
Farm, Butler Town-
ship Community
Garden/Center for
Landscape Stew-
ardship and Design,
Life Expression
Wellness Center, and
Nescopeck State
Park.
The cost for the pro-
gram is $30 which
includes the bus tour,
lunch, and a tour
booklet highlighting
our stops. Tour spon-
sorships are also
available. For more
information and to
register please con-
tact the Penn State
Cooperative Exten-
sion at 825-1701.
HICKORY RUN STATE
PARK NATURALIST
MEGAN TAYLOR will
lead a hike on the
Cove Ridge Trail at
Beltzville State Park
on Sept. 27 at 9 a.m.
Length of the trail,
which is difficult, is
approximately four
miles.
Meeting place is the
Wildcreek Trailhead
parking lot on Poho-
poco Drive, northeast
of the Beltzville
State Park Office.
This hike is the elev-
enth in the 2012
Hickory Run State
Park Hiking Series-
.For more informa-
tion, contact Megan
Taylor at hickoryru-
nenvedsp@pa.gov or
403-2006.
Outdoors Notes items will
not be accepted over the
telephone. Items may be
faxed to 831-7319, dropped
off at the Times Leader or
mailed to Times Leader, c/o
Sports, 15 N. Main St.,
Wilkes-Barre, PA18711-
0250.
OUT DOORS
NOT ES
The big picture looks great.
A recent survey conducted by the
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service found
that hunters nationwide increased by
nine percent, while the number of
anglers jumped 11 percent in 2011.
Thats great news, but on the state
level things are disappointing.
Pennsylvania hunting license sales
dropped from 945,892 in 2006 to
933,208 last year.
Thats alarming, considering the
numerous efforts that the Pennsylvania
Game Commission has made to boost
hunting opportunities in the state.
So what is happening on a national
scale that is allowing participation in
hunting to increase that isnt happen-
ing here?
Well, to be fair, hunting may not be
declining in the state as much it ap-
pears at least in recent years.
The last major decrease in hunting
license sales occurred in 2005 when
the number dropped by almost 50,000
from1.01 million in 2004 to 964,158 the
next year.
After that, the numbers fluctuate,
beginning with two more years of
smaller decrease, followed by a slight
gain of 2,400 in 2008 and a 21,000 hike
in 2009, a 20,000 drop in 2010 and a
nearly 4,000 upswing last year.
In 2005 something happened to force
so many people from the sport. Deer
numbers are a common culprit, and it
cant be ruled out. I still hear as many
complaints about low deer numbers as
anything else.
Did hunters reach a breaking point in
2005 with a lack of deer in areas, re-
sulting in many giving up the sport?
Perhaps.
But in the last six years, with hunt-
ing license sales experiencing three
declines and three increases, it leads
me to believe there is another factor
involved.
To me, it indicates that the hunters
are out there and many are simply
buying a license when its convenient.
When the notion strikes them.
Its a churn rate that the Pennsylva-
nia Fish and Boat Commission has
been experiencing for years and theyre
working on some innovative programs
to combat the problem.
The detailed state report will be
released later this month, but two
states Mississippi and Alabama, have
been identified as showing increases in
licensed hunters.
Why?
Simplicity.
For a Mississippi resident, there are
only a couple of decisions to be made.
First, they have to pick a Wildlife Man-
agement Area there are six in the
state, and buy a $17 permit. After that,
choose from a Sportsmans License,
which includes everything small
game, fall turkey, archery, deer and
even freshwater fishing for $34 or a
lesser package including deer and
fishing for $19.
Easy.
For those who are more specific
about their season, Mississippi offer
crossbow licenses, fall turkey permits
and small game/freshwater fishing
options.
Alabama is even easier.
Residents can pick the All Game
Hunting License for $25.05 and hunt
all legal game in the state. Thats after
the purchase of a $16.70 Wildlife Man-
agement Area License.
And, get this, if you are a resident of
Alabama and hunt on your own land,
you dont need to purchase a license.
Im not implying that the PGC
should copy the licensing programs
from these two states. In fact, Im hes-
itant to compare Pennsylvania to any
other state.
But when I take a look at Pennsylva-
nias (a state where sales have de-
creased compared to six years ago)
licensing guidelines and the licensing
options of two states where sales have
increased, there is a major difference.
Perhaps, when it comes to hunting
licenses in Pennsylania, perhaps less
will equal more.
TOM VENESKY
O U T D O O R S
Could simpler
licenses mean
more hunters?
Tom Venesky covers the outdoors for The
Times Leader. Reach him at tvenesky@time-
sleader.com.
Catching Dreams at Harveys Lake
charity bass tournament organized by
Lake Lehman senior Nicole OConnor to
benefit the Catch A Dream Foundation
Aug. 19results (30boats, 59anglers: $725
raised for charity: Nicole would like to
thank Duke Daley, John Niezgoda, Clar-
ence Hogan and the Harveys Lake Home-
coming Committee for their assistance):
1. Robert Polishan and Joe Zombek
2. Cody Cutter and Travis Doty
3. Jon Kelley and Jonathan Kelley
Lunker Award Shawn Kochorsla and
Robert Vales
Suskie Bassmasters River Series
(Every Wednesday, 6-9p.m. at the Nesbitt
ParkBoat Launch in Wilkes-Barre
(www.suskiebassmasters.co-
morwww.teamrosencrans.org):
Sept. 5 results:
1. Chuck Saypack - 16 inches, 2.43 lbs.
2. Andrew Schweitzer - 16 5/8 inches, 2.19
lbs.
3. DavidR. McGovern- 16inches, 2.18lbs.
4. Dan Byorick Jr. - 16 3/8 inches,2.04 lbs.
5. Anthony Glazenski - 15 7/8 inches, 1.96
lbs.
Small fishpool winner EdMrochko- .92
lbs.
- Big Bass Leader to date Dan Byorick Jr.
2.87 lbs.
Top 10 Season Standings
(total weight in pounds):
1. Chris Ostrowski - 18.73 lbs.
2. Joe Halesey - 17.35 lbs.
3. Jim Lacomis - 17.02 lbs.
4. Chuck Saypack - 15.93 lbs.
5. Frank Slymock - 15.67 lbs.
6. Andy Nealon - 15.50 lbs.
7. Larry Fetterhoof - 15.24 lbs.
8. Donnie Parsons III - 15.04 lbs.
9. Hunter Lacomis - 14.99 lbs.
10. John Centak - 14.53 lbs.
Harveys Lake Wednesday Night Bass
Tournament
(Every Wednesday, 6-9 p.m. at the state
boat launch; for more information, call
Duke Dalley at 991-0080):
Sept. 5 results (22 boats, 34 anglers;
Championship next Wednesday):
1. Bob Strunk - 3.75 lb. smallmouth
2. Mike Peranto - 3.55 lb. largemouth
3. Brad Rinehimer - 3.28 lb. smallmouth
3. Bob Patience - 3.28 lb. smallmouth
4. Gary Mikulski - 3.22 lb. smallmouth
5. Dave Harrison - 3.20 lb. smallmouth
Final Top 10 Season Standings
(total weight in pounds):
1. Gary Mikulski - 27.40 lbs. ( Angler of the
Year)
2. John Niezgoda - 26.41 lbs.
3. Dave Brill - 26.39 lbs.
4. Mike Adamshick - 24.91 lbs.
5. Ken Kosloski - 21.88 lbs.
6. Jim Quinn - 21.36 lbs.
7. Greg Mikulski Sr. - 21.10 lbs.
8. Greg Mikulski Jr. - 21.10 lbs.
9. Tom Bralczyk - 20.14 lbs.
10. Dave Harrison - 19.76 lbs.
PA BassCasters Open Buddy Bass
Tournament at Lake Carey
Sept. 2results (15teams, 45fishfor a total
weight of 67 lbs.):
1. Bob Broody and Cherif Zaher - 9.55 lbs.
2. JoeZombek andJonathenKelley- 9.50
lbs.
3. Dave Brill and Davey Jones - 9.40 lbs.
4. Joe Kosloski andKenKosloski - 7.55lbs.
5. Joe Lasecki and Ed Fore - 6.90 lbs.
Lunker award - Bob Broody and Chearif
Zaher 2.75 lb. largemouth
White Oaks Pond Bass Tournament
Aug. 26 results:
TedBrandroandPaul Wonicj 8bass, 9.72
lbs.
Mike and Tom Austin 8 bass, 8.50 lbs.
John Marhefra and John Masichis 7.81
lbs.
Lunker award Ted Brandro and Paul
Wonick 2.30 lbs.
Upcoming Tournaments
PA BassCasters
Open Buddy Tournament at Harveys Lake
on Oct. 28. Five-fish limit. Begins at safe
light and weigh-in is at 2 p.m.; registration
and boat check open at 4:45 a.m.
WEEKLY BASS TOURNAMENT STANDI NGS
STROUDSBURG -- Eric Uh-
lers routine for the last six
months came to an abrupt halt
on Friday.
Since March, Uhler, who
operates the Pocono Wildlife
Rehabilitation and Education
Center with his wife, Kathy, has
cared for two orphaned black
bear cubs -- cleaning their pen,
monitoring their health and
feeding them twice a day.
He knew the goal was to raise
the cubs so they would eventu-
ally be returned to the wild.
Still, when that day came on
Friday morning, Uhler admits it was a
bittersweet feeling.
Its difficult. You dont want to get
attached to these animals, but when they
come in here as cubs they want contact,
Uhler said. Once they are old enough to
move into the big pen, I distance myself
as much as possible. Our goal is to get
every animal as wild as we can and re-
lease it. These arent pets.
The Pennsylvania Game Commission
picked up the cubs and transported them
to State Game Lands 13 in Sullivan Coun-
ty a nearly 50,000 acre expanse that will
give the bears plenty of room to roam.
The cubs a male and a female, were
brought to the center in March and were
each just over a month old. The male was
found in Luzerne County near Mountain
Top after a homeowner called the Game
Commission to report it in a tree in his
yard. Wildlife Conservation Officer Cory
Bentzoni, who covers part of Monroe
County, said the mother never returned
for the cub for several days.
We dont know what happened to the
mother. It may have been hit on the
road, he said. The cub weighed under
five pounds, which is less than half the
weight it shouldve been.
Not long after Bentzoni
brought the cub to the Uhlers,
another one arrived from Ly-
coming County after its mother
was hit by a car.
PGC biologist Kevin Wenner
said the agencys prefers to
place orphaned cubs in a den
with another female. That
wasnt possible this time, he
said, because an early warm
spell brought many bears out of
their dens ahead of schedule.
This is actually a last resort
because we prefer to keep them
with another female bear, Wen-
ner said. But with these two
cubs, it was too late in the spring and we
just couldnt find any females in their
dens.
If the Uhers hadnt been equipped to
care for bears, the cubs wouldve perished,
Bentzoni said.
Kathy is one of the few rehabbers in
the state that we trust to handle a bear,
he said.
The center has successfully raised and
released 10 bears over the last several
years. Kathy Uher said its easier when
cubs are brought in as pairs because they
tend to grow up wild in the large pen that
Center returns orphaned bears to their natural habitat
TOM VENESKY/THE TIMES LEADER
Wildlife Conservation Officers Cory Bentzoni, left, and Jerry Kapral carry a sedated bear cub to a trailer, where it will be transported
to Sullivan County and released.
Back in the wild
By TOMVENESKY
tvenesky@timesleader.com
Wildlife Conservation Officer Rick Finne-
gan checks the ear tag of a bear cub be-
fore it is released in Sullivan County.
See BEARS, Page 11C
C M Y K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2012 PAGE 11C
is isolated from the rest of the
facility.
The center raises a variety
of orphaned or injured animals
foxes, raccoons, bald eagles
with the goal of releasing
them back into the wild.
Kathy Uhler, who has been a
wildlife rehabilitator for 31
years, said working with bears
is a bit different.
You have to keep your eyes
open and be careful, she said.
We want them to be wild so
theyre not tame. Bears are
smart animals and its a privi-
lege to work with them.
After they were brought to
the center in March, the Uh-
ers fed the cubs a formula
specific for black bears. They
went through six five-gallon
buckets, which each cost $225.
Once the cubs were big
enough to move into the
larger pen, Eric Uher fed them
trout from a nearby hatchery,
fresh produce and wild grapes.
When it came time to go
back to the wild, the male that
once weighed less than five
pounds was now a healthy 75
pounds. The female weighed
in at 81 pounds.
They are a very healthy
weight. Theyve been fed
well, Wenner said.
Before the cubs could be
moved, Wenner and Sullivan
County WCO Rick Finnegan
entered the pen and tranquil-
ized each one with a sedative.
They were then carried out-
side and placed in the shade
where Wenner gave them a
quick health inspection,
cleaned their ears and tattooed
an identification number inside
their upper lip.
Wenner didnt administer a
reversal drug in order to allow
the cubs to remain sedated for
part of the hour-long trip to
Sullivan County. SGL 13 pro-
vides everything necessary for
the cubs to survive, according
to PGC information and educa-
tion supervisor Bill Williams.
The vast forest contains a
multitude of black cherry trees
an essential food source
along with plenty of swamps,
streams and other bears. The
site is remote and far from
people, reducing the risk that
the cubs will get into trouble.
They will be released to-
gether and because theyre
immature and wont breed this
year, territorial issues with
other bears shouldnt be a
problem, Williams said.
BEARS
Continued from Page 10C
After the cubs left the Pocono
Wildlife Rehabilitation and Educa-
tion Center on Friday, Kathy and
Eric Uher prepared for another
farewell. That afternoon they
released a juvenile bald eagle that
was brought to the center six
weeks ago by the Pennsylvania
Game Commission. When it was
brought in, it had a bruised wing
and a severe lung infection, Kathy
Uher said. We took it to an animal
hospital in Bethlehem for x-rays,
wrapped the wing and put it on
antibiotics for the lung infection.
After a few weeks of physical
therapy in the flight pen to get the
wing back in shape, the eagle was
ready to be released. Kathy Uher
said it will be returned to where it
was found in Monroe County, and
the family unit which is still in
the area -- should accept it.
E A G L E R E L E A S E D
The Pocono Wildlife Rehabilitation
and Education Center is licensed
by the Pennsylvania Game Com-
mission, U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service and the U.S. Department
of Agriculture. The facility cares
for injured and orphaned wild
animals until they can be released.
Donations are accepted to cover
the cost of feed and supplies. For
more information, call 402-0223
or visit www.poconowildlife.com.
T O H E L P
Game Lands tour planned
As part of the Pennsylvania
Game Commissions efforts to
highlight its ongoing habitat
improvement initiatives, the
public is invited to take part in
upcoming tours of several State
Game Lands between Sept. 22
and Oct. 14. All tours are free.
State Game Land tours pro-
vide the opportunity for those
who enjoy nature to come out
and talk with our employees
the people who are directly
responsible for managing and
protecting these lands, said
Carl G. Roe, Game Commission
executive director. With au-
tumn nearly here, these tours
will provide a chance to see
some of the best scenery the
Commonwealth has to offer.
These tours afford hunters and
trappers and others who appre-
ciate wildlife the opportunity to
see how the Game Commission
is spending hunting and furtak-
er license fees to acquire and to
manage these lands for wild-
life.
In 1919, the Game Commis-
sion was granted authority to
purchase lands for the protec-
tion, propagation and manage-
ment of game and wildlife, and
to provide areas for public hunt-
ing and trapping. Since that
time, the Game Commission
has acquired more than 1.4
million acres in 65 of the states
67 counties (Philadelphia and
Delaware counties being the
exceptions).
With few exceptions, State
Game Lands were purchased
using revenues from hunting
and furtaker license sales; State
Game Lands timber, coal, oil,
gas and mineral operation reve-
nues; the states share of a feder-
al excise tax on sporting arms
and ammunition, known as the
Pittman-Robertson Program;
from Working Together for
Wildlife artwork and patch
sales; and from the Pennsylvania
Waterfowl Management stamp
and print sales.
Information on local tours is
as follows:
Luzerne/Wyoming Counties:
Sunday, Oct.7, State Game Land
57, which consists of nearly
44,600 acres. Registration to be
held from 7:30 a.m. until 12:30
p.m. at the headquarters build-
ing complex on SGL 57, Rick-
etts Station, Forkston Township,
Wyoming County.
Game Commission personnel
will be on hand to explain vari-
ous points of interest, including
wildlife habitat improvement
projects. Four-wheel-drive vehi-
cles with high clearance are
strongly recommended for this
14-mile, self-guided driving tour.
The tour will begin at the
SGL 57 maintenance building
and travels Southbrook, Shale
Pit, Beech Lake, and Mountain
Springs Roads back to the build-
ing. The tour will pass habitat
improvement projects complet-
ed by the SGL 57 Food and
Cover Corps crew, National
Wild Turkey Federation, Quality
Deer Management Association
and Ducks Unlimited. Repre-
sentatives from the Game Com-
mission and conservation orga-
nizations will be on hand to
explain the projects and answer
questions.
Directions: Take Route 487
north at the intersection of
Route 118 and proceed 7.5 miles
and turn onto a dirt road near
SGL sign on right. Travel on dirt
road one-tenth of a mile to a Y
intersection and proceed left
three-tenths of a mile to the
headquarters complex. Each
vehicle will be provided a map
and brief explanation of wildlife
management programs being
carried out on this magnificent
tract of public hunting land.
OUTDOORS NEWS
NEW YORK With a poten-
tially dangerous storm bearing
down on the U.S. Open, play was
suspended in the first set of de-
fendingchampionNovakDjokov-
ics semifinal Saturday, making
this the fifth consecutive year the
tournament will fail to finish on
time because of the weather.
Djokovic was trailing fourth-
seeded David Ferrer 5-2 after
about a half-hour of action when
tournament referee Brian Earley
came out on court and told the
players and the chair umpire that
they needed to stop.
As some spectators at Arthur
Ashe Stadiumbooed or whistled,
an announcement over the loud-
speakers said: At this time, we
ask you to please make your way
out of the stadium in an orderly
fashion.
That match, which will deter-
mine who faces Olympic cham-
pion Andy Murray in the final,
was scheduledtoresumetodayat
11 a.m. EDT. The mens final was
shifted from its originally sched-
uled Sunday slot to Monday
something that has happened at
every U.S. Open since 2008.
I would say were getting very
tired of having Monday finals,
tournament director DavidBrew-
er said.
The womens final between Se-
rena Williams and Victoria Aza-
renka that was supposed to be
playedSaturdaynight wasshifted
totodayat 4:30p.m. Itsthefourth
time in the last five years the
womens title match was resche-
duled.
Unlike at Wimbledon and the
Australian Open, the U.S. Open
doesnot havearoof toprotect any
courtusedfortournamentmatch-
es. Its also the only Grand Slam
tournament that schedules two
mens semifinals on Saturday,
which leaves less roomfor sched-
uling flexibility when there is dis-
ruptive weather.
Next year, for the first time, a
day off will be inserted between
the semifinals and final, either by
shifting the semis to Friday or by
changing the title match to Mon-
day.
Brewer said he did consider
moving the Ferrer-Djokovic
match to another court and play-
ing it at the same time as Murray-
Berdych, but we thought the on-
ly way to go was to keep them
back-to-backinAsheout of defer-
ence to ticket-holders, TV part-
ners and viewers around the
world.
There was a rain delay of more
than an hour Saturday morning,
delayingthe start of Murrays 5-7,
6-2, 6-1, 7-6 (7) victory over To-
mas Berdychof the CzechRepub-
lic in the opening semifinal. At
least they got to finish, even if it
meant dealing with 20 mph wind
that blewachangeover chair onto
thecourt ononepoint andyanked
Murrays hat off during another.
Im surprised it didnt happen
more, Murray said. It was so, so
windy.
Intheend, henavigatedhisway
into his fifth Grand Slamfinal.
Now hell try to win his first
Grand Slam title and first for
any British man in 76 years.
It was brutal, Murray said
about theconditions duringhis 3-
hour, 58-minute victory. Hard to
describe. You had to focus for ev-
ery single point. ... Some of the
hardest conditions Ive ever
played in, for sure, and I come
from Scotland, so thats saying
something.
This major tournament is the
first since the 2004 French Open
with neither Roger Federer nor
Rafael Nadal in the semifinals.
U . S . O P E N
Mens final moved because of storm
AP PHOTO
Andy Murray reacts after beating Tomas Berdych in a semifinal
match at the U.S. Open on Saturday in New York.
By HOWARD FENDRICH
AP Tennis Writer
PAGE 12C SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2012 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
W E A T H E R
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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 83/64
Average 75/55
Record High 92 in 1959
Record Low 41 in 1940
Yesterday 9
Month to date 66
Year to date 857
Last year to date 715
Normal year to date 546
*Index of fuel consumption, how far the days
mean temperature was above 65 degrees.
Precipitation
Yesterday 0.70
Month to date 1.91
Normal month to date 1.01
Year to date 24.23
Normal year to date 26.04
Susquehanna Stage Chg. Fld. Stg
Wilkes-Barre 0.70 0.32 22.0
Towanda 0.38 -0.05 21.0
Lehigh
Bethlehem 3.07 0.75 16.0
Delaware
Port Jervis 2.77 0.05 18.0
Todays high/
Tonights low
TODAYS SUMMARY
Highs: 69-75. Lows: 45-50. Expect partly
sunny and breezy conditions today.
Clearing and chilly tonight.
The Poconos
Highs: 77-79. Lows: 54-63. Partly cloudy
with isolated showers early today.
Clearing and mild tonight.
The Jersey Shore
Highs: 68-73. Lows: 42-52. Lake effect
showers will be possible today and
tonight; otherwise, partly sunny.
The Finger Lakes
Highs: 76-78. Lows: 49-60. Expect
variably cloudy skies today, with clearing
skies overnight.
Brandywine Valley
Highs: 77-78. Lows: 58-69. Slight chance
of showers early today; otherwise, partly
cloudy. Becoming clear tonight.
Delmarva/Ocean City
Anchorage 49/39/.00 57/38/pc 58/35/s
Atlanta 88/72/.01 80/61/s 85/63/s
Baltimore 88/66/.34 79/56/pc 77/54/s
Boston 82/70/.00 74/57/t 72/53/s
Buffalo 74/60/1.17 69/50/sh 68/49/s
Charlotte 90/68/.49 81/58/pc 81/57/s
Chicago 72/54/.00 70/58/s 72/60/s
Cleveland 69/60/1.78 71/58/sh 71/54/s
Dallas 85/66/.03 88/61/s 91/64/s
Denver 77/47/.01 86/58/s 89/60/pc
Detroit 73/57/.45 71/56/sh 71/57/s
Honolulu 82/74/.00 86/73/s 88/73/s
Houston 87/78/.00 91/64/s 91/65/s
Indianapolis 73/59/.24 74/53/s 75/53/s
Las Vegas 99/80/.00 95/77/t 88/75/t
Los Angeles 77/68/.00 75/67/pc 75/65/pc
Miami 90/77/1.58 92/78/pc 90/77/t
Milwaukee 69/52/.00 69/55/s 71/60/s
Minneapolis 78/50/.00 72/52/s 80/65/s
Myrtle Beach 88/73/.01 82/66/t 83/65/s
Nashville 80/66/1.53 79/56/s 82/59/s
New Orleans 94/76/.00 84/67/s 85/73/s
Norfolk 88/75/.00 80/64/pc 79/60/s
Oklahoma City 82/60/.00 89/56/s 91/62/s
Omaha 84/47/.00 77/52/s 86/64/s
Orlando 92/73/.00 89/75/t 89/73/t
Phoenix 92/78/.00 99/79/t 97/77/t
Pittsburgh 76/61/.45 70/48/pc 70/48/s
Portland, Ore. 78/59/.00 69/56/pc 68/49/sh
St. Louis 74/59/.00 75/54/s 78/58/s
Salt Lake City 85/55/.00 93/68/pc 87/62/t
San Antonio 91/77/.00 92/63/s 93/65/s
San Diego 78/71/.00 79/71/pc 78/69/pc
San Francisco 64/56/.00 68/55/pc 69/54/pc
Seattle 76/56/.00 65/56/c 64/50/sh
Tampa 89/78/.00 88/76/t 90/74/t
Tucson 90/75/.00 94/74/t 91/72/t
Washington, DC 90/66/.42 79/59/pc 79/57/s
City Yesterday Today Tomorrow City Yesterday Today Tomorrow
Amsterdam 75/57/.00 81/59/s 72/61/pc
Baghdad 106/70/.00 109/86/s 113/88/s
Beijing 81/63/.00 84/64/pc 84/65/pc
Berlin 70/57/.00 75/60/pc 82/64/pc
Buenos Aires 72/55/.00 60/45/pc 62/46/s
Dublin 70/55/.00 68/55/sh 60/47/sh
Frankfurt 82/52/.00 82/58/s 81/63/c
Hong Kong 91/81/.00 86/79/sh 87/79/t
Jerusalem 86/66/.00 81/65/s 81/66/pc
London 79/48/.00 80/60/pc 72/54/c
Mexico City 77/52/.00 77/57/t 75/60/t
Montreal 81/64/.00 66/52/pc 69/50/pc
Moscow 57/48/.00 53/41/sh 54/41/sh
Paris 82/48/.00 83/58/s 81/59/pc
Rio de Janeiro 95/72/.00 92/65/s 82/65/pc
Riyadh 104/79/.00 102/78/s 107/79/s
Rome 82/63/.00 84/65/s 83/64/s
San Juan 91/80/.01 89/78/pc 87/79/pc
Tokyo 88/77/.00 87/74/sh 88/74/t
Warsaw 66/54/.00 63/48/c 77/59/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
78/59
Reading
77/51
Scranton
Wilkes-Barre
71/49
72/50
Harrisburg
75/54
Atlantic City
79/60
New York City
77/61
Syracuse
69/49
Pottsville
74/52
Albany
72/49
Binghamton
Towanda
70/48
73/45
State College
71/50
Poughkeepsie
75/50
88/61
70/58
86/58
85/65
72/52
75/67
64/54
77/54
92/58
65/56
77/61
71/56
80/61
92/78
91/64
86/73
50/42
57/38
79/59
Sun and Moon
Sunrise Sunset
Today 6:38a 7:22p
Tomorrow 6:39a 7:20p
Moonrise Moonset
Today 12:03a 3:08p
Tomorrow 12:56a 3:51p
New First Full Last
Sept. 15 Sept. 22 Sept. 29 Oct. 8
We have a very
nice week with
fall-like tempera-
tures headed our
way. Today we
will start off with
some clouds and
a few light show-
ers, then we will
have afternoon
clearing skies.
Temperatures
will be much
cooler on
Monday with
sunny skies. High
pressure will
stay with us for
the entire week,
bringing plenty
of sunshine and
comfortable
temperatures.
Our next chance
for rain will be
Friday night into
Saturday.
-Michelle Rotella
NATIONAL FORECAST: Expect a few lingering showers and thunderstorms along the Eastern
Seaboard early this morning, with showers and a few thunderstorms affecting the central and
eastern Great Lakes. Thunderstorms will be likely over much of Florida, in addition to the Desert
Southwest. Look for scattered thunderstorms in south Texas and over parts of the northern
Intermountain West.
Recorded at Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Intl Airport
Temperatures
Cooling Degree Days*
Precipitation
TODAY
Partly cloudy,
morning rain
MONDAY
Sunny,
nice and
cool
79
70
WEDNESDAY
Sunny
78
48
THURSDAY
Partly
cloudy
80
50
FRIDAY
Partly
cloudy
80
50
SATURDAY
Partly
cloudy,
p.m. rain
75
55
TUESDAY
Sunny
75
44
72
53
C M Y K
BUSINESS S E C T I O N D
THE TIMES LEADER SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2012
timesleader.com
Last weeks give-
away of a free variety
pack of lice treatment
products from Lice-
Guard was well re-
ceived. More than a
dozen people emailed
in answers to the trivia question by 10
a.m. Sunday and Maylan Nicholson
was the winner. She was the first to say
that adult head lice have six legs when
she emailed her response at 5:56 a.m.
A counselor at the Dana Elementary
Center in Forty Fort, Nicholson said
she would provide her sample packs
to a needy family who is having fi-
nancial difficulties treating their chil-
dren who are infested. Believe it or
not, this happens more than you
think.
Thank you Maylan for all you do and
for using your winnings to help those
in need. And thanks to LiceGuard,
which has told me theyll be providing
extra samples in their package so May-
lan can help more families in need.
I am a kid at heart and some nights
theres nothing better than popping
some Totinos Pizza Rolls into the oven
and eating some yummy cheesy good-
ness while watching Nightline. Pills-
bury has a free rebate deal going on
that you should take advantage of. I
know I will. Buy specially marked
packages of Pillsbury cookies between
now and Dec. 15. Send in the rebate
form, along with your proof of pur-
chase by Dec. 31.Youll receive a cou-
pon for a free 15-count box of Totinos
Pizza Rolls (up to $2.29) by mail.
Learn more at http://www.pillsbury-
cookiespromotion.com/
If you are a Petco Pet Pals member,
be sure to print this coupon for a free 3
ounce Wellness Cubed, Sliced or
Minced Cat Food coupon, good
through Oct. 31. There are Petco stores
in Edwardsville and Wilkes-Barre
Township. Find the coupon here:
http://www.petco.com/pet-
co_Page_PC_wellnesscou-
pon0912.aspx
Theres a glossy coupon page in
todays Times Leader from Sonic.
Among the coupons are a buy-one,
get-one-free Sonic cheeseburger and a
$1.49 BLT and any medium flavored
iced tea offer.
There are coupons worth more than
$322 in todays Times Leader. Here are
some good ways to use some of them:
Take the $1 off Listerine coupon to
Target where select varieties of the
mouthwash are on sale for $2.99. Youll
pay just $1.99.
Weis has a mix-and-match Progres-
so deal this week where you can get a
combo of Progresso vegetable classics
soups, bread crumbs and recipe start-
ers for 99 cents each when you buy a
total of 10. There is a coupon for $1 off
four cans of soup and another for $1 off
two cans of recipe starters. So make
sure you grab at least four soups and
two recipe starters, then four more of
whatever you want off the list and
youll get 10 items for $7.90.
Redners Warehouse Markets has
Uncle Bens rice cups for $1. Use the $1
off four Uncle Bens products coupon
to get four for $3.
Pillsbury, Petco and Sonic among this weeks best deals
ANDREW M. SEDER
S T E A L S & D E A L S
Andrew M. Seder, a Times Leader staff
writer, may be reached at 570-829-7269. If
you know of any local steals or deals, send
them to aseder@timesleader.com. And follow
him on Twitter @TLAndrewSeder
rant space and began equipping a kitchen.
Then a partner in the restaurant fell ill, mak-
ing its planned late October opening uncer-
tain.
During a recent tour, Tassone showed off
the work done so far and described the spa-
cious apartments and amenities he believes
would turn the former factory in Wilkes-
Barreintoa highlyprofitableandhighlysat-
isfying venture. But he needs help, whether
its someone to help run the restaurant or a
partner with the $3 million to $4 million he
says it will take to realize the project. In the
meantime, hes turned down at least one pur-
chase offer, although he says he might be
tempted by a better one.
Street Realty bought the 80,000-square-foot
building and 3 acres of land for $100,000,
thinking it was an affordable place to move
his Pool Factory business. Sometime later,
Tassonebegantoseemorepossibilities inthe
114-year-old brick walls and maple flooring,
and in September 2007 he received zoning
approval to build offices, apartments, a res-
taurant and a fitness club.
But just as his plans were coming together,
the economy was falling apart. Since then
Tassone has used a series of refinancings to
keep his dream alive while turning his other
business interests around. Realizing he
couldnt afford to do it all at once, he refin-
ished some of the ground floor into restau-
O
thers might see it as
too big a challenge or
perhaps not evenimag-
ine what it could be,
but when George Tas-
sone looks at the for-
mer Empire Silk Mill
his vision is of a thriving mixed-use develop-
ment. Renters of luxury apartments on the
upper floors are arriving home from work
and getting a quick workout in the on-site fit-
ness club before heading downstairs for din-
ner at the Braziliansteakhouse. Clients come
and go fromthe day spa, or stop by to gaze at
the paintings in the first-floor art gallery.
Its been nine years since Tassones Empire
The former Empire Silk Mill is 114 years old, but structurally sound,
owner George Tassone says.
The dining room is nearly ready to welcome customers. Tables are
refurbished spools and carts used in the factory.
Owner dreams of transforming Empire Silk Mill building
PETE G. WILCOX PHOTOS/THE TIMES LEADER
When George Tassone looks at the former Empire Silk Mill on Empire Street in Wilkes-Barre he sees beautiful loft apartments on the upper
floors, a health spa and fitness club, a fine restaurant and other amenities that make up a complete mixed-use development.
Keeping a vision alive
A
dozen years ago, as owner and
editor of The Dallas Post, I
wrote plenty of editorials decry-
ing the gift of Keystone Opportunity
Zone tax waivers that helped lure Com-
monwealth Telephone Company and
more than 300 jobs to Wilkes-Barre, 10
miles away. The company wasnt add-
ing any jobs, but was removing hun-
dreds of potential customers for Back
Mountain restaurants and shops.
Now I work in Wilkes-Barre and the
move is going the other way, with the
announcement by Commonwealth
successor Frontier Communications
that its downtown staff now just over
100 will move back to its Dallas
Township facilities. Wilkes-Barre busi-
nesses will now have to adapt to fewer
lunches sold and birthday cards pur-
chased.
Wilkes-Barres loss may be the Back
Mountains gain this time, but the
beneficiaries of this expensive shell
game are few. Certainly Common-
wealth and then Frontier saved on rent
because landlord Humford Equities
didnt have to pay property taxes on
the Wilkes-Barre Center building for 10
years. Those savings hopefully will be
offset over the next decades by a high-
er assessment due to $11 million in
renovations made to accommodate the
company.
But the losers outnumber winners,
most notably taxpayers in the Wilkes-
Barre Area School District, which gave
up more than $1 million in property tax
revenue, and the city, which gave up
about half that.
What didnt happen in return, and
was not required under KOZ rules, was
job creation. To get the goodies, Com-
monwealth simply had to keep its
Dallas Township office open, hardly a
tough demand since its maintenance
center is based there. While new jobs
werent a necessary part of the deal,
David Black, deputy secretary of the
state office of Community and Eco-
nomic Development, said Common-
wealth was growing quickly and would
surely add jobs.
In fact, what Commonwealths exec-
utives were doing was positioning the
company for a sale in part by cutting
costs wherever possible in order to
improve profitability and the potential
sale price. Their efforts were rewarded
in 2006 when they struck a deal to sell
the company to Citizens Communi-
cations operator of the Frontier brand
for more than $1 billion. Instead of
adding jobs, Citizens announced 51
layoffs just a month after the deal
closed in March 2007, a continuing
trend that resulted in one-third as
many jobs going back to Dallas as
came from there.
Frontier said the decision to now
consolidate its employees in Dallas had
nothing to do with expiration of the
KOZ. While that may not be the only
reason, it had to be part of the equation
that is causing them to walk away from
a lease that extends to 2016.
State Rep. Phyllis Mundy, whose
district included Dallas Township in
2000, asks, What good did it do to
give them that tax break? Good ques-
tion, and another one is whether well
be smarter in the future. Mundys not
optimistic given the proposed billion-
dollar windfall Gov. Corbett is propos-
ing to give Shell if it builds a chemical
plant near the western Pennsylvania
border.
Theres no requirement to hire Penn-
sylvanians, she says, so (We) are going
to be subsidizing jobs for Ohio and
West Virginia residents.
At a time when every individual and
government is pinching pennies, the
state needs to be sure theres a return
on every dollar of taxpayer subsidy for
businesses and not give away the store
while betting on rewards that may
never materialize.
RON BARTIZEK
B U S I N E S S L O C A L
KOZ shuffle
cost plenty,
helped little
Ron Bartizek, Times Leader business editor,
may be reached at rbartizek@timeslead-
er.com or 570-970-7157.
PAGE 2D SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2012 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
B U S I N E S S
QUESTION: Im afraid that I might be
fired from my first professional job. Four
months ago, after finishing law school, I
was hired by a very large firm that has
no orientation or training program. My
boss keeps saying "just figure it out" and
gets angry if I ask other attorneys for
help.
Unfortunately, my boss and I also
seem to have a terrible communication
problem. Whenever I ask a question, she
gives me a long answer that I dont
understand, which is very frustrating.
She must be frustrated as well, because
she has started rolling her eyes and
sighing when I walk into her office.
I have considered quitting my job to
avoid being fired for poor performance.
However, I hate to give up so quickly. Is
there any way out of this dilemma?
ANSWER: Feeling like a failure in
your first job is a horrible experience,
but dont be too hard on yourself. This
law firm apparently has a sink-or-swim
culture, in which new hires are largely
left to fend for themselves. In such envi-
ronments, the underlying management
philosophy seems to be survival of the
fittest, so training, coaching and peer
support are virtually nonexistent.
Under normal circumstances, your
immediate manager would be expected
to help you conquer the learning curve,
but since discussions with her are un-
productive, you will need to find anoth-
er suitable mentor. Fortunately, most
large law firms have a human resources
manager or a partner responsible for
new associates, either of whom should
be able to help.
Without criticizing your boss or the
firm, explain the challenges you are
facing and ask how other beginners
have managed to learn the ropes. If it
seems appropriate, consider asking your
new ally to facilitate a performance-
planning discussion with your manager.
Having a "translator" available might
help to reduce the communication bar-
riers.
But if your adjustment continues to
be difficult, dont despair. This big,
impersonal organization may simply not
be a good fit for you. Many attorneys
who struggle in a large firm find that
they thrive in a smaller, more support-
ive practice.
Q: My boss frequently expects me to
put in very long hours. How many hours
per day can he force me to work?
A: The answer depends on the type of
position you hold. If you are in a non-
exempt job covered by federal wage
laws, you generally cant be asked to
work more than eight hours a day with-
out overtime pay. If you have a union
contract, then your hours and compen-
sation will be defined by that agree-
ment.
On the other hand, if you hold a typ-
ical salaried position, which is exempt
from federal guidelines, there is no legal
limit on your work hours. Salaried em-
ployees are normally expected to pro-
duce desired results no matter how long
it takes.
Of course, as a person with free will,
you cant technically be "forced" to work
any extra time. But if you refuse, you
run the risk that your boss wont be
"forced" to keep you on the payroll.
OFFICE COACH
Sink-or-swim job has new graduate floundering
By MARIE G. McINTYRE
McClatchy Newspapers
Marie G. McIntyre is a workplace coach and
the author of "Secrets to Winning at Office
Politics." Send in questions and get free coach-
ing tips at http://www.yourofficecoach.com.
WOMEN IN BUSINESS LUN-
CHEON: Tuesday, 11:30 a.m.-1
p.m., Stegmaier Mansion, 304 S.
Franklin St., Wilkes-Barre. $25
for Greater Wilkes-Barre Cham-
ber members. Call 570-823-2101
for reservations and informa-
tion.
RETIREMENT PLANNING WORK-
SHOP: Tuesday, and Sept. 18, 6-9
p.m., Penn State Wilkes-Barre,
Lehman Township. To help deter-
mine the amount of money
needed to retire. $49, includes a
guest. For more information or
to register call 675-9253.
10-HOUR OSHA TRAINING: Tues-
day and Wednesday, 9 a.m.-2:30
p.m., Greater Hazleton Chamber
of Commerce, 20 W. Broad St.,
Hazleton. For general industry
workers, supervisors, safety
managers or other individuals
responsible for safety in their
organizations. $180 for Greater
chamber members; non-mem-
bers $230, includes lunch and
materials. 30-hour program also
available. Reservations required;
call 455-1509 or email jfer-
ry@hazletonchamber.org.
YOUNG PROFESSIONALS MIX-
ER: Thursday, 6-9 p.m., Metro
Bar & Grill, Twin Stacks Center,
Memorial Highway, Dallas. $15 at
the door includes admission and
hors doeuvres; cash bar.
PROFESSIONAL ETHICS SEMI-
NAR: Friday, 8:30-10:30 a.m.,
Greater Hazleton Chamber of
Commerce, 20 W. Broad St.,
Hazleton. Ethical theories and
practices to use every day. $10
for chamber members; non-
members $15, includes materials
and refreshments. Reservations
required; call 455-1509 or email
jferry@hazletonchamber.org.
CAREER FAIR: Sept. 18, 10 a.m.-5
p.m., 109th Field Artillery Armo-
ry, 280 Market St., Kingston.
More than 30 employers will
participate, as well as Career-
Link. Job seekers should bring
resumes and be prepared to
interview.
INNOVATION AND INSIGHT:
BECOMING MORE CREATIVE:
Sept. 19, 9 a.m.-noon, Wyoming
Valley Art League, 130 S. Franklin
St., Wilkes-Barre. First in a four-
part professional development
series sponsored by Leadership
Wilkes-Barre. $40 per person or
$140 for the series. For informa-
tion or to register, call 570-823-
2101, ext. 135 or visit www.lead-
ershipwilkes-barre.org.
APPEALS AND HEARINGS SEM-
INAR: Sept. 19, 8-9:30 a.m.,
Meas restaurant, 8 W. Broad St.,
Hazleton. Learn the best ap-
proach to unemployment com-
pensation claims and appeals.
Sponsored by PA CareerLink and
the Greater Hazleton Chamber
of Commerce. Reservations are
required, call Elaine at -459-
3895 or email estalfa@pa.gov.
LABOR AND EMPLOYMENT LAW
SUMMIT: Sept. 19, 8:30 a.m.-XX
p.m., Top of the 80s, Sugarloaf
Twp. Covering a wide variety of
relevant and timely topics in the
area of Labor and Employment
Law that have been chosen by
Northeast Pennsylvania Manu-
facturers and Employers Associ-
ation members. General and
breakout sessions; completion of
all events will earn 6 HRCI Gen-
eral Recertification Credits as
well as 5 CLE credits. be $185 for
association members and $370
for non-members, includes lunch
and a complimentary copy of Dr.
Robert Nelsons book, 1501 Ways
to Reward Employees. For more
information or reservations, call
at 570-622-0992, or email crob-
bins@maea.biz.
BUSINESS AGENDA
Send announcements of upcoming
events by email to tlbusiness@time-
sleader.com; by mail to Business
Agenda, Times Leader, 15 N. Main St.,
Wilkes-Barre, PA1871 1 or by fax to
829-5537. Include a contact phone
number and email address. The
submission deadline is Wednesday
for publication on Sunday.
Jose L. Cazares, has been desig-
nated the Employee of the
Month for
August at
Golden Tech-
nologies.
Cazares has
been employ-
ed as a boxer
since June,
2011. He was
selected for
the honor due
to his excellent attendance
record, cooperative attitude, and
attention to quality.
CORPORATE LADDER
Cazares
Submit announcements of business
honors and awards to Business
Awards by email to tlbusiness@time-
sleader.com; by mail to 15 N. Main St.,
Wilkes-Barre, PA18711-0250; or by fax
to (570) 829-5537. Photos in jpg
format may be attached to email.
HONESDALE NATIONAL BANK
Raymond Ceccotti,
senior vice presi-
dent, has been
appointed to the
Pennsylvania
Bankers Associ-
ation Public Rela-
tions & Communi-
cations Advisory
Committee.
Ceccotti will serve a one-year term
that started on July 1.
PNC BANK
Nathan A. Chappell
has been pro-
moted to assist-
ant vice presi-
dent. Chappell is
a graduate of
Susquehanna
University where
he earned a
bachelors de-
gree in business administration
and finance. Chappell also is a
graduate of the Sigmund Weis
School of Business London pro-
gram.
WILKES UNIVERSITY
Dawn Leas, Shaver-
town, has been
hired in the
low-residency
graduate cre-
ative writing
program as asso-
ciate director.
Leas earned the
Master of Arts
and Master Fine Arts degrees in
creative writing from Wilkes
University and a bachelors de-
gree in communications with a
minor in English, magna cum
laude, from the University of
Scranton.
WYOMING SEMINARY COLLEGE
PREPARATORY SCHOOL
The board of trust-
ees has elected
four new mem-
bers.
John Dowd, foun-
der and presi-
dent of Sun-
dance Vacations.
Kathi S. Flack, a
Susquehanna
University grad-
uate.
Jeffrey Metz,
president and
chief executive
officer of Metz
Culinary Man-
agement in Dal-
las.
Robert Tamburro,
trustee, general
partner of TFP
Limited, a
Wilkes-Barre
based real estate
development
and manage-
ment firm.
PNC BANK,
NORTHEAST
Michael Moses has
been hired as a
bank officer and
an associate
investment ad-
visor in the wealth
management group in Wilkes-Barre.
He is a graduate of Penn State
University where he earned his
bachelors degree in business ad-
ministration.
CORPORATE LADDER
The Times Leader publishes announce-
ments of business promotions, hirings
and other noteworthy events on Sun-
days.
Photographs may be included as space
allows.
Submit an announcement by e-mail to
tlbusiness@timesleader.com, by mail to
15 N. Main St., Wilkes-Barre, PA18711; or
by fax to 829-5537.
Photos in jpeg format may be attached
to e-mails.
Chappell
Tamburro
Leas
Ceccotti
Dowd
Flack
Metz
C
HICAGO As Lake Forest, Ill., economist Mike Moebs planned for his marriage last
year, his lawyer pressed him for a complete list of assets.
Initially, the frequent-flier miles detailed in his online travel records didnt even cross
Moebs minduntil his family lawattorney recognizedthe value of anasset Moebs large-
ly manages online.
We gave a lot of thought to the
things that I own, said the chief ex-
ecutive of Moebs Services. Ive
flown, just on American Airlines,
more than 3 million miles, and I have
a half a million miles I havent used.
To prepare for the worst, Moebs al-
so has created an inventory of user
names, passwords and answers to se-
curity questions for more than 50 ac-
counts, including online bank and in-
vestment records, and billing setups
for credit cards and phone bills. His
family and close business colleagues
canaccess themif he dies premature-
ly or is incapacitated.
Indeed, family heirlooms and re-
cords arent what they used to be.
Nowadays everything from photos
and music to financial statements
and tax documents are increasingly
likely to be created, stored or ac-
cessedvia computers, mobile phones
or other devices.
Im revamping my personal and
business trusts to include all digital
assets and what I want done with
them, Moebs said.
He appears to be far ahead of the
curve. Estate planners, lawyers and
surveys indicate that fewpeople have
begun revising their family and es-
tate plans to keep pace with the new
reality of digital assets and online ac-
counts.
In a recent survey by BMO Retire-
ment Institute, more than half of sur-
vey respondents age 45 and older
with digital property believe its very
or somewhat important to put plans
in place for their personal and finan-
cial online assets, yet 57 percent of
them havent made such provisions.
When asked why theyve failed to
do so, the two most common an-
swers, overwhelmingly, were didnt
think of it and I dont think its nec-
essary.
Chicago lawyer Richard Magnone
suggests a reason: People dont
think of digital assets in the same
way as tangible assets.
Yet in an increasingly paperless
world, not accounting for passwords
and other online records could leave
already grieving loved ones or busi-
ness associates unable to access ac-
counts promptly, keep finances cur-
rent or continue to run a business.
And unless such provisions are
made, some email providers might
deny family members access to the
deceaseds accounts, oftena doorway
to other online assets.
Take Yahoos terms of service,
found under a link on its home page.
At nearly the end of its eight pages,
theres a reference to no right of sur-
vivorship and non-transferability.
Digital asset case law is scant, but
inone of the earliest court fights over
such property, a Michigan court or-
dered Yahoo to turn over the con-
tents of Justin Ellsworths account in
2005 after the Marine was killed in
actionandhis familysought toget ac-
cess to his emails.
Several states have passed laws ad-
dressing various digital concerns,
but the legislationvaries greatly. As a
result, the Uniform Law Commis-
sion, alsoknownas theNational Con-
ference of Commissioners on Uni-
form State Laws, has a committee
that is drafting recommendations for
state legislatures to enact concern-
ing the rights of a fiduciary to man-
age and distribute digital assets,
copy or delete digital assets and ac-
cess digital assets.
A fiduciary who is administering
an estate or the affairs of an incapac-
itated individual needs to be able to
find, access, value, protect and trans-
fer the individuals online accounts
and digital property, the commission
said. Because of the need to protect
against fraud and identity theft, in re-
cent years it has become increasingly
difficult for fiduciaries to get access
to digital information promptly and
efficiently, the commission said.
In2007, Indiana declaredthat elec-
tronic documents are to be consid-
ered estate property. The law re-
quires a person who electronically
stores documents or information of
another person who is deceased to
give the personal representative of
that estate access to or copies of the
stored documents or information.
Its time we realized so many im-
portant documents in a persons life
are now stored electronically, one
Indiana state senator said at the
time. The old-fashioned paper trail
has given way to computer files, the
rights of which must be protected
just the same as you would seek to
protect personal property.
Digital assets often forgotten during estate planning
MCT PHOTO
Lake Forest, Illinois economist Mike Moebs, pictured with his dog Missy, revamped his personal and business
trusts to include all his digital assets, including the Janis Joplin album Pearl.
LETS GET DIGITAL
By BECKY YERAK MCT Wire Services
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2012 PAGE 3D
B U S I N E S S
MarketPulse
RINGING UP SALES
Customers are willing to pay for better cameras and faster
performance, making the best-selling smartphones the ones with
the highest price tags. The industry is on pace to sell 674 million
smartphones this year, according to Credit Suisse analysts. Of
them, 28 percent will
cost more than $500.
Last year, phones that
price accounted for 25
percent of total sales.
That growing popular-
ity will likely most
benefit Apple and
Samsung, which
together account for 87
percent of the high-end
market through the
iPhone and Galaxy
lines of phones, Credit
Suisse says.
HOUSING NOT ENOUGH
The housing markets collapse led the economy into a reces-
sion, so its reasonable to get excited about the last few
months of improved housing data. But dont get carried away.
The housing industry accounts for less than 2 percent of the
profits for the Standard & Poors 500 index, according to
Deutsche Bank. That
means that a housing
recovery will a mod-
est improvement to
overall corporate
profits. And over the
long term, the stock
market tends to follow
the trend of corporate
earnings. For earn-
ings to keep rising,
investors still need
the global economy
to strengthen.
AP
FALLING IN FALL
Its cutting season for financial analysts. Going back to 2000, October
and September have been the two months for analysts to cut their
earnings estimates. Such moves can hurt stocks, because their prices
depend in part on expectations for their future profits.
The timing may be because investors and analysts are returning
from vacation and at-
tend industry confer-
ences, Barclays strate-
gist Barry Knapp says.
This month alone, 180
conferences are sched-
uled to occur. Analysts
across Wall Street ex-
pect earnings per share
to rise 12 percent for
S&P 500 companies in
2013. Knapp says its
more likely to be 4 per-
cent. Source: Credit Suisse Source: FactSet
Revised expectations
Analysts have sharply reduced their earnings
forecasts.
0
10
20
30%
10 11 12
est.
Smartphones that cost over $500
percentage of total sales
0
5
10
15%
2013 (full year) 2012 3Q
Est. growth as of
March 31
Est. growth as of
Sept. 4
Title: Chief investment strategist at
Advisors Asset Management
What he suggests: Stick with
stocks despite worries about the
fiscal cliff
Answers edited for content and
clarity.
Matthew Lloyd
One of the big worries for investors
is the fiscal cliff looming at the end
of the year. Thats what economists
are calling a slate of scheduled
government spending cuts and
tax-rate hikes to take effect if
Congress doesnt reach a budget
agreement. But Matthew Lloyd
says stock prices can continue to
rise despite the concerns.
How worried should we be?
When we look at the fiscal cliff, it is
very heightened because of the
political tension: Which party can
cause their constituents to be more
fearful, and therefore head to the
polls? But by the end of this
conversation, by the end of this
election, I think you will see a very
muted effect. Well see the
discussion go up to the deadline,
and then there will be some kind of
patch, some kind of extension. I
think there will be a very limited
impact on the U.S. economy when
all is said and done. We always see
the saber rattling being far worse
than what ultimately happens.
But if Congress just delays the
tax increases and spending cuts,
that doesnt fix the problem. It
just moves it into the future.
Yes, we are kicking the can down
the road. But if you look at the
improvement thats going on in
housing and the potential for other
stimulus packages floating out
there, that has the potential of
having significant impact. A lot can
happen in that timeframe.
So, investors dont need to
make big changes in anticipa-
tion of the fiscal cliff?
Is your perspective that the glass is
half-full or half-empty? Some
people call it purgatory: The
economy is not slow enough for the
Fed to act but not fast enough
where people are feeling better and
spending more.
I tend to take the half-full
perspective at this point, probably
because a lot of people are taking
the glass half-empty approach. We
know that the Fed can step in with
some kind of support program. So if
a recession does happen, youve
got a large backstop with the Fed.
And there is a lot of liquidity out
there: Households and corporations
are holding a lot of cash. So, for us,
the best place to be is risky assets in
the next few years. Were bullish on
stocks, were bullish on real estate.
But isnt it a worry that the
market seems to be addicted to
Fed stimulus?
Look at the fundamentals. I think
this last quarter is instrumental in
this, when the markets climbed a
wall of worry. With the worries
about Europe, China, tax rates, the
fiscal cliff, people say that theres
no way the equity markets should
be higher. But 75 percent of
companies beat earnings
estimates for the second quarter.
Now, if you look at stock prices
relative to earnings per share,
theyre at a 20 percent discount to
what they were over the last
decade. Relative to their cash flow,
its a 40 percent discount. Those are
reasons why the market doesnt
have too much downside to it,
regardless of what happens to the
Fed.
Peering over
the cliff
InsiderQ&A
AP
Internet IPO pops &flops
Facebook isnt the only Internet-related IPO to flop so
far. A parade of buzzworthy companies have debuted
in the last two years, and most are trading below their
initial public offering price. Investors are wary that
earnings growth wont measure up to the hype.
Facebook investors are concerned about its ability
to keep increasing revenue and make money from its
growing mobile audience. And that same audience is
playing fewer Zynga games on Facebook. Groupon
has had the steepest decline of 80 percent as financial
analysts continue to question the soundness of its daily
deals business model.
Some successes exist. Analysts at Jefferies envision
that the professional networking website, LinkedIn
(LNKD), will see its revenue rise from a projected $522
million this year to $1.8 billion in 2014.
Stan Choe; J.Paschke AP Source: FactSet
May 19, 2011 $45 $95.25 $119.10
June 15, 2011 16 17.42 12.57
Nov. 4, 2011 20 26.11 4.22
Nov. 17, 2011 13 16.26 9.50
Dec. 16, 2011 10 9.50 2.94
March 2, 2012 15 24.58 25.55
May 18, 2012 38 38.23 18.96
online professonal network
Internet radio
online deals
online games
online reviews
social network
consumer reviews
-80
-27
-71
70
-50
165%
-21
FIRST DAY
OF TRADING
IPO
PRICE
FIRST-DAY
CLOSE
THURSDAYS
CLOSE
PERCENT CHANGE
SINCE IPO
Air Products APD 72.26 6 92.79 83.61 1.03 1.2 t s -1.9 +4.27 3 1.0 15 3.1
Amer Water Works AWK 28.10 9 39.38 37.28 0.41 1.1 t s 17.0+29.30 226.4a 19 2.7
Amerigas Part LP APU 37.00 6 46.47 41.96 -0.86 -2.0 s s -8.6 +3.74 3 9.6 ... 7.6
Aqua America Inc WTR 20.16 8 26.93 25.23 0.23 0.9 t s 14.4+18.76 2 3.4 23 2.8
Arch Dan Mid ADM 23.69 4 33.98 27.29 0.54 2.0 s t -4.6 +.25 3 -1.5 15 2.6
AutoZone Inc AZO 304.95 7399.10 369.72 8.08 2.2 s t 13.8+16.75 2 27.1 17 ...
Bank of America BAC 4.92 8 10.10 8.80 0.82 10.3 s s 58.3+18.18 2-24.8 9 0.5
Bk of NY Mellon BK 17.10 8 24.72 22.92 0.38 1.7 s s 15.1+13.13 3 -8.2 12 2.3
Bon Ton Store BONT 2.23 0 12.98 12.76 2.27 21.6 s s 278.6+104.42 1-12.8 ... 1.6
CVS Caremark Corp CVS 32.28 9 48.69 46.06 0.51 1.1 s s 12.9+26.04 2 5.2 16 1.4
Cigna Corp CI 38.79 7 49.89 46.13 0.36 0.8 s s 9.8 -.30 4 -2.2 10 0.1
CocaCola Co KO 31.67 7 41.25 37.90 0.50 1.3 t s 8.3 +9.83 3 9.1 20 2.7
Comcast Corp A CMCSA 19.72 0 35.16 34.46 0.93 2.8 t s 45.3+63.67 1 7.7 20 1.9
Community Bk Sys CBU 21.67 0 29.47 28.99 0.95 3.4 s s 4.3+22.27 2 11.4 14 3.7
Community Hlth Sys CYH 14.61 0 28.79 27.69 0.65 2.4 s s 58.7+45.05 1 -4.1 9 ...
Energy Transfer Eqty ETE 30.78 0 45.08 45.00 1.05 2.4 s s 10.9+25.00 2 8.6 28 5.6
Entercom Comm ETM 4.61 5 8.64 6.45 0.12 1.9 s s 4.9+19.44 2-17.7 9 ...
Fairchild Semicond FCS 10.25 9 15.90 15.00 0.48 3.3 t s 24.6+20.39 2 -4.1 25 ...
Frontier Comm FTR 3.06 4 7.58 4.55 0.03 0.7 t s -11.727.62 4 -8.8 28 8.8
Genpact Ltd G 11.76 9 17.16 16.54 0.53 3.3 s s 25.8+18.94 2 5.0 21 1.1
Harte Hanks Inc HHS 6.16 3 10.24 7.22 0.26 3.7 s t -20.6 -3.48 4-18.2 ... 4.7
Heinz HNZ 48.54 8 58.31 55.76 0.04 0.1 s s 3.2 +9.39 3 7.5 19 3.7
Hershey Company HSY 55.32 0 73.19 72.32 0.50 0.7 s s 17.1+27.93 2 11.8 25 2.1
Kraft Foods KFT 31.88 8 42.44 39.99 -1.52 -3.7 t s 7.0+18.32 2 6.7 20 2.9
Lowes Cos LOW 18.28 8 32.29 28.32 -0.16 -0.6 s s 11.6+47.00 1 0.7 19 2.3
M&T Bank MTB 66.40 0 90.50 90.74 3.84 4.4 s s 18.9+23.75 2 0.3 16 3.1
McDonalds Corp MCD 83.65 4102.22 91.02 1.53 1.7 s s -9.3 +5.07 3 15.9 17 3.1
NBT Bncp NBTB 17.05 7 24.10 21.85 0.82 3.9 s s -1.3+16.99 2 4.1 13 3.7
Nexstar Bdcstg Grp NXST 5.53 0 9.60 9.50 0.84 9.7 s s 21.2+58.86 1 -0.3 34 ...
PNC Financial PNC 44.20 9 67.89 63.80 1.64 2.6 s s 10.6+33.05 1 0.7 13 2.5
PPL Corp PPL 26.68 8 30.27 29.24 0.27 0.9 t s -0.6 +8.34 3 -5.5 10 4.9
Penna REIT PEI 6.50 0 16.50 16.42 0.70 4.5 s s 57.3+73.52 1-10.3 ... 3.9
PepsiCo PEP 58.50 9 73.66 72.10 0.21 0.3 r s 8.7+20.42 2 3.7 19 3.0
Philip Morris Intl PM 60.45 9 93.60 88.83 -0.47 -0.5 t s 13.2+33.28 128.1a 18 3.5
Procter & Gamble PG 59.07 0 68.25 68.52 1.33 2.0 s s 2.7+12.71 3 3.5 18 3.3
Prudential Fncl PRU 42.45 7 65.17 57.19 2.68 4.9 s s 14.1+20.34 2 -6.4 7 2.5
SLM Corp SLM 10.91 9 16.89 15.94 0.32 2.0 t s 19.0+22.77 2-19.2 9 3.1
SLM Corp flt pfB SLMBP 39.00 9 50.35 49.05 2.77 6.0 s s 25.8 ... 0.0 ... 4.6
TJX Cos TJX 25.47 0 46.67 45.85 0.06 0.1 s s 42.1+74.60 1 26.3 20 1.0
UGI Corp UGI 24.07 0 31.51 31.21 0.73 2.4 s s 6.2 +9.02 3 7.2 18 3.5
Verizon Comm VZ 34.65 8 46.41 43.72 0.78 1.8 t s 9.0+28.35 2 6.5 44 4.7
WalMart Strs WMT 49.94 0 75.24 73.82 1.22 1.7 s s 23.5+43.80 1 13.5 16 2.2
Weis Mkts WMK 36.52 7 45.96 42.23 0.08 0.2 t t 5.7+13.66 3 3.9 14 2.8
52-WK RANGE FRIDAY $CHG%CHG %CHG%RTN RANK %RTN
COMPANY TICKER LOW HIGH CLOSE 1WK 1WK 1MO 1QTR YTD 1YR 1YR 5YRS* PE YLD
Notes on data: Total returns, shown for periods 1-year or greater, include dividend income and change in market price. Three-year and five-year returns
annualized. Ellipses indicate data not available. Price-earnings ratio unavailable for closed-end funds and companies with net losses over prior four quar-
ters. Rank classifies a stocks performance relative to all U.S.-listed shares, from top 20 percent (far-left box) to bottom 20 percent (far-right box).
LocalStocks
Source: FactSet *1= buy; 2 = hold; 3 = sell ^ based on past 12 months results Data through Sept. 5
Finally, the housing market appears to be recovering.
The improvements are modest, to be sure, but they are at least heading
in the right direction following the industrys bust in 2006: Home prices na-
tionwide rose 1.2 percent in the second quarter from a year earlier, accord-
ing to the S&P/Case-Shiller home price index. Sales of new homes
strengthened to match a two-year high in the most recent report for July.
The obvious beneficiaries of a housing recovery, such as homebuilders
and home improvement retailers, have already seen their stocks surge.
Homebuilder Lennar, for example, jumped 65 percent in the first eight
months of 2012. This screen shows other kinds of stocks that JPMorgan
strategist Thomas Lee says could also be winners from a housing recovery.
Terex and Caterpillar would sell more of their construction equipment.
Owens Corning makes fiberglass insulation, while Georgia Gulf sells every-
thing from patio doors to pipe fittings. Watts Water Technologies makes
products used in plumbing and heating systems, and it gets 50 percent of its
revenue from the residential market.
Georgia Gulf (GGC) $39.47 $12 $40 112.3% 1.4 17
Terex (TEX) 20.85 9 27 55.1 1.5 18
Watts Water Technologies (WTS) 37.35 24 42 44.4 1.8 19
Owens Corning (OC) 32.92 19 38 26.6 1.2 25
Caterpillar (CAT) 82.75 68 117 -1.2 1.5 9
LOW HIGH
1-YR
STOCK
CHANGE
AVG.
BROKER
RATING*
P/E
RATIO^ CLOSE COMPANY
Profiting from
a housing bounce
52-WEEK
Stock
Screener
American Funds BalA m ABALX 20.28 +.32 +2.0 +16.4/A +3.7/A
American Funds BondA m ABNDX 12.92 -.02 +.5 +5.8/D +4.0/E
American Funds CapIncBuA m CAIBX 53.17 +.52 +.9 +12.9/A +1.7/C
American Funds CpWldGrIA m CWGIX 36.02 +.82 +2.5 +14.1/A -.1/B
American Funds EurPacGrA m AEPGX 39.27 +.97 +2.2 +6.3/C -1.0/A
American Funds FnInvA m ANCFX 40.23 +.94 +2.8 +18.1/D +1.5/C
American Funds GrthAmA m AGTHX 33.66 +.86 +3.4 +17.6/C +1.0/D
American Funds IncAmerA m AMECX 18.06 +.23 +1.5 +15.1/B +3.0/B
American Funds InvCoAmA m AIVSX 30.78 +.54 +2.1 +20.3/C +.6/D
American Funds NewPerspA m ANWPX 30.37 +.74 +2.9 +14.6/A +2.0/A
American Funds WAMutInvA m AWSHX 31.47 +.52 +1.7 +20.2/C +1.4/B
BlackRock GlobAlcA m MDLOX 19.47 +.29 +1.9 +5.2/D +3.4/B
BlackRock GlobAlcI MALOX 19.57 +.30 +2.0 +5.5/C +3.7/B
Dodge & Cox Income DODIX 13.86 +.6 +6.8/B +7.0/B
Dodge & Cox IntlStk DODFX 32.57 +1.20 +3.8 +7.3/B -2.8/B
Dodge & Cox Stock DODGX 119.44 +3.59 +3.3 +23.2/A -1.1/D
Fidelity Contra FCNTX 79.20 +1.92 +3.6 +18.9/C +4.0/B
Fidelity GrowCo FDGRX 99.07 +2.90 +5.0 +22.1/A +6.1/A
Fidelity LowPriStk x FLPSX 39.26 -.97 +4.2 +18.0/C +4.5/A
Fidelity Spartan 500IdxAdvtg FUSVX 51.15 +1.14 +2.9 +22.6/A +2.0/B
FrankTemp-Franklin Income A m FKINX 2.22 +.02 +1.4 +15.2/A +4.1/C
FrankTemp-Franklin Income C m FCISX 2.24 +.02 +1.4 +14.5/A +3.5/D
FrankTemp-Mutual Euro Z x MEURX 20.89 +.31 +2.1 +16.1/A -.5/A
FrankTemp-Templeton GlBond A mTPINX 13.24 +.12 +.3 +2.7/C +10.0/A
FrankTemp-Templeton GlBondAdv TGBAX 13.20 +.12 +.3 +2.9/C +10.3/A
Harbor IntlInstl d HAINX 58.93 +1.75 +2.0 +9.7/A -.3/A
Oakmark EqIncI OAKBX 29.11 +.50 +2.0 +11.0/D +4.5/A
PIMCO AllAssetI PAAIX 12.62 +.15 +1.9 +9.4/B +7.1/A
PIMCO LowDrIs PTLDX 10.61 +.01 +.7 +4.6/A +5.4/A
PIMCO TotRetA m PTTAX 11.50 +.8 +8.1/A +8.4/A
PIMCO TotRetAdm b PTRAX 11.50 +.8 +8.2/A +8.6/A
PIMCO TotRetIs PTTRX 11.50 +.8 +8.5/A +8.9/A
PIMCO TotRetrnD b PTTDX 11.50 +.8 +8.2/A +8.5/A
Permanent Portfolio PRPFX 49.32 +.99 +3.6 +1.5/E +8.7/A
T Rowe Price EqtyInc PRFDX 26.15 +.57 +2.7 +21.5/B +1.3/B
T Rowe Price GrowStk PRGFX 38.24 +.96 +3.8 +21.8/A +3.7/B
T Rowe Price HiYield d PRHYX 6.86 +.05 +1.4 +14.1/B +8.3/B
T Rowe Price NewIncome PRCIX 9.90 -.03 +.4 +5.7/D +6.8/B
Vanguard 500Adml VFIAX 133.11 +2.96 +2.9 +22.6/A +2.0/B
Vanguard 500Inv VFINX 133.08 +2.96 +2.9 +22.5/A +1.9/B
Vanguard GNMAAdml VFIJX 11.09 -.01 +.2 +3.5/C +6.6/A
Vanguard InstIdxI VINIX 132.26 +2.95 +2.9 +22.7/A +2.0/B
Vanguard InstPlus VIIIX 132.27 +2.95 +2.9 +22.7/A +2.1/B
Vanguard InstTStPl VITPX 32.58 +.79 +3.3 +22.1/B +2.6/A
Vanguard MuIntAdml VWIUX 14.35 -.01 +.3 +7.0/B +5.6/A
Vanguard STGradeAd VFSUX 10.84 +.5 +3.7/B +4.3/B
Vanguard TgtRe2015 VTXVX 13.48 +.17 +1.8 +11.7/B +3.5/A
Vanguard Tgtet2025 VTTVX 13.65 +.24 +2.3 +13.4/B +2.5/B
Vanguard TotBdAdml VBTLX 11.17 -.04 +.2 +4.9/D +6.4/C
Vanguard TotBdInst VBTIX 11.17 -.04 +.2 +4.9/D +6.4/C
Vanguard TotIntl VGTSX 14.35 +.39 +2.7 +3.6/D -3.2/B
Vanguard TotStIAdm VTSAX 35.99 +.87 +3.3 +22.1/B +2.5/A
Vanguard TotStIIns VITSX 35.99 +.87 +3.3 +22.1/B +2.5/A
Vanguard TotStIdx VTSMX 35.97 +.87 +3.3 +21.9/B +2.4/A
Vanguard WellsIAdm VWIAX 59.35 +.14 +.6 +13.6/A +7.1/A
Vanguard Welltn VWELX 34.23 +.43 +1.7 +16.3/A +4.4/A
Vanguard WelltnAdm VWENX 59.13 +.75 +1.7 +16.4/A +4.5/A
Vanguard WndsIIAdm VWNAX 51.95 +.98 +2.2 +23.1/A +.6/B
Vanguard WndsrII VWNFX 29.27 +.55 +2.2 +23.0/A +.5/C
Wells Fargo AstAlllcA f EAAFX 12.82 +.12 +1.5 +9.3/ +2.8/
MutualFunds
FRIDAY WK RETURN/RANK
GROUP, FUND TICKER NAV CHG 4WK 1YR 5YR
Dow industrials
+1.7%
+0.8%
Nasdaq
+2.3%
+3.8%
S&P 500
+2.2%
+2.3%
Russell 2000
+3.7%
+5.1%
LARGE-CAP
SMALL-CAP
p
p
p
p
p
p
p
p
p
p
p
p
MO
YTD
MO
YTD
MO
YTD
MO
YTD
WEEKLY
WEEKLY
WEEKLY
WEEKLY
+8.9%
+20.4%
+14.3%
+13.7%
Rates remain low
The yield on the 10-year Treasury note stayed be-
low 1.7 percent last week, helping to keep rates
low on a variety of consumer loans. The average
rate on a 30-year fixed mortgage fell to 3.55 per-
cent last week, for example, close to its record low
of 3.49 percent. Thats down from 3.59 percent a
week earlier and 4.12 percent a year ago, accord-
ing to Freddie Mac.
InterestRates
MIN
Money market mutual funds YIELD INVEST PHONE
3.25
3.25
3.25
.13
.13
.13
PRIME
RATE
FED
FUNDS
Taxablenational avg 0.01
Delaware Cash Reserve/Class A 0.10 $ 1,000 min (800) 362-7500
Tax-exemptnational avg 0.01
Alpine Municipal MMF/Inv 0.10 $ 2,500 min (888) 785-5578
Broad market Lehman 1.82 0.02 t t -0.52 2.55 1.71
Triple-A corporate Moodys 3.46 0.03 t t -0.71 4.19 3.22
Corp. Inv. Grade Lehman 2.96 0.02 t t -0.65 4.03 2.89
FRIDAY
6 MO AGO
1 YR AGO
FRIDAY CHANGE 52-WK
U.S. BOND INDEXES YIELD 1WK 1MO 3MO 1YR HIGH LOW
Municipal Bond Buyer 4.23 0.02 t t -0.79 5.05 4.21
U.S. high yield Barclays 6.61 -0.13 t t -1.95 10.15 6.61
Treasury Barclays 0.94 0.06 t t -0.13 1.34 0.80
FRIDAY CHANGE 52-WK
TREASURYS YIELD 1WK 1MO 3MO 1YR HIGH LOW
3-month T-Bill 0.10 0.01 r s 0.08 0.12
1-year T-Bill 0.20 0.02 t t 0.11 0.25 0.09
6-month T-Bill 0.13 0.00 r r 0.08 0.15 0.01
2-year T-Note 0.25 0.03 t t 0.06 0.40 0.16
5-year T-Note 0.65 0.06 t t -0.21 1.20 0.54
10-year T-Note 1.67 0.12 s s -0.31 2.40 1.39
30-year T-Bond 2.83 0.16 s s -0.47 3.48 2.45
Money fund data provided by iMoneyNet Inc.
Rank: Funds letter grade compared with others in the same performance group;
an A indicates fund performed in the top 20 percent; an E, in the bottom 20 percent.
PAGE 4D SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2012 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
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SHOULD THESE MOMS
BE DEPORTED?
A
KRON, Ohio - In the year
since her husband was
deported to Mexico for
working in America
without legal status, Leo-
nor Ferreyra has struggled as a
single mother.
At 3 a.m., she rises to feed her
infant son, who suffers ear infec-
tions. At 6 a.m., she reports to
work in a window factory. At
night, she often fills out paper-
work to try to stall her own expul-
sion to Mexico, which a judge or-
dered last year and then agreed
to delay.
Ferreyra came to America ille-
gally 18 years ago with an uncle
after her mother disappeared
and her father died. She pays her
mortgage, has never been
charged with a crime, and is des-
perate to remain with her three
young children, all of whom were
born in America and thus are en-
titled to stay.
It is a lot of pressure, said
Ferreyra, 36. My whole life is
here.
The Obama administration
has deported a record number of
illegal immigrants in the last
three years, and a little-noticed
effect has been the breakup of
thousands of families. One in five
people deported last year - more
than 93,000 in all - were parents
of U.S. citizens, according to U.S.
Immigration and Customs En-
forcement.
The overwhelming majority
had criminal convictions, had re-
entered the country after being
deported, had ignored a judges
MCT PHOTO
Leonor Ferrerya, left, sits with her 8-year-old son, Erik, at the kitchen table in her home in Akron, Ohio. Leo-
nor is an illegal immigrant and has three children who are U.S. citizens.
THE OBAMA ADMINISTRATION
HAS DEPORTED A RECORD
NUMBER OF ILLEGAL
IMMIGRANTS IN THE LAST
THREE YEARS, AND A LITTLE-
NOTICED EFFECT HAS BEEN
THE BREAKUP OF THOUSANDS
OF FAMILIES. ONE IN FIVE
PEOPLE DEPORTED LAST YEAR
- MORE THAN 93,000 IN ALL -
WERE PARENTS OF U.S.
CITIZENS, ACCORDING TO U.S.
IMMIGRATION AND
CUSTOMS ENFORCEMENT.
By BRIAN BENNETT
Tribune Washington Bureau
Mirka Moctezuma, 8,
holds a stuffed animal in
the bedroom she shares
with her three sisters in
June in Painesville, Ohio.
Mirka was home with her
father when immigration
agents came to arrest him
and deport him to Mexico
last year. The four girls,
who were all born in the
U.S. and are American
citizens, wrote messages
on the walls of their room
when their father was in
an ICE detention facility
before being deported.
See DEPORTED, Page 2E
C M Y K
VIEWS S E C T I O N E
THE TIMES LEADER SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2012
timesleader.com
CHARLOTTE, N.C.
Lets talk about the
other speech.
Yes, Bill Clinton
delivered a 48-minute
stemwinder to the
Democratic National
Convention on
Wednesday night that was so mesmeriz-
ing even Republicans praised it. But after
the huzzahs for Clinton fade, save a little
nod of affirmation for Sister Simone
Campbell, executive director of NET-
WORK, a Roman Catholic social justice
group. She did not speak long about
seven minutes. Her delivery was not
particularly powerful. But with the moral
authority of her calling, she did some-
thing that has sorely needed doing for
some weeks now.
She rebuked I built that.
Granted, the rebuke was only implicit:
She never specifically mentioned the
new GOP slogan of rugged individual-
ism. But it was no less powerful for that.
As should be obvious to any fair ob-
server, this latest spasm of feigned out-
rage is built upon a lie, i.e., that in a
speech in Roanoke, Va., President Oba-
ma told business owners they did not
build their businesses, that their success
was not a product of their own initiative:
If youve got a business, you didnt build
that.
What Obama actually said in 170
words or so is the same thing Martin
Luther King used to say in four: All life
is interrelated. So if you built a business,
said Obama, part of its success is due to
the fact that there was a great teacher
somewhere in your life or that someone
sacrificed to create this unbelievable
American system that allowed you to
thrive, or to the fact that somebody
invested in roads and bridges over
which your inventory traveled. Contrary
to the GOP narrative, he didnt deny the
importance of initiative. The point, he
said, is that when we succeed, we suc-
ceed because of our individual initiative,
but also because we do things together.
Of course, if its true Obamas com-
ment has been mischaracterized, its also
true that, contrary to what an inartic-
ulate ad lib and the Democratic spin
machine would have you believe, Mitt
Romney doesnt enjoy firing people. No
surprise there. Building mountain ranges
out of sand grains is part and parcel of
politics.
Whats vexing, then, is not that the
GOP lied but that it seems to believe its
own lie. On signs, websites, buttons and
T-shirts from the streets to the Web, to
the convention hall, I built this has
become the partys new war cry.
Enter Sister Campbell. This nun,
whose social activism has put her at
odds with the Vatican, did not talk busi-
ness. She talked about the nuns on the
bus tour she undertook to contest cut-
backs to services for vulnerable Amer-
icans that would be necessary under the
budget envisioned by Romney and his
running mate. And about the people she
met along the way.
Like the 10-year-old twin boys in Tole-
do who act as sole caregivers for their
bedridden mother. Like Billy, from
Milwaukee whose job has cut back his
hours and who could not make it with-
out food stamps. Like Jini in Cincinnati
whose sister Margaret lost her job, lost
her health insurance and so, lost her life
when she was diagnosed with cancer.
I am my sisters keeper, said Camp-
bell. I am my brothers keeper. Can you
remember when that went without say-
ing?
This was Obamas point. In a recent
song, Bruce Springsteen put it like this:
We take care of our own.
And we do. Or at least, we should.
Rugged individualism is great. But in
shredding social safety nets while chant-
ing, I built this, the GOP doesnt cele-
brate individualism so much as deny the
interconnectedness of life, scorn the
notion of a social covenant or greater
good, exile conscience from the public
arena. There but for the grace of God
becomes Every man for himself.
On Wednesday, a nun gently reminded
us of what should be obvious: We are
better than that.
COMMENTARY
L E O N A R D P I T T S J R .
A few words
of wisdom
from a nun
Leonard Pitts Jr. is a columnist for the
Miami Herald, 1 Herald Plaza, Miami, FL 33132.
Readers may write to him via email at
lpitts@miamiherald.com.
CHARLOTTE, N.C.
Theres no point trying
to find something
wrong with Michelle
Obamas speech to the
Democratic National
Convention. It was
perfection.
From her stage presence to her deliv-
ery from the punctuating smile to the
strategic repetition of the words you
see it was brilliant. The first lady
ruled the first night of the convention,
and thats saying something given the
lineup of oratorical stars she followed,
notably the Castro twins, Julian and
Joaquin, respectively mayor of San
Antonio and Texas congressional candi-
date.
No matter what ones politics, only
the mingy-minded could fail to be
proud of Americas first lady Tuesday
night. In this spirit, I submit my favorite
lines of the speech, which have received
scant attention. It was perhaps the most
important statement of any thus far
uttered in either convention and has
been sorely lacking from the American
conversation.
Herewith: He was so proud to be
sending his kids to college, and he
made sure we never missed a regis-
tration deadline because his check was
late. You see, for my dad, thats what it
meant to be a man. ... That was the
measure of his success in life being
able to earn a decent living that allowed
him to support his family.
She was talking about her father, of
course, and his struggles to make sure
his children got an education. One
could extrapolate her meaning to in-
clude the problem of unemployment,
which, she asserted, would be solved
under Barack Obamas watch. But the
larger message was not political. It was
that being a man means taking care of
your family. It means showing up and
being there.
It means that children need a father.
To this point, Michelle commented
during a film montage immediately
preceding her speech that her girls
would not be who and what they are
without a man who loves them. Their
father. The photo accompanying this
statement showed President Obama
nuzzling their youngest child.
This profound and simple message
shouldnt need elaboration, but we
seem to have forgotten it. During the
past several decades, women have been
encouraged by a culture dismissive of
traditional family structure to feel free
to go it alone and ignore the contribu-
tions that fathers make in the nurturing
of children.
One neednt diminish the heroic
efforts of single moms, many of whom
are single by necessity or circumstances
beyond their control, to understand that
fathering is just as important as mother-
ing. From their fathers, boys learn to be
men, and girls learn how to manage
them. The Obama girls are indeed
blessed. Theyll know how to relate to
men in healthy ways and how to navi-
gate a sexually aggressive culture in
which some boys wont have had a
decent man to guide them.
Yes, women can teach girls these
things, too, but a fathers love for his
daughter teaches without preaching. A
girl knows what a healthy mans love
looks and feels like. She sees how he
treats her mother. She learns by experi-
encing what should be.
The importance of fatherhood to the
health of children and therefore to the
nation cant be exaggerated. Studies
have shown for decades that social
pathologies afflicting the young tend to
cluster among children without fathers.
We also know from experience and the
testimony of some of Tuesday nights
speakers that single mothers can and do
raise exceptional children. Again, see
the Castro twins.
But these young men are exceptional,
which is why we are so riveted by their
biographies. More often, young males
(and females) without fathers wind up
in trouble. Boys join gangs in search of
male fraternity missing at home. Young
females seek male attention, mistaken
for love, through sexual adventurism.
The Obamas seem to be a model
family, as do, by the way, the Romneys.
I also loved Ann Romneys speech in
COMMENTARY
K A T H L E E N P A R K E R
First ladys
gift to men
and the nation
See PARKER, Page 2E
WASHINGTON Its a fact of life in Washington that
what one party considers a principled stand, the opposi-
tion considers pigheadedness. Compromise? Thats the
other guys problem.
But when former President Bill Clinton took the stage
at the Democratic National Convention on Wednesday, he
portrayed President Barack Obama as a pragmatic com-
promiser who has been stymied at every turn by Repub-
licans. There was nomentionof the role that the president
and the Democrats have played in grinding compromise
to a halt on some of the most important issues facing the
country.
That was among the lines by the former president and
Fact check: Clintons claims of compromise a stretch
By MATT APUZZO and TOMRAUM
Associated Press
AP PHOTO
When former President Bill Clinton spoke at the Demo-
cratic National Convention Wednesday, he portrayed
President Barack Obama as a pragmatic compromiser.
EDITORS NOTE An occasional look at statements by
political candidates and how well they adhere to the facts
See CLINTON, Page 2E
PAGE 2E SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2012 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
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order, or otherwise had been
identified under federal guide-
lines as priorities for forced re-
moval, ICE figures show.
But about 10 percent - includ-
ing Ferreyra - did not fit those
categories, and immigration ac-
tivists argue they should be ex-
empt from deportation.
Some advocates further con-
tend that parents who enter the
country illegally to stay with
their children should be granted
greater leniency.
Parents should not be sepa-
rated from their children, said
Sen. Robert Menendez, D-N.J.,
who has proposed a law to pro-
tect parental rights during de-
portationproceedings. Lets de-
port gang members and crimi-
nals instead of the parents of
young U.S. citizen children.
Opponents argue just as force-
fully that immigration laws
should be enforced irrespective
of the effect on families.
Granting waivers to such par-
ents would amount to de facto
amnesty, said Rep. Elton Gal-
legly, R-Calif., whochairs the im-
migration subcommittee of the
House Judiciary Committee.
Were talking about people who
have already exhausted all ap-
peals and the judge dropped the
hammer.
The Obama administration
last year ordered immigration
agencies to focus on deporting
people who pose a threat to pub-
lic safety or are repeat andegre-
gious immigration law viola-
tors, rather than those who are
here without documentation.
Immigrant communities also
have embraced a program that
allows young undocumented
immigrants, who came to Amer-
ica under the age of 16, to apply
for work permits and temporary
protection from deportation.
The deferred deportation pro-
gram provides no protection for
their parents, however.
Immigration authorities tend
to deport fathers more often
than mothers, studies show. But
that often leaves single-parent
families that struggle to pay
bills. One apparent result is an
increaseinabandonedor abused
children.
More than 5,000 American-
born children of deported par-
ents are infoster care aroundthe
country, according to the Ap-
plied Research Center, a New
York City-based liberal think
tank.
It predicts that figure will tri-
ple in the next five years if pol-
icies dont change.
The state is creating fragile
families and low-income, single-
parent households, said Joanna
Dreby, a sociologist at the Uni-
versity at Albany.
Dreby, whospent five years in-
terviewing immigrant families
in northeast Ohio and central
New Jersey, said many children
of illegal immigrants had devel-
oped a fear of police. She said
the children often had behavior
linked to psychological trauma,
such as bed-wetting, uncon-
trolled crying and insomnia.
The issue has drawnsufficient
attention that the Department
of HealthandHumanServices is
preparing to fund a yearlong na-
tional study on how immigra-
tionenforcement affects the wel-
fare of children.
MCT PHOTO
Cecilia Mendez, far right, attends a community meeting with her 5-month-old daughter, Emily in
Painesville, Ohio. The meeting was organized by HOLA, a nonprofit Latino advocacy organization
based in Painesville.
DEPORTED
Continued from Page 1E
It is a lot of pressure.
My whole life is here.
Leonor Ferreyra
Mother of 3 who faces deportation
which she said she doesnt have
a perfect marriage. She has a
real one. Those who have
spent time in the marital trench-
es understand what she meant
that marriage is hard work and
that parenting is the hardest of
all.
That Michelle Obama chose
to underscore those struggles
and to set an example for wom-
en and, through her daughters,
for little girls was a gift to the
nation. That she chose to high-
light her fathers meaning to her
life and that of her husband to
her daughters was a gift to the
future.
Brava.
PARKER
Continued from Page 1E
Kathleen Parkers email address is
kathleenparker@washpost.com.
others Wednesday that either
cherry-picked facts or mischarac-
terized the opposition. A look at
some of them:
CLINTON: When times are
tough, constant conflict may be
good politics but in the real
world, cooperation works better.
... Unfortunately, the faction that
now dominates the Republican
Party doesnt see it that way.
They think government is the
enemy and compromise is weak-
ness. One of the main reasons
America should re-elect Presi-
dent Obama is that heis still com-
mitted to cooperation.
THE FACTS: From Clintons
speech, voters would have no
idea that the inflexibility of both
parties is to blame for much of
the gridlock. Right from the be-
ginning Obama brought in as his
first chief of staff RahmEmanuel,
a man known for his getting his
way, not for getting along.
One of the more high-profile
examples of a deal that fell apart
was the outline of a proposed
grand bargain budget agree-
ment betweenObama andHouse
Speaker John Boehner in 2011.
The deal would have required
compromise from both sides. It
slashed domestic spending more
than most Democrats wanted
and would have raised some tax-
es, which most Republicans op-
pose.
Boehner couldnt sell the plan
to tea party factions in the House
or to other conservative activists.
And Obama found himself ac-
cused of going too far by some
Democratic leaders. The deal
died before it ever even came up
for a vote.
Inanother instance, Obama ap-
pointed a bipartisan group,
known as the Simpson-Bowles
Commission, to recommend
ways to fix major fiscal problems
like Social Security and Medi-
care. The commission issued its
recommendations but fell three
votes short of formally endorsing
them. AndObama mostly walked
away fromthe report. He later in-
corporated some of the less con-
tentious proposals from the re-
port into legislation he support-
ed.
But that ensured the tough
compromises would not get
made.
The problem with compromis-
ing in Washington is that there
are few true moderates left in ei-
ther party. The notion that Re-
publicans are the only ones
standing in the way of compro-
mise is inaccurate.
CLINTON: Clinton suggested
that Obamas health care law is
keeping health care costs in
check.
For the last two years, health
care spending has grown under 4
percent, for the first time in 50
years. So, are we all better off be-
cause President Obama fought
for it and passed it? You bet we
are.
THE FACTS: Thats wishful
thinking at best. The nations to-
tal health care tab has been grow-
ing at historically low rates, but
most experts attribute that to
continued uncertainty over the
economy, not to Obamas health
care law.
Two of the main cost-control
measures in Obamas law a
powerful board to keep Medicare
spending manageable and a tax
on high cost health insurance
plans have yet to take effect.
Under the law, Medicare has
launched dozens of experiments
aimed at providing quality care
for lower cost, but most of those
are still in their infancy and mea-
surable results have yet to be ob-
tained. Former administrationof-
ficials say the law deserves at
least part of the credit for easing
health care inflation, but even
they acknowledge that the lack-
luster economyis playinga major
role.
Meanwhile, people insured
through the workplace by and
large have seen little relief from
rising premiums and cost shifts.
According to the nonpartisan
Kaiser Family Foundation, the
average premium for job-based
family coverage rose from
$13,375 in 2009 when Obama
took office to $15,073 in 2011.
Duringthe same period, the aver-
age share paid by employees rose
from $3,515 to $4,129.
While those premium increas-
es cannot be blamed on the
healthcare lawas Republicans
try to do neither can Demo-
crats claim credit for breaking
the back of health care inflation.
CLINTON: Their campaign
pollster said, Were not going to
let our campaign be dictated by
fact checkers. Now that is true. I
couldnt have saidit better myself
I just hope you remember that
every time you see the ad.
THE FACTS: Clinton, who fa-
mously finger-waggeda denial on
national television about his sex-
ual relationship with intern Mon-
ica Lewinsky and was subse-
quently impeached in the House
on a perjury charge, has had his
own uncomfortable moments
over telling the truth. I did not
have sexual relations with that
woman, Miss Lewinsky, Clinton
told television viewers. Later, af-
ter he was forced to testify to a
grand jury, Clinton said his state-
ments were legally accurate
but also allowed that he misled
people, including even my wife.
CLINTON
Continued from Page 1E
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2012 PAGE 3E
S E RV I NG T HE P UB L I C T RUS T S I NC E 1 8 81
Editorial
We havent yet received the
avalanche of claims that might
have been expected.
Sheila Birnbaum
The special master of a Sept. 1 1 victims
compensation fund recently noted that so far only
about 300 people have filed eligibility forms. She ultimately expects
thousands of applications from ground zero responders and others
who became ill after being exposed to dust and ash from the
smoldering ruins of the World Trade Center.
IF SOMEONE were to
poke me out of a sound
sleep and whisper, What
was your time in that
marathon you ran, I
would immediately re-
spond, My gun time was
4:48 but my chip time was 4:44, because
I started from the back, so runners fas-
ter than me (octogenarians, grandmoth-
ers, a guy carrying an enormous Amer-
ican flag) wouldnt run over me as I
shambled along. It was an 11-minute per
mile pace. I ran the first half in 2:23 and
the second half in 2:21. I could have
done a lot better, if I wasnt a chubby
guy with the raw athletic ability of an
overripe eggplant.
I would be able to give this answer
instantaneously even if awakened from a
slumber so deep drool had created a
small lap pool on the pillow and my
snores were registering as earthquakes
on a seismic monitor 45 miles away.
I ran the Kiawah marathon on my 39th
birthday, in 2009. Crossing that finish
line probably wasnt the top athletic
achievement of my life (I was a pretty
fair competitive swimmer in my youth),
but it was the top discipline achieve-
ment of my life. It officially marked the
end of a two-decade period of sedentary
sloth, and it took two years of training,
the last six months of it extremely in-
tensive, to make happen.
I do not believe that Republican vice-
presidential nominee Paul Ryan could
misstate the time he clocked in the 1990
Grandmas Marathon, in Duluth, Minn.,
without it being intentional. Particularly
after I looked at what he actually said.
Ryan recently told a radio host he ran
that marathon, the only one hes ever
run, in under three (hours), high twos.
I had a two hour and fifty-something.
He actually completed it in just over
four hours.
For you non-runners out there, he was
describing an athletic feat that would
be, while not world class, pretty elite.
Were talking more than 26 miles at a
sub-seven minute per mile pace. Few
casual runners can run more than one or
two miles at that clip.
Based on the fact that he stated the
time in three separate ways in the com-
ment, I dont believe he misspoke. And
again, I dont think its possible for a guy
who has run just one marathon to forget
his time, or misstate it by an hour, in
three different ways, by accident.
This might not be a huge personal
failing, but it is quite odd.
Ryans exaggeration is not the equiv-
alent of a golfer saying he shot an 89
when he actually needed 94 strokes to
complete the round. This is the equiv-
alent of a golfer saying he shot a 69
when he needed 94 strokes to complete
the round.
The technical term for such a state-
ment is a whopper.
Whats sad is that running a marathon
in four hours, which Ryan undeniably
did, is a significant accomplishment,
and one worth trumpeting. It takes a ton
of perseverance, discipline and drive,
traits that would serve a vice president
well.
Its an above-average time, and a great
one for a novice. Had we run our singu-
lar marathons together, hed have been
showered, dressed and drinking a Coo-
latta by the time I crossed the line.
Somehow Ryan managed to turn what
should be a badge of honor into an (ad-
mittedly) small mark of shame.
Me, Ill keep taking pride in my 4:44,
no matter how many 77-year-old power
walkers beat me. Its not very fast, I
know. But it is true.
What was Ryan thinking turning triumph to blunder?
Lane Filler, a former writer for The Times Leader,
is a member of the Newsday editorial board. His
email address is lane.filler@newsday.com.
COMMENTARY
L A N E F I L L E R
Ryans exaggeration is not the
equivalent of a golfer saying he shot an 89
when he actually needed 94 strokes to
complete the round. This is the equivalent
of a golfer saying he shot a 69 when he
needed 94 strokes to complete the round.
The technical term for such a statement is
a whopper.
THE LOUD sucking
sound heard from Neva-
da to New Hampshire is
the 2012 presidential
campaign consuming the
electoral oxygen, if not
every available 30-sec-
ond commercial TV time slot, in the
nine remaining swing states.
The unprecedented amount of presi-
dential campaign money set to explode
upon the airways in the 58 days to Nov.
6 will blanket the states yet to tilt to-
ward President Obama or former Gov.
Mitt Romney.
Those states remaining In the Arena
2-3-4 Toss-up Category three weeks
before the first presidential debate are
two western states Colorado and Ne-
vada; Iowa, Ohio and Wisconsin in the
Midwest, and the four eastern states of
New Hampshire, Virginia, North Car-
olina and Florida.
If Christian Doppler could have de-
vised a radar map to detect precipita-
tion of presidential campaign funds
spent, it would show those nine states
covered in ominous shades of green
being subjected to a downpour of 30-
second TV ads.
As the race for president dominates
TV, newspaper and radio, candidates for
lesser-known statewide offices often get
overlooked.
The Romney and Obama campaigns
are purchasing some ads in the media
markets of Pennsylvania but nothing
compared to the wall-to-wall media
carpet-bombing over Ohio and the cam-
paign armies of northern Virginia.
Obamas lead in Pennsylvania remains
sturdy and exceeds the margin of error.
If this trend continues after the debates
(Oct. 3, 11, 16 and 22), Team Romney
could take its big money elsewhere,
freeing up the airwaves, column inches
and the political oxygen that in-state
candidates desperately need for their
messages to be heard.
Of particular importance in Penn-
sylvania are races for auditor general,
state treasurer and attorney general.
Republicans and Democrats have nomi-
nated qualified candidates for each of
these important offices and they de-
serve our careful evaluation.
After all, the state attorney general is
the commonwealths chief law enforce-
ment officer, the auditor general our
fiscal watchdog, while the state treasur-
er collects, protects and invests Penn-
sylvanias financial assets.
In the April primary, Republicans
nominated Washington County Com-
missioner Diana Irey Vaughan, 50, for
state treasurer. Irey Vaughan is serving
her fifth term on the board of commis-
sioners.
She will face incumbent Democratic
state Treasurer Rob McCord. McCord,
53, was elected treasurer in 2008. A
1982 graduated of Harvard University
with a degree in history and economics,
McCord received his masters degree in
1989 from the Wharton School of Busi-
ness.
In the race for attorney general, Dem-
ocrats chose Scranton native and former
Lackawanna County Assistant District
Attorney Kathleen Kane. A graduate of
the University of Scranton and Temple
University School of Law, Kane, 45, has
13 years experience and has prosecuted
thousands of cases.
The GOP nominated Cumberland
County District Attorney David Freed.
Freed, 42, of Camp Hill, is a 1992 gradu-
ate of Washington & Lee University and
the Penn State Dickinson School of
Law. He has worked in the DAs office
since 1998, as an assistant DA and first
assistant before being elected district
attorney in 2005 and 2009.
John Maher of Upper St. Clair in Al-
legheny County is an eight-term mem-
ber of the state House of Representa-
tives and the Republican candidate for
auditor general. Maher, 53, is also a
certified public accountant and a magna
cum laude graduate of Duke University,
earning a degree in management sci-
ences/accounting. He also studied at
Oxford University.
Fellow House member and three-term
Democrat Eugene DePasquale, 41, of
York County will oppose Maher in the
fall. DePasquale is a graduate of the
College of Wooster. He earned his mas-
ters degree in public administration
from the University of Pittsburgh and a
law degree from the Widener School of
Law.
The parties have selected several
talented candidates for three extremely
important positions. Amid all the noise,
let them not be overlooked.
Dont allow presidential race to overshadow state runs
Kevin Blaums column on government, life and
politics appears every Sunday. Contact him at
kblaum@timesleader.com.
KEVIN BLAUM
I N T H E A R E N A
A
S SPEECHES GO,
none delivered by the
candidates and main
speakers during the
most recent conventions of the
Republican and Democratic
parties rose to the level of, say,
the Gettysburg Address. A cou-
ple would barely pass muster at
a Toastmasters International
club.
Lets assess the elocutionists.
Chris Christie. The hard-
charging New Jersey governor
must have missed the memo;
he talked at length about him-
self, the Garden State and GOP
generalities, but saidlittleabout
the Republican nominee. His
script also contained references
to the sacrifices in store for
Americans under a Romney/
Ryan administration; however,
by the next night of the conven-
tion there was no mention of
shared pain. Only future pros-
perity.
Ann Romney. Ann loves
Mitt. They love women. We all
love our veterans. Joanie loves
Chachi. Howdid this disjointed
script sneak past the GOP cam-
paign speechwriters? Anns role
inTampa, Fla., wastohumanize
her husband, former Massachu-
settsGov. Mitt Romney. Instead
of hearing warm or humorous
anecdotes about Mitt, listeners
were told only that the presi-
dential hopeful is kind and
sometimes funny. Not exactly
Hallmark material.
Clint Eastwood. The actor
drew fire from some critics be-
cause of what they termed a
rambling soliloquy. We, by
contrast, followed what he was
trying to say, but didnt under-
stand why he had been invited
there to say it. Perhaps rather
than an empty chair, Clint
should have addressed an emp-
ty room like grumpy old men
everywhere.
Paul Ryan and Mitt Rom-
ney. The Republican vice presi-
dential and presidential nomi-
nees each delivered solid, effec-
tive speeches, convincing in
their points and inspiring to
their followers. As for being ac-
curate, well, Ryan in particular
played a bit loose with what
non-politicians refer to as
facts.
And now the Democrats.
Michelle Obama. The presi-
dents wife probably gave the
finest speech of either conven-
tion, usingthepersonal tomake
a case for her broader political
objective: Keep her husband in
theWhiteHouse. Herstammer-
ing, however, seemed con-
trived, as if to convey false emo-
tion. (If the stutter is authentic,
our apologies for mentioning
it.)
Bill Clinton. Theformer pres-
ident, silver-haired and silver-
tongued, did not disappoint.
Absent a thumb gesture or two
from his glory days, he seemed
almost to still feel our pain.
Joe Biden. No big blunders.
Yet the vice president didnt say
much to help the cause. For a
guyonly30stepsfromthepresi-
dents office, he shared few in-
sights about the man, only so-
lidified that they are indeed
pals. Good pals.
Barack Obama. The presi-
dent offered in good but not
grand style what the partisan
crowd wanted to hear. Notice-
ablyabsent, however, was aspe-
cific planfor thenext four years.
Obama should have provided
his blueprint for, finally, dealing
withthenational debt anddeliv-
ering on jobs growth.
Of course, of more impor-
tance than the candidates one-
liners, presentation styles and
words are their ideas. Base your
vote in November on what real-
ly matters.
Everything else is just hot air.
OUR OPINION: ELECTION 2012
Convention talk
has highs, hiccups
Watch the convention
speeches.
Visit www.pbs.org.
Dont fall for the spin.
Go to www.factcheck.org or
www.politifact.com.
S E E F O R YO U R S E L F
PRASHANT SHITUT
President and CEO/Impressions Media
JOSEPH BUTKIEWICZ
Vice President/Executive Editor
MARK E. JONES
Editorial Page Editor
Editorial Board
QUOTE OF THE DAY
P
RESIDENT Barack
Obama had a tough
act tofollowonThurs-
day night in accepting
the Democratic presidential
nomination himself, four
years ago. At that point, he and
the nation were in a swoon of
possibility, justifiably proud of
breaking the race barrier to the
White House and lifted by his
words of bipartisanship and a
new way of governing.
At his inauguration, he
warnedthat theroadbackfrom
the economic abyss would be
steep and hard.
How right he was. The re-
covery has been slow and ran-
corous. Thursday night, Oba-
ma owned up to the shortcom-
ings, disappointments and
challenges remaining.
What he did right, and in
welcome detail, was delineate
clear differences with his GOP
opponent, Mitt Romney. He
spoke out against intolerance,
tax breaks for millionaires and
vouchers for Medicare, and he
defended government.
We dont think government
can solve all of our problems.
But we dont think that govern-
ment is the source of all of our
problems
What he didnt offer was a
surprise. He stuck with his
State of the Union-like wish
list.
Bring on the debates.
The Kansas City Star
OTHER OPINION: DNC SPEECH
Obama faces up
to the challenge
An company
PAGE 4E SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2012 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
V I E W S
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AM / F M / CD, Allo ys ,
F lo o rM a ts
& M u ch M o re!
*$259 p erm o n th p lu s ta x, 39 m o n th lea s e; 12,000 m iles
p eryea r; Res id u a l= $15,834.35; m u s tb e a p p ro ved thru
NM AC @ T ier1; $2500 ca s h d o w n o rtra d e eq u ity. (+) p lu s
regis tra tio n fees ; to ta l d u e @ d elivery= $2702.50. $1750
Nis s a n L ea s e Reb a te & $1000 S ep tBo n u s Ca s h in clu d ed .
STK# N22166
M O DEL# 25012
V IN# 625154
M SRP $32,315
6 A T TH IS 6 A T TH IS
P R IC E! P R IC E!
B U Y FOR
$
25,8 15
*
+ T/T
OR
$
259
*
L EAS E FOR
P ER
M O.
W / $250 0 N IS S AN R EB ATE, $50 0 N M AC CAP TIVE CAS H & $10 0 0 S EP T B ON U S CAS H
SA VE $6000O R M O R E O N A LL
2012 M U R A NO S IN STO C K!!
W / $20 0 0 N IS S AN R EB ATE, $50 0 N M AC CAP TIVE CAS H & $50 0 S EP T B ON U S CAS H
2012N IS S A N M A XIM A
3.5S L IM ITE D E DITION
V-6, CVT , A/ C, S u n ro o f,
Bla ck W heels , F lo o r
M a ts , AM / F M / CD,
M u ch, M u ch M o re!
*$289 p erm o n th p lu s ta x, 39 m o n th lea s e; 12,000 m iles p eryea r; Res id u a l= $19,627.95;
m u s tb e a p p ro ved thru NM AC @ T ier1; $2000 ca s h d o w n o rtra d e eq u ity. (+) p lu s
regis tra tio n fees ; to ta l d u e @ d elivery= $2,202.50. $1000 Nis s a n L ea s e Reb a te in clu d ed .
STK# N22368
M O DEL# 16112
V IN# 861635
M SRP $34,435
5 A T TH IS 5 A T TH IS
P R IC E! P R IC E!
B U Y FOR
$
27,435
*
+ T/T
OR
$
28 9
*
L EAS E FOR
P ER
M O.
W / $350 0 N IS S AN R EB ATE & $50 0 N M AC CAP TIVE CAS H
H U R R Y ! H U R R Y !
WERE
SCHOOLING
THE
COMPETITION
2012N IS S A N A L TIM A
2.5S COUP E
4 Cyl, CVT , A/ C, L ea ther, Prem iu m Pa cka ge, F o g L ights ,
M o o n ro o f, Bo s e S o u n d , Cn v. Pkg, & M u ch M o re!
*$299 p erm o n th p lu s ta x, 39 m o n th lea s e; 12,000 m iles p eryea r; Res id u a l=
$16,710.90; m u s tb e a p p ro ved thru NM AC @ T ier1; $2000 ca s h d o w n o r
tra d e eq u ity. (+) p lu s regis tra tio n fees ; to ta l d u e @ d elivery= $2202.50.
STK# N22155
M O DEL# 15112
V IN# 260196
M SRP $31,530
2 A T TH IS 2 A T TH IS
P R IC E! P R IC E!
B U Y FOR
$
26,530
*
+ T/T
OR
$
299
*
L EAS E FOR
P ER
M O.
W / $150 0 N IS S AN R EB ATE, $50 0 N M AC CAP TIVE CAS H
SA VE $5000O FF M SR P !
2012N IS S A N XTE RRA
S 4X4
V6, Au to , A/ C, Va lu e Pkg, AM / F M / CD, PW ,
PDL , Cru is e, T ilt, Allo ys , & M u ch M o re!
*$299 p erm o n th p lu s ta x, 39 m o n th lea s e; 12,000 m iles p eryea r; Res id u a l=
$15,873; m u s tb e a p p ro ved thru NM AC @ T ier1; $2500 ca s h d o w n o rtra d e
eq u ity. (+) p lu s regis tra tio n fees ; to ta l d u e @ d elivery= $2702.50.
STK# N21979
M O DEL# 24212
V IN# 513857
M SRP $30,525
6 A T TH IS 6 A T TH IS
P R IC E! P R IC E!
B U Y FOR
$
26,525
*
+ T/T
OR
$
299
*
L EAS E FOR
P ER
M O.
W / $150 0 N IS S AN R EB ATE, $50 0 N M AC CAP TIVE CAS H
SA VE $4000O R M O R E O N A LL
2012 XTER R A S IN STO C K!!
SA VE $$$
O N TH E NEW
A LTIM A !!!
PAGE 4G SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2012 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
Automatic, Air, PM, Advance Trac with
Electronic Stability Control, Side
Curtains, Sirius Satellite, CD, Pwr.
Door Locks, Tilt Wheel, ,
, Cruise Control,
15 Alum. Wheels, Keyless
Entry w/Keypad
*Tax and tags extra. Security deposit waived. All factory rebates applied **Lease payments based on 24 month lease 21,000 allowable miles. First months payment, $595 Bank Fee, and $2,500 down payment (cash or trade) due at delivery. Sale ends 9/30/12.
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
24
Mos.
NEW2013 FORDFIESTA SE
*Tax and tags extra. Security deposit waived. All factory rebates applied **Lease payments based on 24 month lease
21,000 allowable miles. First months payment, $595 Bank Fee, and $2,500 down payment (cash or trade) due at delivery. Sale ends 9/30/12.
*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 9/30/12.
Auto., Anti-Theft Sys., Side Curtain
Air Bags, 16 Steel Wheels, Tilt
Wheel, Instrument Cluster,
Message Center, PW,
Air, CD, Keyless Entry
w/Keypad, PL, Pwr.
Side Mirrors, Fog
Lamps, MyKey,
NEW2012 FORDFOCUS SE 5 DR
24
Mos.
NEW FORDEXPLORER
*Tax and tags extra. Security deposit waived. All factory rebates applied **Lease payments based on 24 month lease
21,000 allowable miles. First months payment, $595 Bank Fee, and $2,500 down payment (cash or trade) due at delivery. Sale ends 9/30/12.
24
Mos.
3.5L Engine,
MyFord Display, CD, Auto.
Climate Control, PL, Pwr.
Mirrors, PW, 17 Steel
Wheels, Keyless Entry,
MyKey,
Cruise Control,
MPG
MPG
*Tax and tags extra. Security deposit waived. All factory rebates applied **Lease payments based on 24 month lease
21,000 allowable miles. First months payment, $595 Bank Fee, and $2,500 down payment (cash or trade) due at delivery. Sale ends 9/30/12.
, SE, 1.6
EcoBoost Engine, Auto.,
Keyless Entry w/Keypad,
Auto. Headlamps, PL,
PW, 17 Alloy Wheels,
SYNC, Sirius Satellite
Radio, Perimeter
Alarm, Tonneau Cover
ALL NEW FORDESCAPE SE AWD
24
Mos.
SIRIUS SATELLITE RADIO
AM/FM/CD
ALUMINUM WHEELS
POWER WINDOWS
SIDE IMPACT AIR BAGS
ANTI-THEFT SYSTEM
TILT WHEEL
MESSAGE
CENTER
KEYLESS
ENTRY
1ST & 2ND
ROW AIR
CURTAINS
AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION
M
O
S.
APR
P
L
U
S
NEW2012 FORDF-150 4X4
3.7L V6 Engine, XL Plus Pkg.,
Cruise Control, MyKey
Sys., Pwr. Equipment
Group, Pwr. Mirrors,
XL Decor Group,
40/20/40 Cloth
Seat, CD
*Tax and tags extra. Security deposit waived. All factory rebates applied **Lease payments based on 24 month lease
21,000 allowable miles. First months payment, $595 Bank Fee, and $2,500 down payment (cash or trade) due at delivery. Sale ends 9/30/12.
NEW2012 FORDFUSION HYBRID
2.5L I4 Engine, Rain Sensor Wipers, Sony Sound
Sys., CD, Alum Wheels, Tilt, PW, PDL, Safety Pkg.,
Side Impact Air Bags, 1st & 2nd Air Curtains,
Anti-Theft Sys., Pwr. Moonroof,
Sirius Satellite Radio,
Keyless Entry w/Keypad,
Message Center,
*Tax and tags extra. Security deposit waived. All factory rebates applied **Lease payments based on 24 month lease
21,000 allowable miles. First months payment, $595 Bank Fee, and $2,500 down payment (cash or trade) due at delivery. Sale ends 9/30/12.
M
O
S.
APR
PLUS
*Tax and tags extra. Security deposit waived. All factory rebates applied **Lease payments based on 24 month lease
21,000 allowable miles. First months payment, $595 Bank Fee, and $2,500 down payment (cash or trade) due at delivery. Sale ends 9/30/12.
24
Mos.
NEW FORDTAURUS SEL AWD
Auto., 3.5L V6,
SYNC, Reverse Sensing Sys., CD,
Keyless Entry with Keypad,
PDL, 18Alum. Wheels,
PW, Anti-Theft Perimeter
Alarm, Sirius Satellite
Radio,
POWER LOCKS
*Tax and tags extra. Security deposit waived. All factory rebates applied **Lease payments based on 24 month lease
21,000 allowable miles. First months payment, $595 Bank Fee, and $2,500 down payment (cash or trade) due at delivery. Sale ends 9/30/12.
Auto., Alum Wheels, Tilt, Pwr. Seat, Safety Pkg.,
Side Impact Air Bags, 1st & 2nd Air Curtains,
Anti-Theft Sys., PL, PW, Sirius Satellite
Radio, Keyless Entry, CD, Message
Center,
NEW2012 FORDFUSION SEL
M
O
S.
APR
PLUS
24
Mos.
M
O
S.
APR
PLUS
*Tax and tags extra. Security deposit waived. All factory rebates applied **Lease payments based on 24 month lease
21,000 allowable miles. First months payment, $595 Bank Fee, and $2,500 down payment (cash or trade) due at delivery. Sale ends 9/30/12.
Pwr. Windows, PDL, Air, Advance
Trac with Roll Stability Control,
CD, Remote Keyless Entry
w/Keypad, Convenience
Group, Auto Headlamps,
MyFord, Reverse
Sensing Sys.
NEW FORDEDGE
24
Mos.
M
O
S.
APR
PLUS
24
Mos.
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2012 PAGE 5G
INTERSTATE
ROUTE 315
KEN
POLLOCK
SUZUKI
81
ROUTE 315
EXIT 175
CLOSE TOEVERYWHERE!
WERE EASY TOFIND!
JUST OFF EXIT 175
RTE I-81 PITTSTON
A TOP 10 IN THE NATION SUZUKI SALES VOLUME DEALER 2 YEARS RUNNING***
2012 SUZUKI SX4 LE
POPULAR SEDAN
MSRP
$
18,439*
Ken Pollock Sale Price
$
17,499*
Manufacturer Rebate -
$
1,000*
Owner Loyalty Rebate -
$
500*
Stk#S2148
LE Popular Package, 8 Standard Airbags,
Automatic Transmission, Power Windows, Power Locks,
Power Mirrors, Alloy Wheels
$
16,299*
BUY NOW FOR:
MSRP
$
20,025*
Ken Pollock Sale Price
$
18,299*
Manufacturer Rebate -
$
1,000*
Owner Loyalty Rebate -
$
1,000*
3-Mode Intelligent All-Wheel
Drive, 8 Standard Airbags, Power
Windows, Power Locks, Power
Mirrors, Automatic,
OVER 20 AVAILABLE
AT THIS PRICE!
Stk#S2232
NEW
2012 SUZUKI SX4
CROSSOVER AUTO AWD
$
20,999*
BUY NOW FOR:
4 Wheel Drive, Voice Activated Navigation w/ Blue Tooth,
Automatic Transmission, Power Windows, Power Locks,
PowerMirrors, Electronic Stability Control
2012 SUZUKI GRAND VITARA
4WD
MSRP
$
24,554*
Ken Pollock Sale Price
$
22,999*
Manufacturer Rebate -
$
1,500*
Owner Loyalty Rebate -
$
500*
Stk#S2137
Advanced Intelligent All-Wheel Drive, 8 Standard Air-
bags, Dual Zone Digital Climate Control, Automatic
CVT Transmission, TouchFree Smart Key, Power
Windows, Power Locks, Molded Mud ap package
MSRP
$
23,294*
Ken Pollock Sale Price
$
21,999*
Manufacturer Rebate -
$
1,500*
Owner Loyalty Rebate -
$
1,000*
2012 SUZUKI KIZASHI
S AWD
NEW
I
L
o
v
e
M
y
S
u
z
u
k
i
C
a
r
C
l
u
b
!
J
o
i
n
T
h
e
T
O
D
A
Y
$
15,999*
BUY NOW FOR:
8 Standard Airbags, Dual Digital Climate Control,
Power Windows, Power Locks, Power Mirrors,
AM/FM/CD, 6 Speed Manual Transmission
2012 SUZUKI KIZASHI
S FWD
MSRP w/ Accessories
$
20,493*
Ken Pollock Sale Price
$
18,499*
Manufacturer Rebate -
$
1,500*
Owner Loyalty Rebate -
$
1,000*
Stk#S2207
September
DEALS IN PITTSTON
4 Wheel Drive, Automatic Transmission,
Power Windows, Power Locks, Power Mirrors,
4.0L V6, RMZ-4 Off Road Package
MSRP
$
31,034*
Ken Pollock Sale Price
$
29,299*
Manufacturer Rebate -
$
2,000*
Owner Loyalty Rebate -
$
500*
Stk#S2355
2012 SUZUKI EQUATOR RMZ-4
4WD
Stk# S2289
$
19,499*
BUY NOW FOR:
NEW
$
15,999*
BUY NOW FOR:
NEW
NEW
$
26,799*
BUY NOW FOR:
NEW
*Tax and tags additional. Buy now for sale price includes Suzuki Manufacturer Rebates of $1,000 on 2012 Suzuki SX4 AWD, and SX4 Sedan; $1,500 Suzuki Manufacturer Rebates on Suzuki Grand Vitara and Kizashi. Buy now for sale prices includes $500 Suzuki Owner Loyalty on 2012
Suzuki SX4 Sedan, Equator and Grand Vitara. Buy now for sale price includes $1,000 Suzuki Owner Loyalty on 2012 Suzuki SX4 Crossover and Kizashi. All Ken Pollock Suzuki discounts applied. Artwork for illustration purposes only. Dealer not responsible for typographical errors. Prices
are VALID ON IN STOCK VEHICLES ONLY **0% Financing up to 72 Months with approved credit for S Tier Customers. $13.89 for every $1,000 nanced. 0% Financing in lieu of Manufacturer Rebate. Offer Ends 10/1/2012. ***Based on 2010 and 2011 Presidents Club Standings.
PAGE 6G SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2012 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2012 PAGE 7G
PAGE 8G SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2012 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
www.MattBurneHonda.com
2012 HONDA
ACCORD LX
4 dr, Auto Trans, AC, PW, PL, Cruise, ABS, 6 Air Bags, Tilt,
Keyless Entry, AM/FM/CD, Model #CP2F3CEW
*
MPG
34 HWY
$219 Lease Per Mo. For 36 Months through AHFC. $0 Down Payment. 1st Payment and tags due at delivery. Residual $12,457.80.
$0 DOWN
PAYMENT
Open Monday - Thursday 9-9
Friday & Saturday 9-5
Thank You To Our Customers
0
.9%
APR FINANCING
NOWAVAILABLE!
*On select models to qualied
buyers for limited term.
2012 HONDA CIVIC LX SEDAN
MPG
28 City
39 HWY
***Lease 36 Months through ahfc. $0 Down Payment.
1st payment and tags due at delivery. Residual $11,757.00
Per Mo.
Lease
ease 36 Months through ahfc $0 Down Payment
Per Mo Per Mo.
LLease
* **
Model #FB2F5CEW 140-hp
16-Valve SOHC i-VTEC 5-Speed
Automatic Transmission Air Con-
ditioning with Air-Filtration System
Power Windows/Locks/Mirrors
Cruise Control Remote Entry
160-Watt AM/FM/CD Audio System
with 4 Speakers ABS
Dual-Stage, Multiple-Threshold
Front Airbags (SRS) Front Side
Airbags with Passenger-Side Oc-
cupant Position Detection System
(OPDS) Side Curtain Airbags
$0 DOWN
PAYMENT
2012 HONDA ODYSSEY EX
MPG
18 City
27 HWY
****Lease 36 Months through ahfc. $0 Down Payment.
1st payment and tags due at delivery. Residual $18,174.80
Per Mo.
Lease
Model #RL5H4CEW
248-hp, 3.5-Liter, 24-Valve, SOHC i-VTEC
V-6 Engine 5-Speed Automatic Transmission
Vehicle Stability Assist (VSA) with Trac-
tion Control Anti-Lock Braking System (ABS)
Drivers Seat with 10-Way Power Adjustment,
including Power Lumbar Support Power Slid-
ing Doors 17 Alloy Wheels 229-Watt AM/
FM/CD Audio System with 7 Speakers includ-
ing Subwoofer 2GB CD-Library Bluetooth
HandsFreeLink USB Audio Interface
Exterior Temperature Indicator Multi-Function
2nd-Row Center Seat Three-Row Side Curtain
Airbags with Rollover Sensor Front Side
Airbags with Passenger-Side Occupant Position
Detection System (OPDS) Tri-Zone Automatic
Climate Control System with Humidity Control
and Air Filtration One-Motion 60/40 Split
3rd-Row Magic Seat
2012 HONDA CR-V EX
MPG
22 City
30 HWY
Model RM4H5CJW 185-hp
2.4-Liter, 16-Valve SOHC i-VTEC 4-Cylinder
Engine Real Time AWD with Intelligent Control
System Vehicle Stability Assist (VSA) with
Traction Control Automatic Transmission
Cruise Control A/C One-Touch Power
Moonroof with Tilt Feature Remote Entry
System Bluetooth HandsFreeLink
Multi-angle rearview camera with guidelines
160-Watt AM/FM/CD Audio System with 6
Speakers Bluetooth Streaming Audio
Pandora Internet Radio compatibility
SMS Text Message Function
USB Audio Interface
Anti-Lock Braking System (ABS)
Dual-Stage, Multiple-Threshold Front Airbags
(SRS) Front Side Airbags with Passenger-Side
Occupant Position Detection System (OPDS)
Side Curtain Airbags with Rollover Sensor
VTEC
mission
h Trac-
m (ABS)
ustment,
wer Slid-
att AM/
includ-
etooth
LEASES BASED ON APPROVED CREDIT TIER 1 THRU AHFC. MILEAGE BASED ON 2012 EPA MILEAGE ESTIMATES. USE FOR COMPARISON PURPOSES ONLY.
DO NOT COMPARE TO MODELS BEFORE 2008. YOUR ACTUAL MILEAGE WILL VARY DEPENDING ON HOW YOU DRIVE AND MAINTAIN YOUR VEHICLE. OFFERS EXPIRE 10/31/2012
MATT BURNE HONDA PRE-OWNED CENTER
Call: 1-800-NEXTHONDA View Prices at www.mattburnehonda.com
*2.9% on Certifed Accords thru Am Honda Finance W.A.C. up to 60 mos. Certifed Hondas have 1 yr - 12k
Basic Warranty & 7yr - 100k Powertrain from orig. inservice date.
S
1110 Wyoming Ave,
Scranton, PA
1-800-NEXT-HONDA
570-341-1400
ODYSSEY
10 ODYSSEY EX Slate, 24K.....................NOW $23,720
10 ODYSSEY EXL-DVD Slate, 33K ...NOW $25,772
10 ODYSSEY EXL-DVD Slate, 24K ...NOW $26,302
ACCORDS
08 ACCORD LX SDN 5 Speed, Silver, 46K..............NOW $13,431
08 ACCORD LXP SDN Red, 37K .......................NOW $14,304
09 ACCORD LX SDN Gray, 36K..........................NOW $15,580
09 ACCORD LXP SDN Silver, 37K......................NOW $15,908
09 ACCORD EX SDN Gold, 31K..........................NOW $16,982
11 ACCORD LX SDN 5 Speed, White, 17K..............NOW $17,497
08 ACCORD EXL V6 SDN Green, 52K .............NOW $17,633
10 ACCORD LXP SDN Silver, 29K......................NOW $17,944
09 ACCORD EXL V6 SDN Silver, 37K ..............NOW $17,947
10 ACCORD EX SDN Burgandy, 19K ....................NOW $18,891
10 ACCORD EXL SDN Burgandy, 30K .................NOW $18,945
10 ACCORD EXL V6 SDN Gray, 39K ...............NOW $19,717
11 ACCORD SE SDN Gray, 16K ..........................NOW $19,999
ELEMENT 4WD
09 ELEMENT EX Red, 53K ...................................NOW $17,243
$0 DOWN
PAYMENT
Lease 36 Months through ahfc $0 Down Payment
Per Mo. Per Mo.
LLease
* ***
2.9% on
Certied
Accords
Gold, 88K, Was $8,250
Now $7,888
02 HONDA ACCORD
LX V6 SDN
Navy, 105K, Was $8,950
Now $8,473
05 HONDA ACCORD
EX SEDAN
Red, Laredo, 80K, Was $14,950
Now $13,929
08 JEEP GRAND
CHEROKEE 4X4
Navy, 71K, Was $9,850
Now $8,979
07 CHRYSLER
SEBRING TOURING
Silver, 37K, Was $11,950
Now $10,823
06 MERCURY GRAND
MARQUIS SDN
Silver, 68K, Was $12,500
Now $11,775
07 CHEVY
TRAILBLAZER LS 4WD
EXL, Gold, 104K $10,973
05 HONDA
PILOT 4WD
EX, Gold, 71K $12,926
EX, Sage, 47K $14,931
Black, 73K, Was $13,950
Now $12,675
07 FORD FUSION
SEL SDN
Silver, 34K, Was $14,950
Now $12,592
09 HONDA CIVIC
LX COUPE
Navy, 69K, Was $17,950
Now $15,838
07 TOYOTA
HIGHLANDER 4WD
Gray, 23K, Was $18,950
Now $17,444
10 TOYOTA MATRIX
S AWD
Silver, 63K, Was $19,950
Now $18,402
09 HONDA RIDGELINE
RTL 4WD
Black, 24K, Was $20,950
Now $19,964
10 TOYOTA CAMRY
XLE SDN
Silver, 17K, Was $20,950
Now $19,647
10 VOLKSWAGEN TIGUAN
S 4 MOTION
2.9%
APR
2.9%
APR
CIVICS
10 CIVIC LX SDN Titanium, 36K ............................NOW $14,788
09 CIVIC HYBRID SDN Black, 37K....................NOW $14,973
11 CIVIC EX SDN Titanium, 19K ............................NOW $15,899
10 CIVIC EX SDN Silver, 25K................................NOW $16,316
10 CIVIC EX SDN Blue, 26K.................................NOW $16,316
10 CIVIC EX SDN Black, 25K................................NOW $16,316
09 CIVIC EX SDN Navi, Titanium, 34K......................NOW $15,985
12 CIVIC EXL SDN Gray, 11K ..............................NOW $19,999
09 CIVIC EX CPE Black, 40K ................................NOW $13,988
10 CIVIC LX CPE Gray, 19K..................................NOW $14,707
PILOT 4WD
09 PILOT EX Silver, 58K ..........................................NOW $22,705
11 PILOT LX Gray, 37K............................................NOW $23,748
11 PILOT LX Silver, 17K...........................................NOW $24,748
10 PILOT EXL Cherry, 20K......................................NOW $26,347
11 PILOT EX Navy, 18K...........................................NOW $27,284
11 PILOT EXL-DVD Cherry, 36K...........................NOW $28,830
11 PILOT EXL White, 17K .......................................NOW $28,893
CRV 4WD
08 CRV EX White, 46K ..............................................NOW $17,723
08 CRV EXL Red, 18K .............................................NOW $20,924
What You See Is What You Pay!
White, 66K, Was $9,950
Now $9,484
08 FORD FOCUS
SE SDN
Red Laredo, 46K, Was $15,950
Now $15,501
07 JEEP GRAND
CHEROKEE
06 HONDA PILOT
EXL 4WD
LX, Silver, 76K $11,783
EXL, White, 56K $15,948
Pearl, 26K, Was $21,500
10 FORD ESCAPE
XLT 4WD
Now $20,499
2013S ARE COMING & WEVE GOT TO
MAKE ROOM FOR NEW TRADE-INS!
RIDGELINE 4WD
09 RIDGELINE RTL Cherry, 33K ..........................NOW $26,608
11 RIDGELINE RTS Black, 19K ...........................NOW $27,476
Gold, 48K, Was $13,950
Now $13,238
07 KIA SORRENTO
LX 4WD
Khaki, 31K, Was $14,508
Now $13,762
07 JEEP LIBERTY
SPORT 4X4
White, 19K, Was $14,950
Now $14,731
06 HONDA ACCORD
EX SDN
Green, TMU, Was $6,950
Now $5,965
99 HONDA ACCORD
LX SEDAN
HONDA CRV 4WD
02 LX, Silver, 53K $10,371
05 SE, Gray, 73K $13,393
05 SE, Gray, 37K $15,372
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2012 PAGE 9G
PAGE 10G SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2012 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
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
10 CHEVY MALIBU LS
blue 4 cyl. auto
09 CHEVY IMPALA LS
Silver, V6
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, 87k miles
05 FORD 500
AWD grey, auto V6
05 CHEVY IMPALA
silver, alloys, V6
04 NISSAN MAXIMA LS
silver, auto,
sunroof
03 CHEVY CAVALIER
Blue, 4 cyl., auto
(R-title)
03 CHEVY MONTE
CARLO LS blue
V6 auto
03 AUDI S8 QUATTRO,
mid blue/light grey
leather, naviga-
tion, AWD
01 TOYOTA CELICA
GT silver, 4 cyl
auto sunroof
00 BMW 323i
silver auto
98 NISSAN ALTIMA
Gold, auto, 4 dr
4 cyl.
73 PORSCHE 914
green & black, 5
speed, 62k miles.
SUVS, VANS,
TRUCKS, 4 X4s
08 JEEP PATRIOT
grey, auto, 4 cyl.,
4x4
08 DODGE NITRO
SXT orange,
auto, 4x4
08 FORD ESCAPE XLT
SILVER, V6, 4X4
07 DODGE CARAVAN
SXT green,
4 door, 7 pass
mini van
06 DODGE DAKOTA
QUAD CAB SLT
black, 4 door, V8,
4x4 truck
06 MERCURY MARINER
premium seafoam
green, leather int.,
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 ESCAPE XLT
blue, auto, V6 4x4
05 JEEP LIBERTY SPORT
green, V6, 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
04 CHEVY TRAILBLAZER
lt green V6 4x4
04 MITSUBISHI
OUTLANDER XLS
red, auto, 4 cyl.,
AWD
04 JEEP GRAND
CHEROKEE LAREDO
Se patriot blue, V6,
4x4
04 FORD SUZUKI XlS LX
blue V6 4x4
04 KIA SORENTO EX
blue, auto, V6 AWD
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 CHRYSLER TOWN &
COUNTRY EL
4 door,
7 pass mini van
02 CHEVY TRAILBLAZ-
ER LT, silver, V6,
4x4
02 FORD F150
SUPERCAB XLT
silver, 4x4 truck
01 FORD F150 XLT
white, super cab,
4x4 truck
01 FORD F150 XLT
Blue/tan, 4 door,
4x4 truck
00 CHEVY 1500
SILVERADO X-CAB
green, 4x4 truck
99 NISSAN PATHINDER
gold, V6, 4x4
98 FORD EXPLOREER XLT
red, auto, 4x4
415 Autos-Antique
& Classic
CHEVROLET `61
CORVETTE
A black & silver
beauty. 4 barrel with
4 on the floor.
$39,000 Firm. Inter-
ested parties call for
info 570-287-8498
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
CHEVROLET `76
PICKUP
4 Cylinder
Very Good
Condition!
NEW PRICE
$2,500.
570-362-3626
Ask for Lee
415 Autos-Antique
& Classic
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
MERCURY `55
MONTCLAIR
99.9% original. 4
door sedan, black &
yellow. Motor re-
built, 250 miles on
it. Youve got to
see it to believe it!
call for more infor-
mation after 1:00pm
(570)540-3220
421 Boats &
Marinas
ALUMINUM 15 BOAT
with 35hp Evinrude,
trailer & extras.
$1700. obo call
(570) 239-7708
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
MYERS 13 SEMI V
aluminum boat with
trailer, oars, seats,
lights, vests, etc.
$500.570-823-2764
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
CHEVY 08 3500
HD DUMP TRUCK
2WD, automatic.
Only 12,000 miles.
Vehicle in like
new condition.
$19,000.
570-288-4322
439 Motorcycles
BMW 2010 K1300S
Only 460 miles! Has
all bells & whistles.
Heated grips, 12 volt
outlet, traction con-
trol, ride adjustment
on the fly. Black with
lite gray and red
trim. comes with
BMW cover, battery
tender, black blue
tooth helmet with
FM stereo and black
leather riding gloves
(like new). paid
$20,500. Sell for
$15,000 FIRM.
Call 570-262-0914
Leave message.
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 05
750 SHADOW
Windshield, saddle-
bags & new battery.
2,190 Miles Garage
Kept. Asking $4500.
570-430-3041
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
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
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
442 RVs & Campers
FOREST RIVER`08
5TH WHEEL
Model 8526RLS
Mountain Top,PA
$18,500
570-760-6341
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2012 PAGE 11G
POLLOCKS USED CARS
Ken Pollock AT
339 HWY 315, PITTSTON, PA
Hours
M-F 9-8pm
Sat 9-5pm
1-800-223-1111
www.kenpollocksuzuki.com
CLOSE TO EVERYWHERE
WERE EASY TO FIND
JUST OFF EXIT 175
RTE I-81 PITTSTON
SCAN HERE FOR
MORE INFO
*All Prices Plus Tax, Tags, & Fees. Artwork for illustration purposes only. Dealer not responsible for typographical errors. All Value Vehicle Outlet Cars pass PA State Inspection.
See sales person for complete details. **1.74% on bank approved credit for 60 month term. Just Traded As Traded Vehicles are sold as is where is with no warranty.
GOLD CHECK CERTIFIED VEHICLES
JUST TRADED
AS TRADED!
RATES AS LOW AS
1.74%
**
The Best Vehicle At The
Absolute Lowest Prices.
3 Day or 150 Mile Money Back Guarantee**
30 Day/1000 Mile Limited Warranty**
All Value Vehicle Outlet Cars Pass
PA State Inspection**
Value Vehicle Outlet
GOLD CHECK CERTIFIED
MANAGERS SPECIALS
$
19,799
*
LIKE NEW!
2012 SUZUKI EQUATOR EXT CAB
2WD
Stk# S2358A, Only 500 Miles
On It, Alloy Wheels, Automatic,
Power Windows & Locks
1984 PONTIAC FIRE BIRD COUPE
Stk# S2304A, Runs And Drives!!!
$
999
*
2003 DODGE DAKOTA EX CAB 4X4
Stk#S2219A, 4 Wheel Drive
$
2,999
*
2000 MERCURY MOUNTAINEER 4X4
Stk# P14703A, Power Windows & Locks, Automatic,
$
2,799
*
2008 SUZUKI XL-7 AWD
Stk# S2202A, Alloy Wheels, Power Windows & Locks, 3rd Row
$
13,799
*
1998 DODGE AVENGER COUPE
Stk# S2257B, Only 74K Miles, Automatic, Power Windows & Locks
$
2,199
*
2002 CHRYSLER PT CRUISER WAGON
Stk# S2291A, Automatic, Power Window & Locks
$
2,299
*
2004 KIA RIO WAGON
Stk# S2204A, Great Runner and Great on Gas!
$
2,499
*
1983 FORD MUSTANG GT CONV
Stk# P14730, Perfect Project Car, GT Pkg, Power Windows, 4 Speed Manual
$
2,999
*
2001 DODGE RAM 2500 EX CAB 4X4
Stk# S1797B, Plow Package w/Plow, Automatic
$
3,799
*
Stk# P14684A, Power Windows &
Locks, CD, Alloy Wheels, Auto
2005 PONTIAC VIBE
NOW
$
7,299
*
Stk# P14702, Alloy Wheels, Automatic,
Power Windows & Locks
2008 PONTIAC
GRAND PRIX SEDAN
NOW
$
9,399
*
Stk# P14716, Power Windows &
Locks, Automatic, A/C, CD
2006 PONTIAC G6
SEDAN
NOW
$
6,499
*
Stk# P14718, Sunroof, Alloy
Wheels, Automatic, PW, PL
2004 OLDSMOBILE
ALERO COUPE
NOW
$
5,999
*
Stk# P14715, Leather, Sunroof,
Automatic, PW, PL
2004 SATURN
ION SEDAN
NOW
$
7,299
*
Stk# S2222A, Automatic, Power
Locks & Winmdows, CD, A/C
2009 SUZUKI SX4
SEDAN LE
NOW
$
9,499
*
Stk# S2252B, Leather, Automatic, Power
Windows & Locks
2006 SAAB 9-5
SEDAN
NOW
$
9,699
*
Stk# S2307A, Automatic, Power
Windows & Locks, Great Runner!
2003 CHEVROLET
IMPALA SEDAN
NOW
$
6,799
*
Stk# P14737, Power Windows &
Locks, Automatic, Only 68K Miles
2002 SUBARU
FORESTER AWD
NOW
$
8,999
*
Stk# S2290B, Automatic, Power
Windows & Locks, A/C
2003 SUZUKI
GRAND VITARA 4WD
NOW
$
6,999
*
Stk# S2235A, Sunroof, 5 Speed
Manual, A/C, Low Miles!
2009 HYUNDAI
ACCENT SEDAN
NOW
$
9,999
*
$
10,999
* 2006 MERCURY MONTEGO SDN AWD
Stk#S2256, Leather, Sunroof, All Wheel Drive, Auto, PW, PL
$
11,399
* 2006 CHEVY IMPALA LTZ
Stk#P14671, Leather, Alloy Wheels, Automatic, CD, PW, PL
$
11,499
* 2010 HYUNDAI SONATA
Stk#S2050A, GLS Package, Automatic, Power Windows & Locks
$
11,999
* 2009 NISSAN SENTRA SEDAN
Stk#P14710, SR Pkg, Power Windows & Locks, Automatic
$
12,299
* 2011 TOYOTA YARIS HATCHBACK
Stk#S2175A, Power Windows & Locks, Manual Trans., Awesome on Gas, Only 12K Miles
$
12,599
* 2010 SUZUKI SX4 CROSSOVER AWD
Stk#P14691A, Automatic, Power Windows & Locks, AM/FM/CD, All Wheel Drive!
2011 SUZUKI KIZASHI SE AWD
Stk# S1548, Alloy Wheels, Power Seat, Automatic CVT, PW, PL
$
16,999
*
$
12,899
* 2008 DODGE NITRO 4X4
Stk#P14714, SXT Pkg, Alloy Wheels, Automatic, PW, PL
2011 MITSUBISHI GALANT
Stk# P14728, Power Windows & Locks, Alloy Wheels, CD, A/C
$
12,999
*
2011 SUZUKI SX4 CROSSOVER TECH AWD
Stk# S2254A, Custom Wheels, Automatic, Navigation, PW, PL
$
14,599
*
2007 MINI COOPER S HATCHBACK
Stk# S2296A, Sunroof, Automatic, S Package, Alloy Wheels
$
15,799
*
2011 KIA SOUL
Stk# S1731B, Power Windows & Locks, Automatic, CD, Only 8K Miles!
$
15,899
*
2007 MAZDA CX-7 AWD
Stk# P14738, Automatic, 4 Cylinder, Alloy Wheels, PW, PL
$
15,999
*
2011 SUZUKI GRAND VITARA PREMIUM 4X4
Stk# P14705, Alloy Wheels, Automatic, Navigation, Power Windows & Locks
$
15,999
*
2011 DODGE AVENGER SXT
Stk# P14720, Alloy Wheels, Power WIndows & Locks, CD, Onlky 16K Miles!
$
16,499
*
2007 FORD EDGE AWD
Stk# P14736, Panoramic Sunroof, Leather, All Wheel Drive
$
16,599
*
2009 HONDA CIVIC EX-L SDN
Stk# S2346A, Leather, Sunroof, Automatic, PW, PL, Only 14K Miles!
$
16,799
*
2009 SUBARU FORESTER LIMITED AWD
Stk# P14704, Sunroof, Leather, Automatic, Alloys
$
17,799
*
2011 TOYOTA CAMRY SE SEDAN
Stk# S2227A, Alloy Wheels, Automatic, Power Windows & Locks, CD
$
17,999
*
2009 JEEP LIBERTY SPORT 4X4
Stk# S2228A, Sunroof, Alloy Wheels, Automatic, Power Windows & Locks
$
17,999
*
2012 SUZUKI KIZASHI SE AWD
Stk# S2161A, Only 2K Miles, Power Windows & Locks, Power Seat
$
18,499
*
2007 HONDA PILOT EX-L SUV 4WD
Stk# S2261A, 3rd Row Seating, Leather, Sunroof, Power Seat
$
18,999
*
2012 SUZUKI KIZASHI GTS AWD
Stk# S1806A, Only 3K Miles, Sunroof, 18 Wheels, All Wheel Drive
$
20,499
*
2009 CHEVY TRAVERSE AWD
Stk# P14735, Leather, Dual Sunroof, 3rd Row, Rear Park Assist
$
20,999
*
2011 DODGE NITRO HEAT 4WD
Stk# S2270A, Sunroof, 20 Chrome Wheels, Automatic, Only 10K Miles!
$
21,499
*
2010 JEEP WRANGLER 2DR 4X4
Stk# P14725, Lift Kit, Off Road Tires, Winch, PW, PL, Ready for Some Mud
$
21,999
*
2012 SUZUKI KIZASHI SLS AWD
Stk# P14726A, Sunroof, Heated Leather, Power Seats, 1-Owner!
$
22,999
*
2012 DODGE RAM QUAD CAB 1500 4X4
Stk# P14734, Chrome Pkg, Power Windows & Locks, CD, Low Miles
$
25,999
*
2011 HONDA RIDGELINE RTL 4WD
Stk# P14713, Leather, Sunroof, Navigation, Bed Cover
$
28,499
*
2000 CHEVY TRACKER 2DR CONVERTIBLE
Stk# P14665A, Automatic, Convertible Top
$
1,999
*
2000 CHEVY BLAZER 2DR 4X4
Stk#S2319B, Automatic, Alloy Wheels, Power Windows & Locks
$
2,899
*
PRICES FOR EVERY BUDGET!!!
OVER 50 USED VEHICLES IN STOCK UNDER $20,000!
KEN WALLACES
www.valleychevrolet.com
VALLEY
CHEVROLET
Chevy Runs Deep
EXIT 170B OFF I-81 TO EXIT 1. BEAR RIGHT ON BUSINESS ROUTE 309 TO SIXTH LIGHT. JUST BELOWWYOMINGVALLEY MALL.
821-2772 1-800-444-7172
601 Kidder St., Wilkes-Barre, PA
Mon.-Thurs. 8:30-8:00pm; Fri. 8:30-7:00pm;Sat. 8:30-5:00pm
o s b e o typog ap ca e o s; ust ta e de e y by 9/30/
Scan From
Mobile Device
For More
Specials
VALLEY CHEVROLET
AVALANCHE OF VALUES
AVALANCHE OF VALUES
*Tax and tags additional. Not responsible for typographical errors.
2009 CHEVY AVALANCHE
LTZ 4X4
#13074A, White Diamond, 5.3L V8, AT, PS, PB,
A/C, PW, PL, Tilt, Cruise, Int. Wiper, 20 Wheels,
Leather, DVD, Sunroof, Nav, 1-Owner
$
29,999
*
ONE
OWNER!
#13091A, Orange, 5.3L V8, Auto, PS,
PB, A/C, PW, PL, Tilt, Cruise, 20 Chrome
Wheels, Sunroof, Nav, Leather, 40K
#13027A, Gray, 5.3L V8, AT, A/C, PW, PL, Tilt,
Cruise, Int. Wiper, Leather, 20 Chrome Wheels,
DVD, Sunroof, Nav, 1-Owner, 27K Miles
2008 CHEVY AVALANCHE
LTZ 4X4
$
32,999
*
2009 CHEVY AVALANCHE
LTZ 4X4
$
35,999
*
ONLY
27,000
MILES
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
451 Trucks/
SUVs/Vans
CADILLAC 08 SRX
AWD. Beige
metallic. 60K miles,
sunroof,
heated seats.
$19,995.
444 Market St.
Kingston
MAFFEI
Auto Sales
570-288-6227
CHEVROLET `99 S-10
64,000 ORIGINAL
MILES, RUNS LIKE
NEW. $4500.
570-947-0032
CHEVROLET `99
S-10 PICK-UP
Silver,
85,000 miles,
excellent condition,
covered bed.
$3,800
570-822-7657
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
CHEVY 03
SILVERADO 4X4
REG CAB
AUTO, V8. LOOKS
& RUNS GREAT
$6995.
4x4, 6 cyl., auto, 1
owner, great work
truck $4995.
Call For Details!
570-696-4377
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
CHEVY 99 SILVERADO
4X4 XCAB
Auto, V8, like new
$6995
Call For Details!
570-696-4377
451 Trucks/
SUVs/Vans
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
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
DODGE 03 CARAVAN
Auto, V6. Nice
clean car $4995
Call For Details!
570-696-4377
FORD `04 F150
Silver, 4 x 4, auto-
matic, 56,000
miles, extra tool
box, leather cover,
plastic bed &
remote starting.
Runs perfect,
asking $7,200.
Cell-570-472-8084
Home-
570-825-2596
Boat? Car? Truck?
Motorcycle? Air-
plane? Whatever it
is, sell it with a
Classified ad.
570-829-7130
FORD 01 F150
4WD Ext Cab, V8,
Lariat, 6 bed with
liner, 7 western
plow, 80,000 miles,
$8500. OBO
Call Tom
570-234-9790
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 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 F150 XL
4x4, 6 cyl., auto, 1
owner, great work
truck $4995.
Call For Details!
570-696-4377
Looking for that
special place
called home?
Classified will address
Your needs.
Open the door
with classified!
HONDA `05
ELEMENT LX
4 wd, auto, 58k
miles, excellent
condition. $12,000
(570)472-9091
JEEP `12
LIBERTY SPORT
4 x 4. Silver. 14K
miles. Factory War-
ranty . Sale Price -
$20,900.
444 Market St.
Kingston
MAFFEI
Auto Sales
570-288-6227
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
LAND ROVER 97
DISCOVERY
inspected runs well
$1800.
RANGE ROVER 95
CLASSIC
runs well not
inspected $1500.
570-239-4163 or
570-675-9847
leave message
451 Trucks/
SUVs/Vans
MITSUBISHI `11
OUTLANDER SPORT SE
AWD, Black interi-
or/exterior, start/
stop engine with
keyless entry, heat-
ed seats, 18 alloy
wheels, many extra
features. Only 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
Collect cash, not dust!
Clean out your
basement, garage
or attic and call the
Classified depart-
ment today at 570-
829-7130!
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
451 Trucks/
SUVs/Vans
TOYOTA `04 SIENNA
LE
Clean & well main-
tained, auto car
starter, gold, low
mileage, 65K, Kelly
blue book value of
$11,300.
Asking $10,900
(570)283-3086
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!
457 Wanted to Buy
Auto
BUYING
USED
VEHICLES
Call
Vitos & Ginos
949 Wyoming Ave,
Forty Fort, PA
288-8995
600
FINANCIAL
610 Business
Opportunities
NEPA FLORAL &
GIFT SHOP
Full-service floral &
gift shop for sale.
Turn key operation
in prime retail loca-
tion. Stable revenue
growth & flexible
operating hours.
Includes delivery
van, all inventory,
walk in cooler, sup-
plies, website, and
customer list. Must
sell, Owner relocat-
ing. 570-592-3327
Let the Community
Know!
Place your Classified
Ad TODAY!
570-829-7130
630 Money To Loan
We can erase
your bad credit -
100% GUARAN-
TEED. Attorneys
for the Federal
Trade Commission
say theyve never
seen a legitimate
credit repair opera-
tion. No one can
legally remove
accurate and timely
information from
your credit report.
Its a process that
starts with you and
involves time and a
conscious effort to
pay your debts.
Learn about manag-
ing credit and debt
at ftc. gov/credit. A
message from The
Times Leader and
the FTC.
700
MERCHANDISE
702 Air
Conditioners
AIR CONDITIONER,
10,000 BTU, great
condition, automatic
shutoff $40.
570-824-3092
AIR CONDITIONER,
24,000 BTU, LG
Ductless, complete,
$700.
570-822-1824
708 Antiques &
Collectibles
BOTTLES, (50), old,
$.50/each. BEER &
SODA CANS (50),
old, $.25/each.
BISHOP HAVEY
YEARBOOKS (4),
1971-1973, 1974,
1975, $10/each.
570-823-6986
CAMERA, antique,
fold-out, $50
570-489-2675
CHIFEROBE - refin-
ished to excellent
condition. $195.
HOOSIER refinished
to excellent condi-
tion. Made by
Napanee Cabinet
Co. $700. 779-1342.
COINS, Washington
quarters 1932-P-
1934-P-1935-P-
1936-P-1936-D-
1940-S. $80.
570-287-4135
COMMEMORATIVE
QUARTERS, 50
State, P-Mint, D-
Mint And Gold Plat-
ed, $65.
Call 570-855-3113
708 Antiques &
Collectibles
HESS TRUCKS (53)
new in boxes 1990
thru 2011 $700 firm.
570-735-4580
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
HORSE. Radio Flyer
Liberty Spring Horse
with Sound option.
$100.
570-288-8689
LIONEL 4 tin cars
$50. all. German
dagger repro $25.
HO train set, diesel
$25. 2 Hess 00-03
$15. each.
570-574-0271
MOVING SALE
NY METS, 150 base-
ball cards, $10. BAL-
TI MORE ORI OLES,
150 baseball cards,
$10. NY YANKEES,
150 baseball cards,
$10. BOSTON RED
SOX, 150 baseball
cards, $10.
PHILADELPHIA
PHILLIES, 270 base-
ball cards, $15.
570-313-5214 or
570-313-3859
OLD PUMPKIN
WAGON $295.
Antique coffee bin
from the Dilsworth
Coffee Co., $525.
Old wooden baby
highchair $95. Coal
miners liquor
decanter, collectors
item $39.823-5648
VINTAGE EICO #666
vacuum tube tester
with manual in
excellent condition
working $75. Lionel
vintage train trans-
former speckled
case type #4044,
chec 570-735-6638
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
COM TECH REPAIR
All Major Brand
Appliances. Over 25
years experience
with Americas
largest repair
organization. We
know how to get it
done. Call today!
570-954-7608
MICROWAVE, GE,
20w x 14d x 10L, like
new, has carousel
turntable, $35.
570-288-8689
REFRIGERATOR
Whirlpool $150.
Maytag Washer
$75. Maytag Dryer
$75. All very good
condition.
570-654-7937
SLOW COOKER, still
in box, great for
dips, fondue $10.
570-650-8710
STOVE Black Ameri-
cana gas, used
once, excellent con-
dition. Bought for
$429, will sell for
$250.
570-328-2444
WASHER, Hotpoint,
white, great condi-
tion, $50
570-655-4397
710 Appliances
TOASTER, new, still
in box, $10. TOAST-
ER OVEN, new, $10.
GEORGE FOREMAN
GRILL, 1 year old,
$10. 570-824-2571
712 Baby Items
HIGH CHAIR like
new $25. obo.
570-262-9273
STROLLER, Peg
Perego, Model Pliko
P3, Girls, very good
condition, $75.
STROLLER,
MacLaren Volo,
girls, very good con-
dition $45. CAR
SEAT, Britax
Decathlon Convert-
ible, very good con-
dition $75. CRADLE
SWING, Fisher Price
Starlight, very good
condition, $45.
HIGH CHAIR, Peg-
Perego Prima
Pappa, girls, very
good condition,
$45. CAR SEAT, Peg
Perego Primo Viag-
gio, girls, very good
condition, $75.
BABY ROCKER,
MacLaren, girls,
very good condition
$45.
570-430-4054
GET THE WORD OUT
with a Classified Ad.
570-829-7130
716 Building
Materials
DOORS, 2, Birch,
includes all hard-
ware, 30, right &
left, $25.
570-288-8689
FENCE, 36W x
42H; galvanized
chain link gate, $10.
FENCE, 22W x
62H; galvanized
chain link gate, $10.
570-823-6986
PAGE 12G SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2012 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale
www.BERWICKCHEVY.com
CADILLAC-BUICK-GMC TRUCKS
12th & Pine Streets, Berwick
570-759-1221
*Tax and tags extra. All rebates applied.
HOURS: Mon.-Tue. 9-8, Wed. 9-5, Thur. 9-8, Fri. 9-8, Sat. 9-3
Every
2012
Must Go!
BERWICK CHEVROLET-BUICK-GMC-CADILLAC
GMC
G2175 2012 Terrain $29,520
$
28,390
*
G2228 2012 Terrain $29,990
$
28,790
*
G2166 2012 Terrain $32,545
$
31,490
*
G2176 2012 Terrain $35,515
$
34,390
*
G2062 2012 Acadia $35,895
$
32,290
*
G2241 2012 Acadia $38,235
$
34,590
*
G2220 2012 Acadia $38,180
$
34,590
*
G2264 2012 Acadia $43,135
$
39,290
*
G2221 2012 Acadia $51,215
$
46,990
*
G2266 2012 Sierra Ext. $38,585
$
29,590
*
G2261 2012 Sierra Crew $38,790
$
31,390
*
G2183 2012 Sierra Crew $38,790
$
31,390
*
G2029 2012 Sierra Crew $39,195
$
31,790
*
G2139 2012 Sierra Crew $39,444
$
31,990
*
G2185 2012 Sierra Crew $39,650
$
32,190
*
G2209 2012 Sierra Crew $39,650
$
32,190
*
G2170 2012 Sierra Crew $40,155
$
32,570
*
G3003 2013 Sierra Crew $39,290
$
34,390
*
G3002 2013 Sierra Ext. $40,660
$
35,590
*
G3004 2013 Sierra Crew $42,030
$
36,790
*
G2229 2012 Sierra Crew 2500 $45,470
$
39,590
*
G2329 2012 Sierra Ext. $51,115
$
41,390
*
G2144 2012 Sierra Crew $54,950
$
45,990
*
G2326 2012 Sierra Ext. $55,920
$
46,950
*
BUICK
B0234 2011 Enclave $50,715
$
40,990
*
B2204 2012 Enclave $44,335
$
40,990
*
B2258 2012 Enclave $44,670
$
41,290
*
B2316 2012 Verano $23,470
$
22,490
*
B2254 2012 Verano $25,955
$
24,690
*
B2319 2012 LaCrosse $32,115
$
30,590
*
B2324 2012 LaCrosse $34,820
$
32,890
*
CADILLAC
K2203 2012 CTS AWD Sedan $52,060
$
46,690
*
K3001 2013 XTS AWD $55,335
$
53,690
*
K3005 2013 Escalade ESV $79,415
$
75,090
*
BERWICK CHEVROLET
BERWICK CHEVROLET
Stk. # Year/Model MSRP YOU PAY
CHEVROLET
C2348 2012 Sonic $18,580
$
17,908
*
C2357 2012 Sonic $18,540
$
18,190
*
C2350 2012 Cruze $18,590
$
18,090
*
C2345 2012 Cruze $18,865
$
18,490
*
C2352 2012 Cruze $20,540
$
19,890
*
C2351 2012 Cruze $21,030
$
20,290
*
C2355 2012 Cruze $22,915
$
22,190
*
C3013 2013 Cruze $22,765
$
22,290
*
C2346 2012 Equinox $26,105
$
25,090
*
C3014 2013 Equinox $26,750
$
25,990
*
C3007 2013 Equinox $28,500
$
27,690
*
C2347 2012 Equinox $29,520
$
28,290
*
C2014 2012 Camaro $46,200
$
44,990
*
C3009 2013 Camaro $49,190
$
45,490
*
C3012 2013 Malibu $26,030
$
25,390
*
T2280 2012 Silverado Ext. $36,575
$
27,690
*
T2302 2012 Silverado Ext. $36,825
$
27,990
*
T2358 2012 Silverado Ext. $37,374
$
28,290
*
T2043 2012 Silverado Ext. $37,890
$
28,890
*
T2233 2012 Silverado Crew $38,240
$
30,790
*
T2232 2012 Silverado Crew $38,240
$
30,790
*
T2292 2012 Silverado Crew $38,380
$
30,990
*
T2058 2012 Silverado Crew $39,960
$
31,490
*
T2230 2012 Silverado Crew $39,100
$
31,590
*
T2270 2012 Silverado Crew $39,240
$
31,690
*
T2272 2012 Silverado Crew $39,750
$
32,190
*
T2273 2012 Silverado Crew $39,830
$
32,290
*
T2295 2012 Silverado Crew $39,830
$
32,290
*
T2243 2012 Silverado Crew $40,550
$
32,890
*
T3015 2013 Silverado Crew $38,805
$
33,890
*
T3008 2013 Silverado Crew $40,864
$
35,690
*
T3010 2013 Silverado Crew $40,864
$
35,690
*
T2052 2012 Silverado Crew $47,975
$
40,390
*
T2341 2012SilveradoCrewDually$61,620
$
51,190
*
T2197 2012 Tahoe Z71 $52,270
$
46,290
*
T3011 2013 Tahoe $53,210
$
48,890
*
T2041 2012 Traverse $35,780
$
32,690
*
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
716 Building
Materials
SINK stainless steel
sink made by Just,
single bowl sink 25
x22x8 deep with
strainer basket,
excellent condition.
$20. 570-735 6638
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
STAIR TREADS,
Pine, with returns,
no knots. 10 1/2
deep and at least
40 wide. 11 for $10.
Call 570-430-6434
722 Christmas
Trees
CHRISTMAS TREE,
6 1/2 foot Regency,
slim, evergreen, life
like, prelit with white
lights and accented
with sugar globe
white lights, Tree
bag included. Used
2 years, purchased
at www.treeclas-
sics.com for $350.,
will sell for $100.
570-301-8515
726 Clothing
BLOUSES, (10)
womens, large &
XL, $1/each. JACK-
ETS (10) womens,
large and XL,
$2/each.
570-823-6986
CHILDRENS
SOCKS, 114 pairs,
$15 for all.
570-313-5214 or
570-313-3859
JERSEY new Pen-
guins jersey (unisex)
black, red, white
with em-bossed
Penguin logo on
front. Originally
$139. sell $45.
(570) 868-6168
PANTS, Justice,
girls size 10 slim,
excellent condition:
black denim, grey
denim, and grey
twill. All three pairs
for $8.00
570-905-5539
RAINCOAT beige,
longer length Misty
Harbor 16P, like new
$20. 570-654-9517
SCHOOL UNIFORMS
Good Shepherd
Academy, girls size
12 skirts & sweaters
$5.00 each
570-825-3534
730 Computer
Equipment &
Software
DESKTOP & tower!!
refurbished fresh &
legal Winxp/
Win7,Office 10, anti-
virus & more.
Accessories includ-
ed $35-$100.
Complete systems
with lcd monitors:
$100-$150. Lap-
tops with Win7,
office10, AV + more,
wifi, bag:$125-175.
All have cdrw/dvd or
dvdrw. 100% condi-
tion. 570.862.2236
PRINTER: Oki B6
300 laser mono-
chrome, prints up to
35 ppm, parallel,
USB & network-
capable. $65.
570-266-1602
732 Exercise
Equipment
HARD CORE GYM,
Plate loaded cable
pulley machine; lat
pull down, chest
press, pec deck, leg
ext, lower pulley for
curling. $150.
570-868-6024
TREADMILL, Pro-
Form, very good
condition, $75.
OLYMPIC WEIGHT
BENCH with bar,
weights, matts,
attachments, $245.
570-430-4054
TREADMILL, Weslo
Cadence 70e,
space saver.
$80 or best offer.
570-430-6434
WEIDER 2 person
exercise equipment
set, cant get to the
gym this is great
$125. 825-0283
736 Firewood
FIREWOOD, stove
cords, all hard-
woods, delivered,
stacked, $90.
Call Greg
570-239-6244
742 Furnaces &
Heaters
HEATERS vent free
natural gas &
propane heaters.
New in unopened
box with thermostat
& blower. 20,000
BTU $170. 30,000
BTU $220.
Call after 6:00
(570) 675-0005
744 Furniture &
Accessories
BEDROOM SET,
white, twin bed, tall
dresser, long dress-
er, mirror, night
stand, tall book
case, $250.
570-825-3534
BEDROOM SUITE,
antique, mahogany,
3 piece, $200.
570-824-2571
CHAIR, light gold
accent chair, basket
weave size, $40.
570-288-4852
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
CHEST maple
five drawers, Con-
temporary $75.
570-779-1342.
COMPUTER DESK
oak overlay $50 or
best offer.
570-825-0283
COUCH
80x32
$25. 570-829-2082
COUCH Lazy Boy
$100. OBO 570-817-
1190
GRAND FATHER
CLOCK Oak, curio,
excellent condition.
paid $1800. sell for
$950.570-735-5482
744 Furniture &
Accessories
COUCH maroon
reclining couch with
fold down center
console & mas-
sagers & reclining
love seat also
matching area rug.
Good Shape. Asking
$350. 762-7495
ENTERTAINMENT
CENTER, Raymour
& Flanigan. Cherry.
Top section features
wraparound doors
for easy TV viewing.
Top holds 2 compo-
nents, bottom holds
4 components, 2
side drawers. 6.75
ft. H x 3.5 ft. W x
1.75 ft. D. $1,000.
email mar4man@hot
mail.com for photos.
570-655-5951
ENTERTAINMENT
CENTER, solid Oak,
leaded glass doors,
will fit up to 35 TV,
space for DVD play-
er, stereo, game
system, etc. Large
storage drawer.
Excellent condi-
tion.$250. Call after
3pm. 570-779-3281
ENTERTAINMENT
CENTER, wooden,
with glass stereo
cabinet & storage.
Very good condition.
Asking $75
Call 570-239-6011
FURNI SH FURNI SH
FOR LESS FOR LESS
* NELSON *
* FURNITURE *
* WAREHOUSE *
Recliners from $299
Lift Chairs from $699
New and Used
Living Room
Dinettes, Bedroom
210 Division St
Kingston
Call 570-288-3607
FURNITURE SALE
3 piece reclining
sectional, maroon,
cup holder, maga-
zine holder, paid
$2700 asking $900.
obo. Dark wood din-
ing room suite 7
pieces with match-
ing hutch - set
includes table, leaf,
4 chairs, 2 captain
chairs & 2 piece
hutch paid $2500
asking $900. obo.
King size bedroom
suite, light wood
bed, 2 night stands,
dresser with match-
ing mirror and chest
of drawers paid
$2800 asking $900.
obo. All furniture
only 2 years old,
have all original
receipts moving
from Pennsylvania
to Arizona.
570-687-5335 or
570-780-0227
KITCHEN SET with 4
chairs excellent
condition $100.
Call 779-2349.
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
LAMP 28 brass
with pleated shade
$10. 13 Lenox orna-
ments in their origi-
nal boxes $3.-$10.
570-826-0830
LIFT CHAIR, tan,
very good condition.
$200.
Call 570-262-6893
LIVING ROOM SET,
2 pieces, excellent
condition, $125.
HUTCH, solid large,
Maple, with lights
$125. BEDROOM
SET, small, cherry
Call 570-655-4717
or 570-287-4043
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
MATTRESS:
QUEEN Size P-Top
Set New in Plastic.
Must sell asap. $150
Call 570-280-9628
MOVING MUST SELL
Coffee table & 2 end
tables $40 each.
Kitchen table & 4
chairs $100. TV
stand with drawer
$30. End table $25.
2 corner tables $10
each. Chair $10. 2
area rugs $25.
each. 570-655-4124
PENNSYLVANIA
HOUSE
Oak 5 piece Wall
Unit China, Book
Shelf, Entertainment
Unit, 2 corner
shelves
570-675-3162
RUG RUNNER, Rose
color, (33 w x 84
L), $25.
570-650-8710
SOFA LOVESEAT &
Ottoman. Dark
Green patterned.
Good Condition
Asking $150.00 for
all three. Call
570 779-2030
SOFA-HIDE A BED,
queen size, 6 ft.
long $50. OBO Call
570-693-1918
STOOL/CHAIR (1),
high back, kitchen,
$5. 570-823-6986
TABLE LAMP Orien-
tal Chinese woman
1960s ceramic, pink
-white-gold. $35.
Collector spoons 18
different, $30. neg.
570-696-1927
TempurPedic Mat-
tress/Foundation,
double bed, new,
must sell. Paid
$1,849. Make a rea-
sonable offer. Will
deliver within 100
miles. 570-696-1410
ASHLEY
BY FAMILY
43 Manhattan St
Saturday & Sunday
9am-4pm
Antiques, jewelry &
collectibles, small
kitchen appliances,
gas dryer, crystal
knick knacks, reli-
gious items, pic-
tures, bedroom fur-
niture, sofa bed,
metal kitchen cup-
board, wall mirrors,
womens clothing &
much more!
EVERYTHING MUST GO!
DUPONT
GIANT OUTDOOR
SATURDAY,
SEPTEMBER 8TH
9 AM to 5 PM
Over 50 Vendors!
Country Store
Wide variety
of fruits &
vegetables.
RAIN OR SHINE
ALL TABLES
UNDER TENT
FOOD MENU
ALSO AVAILABLE
POTATO
PANCAKES,
PIEROGIES,
HALUSKI & MORE
SUNDAY
SEPTEMBER 9TH
11 AM TO 7 PM
POLISH HARVEST
FESTIVAL
(DOZYNKI)
HARVEST
WREATH
CEREMONY &
BLESSING, 2 PM
POLKA PUNCH
BAND, 3 PM
GAMES, PRIZES
HOLY MOTHER OF
SORROWS
CHURCH
212 WYOMING
AVENUE, DUPONT
Call
570-654-4262 For
More Information
DURYEA
196 Evans Street
Friday 10-5
Saturday 8-5 &
Sunday 10-1
Clothing, house-
wares, furniture,
vintage and antique
items, seasonal
decorative and
crafts, including
large selection of
Christmas items,
many handmade.
Electronics and
tools, garage kept.
Lawnmowers and
saws. Clothing,
(large woman's
clothing) many
items brand new or
like new & much
more! Absolutely
no earlybirds.
EDWARDSVILLE
HUGE OUTDOOR
YARD SALE
Sat., Sept. 8th
7am to 3pm
EDWARDSVILLE
Collectors Market
Parking Lot
378 Main St
VENDOR SPACE
AVAILABLE
$15. PER SPACE
STOP BY
For Reservations
Call 570-718-1123
Looking for Work?
Tell Employers with
a Classified Ad.
570-829-7130
EXETER
19 Park Lane
Sat., Sept. 8th, 8-4
Sun., Sept. 9th, 9-3
Entire contents in
excellent condition.
Housewares,
kitchenwares,
Mikasa china,
Gorham flatware.
Fontanini figurines,
linens, curtains, wall
decor, twin beds,
old tools. Mens
clothes, 1X. Gor-
geous womens
clothes, 6P(Alfred
Dunner, Talbots).
Medical equipment
& supplies galore:
Jazzy scooter,
wheelchairs, canes,
walkers, Accucheck
meter & strips &
much more!
Priced to Sell!
Most Items 50% Off
on Sunday!
LUZERNE
177 Main Street
Fri., 10-5,
Sat., 9-4, Sun., 10-2
All New
Merchandise!
Furniture, antiques,
dining room set, &
much, much more.
Everything Priced
to Sell!
FORTY FORT
Sat. & Sun.
Sept. 15th & 16th
MARK YOUR
CALENDER:
EXTRA ORDINARY
ESTATE SALE
OF 60 YEAR
ANTIQUE PICKER.
60 years before
the TV reality
show, American
Picker, there was
a passionate
antique collector
with an extra-
ordinary eye for
amazing finds.
Mark your calen-
der for this one-
of-kind estate sale
event. Inquire at:
chriscom@epix.net
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
LUZERNE
YARD SALE
890 BENNETT ST.
Saturday & Sunday,
Sept., 8th & 9th
9am to 4 pm
weather permitting.
Huge Sale! Help us
simplify our lives!
Everything must go!
Most items $5 or
less. Clothes $1,
mens, womens,
girls size 4 to 8,
some with tags.
Books, DVDs, Toys,
some new,
Housewares,
Hunting,
Fishing,Tools.
Apothecary com-
puter desk $75.
Definately some-
thing for Everyone!!
MOUNTAIN TOP
1804 St Marys Rd.
Sun., September
9th, 10-2 New &
used merchandise
bought out from a
Country Store
NANTICOKE
149 E. Broad St.
Sat. & Sun., 9-2
Vintage costume
jewelry, glassware,
old toys,
old school desk.
Dealer Friendly.
Too Much to List!
NANTICOKE
186 East Ridge St.
Saturday the 8th.
9:00 to 12:00
Rain/shine
New Ugg boots,
lawn tracktor trailer
coffee, end tables
Longabergers, XBox
games & more.
PITTSTON
351 South Main St.
SUNDAY ONLY
SEPT 9TH
9AM-4PM
RAIN OR SHINE!
All Items must go.
Clothing, Household
items, furniture,
windows & doors
(used & new), gun
cabinets, misc.
PITTSTON TWP.
633 Suscon Rd
Rain or Shine!
Thurs., Fri., Sat. &
Sun., 9am-6pm
Old Bolova watch,
& others, sports
cards & NASCAR,
household & holiday
items, Precious
Moments & Radko
ornaments, vintage
stained glass win-
dow, toys, tools &
many new items.
PLAINS
69 Abbott St
9/8 & 9/9
from 9a-3p
Lamps, furniture,
collectibles, D&B
purses ($25!),
holiday, bric-a-brac,
more!
Rain or Shine.
PITTSTON
NAME BRAND
LIQUIDATIONS
75% off
All Patio Furniture
Chairs, Tables,
Sets, Gazebos
Retail Price
$200-$1400
Our Price
$50-$350
Cash Only This
Weekend!
Also a nice
selection of
outdoor lawn
equipment, tool
chests, bicycles,
exercise
equipment, small
appliances & more
AT 50%
OFF RETAIL
every day!
All items are new,
but quantities are
limited!
TRAMPOLINE
12 with enclosure,
retail $370.
our price $185!
TABLE TENNIS
Official Size, retail
$200.
our price $100!
GAS GRILL
4 Burner, 48,000
BTU or 4 Burner,
50,000 BTU,
retail $500.
our price $250!
CAR ROOF TOP
CARRIER X CARGO
SPORT 20,
Retail $200.
our price $100!
FUTON
Hudson wood arm
futon, retail $500,
our price $250!
MICROWAVE
Kenmore Elite 1.5
cu ft 1200 watt,
retail $150.
our price $75!
LAWN MOWER
Remington Electric
12 amp, 19 inch
with bagger, retail
$270.
our price $135!
CHIPPER/
SHREDDER
Craftsman 305cc,
10:1 reduction,
retail $945.
our price $472.50!
TOOL CHEST
Craftsman 5 drawer
quiet glide,retail
$300. our price
$150! Plus
many other top,
bottom, middle
corner chests to
choose from!
Find us at
Merchants Village
1201 Oak Street
Pittston or call
570-592-3426
SWOYERSVILLE
459 Owen Street
Sun., Sept 9, 8-1
Kids items, cloth-
ing, baby swing,
toys, household
items, womens
clothing.
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!
WARRIOR RUN
310 Chestnut St.
Sun, Sept. 9, 10-3
Welders, pressure
washer, tile saw/
other saws, tool
box & lots of
other tools.
WEST WEST WYOMING WYOMING
6th Street
OPEN YEAR ROUND
SP SPACE ACE
A AV VAILABLE AILABLE
INSIDE & OUT INSIDE & OUT
Acres of Acres of
parking parking
OUTSIDE
SPACES
- $10
Saturday
10am-2pm
Sunday
8am-4pm
WILKES-BARRE
174 East Thomas
Street
Sat., & Sun.
9/8 & 9/9
8am to noon
750 Jewelry
WATCH, Rollex,
$120
570-489-2675
752 Landscaping &
Gardening
LAWNMOWER,
Yardmachine, gas,
6.0 h.p. high wheel,
22cut $60.
570-675-0042
752 Landscaping &
Gardening
RIDING lawn mower,
Toro, 11hp, 38 cut,
runs great, new bat-
tery, $200 firm.
HEDGE CLIPPERS,
Craftsman 19 gas
powered, new con-
dition, $75 firm.
LAWNMOWER, self
propelled, Toro,
5hp, with hard bag,
runs good $60 firm
570-655-3197
TRACTOR ATTACH-
MENTS, Planet Jr.,
made in the USA,
Cultivator #2368;
Right Plow #1096
and left plow #5568.
$50. for all three.
TRACTOR HITCH,
David Bradley walk
behind, $50.
WHEELBARROW,
steel front wheel,
needs work. $20.
OBO 570-693-1918
754 Machinery &
Equipment
SNOWBLOWER,
Toro 421, two stage,
5 HP, runs well,
$200.
570-592-1328
756 Medical
Equipment
HOSPITAL BED
Invacare total elec-
tric with split rail
$200 negotiable
Golden Companion
II 3 wheeled scooter
with battery $500
negotiable. Invacare
wheelchair 20
width heavy duty
with footrests $35
negotiable. Dolo-
mite 4 wheel walker
with brakes and
seat 650 lb. capaci-
ty $200 negotiable.
Call 570-362-4117
TRANSPORT CHAIR
Carex lightweight
transport chair with
foot rests. 19 xw
seat. (new) $50.
Also, R726 red roller
walker with drop
down seat, backrest
& handle breaks.
(new) $70. call 570-
362-0562 after
9am. will sell
together for $100.
WHEELCHAIR light-
weight brand new
$145. Walker 2
wheel $10. Walker
no wheels free,
quad cane $5, cane
regular free, pill
crusher silent knight
with 350 pouches
$65, vitacarry pill
re-minder $15. bath
rail attach to tub
$15. toilet rail stand
alone frame $45.
toilet rail attach to
toilet $10. bed rail
swing $50. bed rail
stationary $35, grab
bar 10 screw in $5.
free personal aids.
570-788-7874
758 Miscellaneous
All Junk
Cars &
Trucks
Wanted
Highest
Prices
Paid In
CA$H
FREE
PICKUP
570-574-1275
AUTO PAINT (base
coat) one gallon of
GM Rally Red
corvette color, sell-
ing for $100.00 call
570-883-7007
BLINDS: Complete
set mauve vertical
blinds for 8 stan-
dard windows, 53,
plus vanes to cover
6ft patio door $125.
570-288-0362
CAGE for parakeet
very good condition
$5. 570-675-4795
CAR RAMPS, steel,
$40. POST HOLE
DIGGER, $15
570-288-4852
CAR STARTER
remote, never used
$15. 570-826-0830
FISH TANK, 20.5 L
X 14 H X 10.5 W
with 30 high stand,
light, and all acces-
sories. $20. OBO.
WINDMILL BLADES,
4 Plastic Blades
about 7 X 28- set
of 2 for $25.
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.
MAGNIFYING
screen for various
uses 21x23 $20.
firm. 570-654-9517
MOVIES. VHS total
of 54, $25 for all.
Call 570-313-5214
or 570-313-3859
758 Miscellaneous
BEST PRICES
IN THE AREA
CA$H ON THE $POT,
Free Anytime
Pickup
570-301-3602
570-301-3602
CALL US!
TO JUNK
YOUR CAR
KNICK-KNACKS,
elephant (10) $.50-
$1. FAN, window,
$5. FAN, box, $3.
BAGS MATERIAL
(4), $1./each. MAG-
AZINES (10),
$2/each. ASH
TRAYS, Gibbons (3)
$2/each. PURSES
(5) $.50/each.
IRONING BOARD,
metal, $3.
570-823-6986
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
MOVING SALE
Furniture, patio
sets, freezer, hutch,
dressers, curio cab-
inet, TVs, trampo-
line, & much more.
Call for more info,
570-200-6293
PAINTINGS, 5 out-
door scenes,
framed, 36 x 24.
PRINTS, framed,
$250.
570-489-2675
RADIO, new, still in
box, $10. DISHES,
service for 8, yellow,
floral, $20. LENOX
DISHES, (4) small,
$6. CHRISTMAS &
HALLOWEEN
ITEMS, $.25-$.50.
570-824-2571
RIMS, Honda car
rims - black (4) 15
will fit any model
Accord, Civic, and
Del-Sol cars. Brand
new. Asking $85
Call 570-239-6011
SLICER new heavy
duty 10 commercial
restaurant/home
electric meat deli
food slicer 240w/
110v new in box.
$300. 562-1801
SNOW TIRES, Stud-
ded, P195/65-15
mounted on steel
rims. $40 for the
pair. 570-406-7544
TABLE, Harry Potter
custom aibrushed
full sized table. Fea-
tures Harry and
friends, Voldemort
and Hogwarts cas-
tle. Heavy table
with chrome legs.
$299.
570-477-5955
Looking for that
special place
called home?
Classified will address
Your needs.
Open the door
with classified!
TIRES. Continental.
195/70R15, (4) good
condition, 75% tread
remaining. $65
570-430-4054
TORCH PATIO
LIGHTS, (3) comes
with the fuel, $10.
DOG CRATE, small,
hardly used, $15.
570-650-8710
Various household
items for sale in
Pittston area
including a 6 year
old oil furnace &
water heater.
Please call
for info.
570-654-6146
WINE BOTTLES 1
gallon, clear, never
refilled. $1. each or
a dozen for $10.
570-654-2955
762 Musical
Instruments
GUITAR, FENDER
Squier Stratocaster,
electric, practice
amp $149. GUITAR,
MARSHALL JCM600
tube guitar amp
head $425. SPEAK-
ER CABINET,
AMPEG 4x12 $275.
570-283-2552 or
rick@wyoming
valley.net
PIANO. Gulbansen
Spinet. Asking
$500.
570-262-8282
746 Garage Sales/
Estate Sales/
Flea Markets
746 Garage Sales/
Estate Sales/
Flea Markets
746 Garage Sales/
Estate Sales/
Flea Markets
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2012 PAGE 13G
CALL AN EXPERT
CALL AN EXPERT
Professional Services Directory
1000
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
1015 Appliance
Service
ECO-FRIENDLY
APPLIANCE TECH.
25 Years Experi-
ence fixing major
appliances: Washer,
Dryer, Refrigerator,
Dishwasher, Com-
pactors. Most
brands. Free phone
advice & all work
guaranteed. No
service charge for
visit. 570-706-6577
1024 Building &
Remodeling
1st. Quality
Construction Co.
Roofing, siding,
gutters, insulation,
decks, additions,
windows, doors,
masonry &
concrete.
Insured & Bonded.
Senior Citizens Discount!
State Lic. # PA057320
570-606-8438
ALL OLDERHOMES
SPECIALIST
825-4268.
Remodel / Repair
Kitchen
& Baths
DAVE JOHNSON
Expert Bathroom &
Room Remodeling,
Carpentry & Whole
House Renovations.
Licensed &Insured
570-819-0681
Looking for
answers
to the
changes in
the Building
Trades ?
Join the BIA
and get
all the
answers &
many
benefits.
call 287-3331
or go to
www.bianepa.com
NICHOLS CONSTRUCTION
All Types Of Work
New or Remodeling
Licensed & Insured
Free Estimates
570-406-6044
GET THE WORD OUT
with a Classified Ad.
570-829-7130
1024 Building &
Remodeling
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
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!
CHRIS MOLESKY
CHIMNEY SPECIALIST
New, repair, rebuild,
liners installed.
Inspections. Con-
crete & metal caps.
Licensed & Insured
570-328-6257
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
A+ VERAS CLEANING
Homes,
Apartments,
Offices.
(570)817-3750
BEST
CLEANERS
Most thorough
home or office
cleaning at
reasonable prices.
Satisfaction Guar-
anteed!
REFERENCES AVAIL.
570-704-8288
Connies Cleaning
15 years experience
Bonded & Insured
Residential Cleaning
Connie Mastruzzo
Brutski - Owner
570-430-3743 570-430-3743
Connie does the
cleaning!
1054 Concrete &
Masonry
A. CHAIRGE CONCRETE
25 Years Exp.
Concrete/Masonry
Quality Work
Affordable Prices
Free Estimates
Licensed/Insured
W. Pittston
570-760-6720
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
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
1099 Fencing &
Decks
ACTION FENCE
END OF
SUMMER SALE:
Discounts on wood,
vinyl, chain link,
aluminum & more!
Call today for a
FREE ESTIMATE!
570-602-0432
PISANOS FENCE &
MANUFACTURING
COMPANY
1399 Susquehanna
Ave, Exeter, PA
40 years in
business, free esti-
mates, fully insured.
Sales and installa-
tion of chainlink,
custom built wood,
PVC, and all types
of fencing. Call
570-654-2257 or
570-654-2286
Find homes for
your kittens!
Place an ad here!
570-829-7130
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
MERIT
HANDYMAN
SERVICE
You Name It, We
Can Do it.
Over 30 Years Expe-
rience in General
Construction
Licensed & Insured
570-704-8759
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
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
1135 Hauling &
Trucking
Mikes $5-Up
Hauling Junk &
Trash from Houses,
Garages, Yards, Etc
826-1883 472-4321
1162 Landscaping/
Garden
1st Call JOHNS
Landscaping/Hauling
Excavating: Bobcat
Shrub/Tree
Trimming
Installation &
Removal
Edging, Mulch,
Stone, Driveways
Handyman/Gutters
Junk/Moving
& more!
Reasonable Reliable
735-1883
JAYS LAWN SERVICE
Summer clean-ups,
mowing, mulching
and more!
Free Estimates
570-574-3406
KELLERS LAWN CARE
Mowing, mulching,
Fall cleanup, gravel
& trimming.
Landscaping,
planting. Affordable.
Free Estimates.
Fully Insured.
Commercial
& Residential.
570-332-7016
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.
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
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
STEVE WARNER
Masonry/Concrete
Custom Work
Small Jobs &
Repairs. Free esti-
mates. Lic. & Ins.
570-561-5245
Find homes for
your kittens!
Place an ad here!
570-829-7130
1189 Miscellaneous
Service
PSYCHIC PSYCHIC
MASTER MASTER D D
Psychic
Advisor/Consultant
Tarot-Crystal
Revelations
570-301-7776
1195 Movers
BestDarnMovers
Moving Helpers
Call for Free Quote.
We make moving easy.
BestDarnMovers.com
570-852-9243
1204 Painting &
Wallpaper
JACOBOSKY JACOBOSKY
P PAINTING AINTING
Get your home
painted today, We
have an eye for
detail!
Power Washing,
Quality Painting,
Affordable prices,
$50.00 off with
this ad.
Free Estimates.
570-328-5083
M. PARALI S PAI NTI NG
Int/ Ext. painting,
Power washing.
Professional work
at affordable rates.
Free estimates.
570-288-0733
WITKOSKY PAINTING
Interior
Exterior,
Free estimates,
30 yrs experience
570-826-1719
OR
570-704-8530
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
L&M BLACKTOPPING
Driveways, exca-
vating & resurfac-
ing. Concrete &
pavers. Licensed &
Insured. Call Ron
570-290-2296
1219 Photo
Services
PORTRAIT
PHOTOGRAPHY
Adults & Children
Black & White
Silver Prints
call MCPHOTO
570.822-2766
Wilkes-Barre
Say it HERE
in the Classifieds!
570-829-7130
1219 Photo
Services
Aerial &
Commercial
Photography Photography
www.Rittinger
aerialphoto.com
570-288-5158
1234 Pressure
Washing
POWER WASHING!
Concrete, Houses,&
Decks. The weather
is changing. Now is
the time to have
your concrete
washed and sealed!
Call now:
(412) 346-2025 or
(570) 591-1933
PA094210
1252 Roofing &
Siding
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
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
Find homes for
your kittens!
Place an ad here!
570-829-7130
770 Photo
Equipment
CAMERA new Sony
Cybershot dschx
9v/b digital camera.
Original cost $315.
$11.00 case, $15.
8gb sdhc card-
(new) 128mb sd
card - $80. - total
value $421. total
price for all items:
$350. 868-6168
772 Pools & Spas
HOT TUB. Six seat
Hawkeye Ambas-
sador.
Built in radio &
lights, accessories
indluced. $3,000,
firm. 570-237-0275
776 Sporting Goods
COMPOUND BOW
P.S.E. 60 to 70 lbs.
29 draw lots of
extras $250
570-824-8810
GOLF BALLS name
brand, excellent
condition $3. a
dozen. 735-5290
GOLF CLUBS bag &
balls (dozen). $40.
570-824-8183
GYM Weslo Force
Home Gym $85.
570-655-2192
SCOPE MOUNTS,
Leupold one piece
base and rings with
hardware for Rem-
ington Model 7, $12.
570-825-9744
780 Televisions/
Accessories
TV RCA 27 swivel
console, great for
college students
$30. 570-825-0283
TV STAND, black,
glass, for flat
screen, like new,
swivel bar. Must sell
$40. 570-655-3512
TV, RCA, 14 w X 13
h X 14 D, $10.
570-288-8689
782 Tickets
DOO WOP PLUS
F. M. Kirby Center
Friday Sept. 28th, 7
pm. Row N, Seats
114 & 116. $75 for
pair. 570-265-5047
suzo@frontiernet.net
NOTRE DAME
2 Tickets for all
home games
except Michigan.
Call Nick
570-287-4366
784 Tools
PIPE CUTTER, Rigid,
$50. PIPE
WRENCHES, Rigid,
$50. SEWER
SNAKE, $25.
SCROLL SAW
(Ryobi) $50. FURNI-
TURE CLAMPS, $30.
SPACKLE KNIVES,
$25. for all. TILE
CUTTER, $10. WEED
BURNER for LP Tank
$20. STEP LADDER,
10 aluminum, $40.
WEEDWACKER, 4
stroke, $50. HEDGE
CUTTERS with
attachments $25.
WHEELED FERTILIZ-
ER SPREADER $15.
Call Lori @
570-262-6596
SCAFFOLD. Rolling,
folding, aluminum .
8 High 6 long, 2
wide. Excellent con-
dition. $300. TAPS,
all size, pipe &
straight. DRILL BITS,
all size, $1 to $10.
570-735-5290
WRENCHES (20)
$.25/each
570-823-6986
786 Toys & Games
SWING SET with
stairs that lead to a
play house attached
to a slide and a rope
gym with 2 swings.
Very good shape.
Strong durable plas-
tic. Red and blue.
Like new. $80
570-822-8957 ask
for Jamie
788 Stereo/TV/
Electronics
TV 32 Sylvania
color, purchased
new 2006/ Old style
and heavy, great
picture, good for
college students
or spare. $100.
570-655-1156
To place your
ad call...829-7130
TV, HD, Sony 52,
very good condition
with Component
stand $125.
570-430-4054
794 Video Game
Systems/Games
SONY PLAYSTATION
3 console & con-
troller, play games,
watch movies, high
def Blue Ray, can be
connected to the
internet wirelessly,
can be used as
music player or to
store music. Never
used, works per-
fectly $125.
570-466-5115
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
796 Wanted to Buy
Merchandise
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
Sept. 10 - $1,728.00
800
PETS & ANIMALS
810 Cats
CATS & KI TTENS
12 weeks & up.
All shots, neutered,
tested,microchipped
VALLEY CAT RESCUE
824-4172, 9-9 only
KITTENS, 3 playful,
pretty, free to good
home.
570-822-3196
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.
Line up a place to live
in classified!
AUSTRALIAN
Shepherd Puppies.
AKC. Merles & Tris
available. $850.
570-280-5082
BEAGLE PUPPIES
AKC Field Champi-
on gundog sired.
Have shots &
wormed. $275.
570-854-4959
BEAGLE PUPS
AKC
CALL AFTER 5 PM
570-654-8863
Poms, Husky, Labs,
Yorkies, Puggles,
Chihuahuas, Pugs
Dachshund, Goldens,
Shepherds, Dober-
mans, Shih-Tzus
570-453-6900
570-389-7877
BICHON FRISE PUPS
Cute & Playful. Call
(570) 943-2184 for
more information.
BLACK LABS AKC
1 male, 2 females,
born April 28. Train-
ing started. Come,
Sit, Steady & Lead
Broke. Parents out
of a Pointing Lab in
Nebraska. Strong
hunting background
$500. 570-721-1148
BOXER PUPPIES
$450.00 each call
570-262-3564
GOLDEN RETRIEVER
/LAB PUPS
3 yellow females.
$350 each. 1 black
female, 4 black
males $300 each.
570-836-1090
GOLDEN RETRIEVER
PUPPIES
ACA registered with
Pedigrees. Vet
checked, wormed.
1st shots. $650
Ready NOW!
570-864-2656
815 Dogs
LABS/CHOCOLATE
AKC. Vet checked.
Ready now. $350.
570-925-2572
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
SHIH-TZU PUPPIES
Parents on premises
$500
570-436-3792
835 Pets-
Miscellaneous
DOG CRATE, wire,
42 x 26 x 28,
$70 firm
570-357-8089
timesleader.com
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GARAGE
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PAGE 14G SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2012 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
551 Other 551 Other 551 Other 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale
Lease
For Only
$
219
PER MO.
FOR 24 MOS.
#12781, 2.4L DOHC 4 Cylinder 6 Speed Automatic, Remote Keyless Entry,
Climate Control, Cruise Control, Power Windows, Power Door Locks,
Bluetooth, XM Satellite Radio, AM/FM/CD, OnStar with
Turn-by-Turn Navigation, 17 Forged Aluminum Wheels, Rear Liftgate
VALLEY CHEVROLET
KEN WALLACES www.valleychevrolet.com
Chevy Runs Deep
EXIT 170B OFF I-81 TO EXIT 1. BEAR RIGHT ON BUSINESS ROUTE 309 TO SIXTH LIGHT. JUST BELOWWYOMINGVALLEY MALL.
821-2772 1-800-444-7172
601 Kidder St., Wilkes-Barre, PA
Mon.-Thurs. 8:30-8pm; Fri. 8:30-7pm;Sat. 8:30-5pm
SUMMER
LEASE
Specials
STOP
BY
TODAY
STOP
BY
TODAY
Shop 24/7
Lease
For Only
$
149
PER MO.
FOR 24 MOS.
#12758, 1.8L ECOTEC VVT DOHC 4 Cylinder 6 Speed Automatic,
Stabilitrak, USB Audio Interface, Bluetooth, Steering Wheel Controls,
Front Bucket Seats, AM/FM/CD, OnStar with Turn-by-Turn Navigation,
XM Satellite. Air Conditioning, Power Windows, Power Door Locks
*Prefer Pricing Lease - Chevy Cruze - $149 per month plus tax, 24 month
lease, 12K miles per year, total due at signing=$1929; Lease Specials are to
well qualied buyers (S-Tier & 800+); Artwork for illustration only;
Not responsible for typographical errors; Must take delivery by 9/30/12.
2012 Chevy Cruze LS 2012 Chevy Equinox LS FWD
*Prefer Pricing Lease - Chevy Equinox LS FWD - $219 per month plus tax, 24
month lease, 12K miles per year, total due at signing=$1539; Lease specials are
to well qualied buyers (S-Tier & 800+); Artwork for illustration only;
Not responsible for typographical errors; Must take delivery by 9/30/12.
WVONMO VALLEV
UV MEME PAV MEME UV MEME
415 Kidder Street
Wilkes-Barre, PA 18702
570.822.8870
Reliable
Cars
Use your tax refund to buy.
(See sales representative for details)
steve@yourcarbank.com
www.wyomingvalleyautomart.com
FREE GAS when you nance a vehicle
up to 36 months
(See sales representative for details)
FREE GAS when you nance a vehicle
up to 36 months
SUMMER CLEARANCE!
OUR INVENTORY MUST BE REDUCED TO
MAKE ROOM FOR NEW ARRIVALS
2004 Buick LeSabre REDUCED BY $2,600
2001 Chevy Monte Carlo REDUCED BY $2,300
2001 Hyundai Elantra REDUCED BY $2,000
2005 Chrysler PT Cruiser REDUCED BY $1,700
2001 Mercury Gr. Marquis REDUCED BY $1,400
2000 Saturn SL REDUCED BY $1,000
Earn Extra Cash
For Just A Few
Hours A Day.
Deliver
Available routes:
( No Col l ect i ons)
Wilkes-Barre
S. Franklin St.
S. Main St.
BNai Brith Apartments
Washington Square Apartments
E. Northampton St.
240 Daily Papers
231 Sunday Papers
Monthly Prot $900.00 + Tips
To start earning extra cash or to
nd a route near you call Rosemary:
570-829-7107
1339N. River Street,
Plains, PA. 18702
829-2043
www.jo-danmotors.com
J
O
-
DAN
MOTORS
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
10 FORD MUSTANG GT
Grey Metallic, Glass Top, 5 Speed, Leather, 34K Miles.
$
24,995
09 CHEVY IMPALA LS
Blue, Nicely Equipped, 35K . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
$
13,995
09 FORD FOCUS SE
White, 4 Door, Nicely Equipped . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . .. . . . . . . .. . . . . . . .. . . .
$
12,495
08 DODGE AVENGER SXT
Black, Sunroof, Alloys, Spoiler . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
$
12,495
09 CHEVY AVEO LT
White, Sedan, Auto, CD . . . . . .. . . . . .. . . . . .. . . . . .. . . . . .. . . . . .. . . . . .. . . . . .. . .
$
10,995
08 PONTIAC G5
Red, Cpe, 5-Speed. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
$
9,995
07 NISSAN ALTIMA S
Grey, Sdn, 4 Cyl, Nicely Equipped. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
$
9,995
06 DODGE GRAND CARAVAN SE
Charcoal, 7-Pass, Good Miles, Rear A/C. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
$
9,995
05 DODGE GRAND CARAVAN SE
Green, 7 Passenger, Only 46K Miles! . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
$
9,995
04 HYUNDAI SONATA
Silver, 50K Miles, Nicely Equipped. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
$
8,995
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
Bad Credit - No Credit
We Make It Simple
2 WAYSTO PURCHASE
YOUR NEXT CAR
1-855-313-LOAN (5626)
or
ONLINE @ www.ApproveMyCredit.com
TOLL
FREE
An Eynon Buick GMC Dealership
Just Ask
STAN!
We Service
ALL
Motor Vehicles
Just Ask
STAN!
Call today 876-2100
Some restrictions apply. See dealer for details.
State Inspection
Must Present Coupon Prior To Service. Expires 9/30/12. $.99
Lube Oil Filter
Must Present Coupon Prior To Service. Expires 9/30/12. $24.95
Rotate & Balance
Must Present Coupon Prior To Service. Expires 9/30/12. $24.95
Emissions Inspection
Must Present Coupon Prior To Service. Expires 9/30/12.
Coolant System Services
Must Present Coupon Prior To Service. Expires 9/30/12.
Automatic Transmission Service
Must Present Coupon Prior To Service. Expires 9/30/12.
$24.95
$89.95
$124.95
NEW CARS
USED CARS
*All lease payments based on 39 mos with 10,000 miles per year, $3,000 cash or trade down plus tax, tags and rst payment due at signing. All factory rebates applied. See Dealer for details. Residual Values: A=$14,379 B=$23,172.25 C= $20,812 D=$21,609.50
STK#2113
SLE PACKAGE,
POWER TECH
PACKAGE
LEASE FOR $393
.56
PER MO.
STK#2065
SLE PACKAGE,
POWER TECH
PACKAGE
LEASE FOR $366
.90
PER MO.
STK#2001,
8 PASSEN-
GER SEATING,
LOADED W/
LUXURY
LEASE FOR $366
.11
PER MO.
STK#2115,
PREFERRED
EQUIPMENT PKG.,
WHITE DIAMOND
BEAUTY
LEASE FOR $183
.09
PER MO.
NEW 2012 BUICK ENCLAVE AWD
A B C D
04 CHRYSLER SEBRING TOURING SDN
Just Traded, V6 Engine, Priced to Move ................
$
6,995
06 JEEP LIBERTY SPORT 4X4 One Owner ..........
$
7,995
06 MERCURY GRAND MARQUIS GS Just Arrived,
Local One Owner, Only 29K Miles .................
$
12,995
08 PONTIAC TORRENT AWD........................
$
12,995
10 CHEVY HHR LT
Silver Beauty, Power Galore.........................
$
13,995
11 HYUNDAI ACCENTS (4 AVAILABLE)...........
$
13,995
11 TOYOTA YARIS SEDANS. .............................
$
14,900
10 DODGE CALIBERS (2 AVAILABLE) .............
$
14,995
10 CHRYSLER SEBRING (2 AVAILABLE)From
$
14,995
10 VW BEETLE COUPE......................................
$
15,900
11 CHEVY IMPALA LT
Power Equipped, Tons of Warranty...............
$
15,995
11 DODGE AVENGER SXT................................
$
16,900
12 FORD FOCUS SDNS.......................... From
$
16,900
11 TOYOTA COROLLA 27K Miles ......................
$
16,995
11 NISSAN ALTIMA 23K Miles ............................
$
17,995
08 DODGE RAM 2500 QUAD CAB 4X4
83K Miles...................................................
$
18,995
12 FORD E-150 CARGO VAN...........................
$
19,900
11 NISSAN ROGUE AWD..................................
$
19,900
11 HYUNDAI SANTA FE AWD ..........................
$
20,900
10 MAZDA MIATA CONVERTIBLE
Local One Owner, Only 13K Miles .................
$
20,995
07 GMC YUKON XL DENALI AWD
White Beauty, Local New Car Trade ..............
$
21,995
09 LINCOLN MKZ ALL WHEEL DRIVE
One Owner, Local Trade, Only 45K Miles ......
$
21,995
11 DODGE CHALLENGER.................................
$
22,900
11 CHEVY CAMARO LT.....................................
$
22,900
11 MAZDA CX-7 AWD......................................
$
23,900
08 DODGE RAM 3500 DUALLY DIESEL 4X4 ...
$
23,995
12 NISSAN MAXIMA 16K Miles .......................
$
25,995
11 CHEVY TRAVERSE LT AWD..........................
$
26,995
12 RAM 1500 QUAD CAB 4X4
13K Miles, White Beauty, SLT Equipment........
$
26,995
11 CADILLAC CTS-4 COUPE All Wheel Drive, Just 15K
Local One Owner Miles, Tons of Warranty! ....
$
33,995
NEW 2012 BUICK VERANO NEW 2013 GMC SIERRA 1500 EXT. CAB 4X4 NEW 2013 GMC SIERRA 1500 CREW CAB 4X4
1-888-307-7077
HOURS: Monday Thru Thursday 8:00am - 8:00pm
Friday & Saturday 8:00am - 5:00pm
WE ARE OPEN
Please Pardon Our Dust
As We Remodel To Serve You Better!
Collect
Cash.
Not
Dust.
Sell it in The
Times Leader
Classied
section.
Call 829-7130
to place an ad.
ONLYONE LEADER. ONL NNL L NNL NNNLYONE NNNNNNNNNNN LEA LLE LE LE LE LE LE LE LLE LE EEE DER.
timesleader.com
Find your next
vehicle online.
timesleaderautos.com
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com SUNDAY, MAY 20, 2012 PAGE 15G TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com SUNDAY, MARCH 4, 2012 PAGE 15G TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 2012 PAGE 15G
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com PAGE 15G
www.lewith-freeman.com
Top Seller In
Luzerne County
Exposure
on Over 600
Web Sites
Source: Actual member statistics for LeadingRE and estimates for other networks using average sales units per agent
and average sales price for frms in each respective network frompublished sources for 2011 production.
L
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s
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a
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C
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p
a
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ie
s
o
f
t
h
e
W
o
r
ld
250
200
150
100
50
0
$235
$157
$106
$101
$85
$46
$26
$21 $17
$9
$166
Coldwell Banker
RE/MAX
Prudential
Keller Williams
Century 21
Sothebys
Real Living
ERA
Realty Executives
Better Homes & Gardens
LEADING RE IS LEWITH & FREEMANS
WORLD WIDE NETWORK
Lewith&Freeman
Real Estate, Inc.
NATIONAL STRENGTH
LOCAL COMMITMENT
ONE
SOURCE
REALTY
ERA1.com
Mountaintop Ofce
12 N Mountain Blvd.
(570) 403-3000
WE WILL SELL YOUR HOUSE
OR ERA WILL BUY IT!*
Watch this Community come to life by
becoming a Bell Weather Resident. Tere
has never been a better time to join us
Prices Starting in the $140s
Find us in our convenient Location:
Wyoming Avenue to Union Street. Turn
onto Mill Hollow in Luzerne.
Two-story
New Construction
Townhomes
1st oor master
Formal Dining Room
Eat-in Kitchen
Loft
Valuted Ceilings
Front Porch
Garage
Garden Area
Pure Indulgence...
Luxury
Condominiums
nestled in a quiet
corner of Northeast
Pennsylvania
OR ERA WILL BUY IT!
Waypoint
In Luzerne
Contact one of our
Luzerne County
Real Estate
Professionals at
570.403.3000
2
6
3
4
9
0
Se Habla
Espanol
~
415 JONES ST.
NANTICOKE 12-3267
Very nice 2 s t o r y, 4 BR,
1 1/2 bath home. Features
include family room, deck,
2 car detached garage, shed,
and much more!
CALL JACK 878-6225 $109,000
DIR: From Wilkes-Barre, take
Middle Road past Birchwood
Nursing Home. Turn left on
Espy St, left on Bliss St, left
on Center St, right on Jones
St. Home on right.
Open House - New Listing!
12:00
- 2:00
PM
2217 W. 8TH ST.
DALLAS 12-796
This private and well
maintained home on
2 acres features an
open floor plan, with
4 bedrooms, large
eat-in k i t c h e n ,
2 full baths, a large
deck and top-of-the-
line Fujitsu energy-
saving heating and
cooling system. An outstanding buy with motivated seller!
CALL CARY 240-3552 $195,900
DIR: From Rt 309 to Carverton Road to left on 8th St. Home is
on right.
Open House - Price Reduced!
2:00
-
3:30
PM
7 MANOR DRIVE
SHAVERTOWN 12-1184
Well maintained,
quaint 3 bedroom
Cape Cod located in
the beautiful Back
Mountain. Home
features first floor
master bedroom,
extra large bedroom
on 2nd floor,
hardwood floors,
shed and covered deck. Conveniently located; close to Cross
Valley Expy and 8th Street. CALL KIM 466-3338 $149,900
DIR: Cross Valley Expy (Rt 309) to Carverton Road. Turn left on
Manor Drive. Home is on the right.
Open House!
12:00-1:30P
M
Two Ofces To Serve You Better:
1149 Wyoming Avenue, Forty Fort 570.283.9100
28 Carverton Road, Shavertown 570.696.2600
Visit our website: www.poggi-jones.com
!
#12-2904 $259,900
Ted Poggi 283-9100 x25
Immaculate 4years young!
Bright andspacious 4bedroom,
2.5bathhome withfamily
roomplus oce/library, fully
landscapedyard, deck, gas
replace, country living with
many amenities, golf and
community pool!
#12-3308 $184,500
Carole Poggi 283-9100 x19
Spacious ranchon1.23acres.
10room, 4bedroom, 2.5baths.
In-groundheatedpool, ample
raiseddeck, nishedbasement,
central A/C, attached2-car
garage. DIR: St. Marys Rd.,
Hanover to Liberty Hills, 1st R
onto RedCoat, home onR.
Youwill be proudto ownthis
beauty! Customkitchen, family
roomwithvaultedceiling,
nishedlower level, grandmaster
suite, ultra closet space. Newroof.
DIR: Trough Pittston City, R
turnonNewStreet, house onL
at the corner of Lynne andNew.
#12-2606 $369,900
Maribeth Jones 696-6565
#12-3324 $249,000
Walter Belchick 696-2600
Great 2-storyina lowtraffic area.
Enjoynature fromthe rear deck
overlooking your 1.8acres. 4
bedrooms, 3baths, living room
withreplace, formal dining
room, nishedlower level with
Frenchdoors to the back yard.
Motivatedseller!
Mountain Top-Quiet Area!
2012 BRERAfliates Inc. An independently owned and operated broker member of BRERAfliates Inc. Prudential, the Prudential logo and the Rock symbol are registered service marks of Prudential
Financial, Inc. and its related entities, registered in many jurisdictions worldwide. Used under license with no other afliation with Prudential. Equal Housing Opportunity.
THERES NO PLACE LIKE HOME! Call us today!
101 NewSt., Pittston 121 Red Coat Lane, Hanover Thornhurst-Many Amenities
NEW LISTING!
O
P
E
N
H
O
U
S
E
T
O
D
A
Y
!
1
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NEW LISTING!
Atlas Realty, Inc.
829-6200 www.atlasrealtyinc.com
We Sell Happiness!
Charles A. Adonizio, III
Broker, GRI, SRES
81 CLIFF STREET,
PITTSTON
Move in ready, freshly
painted, 2 story home
with private driveway,
screened in back porch,
nicely landscaped 4 bed-
room, MUST SEE.
Call Melissa 237-6384.
$85,000
Dir: South on Main St.
to right on Union St, 1st
left on Cliff St.
1
2
-1
:3
0
OPEN HOUSE TODAY
Wilkes-Barre 570-825-2468 Shavertown 570-696-2010
info@mksre.com
Darren G. Snyder
Broker/President
Open Houses Today Sunday, September 9th
23 W. GRAND ST., NANTICOKE
Totally Remodeled 3 Bedroom home on
large lot on a well-kept street in move-in
condition! Home Includes 1 1/2 Modern
Baths w/ stone countertops, tile oors,
spacious kitchen with all new appliances
& plenty of countertop space! New carpet
throughout! An Amazing Price- Tis home
can be yours with very little out-of-pocket
money. $49,900
Call Darren Snyder 570-825-2468.
1 PAIGE DR., YATESVILLE
Better than new end unit townhouse
with 3 bedroom, 2.5 baths, 1 car ga-
rage, modern kitchen with breakfast
bar, dining area and all appliances in-
cluded. Master bedroom with beau-
tiful master bath. Fenced yard with
patio. $229,900
Call Darren Snyder 570-825-2468
988 SCOTT ST., WILKES-BARRE
Completely remodeled 3 bedroom, 3
bath 2-story home on a double lot with a
recent sun room addition. Tis beautiful
home also includes a nished basement
and attic, 2 decks, above-ground pool,
hot tub and OSP. $139,900
Call Darren Snyder 570-825-2468
1
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1
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1
-3
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7
7
3
3
7
7
837 Wyoming Ave., Kingston
288-1401
LOWER DEMUNDS RD.,
DALLAS
Like new! This 2,500 sq.ft. home
features 4 bedrooms; newkitchen;
2 1/2 new baths; new hardwood
fooring; new heating system; new
plumbing; newly fnished lower
level. MLS#11-4504
JOE MOORE $185,000
For Instant Pricing & More Info TEXT:
ML29 TO: 88000
138 ORCHARD EAST,
DALLAS
2 bedroom - 2 bath condo in very
nice condition. Tiled baths. 2 bal-
conies. Nearby 1-car garage. New
vinyl exterior... Assessment paid
by seller/owner. New roof 2005.
New electrical system.
MLS#11-4031
JOE MOORE $109,000
For Instant Pricing & More Info TEXT:
ML30 TO: 88000
2297 W. 8TH ST.,
FRANKLIN TWP. 18612
2 or 3 bedroom 2-story farmhouse
located in the Village of Orange. 1st
foor bedroom, living room with hard-
wood fooring, eat-in kitchen. 1st
foor laundry. garage & shed with
loft. Rear deck overlooking cleared
lot. New furnace, new kitchen foor
(October, 2011) MLS#11-3255
JOE MOORE $109,900
For Instant Pricing & More Info TEXT:
ML28 TO: 88000
GERALD L. BUSCH
REAL ESTATE, INC.
288-2514
EMAIL:
JERRYBUSCHJR@AOL.COM View Our Listings on Realtor.com
Pat Is Ready
To Work For You!
Call Pat Today 885-4165
Jerry Busch, Jr. Is Ready
To Work For You!
Call Jerry Today 709-7798
FOR PROMPT REAL ESTATE APPRAISALS, CALL GERALD L. BUSCH APPRAISAL SERVICE 288-2514
NEW LISTING - LUZERNE!
Say Hello To A Good Buy ! This
home features the perfect blend
of comfortable living, choice
location and affordable price.
Home includes 3 bedrooms,1
1/2 baths, care-free vinyl siding,
roomy two car garage, private
drive and a great yard.
MLS#12-3306 $84,900
Call Jerry Busch Jr Today !
NEW LISTING -
TRUCKSVILLE
PLYMOUTH
HOME AND GARAGE!
Bring Your Hammer & Nails !
Great Opportunity ! 6 rooms,
sunken living room,huge ca-
thedral master bedroom,large
full bath, newer roof and wir-
ing. Ready for you to fnish.
Call Pat Busch Today!
MLS#12-2893 $39,900
Start To Put The Bucks In Your
Own Pocket Instead Of The
Landlords ! This home fea-
tures pretty wood foors, a nice
kitchen and bath, living room,
dining room and comfortable
gas heat. Be Sure to Checkout
The Huge Yard And Garage !
Call Jerry Busch Jr !
MLS#12-3358 $56,900
KINGSTON -
MAKE AN OFFER!
Huge Rooms! Lots of Space
! This home has a huge living
room and dining room, den, 2
full baths, 3-4 bedrooms, a
massive yard and a large garage
with a second foor for storage.
Dont Wait ! MLS#11-3753
Call Jerry Busch Jr
New Price $119,900
Story by Marianne Tucker Puhalla
Advertising Projects Writer
You will need to just stand back to
take it all in since an extraordinary home
like this doesnt come along very often.
Welcome to 145 S. Highland Dr., in the
Highland Hills section of Jenkins Twp.
From its exceptional brick exterior to
its amazing room sizes and 1.28 acre lot,
amenities are plentiful and this property
radiates stately elegance.
Listed by Nancy Answini of Joseph
P. Gilroy Real Estate for $998,000, this
home was built in 1992 and offers a total
of 6,524 square feet of space, includ-
ing ve bedrooms, six baths, a 1,224
square foot lower level, and room for six
vehicles in two garages.
The list of custom features includes
four replaces and a must-see, heated
in-ground pool with its own brick cabana
with bath and changing room. Inside,
a dramatic two-story foyer welcomes
guests and features a curved staircase to
the second oor.
To the right, the elegant living room
is a comfortable 16-by-17 and features
a striking replace with carved oak
mantle and white and gray marble
hearth. Two elongated windows face
front. Oak crown molding matches the
hardwood ooring that continues across
the foyer and into the 13-by-15 dining
room. Equally elegant with oak chair rail
and crown molding, this room has two
matching windows front and off-white
walls accented by hunter green print
wallpaper.
A full 33-feet long, the tiled kitchen has
an amazing amount of custom cabinets
and countertop workspace thanks to a
large center island and a breakfast bar
peninsula. Oak cabinets are topped by
white Corian countertops punctuated by
stainless steel appliances. Numerous win-
dows overlook the rear patio and pool.
The nearby two-story family room
measures a spacious 23-by-27 and offers
a dramatic brick replace with raised
brick hearth and wooden mantle. The
replaces arch detailing matches the
half-round tops on three front-facing
windows.
Sure to be a favorite, a circular wall
of windows frames the homes library/
study bringing in light from every direc-
tion and providing a 180-degree view of
the property. This striking room has a
vaulted ceiling, cherry walls and built-in
cherry bookcases. This library has its
own granite-trimmed replace with
cherry mantle and granite tile oor.
Not to be missed is an equally amazing
One-of-a kind home offers stately elegance
Continued
SUNDAYREAL ESTATE
THE TIMES LEADER SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2012
Smith Hourigan Group
SMARTER. BOLDER.
FASTER.
Century21SHGroup.com
Visit Our Website
View Open Houses and Featured
Properties Online at
Click on Homes
timesleader.com
www.timesleader.com
Scan to View
Listings
PAGE 16G SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2012 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
three-season sunroom that extends out the rear of the
home. Measuring 23-by-23, this pleasant retreat has a
tile oor, and three walls of dramatic windows that over-
look the yard and the pool. A set of atrium doors opens
to a brick patio.
This level includes a tiled laundry and marble pow-
der room.
Upstairs, two-room master bedroom suite includes a
14-by-21 bedroom with a separate sitting room. It has
an amazing custom master closet.
The luxurious master bath is sure to please with
beautifully tiled walls and oor with a clear glass
shower and a jetted tub set underneath a striking
leaded glass window. Bedrooms two, three and four are
all comfortably sized, ranging from 13-by-14 to 15-by-18,
each with a private full or three-quarter tiled bath. The
rooms all have large closets and windows. The baths
are all custom designed with beautiful tile and top-of-
the-line xtures.
The fth bedroom measures 12-by-14, and is located
in the lower level. That is also where you nd the 26-
by-30 recreation room, another special space designed
with entertaining in mind. It offers a sauna, a wet bar
and a white brick replace.
This home has oil forced air heat with a heat pump
and public sewer and water utilities.
For additional information, or to make an appoint-
ment to see this executive home, contact Nancy An-
swini, of Joseph P. Gilroy Real Estate at (570) 288-1444,
(570) 237-5999; or email nancyanswini@yahoo.com.
SPECIFICATIONS:
Two-story
6,524 square feet
BEDROOMS: 5
BATHS: 6
PRICE: $998,000
LOCATION: 145 S. Highland Dr., Jenkins Twp.
AGENT: Nancy Answini
REALTOR: Joseph P. Gilroy Real Estate,
(570) 288-1444; (570) 237-5999,
Highland Hills
Continued from front page
The Attorney To Call
When Buying A Home
Complete Real Estate Legal
Services
Title Insurance
Rapid Title Search & Closing
Evening & Weekend
Appointments
Angelo C. Terrana Jr.
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Suite 117 Park Building,
400 Third Avenue, Kingston, PA
(570) 283-9500
7
7
2
0
1
9
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.
Line up a place to live
in classified!
ALDEN
Large home on a
huge lot. Needs
some care so come
put your personal
touch into this great
value. Off street
parking, 2 car
detached garage
and a large fenced
in yard. Did we men-
tioned 4 bedrooms.
MLS 12-1589
$64,900
Call/text Donna
570-947-3824 or
Tony 570-855-2424
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
ComeUpToQuailHill.
com
New Homes
From $275,000-
$595,000
570-474-5574
906 Homes for Sale
NANTICOKE
201-203 West
Church Street. 3
unit building for
sale. Call
(570)881-1229
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
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#12-1751
PRICE REDUCED
$275,000
Call Geri
570-696-0888
BEAR CREEK
Spacious traditional
Cape Cod home sit-
uated on 7.6 acres.
Country like setting
yet minutes to
downtown & major
highways. Home
features 4-5 bed-
rooms, 2 baths,
family room, hard-
wood floors, 2 fire-
places, 2-car
garage, large rear
yard.
Call today for a
showing!
#12-2627 $199,900
Karen Ryan
283-9100 x14
696-2600
DALLAS
95 JACKSON ST.
New Stainless steel
appliances. Great
Low Cost Utilities,
Taxes and no Water
bill. Your own fresh
Water well. Bath on
each floor, 3 Good
sized Bedrooms,
Paved Drive leading
to an oversized
Garage. Owner
Motivated.
MLS 12-2006
$179,000
570-675-4400
SHAVERTOWN
House for sale on
3 lots, quiet dead
end street. Needs
updating/TLC. Ask-
ing $75,000
Call 570-333-5198
906 Homes for Sale
NANTICOKE
HANDYMANS SPECIAL
2 bedrooms, large
kitchen & dining
rooms, new roof &
steps, large fenced
double lot with off-
street parking.
Near LCCC on quiet
street $29,000,
OBO. Call Tom @
201-679-4061
906 Homes for Sale
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.
MLS# 11-2035
$279,900
Sandra Gorman
570-696-5408
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-696-1195
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
DALLAS
Lovingly restored
farmhouse with
newer kitchen with
ceramic tile.
Approximately 500
feet of stream
frontage on Sutton
Creek. Bonus 30' x
60' drive-through
heated garage with
over 20' clearance.
Natural wood
built-ins, archway &
under carpets
....Seller to credit
buyer $3,000
towards a water fil-
tration system.
MLS# 12-1624
$169,900
call Tracy
McDermott.
570-696-2468
NANTICOKE
HANDYMAN
2 bedroom house
large kitchen & din-
ing, new roof &
steps, large fenced
double lot, off
street parking.
Close to LCC on
very quite street.
Asking $29,000
OBO. 201.679.4061
906 Homes for Sale
DRUMS
SUGARLOAF
COUNTRY MANOR
Private 18 acre
estate with south-
ern exposure &
panoramic views!
Quality constructed
& custom built, this
New England split
level offers 3-4
bedrooms, three
baths, solarium with
hot tub, two fire-
places, extra large
gameroom & other
attractive ameni-
ties! Matching 2
story brick barn,
cozy A frame
guest cottage &
more......absolutely
ideal for horses,
mini farmette &
children. 20
minutes from
Wilkes-Barre &
Pocono Resorts.
Broker Owned
$489,900
Call Mike @
570-455-9463
M.S. Pecora
Realtor
DRUMS/
BUTLER TWP.
4 bedroom bi-level.
Large stone patio.
Brick fireplace in
rec room. 12x24
exercise room.
Remodeled kitchen.
Heated 12x24
sunroom. Shed.
Deep yard.
MLS# 12-1442
Call Vieve
570-474-6307
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-474-6307
DURYEA
$109,000
226 Church St.
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
LARKSVILLE
424 Washington
Avenue
New Listing!
Very nice 3 bed-
room/2 bath ranch,
move in condition.
One car garage &
nice yard. Finished
basement & handi-
capped accessible.
Deck off the dining
room & built in wall
air-conditioner.
All appliances.
$120,000
Call 570-287-4644
906 Homes for Sale
DURYEA
$239,900
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
Call Fred
570-817-5792
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
Collect cash, not dust!
Clean out your
basement, garage
or attic and call the
Classified depart-
ment today at 570-
829-7130!
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
EAGLE ROCK
Beautiful, true log
home very privately
located on a
gorgeous, scenic
lot. Approximately
1920 sq. ft. interior
offers 3 bedrooms,
3 baths, huge great
room with fireplace.
Exquisite. Still time
to choose colors,
etc. Amenities
galore in this
upscale, gated
community.
MAKE YOUR
DREAM COME
TRUE!
Asking $309,000
M.S. PECORA
RELATOR
570-455-9463
or Cheryl at
570-436-3790
906 Homes for Sale
DURYEA
REDUCED
$49,900
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
Sell your own home!
Place an ad HERE
570-829-7130
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
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
906 Homes for Sale
DURYEA
BLUEBERRY HILL
ESTATES
205 Strawberry Ln
$369,000
Almost new home
only 5 years old.
Large corner lot. 3
bedrooms, 3 baths,
2200 sq. ft. Some of
the nice touches
include: central vac-
uum, lawn sprinkler
system, bay window
seat & large (16x16)
deck. Move right in
with nothing to do!
DIRECTIONS:
Entering Blueberry
Hill Estates turn
right on Raspberry
Drive, then left on
Strawberry, follow
to end, at corner of
Strawberry and
Huckleberry.
Call Paul Pukatch at
696-6559 for your
appointment!
MLS#12-3194
696-2600
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
DURYEA
Charming well main-
tained 3 bedroom, 1
bath home located
on a quiet street
near Blueberry Hills
Development. Fea-
tures a modern
kitchen with break-
fast bar, formal din-
ing room, and family
room with gas
stove, hardwood
floors in bedrooms,
deck, large fenced
yard, shed and off-
street parking.
#11-2947 $99,500
Karen Ryan
283-9100 x14
696-2600
FALLS
NEW LISTING!
This home was built
with energy efficien-
cy in mind. Nestled
in a wooded setting
and close to Wilkes
-Barre and Clarks
Summit. Floor to
ceiling windows in
the 3-season sun
room, hardwood
and tile throughout,
spacious room
sizes, wood/coal
stove for those win-
ter evenings. 3 bed-
rooms, with 16x20
master and adja-
cent sitting room or
den. Call for an
appointment today.
Maribeth Jones
570-696-6565 or
Chris Jones
570-696-6558.
#12-3048
$205,000
696-2600
906 Homes for Sale
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%)
NOT IN FLOOD
100% OWNER
FINANCING
AVAILABLE
Call Bob at
570-899-8877
570-654-1490
It's that time again!
Rent out your
apartment
with the Classifieds
570-829-7130
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
OPEN HOUSE
Sun., Sept. 9th
12-2pm
29 Durkee Street
Extreme Makeover.
This is a Must See!
Totally renovated 3
bedroom, 1.75
baths, with Ultra-
Modern kitchen,
granite counter-
tops, maple cabi-
nets & stainless
steel appliances. All
new plumbing, elec-
tric, gas forced air
furnace, central air.
The home is over
1700 sq. ft. with all
new vinyl siding,
2nd floor laundry
room, 2 car garage
on a large double
lot & much more.
Great location!
For Sale by Owner.
No agents please.
Asking $175,000.
Call Don at
570-814-5072.
906 Homes for Sale
EXETER
$15,000 PRICE
REDUCTION!
Serious Sellers are
looking for serious
buyers who are
ready to move into
this 1620 sq. ft. bi-
level home with 3
bedrooms, 1 and
baths. This gem is
located in a great
neighborhood on a
quiet dead-end
street in Exeter. The
home is quality con-
structed & has been
well-maintained by
the original owners.
Special features
included 2x6 con-
struction and hard-
wired smoke alarms
with battery back-
up for your familys
safety. A large eat-
in kitchen with tile
floor exits to the
26x12 cedar deck
for convenient out-
door cooking and
entertaining. Or host
a more formal din-
ner in the spacious
dining room with
new poplar hard-
wood flooring. The
remainder of the
main floor includes
2 bedrooms and a
full bath. The lower
level has beautiful
family room with
gas fireplace, a 3rd
bedroom, bath,
large laundry center
and ample storage
space. The laundry
area and bath
have tile floors and
provides an easy
exit to the rear yard
with the deck and
above-ground pool.
For more informa-
tion and to view the
photos go to www.
prudentialealestate.
com and enter
PRU2A8T2 in the
Home Search. Now
listed at $152,900.
MLS #12-2654. Call
today for your
appointment.
Mary Ellen Belchick
696-6566
Walter Belchick
696-2600 ext. 301
696-2600
Looking for that
special place
called home?
Classified will address
Your needs.
Open the door
with classified!
Looking for that
special place
called home?
Classified will address
Your needs.
Open the door
with classified!
906 Homes for Sale
FORTY FORT
PRICE REDUCED
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 $95,000
Call Barbara Metcalf
570-696-0883
GET THE WORD OUT
with a Classified Ad.
570-829-7130
FORTY FORT
OPEN HOUSE
SEPT. 9, 16 & 23
1:00 to 3:00
84 Wesley St.
DIR: Wyoming Ave.,
North, left on Wes-
ley, house on left.
Newly renovated
interior and exterior.
Home features 3
bedrooms with
large closets, 2
large bathrooms,
one with a double
vanity, the other
with laundry hook-
up, ultra modern
kitchen with honey
oak cabinets, gran-
ite countertops and
stainless steel appli-
ances, oversized 2-
car garage, walk-up
attic, full basement,
large yard, very
desirable location!
#12-3227 $179,000
Eric Feifer
570-283-9100 x29
570-696-2600
906 Homes for Sale
NANTICOKE
MUST SELL
NICE
3 bedroom, 1.5
baths single home,
modern kitchen and
bath, fenced yard
off street parking.
$39,900
570-956-2385
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 SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2012 PAGE 17G
OPEN HOUSE SUN, 9/9
12:00 - 1:30PM
OPEN HOUSE SUN, 9/9
2:00-3:30PM
OPEN HOUSE SUN, 9/9
1:00-2:30PM
OPEN HOUSE SUN, 9/16
12:30 - 1:30PM
OPEN HOUSE SUN, 9/16
12:00 - 2:00PM
56 Crisman Street
FORTY FORT REDUCED Why pay rent? Freshly painted,
well maintained 3BR, 1.5 bath Cape features LR, DR,
eat-in kitchen, LL FR. Private drive, quiet street. MLS#
12-1119 CLYDETTE 696-0897 $99,900
Dir: From Wyoming Ave. in Kingston to L onto Crisman
- Property on L.
635 Westmoreland Avenue
KINGSTON 3BR, 1.5 bath home w/new eat-in kitchen,
FR, screened-in porch, laundry on 1st foor & nice size
yard. MLS# 12-2584
TERRY NELSON 714-9248 $129,900
Dir: Wyoming Avenue, Kingston, onto E. Dorrance, L
onto Westmoreland Avenue, house on R.
35 Shoemaker Street
FORTY FORT REDUCED Attractive 3BR, 1 3/4 bath
Ranch features open LR/DR, spacious fnished LL, new-
er roof, windows & furnace. Private yard, 2 car garage.
MLS# 12-1977
CLYDETTE 696-0897 $129,500
Dir: Wyoming Avenue to Shoemaker - 3rd house on R.
92 Watkins Street
SWOYERSVILLE Great curb appeal! 4BR home in de-
sirable location. BIG kitchen, HW foors, large closets,
above ground pool, deck, storage garage & much more!
MLS# 12-2613 MARY M. 714-9274 $173,900
Dir: Wyoming Avenue to Shoemaker, L on Watkins.
66 Thistle Street
PITTSTON Lovely 3BR, 1 bath 2-story home with FR,
formal DR & eat-in kitchen area. Large backyard & over-
sized 1 car garage. MLS# 12-2503
TERRY NELSON 714-9248 $78,500
Dir: From Main St, Pittston, toward Duryea, pass
Pittston Lumber, go several blocks, R on Chaple, top
of hill, L on Thistle.
1000 Laurel Run Rd
BEAR CREEK Custom Designed - New Construction
-2 Story w/open fr plan. 4 BRs, 3.5 baths, ultra kit,
formal DR, LR w/FP, oversized laundry. Hardwood on 1st
foor. Many amenities! MLS# 12-353
CLYDETTE 696-0897 $449,000
Dir: Rt 115S to R on Laurel Run Rd, L on Golf Course
Rd, property on L corner
DALLAS Outstanding custom home on
27+acres w/spacious rooms, 1st foor Mas-
ter, great kitchen & windows to exceptional
landscaping. MLS# 12-2312
RHEA 696-6677 $1,280,000
MOUNTAINTOP *Motivated Seller* Elegance
with comfort! 4BR on 6.5acres gathering room
w/cathedral ceiling highlighted by foor to ceil-
ing FP, custom kitchen, fnished LL, inground
heated pool, hot tub, screened porch & every-
thing you desire! MLS# 12-1557
PAT S. 715-9337 $619,000
DALLAS Exceptional 3BR Condo w/spacious
rooms & elegant custom paint & built-ins through-
out. Beautiful kitchen, wonderful views. 1st foor
Master Suite has offce, large WIC & stunning
bath. Walk-out LL has handsome FR, BRs, offce
& great organized storage. MLS# 12-1680
RHEA 696-6677 $495,000
DALLAS Beautiful 4BR home w/granite kitch-
en & baths. Dramatic 2-story FR w/gas FP, HW
foors, fnished lower level w/bath, additional
FR & offce. MLS# 12-3241
JILL 696-0875 $469,900
MOUNTAINTOP Quality built 6000SF home
on 3acres! Radiant heat on 1st foor, 5 car
garage, 10 ceilings on 1st foor, 2-story FR w/
FP, in-ground pool, covered patio, wet bar in LL!
One of a kind! MLS# 12-3153
JIM 715-9323 $797,500
SHAVERTOWN Attractive 2 Story - almost
new const. Elegant kitchen w/bkfst bar, FR
w/gas FP, 3-4 BRs, hdwd frs, 3 car garage &
much more! MLS# 12-1433
JUDY 714-9230 $444,900
MOUNTAINTOP Spectacular foor plan
in this lovely 2story in Woodberry Manor!
Unique features & upgrades set in apart
from the rest! MLS# 12-2461
LISA 715-9335 $439,900
SHAVERTOWN Spacious home. Wonder-
ful fr plan & elegant detail throughout.
Fantastic 2 story great rm w/gas FP, great
kitchen, MSTR on 1st fr, 5BRs, 5 baths
& great fnished LL w/custom cabinetry.
MLS# 11-3697
MARGY 696-0891 $425,000
MOUNTAINTOP 6yr young Hallmark home on
cul-de-sac. Stone & vinyl 2 story w/front porch,
walk-out basement, deck to private backyard w/
hot tub & swing set. All HW except tiled 1st foor
bath & laundry. Beautiful kitchen, baths & much
more! MLS# 12-2208
TERRY D. 715-9317 $409,900
MOUNTAINTOP Brand new 4BR, 2.5 bath
2-Story in Heritage Woods. Great open fr
plan, 9 ceilings, hw fooring, FR w/FP, cus-
tom kit w/granite, lux MBR w/whirlpool.
Gas heat & CA. MLS#12-1056
DONNA S 788-7504 $364,900
MOUNTAINTOP This totally renovated
Ranch rests on 29+ acres of beautiful
land w/stream. 4 BRs, 3 baths, 2 kitch-
ens & so much more! MLS# 12-2804
CORINE 715-9321 $329,000
DALLAS Smashing Contemporary Townhouse
combines luxury & comfort. 1st foor Mas-
ter, 3-4BRs, fabulous kitchen. MLS# 11-343
DEANNA 696-0894 $258,500
SHICKSHINNY Enjoy privacy & com-
fortable living with this 3BR, 1 full, 1
3/4 & 1 1/2 bath, 2-story on 2acres.
MLS# 12-3210
CHRISTINA K. 714-9235 $230,000
MOUNTAINTOP Zoned Highway Commercial.
100x556 Level lot; Prime location; 4BR, 1
bath Cape Cod; Replacement windows; 2 car
garage; Gas heat. MLS# 11-228
RAE 714-9234 $190,000
NANTICOKE NEW LISTING Large
2000SF, 4BR, 1.5 bath single family
home across from Recreation park. Gas
heat, OSP, convenient to Hanover Indus-
trial Park & I-81. MLS# 12-3268 PAT S.
715-9337 or
DANA 715-9333 $48,500
SHAVERTOWN REDUCED Lovely 2 story
home with charm throughout. HW foors
in LR & DR, built-in bookcases, gas FP,
screened sun porch, detached garage.
MLS# 12-2144
SALLY 714-9233 $229,900
MOUNTAINTOP Cozy Cape Cod on 9
mostly wooded acres w/1 car garage.
Field stone freplace in LR, 2BRs on 1st
foor & 2BRs on 2nd (unheated), eat-in
kitchen. Enjoy the beautiful setting from
wrap-around porch! MLS# 11-1614
TERRY D. 715-9317 $132,000
MOUNTAINTOP Beautiful 2story located
in Fox Run Estates. 5BRs, 4 baths, gas
heat, C/A, above ground heated pool,
fnished basement. MLS# 12-1966
CORINE 715-9331 $279,900
FAIRVIEW TWP. 2BR & offce on 1st foor
could be 3rd BR. Freshly painted, new
carpeting, 3 season porch, 2 car garage,
fenced yard. Move right in! MLS# 12-2387
PAT S. 715-9337 $115,000
MOUNTAINTOP NEW LISTING Unique
foor plan describes this gorgeous 2-story
in Greystone Manor. 4BRs, 2.5 baths. Ex-
cellent condition! MLS# 12-3357
CORINE 715-9321 $294,900
KINGSTON Character & charm through-
out this 3story beauty! 6BRs, 3 baths, HW
foors, beveled glass windows, modern
kitchen, 2 car garage. MLS# 12-3121
TRACY Z. 696-6674 $299,000
MOUNTAINTOP NEWLISTING 4 year old,
4BR Ranch. 2990SF including fnished
lower level. 3baths, C/A, 2 car attached
garage on a nice wooded lot!
JIM 715-9323 $289,000
EXETER Cute well-built Ranch offers great
opportunity in desirable neighborhood. 3BRs,
carport, adjacent lot included in price.
MLS# 12-3051
MARCIE 714-9267 $124,900
Lewith&Freeman
Real Estate, Inc.
Kingston: 570.288.9371
Hazleton: 570.788.1999
Wilkes-Barre: 570.822.1160
Clarks Summit: 570.585.0600
www.lewith-freeman.com
Shavertown: 570.696.3801
Mountain Top: 570.474.9801
Ready for a New Home? Call the experts.We can help.
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OPEN HOUSE SUN, 9/16
2:30-3:30PM
PAGE 18G SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2012 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
Restored 4219 sq. ft. Century home with all original woodwork on a large double lot in Kingston. 5
bedrooms, 3 baths. Formal dining room, family room & sunroom. Fireplace in master bedroom.
3rd oor studio with bookshelves. Te architecture and size of the lot are what set it apart from
the other homes. New cedar fence, 90% Pella new architectural windows. Replaced heating system
to gas hot water radiators. 3 zoned PEX tubing throughout heating systems. New hot water heater.
Dir: From Rutter Ave., Kingston one way onto Butler St.
$449,000
Smith Hourigan Group
Smarter. Bolder. Faster.
Shavertown 570-696-1195 Ruth K. Smith
Call Ruth K. Smith 570-696-1195 / 570-696-5411
39 Butler Street, Kingston
Shavertown 570 696 1195 Ruth K. Smith
OPENHOUSE SUNDAY, SEPT. 9TH 1-3PM
Smith Hourigan Group
358 South Memorial Highway, Shavertown
(570)696-1195
Visit Us @ century21SHGroup.com
SMARTER. BOLDER. FASTER.
81 Sandspring Road, Bear Creek
Impeccable class describe this 2 story home featuring a wonderful frst foor master
bedroom w/vaulted ceiling. Loft area overlooking great room w/gas freplace. Tankless
hot water heater, clever closets throughout, new carpeting,interior garage walls and foor
painted with walk-up storage overhead. MLS#12-792
DIR: Rte. 115 past Dam, left into Laurelbrook Estate to stop sign, home on left.
New Price $420,000
Arlene
Warunek
CALL ARLENE WARUNEK 696-1195 OR 714-6112
$
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OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 9
TH
1:00-3:00PM
Patrick Deats Contractor
Integrity Quality Value
Custom Home Builder
with over 25 years
experience in Luzerne
and Lackawanna Counties
570-696-1041
www.patrickdeats.com
Lot/Home Packages or Custom Homes on Your Lot
New Construction in Fairway Estates
For Sale $399,500
ELEGANT HOMES, LLC.
51 Sterling Avenue, Dallas PA 18612
(570) 675 9880
www.eleganthomesinc.net
New Construction! $198,900
* Approx 2100 Sq. Ft.
* 2 Car Garage
with Storage Area
* 2 Story Great Room
* Cherry Kitchen
with Granite
* Fenced in Yard
with Patio
* Gas Heat/AC
Directions: From Wyo-
ming Ave. take Pringle
St. to the End, take left on
Grove St. Twins on left -
267 Grove St. Kingston
Luxurious Twins in Kingston
Open House Today 1:00-3:00PM
Smith Hourigan Group
358 South Memorial Highway, Shavertown
(570)696-1195
Visit Us @ century21SHGroup.com
SMARTER. BOLDER. FASTER.
200-81 Harris Hill
Road, Shavertown
Well maintained 3
bedroom, 2 bath
double-wide, move
in condition, fenced
yard, deck & fre pit.
MLS#12-2109
New Price
$50,000
Arlene
Warunek
CALL ARLENE WARUNEK 696-1195 OR 714-6112
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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
Need to rent that
Vacation property?
Place an ad and
get started!
570-829-7130
HANOVER TWP
72 Lyndwood Ave.
Move right in to this
large yet cozy 4
bedroom, 2 bath
home in a great
area. The beautiful
finished basement
adds even more liv-
ing space. This well
maintained home
has a Split AC sys.
with heat pump,
alarm system,
private drive.
Motivated sellers.
Asking $105,000
MLS# 12-535
Appointment only.
Call Don Marsh
570-814-5072
HANOVER TWP.
Enjoy nature in
charming 2 bed-
room, 1 bath raised
ranch home in quiet
setting on Pine Run
Road, Laurel Run.
Close to everything.
Single car attached
garage, 3 season
sunroom, economi-
cal propane heat,
central air, base-
ment with fireplace.
New carpeting and
flooring, freshly
painted, Hanover
Area School Dis-
trict.
Ready to move in!
$105,000.
Call 570-474-5540
HANOVER TWP.
58 Simon Block
Nice home with
private driveway
features gas heat
with baseboard
heating, large room
sizes, lower level
with front walk-out
ideal for finishing or
extra storage.
Directions: Sans
Souci Pkwy, turn
onto Main Rd, right
on Mary St., left
onto Simon Block,
home on left.
MLS# 12-2157
$55,000
Call
Lynda Rowinski
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-696-1195
906 Homes for Sale
HANOVER TWP.
NEW PRICE!
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!
$329,900
Call Pat Guesto
570-793-4055
CENTURY 21
SIGNATURE
PROPERTIES
570-675-5100
HANOVER TWP.
OPEN HOUSE
Sun., Sept 9, 12-2
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
HANOVER TWP.
PRICE
REDUCED
$114,900
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
HUGHESTOWN
$87,900
Very nice 2 story
with 3 bedrooms
and 2 full baths.
Replacement win-
dow with great
screened porch for
outdoor living with-
out the bugs. Very
neat and clean.
MLS 12-3029
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
906 Homes for Sale
HANOVER TWP
NEW LISTING!
Well maintained
brick & vinyl 2-story
home in a nice
Hanover Twp.
neighborhood. This
home has been
freshly painted and
new carpet installed
thruout the upper
two floors. The first
floor has large,
modern eat-in
kitchen with tile
floor, counter &
backsplash, formal
dining room with
sliding doors to the
screened-in porch,
a large living room.
The second floor
has 3 bedrooms,
modern full bath,
featuring a tile
tub/shower. The fin-
ished lower level
includes a 21 x 15
family room with
large storage clos-
ets and another full
bath. The laundry
area is also in the
lower level. An
attached one-car
garage includes a
large room for a
workshop or for
storing outside fur-
niture and garden
tools, with easy
access to the pri-
vate back yard. For
more information
and to view the pho-
tos online go to:
www.prudential-
realestate.com and
enter PRU7W7A3 in
the Home Search.
Listed at $139,900.
MLS#12-3160
Call today
Mary Ellen Belchick
696-6566
Walter Belchick
696-2600 ext. 301
696-2600
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
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
906 Homes for Sale
HARDING
''Country Charm''
at its best describes
this 3 bedroom, 1.5
bath 2 story situat-
ed on 1.87 scenic
acres with many
updates. Knotty
pine kitchen, break-
fast room, living
room with gas
propane stove,
dining room, hard-
wood, office with
electric stove, deck,
gazebo & detached
garage.
MLS# 12-2813
$204,900
Call Marie Montante
570-881-0103
HARDING
PRICE REDUCED
$69,900
2032 ROUTE 92
RIVER VIEWS PLUS
EXTRA LOT ON
RIVER. Just 1/4
miles from boat
launch, this great
ranch home is
perched high
enough to keep you
dry, but close
enough to watch
the river roll by.
Surrounded by
nature, this home
features large living
room and eat in
kitchen, 3 bed-
rooms, full unfin-
ished basement.
Ready to move
right in and enjoy
country living just
minutes from down-
town. For more info
and photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-79
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
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
906 Homes for Sale
HUDSON
NEW LISTING!!
ADD YOUR
TOUCHES!!
Genuine hardwood
floors, doors & trim
will catch your
attention as you
arrive through the
entry foyer into the
sunny living room,
formal dining room
& eat-in kitchen.
You will be pleased
with the spacious
bedroom sizes &
closets. Terrific
walk-up attic for
your imagination.
Whole house fan
will keep you cool.
Attached garage
with large, full
B-Dry Basement.
Great Yard!
Virtual Tour.
MLS#12-2785
$120,000
Michele Hopkins
570-540-6046
Call (570)696-2468
HUNLOCK CREEK
1594 MAIN ROAD
REDUCED
$98,500
Owner Will
Entertain Offers
Large 2 story home
in very good condi-
tion, features 3 bed-
rooms, 1 1/2 modern
bath rooms, large
eat in kitchen with
appliances. Dining
room with French
doors, large family
room has fireplace
large foyer, with
opened stairway
and stained glass
window. Home has
natural woodwork
thru-out, with plast-
er walls, CENTRAL
AIR thru out. Many
extras must see.
Level lot with a 3
bay garage in back.
Shown by appoint-
ment to qualified
buyers only. Home
has a "HOME WAR-
RANTY" paid by sell-
ers. Additional pho-
tos can be seen at
CAPITOL REAL
ESTATE WEB SITE,
www.capitol-real
estate.com
Call John Vacendak
823-4290
735-1810
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.
Most furnishings
included. Serious,
pre-qualified
inquiries only.
Asking $575,000.
Call Jim Stachelek
or email
jims@prudential
keystone.com
Prudential
Keystone
Properties
215-896-8860
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
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
906 Homes for Sale
JENKINS TWP.
$254,900
297 Susquehannock
Drive
Traditional 4 bed-
room home with 2.5
baths, 2 car
garage. Large yard
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
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
OWNER SAYS
SELL. PRICED
REDUCED TO
$369,900
Call Terry
570-885-3041
Angie
570-885-4896
Need a Roommate?
Place an ad and
find one here!
570-829-7130
JENKINS TWP.
MOTIVATED SELLER
MAKE AN OFFER $65,000
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
KINGSTON
121 Vaughn St.
Nicely Maintained
3 bedroom 1 bath
2 story on a quiet
street in Kingston.
Large yard includes
garage which is
presently being
used as a storage
building.
MLS# 12-2408
$95,000
Call Pat Guesto
570-793-4055
CENTURY 21
SIGNATURE
PROPERTIES
570-675-5100
906 Homes for Sale
KINGSTON
142 Poplar St.
Fully remodeled,
move in ready!
3 bedrooms, 1 full
bath. Modern
kitchen, all stainless
steel appliances,
marble counter
tops, custom cabi-
nets. Beautiful
fenced in back
yard with deck and
firepit.
A MUST SEE!!!
$127,900
For additional
details or to see
home call
570-239-2882
KINGSTON
177 Third Avenue
COMPARE WHAT
YOU GET FOR YOUR
MONEY! Modern 3
bedroom end unit
townhouse, with 2
1/2 baths (master
bath). Central air.
Family room, foyer,
deck with canopy,
patio, fenced yard,
garage. Extras!
$123,000.
MLS # 12-3012
Ask for Bob Kopec
Humford Realty Inc
570-822-5126
KINGSTON
3 story traditional
BEAUTY features all
the original charac-
ter you would hope
for. Crown mold-
ings, hardwood
floors throughout all
three floors,
beveled glass
windows, built-ins.
Modern maple
kitchen, new
windows, 2 new
furnaces. 6 bed-
rooms, 2.5 baths, 2
car garage, private
backyard, one year
home warranty.
Directions:
Wyoming Ave.
South - Take a left
at Reynolds (just
past Dairy Queen)
Home on right.
MLS #12-3121
$299,000
Call Tracy Zarola
570-696-0723
906 Homes for Sale
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
OPEN HOUSE
SUN., SEPT. 9TH
12-1:30
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
PLAINS
70 Warner Street
2 bedrooms,
move-in ready with
appliances, nice
yard with shed and
deck, Newer roof,
and furnace, gas
heat. Low taxes.
Asking $62,900
Please Call
570-822-8708 or
570-301-2455
906 Homes for Sale
LAFLIN
13 Fordham Road
Totally remodeled
custom brick ranch
in Oakwood Park.
This home features
an open floor plan
with hardwood
floors, 2 fireplaces,
kitchen, formal living
& dining rooms,
family room, 4 bed-
rooms, 4 baths,
office with private
entrance, laundry
room on first floor,
tons of closets and
storage areas,
walk-up attic, great
finished basement
with fireplace, built-
in grill, in-ground
pool, cabana with
half bath, an over-
sized 2-car garage
& a security system.
Renovations include
new: windows, gas
furnace, central air,
electrical service,
hardwood floors,
Berber carpeting,
freshly painted,
updated bathrooms
& much, much,
more. Laflin Road to
Fordham Road, on
right. $423,700
Call Donna
570-613-9080
Looking for that
special place
called home?
Classified will address
Your needs.
Open the door
with classified!
LAFLIN
New Listing
142 Maplewood Dr.
Ranch house, quiet
neighborhood,
deck, newly land-
scaped, above
ground pool with
deck, spacious front
and back yard,
newly installed elec-
tric fence, alarm
system, finished
basement with 1
storage room, and
another can be bed-
room with closet,
spacious bedrooms,
recently remodeled
hall and master
baths with heated
floors, tile, new win-
dows, and custom
granite countertops.
$221,000. MLS# 12-
3036.
Call Melissa
570-237-6384
906 Homes for Sale
LAUREL RUN
PRICE REDUCTION!
OASIS in your own
back yard!! This
house has every-
thing. 3 bedrooms,
3 full baths & 1 3/4
bath. 2+ acres, your
own rec room,
screened in porch,
modern kitchen
with granite coun-
tertops & a 32x16
heated pool. Amaz-
ing setting in a
great area.
Very private setting.
MLS 12-2326
Seller willing to
entertain lease to
purchase options.
NEW PRICE
$299,900
Call/text Donna
Cain 570-947-3824
or Tony
570-855-2424
To place your
ad call...829-7130
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
MOUNTAINTOP
DOUBLE BLOCK
220 Woodlawn Ave
3 bedroom, 1 bath
rented - new oil
boiler and tank
2006. 2 bedroom
and 1bath vacant
as of Sept 1 - new
propane furnace
2012. Excellent
rental history and
income. Separate
utilities paid by
tenants. Roof and
vinyl siding in good
condition. Interior
fair condition.
$99,900.
570-262-3885.
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2012 PAGE 19G
Heritage Homes Promise:
Competitive Pricing No Hidden Costs No Hidden Upgrades
Heerriittaagggee HHooommmeeess PPrroommiise:
titiv ivee Pr Pr Pric iccin in innggggggg NNo No No No HHHH Hid id id id id idddde de de dennnnn CCo Co Co Costt st stsss No No No N H HHidd idde de d nn Up
Te Somerville - 2,210 sq. ft.
2808 Scranton/Carbondale Highway
Blakely, PA 18447
570-383-2981 www.heritagehomesltd.com
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HERITAGE HOMES INCLUDE:
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1st Floor Laundry
Master Bedroom 1st Floor
Two Story Great Room
2 1/2 Tile Baths
Front Vinyl Shakes
Hardwood, Kitchen, Foyer
Poured Concrete Foundation
G
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2012
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TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2012 PAGE 20G
Single Family Homes Patio Homes
Live Here For
$
695
*
Per Month!
Sand Springs
YOU CAN LIVE HERE FOR
$1,000 PER MONTH!
YOU CAN LIVE HERE FOR
$979 PER MONTH!
4 Homes ready for immediate move-in!
NewTwo Story Floor Plans
NewRanch Plans
Free Granite Countertops plus
Stainless Steel Appliances
158
157
32
30
29
28
31
33
34
35
137.00
8
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17,818.61 SF
17,818.61 SF 18,309.98 SF
24,445.03 SF
23,903.35 SF
35,644.32 SF
31,609.33 SF
20,855.99 SF
22,266.25 SF
16,657.29 SF
Development
PHASE IVB
JENKINS TWP.
HUMFORD REALTY INC.
HUMFORD.COM
(570)822-5126 ext.3
HUMFORD REALTY INC.
WillowViewDevelopment
NEWPhase IV-B in Pittston Area (Jenkins Twp.)
Build immediately. All utilities available.
5 lots available from$76,000!
Build
Immediately!
Close to
Everything!
Next to Pittston High School
Centerpoint Industrial Park: 4 minutes
Route 81 and Turnpike: 4 minutes
Mohegan Casino: 6 minutes
Avoca Airport: 10 minutes
Center City Wilkes-Barre: 16 minutes
Center City Scranton: 19 minutes
Travel time calculated by Mapquest
1
3
4
.5
0
Development
34 34 34 34 3
2
2
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2
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4
5
4
1
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159 9 59 08 08 .08
8,30 30 30 09 09 09 09 999 3 .9 .98 98 98 .9 .. SF SF SF SFFF S
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6
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S
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