Académique Documents
Professionnel Documents
Culture Documents
n 75 CENTS n LANCASTERONLINE.COM
Art in
the park
EL
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SEPT
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LANC
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15
Art in t
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n EL, inside
The Lo
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Art &
Craft Fe
stival
opens
Friday
A W ovies
THE W ALK IN
OODS
Foes
of Iran
deal are
upset
TSTUHLDREHER@LNPNEWS.COM
Lancaster opponents of
the Iran nuclear deal said
theyre disappointed Congress will be unable to block
it, but they plan to continue
their efforts.
We still think its very important that this issue be debated in the U.S. House and
Senate, Don Feldman said.
Feldman, a local businessman, helped organize
Julys Rally to Support Israel, which drew several
hundred people to Clipper
Magazine Stadium.
Among the speakers opposing the deal at the rally
was U.S. Rep. Joe Pitts, RPennsylvania, whose district includes most of Lancaster County.
The more we learn about
the (Obama) administrations policy toward Iran,
the clearer it is that the
agreement is unsound,
Pitts said in a statement
Wednesday.
Pitts and Feldman both
stressed that large majorities in Congress oppose the
international agreement.
That it now has the tepid,
qualified support of onethird of the Senate does not
RROBINSON@LNPNEWS.COM
JTODD@LNPNEW.COM
Above, several of Neffsville Parks walking paths lead into and are backed by housing developments. The alleged stabbing of a 15-year-old girl by 16-year-old Manheim Township High School
student Cameron Anthony Andrews took place in a wooded area at the park Tuesday evening.
RROBINSON@LNPNEWS.COM
Manheim
Townships
Community Park is the
perfect place to picnic,
walk a dog, go for a jog, or
take your kids to the playground. Its an idyllic setting bike and hiking trails
snake across 34 sprawling
acres in one of the most
populous and developed
suburbs.
But the joggers and walkers out for a stroll Wednesday said they were shocked
and disturbed to find out
that a 16-year-old high
school student was accused
of stabbing a 15-year-old
girl nearly to death on one
of the trails a day earlier.
Its pretty disturbing,
said Galen Graham, 62, of
North Carolina. He is visiting his ill father at nearby
Brethren Village and has
jogged on the path four
MORE INSIDE
Five takeaways: Obamas big
win on Iran deal
n Inside, page A4
Analysis: Why foes failed
n Nation & World, page A10
POVERTY
THE TIMELINE
n At 5:30 p.m. Tuesday,
REACTION, page A4
68
70
60 55
50
40
26
30
20
10
0
0
10 11 12 13 14 15
SOURCE: LANCASTER COUNTY COALITION TO
END HOMELESSNESS
Encode: 677490120008 PU
Encode: 677490210006 PU
SUNDAY NEWS
Kick-Off
OPINION.................. A18
PUZZLES................... B6
SPORTS......................C1
TV............................... B5
SALE!
Anthony
Andrews met
with police,
admitted to
stabbing the
victim.
n Andrews is
charged with
attempted
murder
and felony
aggravated
assault and
placed in
Lancaster
County Prison.
Bail is denied.
READ
THE FILE
n A copy of
the criminal
complaint is
available to
view online at
bit.ly/1Jysmpk
VIDEO
ONLINE
n Park visitors
react to news
of a stabbing
there at
bit.ly/1Jysmpk
BALTIMORE (AP) A Baltimore judge on Wednesday ren A mural in downtown State College
fused to dismiss charges against
featuring former Penn State head
six police officers in connection
football coach Joe Paterno is seen in
with the death of a black man
this July 2012 photo. Paternos legacy
remains a battleground for fans,
from injuries he suffered while
alumni. Sports, page C1
in custody. The judge also refused to remove the prosecutor
in the case.
ALSO INSIDE
The death of 25-year-old Fred
DigiCode Data File
die
Gray who succumbed to
Lancaster
County gets
a
ACCOUNT
: 8275701
LANCASTER
NEWSPAPERS,
INC.
injuries sustained
after his arrest
B for its
small-business
on April 12 sparked rioting and
ORDERED BY : RORY MACKISON
friendliness
unrest that shook Baltimore for
P.O. NUMBER : 008508
days. Protests Wednesday outn Business, page A8
0%
5%courtroom
25%
INVOICE NO. : 726848
side the Baltimore
Blossom(MAC
Hill neighborhood:
where a pretrial hearing on the
Illust. V.3 EPS via EMAIL)
From orchard to suburb
charges took place resulted in
just one arrest.
n Home & Garden, page B1
Fall Flooring
n Cameron
HITTING ZERO
STABBING, page A4
CHARGES
INDEX
BUSINESS.................A8
CLASSIFIEDS............ C8
COMICS..................... B8
JOE PATERNO
TH
PANTRYE
IN BROAD DAYLIGHT
TIM STUHLDREHER
food &
drink
JHAWKES@LNPNEWS.COM
THE EL theater
EPHA
NT
MAN
FOREIGN POLICY
JEFF HAWKES
mus
BALTIMORE,
A5
MAG 140page
NBAR .0182
Encode: 677490310003 PU
INTELLIGENCER JOURNAL
91 68 H
LANCASTER NE
TODAY'S WEATHER
6
77490
PAGE C12
12000 FORECAST,
8
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21000
Prefinished
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from
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LOCALLY OWNED 6
SINCE 1794
77490
A2
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
9.3.15
PA. LOTTERY
WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 2
Night
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Cash 5: 1416171834
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Treasure Hunt: 0203
062527
LeBron James
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Its the Island Sailing Club against the Royal Southern Yacht Club during their annual Bramble Bank cricket match, which takes place on the sandbank in the middle of the Solent the strait that separates the Isle
of Wight from the mainland of England on the low spring tide, on Monday. The traditional match can
only be held during the low spring tide when the sandbank is exposed for a short time.
ON LANCASTERONLINE
TOM, TAKE 2
Soccer star Alex Morgan will be the first athlete profiled on Disneys
inspirational
Becoming series produced by
LeBron James. Morgan
helped the United States
win the FIFA Womens
World Cup this summer.
Her path from childhood
to Olympic gold medalist
will be told in the Sept. 13
premiere episode. Other
athletes to be featured
in upcoming shows this
season include New York
Rangers goalie Henrik
Lundquist, Los Angeles Clippers guard Chris
Paul, Yankees pitcher CC
Sabathia and U.S. soccer
goalie Tim Howard. The
Becoming pilot aired
last year and told James
rise as a basketball prodigy raised in Akron, Ohio,
by a single mother.
Broadway revival
n Sept. 3, 1189: Englands King Richard I (the LionHearted) was crowned in Westminster Abbey.
CORRECTIONS
LNP wants to correct substantive errors of fact.
To request a correction or clarification, call the news desk at 291-8622 or email news@LNPnews.com
Zachary Levi
Dancing Deen
Paula Deen
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LOCAL
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
FIRE
A3
INVESTIGATION
SMOKE DELAY
TKNAPP@LNPNEWS.COM
ANDREW SPREADBURY
A tractor-trailer fire closed Route 283 westbound at the Route 741 interchange Wednesday.
TKNAPP@LNPNEWS.COM
COMMUNITY
ECORNELIUS@LNPNEWS.COM
SUBMITTED PHOTO
Christopher L.
Huynh
CHARGED
East Hempfield
Township police
have filed
the following
charges against
Christopher L.
Huynh:
n Felony
charge of
robbery
n Misdemeanor
charge of theft
ARREST, page A7
EMERGENCY
Residents fight
farmhouse blaze
er in an electrical room
at CNH Industrial in
New Holland.
The 12:35 p.m. house
fire occurred at Short
and South Line roads.
When crews arrived,
residents were bailing water onto the
fire, which eventually spread around the
window and damaged
the eaves, said Stevens
Fire Chief Chad Weaver.
The fire was under
control within 20 minutes and Weaver esti-
FIRE, page A7
CITY COUNCIL
Will increase total by $120,000; half may be earmarked for surveillance cameras
DAN NEPHIN
DNEPHIN@LNPNEWS.COM
Lancaster
General
Health is increasing the
amount of money it gives
to Lancaster city in lieu
of taxes by $120,000 a
year.
That will mean an additional $60,000 for the
city this year, Patrick
Hopkins, city business
administrator, told city
council at its agenda
meeting Tuesday.
With the $120,000 addition, LG Healths total
payment in lieu of taxes
will touch $1.5 million
annually. As a nonprofit,
LG Health with total
Law Offices Of
William C. Haynes
Funding may be provided by Medicare, Medicaid, Long Term Care Insurance or private resources. Must reside in Lancaster
County, be age 55 or older and determined to need nursing home level of care to be eligible. All non-emergency services must be
provided/approved by LIFE. Participants may be held financially liable for unauthorized, non-emergency services.
CONTACT
General info: 291-8811, P.O.
Box 1328, Lancaster, PA
17608
Newsroom: Tips, stories and
announcements, 291-8622,
news@LNPnews.com
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subscriptions: 291-8611,
circulation@LNPnews.com
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subscribers
ONLINE
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Classifieds: 291-8711,
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& anniversaries: 291-4957,
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ad, beyond liability for the value of the actual space occupied
by the ad or item in which the error, omission and/or failure
to insert occurred LNP Media Group, Inc. reserves the right to
reject or cancel any advertisement at any time.
A4
FROM PAGE A1
Stabbing: Park
Continued from A1
ty Park in Neffsville in
broad daylight early Tuesday evening, police said
in a criminal complaint.
The park, at 209 Petersburg Road, is surrounded
by residential neighborhoods and is a popular
hangout for students after
school.
The 15-year-old victim
suffered five or six stab
wounds to her lower back
and left side, police said.
A doctor determined that
one of the punctures narrowly missed vital organs.
She was being treated at
an area hospital Wednesday, authorities said.
Police said they are still
trying to determine a motive for the assault.
Authorities said the girl
was yelling for help when
a woman came upon the
attack in a wooded area
of the park just after 5:30
p.m. The assailant, who
was kneeling on top of
the girl, fled as the woman
called 911, police said.
This is an absolutely
shocking crime, Lancaster County District
Attorney Craig Stedman
said. We are trying to determine a motive and get
more answers, but I can
say it seems likely that
the victims life was saved
by the quick-thinking action of a jogger who was
passing by and called 911.
Otherwise, this incident
Family reacts
Contacted by phone
Wednesday morning, Andrews father, Michael,
said he didnt even know
what charges were being
filed against his son.
When told they are attempted murder and aggravated assault, he said,
My son is not that type of
person. We are unsure of
what actually happened.
He said he understands
that Cameron and the girl
were friends. Nothing
less and nothing more,
he said. He said he didnt
know the girl.
We are very sorry for
her injuries and we wish
her and her family well,
he said.
Cameron is dating a different girl, he said.
Lindy Andrews, speaking by phone Wednesday
afternoon, said the girl
lives in their neighborhood, which is off Route
501 and north of Oregon
Road. She said Cameron
and the girl went to school
together and were friends
but said she personally
Reaction: Locals
Continued from A1
Road, is surrounded by
residential
neighborhoods and is a popular
hangout for students after school. Several park
visitors said that because
it didnt appear to have
been a random attack,
Investigation
Township police Detective Sarah Goss met with
the girl at the hospital
and she said Andrews had
stabbed her several times
as they were walking on a
wooded foot path on the
north side of the park,
charging documents state.
Andrews was later interviewed at the township
police station and admitted to having stabbed the
girl, according to the complaint.
Stedman said the bladed
weapon was recovered.
Wednesday.
This is why I relocated
from New York here,
Barber said. It is quieter, a slower pace of life.
Thats why what happened is really shocking.
Lueders, 53, of Leola,
said he found it hard to
believe an attempted
murder happened where
they walk. He prefers
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Homeless vets
Continued from A1
Not my day
A Facebook profile
for a Cameron Anthony Andrews lists him as
a student at Manheim
Township High School
since 2013. The profile
includes
comments
from early Tuesday
morning showing he
was unhappy.
I Can tell todays not
my day!! he posted at
6:46 a.m. At 7:01 a.m.,
he posted: They really
gone miss me when I
pack my (expletive) an
leave! cant deal with
this bs everyday.
The Facebook account appeared to have
been deleted Wednesday night.
Help offered
The high school issued a written statement
to
parents
Wednesday morning
saying it was making
additional high school
guidance counselors
available through the
day for any students or
staff members.
Functional zero
walking in Manheim
Township Community Park to nearby
Stoner Park, along
Route 222 and Northbrook Drive in the
township.
It is quieter here
with no traffic noise
from 222, he said.
You feel like you are
more out (in nature).
Officially,
Lancaster
County has achieved what
is known as functional
zero, meaning the coalition is able to immediately divert any newly homeless veteran from the
street or an emergency
shelter into an apartment
or a transitional program.
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LANCASTER EPHRATA
LEBANON
PALMYRA
1914
Fruitville Pike (Rts.884
E. Main St. 1051
E. Cumberland St. Londonderry
Square
(1/2 Block from K-Mart, in front of Savemart)
222 & 322, In the Wal-Mart Plaza)
(Rt. 422 - between Home Depot & Wal-Mart)
(Rt. 422 - Behind Burger King)
www.lancastermattress.com
FROM PAGE A1
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
A5
representing
Officer
Caesar Goodson, unsuccessfully argued that
Mosbys comments after
filing charges against the
officers were reckless
and unprofessional, and
violated the rules of conduct. He likened Mosbys
comments on the case
to a pep rally calling for
payback.
Williams also ruled
against another defense
motion, one that sought
to have Mosby removed
from the case due to
what the defense contended were conflicts of
interest. He called the
assertion that Mosbys
judgment was impacted
by the fact that her husband, Nick Mosby, is a
councilman in a district
that experienced a disproportionate amount of
violence troubling and
condescending.
Being married to a
councilman is not a reason for recusal, he said.
Williams added that
allegations of prosecutorial misconduct would
have to be addressed by
the state Attorney Grievance Commission.
Prosecutors also told
Williams they will put
into evidence redacted
statements that the officers made to investigators. Both sides agreed
to ask for an order sealing the statements from
public view.
Officers Edward Nero,
Garrett Miller, William
Porter and Goodson, as
well as Lt. Brian Rice
and Sgt. Alicia White,
face charges in Grays
death. They did not attend the hearing. All
six are charged with
second-degree assault,
reckless endangerment
and misconduct in office.
Rice, Porter and White
also face manslaughter charges, and Goodson faces an additional
charge of second-degree
murder.
After hearing arguments about whether
the officers should be
tried together or separately, Williams ruled
that they would be tried
separately. Defense attorneys had argued their
clients cases would be
hurt if they were tried
together.
Graham,
Goodsons
lawyer, argued that his
client who faces the
most serious charge
would face a great risk
of spillover effect and
transference of guilt.
Prosecutors wanted to
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ASSOCIATED PRESS
Kwame Rose is detained by police as protesters rally outside the Baltimore courthouse
Wednesday during the first court hearing for six Baltimore police officers charged in
the death of Freddie Gray.
A6
FROM PAGE A1
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lution of disapproval
gambit for reviewing the
Iran deal.
At one point, remember, there was talk of
getting a veto-proof
majority to impose new
sanctions against the
White Houses wishes.
If 67 Democrats and Republicans had held together, they could have
passed a law and overridden the presidents veto
on a law requiring explicit congressional approval. But the law crafted by Foreign Relations
Chairman Bob Corker,
R-Tenn., and ranking
Democrat Benjamin L.
Cardin, of Maryland,
didnt do that; it instead
required Congress to
override a veto to kill the
deal.
If Congress couldnt
find 67 votes to demand
congressional approval
of the deal, why would it
be able to find 67 votes to
kill it outright? The math
was stacked against the
deals opponents from
the get-go.
That, of course, had the
right wing upset about
the Senate giving up its
constitutional prerogative to ratify treaties,
which would have required 67 votes to approve.
Congress gets to blame
itself because of how the
sanctions were written
into law in the first place.
As Corker repeatedly
noted, Obama had the
authority under existing
law to waive the sanctions on his own. And
without the Iran-review
law, there was every
expectation Congress
wouldnt get a say or a
vote at all on the Iran
deal.
Resolutions of disapproval, meanwhile, are a
particularly elegant way
for Congress to avoid responsibility with the
same tactic deployed repeatedly to raise the debt
limit. Most lawmakers
get to say they voted no
and the president gets
what he wants anyway.
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FROM PAGE A3
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Cruz
Continued from A3
Continued from A3
the administration
had requested increased funding.
Our financial contribution seeks to improve the overall health
and well-being of our
community, he said
Wednesday.
Were
pleased to be able to
support the city as long
as were financially able
to do so.
The city administration intends to earmark
the $60,000 it will get
from LG Health for the
rest of 2015 for the Lancaster Safety Coalition,
which operates surveillance cameras throughout the city.
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by an unidentified male.
No weapon was displayed during the robbery.
A blurry surveillance
photo of the man, his face
largely concealed by a
black-and-white baseballstyle cap and glasses, was
released after the robbery.
Huynh was identified
as the suspect following an investigation,
East Hempfield police Lt.
Tammy Marsh said.
We got numerous
tips based on the photo,
Marsh said.
That branch of Metro
Bank has been robbed at
least four previous times
in the past five years,
newspaper and court records show.
Fire: 2 blazes
the money.
Gray said the idea came
up in conversations with
LG Health officials about
the increased payment.
Brogan added supporting the coalition ultimately saves the police department money in protracted
investigations.
The coalition which
had a 2014 budget of
$429,000 recently finished a $100,000 capital
campaign, allowing it to
install eight more cameras.
That will bring the total number of cameras
owned and monitored by
coalition to 169. The new
cameras are expected to
be installed by the end of
the year.
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A8
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Business
MEDIA PRODUCTION
TMEKEEL@LNPNEWS.COM
Triodes new home will have a multisoundstage, film, video and recording
studio for corporate clientele and the
entertainment industry.
Creating that out of the idle building
at 631 S. Water St. will require substantial structural repairs and renovations, said the Pennsylvania Industrial Development Authority.
PIDA is assisting the project by providing a $400,000 loan.
Triode is owned by Peter Scudner,
Farm markets
NEW HOLLAND DAIRY
Lancaster
County
earns a B for its friendliness toward small business, a new survey finds.
Thumbtack, a website
that lists experienced
small-business professionals in markets across
the country, says Lancaster County ranks in
roughly the top third of
communities nationwide.
The website places
Lancaster County 33rd
of 95 communities sur-
FRIENDLINESS GRADES
n Lancaster County: B
n Pittsburgh: C
n Philadelphia: C
n Allentown: Chere, who responded to
36-question surveys.
Thumbtack has done
the survey annually
since 2012, but the 2015
survey is the first to include Lancaster County.
The results were released Tuesday.
Nationally, the city
KIRKWOOD HAY
Dividends
SMALL BUSINESS
TIM MEKEEL
thats friendliest to
small business is Manchester, New Hampshire. The least friendly
city is Hartford, Connecticut.
For more details on
the surveys findings
here, visit thumbtack.
com/pa/lancaster.
Payable
12-14
9-28
11-3
10-15
10-1
9-30
9-29
10-31
10-30
9-25
9-16
9-16
10-30
10-15
10-7
10-2
10-1
LNP
MORTGAGE GUIDE
Institution
30 yr APR
30 yr Fixed
Rate: 4.000
4.058%
Points: 0.000
Fees: $1143
% Down: 20%
Rate: 3.750
3.777%
Points: 0.000
Fees: $540
% Down: 20%
Rate: 3.750
3.770%
Points: 0.000
Fees: $0
% Down: 20%
4.040%
Points: 0.000
Rate: 4.000
Fees: $787
Integrity Bank
% Down: 5%
Product
Rate
Points
Fees
% Down
APR
0.000
0.000
0.000
$1143
$1143
$1143
20%
20%
20%
3.829
3.351
3.238
3.500
0.000
$745
20%
2.875
0.000
$745
20%
2.875
0.000
$125
20%
Consistent low rate market leader!!!
3.551
2.940
2.891
20 yr fixed
15 yr fixed
3/1 ARM
20 yr fixed
15 yr fixed
10 yr fixed
3.750
3.250
3.000
15 yr fixed
2.875
0.000
$0
20%
2.890
20 yr fixed
3.500
0.000
$0
20%
3.530
5/1 ARM
2.750
0.000
$0
20%
2.842
A+ BBB Rating,Open Evenings and Weekends,Free Relocks !
15 yr fixed
30 yr FHA
5/1 jumbo ARM
3.250
0.000
$787
3.750
0.000
$3675
2.990
0.000
$787
Smile More Worry Less
5%
3.5%
20%
3.319
3.935
3.076
15 yr fixed
Call for Rates
10 yr fixed
2.990
0.000
$557
20%
3.061
5/1 ARM
3.250
0.000
$567
20%
3.343
One settlement construction/permanent loans. Call for details.
877-378-4413
866-250-9370
NMLS # / License #
Bank
NMLS# 141744
http://www.skyfinancialloans.com
866-223-9998
NMLS# 138509
LIC# 26143
http://www.approvalplusmortgage.com
866-503-1366
http://www.epnb.com
866-723-8561
http://www.integritybankonline.com
Legend: The rate and annual percentage rate (APR) are effective as of 9/1/15. 2015 Bankrate, Inc. http://www.interest.com. The APR may increase after consummation and may vary. Payments do not include amounts for taxes and insurance. The fees set forth for each advertisement above may be charged to open the plan (A) Mortgage Banker, (B) Mortgage Broker, (C) Bank, (D) S & L, (E) Credit Union, (BA) indicates Licensed Mortgage Banker, NYS Banking
Dept., (BR) indicates Registered Mortgage Broker, NYS Banking Dept., (loans arranged through third parties). Call for Rates means actual rates were not available at press time. All rates are quoted on a minimum FICO score of 740. Conventional loans are based on loan amounts of $165,000. Jumbo loans are based on loan amounts of $435,000. Points quoted include discount and/or or igination. Lock Days: 30-60. Annual percentage rates (APRs) are based on fully
indexed rates for adjustable rate mortgages (ARMs). The APR on your specific loan may differ from the sample used. Fees reflect charges relative to the APR. If your down payment is less than 20% of the homes value, you will be subject to private mortgage insurance, or PMI. FHA Mortgages include both UFMIP and MIP fees based on a loan amount of $165,000 with 5% down payment. VA Mortgages include funding fees based on a loan amount of $165,000
with 5% down payment. Bankrate, Inc. does not guarantee the accuracy of the information appearing above or the availability of rates and fees in this table. All rates, fees and other information are subject to change without notice. Bankrate, Inc. does not own any financial institutions. Some or all of the companies appearing in this table pay a fee to appear in this table. If you are seeking a mortgage in excess of $417,000, recent legislation may enable lenders in
certain locations to provide rates that are different from those shown in the table above. Sample Repayment Terms ex. 360 monthly payments of $5.29 per $1,000 borrowed ex. 180 monthly payments of $7.56 per $1,000 borrowed. We recommend that you contact your lender directly to determine what rates may be available to you. To appear in this table, call 800-509-4636. To report any inaccuracies, call 888-509-4636. http://lancasteronline.interest.com
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
DOW
16,351.38 +293.03
NASDAQ
4,749.98 +113.87
S&P 500
1,948.86 +35.01
2,080
Close: 1,948.86
Change: 35.01 (1.8%)
1,960
1,840
10 DAYS
2,080
17,600
2,000
16,800
1,920
16,000
A
DOW
DOW Trans.
DOW Util.
NYSE Comp.
NASDAQ
S&P 500
S&P 400
Wilshire 5000
Russell 2000
NYSE NASD
3,640 1,875
4,298 2,192
2330 1966
817 865
11
21
83
48
est.
-37.3 -50.6 -40.7 -40.9 -43.8 -43.0
$0
HIGH
Tupperware Brands
15,200
LOW
16352.58 16058.35
7865.69 7688.74
551.68
542.49
10013.36 9884.15
4749.98 4659.41
1948.91 1916.52
1396.33 1376.29
20558.62 20206.07
1146.03 1128.05
CLOSE
16351.38
7865.32
547.29
10013.36
4749.98
1948.86
1396.32
20558.41
1146.03
YTD
CHG. %CHG. WK MO QTR %CHG.
+293.03
+188.00
+0.35
+138.69
+113.87
+35.01
+19.63
+352.34
+17.98
+1.82%
+2.45%
+0.06%
+1.40%
+2.46%
+1.83%
+1.43%
+1.74%
+1.59%
s
s
t
s
s
s
s
s
s
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
-8.26%
-13.95%
-11.45%
-7.62%
+0.29%
-5.34%
-3.86%
-5.13%
-4.87%
End of correction
-50
F
2015
Source: FactSet
Better quarter?
Medtronic delivers its latest
quarterly results today.
The medical device maker is
expected to report improved
earnings and revenue for its fiscal
first quarter. Beyond its earnings,
investors will be listening for
details on Medtronics acquisition
of privately held Twelve, which is
developing a heart valve replacement. Medtronic announced it had
agreed to buy the California
company last month.
$80
$71.55
MDT
$63.85
70
60
Operating
EPS
15
$0.93
est.
$1.01
1Q 14
1Q 15
Price-earnings ratio: 30
October 7, 1966
May 21, 1973
May 31, 1977
November 2, 1977
March 6, 1978
October 31, 1978
July 24, 1984
October 19, 1987
October 27, 1997
August 31, 1998
July 2, 2010
October 3, 2011
Average
10.0
Source: FactSet
AP
$61
52-WEEK RANGE
Source:FactSet
96
*annualized
ASSETS
(Mlns)
FUND
Vanguard 500Adml
Vanguard TotStIAdm
Vanguard TotStIdx
Vanguard InstIdxI
Vanguard InstPlus
Fidelity Contra
American Funds GrthAmA m
Vanguard TotIntl
American Funds IncAmerA m
Dodge & Cox IntlStk
American Funds CapIncBuA m
Vanguard WelltnAdm
PIMCO TotRetIs
Dodge & Cox Stock
145,189
120,091
101,308
100,022
87,777
74,530
72,335
70,683
69,387
68,597
67,920
66,468
64,880
60,638
-0.7/B
-0.9/B
-1.0/B
-0.6/B
-0.6/B
+2.9/B
+0.9/C
-13.5/E
-4.9/E
-16.1/E
-5.1/B
-1.3/B
+1.1/C
-5.3/C
+14.7/A
NL
+14.9/A
NL
+14.7/A
NL
+14.7/A
NL
+14.7/A
NL
+15.0/C
NL
+14.4/C 5.75
+3.8/E
NL
+9.3/B 5.75
+6.3/A
NL
+7.7/A 5.75
+10.2/A
NL
+3.5/B
NL
+14.8/A
NL
NAME
52-WK RANGE
TICKER LO
HI CLOSE CHG%CHG
AT&T Inc
Air Products
Alcatel-Lucent
Alcoa Inc
Applied Indl Tch
Armstrong World Inds
BB&T Corp
Bco Santander SA
Bon Ton Store
CNH Indl NV
Campbell Soup
Carpenter Tech
Clarcor Inc
Costco Wholesale
Donegal A
Donnelley RR & Sons
Exelon Corp
Frontier Comm
Fulton Financial
GlaxoSmithKline PLC
Harley Davidson
Henry Schein Inc
Hershey Company
Intl Paper
Johnson & Johnson
Kellogg Co
Kroger Co
L-3 Communications
M&T Bank
Merck & Co
T
30.97
APD 118.20
ALU
2.28
AA
7.97
AIT
37.15
AWI 44.00
BBT 34.50
SAN
5.87
BONT 2.89
CNHI 7.35
CPB 41.15
CRS 34.28
CLC 53.17
COST 117.03
DGICA 13.47
RRD 14.32
EXC 29.75
FTR
4.19
FULT 10.43
GSK 39.27
HOG 50.64
HSIC 109.34
HSY 82.41
IP
40.64
JNJ 81.79
K
58.83
KR
25.42
LLL 101.11
MTB 111.78
MRK 45.69
4 36.45
6158.20
4 4.96
2 17.75
3 50.00
7 60.70
2 41.90
1 10.29
2 10.92
2 9.72
7 50.80
2 55.44
2 68.72
6156.85
3 16.47
2 20.22
1 38.93
3 8.46
5 13.66
2 49.08
3 70.41
7149.95
3 111.35
1 57.90
5109.49
8 69.89
7 39.43
2132.92
2134.00
5 63.62
32.82
138.95
3.29
9.32
40.46
55.20
35.88
5.93
3.82
7.60
47.77
38.42
54.87
140.42
14.12
15.27
29.96
5.21
11.82
40.64
55.79
135.38
88.62
41.98
93.35
66.74
34.65
105.95
115.27
52.98
+.50
+3.03
+.06
+.10
-.11
+.82
+.55
+.03
+.05
...
+.90
+.90
+.71
+2.12
-.06
+.18
...
+.17
+.13
+1.17
+1.14
+2.82
+1.54
+.29
+1.26
+1.03
+.80
+2.88
+2.62
+.45
J
52-week range
+1.5
+2.2
+1.9
+1.1
-0.3
+1.5
+1.6
+0.5
+1.3
...
+1.9
+2.4
+1.3
+1.5
-0.4
+1.2
...
+3.4
+1.1
+3.0
+2.1
+2.1
+1.8
+0.7
+1.4
+1.6
+2.4
+2.8
+2.3
+0.9
YTD 1YR
Vol
WK MO QTR%CHG %RTN (Thous) P/E
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
s
t
t
t
t
s
t
t
t
s
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
s
t
t
t
t
t
t
s
t
t
t
t
t
s
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
s
t
t
s
s
t
t
t
t
s
t
t
s
t
t
t
s
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
s
t
t
t
t
-2.3
-2.2 21902 33
-3.7 +4.4 1312 28
-7.3
-5.3 2336
-41.0 -43.8 39879 13
-11.3 -14.5
293 14
+8.0
-5.7
250 41
-7.7
-2.6 4289 13
-28.8 -35.1 5269
-48.4 -62.4
111 dd
-5.7 -10.6 1754 25
+8.6 +7.4 2470 20
-22.0 -30.5
357 26
-17.7 -13.1
183 18
-0.9 +19.6 1687 27
-11.6
-6.6
36 14
-9.1
-8.7 1601 11
-19.2
-6.6 7606 11
-21.9 -19.7 23828 dd
-4.4 +4.5
869 14
-4.9 -14.5 3890
-15.4 -12.2 2197 15
-0.6 +10.8
500 25
-14.7
-2.4
819 23
-21.6 -10.7 1971 17
-10.7
-8.4 11277 16
+2.0 +4.2 1832 62
+7.9 +34.3 7286 19
-16.1
-3.9
365 15
-8.2
-6.6
893 15
-6.7
-9.6 12909 15
DIV
1.88
3.24
...
0.12
1.08
...
1.08
0.61e
0.20
...
1.25
0.72
0.80
1.60
0.54
1.04
1.24
0.42
0.36
2.49e
1.24
...
2.33f
1.60
3.00
2.00f
0.42f
2.60
2.80
1.80
$10.80
$27.42
PE: ...
Yield: ...
J
52-week range
$36.29
Republic Airways
RJET
J
52-week range
A
$95.59
$1.97
PE: ...
Yield: ...
J
52-week range
METALS
Gold (oz)
Silver (oz)
Platinum (oz)
Copper (lb)
Palladium (oz)
Interestrates
PE: 3.8
Yield: ...
%CHG %YTD
+1.85
-13.2
+0.89
-10.0
+1.98
-12.9
-2.00
-8.3
+2.12
-0.7
CLOSE
PVS.
1132.50 1138.70
14.66
14.61
1013.60 1008.40
2.33
2.30
582.80 578.50
%CHG %YTD
-0.54
-4.3
+0.33
-5.8
+0.52
-16.2
+1.32
-17.8
+0.74
-27.0
TREASURIES
PVS.
1.41
1.17
3.56
0.64
235.00
1.30
8.85
4.84
YEST PVS
3-month T-bill
6-month T-bill
52-wk T-bill
2-year T-note
5-year T-note
10-year T-note
30-year T-bond
.03
.24
.34
.71
1.52
2.19
2.95
Barclays USAggregate
A
$15.36
PVS.
45.41
1.46
1.58
2.70
1.40
AGRICULTURE
CLOSE
Cattle (lb)
1.41
Coffee (lb)
1.15
Corn (bu)
3.54
Cotton (lb)
0.63
Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 234.00
Orange Juice (lb)
1.29
Soybeans (bu)
8.84
Wheat (bu)
4.73
%CHG %YTD
-0.07
-14.8
-2.01
-31.2
-0.56
-10.8
-0.63
+4.8
-0.43
-29.3
-0.46
-7.9
-0.11
-13.3
-2.27
-19.8
NET
CHG
0.01
0.26
0.36
0.71
1.49
2.15
2.92
+0.02
-0.02
-0.02
...
+0.03
+0.04
+0.03
YEST PVS
NET
CHG
2.80
4.42
2.41
7.30
4.15
1.86
3.49
2.77
4.43
2.42
7.26
4.15
1.85
3.49
WK MO QTR
t
s
r
s
s
s
s
+0.03
-0.01
-0.01
+0.04
...
+0.01
...
t
s
t
t
t
t
s
1YR
AGO
s .01
s .04
s .09
s .53
t 1.69
t 2.42
t 3.18
WK MO QTR
1YR
AGO
s
t
s
t
s
s
s
2.99
4.42
2.22
5.20
3.95
1.92
2.86
s
s
s
s
s
t
s
t
t
s
s
s
t
s
GlobalMarkets
INDEX
S&P 500
Buenos Aires Merval
Frankfurt DAX
London FTSE 100
Hong Kong Hang Seng
Paris CAC-40
Mexico City Bolsa
Tokyo Nikkei 225
Seoul Composite
Singapore Straits Times
Sao Paolo Bovespa
Sydney All Ordinaries
Toronto S&P/TSX
Shanghai Composite
YEST
1948.86
10823.02
10048.05
6083.31
20934.94
4554.92
42969.93
18095.40
1915.22
2878.13
46394.28
5119.45
13545.25
3160.17
NAME
52-WK RANGE
TICKER LO
HI CLOSE CHG%CHG
NPBC
NWBI
PNC
PPL
PDCO
PENN
JCP
PFE
RAD
SHLD
SKY
SVU
TEL
TLN
SKT
TGNA
TSN
UGI
UVV
URBN
VZ
WMT
WMK
WFC
WIN
YRCW
9.17
11.52
76.69
29.32
39.28
10.50
5.90
27.51
4.42
19.08
2.50
7.26
51.03
13.05
30.30
20.75
37.02
31.54
38.30
27.89
38.06
61.50
38.23
46.44
4.42
11.90
HTWR
LocalStocks
25
10
$61.52
AP
HRB
32.8
PE: ...
Yield: ...
35
60
5-yr*
-1.8
A
$40.17
H&R Block
GPRK
3-yr*
Price change 1-yr
HTWR
-19.9%
-10.2
Price-earnings ratio: lost money
ASSETS
(Mlns)
59,647
54,847
53,171
50,673
49,774
48,446
48,310
46,883
44,733
44,480
42,652
42,437
42,208
40,296
39,549
39,350
80
FUND
Vanguard TotBdAdml
American Funds InvCoAmA m
American Funds CpWldGrIA m
Vanguard IntlStkIdxIPls
FrankTemp-Franklin IncomeA m
American Funds WAMutInvA m
Fidelity Spartan 500IdxAdvtg
American Funds AmBalA m
Vanguard TotStIIns
Dodge & Cox Income
American Funds FnInvA m
Metropolitan West TotRetBdI
T Rowe Price GrowStk
Harbor IntlInstl
Vanguard HltCrAdml
Vanguard MuIntAdml
J
52-week range
FUELS
CLOSE
Crude Oil (bbl)
46.25
In a volatile day Ethanol (gal)
1.47
of trading, the
Heating Oil (gal)
1.61
price of oil con- Natural Gas (mm btu) 2.65
tinued its sharp Unleaded Gas (gal)
1.43
$15.33
HeartWare Intl
GeoPark
HeartWare International says it is buying privatelyheld Valtech Cardio in a cash and stock deal.
The news sent its shares of the medical device
company down 20.8 percent
Wednesday in high-volume trading.
HeartWare makes heart pumps to
treat patients suffering from advanced
heart failure. The company said the
acquisition will bring together
complementary technology Valtech
makes valve repair and replacement
$76.08
28.6
17.3
15
Commodities
20.7
Company
Spotlight
$47.85
J
52-week range
15.8
23.0
$2.70
S&P 500
Performance
19.0
20
21.9%
5.7
25
50
40
NAV
60
6 months later
1.6
0.4
Navistar International
TUP
Rising market ahead? The S&P 500 has generally posted strong results after it has fallen by
10 percent or more as the unemployment rate is falling.
-25
EURO
$1.1238 -.0052
The stock market bounced back Wednesday following a staggering loss the day before amid mounting concerns about China.
News about the U.S. economy gave investors some encouragement: A private survey showed that U.S. businesses added jobs at
a steady pace last month. Apple led the Dow Jones industrial average higher and technology companies led all 10 sectors of the
Standard & Poors 500 index to gains. Later this week, attention
will turn to the governments monthly job report, which could help
determine whether the Federal Reserve raises a key interest rate
at a meeting later this month.
A rare correction
Trade deficit
GOLD
$1,132.50 -6.20
Close: 16,351.38
Change: 293.03 (1.8%)
10 DAYS
CRUDE OIL
$46.25 +.84
15,360
18,400
30-YR T-BOND
2.95% +.03
16,360
2,160
1,840
10-YR T-NOTE
2.19% +.04
17,360
S&P 500
StocksRecap
Money&Markets
Today
Eye on Campbells
A9
8 12.80
6 13.30
6100.52
1 38.14
5 53.07
8 20.23
7 11.30
5 36.46
8 9.47
3 48.25
5 4.30
3 12.00
4 73.73
1 27.00
2 40.80
2 33.40
7 45.10
3 39.74
6 58.89
2 47.25
6 51.73
1 90.97
3 51.91
5 58.77
3 17.77
3 25.40
11.77 +.13
12.44 +.01
88.94 +1.75
30.15 +.15
44.94 +.48
18.06 +.37
9.32 +.06
31.97 +.61
8.16 +.16
26.69 +.54
3.27 -.08
8.25 +.16
59.04 +1.13
13.63 +.05
31.42 +.24
23.11 +.03
42.00 +.60
33.46 -.10
48.92 +.43
30.79 +.29
45.35 +.45
64.44 +.62
41.72 +.92
51.99 +1.00
8.00 +.59
15.55 +.27
+1.1
+0.1
+2.0
+0.5
+1.1
+2.1
+0.6
+1.9
+2.0
+2.1
-2.4
+2.0
+2.0
+0.4
+0.8
+0.1
+1.4
-0.3
+0.9
+1.0
+1.0
+1.0
+2.3
+2.0
+8.0
+1.8
CHG
+35.01
+76.19
+32.48
+24.77
-250.49
+13.76
+58.42
-70.29
+0.99
-4.64
+975.24
+2.37
+63.35
-6.45
%CHG
+1.83%
+0.71%
+0.32%
+0.41%
-1.18%
+0.30%
+0.14%
-0.39%
+0.05%
-0.16%
+2.15%
+0.05%
+0.47%
-0.20%
WK
s
s
s
s
t
s
s
t
s
s
s
t
s
s
MO
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
QTR
YTD
t
-5.34%
t +26.16%
t
+2.47%
t
-7.35%
t
-11.31%
t
+6.60%
t
-0.41%
t
+3.69%
t
-0.02%
t
-14.47%
t
-7.23%
t
-4.99%
t
-7.43%
t
-2.30%
YTD
1YR
Vol
+11.8
-0.7
-2.5
-10.6
-6.6
+31.5
+43.8
+2.6
+8.5
-19.1
-19.3
-14.9
-6.7
-34.3
-15.0
-9.5
+4.8
-11.9
+11.2
-12.4
-3.1
-25.0
-12.8
-5.2
-37.9
-30.9
+20.8
+2.9
+5.2
-2.0
+12.5
+56.7
-14.3
+10.4
+28.6
-24.9
-4.0
-15.3
-5.6
...
-7.7
-11.0
+9.8
-2.5
-4.2
-23.3
-5.5
-12.9
-2.2
+1.9
-32.1
-34.2
1850
871
2524
4499
1200
549
10272
30855
14814
562
2
2035
1569
1214
523
2263
2206
1019
157
1414
16817
9314
44
20146
5053
573
t
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t
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s
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t
t
t
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t
t
t
t
t
t
s
s
16
17
12
10
20
dd
dd
23
22
dd
dd
11
12
30
5
13
24
16
18
19
13
20
13
dd
68
DIV
0.44
0.56
2.04
1.51f
0.88
...
...
1.12
...
...
...
...
1.32
...
1.14
0.56
0.40
0.91
2.08
...
2.20
1.96
1.20
1.50
0.60
...
Dividend Footnotes: a - Extra dividends were paid, but are not included. b - Annual rate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. e - Amount declared or paid in
last 12 months. f - Current annual rate, which was increased by most recent dividend announcement. i - Sum of dividends paid after stock split, no regular rate.
j - Sum of dividends paid this year. Most recent dividend was omitted or deferred. k - Declared or paid this year, a cumulative issue with dividends in arrears.
m - Current annual rate, which was decreased by most recent dividend announcement. p - Initial dividend, annual rate not known, yield not shown. r - Declared
or paid in preceding 12 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash value on ex-distribution date. PE Footnotes: q - Stock is a closed-end
fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc - P/E exceeds 99. dd - Loss in last 12 months.
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Nation&World
FOR THE LATEST UPDATES, GO TO LANCASTERONLINE.COM
In brief
SANAA, YEMEN
Bombs at mosque
kill at least 20
An Islamic State-claimed suicide
bomber and a subsequent car bombing
killed at least 20 people Wednesday at
a mosque in Yemens rebel-held capital, Sanaa, amid the countrys raging
civil war, officials said.
The suicide bomber blew himself up
inside the mosque during the evening
call to prayers, while the car bomb exploded outside an entrance, they said.
Medical officials said the death toll may
rise with people now still in operating
rooms in several hospitals.
ANKARA, TURKEY
12 migrants drown
off Turkish coast
Telework urged
during Popes visit
The Office of Personnel Management
Acting Director Beth Cobert is calling
on federal agencies to allow teleworking during the popes visit to Washington to cut down on traffic.
The federal government will remain
open during Pope Francis three-day
visit, but road closures and crowds will
mean disruptions to the usual commute. Pope Francis is set to arrive in
Washington on Sept. 22.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Secretary of State John Kerry speaks Wednesday in support of the Iran nuclear deal at the National Constitution Center
in Philadelphia.
ANALYSIS
WASHINGTON Determined
foes of President Barack Obamas
nuclear deal with Iran had vowed
to use August to fire up public opposition and to build a bipartisan
majority in Congress to sink the
landmark pact.
Instead, the effort fizzled. The result gave a boost to a White House
that has often had rocky relations
with even fellow Democrats on
Capitol Hill and an unaccustomed
defeat to Washingtons pro-Israel
lobbying groups, which often are
regarded as among the Capitols
most effective interest groups.
The deals survival was in effect
sealed Wednesday when Sen. Barbara Mikulski, D-Md., gave the
White House a crucial 34th Senate backer. Thats enough to ensure that even if Congress passes a
resolution to disapprove the agreement, Obama would have sufficient
votes to uphold a veto.
With that victory in hand, Obamas
Senate allies will try to nail down the
votes of seven of the final 10 Democrats who have yet to declare a position. If they succeed, they could
block a floor vote on the disapproval
resolution this month so Obama
wouldnt need a veto to protect what
his aides view as the most significant
diplomatic deal in decades.
Several factors led to the oppositions failure.
Opponents of the deal may have
miscalculated the degree of public
interest in the debate. They hoped
presidents side.
Another factor, said one frustrated Republican on Capitol Hill:
Trump happened.
The GOP leadership aide, granted
anonymity to discuss the setback,
said billionaire Donald Trumps attention-grabbing presidential campaign, along with scrutiny of Hillary Rodham Clintons email server,
overshadowed all other issues this
summer, making it harder for their
message to attract attention.
Cliff Kupchan, an Iran specialist
and chairman of the Eurasia Group
risk advisory consulting firm, said
the deal turned out to be good
enough to survive the political
market.
The administration was effective in raising the question: Whats
the alternative? Kupchan said.
They beat back the arguments
that pushing for an extension of
sanctions on Iran would produce a
better deal.
The agreement between Iran
and six world powers the United
States, Britain, France, Russia, China
and Germany will ease international economic sanctions on Iran
in exchange for limits on its ability to
enrich uranium and conduct other
nuclear activities for at least 15 years.
Among the losers in the political arena is the American Israel
Public Affairs Committee. Known
as AIPAC, the powerful pro-Israel
lobby helped raise tens of millions of dollars for an advertising
campaign intended to sway public
opinion and wavering Democrats to oppose the deal.
QUINCY, ILL.
Legionnaires cases
rise at veteran home
The death toll from a Legionnaires
disease outbreak at a western Illinois
veterans home has climbed to seven,
and the states public health director
has warned more fatalities could occur.
The Illinois Department of Veterans
Affairs and the state Department of
Public Health said residents of the facility in Quincy who contracted Legionnaires a severe form of pneumonia
had underlying medical conditions and
an average age of 86. As of Wednesday,
45 people had been sickened.
VILLA RICA, GA.
School investigates
mass baptism
A video of football players and a
coach being dunked into a small tub
of water during a mass baptism on the
football field of Villa Rica High School
is drawing criticism from a religiousfreedom group, and officials in Georgia
say theyre investigating.
The Freedom from Religion Foundation sent a letter to Carroll County officials Tuesday asking the district to investigate and ensure there are no more
religious events that violate students
constitutional rights on school grounds.
SOURCE: WIRE REPORTS
GAY MARRIAGE
Senate president seeks time for legislature to amend state law to resolve issue
ADAM BEAM
ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Supreme
Court ruling
has completely
obliterated the
definition of
marriage and
the process
for obtaining a
marriage license
in Kentucky.
Robert Stivers, Kentucky
Senate president
NATION
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
A11
2016 CAMPAIGN
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Veterans and their families bow their heads during a ceremony Wednesday in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, marking the
70th anniversary of the end of World War II.
70TH ANNIVERSARY
Ceremony recalls
end of World War II
PEARL HARBOR, Hawaii (AP) U.S. officials
gathered on a decommissioned battleship in
Pearl Harbor to mark
the 70th anniversary of
World War IIs end.
U.S. Sen. Brian Schatz
and U.S. Rep. Mark Takai
of Hawaii joined U.S. Pacific Fleet commander
Adm. Scott Swift at a ceremony Wednesday.
The Missouris decks
are where Japanese Foreign Minister Mamoru
Shigemitsu and Army
Gen. Yoshijiro Umezu
signed documents to
formally surrender on
Sept. 2, 1945. The USS
Missouri was anchored
in Tokyo Bay at the time.
Allied leaders including Gen. Douglas MacArthur and Adm. Chester
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A12
STATE
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LNP | LANCASTER, PA
US VISIT
PHILADELPHIA (AP)
If you want to see Pope
Francis in Philadelphia
later this month, youll
have to leave your selfie
stick at home.
The Secret Service on
Wednesday announced
a list of items that will
not be allowed inside
secured areas where the
pope will appear during
the World Meeting of
Families on Sept. 26 and
27.
Small bags and backpacks those under
18-by-13-by-7 inches
will be allowed, and they
need not be clear. Signs
made of cardboard,
poster board or cloth are
allowed if they are no
PERMITTED
n Small bags and
backpacks those under
18-by-13-by-7 inches; they
need not be clear.
n Signs made of
cardboard, poster board or
cloth, if they are no larger
than 5-by-3 feet.
BANNED
n Support structures for
n Balloons.
n Bicycles.
n Pets.
n Hard-sided coolers.
n Laser pointers.
n Drones.
n Glass items.
n Weapons and
PITTSBURGH TRIBUNE-REVIEW
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COURT
DOYLESTOWN A
judge on Wednesday
cleared the way for a
48-year-old transgender
woman to undergo gender-reassignment surgery, rejecting an effort
by her parents to have
the operation blocked.
Christine Kitzlers parents said she was incompetent and needed to
have a guardian appointed, but Judge C. Theodore Fritsch Jr. said they
failed to provide clear
and convincing evidence
of that. He also rejected
their request for an independent medical exam.
Im so happy, Kitzler
whispered after the ruling.
The surgery originally
been scheduled for Tuesday but was halted when
the parents went to court.
Kitzlers lawyers were trying to arrange to have it
done Wednesday night.
The procedure is barbaric and they want to do
it tonight. Why the rush?
They should be ashamed
of themselves, said her
father, Klaus Kitzler.
Responded Christine
Kitzler: Its barbaric to
keep me this way, not to
take this risk.
Risk factors cited by
her father including
complications from her
HIV and hepatitis C diagnoses were worth
facing to have her body
match the gender shes
identified with since
growing up in suburban
Cleveland, Ohio, she said
during a break in the
emergency hearing.
In ruling in her favor,
the judge said he recognized she had suffered
from depression and
substance abuse, but
noted she had testified
to being sober for three
years and had demonstrated an ability to understand her decisions.
Klaus and and his
wife, Ingrid Kitzler,
had argued she was not
competent to make an
informed decision because of the depression
and a childhood learning
disorder. They wanted
a temporary guardian
named; her lawyers said
they feared the longrange goal was a permanent guardianship.
I might die from this.
But its worth dying,
Christine Kitzler said.
I would rather die than
live the way I was and
return to my bad addictions, like alcohol, because I cant do it and I
wont do it.
On the witness stand,
Klaus Kitzler underscored his concern for
his childs health. He said
he would accept her surgery if an independent
psychiatrist deemed her
fit to make the decision.
I accept it, but I want
to stop it, Kitzler told
the judge. I would love
to have a son back who
goes to church with us on
Sunday mornings.
September 12 8:30 am
VEIN CENTER
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OF LANCASTER
OBITS
A13 THURSDAY,
SEPTEMBER 3, 2015
LNP | LANCASTER,
PA
Deaths
Reported
Ahlstrom, Bernice E.
76, of Lancaster.
August 31, 2015. Longwood Funeral Home of
Matthew Genereux,
610-388-6070
Awkerman, Loy C.
89, husband of Rose
Marie (Root) Awkerman, of Manheim.
August 29, 2015. Buch
Funeral Home, Inc.,
665-4341
Coelho, Mary V.
86, of Oak Leaf Manor
North.August30,2015.
Charles F. Snyder Jr.
Funeral Home & Crematory, 560-5100
Culp, Amos M. Jr.
62,
husband
of
Kathryn Lake Culp, of
3194 Thornapple Dr.,
Lancaster. September
1, 2015. Clyde W. Kraft
Funeral Home, Inc.,
684-2370
Hotchkiss, Thomas S.
Sr.
52, husband of Billie L.
(Cauler) Hotchkiss, of
Washington Boro. September 1, 2015. Andrew
T. Scheid Funeral
Home, 872-2266
Landis, Edwin J.
83, husband of Almeda
(Groff) Landis, of Lancaster. September 1,
2015. Bachman Funeral Home, Inc., 6877644
Marks, Virginia D.
87,ofEphrata.September 1, 2015. Paul L.
Gravenor Home For
Funerals, 733-6181
Martin, Roy B.
82, of Ephrata. September
2,
2015.
Stradling
Funeral
Homes, Inc., 733-2472
May, Dolores R.
85, of Columbia. September 1, 2015. Clyde
W. Kraft Funeral
Home, Inc., 684-2370
Mohr, Mary Elizabeth (Witman)
93, wife of Harold A.
Mohr, Sr., of Bainbridge. September 1,
2015. Miller-Finkenbinder Funeral Home
& Crematory, 367-1543
Rende, Eleanor J.
88, of Lancaster. September 1, 2015. Charles
F. Snyder Funeral
Home & Crematory,
393-9661
Reynolds, Lois M. *
77. September 2, 2015.
The Groffs Family
Funeral & Cremation
Services, Inc., 3945300
Royalty, Grace L.
91, of Landisville. September1,2015.DeBord
Snyder Funeral Home
& Crematory, 3944097
Schofield, Howard N.
85. September 2, 2015.
Bachman
Funeral
Home, 687-7644
Smith, Grace I.
83, of Denver. August
31, 2015. Stradling
Funeral Homes, Inc.,
733-2472
Vivona, Allan R. *
67, husband of Sandra
(Doyle) Vivona, of
Ephrata. August 31,
2015. StradlingFuneral
Homes, Inc., 733-2472
* No Obituary appears
Obituary notices are provided as an advertising service
by the Classified Advertising
department of LNP Media
Group, Inc.
Deaths Reported and Obituaries may be placed by first
calling the Obituary Coordinator at 295-7875, then submitting the written notice either
by
e-mail
(obits@LNPnews.com) or by
fax (717-399-6523), MondayFriday, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.; Saturday, 2 to 6 p.m.; Sunday, 3 to
6 p.m.
The advertising department
publishes obituaries provided
by funeral homes or crematoria, based on information provided to them by families. It
does not accept obituaries
from individuals. Obituaries
and related materials, submitted to LNP Media Group, Inc.
may be edited for style, policy
or legal reasons, and they
become the property of LNP
Media Group, Inc.
Howard N.
Schoeld
Howard N. Schoeld,
85, formerly of West
Chester
and Ronks,
died at St.
M a r t h a s
Manor on
Wednesday,
Sep tember
2, 2015. He was the husband of the late Shirley
(Plumridge) Schoffiield,
who died in 2003.
2003
Howard worked as
a milkman for Eachus
Dairyy, and later had a
painting business.
He enjoyed baseball,
golf and shing. Howard
was a New Yo
ork Yaankees
and Green Bay Packers
fan.
Born in West Chester,
he was the son of the
late H o w ard Philip
and Eleanor (Jones)
Schoffield.
i
Howard is
survived by two sons,
Stev en husband of
Debbie of Downingtown
and Bruce husband of
Jane of Weest Chester;
his companion, Diane
Fisher; four grandchildren and two great
grandchildren.
There will be a graveside service on Friday,
S e pt e m b e r 4 , 2 01 5 a t
2:00 PM in Strasburg
Mennonite Cemeteryy,
151 4 Villag e Road,
Strasburg, PA.
A
Bachman Funeral
Home, Strasburg
BachmanFuneral.com
Services
Today
Arcudi, Paulene J.
(Snyder)
Charles F. Snyder
Funeral Home & Crematory, 441 N. George
St., Millersville, 11 AM
Davis, Charles A.
Chapel,
LaFayette
Memorial Park, 132
Twin Hills Road, Brier
Hill, 11 AM. Greenlee
FuneralHome
DeMott, Kathryn Y.
St. John Neumann
Catholic Church, 601
East Delp Rd., Lancaster, 11 AM. Charles
F. Snyder Jr. Funeral
Home & Crematory
Dessen, Larry G.
DeBord Snyder Funeral Home & Crematory,
141 East Orange St.,
Lancaster, 11 AM
Durdock, Shirley M.
Buch Funeral Home,
21 Market Square,
Manheim, 11 AM
Goss, Paul W. Jr.
Sell Chapel at Masonic
Village, 1 Masonic
Drive, Elizabethtown,
2:30 PM. MillerFinkenbinder Funeral
Home & Crematory
Grier,WilliamPatrick
Clyde W. Kraft Funeral
Home,Inc.,519Walnut
Street, Columbia, 6 PM
Lowry, Paul S.
Beck Funeral Home,
315 E. Main St., New
Holland, 1 PM
Martin, Deacon H.
Moses
Meadow Valley Mennonite Church, 200
Meadow Valley Rd.,
Ephrata, 9:30 AM.
Stradling
Funeral
Homes, Inc.
Mays, Troy Thomas
Jr.
MorgantownCommunity Church, 4221
Main St., Elverson, 11
AM.
Groff-High
Funeral Home
Pritchard, Perry M.
Hempfield
United
Methodist Church,
3050 Marietta Ave.,
Lancaster, 7 PM.
Charles F. Snyder Jr.
Funeral Home & Crematory
Shenandoah,
Brianne Noelle
New Path Community
Church, 22 W. Main
St., Mount Joy, 5 PM.
Cremation Services of
Lancaster
Vergis, Sara
Andrew T. Scheid
Funeral Home, 121
South Prince Street,
Lancaster, 11 AM
Obituaries
Loy C. Aw
wkerman
Dr. Loy C.
Awkerman
left this earth
to be with
his Sa vior
on Saturday,
A ugus t 29
at
Spang
C re st n u rs ing home in
Lebanon. He
was born in
Harrisburg,
on October
15, 1925 and
was the son
of the late
Harry L. and
Gertrude
B l a c k
Awk erman.
H e i s s ur vived by his
wife, lo v ing
com panion and
bes t friend
Rose Marie (Roo t)
A w ke r m a n w h o m h e
married Sep tember
2, 1949. Loy was predeceased by a sister,
Helen Lowe, formerly
of Des Moines, IA.
Surviving, in addition to his wife are
his two children: Kyle
Awkerman, Jr., married to Shirley Wissler,
o f L e b a n o n ; a n d L i sa
A. Delozier, married
to Da vid Delo zier,
of Wyomissing. Also
surviving are four
grandchildren: Amy
Delozier, of Palmyra;
Brian Delozierr, of Little
Falls, MN; Camrin
Edwards, married to
Anthon y Edw ards ,
of Wyomissing; and
Lindsey Delozier, of
Mill Vaalleyy, CA.
Loy was a 1950
graduate of Lebanon
Valley College and received his Veterinary
degree in 1952 from
the Univ ersity of
Pe n n sy l v a n i a . He
lived and practiced in
Manheim, for 42 years
before retiring to North
Cornw all Township,
Lebanon Countyy.
He was a mem ber of several profess i o n a l s o c i et i e s a n d
in 1999 was named
Veterinarian of the Year
e
by the Pennsylvania
Ve terinary M edical
Association. In 1987 he
received the University
of P en ns yl va ni as
Veterinary Award of
Merit.
He was a member
of the Weestminster
Presbyterian Church in
Lancaster. He was also a
charter member of the
Manheim Historical
Society as well as several other historical
societies. He was an
advisory board member of Fulton Banks
Manheim branch for
24 years, a member of
the Manheim Lions
Club and a member of
the Lebanon Country
Club for 60 years. He
was also a member of
the American Legion
and the V.F
.F.W.,. having
served in the
A rm y Air
Corps during
WW II.
He had a
strong interest in local
sports, which
led him to
become the
coordinator of the
Manheim
Lions Club
Relays during the decade of the
1960s . In
that role, he
introduced
distance relay races for
girls which
were
un heard off at
that time in
Lancaster
Countyy.
Loy was a history
buff, having authored
or coauthored several
books and papers on
subjects of local historical signicance, particularly Henry William
Stiegel and Mt. Hopes
Grubb familyy. His photo-ess a y, Manheim:
A Green Country
Town, and Thoughts
While Holding a
Thermometer: Short
Stories of Foortyy-two
Years
e
of Veterinary
Practicee, are still much
A13
OTHER OBITUARIES
ON PAGES A14 & A15
Mary V. Coelho
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OBITS
A14 THURSDAY,
SEPTEMBER
3, 2015
A14 THURSDAY,
SEPTEMBER
3, 2015
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Obituaries
Roy
y B. Martin
How is D
Dad???
Amos M.
Culp, Jr.
Grace I. Smith
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OTHER OBITUARIES
ON PAGE A15
Thomas S.
Hotchkiss, Sr.
Thomas Tom S.
Hotchkiss, Sr., 52, of
Washington
Boro, entered into
rest
on
T u e s d a y,
September
1, 2015 at
his home.
He was the husband of Billie
L. (Cauler)
Hotchkiss.
They
were
married twenty-three years
last November
9.
Tom last worked as
a maintenance electrician.
Born October 1, 1962
in Lancaster, he was
the son of Thomas O.
Hotchkiss, of Willow
Street and the late
Sandra J. (Hasselbach)
Hotchkiss and was a
member of Colemanville
United
Methodist
Church, Conestoga. He
was a proud Veteran of
the U.S. Air Force.
Tom enjoyed hunting, shing and spending time with family and
doing side jobs. He was
an avid Phillies & Miami
Dolphins fan.
He will be lovingly
missed by his wife,
Billie; father, Thomas;
two children: Thomas S.
Jr., married to Christa;
and Kaitlin; and siblings: Pamela J. married to Paul Erb, Jr. and
Holly L. Fry; in-laws:
William & Corie Cauler,
as well as extended family and friends. He was
also preceded in death
by two nieces: Samantha
Groff and Cortney Fry.
Toms Celebration
of
Life
Service
will be held at the
Colemanville United
Methodist Church, 210
Colemanville Church
Road, Conestoga, PA
17516 on Saturday,
September 5, 2015 at
11AM with Pastor James
A. Goudie officiating
(Visitation 9:30-11AM).
Interment will be private at the convenience
of the family. Kindly
omit owers. Memorial
Remembrances can be
made in Toms memory
to Humane League of
Lancaster County or
Colemanville United
Methodist Church.
To submit an on-line
condolence, visit: www.
scheidfuneralhome.com
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Dolores R.
May
Virginia D.
Marks
Virginia D. Marks,
87, a lifelong resident
of Ephrata, PA, passed
away at home on
Tuesday, September 1,
2015.
Virginia was the
wife of the late John E.
Marks, who passed away
July 10, 1999 and daughter of the late Joshua
and Sadie Hiester.
She was a member of
Grace E. C. Church in
Ephrata and had worked
as a telephone operator at the former D&E
Telephone Company.
Virginia loved music,
especially pipe organ
music and was a fan of
Diane Bish. She also
loved traveling, reading
poetry and literature,
and spending time with
her family.
She is survived by
three children: Sandra
J. wife of Paul G.
Burkholder of Ephrata,
PA, John R. Marks,
husband of Barbara,
of West Chester, PA,
and Thomas L. Marks,
husband of Diane, of
Ephrata, PA; ten grandchildren; fourteen
great-grandchildren;
two great-great-grandchildren; and a number
of nieces and nephews.
Friends will be received from 9-10 a.m.
on Friday, September 4,
2015 at Mt. Zion United
Methodist Church 105
N. 11th St. Akron, PA
17501. Funeral services will follow at 10:00
a.m. with the Rev. Terry
Wible officiating.
Donations
in
Virginias memory may
be made to Diane Bish
Joy of Music at PO Box
5564, Bloomington, IN
47405.
Services under the
care of Paul L. Gravenor
Home For Funerals,
Ephrata, PA.
To send an online
condolence please visit
gravenorhomeforfunerals.com
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Obituaries
Eleanor J. Rende
Bernice
Chris E.
Ahlstrom
Bernice Chris E.
Ahlstrom of Lancaster,
on August 31, 2015, in
Kennett Square, PA. She
was 76 years old.
Born in Wilmington,
she was the daughter of
the late Victor Hurlock
and the late Dorothy
Walraven Hurlock.
Beloved wife of the
late David H. Ahlstrom
(2005); mother of Lee
M. Ahlstrom (Patricia
A.), Scott W. Ahlstrom
(Brenda M.) and Laura
J. Ahlstrom; grandmother of Julia, Lauren,
Dash, Rebekah, Brooke
and Sydney.
An evening viewing
will be from 5-7PM on
Friday, Sept. 4, 2015 at
the Longwood Funeral
Home of Matthew
Genereux, 913 East
Baltimore Pike in
Kennett Square, PA.
A morning viewing
will be from 10-11 AM
on Sat., Sept. 5, 2015 in
the Chapel at Gracelawn
Memorial Park, 2220
N. Dupont Hwy., New
Castle, DE.
Her funeral service
will follow at 11 AM at
the Chapel. Burial in adjoining memorial park.
Condolences to family: www.longwoodfuneralhome.com
Longwood
Funeral Home
Kennett Square
LUCO
Grace L.
Royalty
Urgent Care+
Edwin J.
Eddie
Landis
Edwin J. Eddie
Landis, 83 of Lancaster,
went home
to be with
his Lord
and Savior
J e s u s
Chris t at
LGH
on
September 1 after a long
battle with Chronic
Lymphocytic Leukemia.
Born
in
W es t
Lampeter Township, he
was the son of the late
Edwin W. and Anna E
( Witmer) Landis. Eddie
was married to Almeda
(Groff ) Landis for
o over
62 years.
Eddie was a member of the Willow Street
M ennonite Church.
H e graduated from
Lancaster Mennonite
High School in 1950. He
and Almeda operated a
dairy farm for 43 years.
Eddie loved to sing.
He served as a song leader and sang in Quartets,
but the highlight of his
singing experience was
singing the great sa cred classics with the
Franconia-Lancas ter
Choral Singers. Eddie
enjo yed flo wer and
landscape gardening. He
thrilled with the wonwon
der and beauty of Gods
marvelous creation.
In addition to his
wife, he is survived
b y three daughters,
Shirley L andis , of
Philadelphia, Sharon,
wife of Gene Embleton
of Harrington, DE, and
Charlene Landis, of
Lancaster, two grandchildren, J ennifer ,
wife of John Jackson
III of Pryor, OK,
a n d Ke n t , h u s b a n d
of Am y E mbl e t on,
commissioned
to
serv e as a mission ary pilot with Mission
A viation Fello w ship
in Mozambique, two
great-grandchildren,
John Jackson, IV and
Isaac Embleton, a sister
Arlene, wife of Nathan
Hege. Eddie was preceded in death by a sister Alta Landis.
Relatives and friends
are invited to attend
Eddies funeral service at Willow Street
M ennonite Church,
399 East Penn Grant
Road, Willow Street,
on Tuesday September
8 , 20 15 at 11AM
with Pastors Robert
B r e n e m a n a n d Jo e
Sherer offfiiciating. A
viewing will be held in
the church from 1011AM. Interment will
be in the adjoining cem
cemeteryy. In lieu of owers,
contributions may be
made to Trans World
o
Radio, PO Box 8700,
Caryy, NC 27512-8700 or
World Missionary Press,
Inc., PO Box 120, New
Paris, IN 46553-0120.
Bachman Funeral
Home, Inc. Strasburg
BachmanFuneral.com
Mary
Eliza
abeth
b
Betty
( Witman)
Mohr
Mary
Be t ty
Elizabe th
( Witman)
Mohrr, 93, of
Bainbridge,
passed away
peacefully
on Tuesday,
Sep tember
1, 2015 at
her home in Conoy
Township with her loving husband of 75 years
at her side. She was born
Wednesda
e
y, March 1,
1922 in Thomasville, PA
to the late Paul Witman
and Mabel Leib. She was
married to Harold A.
Mohr, Sr. on November
4, 1939.
A hom ema k er for
most of her life, Betty
and Harold were also
charter members of
Wo
ord of Life Chapel in
Bainbridge.
In addition to her
husband, Harold, of
Bainbridg e, she will
be lo vingly missed
by her children:
Sandra A. Moore, of
Elizabethtown; Harold
A. Mohr, Jr. and wife
Jane, of Ma yto wn;
Dennis N. Mohr and wife
Carol A., of Bainbridge;
Mary E. Prokopchak
a n d h u s b a n d S t e ve , o f
Elizabethtown; Jerry L.
Mohr and wife Carol L.
of Mount Joy; Rodney A.
Mohr, of Bainbridge; 19
grandchildren; 27 great
grandchildren; 6 great
great grandchildren; a
brother Russell Leib and
wife Monika of Georgia
as well as Betty s extended family and caring friends. She was
predeceased by two children, Sheila K. Doutrich
and Donald N. Mohr;
a grandson, Brandon
C. Mohr; a brother,
Daniel Witman; a sister,
Katherine Zimmerman
and two sons-in-law,
Darrel J. Moore and
Jack B. Doutrich.
A p r i v a t e g r ave s i d e
service will be held in
Laurel Hill Memorial
Gardens , Columbia.
A Memorial Service
will be held at Word
o
of Life Chapel, 139
Wick ersham Road,
Bainbridge, PA 17502 on
Monday, September 14,
2015 at 7 PM with Pastor
Mark Habecker offfiiciatin g. V isitation will
follow the services on
Monday. Arrangements
ha v e been entrus t ed to the Miller Finkenbinder Funeral
Home & Crematoryy, 130
North Market Street,
Elizabe thto wn, P A
17022.
In lieu of flowers,
contributions may be
made in Betty s Memory
to Word
o of Life ChapelMission Fund, at the
above listed address.
Condolences and memories may be shared at
www .millerfuneral home.com
A15
DEAN JONES
Boyish Disney
star dies at 84
LOS ANGELES (AP)
Dean Jones, whose
boyish good looks and
all-American
manner
made him Disneys favorite young actor for
such lighthearted films
as That Darn Cat! and
The Love Bug, has died
of Parkinsons disease.
He was 84.
He died Monday in Los
Angeles, Jones publicist
Richard Hoffman said
Wednesday.
Jones long association with The Walt Disney Co. began after he
received an unexpected
call from Walt Disney
himself, who praised his
work on the TV show
Ensign OToole, noting
it had some good closing sequences. Jones,
himself a former Navy
man, played the title role
in the 1962 sitcom.
Jones puzzled over
Disneys remark until
it occurred to him that
Ensign OToole preceded Disneys own Sunday night show on NBC,
and he realized Disney
probably only watched
each episodes ending.
Two years later, Jones
heard from Disney again,
calling this time to offer
him a role in That Darn
Cat! opposite ingnue
Hayley Mills. His FBI
agent Zeke Kelso follows a crime-solving cat
that leads him to a pair of
bank robbers.
Released in 1965, it
would be the first of
10 Disney films Jones
would make, most of
them in the supernatural vein.
I see something in
them that is pure form.
Just
entertainment.
No preaching, he told
the Los Angeles Times.
Were always looking
for social significance
but maybe people just
like to be entertained.
The Love Bug (1969)
was the most successful
of the genre, with Jones
playing a struggling racedriver who acquires a
Volkswagen that wins
races for him. The Bug,
named Herbie, has hid-
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LNP | LANCASTER, PA
COURT
Wrongly convicted
brothers get $750K
in compensation
Jailed for 3 decades in death of girl
JONATHAN DREW
ASSOCIATED PRESS
RALEIGH, N.C.
When two brothers
were released after
three decades of wrongful imprisonment, they
struggled to adapt to an
outside world neither
had experienced since
they were teenagers.
The older one has managed to adjust and keep
his head up high, but
the younger one, according to his family, is
a broken man.
On Wednesday, the
state of North Carolina
sought to make amends,
awarding each man
$750,000 for the time
they spent behind bars after they falsely confessed
to taking part in the killing of an 11-year-old girl.
Henry
McCollum,
51, appeared calm as a
state official approved
the maximum payout
under the law to him
and half-brother Leon
Brown, 47. Brown did
not attend the hearing;
he is in the hospital,
suffering from mental
health problems including post-traumatic
stress disorder, the
brothers lawyer said.
McCollum and Brown
were released last September after a judge
threw out their convic-
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President Barack Obama holds up a fish while visiting Wednesday with commercial and subsistence fishers Alannah
Hurley, left, and Kim Williams on Kanakanak Beach in Dillingham, Alaska.
ALASKA TRIP
JOSH LEDERMAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS
ANCHORAGE, Alaska
With a historic visit
to the Alaska Arctic,
President Barack Obama
was shining a spotlight
Wednesday on the plight
of residents in rural
Alaska, where Alaska
Natives and others toil
under rough-and-tumble conditions that most
Americans would be
hard-pressed to imagine.
Closing out his threeday tour, Obama first
dropped in on the fishing village of Dillingham
in Western Alaska to inspect one of the biggest
sockeye salmon runs in
the world and underscore the need to protect this incredible natural resource, not just for
the people whose livelihood depends on it, but
for the entire country.
From there, he was
traveling north of the
Arctic Circle to the town
of Kotzebue, a regional
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OPINION
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
A17
National Conversation
JONAH GOLDBERG
TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES
E.J. DIONNE
THE WASHINGTON POST
I care.
Bob Dole, another old-school
politician, had the same problem. He
once said at a meeting of the Republican National Committee, If thats
what you want, Ill be another Ronald
Reagan. His aides told the press that
his strategy was to act presidential.
Jeb Bush has the same tendency. In
2014, he told people he would run for
president only if he could do so joyfully. The problem is that hes good
at telling but pretty bad at showing.
To date, hes displayed all the joy of
a man waiting to get called for his
colonoscopy.
But all of the professional politicians have this problem to one extent
or another. Chris Christie talks about
how he tells it like it is as often as
he actually tells it like it is.
Christie recently told Tonight
Show host Jimmy Fallon about his
plans for the next GOP debate: Stay
tuned on September 16th. We may be
changing tactics. If the moderators
ask 15 questions in a row without
asking Christie any, the New Jersey
governor explained, youre going to
go, Uh oh, hes going to go nuclear
now.
If you have to tell people that going nuclear is just a tactic, it makes
going nuclear seem a hell of a lot less
authentic.
John Kasich has a policy of not attacking Hillary Clinton. Thats weird
enough. But he also feels compelled
to explain that his refusal is a tactic. Ted Cruz, Marco Rubio, Mike
Huckabee, Scott Walker et al. cant
resist telling audiences about the
importance of being optimistic. Why
not just try being optimistic? Voters
will notice. I promise.
There are many reasons the nonpoliticians Trump, Ben Carson
and Carly Fiorina are doing so
well, but near the top is the fact
that they havent internalized the
language of political consultants
and pundits. They understand
something the politicians have forgotten: Politics is about sales. Good
salesmen dont say, I need to sell
you this car today because I need
to make my quota. They also dont
say, I need to convince you that you
need this car even though its more
than you think you can afford. That
may be their motivation, but they
concentrate on the actual convincing.
n Jonah Goldberg is a fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, a senior editor of National Review and a Tribune Media syndicated columnist. Twitter: @JonahNRO
A18
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Opinion
Beverly R. Steinman
Robert M. Krasne
Suzanne Cassidy
Chairman Emeritus
Executive Editor
In our words
No budget, no holiday
THE ISSUE
The state budget is now 65 days late. Pennsylvania Auditor General Eugene
DePasquale says he will keep track of the effects of Harrisburgs tardiness
in upcoming audits costs such as interest expenses and penalties for late
payments to a school districts vendors. DePasquale says he plans to release
the numbers on those costs as he completes 50 audits this fall and eventually
expects to compile a total from all districts.
Sure, its not easy to come up with a state budget.
And sure, we know its even harder when that
budget must be agreeable to Republican majorities in both houses of the General Assembly that oppose tax increases and to Gov. Tom
Wolf, a Democrat who promised voters that he
would add an extraction tax on natural gas and
increase education spending.
But does it really need to be this difficult?
At a news conference Tuesday in the Capitol, Auditor General DePasquale said he thinks
agreeing on education spending, pension reform and how to handle Pennsylvanias stateowned liquor sales should not take long.
I think if everyone locked themselves in the
Governors Residence for a weekend, and were
willing to come up with a deal on those three
things, they could do it within a weekend, the
auditor general said.
Perfect timing. Labor Day is a long weekend.
Its time to get this done.
Lawmakers and the governor should find a
compromise that will reduce the states pension costs (now $53 billion in the red), sell off
the state liquor stores, charge drillers for the
gas they take from the Marcellus Shale and,
most importantly, boost state funding of public
education.
Granted, Pennsylvanians have endured long
budget stalemates before: Gov. Ed Rendell
signed the 2009-10 budget in October and the
2003-04 budget in December.
But, with the percentage of state funding
comparatively low (45th among the 50 states
and Washington, D.C.) and declining in Pennsylvania, this problem grows worse for school
districts that depend more on the state than local taxpayers.
Critics will counter that Pennsylvania ranks
seventh or eighth in per-pupil spending (depending on the source cited) but this avoids
the issue of equity. Wolf also campaigned on
bit.ly/LCDistrictsandLateBudget
do it again. Narcotics
Anonymous and
Alcoholics Anonymous are
free for those who want
it. That in which lies the
problem. You have to want
to stay clean and sober
more than you want to get
drunk or high.
Phil Hoffer, of
Elizabethtown/Facebook
GEORGE WILL
THE WASHINGTON POST
OP-ED/LETTERS
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
A19
Late budget?
Kick officials out
Poll: Voters think that legislators shouldnt be paid until budget passes (Aug. 27): Amen, but
why stop there? None of their
staff should be paid; and none of
their office expenses should be
paid, including rent for any of
their office space in their home
districts.
And lets not stop there. If there
is no new state budget by 11:59
p.m., June 30, of any given year,
at exactly 12 a.m., July 1, of that
same year, every senator and every representative shall be, immediately, out of office along
with every member of their
staffs (since with no senator or
representative there can be no
need for any staff ). Then, a second later, the governor simply
declares the budget for the
new fiscal year. (So as to hold
the governor accountable, he
then immediately stands for
re-election, or not, in an election held Aug. 1 of that same
year.) Whether the governor is
re-elected, or not, the declared
budget stands for that year.
(And, by the way, every senator
and every representative shall
also stand for re-election Aug.
1 of that year. Plus, any senator
or representative who has gone
through this process once, and
been re-elected, shall not be eligible to stand for re-election a
second time under this process.
My guess is that such a plan
would be even more likely to produce a timely budget than would
simply delaying salaries.
James D. Lawrence
Mount Joy
Strategy behind
budget standoff?
When I first learned of the
Franklin & Marshall College poll
(Divide hits home, Aug. 27) as
to whom voters blame for the
current state budget impasse,
it gave me a much-needed belly
laugh.
How in heavens name would
any of us know since obviously the
Fourth Estate (i.e., reporters) was
not admitted to the bargaining
room?
But it did lead me to a surprising revelation: Perhaps no one is
to blame, per se. Think about it.
Both the governor and legislators
may well be in cahoots to make
sure we do not have a budget for
this year.
Take your pencils out, kids, and
do the math. In normal years, we
have roughly a $30 billion budget.
This year, depending on whom
you ask, the structural deficit is
expected to run $2.5 billion to
$4 billion. If only state employees and essential services are being paid for 12 months, we end
up with a mind-boggling savings!
This one-years savings surplus
is enough to cover future deficits
Execute killers,
not dogs and cats
Animal shelters keep stray
animals for certain periods of
time and then they kill them.
Prisons keep murderers for
years and years, and feed them
and take care of them until they
die. They have been convicted
of crimes that have killed and
hurt people, and destroyed
families, and we let them continue to live.
Our tax dollars in my humble
opinion would be better served
saving the animals who have hurt
no one and put the convicted killers to death. What purpose do
they serve in prison? While an
animal could become a pet for a
family.
We sentence killers to death
and most of the time nothing
happens, yet we have no trouble
killing cats and dogs that have
done nothing wrong other than
being homeless.
Steve Vogel
Oxford,
Chester County
Democrats doing
US no service
In response to Mike Dinis Aug.
28 letter (Donald Trump, the
end of the GOP): Perhaps if you
take a quick glance at Detroit or
Stockton, California, you will
see they went bankrupt after
years of Democratic rule. But
facts dont make a difference for
people who would rather spend
others hard-earned money to
get elected. As Hillary Clinton,
your obviously flawed choice
for our new president next year,
says: What difference does it
make?
Well, it makes a big difference if
you are someone who pays more
in taxes than he gets back from
the government in public assistance.
You are right, though; she may
get elected because the moral
compass of my country is backward and being a liar, cheat and
worse no longer precludes one
from office.
Eric Beale
Mohnton, Berks County
Kane fighting
male authority
The story of Kathleen Kane is
the story of every woman who
has challenged governmen-
Time to honor
roadkill, too?
Recently, a squirrel was run
over by a vehicle in the neighborhood.
May we not put a squirrel
memorial next to the swine
shrine (PETA wants roadside
memorial for pigs killed in truck
crash, Aug. 25)?
Stan Binkley
Millersville
Contractor explains
Donegal stadium delay
I am writing to clear up misconceptions about delays to the
Donegal High School stadium,
which eciConstruction is building. The confusion arises from
the article, Donegal stadium
project stalls (Sports, Aug. 15). It
suggests eci did not have enough
time allotted to cure the base
course around the track.
The article inaccurately refers
to this as a timeline mistake.
Our original baseline schedule had enough time for track
paving and the required curing
prior to installation of the running track surface. Conditions
beyond anyones control caused
delays, which the Donegal School
District has acknowledged by approving a time extension until
Oct. 28.
Rock was unexpectedly found
during excavation, which took
several weeks to remove. Numerous sinkholes opened as well,
which had to be remediated. It
took time to close the sinkholes
and have them inspected to ensure they were made safe.
Another reason for delay was
that stresses from the stadium
structure were greater than anticipated by the districts engineer, who had to make changes to
add extra support.
The article suggests that the
stadium was originally planned
to open for the first home game.
But it was never expected that
the stadium would be finished
for the opener. We realize that
construction is complicated,
and it is tempting to blame the
contractor, but there have been
numerous justifiable issues that
required additional time. Rest
assured that eci, the district and
the design professionals will deliver a stadium that we all can be
proud of.
Mark A.Yinger
President
eciConstruction
Dillsburg, York County
ROBERT BRESLER
SPECIAL TO LNP
OPE
LABOR N
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ASK ABOUT OU
R
COLLEGE GRAD
FINANCING
Home &Garden
n SEND STORY TIPS & INFO TO: JENNIFER KOPF, 291-8644, JKOPF@LNPNEWS.COM
ANTIQUES
MIDCENTURY MODERN
DR. LORI
ART AND ANTIQUES
Play Dumpster
or No Dumpster
and check your
vintage skills
When faced with the decision about
which items to pitch from a pile of
school stuff, which items would you
toss?
When you clean out a house and you
come across old items that you dont
know about and dont know their
worth, remember they could have
significant monetary value. Using these
five back-to-school items, heres a guide
on how to identify the valuables.
1. A Munsters lunchbox, circa
1970s.
2. A classroom set of instructional cursive writing panels, circa 1960s.
3. A macaroni picture frame,
circa 1980s.
4. Pokemon trading cards, circa
1990-2000s.
5. A United States history textbook, circa 1965.
MELISSA L. DOHERTY
SPECIAL TO LNP
Would
you throw out
this vintage Munsters
lunchbox? If so ... you first
may want to read more.
OUR EXPERT
Melissa L. Doherty
visited the Blossom
Hill neighborhood, and
some of its individual
houses, in November
and December 2014.
Originally from East
Hills, New York, shes
interned with the
Technical Preservation
Services department
of the National Park
Service in Washington,
D.C. She received a B.A.
from Franklin & Marshall
College, where she
studied art, with a focus
on architectural history.
LNP CORRESPONDENT
B2
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
h&g2
GARDEN TIPS
CURB APPEAL
A poorhouse
that is rich
in history
HOUSE HACKS
Use
mesh
laundry
bags to
keep sets of small toys,
such as puzzle pieces or
separate Lego building
projects, together yet
easily visible and it
avoids using plastic bags
around small children.
The 1799 Lancaster County Almshouse, above, is on the National Register of Historic Places and also has a Historic Preservation Trust of
Lancaster County facade easement, which forbids exterior alterations. Below, a file photo of the county almshouse and hospital campus
taken shortly after late 1960s construction of Conestoga View, the modern building in the photos center. The old hospital buildings
were later demolished, but the almshouse remains. Thaddeus Stevens College of Technology is at the top right corner.
JENNIFER KOPF
JKOPF@LNPNEWS.COM
RENEWED RESOURCES
FILE PHOTO
SOURCES
DAY
*
SAVE
$500
on H
Hardwood, Tile, Vinyl & More!
ONLY
up
to
Sept. 7, 2015
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OR
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30 ANNIVERSARY
th
1985 - 2015
*$500 on hard surface (10% on materials only - CANNOT BE COMBINED WITH FINANCE OFFER)
PA005901
717-445-1792
PA005901
ADVICE/LOCAL
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Moderate caffeine
consumption has
big benefits
The recent headline Coffee
Habits Impact Risk of Mild Cognitive Impairment reminded us
of a TV ad for Berlitz language
school in which a German Coast
Guard officer who speaks broken
English replies to a mayday call. A
ships captain is pleading for help:
Were sinking, were sinking! Can
you help us? The young German
replies, Um ... vut are you sinking
about?
That hilarious advertisement
makes it clear that when it
comes to communicating important information, you must
choose your words wisely and
accurately.
Just what those headline writers
didnt do. They made it sound like
coffee was bad for the brain when,
under specific circumstances, its
just the opposite!
The study, from the University
of Bari in Italy, actually says, Coffee, tea or caffeine consumption
may be protective against cognitive impairment and dementia.
And moderate amounts or
one to two cups per day appear to have greater (cognitive)
benefit than drinking no or
very little coffee daily. Seems
the compounds in coffee have
the ability to protect brain
neurons from plaque (linked to
dementia) and to activate and
protect other neural receptors.
Plus, if youre a fast metabolizer of coffee 88 percent of
North Americans are it also
helps to protect against Parkinsons while reducing your
risk of nine cancers and Type 2
diabetes.
The study also points out that
occasionally drinking a couple
of cups or skipping it altogether
isnt brain-friendly, but the steady
enjoyment of a couple of cups a
day does the trick just right.
Show and Dr. Mike Roizen is chief wellness officer and chairman of the Wellness Institute at Cleveland Clinic. To live
your healthiest, visit sharecare.com.
Blossom Hill
Dr. Lori
Continued from B1
Continued from B1
Births
CUNNINGHAM, Kayla, and
Edwin Nieves, Lancaster, a
daughter, at Heart of Lancaster
Regional Medical Center, Friday.
ESH, Noah J. and Priscilla S.
(Stoltzfus), 21 Pond Road,
Strasburg, a son, at home,
Wednesday.
FISHER, David and Nancy
(Smucker), 412 Strasburg Pike,
Lancaster, a son, at home,
Wednesday. GLICK, Abner and
n GOLF TOURNAMENT:
Buying Designer
Sterling Silver Jewelry
Community calendar
n OPEN MEDITATION:
B3
Curb
Appeal
Continued from B2
deference to authority.
n What was its most
recent use? Its been
used to house several
county agencies,
including the Lancaster
City/County Human
Relations Commission
and a department of
the Lancaster County
Office of Mental Health/
Mental Retardation. Most
recently, it housed offices
of Lancaster County
Children & Youth, which
relocated this summer to
the Government Center at
150 N. Queen St.
n Whats next for the
building? The most
recent plans made public
involve a museum to
be established by the
Lancaster City & County
Medical Society. A call
for an update was not
immediately returned.
Monday:
Trending
Whats hip
around the county
SALE
30% OFF
SALE
717-354-2233
www.heritagedesigninteriors.com
Retail Hours: M-F 10-5 Sat 10-2
B4
LOCAL
Marriages
Stairlift Sales,
Service & Rentals
AWARDS
GRADUATIONS
n Joshua C. Eberly,
of Quarryville, recently
graduated with honors
from Grove City College
with a Bachelor of Arts in
political science. He was
named to the deans list
for the spring semester.
A 2011 graduate of Solanco
High School, he is the
son of Gary and Kathy
Eberly, of Quarryville. He
is employed by Western
Journalism in Anthem,
Arizona.
n Jessica Bonham, of
Lancaster, received a
Bachelor of Arts in general
studies from Harding
University on May 9.
DEANS LIST
n Andrew Macgloughlin
was named to the deans
list for the fall and spring
semesters at American
University, where he
is majoring in political
science.
Friday:
Together
Madison
Miller
A 2014 graduate of
Hempfield High School,
he is the son of Kevin and
Marie Macgloughlin, of
Mountville.
n Christopher D.
Fassnacht, of Ephrata, was
named to the deans list
for the spring semester
at Gettysburg College,
where he is majoring in
mathematical economics.
He is a 2011 graduate of
Ephrata High School.
n Three area students
were named to the deans
list for the spring semester
at Colgate University. They
are:
Kathryn Mears, of Lititz;
Andrew Moshos, of
Lancaster; and Andrew
Shin, of Lititz.
HONORS
n Megan A. Smith, of
Joshua
Eberly
Andrew
Macgloughlin
of Katie Freisen and is
majoring in mathematics at
Eastern University.
to collegenews@lnpnews.
com or mail them to College
News, c/o LNP Media Group,
Inc., P.O. Box 1328, Lancaster Pa. 17608-1328. Please
include a self-addressed
stamped envelope for photos
to be returned.
FUNDRAISER
3012 Willow Street Pike North, Willow Street, PA 17584 717-464-9446 Groffs.com
717-656-8928
Fall Sale
September 3-27
Fall Open House
Olde
Mill House
Shoppes
Lebanon
1510 Cornwall Road
717.454.0061
Olivia
Catherine
Woods has been chosen
as the child representative of the 2015 Lancaster Heart Walk.
Woods, 6, of Ephrata,
was diagnosed with a
heart defect in 2013, but
for now can live normally with a heart exam
every five years.
The Lancaster walk,
to be held Sept. 19 at
Spooky Nook Sports
in Manheim, will center on indoor and outdoor
noncompetitive
1-mile and 3-mile fitness walks. It also will
feature entertainment,
vendors, health information, blood pressure
Olivia Woods
Saturday:
REGISTER ONLINE AT
www.lancasterneuroscience.com/events
Lancaster
1671 Crooked Oak Drive
717.569.5331
Justin
Greenly
College news
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Faith &
Values
299-0678
www.oldemillhouse.com
Parkesburg
950 Octorara Trail
610.857.6630
WWW.LANCASTERNEUROSCIENCE.COM
ADVERTISING
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WILLOW STREET
HARDWARE
The helpful place.
COLUMBIA
TELEVISION
TV HIGHLIGHTS
( WGAL
NBC
8.2 WGAL2
5 WHP
CBS
21.2 WHP2
; WHTM
ABC
27.2 WHTM2
A WITF
PBS
K WPMT
FOX
43.2 WPMT2
ASSOCIATED PRESS
These Jokers
are real live wires
KEVIN MCDONOUGH
TV COLUMNIST
TONIGHTS SUMMER
SEASON FINALES
n A soccer mom takes
Com-Lanc
Blue Ridge
Com-Etown
Com-Coats
Com-Lab
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
TONIGHTS
HIGHLIGHTS
n The New York Jets host
CULT CHOICE
n An Oscar-winning script
by Christopher McQuarrie
steals the show from stars
Stephen Baldwin, Gabriel
Byrne, Chazz Palminteri,
Kevin Pollak and Pete
Postlethwaite in the 1995
head-scratcher The Usual
Suspects (8 p.m., Encore).
SERIES NOTES
n The force is not with
LATE NIGHT
n Jean-Claude Van
n Kevin McDonough is a
^ WMAR
# KYW
& WPVI
* WCAU
+ WBAL
, WHYY
` WJZ
/ WLYH
CW
1 WPHL
MNT
= WTXF
Q WGCB
IND
Y WPSG
CW
WPPX
ION
Kids
Sports
News
BROADCAST CHANNELS
C BR CE CC CL
28 33 26 34 39 Beyond Scared
Straight 14
AMC
36 39 36 138 26
ANPL
BBC
BET
BRV
CMTV
CNBC
CNN
COM
CSN/PH
CSPAN
72
114
45
55
67
39
27
49
35
21
DISN
37 54 46 33 63
33
52
25
26
63
41
48
78
77
51
73
64
62
57
56
42
47
65
53
NBCSP 60
NICK
50
OWN
74
PCN
186
SPIKE 38
SYFY 59
Movie
B5
7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00
A&E
DSC
E!
ESPN
ESNP2
ESQTV
FAM
FNC
FOOD
FS1
FX
GOLF
GSN
HALL
HGTV
HIST
LIFE
MASN
MASN2
MSNBC
46
209
-
73
44
43
49
51
41
15
34
67
25
26
208
29
59
60
70
62
72
79
74
56
42
30
-
-
63
68
28
55
18
47
40
71
114
62
37
69
44
24
68
49
21
51
58
31
67
61
28
45
60
57
53
52
72
56
48
70
29
78
20
63
64
30
65
186
27
54
14
114
41
55
146
39
31
56
35
99
28
54
37
38
52
30
51
57
78
48
72
179
65
70
50
36
-
-
17
60
32
67
186
29
42
55
114
61
68
27
42
44
38
53
23
60
40
45
70
59
36
52
56
28
57
69
74
48
51
73
37
66
21
62
35
22
64
30
71
TBS
32 52 25 40 24
TCM
TLC
71 57 169 71 72
46 45 41 46 34
TNT
34 36 32 47 46
TRAV
TRUTV
TVL
UNI
USA
WGN-A
54
75
76
44
29
20
C
61
66
64
-
27
48
BR
47
75
55
-
33
-
CE
26
58
59
16
27
-
CC
50
33
54
29
47
CL
CABLE CHANNELS
Beyond Scared
Beyond Scared
(:01) Behind Bars:
(:02) Behind Bars:
Beyond 14
Straight 14
Straight (N) 14
Rookie Year (N) 14
Rookie Year 14
(5:30) Terminator 3: Movie Predator (1987, Action) Arnold Schwarzeneg- Movie Predator 2 (1990, Science Fiction)
Rise of the Machines ger, Carl Weathers, Jesse Ventura.
Danny Glover, Gary Busey.
Tanked PG
Tanked PG
(:01) Tanked PG
(:02) Tanked PG
(:03) Tanked PG
Tanked
Top Gear PG
Movie From Dusk Till Dawn (1996)
Movie From Dusk Till Dawn (1996)
Shaun
Punkd
Punkd
Punkd
Husbands Husbands Movie The Nutty Professor (1996) Eddie Murphy.
Wendy
Housewives/NYC 14 Housewives/NYC 14 Housewives/NYC 14 Housewives/NYC 14 Watch
Housewives/OC 14
Reba PG Reba PG Reba PG Reba PG Down South 14
Gaines.
Gaines.
Cheerleaders PG
Cheerlead
Make Me a
Shark Tank PG
Shark Tank PG
West Texas
West Texas
Make Me
Erin Burnett OutFront Cooper 360 PG
Movie Fresh Dressed (2015)
(:45) Movie Fresh Dressed (2015)
South
South 14 Gaffigan Tosh 14 Tosh 14 Key 14
Review
Key 14
Kevin Hart: Boyz MA K. Hart
Boxing
PST Primetime
SportsNet Central (N) Football Phillies
SportsNet
St. Augustine, Florida Wendy Sherman on Iran Nuclear Agreement Nelson
(:36) Key Capitol Hill Hearings
Austin & Liv-Mad. Movie High School Musical 3: Senior
Bunkd
Girl Meets I Didnt Do Austin & Good Luck
Ally G
G
Year (2008) Zac Efron, Ashley Tisdale.
G
World G It G
Ally G
G
Naked and Afraid 14 Naked and Afraid 14 Naked and Afraid 14 Naked and Afraid 14 Naked and Afraid 14 Afraid 14
E! News (N) PG
Rivers
Fashion Police 14
Rivers
I Am Cait 14
E! News (N) PG
Divas 14
College Football
College Football Texas Christian at Minnesota (N) (Live)
SportCtr
2015 U.S. Open Tennis Second Round (N) (Live)
SportsCenter (N)
Baseball
NCIS: LA 14
Movie Jerry Maguire (1996) Tom Cruise. Premiere.
The Agent PG
The Agent
(6:00) The Flintstones (:10) Movie The Goonies (1985) Sean Astin, Josh Brolin.
The 700 Club G
Job PG
Greta Van Susteren
The OReilly Factor
The Kelly File (N)
Hannity (N)
The OReilly Factor
Kelly File
Chopped G
Chopped G
Chopped (N) G
Beat Flay Beat Flay Beat Flay Beat Flay Chop G
College Football Pregame
College Football Michigan at Utah From Rice-Eccles Stadium in Salt Lake City.
Sports
Green Lnt Movie Iron Man 2 (2010) Robert Downey Jr.
Sex &
Married
Sex &
Married
Married
Movie Tin Cup (1996, Comedy) Kevin Costner.
Movie Tin Cup (1996, Comedy) Kevin Costner.
Golf Ctral
FamFeud FamFeud The Chase (N) PG
Chain
Chain
FamFeud FamFeud The Chase PG
Chain
The Waltons G
The Waltons G
Middle
Middle
Middle
Middle
Golden
Golden
Golden
Fixer Upper G
Fixer Upper G
Fixer Upper G
Hunters Hunt Intl Hunters Hunt Intl Fixer G
Mountain Men PG
Mountain Men PG
Mountain Men (N) (:03) Power & Ice 14 Mountain Men PG
Mnt. Men
Project Runway PG Project Runway PG Project Runway (N) PG
Atlanta Plastic 14
Terra PG Runwy
MLB Baseball Atlanta Braves at Washington Nationals (Live)
Nats Xtra Football N.C. State MLB Baseball
College Football Southeastern Louisiana at Northwestern State (N) (Live)
Game
World Poker Tour
Cliff Div.
Hardball Matthews
All In With Chris
Rachel Maddow
The Last Word
All In With Chris
Maddow
NASCAR Racing
Mecum Auctions: Collector Cars and More
Dealmakers G
Off the
Global Rallycross G
Henry G Henry G House G House G House G House G House G House G Friends
Friends
Friends
20/20 on OWN 14
20/20 on OWN 14
20/20 on OWN 14
20/20 on ID 14
20/20 on OWN 14
20/20 14
PCN PM - pcntv.com PCN Primetime - pcntv.com
PCN Evening - pcntv.com
PCN
(6:34) Movie Four Brothers (2005)
Movie Scarface (1983, Crime Drama) Al Pacino, Michelle Pfeiffer.
(6:00) See No Evil WWE SmackDown! (N) PG
Dominion (N)
Geeks
Geeks
Dominion
Seinfeld Seinfeld Family Guy Family Guy Family Guy Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Conan 14
The Office
PG
PG
14
PG
14
PG
PG
PG
PG
Night of Iguana
Movie Beau Geste (1939)
Movie Adam Had Four Sons
Reap the Wild Wind
Fabulous Fabulous Fabulous Fabulous Fabulous Fabulous Fat Fabulous PG
Fabulous Fabulous Fabulous
Castle Heartbreak
Movie The Help (2011, Drama) Viola Davis, Emma Stone, Bryce Rizzoli & Isles 5:26 CSI: NY 14
Hotel PG
Dallas Howard.
14
Mysteries at PG
Mysteries at PG
My.- Monument PG
Mysteries at PG
Mysteries at PG
Monument
Jokers
Jokers
Jokers
Jokers
Jokers
Jokers
Imp. Jokers 14
Imp. Jokers 14
Jokers
Gilligan
Gilligan
Love-Raymond PG
Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond King PG King PG King PG
Muchacha
Amores con Trampa Lo Imperdonable
Yo No Creo/Hombres Impacto Noticiero Deportivo
Law & Order 14
Law & Order 14
Law & Order 14
Graceland (N) 14
Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam
Person-Interest 14
Person-Interest 14
Person-Interest 14
Elementary 14
Elementary 14
Elmntry
ENC
PAY CHANNELS
Movie The Usual Suspects (1995,
150 507 150 150 150 (6:20) Movie Sex
Tape (2014) R
Suspense) Stephen Baldwin. iTV. R
HBO
HBO2
MAX
TMC
TELEVISION
Good news for the people of fictional Chesters Mill is bad news
for fans of Under the Dome.
CBS announced Tuesday it is
bringing an end to the summer
series after three seasons.
The science-fiction drama,
based on Stephen Kings 2009
novel, will conclude in a Sept.
10 finale, in which the impenetrable bubble that suddenly fell
on the small town will finally be
lifted and the mysteries of its
origins revealed but not before one final, fatal showdown
for the residents of Chesters
Mill.
Under the Dome was a ratings
smash when it premiered in 2013,
attracting an average same-day
audience of 11 million viewers and
millions more via DVR.
CBS also struck a groundbreaking deal with Amazon that made
episodes of the series available
to stream four days after their
broadcast debut, allowing the
network to offset some of the considerable production cost.
The series is executive produced by King, who also wrote the
second-season premiere, and Steven Spielberg. ER writer Neal
In this 2012
file photo,
novelist
Stephen
King speaks
to creative
writing students at the
University of
Massachusetts-Lowell
in Lowell,
Mass.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
B6
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
CROSSWORD
ACCEPTING
NEW PATIENTS
CALL
(717) DENTIST
336-8478
WONDERWORD
THE
SMILE
CARE
GROUP
2 LOCATIONS
18 S. Duke St.
Lancaster, PA
1337 Elm Ave.
Lancaster, PA
smilecaregroup.com
SE HABLA ESPAOL
The Smile You Want... The Care You Deserve
SUDOKU
Complete the
grid so every
row, column
and 3 x 3 box
contains every
digit from
1 to 9
inclusively.
Previous puzzle
solution
CRYPTOQUIP
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
will be enhanced as a result, and youll have a better sense of whether you have communicated effectively. Your effectiveness and your people skills
can only benefit. Tonight: Be a duo.
SCORPIO
(Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
Defer to others; you have a lot on your
plate. Someone will want to assume responsibility and earn a leadership position. Let this person
demonstrate his or her abilities, while at the same
time releasing yourself from at least one obligation.
Tonight: Be optimistic. Accept an offer.
SAGITTARIUS
(Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
Evaluate your responsibilities, and decide
how much you need to complete. Plan accordingly,
but dont put yourself on a faster track than need
be. You need to slow down and schedule a doctors
appointment. Tonight: Squeeze in some exercise,
if possible.
CAPRICORN
(Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
You could be in a position where you need
to relax more. Open up to new ideas, even though
youd prefer to follow a more traditional route. A
little creativity is likely to spice up a lackluster concept. Tonight: Share a treat with a favorite person.
AQUARIUS
(Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
Reach out to a child or loved one you really care about. Have a long-overdue conversation
with this person. Remain thoughtful, but take care
of your needs as well. You might need to have a
discussion about your bottom line and boundaries.
Tonight: Happiest at home.
PISCES
(Feb. 19-March 20)
Conversations remain active and worthwhile. How you handle a problem could change
quickly as the result of a conversation. In fact, you
might decide that you dont have a problem. Let
go and start relaxing in the company of another
person. Tonight: Meet a pal for dinner.
BORN TODAY
Guitarist George Biondo (1945), snowboarder
Shaun White (1986), musician Al Jardine (1942)
S
I
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A
S
A
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A
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U
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T
E
A R
A
S H
A R
T A
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A T
G R
O U
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M
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E
S
C
L K
O Y T
P L A Y
E T A
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T H
U E L
B L E D
I L
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Y
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G
R E
E O V
S T
T I G
A N O
B I L
D
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C O N
O U B
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CROSSWORD
B7
0730
1
13
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17
10
15
25
26
30
32
33
34
36
44
51
52
56
57
61
62
64
65
ACROSS
1 Chronicler of
the English
Restoration
6 Open a crack
10 Player for big
laughs
13 Crack, as a code
15 Baby ___
16 Back
17 Hardy brown
spice?
19 Tell
20 Shambles, e.g.
21 Bring to light
23 Many
homecoming
attendees,
informally
25 Booster for a band
27 Not just deception
28 Company that will
get you a second
spouse?
32 Corn ___
33 School closing?
34 Deli stock
35 Take your pick
36 Rang
38 Real blast
41 Deal maker: Abbr.
42 Like some
baseball
43 Lexingtons ___
38
42
48
44
48
49
50
51
54
56
57
61
62
63
64
65
66
1
2
3
59
60
31
37
45
40
27
29
41
39
22
28
35
12
19
21
24
11
16
18
20
23
43
46
47
49
50
53
54
55
58
63
66
wrong
39 Vault locale
40 Glasses,
informally
41 Taiwan-based
computer giant
43 Put on again
44 Long vowel
indicator
45 Creator of the
characters added
in 17-, 28-, 44and 57-Across
46 University that
was originally
the Medical
College of
Louisiana
47 Like some tea
48 The way beer
was meant to be
sloganeer, once
52 Home of Bountiful
53 Duncan of
Obamas
cabinet
55 ___ Im saying is
58 Cartoonist
Mayerik who cocreated Howard
the Duck
59 Book before
Psalms
60 Last ___
B8
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
CLOSE TO HOME
PLUGGERS
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CLASSIC PEANUTS
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LOCAL
Champion mediumweight:
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BEEF
Reserve mediumweight;
Madeline Musser, of
Elizabethtown.
Champion mediumweight:
Alyssa Heisey, of Elizabethtown.
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
RABBIT
MEAT PEN
Champion: Noah Algoe, of
Marietta.
Reserve champion: Caleb Miller,
of Marietta.
3rd: Cohen Miller, of Marietta.
4th: Jeremey Algoe, of Marietta.
CELEBRITY
MILKING
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Bank. Weight 1.03.
3rd
1. Chuck Mummert, mayor of
Elizabethtown, and Dennis
Stucky, Lancaster County
Commissioner. Weight 0.89.
INFO SESSION
2. Jenna Wirell, 6, of
Elizabethtown.
3. Emily Glen, 7, of
Elizabethtown.
Ages 8-9
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3. Caroline Williams, 5, of
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Elizabethtown.
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n SEND STORY TIPS & INFO TO: CHRIS OTTO, 291-8662, COTTO@LNPNEWS.COM
Moving on
A tight Serena Williams
advances in US Open
n Page C12
Cassebaum dies at 75
Hall of Fame football coach was known as a great and eccentric motivator
JOHN WALK
JWALK@LNPNEWS.COM
CASSEBAUM, page C4
PHILADELPHIA
EAGLES
JOE PATERNO
Crucial
game
for some
players
Birds looking
to fill key spots
PAUL DOMOWITCH
AND LES BOWEN
ASSOCIATED PRESS
A mural in downtown State College featuring former Penn State head football coach Joe Paterno, center, is seen in this photo taken in
July 2012.
FIGHT ON STATE
Joe Paternos legacy remains a battleground for passionate fans and alumni
MORE ON PSU
FRANK FITZPATRICK
THE PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER
STATE COLLEGE Along one side of College Avenue, striking new classroom buildings and residence halls lend this edge of Penn
States campus a 21st-century glow. But on the
opposite side of the towns busiest thoroughfare, it feels like 1985.
There, like The Great Gatsbys all-seeing Dr.
T.J. Eckleburg, the bespectacled image of Joe
Paterno still looms over Happy Valley like a
watchful deity.
Merchandise shops display life-size cutouts
KFREEMAN@LNPNEWS.COM
Steady.
That sums up the day for a pair
of L-L League Section Three
golfers Lancaster Catholics
Thomas Bird and Lancaster
Mennonites Grace Stillman
at the Lancaster Host Wednesday afternoon.
Bird was the low medalist,
shooting an even-par 71 from
the white tees over the 6,144yard course.
EAGLES, page C5
TONIGHTS
GAME
n Who: Philadelphia
sports2
C2
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
IN FOCUS
FROM TWITTER
SUMMERS NOT OVER YET ... kicking off the season with
a BEACH OUT for Friday nights HOME football game
vs Donegal ... floaties, goggles, Hawaiian shirts, straw
skirts, hats & anything summer just remember it must be
school appropriate!
E-townStudentSection (@Etown_Bears)
Bill OBriens the best coach to be on Hard Knocks.
Inspirational, fiery and real. Nothings seemed forced
with him.
Corey Seidman (@CoreySeidmanCSN)
SPORTS ON TV
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
NETWORK
TIME
ESPN
6pm
TCN
6pm
MASN2
7pm
Michigan at Utah
FS1
8:30pm
TCU at Minnesota
ESPN
9pm
NETWORK
TIME
GOLF
9am
NETWORK
TIME
Atlanta at Washington
MASN
7pm
Pittsburgh at Milwaukee
ROOT
7pm
MLB
8pm
NFL PRESEASON
NETWORK
TIME
WCAU-10
7pm
Baltimore at Atlanta
WHTM-27
7pm
NFL
7pm
WHP-21
7:30pm
NFL
10pm
NETWORK
TIME
FS1
2:30pm
NETWORK
TIME
ESPN
1pm
ESPN2
5pm
Southeastern Louisiana
at Northwestern State
GOLF
European PGA Tour:
M2M Russian Open, first round
Carolina at Pittsburgh
San Diego at San Francisco
SOCCER
UEFA Euro 2016 qualifying: Italy vs. Malta
TENNIS
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Philadelphia Phillies Cameron Rupp, right, gets a high-five from third base coach John Mizerock, left,
after hitting a home run against the San Diego Padres on Sunday in Philadelphia.
PAULA WOLF
WHEELCHAIR QUARTERBACK
Rupps improvement
an unexpected positive
One of the pleasant surprises of the Phillies
play since the All-Star break is the development of the younger players, some of whom
were unheralded prospects to begin with.
Though he was a third-round draft pick out
of the University of Texas in 2010, catcher
Cameron Rupp definitely falls into that
category.
Even as he climbed the minor league ladder, Rupp was not considered someone with
much of a future in Philadelphia, as catching
prospects like Sebastian Valle and Tommy
Joseph were ranked ahead of him.
But after earning a spot on the 25-man ros-
NHL
Bryce
Salvador
n Played 14
seasons in
NHL
n Played in
nearly 800
games
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SPORTS
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
C3
Local digest
FIELD HOCKEY
n Maria Guarisco netted two goals, Ashley Gubernick
CROSS COUNTRY
n The Lebanon Valley men finished fourth Tuesday
Penn State tight ends Adam Breneman, left, and Mike Gesicki talk after practice on Wednesday in State College.
SOCCER
n Senior goalie Austin Aldinger (Elizabethtown
STAFF REPORT
VOLLEYBALL
SPORTS@LNPNEWS.COM
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
Annville
n History: F&M and
LVC have met 35 times,
beginning in 1899
and taking a break in
1982. The series was
intermittent before a
15-year stretch from
1968 to 1982 when the
schools met each season
as members of the Middle
Atlantic Conference. The
two stopped playing
when the Diplomats
left for the Centennial
Continued from C1
Three event.
I think golf is just
about having fun, its
not about who shot the
best round, she said. I
just go out and not think
about how Im doing and
then I like looking at the
scorecard and being surprised at the score.
Today was one of
those days.
Lancaster Catholics
Will Riva shot a 75.
Catholics Tom Moran
and Cody Beiler and
Blaine Weaver from
Elco turned in 76s.
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
URSINUS (0-0)
AT MILLERSVILLE (0-0)
n When: Tonight, 7 p.m.
n Where: Chryst Field at
Biemesderfer Stadium,
Millersville
n History: This is the
first meeting between the
Bears and Marauders.
This marks the first time
MU has played a Division
III opponent since joining
the Division II ranks in
1981. The Marauders
reached the D-III playoffs
in 1979, losing in the first
round to Wittenberg,
21-14.
n About Millersville: The
Marauders are coming off
back-to-back 1-10 seasons
and looking for their first
winning season since
2000. MU is 50-59-9 all
time in season openers,
including a 15-7-2 mark
in home openers. The
Marauders are 36-19 all
time in games played
under the lights. From
1984-2000, MU went
69-17-1 at home, but since
2007, the Marauders are
7-41. Redshirt freshman
Blake Cahill gets the start
at QB. The Red Lion
grad, who missed last
season with a knee injury,
will be first freshman QB
to start since Jamal Smith
in 2007. No running
backs on MU roster have
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SPORTS
Cassebaum
Continued from C1
Coaching career
A 1958 Elizabethtown
High School graduate,
Cassebaum was an assistant coach at Pottsville and Easton, and the
head coach at Slatington
(now Northern Lehigh),
McCaskey, Punxsutawney and Elizabethtown.
He was elected to the
Susquehanna
Valley
Sports Hall of Fame and
the Pennsylvania Scholastic Football Coaches
Association Hall of
Fame in 2008, and to
the E-town Sports Hall
of Fame in 2010.
Im surprised, Cassebaum told LNP in a story
in 2008 when speaking
about his induction to
the PSFCA Hall of Fame.
I didnt think the total
overall record would be
good enough.
His record was 114-71-5
and included no state or
district championships,
although the postseason
didnt exist for much of
his career. Cassebaum,
though, was more known
for turning losing programs into winners.
In the three years prior
to Cassebaum arriving at
McCaskey, the Red Tornado won a total of five
games. By his second year
at McCaskey, the Red
Tornado went 7-4 in 1970
At
Punxsutawney,
Cassebaum took a team
that went 0-10 before
he arrived to 6-4-1 in
his first year there, and
eventually 10-0.
When he later got the
job at E-town, the Bears
had lost 29 straight Lancaster-Lebanon League
Section Two games.
By his third year,
Cassebaum took Etown to the District
Three Class AAA title
game, the team finishing 9-1-2 overall.
Cassebaum
retired
from E-town in 1991.
Motivation
methods
Cassebaum
turned
around those programs
with eccentric motivational methods.
Upon his hiring at McCaskey in 1969, Cassebaum gave every returning starter a football
with the mandate that,
all summer, the player
carry the football with
him at all times.
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
ternos
NCAA-record
victory total, a statistic
that itself got caught
in the Jerry Sandusky
scandals messy wake.
This College Avenue
contrast is symbolic of
an ongoing conflict that
shows no sign of abating. Nearly four years
after Sanduskys arrest
triggered an existential
crisis for Penn State,
the struggle to reconcile
past and present persists.
The scandal, in the
student minds, is ancient history, said Scott
Kretchmar, a professor
of exercise and sports
science who once was
Penn States NCAA faculty
representative.
The importance of
Joes legacy, however, is
a current event.
At the heart of this
emotional tug-of-war
are Paterno and the almost mythical football
program he constructed
and nurtured for 46
years.
Ever since Sandusky,
a longtime defensive
coordinator, was arrested on child-sex-abuse
charges in November
2011, school administrators have tried to
push past the ugly episode that cost Paterno
his job and the Nittany
Lions their pristine image.
Theyve implemented
child-protection
guidelines; supported
agencies that tackle the
issue; and transformed
the football coaching
staff, the athletic departments leadership,
and, to some extent,
the iconography of
Nittany Lions football.
Theyve overseen the
modernization of a
program that proudly
clung to the past and
which, despite some
financial aftershocks,
earned a $53 million
profit in the season following the Sandusky
disclosures.
Find your
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ASSOCIATED PRES
A group of Penn State students gather with a cardboard cutout of the late Penn State
head football coach Joe Paterno outside Old Main on campus to celebrate the reversal
of NCAA sanctions against the Penn State football program on Friday, Jan. 16.
No-name jerseys
The Lasch Building isnt being rebuilt,
but, just 17 years after
it opened, Penn State
footballs headquarters
is undergoing a $25 million renovation. Though
billed as necessary in an
ultracompetitive college
sports landscape, many
see the project as an effort to sanitize, symbolically at least, a structure
that was ground zero in
the sordid child-abuse
episode.
If that was the administrations goal, the step
forward was soon countered by a step back.
Amid 2012s tumult,
then-coach Bill OBrien
added player names to
the jerseys Paterno had
so famously kept nondescript. Last month,
OBriens
successor,
James Franklin, announced that the uniform tops would again
be nameless.
Its time we bring
back a tradition that
represented Penn State
for 125 years, Franklin
said. I think what Bill
did was the right thing
at the right time, and I
think this is the right
Joe Paterno
Lager
As this Paterno renaissance picks up steam,
a Reading company is
producing
miniature
versions of the statue,
in which the coach,
right arm raised, is captured leading his team
onto the field. Distinctive Collectibles is selling them on its website
and in State College
shops. The 181/4-inch,
nine-pound replicas go
for $590, and managing
partner Jim Miller said
sales have been very
good.
The man did a lot of
good for that university, said Miller, whose
company is also producing Pope Francis miniatures. We thought this
would be a way to honor
that.
Joe Paterno Lager,
which like the statues
was licensed in deals
between the manufacturers and the Joe Paterno Foundation, has
been selling so briskly in
the few weeks its been
available that a company
official senses divine intervention.
Ive never seen anything like this, and
Ive been in the beer
industry a long time,
Duquesne Brewing Co.
executive Mark Dudash
told the website PennLive, which reported
that 2,800 barrels of
the beer were presold
before its debut, compared with the companys estimate of 500.
SPORTS
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
C5
NFL ROUNDUP
Steelers
returning
punter
Brad Wing
hopes his
experience
gives him
an edge
over countryman
Jordan
Berry.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
the film.
Claims that Concussion was altered to appease the NFL proved
inconclusive following
an Associated Press review of the leaked Sony
emails regarding the
production and positioning of the film.
Bears add TE: The
Chicago Bears have acquired tight end Khari
Lee from the Houston
Texans for a 2017 sixthround draft pick.
A product of Division
II Bowie State, Lee entered the league as an
undrafted free agent this
year.
Boswells back: The
New York Giants have
re-signed
placekicker
Chris Boswell.
New York made the
move because veteran
Josh Brown bruised
BASEBALL ROUNDUP
National League
ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Mets Ruben Tejada slides into home plate past Phillies catcher Cameron Rupp for an inside-the-park tworun homer in the second inning of Wednesday nights
game in New York.
Marlins 8, Braves
3: Marcell Ozuna hit a
two-run homer, Martin
Prado and Jeff Mathis
each had two RBIs and
Miami finished a threegame sweep.
Reds 7, Cubs 4: Joey
Votto hit a three-run
homer in the ninth inning that was set up by
third baseman Kris Bryants two-out error.
American League
Orioles 7, Rays 6 (11):
Chris Davis homered on
a 3-0 pitch from Matt
Andriese leading off the
11th inning, and Baltimore
snapped a six-game losing
streak.
Down 6-4 in the ninth,
Baltimore
appeared
doomed to its 13th loss in
14 games. Looking for his
34th save, Brad Boxberger
STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@LNPNEWS.COM
Change for a
nickel?
For much of the summer, it has been assumed
that rookie cornerback
Eric Rowe would be the
teams season-opening
nickel corner.
But against the Packers on Saturday, Nolan
Carroll slid inside in the
Eagles nickel package
and Rowe replaced him
on the outside.
Rowe, the teams 6-1,
205-pound,
secondround pick, was struggling at nickel, which
was why defensive coor-
Barkley starts
vs. Jets
Matt Barkley will be
the starting quarterback
against the Jets, Chip
Kelly said. But he also
said that doesnt necessarily mean Barkley has
an advantage over Tim
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BASEBALL
NATIONAL LEAGUE
New York.......................................74
Washington...................................66
Miami............................................55
Atlanta...........................................54
Philadelphia...................................53
St. Louis.........................................86
Pittsburgh......................................79
Chicago..........................................75
Milwaukee.....................................56
Cincinnati.......................................55
Los Angeles....................................74
San Francisco.................................69
Arizona..........................................65
San Diego.......................................64
Colorado........................................53
East Division
59 .556
65 .504
7 81-w
79 .410 191-w 21
79 .406 20 211-w
81 .396 211-w 23
Central Division
7-3
6-4
5-5
1-9
3-7
46 .652
51 .608
6
57 .568 11
75 .427 291-w 181-w
77 .417 31 20
West Division
9-1
7-3
4-6
5-5
4-6
57
63
68
68
78
.565
.523 51-w
6
.489 10 101-w
.485 101-w 11
.405 21 211-w
7-3
3-7
3-7
4-6
4-6
W-1
L-2
W-3
L-8
L-1
45-24
37-26
30-36
33-32
30-35
29-35
29-39
25-43
21-47
23-46
W-4
L-2
L-1
W-2
W-1
48-19
46-21
40-28
31-39
29-35
38-27
33-30
35-29
25-36
26-42
W-2
L-4
W-2
L-1
L-2
46-21
38-27
31-35
32-31
28-38
28-36
31-36
34-33
32-37
25-40
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Toronto..........................................76
New York.......................................74
Tampa Bay.....................................66
Baltimore.......................................64
Boston...........................................61
Kansas City....................................81
Minnesota.....................................69
Cleveland.......................................64
Chicago..........................................61
Detroit...........................................61
Houston.........................................73
Texas..............................................69
Los Angeles....................................67
Seattle...........................................62
Oakland.........................................58
East Division
57 .571
58 .561 11-w
67 .496 10
69 .481 12
72 .459 15
Central Division
4
6
9
51 .614
63 .523 12 1-w
68 .485 17 51-w
70 .466 191-w
8
71 .462 20 81-w
West Division
60
62
66
71
76
Tuesdays NL Games
Arizona 6.......................... Colorado 4 (1st)
Miami 7....................................... Atlanta 1
Philadelphia 14......................... N.Y. Mets 8
Chicago Cubs 5........................ Cincinnati 4
Milwaukee 7........................... Pittsburgh 4
St. Louis 8............................. Washington 5
Arizona 5......................... Colorado 3 (2nd)
L.A. Dodgers 2................... San Francisco 1
Tuesdays AL Games
Tampa Bay 11.......................... Baltimore 2
Toronto 5...........................Cleveland 3 (10)
N.Y. Yankees 3............................... Boston 1
Minnesota 8..................... Chi. White Sox 6
Detroit 6................................ Kansas City 5
Seattle 7..................................... Houston 5
L.A. Angels 6............................... Oakland 2
Tuesdays Interleague Game
Texas 8..................................... San Diego 6
8-2
6-4
4-6
2-8
5-5
7-3
8-2
7-3
3-7
2-8
.549
.527
3
.504
6
3
.466 11
8
.433 151-w 121-w
6-4
7-3
4-6
6-4
5-5
W-2
W-2
L-1
W-1
L-2
45-24
37-26
33-35
38-27
34-34
31-33
37-32
33-32
26-42
27-38
W-1
W-3
L-2
L-2
L-1
46-22
42-25
29-34
33-32
30-35
35-29
27-38
35-34
28-38
31-36
L-1
W-1
W-2
W-1
L-2
46-22
32-32
39-27
29-36
31-38
27-38
37-30
28-39
33-35
27-38
Wednesdays NL Games
N.Y. Mets 9............................ Philadelphia 4
Miami 7....................................... Atlanta 3
Cincinnati 7..........................Chicago Cubs 4
Pittsburgh at Milwaukee........................ (n)
Washington at St. Louis.......................... (n)
Arizona at Colorado................................ (n)
San Francisco at L.A. Dodgers................. (n)
Wednesdays AL Games
Baltimore 7...................... Tampa Bay 6 (11)
L.A. Angels 9............................... Oakland 4
N.Y. Yankees 13..............................Boston 8
Toronto 5.................................. Cleveland 1
Minnesota 3......................Chi. White Sox 0
Kansas City 12............................... Detroit 1
Seattle at Houston.................................. (n)
Wednesdays Interleague Game
Texas at San Diego.................................. (n)
Thursdays NL Games
Atlanta (Wisler 5-5) at Washington (Zimmermann 11-8), 7:05 p.m.
Pittsburgh (Liriano 9-6) at Milwaukee (Jungmann 8-5), 7:20 p.m.
San Francisco (Vogelsong 9-10) at Colorado (Rusin 4-7), 8:40 p.m.
L.A. Dodgers (Latos 4-9) at San Diego (Rea 2-2), 10:10 p.m.
Thursdays AL Games
Chicago White Sox (Samardzija 8-11) at Minnesota (Gibson 9-9), 1:10 p.m.
Detroit (Boyd 1-5) at Kansas City (Volquez 12-7), 8:10 p.m.
NL BOXES
Mets 9, Phillies 4
Philadelphia AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Sweeney lf-rf.......5 1 1 1 0 2 .250
Hernandez 2b......3 0 1 1 1 1 .268
Herrera cf............4 0 2 0 0 2 .295
Howard 1b...........4 0 0 0 0 0 .237
A.Blanco 3b.........4 0 2 0 0 0 .309
D.Brown rf...........1 0 0 0 0 1 .228
Asche lf................3 1 1 0 0 0 .249
Rupp c..................4 0 1 0 0 0 .250
Galvis ss...............4 1 1 0 0 1 .265
Nola p..................1 0 0 0 0 1 .111
a-Kratz ph............1 1 1 2 0 0 1.000
Hinojosa p...........0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
b-Ruf ph...............1 0 0 0 0 1 .244
Loewen p.............0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Murray p..............0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
d-Altherr ph.........1 0 0 0 0 0 .227
Totals............... 36 4 10 4 1 9
New York
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Grndersn rf..........5 1 1 0 0 1 .258
Cespedes cf-lf......5 1 3 1 0 0 .295
Murphy 1b...........2 1 1 1 0 0 .282
Cuddyer 1b..........3 0 0 0 0 2 .262
D.Wright 3b..........4 2 2 0 1 1 .328
Conforto lf...........4 1 2 2 0 0 .311
1-Young Jr. pr.......0 0 0 0 0 0 .167
Lagares cf.............0 0 0 0 0 0 .259
dArnaud c............4 0 3 0 0 0 .283
K.Johnson 2b.......3 2 2 1 1 0 .263
Tejada ss..............4 1 2 4 0 0 .257
Harvey p..............3 0 0 0 0 2 .123
Gilmartin p..........0 0 0 0 0 0 .400
c-Uribe ph............1 0 0 0 0 1 .252
Clippard p............0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
A.Reed p..............0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Totals............... 38 9 16 9 2 7
Philadelphia....... 000 030 100 4 10 0
New York............ 033 010 11x 9 16 1
a-doubled for Nola in the 5th. b-struck
out for Hinojosa in the 7th. c-struck out for
Gilmartin in the 7th. d-popped out for Murray in the 9th.
1-ran for Conforto in the 7th.
ECespedes (1). LOBPhiladelphia
6, New York 7. 2BKratz (1), Dan.Murphy (31), dArnaud 2 (12), K.Johnson (10).
HRSweeney (3), off Harvey; Tejada (3),
off Nola; Conforto (5), off Nola; Cespedes
(10), off Murray. RBIsSweeney (7),
C.Hernandez (31), Kratz 2 (2), Cespedes
(26), Dan.Murphy (58), Conforto 2 (17),
K.Johnson (42), Tejada 4 (26). SBK.Johnson (2). CSYoung Jr. (1).
Runners left in scoring positionPhiladelphia 2 (Galvis, Howard); New York 3 (Tejada, Harvey 2). RISPPhiladelphia 2 for 5;
New York 4 for 8.
Runners moved upSweeney, Tejada.
GIDPHoward.
DPNew York 1 (Tejada, Cuddyer).
Philadelphia IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Nola L5-2......... 4 9 6 6 0 4 65 4.02
Hinojosa.......... 2 3 1 1 2 0 34 1.29
Loewen............ 1 3 1 1 0 1 22 9.00
Murray............. 1 1 1 1 0 2 16 9.00
New York
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Harvy W12-7. ..61-e 9 4 4 1 9 101 2.60
Gilmrtin H2..... 2-e 1 0 0 0 0 9 2.17
Clippard........... 1 0 0 0 0 0 12 0.48
A.Reed............. 1 0 0 0 0 0 12 4.01
Inherited runners-scoredGilmartin 1-0.
IBBoff Hinojosa (K.Johnson).
T2:53. A32,464 (41,922).
Reds 7, Cubs 4
Cincinnati
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Brgeois cf-lf..........5 2 2 1 0 1 .260
Bruce rf................5 1 0 0 0 0 .229
Votto 1b...............5 2 2 3 0 3 .316
Phillips 2b............5 0 3 0 0 0 .289
Frazier 3b.............4 0 1 0 0 0 .262
B.Pena c...............4 1 1 1 0 0 .273
Suarez ss..............3 1 2 1 1 1 .284
Schumakr lf..........3 0 0 0 0 1 .220
Hoover p..............0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
b-Barnhart ph......1 0 0 0 0 0 .272
A.Chapmn p.........0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
R.Iglesias p...........3 0 1 1 0 0 .074
LaMarre cf...........1 0 0 0 0 0 .067
Totals............... 39 7 12 7 1 6
Chicago
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Fowler cf..............4 1 0 0 1 2 .255
Coghlan lf............3 0 0 0 1 3 .247
Bryant 3b.............4 1 1 2 0 1 .269
Rizzo 1b...............4 1 2 1 0 2 .282
Montero c............3 0 0 0 1 2 .235
Jackson rf.............4 0 2 0 0 0 .333
Russell ss.............3 0 0 0 1 3 .240
Hammel p............1 0 0 0 0 0 .179
Cahill p.................0 0 0 0 0 0 .200
Richard p.............0 0 0 0 0 0 .091
a-St.Castro ph......1 0 0 0 0 0 .246
T.Wood p..............0 0 0 0 0 0 .111
Strop p.................0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
H.Rondon p..........0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
c-Denorfia ph.......0 0 0 0 1 0 .258
La Stella 2b..........3 1 1 1 0 0 .179
d-J.Baez ph..........1 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Totals............... 31 4 6 4 5 13
AL BOXES
Angels 9, Athletics 4
Los Angeles AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Calhoun rf............4 3 3 0 1 1 .268
Trout cf................5 1 2 0 0 0 .297
Pujols dh..............5 2 2 3 0 0 .249
Murphy lf.............4 1 3 1 0 0 .294
1-Cowgill pr-lf......1 1 0 0 0 0 .177
Aybar ss...............5 0 0 0 0 0 .274
Cron 1b................4 0 1 2 0 0 .271
2-Cowart pr-3b....1 1 0 0 0 0 .200
Freese 3b.............4 0 2 2 0 1 .243
3-Navarro pr-1b...0 0 0 0 0 0 .260
Iannetta c............4 0 0 0 0 2 .180
Feathrstn 2b........4 0 0 0 0 1 .130
Totals............... 41 9 13 8 1 5
Oakland
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Burns cf...............5 0 0 0 0 0 .293
Canha 1b.............4 0 0 0 0 1 .247
Lawrie 2b.............4 2 2 1 0 0 .271
Valencia 3b..........4 1 1 1 0 1 .298
Phegley c.............3 1 1 2 0 1 .263
a-Vogt ph-c..........1 0 1 0 0 0 .269
Smolinski lf..........3 0 1 0 0 0 .198
b-Pridie ph-lf.......1 0 0 0 0 1 .000
B.Butler dh..........4 0 2 0 0 1 .243
Reddick rf............4 0 0 0 0 2 .278
Semien ss.............4 0 2 0 0 1 .257
Totals............... 37 4 10 4 0 8
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
Calendar
LancasterOnline
SCOREBOARD
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
SPORTS SLATE
SCHOLASTIC GIRLS
L-L LEAGUE
Section One
FIELD HOCKEY
SCHOLASTIC
NONLEAGUE
Abington Heights at Cedar Crest, 2 p.m.
FOOTBALL
COLLEGIATE
Ursinus at Millersville, 7 p.m.
Franklin & Marshall at Lebanon Valley, 7 p.m.
GOLF
SCHOLASTIC
L-L LEAGUE
Section One
Cedar Crest, Conestoga Valley, Ephrata,
Hempfield, Manheim Township, Penn Manor, Warwick at Fairview, 12:30 p.m.
Section Two
Solanco, Lampeter-Strasburg, Lebanon,
Elizabethtown, Cocalico, Garden Spot and
Manheim Central at Highlands of Donegal,
12:30 p.m.
SOCCER
COLLEGIATE MEN
Holy Family at Millersville, 5 p.m.
COLLEGIATE WOMEN
Millersville at Kutztown, 3 p.m.
SCHOLASTIC GIRLS
NONLEAGUE
Northern Lebanon at Daniel Boone, 5:45 p.m.
TENNIS
SCHOLASTIC GIRLS
NONLEAGUE
Cocalico at Governor Mifflin, 3:30 p.m.
McCaskey at Lebanon, 3:45 p.m.
Hempfield at Solanco, 4 p.m.
Donegal at Annville-Cleona, 4 p.m.
Northern Lebanon at Elizabethtown, 4 p.m.
Eastern Lebanon at Pequea Valley, 4 p.m.
Ephrata at Manheim Township, 4 p.m.
Lancaster Catholic at Manheim Central,
4 p.m.
Columbia at Garden Spot, 4 p.m.
Lancaster Mennonite at Lampeter-Strasburg, 4 p.m.
VOLLEYBALL
SCHOLASTIC GIRLS
CCAC
Fairview Christian at High Point Baptist
Academy, 4:45 p.m.
TENNIS
U.S. OPEN
Wednesday
At The USTA Billie Jean King National
Tennis Center
New York
Purse: $42.3 million
Surface: Hard-Outdoor
Singles
Men
Second Round
Jeremy Chardy (27), France, def. Martin
Klizan, Slovakia, 7-5, 6-4, 7-6 (1); David Ferrer (7), Spain, def. Filip Krajinovic, Serbia,
7-5, 7-5, 7-6 (4); Feliciano Lopez (18), Spain,
def. Mardy Fish, United States, 2-6, 6-3, 1-6,
7-5, 6-3; Roberto Bautista Agut (23), Spain,
def. Pablo Carreno Busta, Spain, 4-6, 6-4,
6-0, 2-6, 6-4; David Goffin (14), Belgium,
def. Ricardas Berankis, Lithuania, 5-7, 6-4,
3-6, 6-2, 6-1.
Marin Cilic (9), Croatia, def. Evgeny Donskoy, Russia, 6-2, 6-3, 7-5; Fabio Fognini (32),
Italy, def. Pablo Cuevas, Uruguay, 6-3, 6-4,
6-4; Milos Raonic (10), Canada, def. Fernando Verdasco, Spain, 6-2, 6-4, 6-7 (5), 7-6
(1); Benoit Paire, France, def. Marsel Ilhan,
Turkey, 6-3, 3-6, 6-4, 6-3; Rafael Nadal (8),
Spain, def. Diego Schwartzman, Argentina,
7-6 (5), 6-3, 7-5.
Mikhail Kukushkin, Kazakhstan, def.
Grigor Dimitrov (17), Bulgaria, 6-3, 7-6 (2),
2-6, 4-6, 6-4; Tommy Robredo (26), Spain,
def. Sam Groth, Australia, 6-4, 7-6 (3),
6-4; Sergiy Stakhovsky, Ukraine, def. Illya
Marchenko, Ukraine, 6-4, 7-6 (2), 4-6, 6-4;
Jo-Wilfried Tsonga (19), France, def. Marcel
Granollers, Spain, 6-3, 6-4, 6-3; Andreas
Seppi (25), Italy, def. Teymuraz Gabashvili,
Russia, 3-6, 6-3, 7-6 (3), 6-1.
Women
Second Round
Madison Brengle, United States, def.
Anna Tatishvili, United States, 6-3, 6-2;
Madison Keys (19), United States, def.
Tereza Smitkova, Czech Republic, 6-1, 6-2;
Anett Kontaveit, Estonia, def. Anastasia
Pavlyuchenkova (31), Russia, 7-5, 6-4; Daria
Kasatkina, Russia, def. Ana Konjuh, Croatia,
6-4, 6-4; Roberta Vinci, Italy, def. Denisa Allertova, Czech Republic, 2-6, 6-3, 6-1.
Agnieszka Radwanska (15), Poland, def.
Magda Linette, Poland, 6-3, 6-2; Bethanie
Mattek-Sands, United States, def. CoCo
Vandeweghe, United States, 6-2, 6-1; Kristina Mladenovic, France, def. Bojana Jovanovski, Serbia, 7-5, 6-1; Serena Williams
(1), United States, def. Kiki Bertens, Netherlands, 7-6 (5), 6-3; Dominika Cibulkova,
Slovakia, def. Jessica Pegula, United States,
5-7, 7-5, 6-3.
Mariana Duque-Marino, Colombia, def.
Oceane Dodin, France, 6-1, 5-7, 6-2; Eugenie Bouchard (25), Canada, def. Polona
Hercog, Slovenia, 6-3, 6-7 (2), 6-3; Elina
Svitolina (17), Ukraine, def. Kaia Kanepi,
Estonia, 6-3, 6-4; Belinda Bencic (12), Switzerland, def. Misaki Doi, Japan, 5-7, 7-6 (3),
6-3; Ekaterina Makarova (13), Russia, def.
Lauren Davis, United States, 6-1, 6-2; Venus
Williams (23), United States, def. Irina Falconi, United States, 6-3, 6-7 (2), 6-2.
HORSE RACING
PENN NATIONAL RESULTS
1st$33,300,1 1/16m
2-Moon Ridge (Gonzalez E.)... $8.00 $3.80 $3.00
6-Pretty Surprise (Rodriguez A.).... $3.80 $3.00
7-Silver Peach (Rodriguez E.).............. $5.60
Also Ran: Irish Activist, Solar Appeal,
Fantastic Tune; Late Scratches: Velvet Colors; Race Time: 1:44.52; Exacta (2-6) Paid
$13.10; Superfecta (2-6-7-3) Paid $16.53;
Trifecta (2-6-7) Paid $29.45.
2nd$14,300,1m
2-Missdixieactivist (Hrnndz).... $4.00 $3.20 $2.80
3-Just a Wildflower (Wolfsont A.).... $5.80 $3.80
5-L Ps Tiger (Rosa E.).......................... $7.00
Also Ran: With Sprinkles, The Queens
Reign, Humerous Delite, Even Prettier;
Race Time: 1:40.05; Daily Double (2-2) Paid
$19.80; Exacta (2-3) Paid $11.40; Superfecta (2-3-5-7) Paid $30.33; Trifecta (2-3-5)
Paid $35.95.
3rd$20,000,1 1/16m
7-Calico Kitten (Cintron A.).... $3.80 $2.60 $2.10
6-Rontos New York (Hernandez)..... $3.60 $2.60
3-Tafawuk (Cora D.)............................ $2.80
Also Ran: Imperfect, Melodious Tune,
Imaginative, Verity; Late Scratches: Ventura
Highway; Race Time: 1:41.84; Daily Double
(2-7) Paid $9.00; Exacta (7-6) Paid $4.70;
Superfecta (7-6-3-1) Paid $5.37; Trifecta (76-3) Paid $8.00; Pic 3 (2-2-4/7) Paid $11.10.
4th$19,000,1m
4-Go Daddy Girl (Otero W.).. $5.40 $3.40 $3.60
5-Kisses for Love (Rodriguez E.)..... $8.40 $7.80
3-E Lizzy (Vargas, Jr. J.)........................ $8.00
Also Ran: Friendly Dancer, Sweets Galore,
Blaze Wick, Miss Celeb; Race Time: 1:38.38;
Daily Double (7-4) Paid $9.40; Exacta (4-5)
Paid $22.00; Superfecta (4-5-3-6) Paid
$189.13; Trifecta (4-5-3) Paid $140.25; Pic
3 (2-7-4) Paid $10.00; Pic 4 (2-2-4/7-4) Paid
$55.55.
5th$29,500,1m70y
6-Guns of Steel (Otero W.).... $11.80 $5.00 $3.00
3-Goodbyeseeulater (Whitney D.)... $4.20 $2.80
5-Hideaway Moon (Rodriguez A.)....... $2.60
Also Ran: Anthonys Flyer, Kodiak Syd,
R Ks Bobkat, Z Z Thunder; Race Time:
1:41.60; Daily Double (4-6) Paid $61.00;
Exacta (6-3) Paid $34.60; Superfecta (6-3-54) Paid $32.13; Trifecta (6-3-5) Paid $47.95;
Pic 3 (7-4-6) Paid $44.95.
6th$12,400,5 1/2f
2-Gig Em (Cora D.)........ $11.20 $5.00 $3.60
5-Duke of Flatbush (Wolfsont A.)..... $9.80 $5.00
11-Road to Hope (Conner T.).............. $4.40
Also Ran: Rebel Spy, Arctic Solution,
Sherwood Drive, Big Royalblackjack, Go
Pancho Go, Theregoestheblonde, My Little
Jet, One Big Book; Late Scratches: Arrow
Fitz; Race Time: 1:06.13; Daily Double (62) Paid $130.00; Exacta (2-5) Paid $60.70;
Superfecta (2-5-11-1) Paid $238.98; Trifecta
(2-5-11) Paid $178.50; Pic 3 (4-6-2) Paid
$118.15.
7th$11,400,1 1/16m
3-BurningPoint(Hernandez)..... $13.80 $4.60 $4.00
2-Bold Hero (Gonzalez E.)......... $3.20 $2.60
4-Man of the Hour (Oro E.)................ $4.80
Also Ran: Fort Riley, Just Another Toy, Nor
Mac; Race Time: 1:48.85; Daily Double (23) Paid $64.80; Exacta (3-2) Paid $31.00;
Superfecta (3-2-4-6) Paid $47.78; Trifecta
(3-2-4) Paid $88.30; Pic 3 (6-2-3) Paid
$468.30.
OFF-TRACK WAGERING
Saratoga............................................. 1 p.m.
Gulfstream.................................... 1:15 p.m.
Plainridge..................................... 2:30 p.m.
Louisiana Downs T........................ 4:15 p.m.
Golden Gate................................. 4:45 p.m.
Del Mar......................................... 5:05 p.m.
Hoosier Park H.............................. 5:15 p.m.
Presque Isle.................................. 5:25 p.m.
Penn National.................................... 6 p.m.
Scioto Downs................................ 6:30 p.m.
Red Mile............................................ 7 p.m.
Charles Town................................ 7:05 p.m.
Saratoga H.................................... 7:05 p.m.
Yonkers......................................... 7:10 p.m.
Ocean Downs............................... 7:20 p.m.
Mohawk....................................... 7:25 p.m.
Canterbury................................... 7:30 p.m.
Remington T...................................... 8 p.m.
Maywood..................................... 8:30 p.m.
Australia A.................................... 9:38 p.m.
Australia B.................................. 10:55 p.m.
Australia C.................................. 11:05 p.m.
TRANSACTIONS
GOLF
SCHOLASTIC
L-L LEAGUE
Section Three
LANCASTER CATHOLIC (301) T. Bird 71,
W. Riva 75, T. Moran 76, R. VanTash 79, L.
Bird 79.
ELCO (320) C. Tobias 76, B. Weaver 76,
K. Rosegrant 82, R. Woefling 86.
LANCASTER MENNONITE (330) G. Stillman 77, C. Green 81, C. Edie 84, A. Baak 88.
ANNVILLE-CLEONA (365) B. Miller 82,
M. Moore 91, T. Schrader 94, C. Bridi 98.
NORTHERN LEBANON (396) N. Gingrich
90, C. Felty 98, A. Longenecker 99, B. Fellows 109, R. Biever 109.
PEQUEA VALLEY (407) R. Fisher 82, C.
Yoder 98, J. Erickson 108, D. Mann 119.
LEBANON CATHOLIC (0) T. Bender 115,
F. Kostow 117, K. Blauch 138.
BENT CREEK
BASEBALL
National League
PITTSBURGH PIRATES Selected the
contracts of INF infielder Pedro Florimon
from Bristol (Appalachian). Transferred
RHP Deolis Guerra from the 15- to the 60day DL.
ST. LOUIS CARDINALS Recalled LHPs
Tyler Lyons and Nick Greenwood and RHP
Miguel Socolovich from Memphis (PCL).
Optioned LHP Marco Gonzales to Memphis.
SAN DIEGO PADRES Recalled INF/OF
Alex Dickerson, RHP Jon Edwards and C
Rocky Hale from El Paso (PCL). Designated
LHP Chris Rearick for assignment.
WASHINGTON NATIONALS Recalled
RHP Rafael Martin and LHP Matt Grace
from Syracuse (IL).
American Association
JOPLIN BLASTERS Exercised their
2016 option on RHPs Winston Abreu,
Sam Agnew-Weiland, Victor Capellan, Luis
Chirinos, Matt Swilley, Josh Evans, Carlos
Fuentes, Nestor Molina and Matt Parish,
LHPs Frank DeValle and Leyson Septimo, Cs
Mason Morioka and Carlos Ramirez, INFs
Aaron Brill, Mitch Glasser, Maikol Gonzalez,
Omar Luna, Jairo Perez and Jake Taylor and
OFs Oscar Mesa, Jesus Solorzano and Steven Tinoco.
Atlantic League
LONG ISLAND DUCKS Signed RHP
Mariel Checo. Released OF Sam DiMatteo.
FOOTBALL
National Football League
ATLANTA FALCONS Signed OL Eric
Lefeld. Waived WR Bernard Reedy.
CAROLINA PANTHERS Signed QB Derek
Anderson to a two-year contract extension.
CHICAGO BEARS Acquired TE Khari Lee
from Houston for a 2017 sixth-round draft
pick. Waived TE Blake Annen.
CINCINNATI BENGALS Placed WR Onterio McCalebb on the reserve/injured list.
NEW YORK GIANTS Re-signed K Chris
Boswell.
OAKLAND RAIDERS Signed LB Lorenzo
Alexander. Waived LB Horace Miller.
Canadian Football League
CFL Fined Winnipeg LB Jamall Westerman for unsportsmanlike conduct; Toronto
CB Travis Hawkins and Ottawa OT Colin
Kelly for delivering blows to the head of an
opponent in recent games.
EDMONTON ESKIMO Traded QB Matt
Nichols to Winnipeg for a conditional 2017
seventh-round draft pick.
WINNIPEG BLUE BOMBERS Added RB
Chevon Walker to the practice roster.
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS Agreed to
terms with F Joakim Nordstrom on a oneyear contract.
NEW JERSEY DEVILS Announced the
retirement of D Bryce Salvador.
ECHL
MANCHESTER MONARCHS Signed D
Mark Adams.
LACROSSE
National Lacrosse League
BUFFALO BANDITS Named John Tavares assistant coach.
MOTOR SPORTS
INDYCAR Fined No. 22 Team Penske
entry $2,500 and the No. 67 CFH Racing
entry $500 for violating rules following
the GoPro Grand Prix of Sonoma on Aug.
30. Deducted 80 manufacturer points from
Honda for engines that did not attain their
life cycle during the GoPro Grand Prix of
Sonoma race weekend. Honda received an
additional 20 point deduction for fitting the
wrong engine in the No. 41 entry.
COLLEGE
BROWN Announced the retirement of
Phil Pincince, womens soccer coach, at end
of 2015 season.
EAST STROUDSBURG Named Chris
Monasch interim director of athletics.
GEORGETOWN Named Chelsey Broermann assistant softball coach.
HOBART Named Trey Blanding mens
assistant basketball coach.
KANSAS Dismissed sophomre CB Matthew Boateng from the football team.
LEHIGH Named Jabari Trotter director
of mens basketball operations and Cooper
Handelsman mens video coordinator.
RHODE ISLAND COLLEGE Named Tyler
Daffinee assistant wrestling coach.
SAINT MARYS (CAL) Named Greg Kennett mens tennis coach.
SHENANDOAH Named Nick Staufenberger and Tiffany Barnes womens assistant soccer coaches.
UTSA Named Megan Gibson womens
assistant softball pitching coach.
WNBA
Tuesdays Games
New York 80........................ Atlanta 75 (OT)
Indiana 81............................ Connecticut 51
Wednesdays Game
Phoenix 73........................... Washington 53
Thursdays Games
Chicago at New York.......................... 7 p.m.
Tulsa at Seattle................................ 10 p.m.
Washington at Los Angeles......... 10:30 p.m.
Fridays Games
Connecticut at San Antonio............... 8 p.m.
Indiana at Minnesota........................ 8 p.m.
FIELD HOCKEY
CONESTOGA
CROSSGATES
FOUR SEASONS
HAWK VALLEY
MANOR
TANGLEWOOD
BOWLING
CAINS
CITY COUNTY TRAVEL
Tony Kaylor.................... 221-245-245711
Dustin Kroft................... 177-246-277700
CLEARVIEW
CITY COUNTY TRAVEL
Jim Ritzman................... 227-246-231704
Tracy Beck...................... 201-226-176602
DUTCH
YOUNG AT HEART
Ed Ronald....................... 172-202-215589
Ardie Kopp..................... 170-233-139542
Al Johnson..................... 233-153-154540
Carol Stephan................ 147-221-168536
Marsha Copenhaver...... 164-198-142504
Carol Stoltzfus............... 172-144-156472
Marilyn Woods.............. 143-168-161472
EPHRATA LADIES
Sandra Hinkle................ 207-169-237613
Denise Woodworth....... 183-201-224608
LANCASTER COUNTY TRAVEL
Shayne Beck.................. 266-279-244789
Rich Graham.................. 247-247-279773
George Tomlinson......... 227-268-269764
Rick Miller...................... 279-239-246763
Terry Martin................... 233-247-257737
Jeff Wintersteen............ 244-236-240720
Mike Lewis..................... 215-245-259719
Curt Nolt........................ 205-235-268708
Scott Bertzfield.............. 222-226-257705
LEISURE
WEDNESDAY NIGHT MIXED
John Marks.................... 226-223-253702
COLLEGIATE
Elizabethtown........................... 0 0 0
Franklin & Marshall................... 2 2 4
Franklin & Marshall Scoring: M. Guarisco
2 (2:45, 40:26), M.K. Olsen (29:08), C. Wirth
(61:01).
Franklin & Marshall Assists: M. Guarisco,
B. Falcone.
SOG: E 3; F&M 20.
Saves: EM. Donlin 9; F&MA. Gubernick 2.
MLS
Saturdays Games
Orlando City at New England...... 7:30 p.m.
Chicago at Montreal......................... 8 p.m.
Toronto FC at Seattle...................... 10 p.m.
Philadelphia at San Jose............ 10:30 p.m.
C7
NFL
PRESEASON
Thursday, Sep. 3
New Orleans at Green Bay............... 7 p.m.
Baltimore at Atlanta......................... 7 p.m.
Cincinnati at Indianapolis................. 7 p.m.
Philadelphia at N.Y. Jets.................... 7 p.m.
Tampa Bay at Miami......................... 7 p.m.
Jacksonville at Washington.......... 7:30 p.m.
Carolina at Pittsburgh.................. 7:30 p.m.
Buffalo at Detroit......................... 7:30 p.m.
N.Y. Giants at New England.......... 7:30 p.m.
Minnesota at Tennessee................... 8 p.m.
Cleveland at Chicago........................ 8 p.m.
Houston at Dallas............................. 8 p.m.
Kansas City at St. Louis..................... 8 p.m.
Arizona at Denver............................. 9 p.m.
Oakland at Seattle.......................... 10 p.m.
San Diego at San Francisco............. 10 p.m.
ATLANTIC
LEAGUE
Freedom Division
W L Pct. GB
Lancaster........................32 19 .627
York.................................28 23 .549 4
Sugar Land......................23 29 .442 91-w
x-S. Maryland..................19 31 .380 121-w
Liberty Division
W L Pct. GB
x-Somerset......................28 24 .538
Bridgeport......................27 25 .519 1
Long Island.....................27 25 .519 1
Camden..........................22 30 .423 6
x-clinched first half
Wednesdays Games
York 9.......................................... Camden 2
Long Island 12........................ Bridgeport 0
Sugar Land 5........................ Somerset 0 (6)
Lancaster 4................... S. Maryland 2 (1st)
S. Maryland at Lancaster................ (n, 2nd)
Thursdays Games
Camden at York........................... 6:30 p.m.
Bridgeport at Long Island............ 6:35 p.m.
S. Maryland at Lancaster.................. 7 p.m.
Somerset at Sugar Land............... 8:05 p.m.
Fridays Games
Bridgeport at York....................... 6:30 p.m.
S. Maryland at Long Island.......... 6:35 p.m.
Camden at Lancaster........................ 7 p.m.
Somerset at Sugar Land............... 8:05 p.m.
S. MARYLAND
LANCASTER
ab r h bi
ab r h bi
Lewis,rf
4 1 1 1 Owens,cf 3 1 2 1
Stevenson,2b 3 0 2 0 Collier,lf
3 1 3 1
Wilson,1b
2 0 1 1 Matthes, rf 2 0 1 1
Rosa,dh
2 0 0 0 Rivers,dh 3 0 0 0
Maddox,ph 1 0 0 0 Cvzs-Glv,1b 2 1 0 0
Nelson,3b
4 0 0 0 Zawadzki,ss 3 1 1 0
Walton,lf
3 0 0 0 Feliz,3b
2 0 0 0
Frawley,ss
3 0 1 0 Cutler,c
2 0 0 1
Castillo,c
2 0 1 0 Kajimoto,2b 1 0 0 0
DeJesus,cf 3 1 1 0
Totals
27 2 7 2 Totals
21 4 7 4
S. Maryland......001 010
0 2 7 1
Lancaster..........100 210
0 4 7 0
2BStevenson; Collier. 3BDeJesus.
SFMatthes, Cutler. SHFeliz. EThompson. LOBS. Maryland 9; Lancaster 4. DP
Lancaster 1.
IP H R ER BB SO
S. Maryland
Thompson (L, 5-6)......... 6.0 7 4 3 2 2
Lancaster
Morgado........................ 2.0 3 1 1 1 3
Moskos (W, 1-0)............ 2.2 1 1 1 2 1
Andrelczyk..................... 1.1 2 0 0 1 2
Yevoli.............................. 0.1 1 0 0 0 0
Walden (S, 10)............... 0.2 0 0 0 1 0
SOLewis, Stevenson, Nelson, Walton, Frawley, DeJesus; Rivers, Kajimoto.
BBWilson 2, Rosa, Castillo, Stevenson;
Cavazos-Galvez, Kajimoto.
T2:31.
INTERNATIONAL
LEAGUE
North Division
W L Pct. GB
Scranton/W-B (Yanks).....78 61 .561
Rochester (Twins)...........73 66 .525 5
Buffalo (Blue Jays)..........67 72 .482 11
Syracuse (Nationals).......63 76 .453 15
Lehigh Valley (Phils)........62 77 .446 16
Pawtucket (Red Sox).......56 83 .403 22
South Division
W L Pct. GB
Norfolk (Orioles).............76 62 .551
Gwinnett (Braves)...........73 65 .529 3
Charlotte (White Sox).....72 67 .518 41-w
Durham (Rays)................71 68 .511 51-w
West Division
W L Pct. GB
Columbus (Indians).........80 59 .576
z-Indianapolis (Pirates)...80 59 .576
Louisville (Reds)..............63 76 .453 17
Toledo (Tigers)................58 81 .417 22
z-clinched playoff spot
Wednesdays Games
Syracuse 6..................................... Buffalo 2
Toledo 4..................................... Louisville 1
Rochester 8........................ Scranton/W-B 1
Durham 7................................... Charlotte 5
Columbus 4........................... Indianapolis 2
Pawtucket 6........................ Lehigh Valley 5
Gwinnett 6........................... Norfolk 2 (1st)
Gwinnett at Norfolk........................ (n, 2nd)
Thursdays Games
Durham at Charlotte.................. 12:05 p.m.
Louisville at Toledo...................... 6:30 p.m.
Buffalo at Scranton/W-B.............. 7:05 p.m.
Rochester at Pawtucket............... 7:05 p.m.
Gwinnett at Norfolk..................... 7:05 p.m.
Columbus at Indianapolis............ 7:05 p.m.
Syracuse at Lehigh Valley............. 7:05 p.m.
Fridays Games
Durham at Charlotte.................... 7:05 p.m.
Syracuse at Lehigh Valley............. 7:05 p.m.
Columbus at Louisville................. 7:05 p.m.
Gwinnett at Norfolk..................... 7:05 p.m.
Rochester at Pawtucket............... 7:05 p.m.
Buffalo at Scranton/W-B.............. 7:05 p.m.
Toledo at Indianapolis................. 7:15 p.m.
EASTERN
LEAGUE
Eastern Division
W L Pct. GB
z-Reading (Phillies).........78 58 .574
Binghamton (Mets)........75 61 .551 3
Trenton (Yankees)...........69 67 .507 9
New Britain (Rockies).....66 69 .489 111-w
New Hampshire (Jays)....65 69 .485 12
Portland (Red Sox)..........51 86 .372 271-w
Western Division
W L Pct. GB
z-Bowie (Orioles)............77 59 .566
Altoona (Pirates).............72 65 .526 51-w
Akron (Indians)...............69 68 .504 81-w
Richmond (Giants)..........68 67 .504 81-w
Harrisburg (Nationals)....66 71 .482 111-w
Erie (Tigers).....................60 76 .441 17
z-clinched playoff spot
Wednesdays Games
Portland 4............... New Hampshire 3 (10)
New Britain 6........................ Trenton 5 (12)
Binghamton 16............................ Reading 4
Richmond 3............................ Harrisburg 2
Akron 6.............................................. Erie 1
Bowie 4........................................ Altoona 0
Thursdays Games
Binghamton at Reading............... 6:35 p.m.
Portland at New Hampshire........ 6:35 p.m.
Richmond at Harrisburg................... 7 p.m.
New Britain at Trenton..................... 7 p.m.
Erie at Akron................................ 7:05 p.m.
Altoona at Bowie......................... 7:05 p.m.
Fridays Games
Akron at Harrisburg.......................... 7 p.m.
New Britain at Portland.................... 7 p.m.
New Hampshire at Trenton.............. 7 p.m.
Reading at Richmond.................. 7:05 p.m.
Altoona at Binghamton............... 7:05 p.m.
Bowie at Erie............................... 7:05 p.m.
NWSL
Fridays Game
Portland at Western New York.........
Saturdays Game
Seattle at Washington......................
Sundays Games
Houston at Chicago..........................
FC Kansas City at Sky Blue FC............
7 p.m.
7 p.m.
5 p.m.
6 p.m.
REC
SOFTBALL
OVER 70 S-P
South Red 10................................. E-town 5
Classieds
C8
Lancaster
CL
n Stuff ...............................Cx
...........................C9
n Financial ......................Cx
..................C11
Cx
n Automotive................
.............C8
n Services .......................Cx
...................C11
Rentals .........................Cx
n Rentals
.....................C11
...............C8
Cx
n Recreation ..................
..........C11
n Employment..............Cx
LEGAL NOTICES
LEGAL NOTICES
LEGAL NOTICES
INFORMATION
Lost
Legal Notices
Estate Notices
Found
Public Auctions
Estate Sales
Announcements
Legal Services
Please see the
Obituaries in the
A section for the
following:
Obits & Service
Information
Cemeteries/Lots
Cards of Thanks
In Memoriams
LEGAL NOTICES
Proprietary
Fund Types
Fiduciary
Fund Types
Trust Funds
$225,305
-$225,305
ASSETS
Cash and Investments
Other Assets
TOTAL ASSETS
General
$320,279
3,781
$324,060
LIABILITIES
Other Liabilities
TOTAL LIABILITIES
$122,102
122,102
$3,781
3,781
FUND BALANCES
Fund Equity
TOTAL LIABILITIES AND FUND BALANCES
201,958
$324,060
271,046
$274,827
---
$ 5,493
5,493
886,224
$886,224
1,040,536
$1,046,029
TOTAL REVENUES
TOTAL EXPENDITURES
EXCESS (DEFICIENCY) OF REVENUES
OVER EXPENDITURES
OTHER FINANCNG SOURCES (USES)
NET CHANGE IN FUND BALANCES
FUND BALANCES JANUARY 1, 2014
FUND BALANCES DECEMBER 31, 2014
24,853
(675,453)
(650,600)
852,558
$201,958
Special Revenue
$276,200
234,307
41,893
-41,893
229,153
$271,046
Enterprise
$ 944,810
832,325
Trust Funds
$35,632
52,616
(111,623)
677,593
566,330
319,894
$886,224
112,485
104,130
216,615
823,921
$1,040,536
(16,984)
-(16,984)
242,289
$225,305
The above financial information has been prepared from the audit report setting forth the opinion of a certified public accountant
engaged by the East Petersburg Borough Council. These financial statements are available for public inspection at the Borough Office
from 8:00 A.M. 4:30 P.M., Monday through Friday.
LEGAL NOTICES
LEGAL NOTICES
NOTICE
If you wish to defend, you
must enter a written appearance personally or by attorney and file your defenses or
objections in writing with the
court. You are warned that if
you fail to do so the case may
proceed without you and a
judgment may be entered
against you without further
notice for the relief requested
by the plaintiff. You may lose
money or property or other
rights important to you.
YOU SHOULD TAKE THIS
NOTICE
TO
YOUR
LAWYER AT ONCE. IF YOU
DO NOT HAVE A LAWYER,
GO TO OR TELEPHONE
THE OFFICE SET FORTH
BELOW. THIS OFFICE CAN
PROVIDE YOU WITH INFORMATION ABOUT HIRING A LAWYER.
IF YOU CANNOT AFFORD
TO HIRE A LAWYER, THIS
OFFICE MAY BE ABLE TO
PROVIDE YOU WITH INFORMATION ABOUT AGENCIES THAT MAY OFFER LEGAL
SERVICES
TO
ELIGIBLE PERSONS AT A
REDUCED FEE OR NO
FEE.
Notice to Defend:
Lawyer Referral Service
Lancaster Bar Association
28 East Orange Street
Lancaster, PA 17602
Telephone (717) 393-0737
NOTICE OF ACTION
IN MORTGAGE
FORECLOSURE
IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS OF
LANCASTER COUNTY,
PENNSYLVANIA
CIVIL ACTION LAW
COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
CIVIL DIVISION
LANCASTER COUNTY
No. 15-00845
US BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, AS TRUSTEE
FOR ADJUSTABLE RATE
MORTGAGE TRUST 20063, ADJUSTABLE RATE
MORTGAGE-BACKED
PASS-THROUGH CERTIFICATES, SERIES 2006-3
Plaintiff
vs.
ROBERT L. WEAVER, JR
Defendant
NOTICE
To ROBERT L. WEAVER, JR
You are hereby notified that
on January 30, 2015, Plaintiff, US BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, AS TRUSTEE
FOR ADJUSTABLE RATE
MORTGAGE TRUST 20063, ADJUSTABLE RATE
MORTGAGE-BACKED
PASS-THROUGH CERTIFICATES, SERIES 2006-3,
filed a Mortgage Foreclosure
Complaint endorsed with a
Notice to Defend, against you
in the Court of Common
Pleas of LANCASTER
County Pennsylvania, docketed to No. 15-00845.
Wherein Plaintiff seeks to
foreclose on the mortgage
secured on your property located at 333 NORTH 9TH
STREET, DENVER, PA
17517-1360 whereupon your
property would be sold by the
Sheriff of LANCASTER
County.
You are hereby notified to
plead to the above referenced Complaint on or before 20 days from the date of
this publication or a Judgment will be entered against
you.
Continued
Next Column
ANNOUNCEMENTS
SCAM ALERT
Advertisers - If you receive
payment for an item you are
selling and the amount is in
excess of your selling price,
do not attempt to cash the
check or cashiers check and
return the balance to the
buyer. This may be a scam.
To avoid falling victim to the
scam, we suggest you only
accept payment in the exact
amount of your item.
SUVS/CROSSOVERS
JEEP 1999 GRAND
CHEROKEE Exc, 200K mi,
$2900. insp. 285-4140
225,305
$225,305
Capital Projects
$1,725
112,988
---
AUTOMOTIVE
Cars for sale
Vehicle Financing/
Leasing
Classic/Specialty
Vehicles
Parts/Access.
Auto Services
Pick-Ups
SUVs/Crossovers
Vans
Utility Trailers
Trucks/Trailers/
Construction
Cars/Trucks Wanted
CADILLAC 93 DEVILLE,
White w/ maroon chord top,
beautiful, low miles, cold air,
inspd., sac $1995. 717627-4800 Leave Message
Ford 1994 Escort Ugly
duckling,inspected $300.
717-368-1770
2002 FORD TAURUS ES
Exc. Cond., approx. 95K
mi., A/C, electric window/
seat, $2400. 665-6831
Looking for baseball cards?
Be sure & check classifieds new ads every day!
HONDA 2010 CIVIC SDN
35K mi, auto, grey, exccond
4 cyl, $8900. 717-701-1032
Classified
Works!
Mark it . . .
97 LINCOLN TOWNCAR
low miles, white, runs great
cold air, CD, sac. $2400
717-627-4800 LV msg
GREAT
BUY!
CARS/TRUCKS WANTED
CLASSIC/SPECIALTY
VEHICLES
WANTED: Muscle, Classic,
Antique & Sports Cars.
Jeff Gast 717-575-4561
PICKUPS
2002 Ford Ranger V6, Auto,
One Owner! $4,995.00 Call
or Text 717-989-1444
1993 Ford F150 4x4 With cab. Automatic, good
condition, $4,500 negotiable.
717-367-0447
SOLD
CALL TODAY
291-8711
RECREATION
Bikes/Motorcycles
Misc. RVs
Travel Trailers/
Campers
Boats/Aviation
Sports/Exercise
Equipment
Swim Pools/Spas
BIKES/MOTORCYCLES
1996 FXDS-Conv HarleyDavidson 27K miles One
Owner Color Red $4,500.
717-569-5060
1992 Harley
Sportster Deluxe 5 Speed, low miles.
(717)606-6773
GREAT
BUY!
TRAVEL TRAILERS/
CAMPERS
www.STOLTZFUSRV.COM
RT 272 ADAMSTOWN
717-484-4344
BOATS/AVIATION
2006 Pro Crappie For Sale
Excellent Condition
175/25 HP W/Trailer,
Depth Finder, Trolling Motor & More $5,000.00 OBO
#717-687-8116
SPORTS/
EXERCISE EQUIPMENT
* RAINBOW SWING SET *
Redwood inclds: fort, slide,
3 swings. Clean & stained.
Will deliver & set up within
Lanc.Ctny, $350. 717-371-7288
The
Classified
C O N N E C T I O N
WORK!
LNP
III
LANCASTER, PA.
Q:
IndyCar racing is one of Americas fastest and still the biggest attraction in the world
over 250,000 annually enjoy the biggest race in the world, namely the Indianapolis 500.
A:
STUFF
HOUSEHOLD
GOODS/APPLIANCES
The Meadows
Community Yard Sale!
September 4th & 5th 7am-?
Off 272 in Adamstown.
DONEGAL
BUSINESS SUPPLIES/
EQUIPMENT
48Lx20Wx38H Full-View
lighted glass display case, 3
shelves-$150
70Lx20Wx38H Full-View
glass display case, 2
shelves-$200
70Lx20Wx38H 1/4-View
glass display case, white
cabinet-$100
717-940-2398
Due to new federal guidelines governing CRIB
SAFETY,
Lancaster
Newspapers will no longer
accept
ads for used cribs.
LAWN/NURSERY/
LANDSCAPE
1967 JOHN DEERE 112
LAWN TRACTOR w/snow
thrower & wheel weight
Also Craftsman Lawn Tractor abt 15 yrs old. 684-4893
WANTED TO BUY
Wanted:Abner Zook or
Aaron Zook 3-D ART.
Fair price paid in cash
215-257-9286
NEW!
HEMPFIELD
Circle This!
Estate Garage Sale!
PAPA IS DOWNSIZING!
Labor Day Mon Sept 7th
7am-3pm. 585 Church St.,
Landisville. Parking available
at Landisville Mennonite
Church on Bowman Rd.
Rain or shine!
Antiques, furniture, tools,
household items, recliner, lift
chair, electric wheelchair and
lots more! Everything must go!
Looking for a NEW job?
NEW positions added daily
GARAGE
G
AR
RAG
GE
$ALE
$
ALE
Greg Zyla is a
syndicated auto columnist
Prepared by
the Classied Department
GARAGE SALE
GARAGE
SALE
COCALICO
HEMPFIELD
LAMPETER STRASBURG
LANCASTER
CAMERAS,JEWERLY,ART,
& COLLECTIBLES. SOMETHING FOR everyone. 108
Charles Rd. 8a-2p, Fri-Sat.
MULTI-FAMILY YARD SALE!
3481 Horizon Dr. Fri 9/4 &
Sat 9/5, 8-? Glassware,
clothing, furniture and more!
LANCASTER
MULTI ESTATE
TAG & YARD SALE
FRI, SEPT 4, SAT, 5TH,
SUN, 6TH
8AM to 3PM. Discounts
Saturday, DEEP discounts
Sunday. Every item in and
around home must be sold
and will be priced to move.
Rain or shine, cash only.
LAMPETER STRASBURG
Circle This!
Annual Hans Herr Drive
Yard Sale! Friday 9/4 &
Saturday 9/5 8am-?
Something for everyone!
SAT 9/5 7 AM
1819 DIVOT COURT
RT 222 TURN ONTO MEADIA AVE FURNITURE,
NASCAR, TOOLS, HH
GOODS, *BIG SALE*
ESTATE/YARD SALE
Antiques, refinishing
shop tools & supplies,
household items. Fri & Sat
8-2. 1721 Hans Herr Dr.,
Willow Street, PA.
MANHEIM TOWNSHIP
Everything
must
go!
Books, clothing, furniture,
household items, collectables, and more! Sat., 7-1.
810 Blue Grass Rd, across
from Lanc Bible College
MultiFamily Garage Sale
Saturday 9/5 7-1
800 Block Janet Ave
Grandview Heights
PENN MANOR
**GARAGE SALE **
Circle This!
Sidewalk Sale! Saturday
9/5 8am-? Plants,
old photos, some antiques.
107 West King St.
Collectibles,
household
items, clowns, book matches,
toddler boy clothes, lots of interesting treasures. 226
South School Lane, off of
Maple. Sat. Sept. 5th, 7AM
Garage Sale
Multi-family yard sale.
Clothes and other household items. Sep. 4th & 5th
8 to 4. on Wiker Avenue.
Circle This!
Fri and Sat, 9/4 and 9/5 from
7am-7pm at 2101 Franklin
Rd., (corner of Prospect and
Franklin), Lots of kid stuff,
Household and garden, Motorcycle gear and more
MANHEIM CENTRAL
GARAGE
G
AR
RAG
GE
$ALE
$
ALE
Bargain Counter!
Looking for
information online?
Check out
www.lancasteronline.com
PEQUEA VALLEY
GARAGE
G
AR
RAG
GE
$ALE
$
ALE
SOLANCO
291-8711
WARWICK
bargaincounter@LNPnews.com
LNP
III
LANCASTER, PA.
BARGAIN COUNTER
New items added daily!
BARGAIN COUNTER
BARGAIN COUNTER
UNDER $150
BARGAIN COUNTER
UNDER $150
BARGAIN COUNTER
UNDER $150
BARGAIN COUNTER
UNDER $150
BARGAIN COUNTER
UNDER $150
BARGAIN COUNTER
UNDER $150
BARGAIN
COUNTER
NEW ITEMS ADDED DAILY
Limit 3 ads per week
Private individuals only
Price and phone number must be in ad
One item per ad
No gun-related items
All Bargain Counter ads must be prepaid
Create your Bargain Counter ad below by writing one word per box.
Your ad can include up to 6 short words, plus a price and phone number.
Price
Phone
FREE ITEMS
EYE
CATCHERS
All ads
compete for
the readers
attention.
Use
EYE CATCHERS
to make your
ad stand out!
Call
Today
Circle This!
E CELLENT
GARAGE
$ALE
Hiring
Name ________________________________________________________
Address ______________________________________________________
City ______________________________ Zip _______________________
Phone _______________________________________________________
PAYMENT ENCLOSED
Mail to:
LNP MEDIA GROUP, Inc.
Bargain Counter
PO Box 1328
Lancaster, PA 17608
NOW
FULL
TIME
Part
Time
LNP
III
LANCASTER, PA.
MECHANICAL/TRADES
MECHANICAL/TRADES
Machine Shop
Project Manager
- Five years experience preferred.
- Must have estimating experience.
PROFESSIONAL
PROFESSIONAL
Industrial Painter/Blaster
For Personal Residence
Paradise Township
Solanco School District
eoe
m/f
GENERAL HELP
NEWS CORRESPONDENTS
GENERAL HELP
Penn Township
Newspaper Motor
Routes Available
TOWN
STREET
EMPLOYMENT
Schools / Instruction
Career Services
Employment
Agencies
Medical Dental
Office / Clerical
Stores / Retailing
Restaurants / Food
Service
Mechanical / Trades
Technical
Sales
Management
Education
Professional
Transportation
General Help
Volunteer
Domestic Help
Situations Wanted
Child Care
Nursing/Elderly Care
RESTAURANTS/
FOOD SERVICE
COOK NEEDED
Expd. Breakfast & Lunch.
Apply: 66 N. Queen St.
READ YOUR
AD THE
FIRST DAY IT
APPEARS
SALES
TRANSPORTATION
Experienced Dump Truck
Driver - Excellent pay,
717-587-7378
Pre-Press Ad Builder
TRANSPORTATION
GENERAL HELP
l Attendance Bonus
l 4 Hours/Day
l Paid Training Program
l Collect Unemployment
Over Summer
l Class in September
l Classes, Training, Testing
In House
SHULTZ
TRANSPORTATION CO.
717-464-5800
When Youre Ready To Sell
That Farmland, Sell with
Classifieds For Best Results.
PET PLACE
DOGS
DOGS
Beautiful
wrinkly
AKC
English Bulldog pups.
Vet checked & vaccinated,
ready 9/4 with health guarantee. $1,800. 717-617-8404
MINI POODLES - Variable
colors, family raised on farm,
very cute! vet checked. F:
$600, M:$525. 717-786-4789
SCAM ALERT
Advertisers - If you receive
payment for an item you are
selling and the amount is in
excess of your selling price,
do not attempt to cash the
check or cashiers check and
return the balance to the
buyer. This may be a scam.
To avoid falling victim to the
scam, we suggest you only
accept payment in the exact
amount of your item.
Cute
DOGS
$1025
Millersville
M930
$775
E938
$823
7 DAY DELIVERY
*Must be 18+ years. Have a Valid Driver's License. Dependable vehicle required.
Selling a pet?
New lower priced pet ads
available, 4 lines of
text with photo!
7 days $35, 14 days $50
Call 291-8711
NEW!
CATS
Persian-Himmy Ktns.
cfa reg,shots. $200&up
717-569-6226
PENN PAVING
Summer special..time for a
new driveway! Low rates &
free estimates! 717-3442083
COOPER PAVING
Specials: Parking lots,
farm lanes, driveways.
Seal coating, paving,
millings. 717-278-8438
A1-PAVING
Locally owned & oper.
We make paving
affordable. Free Est.
717-490-5192
ASPHALT PAVING
Allied Asphalt Paving, seal
coating, patching,+ more!
Spring /Summer specials,
free est. 867-8456
Stevan E. Brossman
Seal Coating. 25 yrs. exp.,
locally owned Hand brushed.
PA#024520. 717-656-9860
LAWN/GARDEN/
LANDSCAPING
AFFORDABLE MOWING,
Seasonal Clean Up, Leaves,
Trimming, Mulch. 30 yrs. exp.
Fully Insured 392-5540
New In Town? Watch These Columns
For All Your Household Items.
291-8711
HOME IMPROVEMENTS
HAULING
GENERAL HAULING
Clean up
Buildings, Basements
Yards.
392-7855
Ind./Comm. Realtors
717-293-4477
View More Than 300
Properties Online at:
highassociates.com/
propertysearch
RENTALS
Furnished Apts./City
Furn. Apts./Suburbs
Unfurn. Apts./City
Unfurn. Apts./
Suburb
Homes / City
Homes / Suburbs
Mobile Home Rentals
Misc. Rental Property
Shared Living
Rooms for Rent
Garages / Storage
Farms / Land
Vacation Rentals
Misc. Rentals
Wanted to Rent
Rental Services
UNFURNISHED
APARTMENTS/CITY
Eff-26 1/2 S Prince-$499
1Br-244 W. King-$549
1Br 234 N. Lime-$629
Gerhart RE 509-1444
Find
Cars
Classics
Pickups
4x4s
Vans
Trailers
Buses
Const. Equip.
Parts &
Service
in AUTOMOTIVE
24 & 38 S. Prince, 1BDR
$535 - $625 incl. W/S/T. +
Sec. Dep. 394-0362
UNFURNISHED
APARTMENTS/SUBURBS
Circle This!
DUPLEX- 3/4 BR, 2 BA,
2 car garg., $1295/mo incld
w/s/trh, no smk, no pets,
Rheems, PA. 717-471-3611
Business
Business
Opportunities //
Opportunities
Investment
Investment
Office/Business
Office/Business
Property
Property
Investment Property
Property
Investment
Loans // Mortgages
Mortgages
Loans
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
/INVESTMENTS
Asian Rest & Pool Hall
Business only $79,900
Call 808-1942 Rtl
REAL ESTATE
Homes for Sale / City
Homes for Sale /
Suburbs
Open Houses
Manufactured
Housing
Misc. Real Estate
Lots / Acreage
Farms / Farmland
Out of Area Property
Real Estate Wanted
Real Estate Services
HOMES/CITY
238 W James: 2BR house,
new kitch. $750+util,
Gd credit. 393-3838 Rltr.
507 Green St. 3BR, $765,
security deposit required.
717-299-0003
HOMES/SUBURBS
FINANCIAL
FINANCIAL
291-8611
OFFICE/BUSINESS
PROPERTY
NEW HOME!
SERVICES
ASPHALT PAVING
Esbenshade Farms
PACKING POSITIONS-1st
shift
SANITATION-2nd shift
EGG PROCESSING
Entry level positions
includes weekends &
holidays Good starting
wage & Benefits Rate
increase after 90 days.
Company match 401k plan.
Get application.
www.esbenshadefarmmill.com
Send resume to email:
steve@esbenshadefarmmill.com
Can apply in person
220 Eby Chiques Road
Mount Joy PA 17552
FRAMING & REMODELINGMin. 5 yrs exp. valid driv
license & DOT med. card.
req. 15 mi radius from Gap
442-1918 lv msg.
RT. # EST. $
Mountville
MECHANICAL/
TRADES
McCarthy Tire Service Co,
Inc. has immediate full time
openings for the following
positions at our location in
Lancaster, PA:
Check
For New
Routes
Daily!
GARAGES/STORAGE
2 bay garage, 2 drs, 24x20
sqft + shop area 10x15,total
sqft is 630, electric.$250/mo
717-475-1664 517-2135
PRIVATE 2 CAR GARAGE
in Mountville $250/mo.
Call: 682-2409
78%
of recent Home
Buyers
used
Real Estate
Classified ads while
shopping for a
home!
CLASSIFIED
REAL ESTATE
SECTIONS
800-900
CALL
291-8711
To Place Your Ad
C12
SPORTS
LNP | LANCASTER, PA
US OPEN
US OPEN
AT A GLANCE
n MENS SEEDED
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Lancaster Weather
TODAY
FRIDAY
91
68
84
61
SATURDAY
82
55
POP: 40%
POP: 5%
POP: 10%
ALMANAC
REGION
LANCASTER
Partly sunny, hot and humid
today. High 89 to 93. Winds
north-northwest 4-8 mph.
Warm and humid tonight with a
thunderstorm in spots.
100
80
60
12 AM 3
9 NOON 3
9 12 AM
TEMPERATURE
Lancaster
90/64
Ephrata
90/67
New Holland
90/65
Lancaster (last year)
89/69
Normals for the day
81/60
Year to date high 92 on Aug. 17
Year to date low
-2 on Feb. 20
PRECIPITATION
24 hours ending 7 p.m.
0.00
Month to date
0.00
Normal month to date
0.26
Month to date departure
-0.26
Year to date
25.76
Normal year to date
28.57
Year to date departure
-2.81
Greatest Sep. total 11.51 (1975)
Least Sep. total
0.18 (1943)
Source: www.atmos.millersville.edu/~wic
PRECIPITATION
Total precipitation for the 24-hour
period ending 7 p.m. yesterday
Brownstown
Columbia
County Park
Ephrata
Flory Mill
Manheim
Mount Joy
Smoketown
Truce
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
RIVER STAGES
Levels as of 7:00 a.m. yesterday
Susquehanna
at Harrisburg
at Marietta
Conestoga
at Lancaster
at Conestoga
Feet
Below
Flood
3.25
33.19
13.75
15.81
3.09
1.27
7.91
87
63
POP: 5%
83
65
POP: 5%
Plenty of sunshine
Plenty of sunshine
Erie
83/66
Oil City
85/62
AIR QUALITY
Todays forecast
300
500
Yesterdays readings
Main Pollutant
Particulates
Ozone
Bradford
81/59
Ozone
50
70
NATION
Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Seattle
66/50
Winnipeg
90/69
Montreal
80/54
Billings
79/53
POLLEN
Grasses
Trees
Weeds
Mold
Scranton
88/66
Williamsport
Punxsutawney
89/67
Wilkes-Barre
84/65
90/66
State College
84/65
Butler
85/63
Absent
Absent
High
Moderate
San Francisco
72/58
Denver
88/57
New York
92/73
Detroit
84/68
Washington
93/75
Kansas City
90/72
Los Angeles
78/65
TODAY
FRI
Sunrise
6:34 a.m. 6:35 a.m.
Sunset
7:34 p.m. 7:33 p.m.
Moonrise 10:57 p.m. 11:43 p.m.
Moonset
12:10 p.m. 1:15 p.m.
Last
New
First
Full
Toronto
83/64
Minneapolis
89/71
Chicago
87/68
Atlanta
90/72
El Paso
92/71
Houston
86/73
Chihuahua
92/62
T-storms
-10s
Rain
-0s
Showers
0s
10s
Snow
20s
Flurries
30s
Ice
40s
Cold Front
50s
60s
Warm Front
70s
HONDRUAUTO.COM
80s
90s
POP: 30%
An afternoon
thunderstorm possible
Wind: SW 4-8 mph
BEACH REPORT
Atlantic City: Partly sunny today.
Wind north 4-8 knots becoming
east. Seas 1-3 feet. Visibility clear.
Water temp 77.
Cape May: Partly sunny today.
Wind north-northeast 4-8 knots.
Seas 1-3 feet. Visibility clear. Water
temp 80.
Rehoboth Beach: Partly sunny
today. Wind north-northeast 4-8
knots. Seas 1-2 feet. Visibility clear.
Water temp 77.
Ocean City, MD: Very humid today.
Wind north-northeast 4-8 knots.
Seas 1-3 feet. Visibility clear. Water
temp 80.
Outer Banks: A thunderstorm
around today. Wind south-southwest at 4-8 knots. Seas 1-3 feet.
Water temp 81.
NATION
TODAY
Anchorage
Atlanta
Atlantic City
Baltimore
Boston
Buffalo
Cleveland
Chicago
Charlotte
Dallas
Denver
Harrisburg
Honolulu
Las Vegas
Los Angeles
Nashville
New Orleans
New York
Orlando
Philadelphia
Phoenix
Pittsburgh
Salt Lake City
San Francisco
Wash., D.C.
FRI
Hi/Lo/W
Hi/Lo/W
56/49/r
90/72/t
87/72/pc
92/71/pc
83/64/pc
84/64/t
84/65/t
87/68/t
95/70/pc
93/76/pc
88/57/t
91/71/pc
89/77/t
96/72/s
78/65/pc
92/71/s
90/76/t
92/73/pc
92/75/t
95/75/pc
99/79/t
87/67/pc
89/67/s
72/58/pc
93/75/pc
58/48/r
91/72/t
81/67/t
88/66/t
71/59/s
83/62/s
85/67/pc
85/68/t
92/69/t
95/78/t
87/58/t
85/65/t
90/78/t
93/70/s
76/64/pc
92/71/s
91/77/t
83/65/pc
91/74/t
86/67/pc
95/77/t
87/68/t
87/67/s
71/58/pc
89/71/t
WEDNESDAY EXTREMES
Miami
91/77
Monterrey
91/70
83
56
POP: 10%
Plenty of sun
POCONOS
Fog in the morning; otherwise,
partly sunny and warm today. High
82 to 86. Partly cloudy tonight.
84
58
Sunshine
DELAWAREMARYLAND
Partly sunny and humid today; an
afternoon shower or thunderstorm
in the Maryland panhandle. High
77 to 93.
SUNDAY
110s
HARRISBURG
High:
Low:
MANHEIM
E-TOWN
MT. JOY
LANCASTER