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WILKES-BARRE, PA SAtuRdAy, JunE 15, 2013 50
THE TIMES LEADER
6 09815 10011
A NEWS: Local 3A
Nation & World: 5A
Obituaries: 8A
Editorials: 11A
INSIDE
Weathered
Another tough
day at Merion.
SPORTS, 1B
Weather: 12A
B SPORTS: 1B
B BUSINESS: 8B
Stocks: 8B
C AT HOME: 1C
Birthdays: 4C
Television: 6C
Movies: 6C
Puzzles: 7C
D CLASSIFIED: 1D
Comics: 24A
Who calls
Eckley home?
Roots run deep in village AT HOME, 1C
Wanted: A
CEO who can
do tequila shots
BUSINESS, 8B
Pa. ofcial
makes pitch
for road funds
HAZLETON Pennsylva-
nias top transportation ofcials
gathered before business and
government leaders Friday af-
ternoon to share two visions of
the future.
In one, bipartisan support
leads to passage of Senate Bill
1, a $2.5 billion transportation
funding measure that they say
would help pay for desper-
ately needed repairs to roads
and bridges as well as new
projects, such as a $20 million
plan to extend Route 424 in the
area of the Humboldt Industrial
Park, that will foster economic
growth.
The other possibility? A rust-
tainted status quo in which
many aging spans must be
weight-restricted or closed rath-
er than xed, potholes continue
to pockmark the roads, transit
service levels are are slashed
and tens of thousands of con-
struction and engineering jobs
vanish.
I dont think it takes a lot of
context to see what the right
decision is, state Transporta-
tion Secretary Barry J. Schoch
said.
Whatever happens to Senate
Bill 1 in the House this month,
Schoch and Pennsylvania Turn-
pike Commission CEO Mark
Compton were able to reveal
at least one tangible element of
improved transportation policy,
in the form of a pioneering deal
under which the two agencies
will save $1.5 million by sharing
LONg mAy thEy WAvE
PETE G. WILCOX/THE TIMES LEADER
A
merican ags wave in the breeze over Public Square in downtown Wilkes-Barre on Friday
afternoon, which turned out to be a warm and sunny Flag Day. Congress adopted the Stars
and Stripes as the ag of the United States on June 14, 1777. It wasnt until 1949 that an act of
Congress designated the 14th day of June every year as National Flag Day.
Data supports mayor;
crime down in W-B
WILKES-BARRE Although
residents at a council meeting ex-
pressed disbelief at Mayor Tom
Leightons comment crime is down
in the city, statistics are on his side.
Data from the Pennsylvania
State Police Uniform Crime Re-
porting System showed a 5.06 per-
cent decrease in known offenses
in a year-to-year comparison as of
Friday.
Leighton at-
tributed the pub-
lics perception of
increased crime
to ofcers mak-
ing more arrests,
and again the
reporting system
supports him.
There were 811 total arrests as of
Friday compared to 798 for June
14, 2012.
The offense and arrest totals do
not match up because arrests have
Coxton yards dig offers clues about areas settlers
DURYEA Mark Dziak
knelt down in the woods to
retrieve a shard of blue-eck-
ed pottery from between the
roots of an old tree, sending
a long-legged spider scurry-
ing for cover as he lifted the
nickel-sized ceramic chunk
out of the dirt.
I love nding things that
have been lost, said Dziak,
as he rotated the glazed frag-
ment between his ngers.
Theres something fascinat-
ing about scooping up some
Man allegedly
robs 4 buyers
of marijuana
WILKES-BARRE City
police arrested a man they say
lured four people to a street
corner to buy marijuana and
then robbed them at gunpoint.
Jason L. Glover, 25, of East
Orange, N.J., was arraigned
Friday on two counts of rob-
bery and a single count of
theft. He was jailed at the Lu-
zerne County Correctional Fa-
cility for lack of $50,000 bail.
Glover was arrested when
police found him at 273 Carey
Ave. about 30 minutes after
By EDWARD LEWIS
elewis@timesleader.com
See GLOVER, Page 12A
Visitors bureau petitions
for rescue of rail station
Area hotelier Gus Genetti
said the state of the 143-year-
old former train station at the
corner of Market Street and
Wilkes-Barre Boulevard is a
disaster.
Its at one of the gateways
into the city of Wilkes-Barre,
and it shows visitors decay and
neglect, said Genetti. Its just
a shame.
Genetti and other members
of the county Convention and
Visitors Bureau Board of Di-
rectors sent a letter to county
ofcials last week urging them
to help nd a solution to stabi-
lize and renovate the former
Central Railroad of New Jersey
station, preferably as a home
for the county tourism agency
located in rented space on Pub-
lic Square.
The board is not trying to
push the county to allocate
funding, stressed Genetti and
Merle Mackin, the visitor bu-
reaus executive director.
We understand the county
is not in a position to fund
this, said Mackin. Were try-
Market Street site in W-B
should be stabilized for later
use, project proponents say.
By JENNIFER LEARN-ANDES
jandes@timesleader.com
See STATION, Page 12A
Secretary Barry J. Schoch
visits Hazleton to tout shared
projects and proposed SB 1.
By RogER DuPuIS
rdupuis@timesleader.com
See ROADS, Page 12A
History buffs unearth frontier cabin
AIMEE DILGER /THE TIMES LEADER
Volunteers John Dziak and his son, Mark, discuss the remains
of a pioneer cabin in Coxton Yard, Duryea.
By RogER DuPuIS
rdupuis@timesleader.com
See CABIN, Page 9A
In yearly comparison through
Friday, statistics show a 5
percent drop in known offenses.
By JERRY LYNoTT
jlynott@timesleader.com
See CRIME, Page 12A
Leighton
they did it!
Four classes bid
school farewell
NEWS, 6A, 7A
Divorces sought and led in
the Luzerne County Protho-
notarys Ofce from June 10
to 14:
David Probert, unknown
address, and Nona Probert,
unknown address
Andrea Kratz, Berwick, and
Richard Kratz Jr., Drums
Claudia Gesualdi, West Hazleton,
and Arnold Gesualdi, Duryea
Denise Williams, Luzerne, and
Timothy Williams, Luzerne
Joseph Lombardo, Hazleton,
and Irene Lombardo, White
Haven
Megan Shults, McAdoo, and Cas-
sidy Shults, Sugarloaf
Ivy Bixby, Hunlock Creek, and
Jesse Bixby, Noxen
Fred Kramer III, Drums, and
Tempest Kramer, Drums
Tammy Urbanski, Pittston
Twp., and Christopher Urbanski,
Pittston Twp.
Michelle DePriest, Exeter, and
Timothy DePriest, Exeter
Lori Preston, Dupont, and
Thomas Preston, Moosic
Brian Karwaski, Wallace, N.C.,
and Doreen Karwaski, Wilkes-
Barre
Kathy Kotch, Nanticoke, and
Michael Kotch, Nanticoke
Kristi Smith, Hazleton, and Ben-
jamin Smith, McAdoo
David Massaker Sr., Plymouth,
and Joyce Massaker, Mountain
Top
Samantha Reed, Hunlock Creek,
and John Reed, Hunlock Creek
Lamara Sterling, West Pittston,
and Robert Sterling, Pittston
Marriage license applications
led in the Luzerne County
Register of Wills Ofce from
June 10 to 14:
Casare Natale, Frisco, Texas, and
Catherine Novak, Frisco, Texas
Jame Brian Chorba, Danville,
and Alicia Marie Jacoby, Drums
Thomas Capese, Glen Lyon, and
Marianne Hillan, Glen Lyon
Mariusz Hacia, Kingston, and
Agata Pawlica, Freeland
Luis David Cepeda Carrasco,
Hazleton, and Zuleyka Rodri-
guez, Hazle Township
David Thomas Fine, Plymouth,
and Katherine Ann Zeske,
Plymouth
Edward Paul Zdancewicz,
Nanticoke, and Nina V. Ivanova,
Nanticoke
Sean Edward Gallagher, West
Pittston, and Stacey Ann Oliver,
West Pittston
Stephen Balucha, Wilkes-Barre,
and Sara Marie Bartoletti,
Wilkes-Barre
Roberto Anibal Reyes, Warren-
ton, N.C., and Kelsey Elizabeth
Parry, Warrenton, N.C.
Daniel Lopez, Wilkes-Barre, and
Yarimar Tlatenchi, Wilkes-Barre
Thomas R. Dunbar Jr., Wilkes-
Barre, and Heather Sean Leman-
ski, Wilkes-Barre
Ronald Roy Hottenstein Sr.,
Freeland, and Amanda Lee
Acker, Freeland
Joseph M. Kiddish Jr., Drifton,
and Jodi Lyn Showman, Drifton
Corey Frank, Clarks Summit, and
Erin Lyn McDade, Sugar Notch
John Nicholas Isenerg, West
Wyoming, and Emily Konopka,
West Wyoming
Craig James Butler, Pittston,
and Samantha Elise Petroff,
Pittston
Joshua John Bellio, Kingston,
and Cynthia Louise Compton,
Kingston
Christopher Zawatsky, Wilkes-
Barre, and Laura Satkowski,
Wilkes-Barre
Addresses unavaliable for the
following:
Bernard John McDonald and
Danielle Marie Burton
Kyle Robert Pegarella and
Corinne Elziabeth Chonko
Colin J. Walsh and Stephanie
Gawlas
Seth M. Moyer and Kendyl Burda
Rahsaan Briggs and Roshinda
Johnson
Malik Austin and Keiyona Devine
Eric Michael Ourso and Nicole
Marie Sands
Nelson C. Woehrle III and Shel-
ley Hymes
Anthony Majusiak and Melani
Schaeffer
Rickey D. Weaver and Joanne
Rhoads
Donald Lee Pientka and Jillian
Louise Bolesta
Patrick Luke Kilts and Heather
Elizabeth Onore
Douglas Letcher and Shannon
Marie Pfortmiller
Shon M. Khan and Mehnaz Sha
Sheikh
Matthew James Pirolli and Cath-
erine Ann Guarnieri
Brian Jordan Rappaport and
Gaia Waisbrod
www.timesleader.com TIMES LEADER SATuRDAy, JunE 15, 2013
timesleader.com
DETAILS
LOTTERY
MIDDAY DRAWING
DAILY NUMBER - 1-9-3
BIG 4 - 9-9-9-5
QUINTO - 8-1-0-2-2
TREASURE HUNT
10-12-15-22-24
NIGHTLY DRAWING
DAILY NUMBER - 3-6-5
BIG 4 - 1-3-9-9
QUINTO -7-0-5-3-0
CASH 5
08-14-19-23-29
MEGA MILLIONS
02-05-31-33-34
MEGA BALL - 20
HARRISBURG - Two players
matched all ve numbers
in Fridays Cash 5 jack-
pot drawing, each receiving
$250,000. Todays jackpot will
be worth $125,000. Lottery
ofcials reported 179 players
matched four numbers, win-
ning $166.50 each; 5,453 play-
ers matched three numbers,
winning $9 each; and 60, 581
players matched two numbers,
winning $1 each.
OBITUARIES
Bogdan, John
Coyne, William
Davis, Kim
Ferretti, Mary Ann
Golembeski, Carolyn
Grzymski, Josephine
Miller, Clyde Jr.
Montedonico,
Valentine
ODell, Harry
Roberts, Joan
Turel, Caroline
Webb, Samuel
Pages 8A
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and update them promptly.
Corrections will appear in
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mation to help us correct an
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more thoroughly, call the
newsroom at 829-7242.
THE TIMES LEADER A CIvITAS MEDIAcompany
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Regional Business Development
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wlafferty@civitasmedia.com
JOE BUTKIEWICZ
VP/Executive Editor
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ldaris@timesleader.com
PAGE 2A
KINGSTON TWP. There
was denitely a different de-
nition of dancing shoes on
the Lands at Hillside Farms
Friday night as a majority of
the 200-plus guests sported
cowboy boots and their favor-
ite western attire.
New Country was the
theme of the Volunteers in
Medicine annual Music, Mem-
ories and Medicine Gala held
inside and on the grounds of
the former Conyngham Fam-
ily Cottage.
Proceeds from the $150-per-
plate event assist with the
overall operations and direct
patient care at the VIM Medi-
cal and Dental Clinic on North
Pennsylvania Avenue in Wil-
kes-Barre.
Volunteers in Medicine is
a nonprot organization that
helps meet the primary health
care needs of the working
uninsured and under-insured
populations in 93 locations
across the United States that
vary in size and scope.
The generosity of donors
and volunteers in the medi-
cal community have enabled
the clinic to expand services
beyond primary care at the
Wilkes-Barre location, said
Kathleen Hirthler, assistant
medical director and a nurse
practitioner who co-chaired
the event with her husband,
Michael.
Executive Director Kelly Ra-
nieli said that in addition to
doctors and dentists, the clinic
now has chiropractors, clinical
pharmacists, psychologists,
registered dietitians, a social
worker and others volunteer-
ing their services.
There are 93 VIM locations
in the United States. The
Wilkes-Barre branch was rst
envisioned by Dr. Susan Sor-
doni, who conducted a feasibil-
ity study that revealed 35,000
working Luzerne County resi-
dents had no access to health
insurance. The clinic opened
in 2008 and operates through
private foundation grants and
donations; the annual gala is
the major fund raiser.
And this gala is extra spe-
cial because its our fth anni-
versary, Ranieli said.
Each year, gala organiz-
ers choose a different musi-
cal theme, Ranieli said. This
year, its a country theme, so
we have a semi-local enter-
tainer, Aaron Kelly, whos from
the Dushore area and making
it big in Nashville. He made it
into the Top 5 (in Season 9) of
American Idol.
Crestwood High School stu-
dent Alyssa Golden, of Moun-
tain Top, entertained during
the cocktail hour.
Were happy to have ris-
ing local entertainment; it re-
ally makes this very exciting,
Hirthler said.
Among those enjoying the
festivities was Debbie Holland-
er, who volunteers at the clinic
doing things such as screening
patients and ling charts. I do
anything they need me to do
thats non-medical, she said.
Hollander, of Kingston, said
she decided to volunteer be-
cause its an excellent cause
and theres a denite need in
our community, noting the
high unemployment rate and
that people receiving unem-
ployment compensation also
qualify for services.
Dr. Rich Grossman, a den-
tist from Kingston, is one of
about a dozen dentists who
volunteer at the clinic.
Some of us come during
the work day, some people
come at night. Were a very
dedicated bunch, just trying to
give back to the community,
Grossman said.
Boots, jeans OK at gala
By STEVE MOCARSKY
smocarsky@timesleader.com
BILL TARUTIS/FOR THE TIMES LEADER
American Idol top-ve nalist Aaron Kelly, second from right, warms up with his band, 2nd
South, before cocktail hour at the annual Volunteers in Medicine Music, Memories and Medicine
Gala celebrating the organizations fth anniversary with a New Country theme at the Lands
at Hillside Farms in Kingston Township on Friday evening.
Area Red Cross ofcials note accomplishments, set goals
PLAINS TWP. Two years
ago, Heather Bleiler and her hus-
band were living a dream: a new
home in a safe Mountain Top
community, two of their three
children beginning school pro-
grams, and a fourth child on the
way.
Then tragedy struck.
Out of the blue, all of the ex-
citement turned to horror when
at 32 weeks (of pregnancy), I
stopped feeling my baby move,
Bleiler told a room full of Ameri-
can Red Cross employees and
board members Thursday at the
Northeast Blood Services Region
annual meeting at the Best West-
ern East Mountain Inn.
An ultrasound showed Ble-
iler and her son were suffering
a fetal/maternal hemorrhage. A
Cesarean section was performed
immediately.
My son was born with only
15 percent of his blood supply,
Bleiler said. My sons doctor
immediately started a blood
transfusion. He responded well
to several more transfusions over
two days. And now, 18-month-old
Paxton Nathaniel is healthy, ram-
bunctious and loves to climb up
anything.
I must admit, for years, I was
afraid to donate blood. Even with
both my parents donating regu-
larly, I was scared of needles and
pain. But what would have hap-
pened to my sweet baby if some-
one else thought that? What if
everyone thought, Its OK, some-
one else will do it? There would
be nowhere to go, Bleiler said,
choking back tears.
Today, my son is here
strong, happy and growing
because somewhere, somebody
made the choice to donate and
save a life, Bleiler said.
Bleiler might have been preach-
ing to the choir, but her story
reminded the staffers and board
members how important their
work is, and provided some mo-
tivation.
In addition to electing new
board members Joyce Brackbill,
Dr. Irvin Wright, Bruce Mellot,
Ronald Beers and Jean McDer-
mott, attendees heard from CEO
Maria Elena Geyer about the past
years accomplishments, which
included collecting 75,000 units
of blood that helped more than
225,000 recipients.
They also received a medical
update from Dr. Ralph Vassallo,
chief medical ofcer; heard from
Laurene Cianfrani, senior direc-
tor of sales and hospital relations,
on the competition for-prot
blood suppliers and new hos-
pital initiatives; and from guest
speaker Peter Brown, the new re-
gional executive director.
Brown said the Red Cross has
been making an effort to have the
Blood Services and Humanitarian
Services divisions work together
seamlessly as one Red Cross.
That means we should be
able, as an organization, to de-
liver the services that are needed
where theyre needed, regardless
of an individual communitys abil-
ity to generate funds, have volun-
teers, have materials. We need to
be there whenever called upon,
wherever needed, and to build a
structure that would enable us to
do that, he said.
Gary Williams was honored
for his contributions while serv-
ing on the Advisory Board, and
donor recruitment representative
Marge Smith and teamsupervisor
of collections Karen Ranck were
honored for their dedicated work.
ERIC SEIDLE/FOR THE TIMES LEADER
Regional Executive Director Peter Brown speaks at the annual
Northeastern Pennsylvania American Red Cross board meeting
Thursday afternoon.
Attendees at agencys annual
meeting hear rst-person
account of its life-saving work.
By STEVE MOCARSKY
smocarsky@timesleader.com
PUBLIC RECORD
Volunteers in Medicine marks 5th anniversary
Email tied to DCNR chiefs
resignation is released
HARRISBURG Gov. Tom
Corbetts ofce released Friday
an email exchange that it says
led to the forced resignation
this week of a member of his
Cabinet.
The May 3 exchange was be-
tween former Secretary Rich-
ard Allan of the Department of
Conservation and Natural Re-
sources and his wife, Patricia,
who at the time worked for the
Department of Environmental
Protection.
It apparently involved prob-
lems Patricia Allan was hav-
ing with a female co-worker in
making plans for the depart-
ments annual falcon-banding
event, in which biologists
place metal identication
bands on young falcons that
nest on a ledge near the Capi-
tol so they can be monitored
after they leave the nest.
In one email, Patricia Al-
lan wrote that the co-worker,
who is black, was showing
her true colors. Richard Al-
lan responded with one word
COLORS in all capital
letters and followed by excla-
mation points.
The employee learned about
the email and led a com-
plaint.
The Associated Press
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com SATuRDAy, JunE 15, 2013
timesleader.com
PAGE 3A
LOCAL
LUZERNE COUNTY
Victory Sports sets opening
V
ictory Sports Inc., a sports and social
organization for adults 18 and over
with mental and/or physical challenges,
will open its third baseball season on at 5
p.m. July 11 at Pittston Township Little
League Field. Opening ceremonies will
be followed by a team photo, a game, and
pizza and refreshments at the pavilion and
dancing with D.J. Carroll.
Anyone interested in registering
participants for the season can call Fred
DeSanto, president, at 570-655-8224, or
email Tom Bonchonsky, secretary, at tom.
bonchonsky@comcast.net. For more
information on Victory Sports, visit www.
victorysports.us.
After opening day, the games will be
played at 6 p.m. every Thursday at the
Pittston Township eld. The season will
run through Sept. 26. There is no charge
for registration or to participate in the
organization, which also sponsors dances
and a winter basketball league.
WILKES-BARRE
FNCB lawsuit will stand
A Luzerne County judge said Friday
a lawsuit led by the Powell Law Group
against a Dunmore-based bank will not be
thrown out.
Judge Thomas Burke threw out objec-
tions that First National Community Bank
had raised to the November 2012 lawsuit.
According to the suit, the actions of the
bank resulted in problems with a multi-
million-dollar loan and a failed Mountain
Top townhouse project known as The
Sanctuary.
The Powell Law Group, run by attorney
Jill Moran and based in Hazle Township,
alleges negligence and conicts of interest
and requests more than $50,000 in dam-
ages. The bank said the suit should be
thrown out because it lacks specicity in
each of the alleged counts.
WEST PITTSTON
Painter sought by police
Borough police are looking for a man
who allegedly took money for a house
painting job that he never started.
According to court papers, Joseph Lom-
bardo, of Luzerne Avenue, West Pittston,
complained to police on May 22 that he
gave William Laird a
check for $1,800 on May
16 as a down payment
for painting his home
at a total cost of $3,500,
but Laird never started
the work.
Lombardo said he
made the check payable
to Kelly Kramer, as
Laird had instructed.
Police went to the address listed on
Lairds business card and written estimate
on May 28 and found it to be a UPS Store
that rents mail boxes to customers. When
police went to the address listed as Lairds
home address on his drivers license, they
were told by a neighbor that Laird did not
live there.
Police also spoke with Kramer, who
told them she cashed a check written out
to her for Laird because he told her he did
not have any identication.
Police charged Laird, 46, with home
improvement fraud and deceptive or
fraudulent business practices third-
degree felonies and theft by deception,
a misdemeanor. A warrant has been issued
for his arrest.
Anyone who has information about
Lairds whereabouts should call Sgt.
Samuel Fuller at 570-655-7780, ext. 305,
or call 911.
SCRANTON
World record swim planned
Would you like to help try to break a
worlds record and at the same time learn
to swim?
Tens of thousands of children and
adults at aquatic facilities around the
world will unite at 11 a.m. Tuesday to
attempt to set a new Guinness World
Record for the Worlds Largest Swimming
Lesson. The record is 24,873 participants
The event seeks to draw attention
to the fact that drowning is the leading
cause of injury-related death for children
ages 1 to 5. Research shows that formal
swimming lessons can reduce the risk of
drowning by 88 percent for children ages
1 to 4.
Montage Mountain Water Park will
host the event locally. The lesson is free
and registration begins at 10 a.m. The
days activities will include a beach vol-
leyball tournament, a mini-golf hole-in-
one contest, relays, games, a disc jockey
and more. For more information, call
570-969-7669 or visit WLSL.org or www.
montageisback.com.
I N B R I E F
Contractor allegedly abandoned job
WEST PITTSTON A
preliminary arraignment that
should have taken less than
5 minutes lasted about 30
minutes because a contrac-
tor charged with accepting
payment and not nishing
the work did not have a valid
home address.
Lemire Stevenson Brown,
51, owner of Brown and Brown
Home Repair, said he moved to
Kresgeville, Monroe County,
in October,
but his driv-
ers license
says he lives
in Albrights-
ville. Brown
claimed he
lives on Vic-
toria Court,
then saying
it was Victoria Road, but could
not remember the house num-
ber.
Brown and his attorney,
Mark Mack, Swoyersville po-
lice Ofcer Adam Christian
and District Judge Joseph Car-
mody bickered over Browns
actual residence for nearly 30
minutes. Even his vehicle reg-
istration and insurance cards
list an Albrightsville address,
despite Brown claiming he
moved to Kresgeville eight
months ago.
Browns address was an is-
sue for bail.
Carmody set bail at $5,000.
Brown was required to pay
10 percent, or $500, to be re-
leased. Mack contacted a bail
bondsman that posted Browns
bail, permitting his release.
Christian and Swoyers-
ville Ofcer Michael Blessing
charged Brown with failing
to nish installing a new roof
on a home on Noyes Avenue
after accepting a $4,000 de-
posit from the homeowner.
The roof was damaged during
Hurricane Sandy last October.
The contract was signed Nov.
23 with Brown giving the Al-
brightsville address.
Brown began the job in early
December when he removed
shingles and installed tar pa-
per.
Police allege that is as far as
Brown went with installing the
new roof, which was expected
to take three to four days.
The homeowner alleges she
made numerous attempts to
contact Brown. When she did,
Brown pledged to be at the
house on a certain date and
failed to show, according to
the criminal complaint.
Police spoke with Brown on
May 31, advising him to nish
installing the roof by June 8.
Brown allegedly told police he
should not have taken the roof-
ing job because he was busy
with other jobs, the complaint
states.
Mack told Carmody that the
dispute should be a civil law-
suit and not a criminal one.
I never seen this before in a
criminal arena, he said. This
is a civil matter; this is a civil
contract matter.
Police charged Brown with
receiving payment for services
and failing to perform, a rela-
tively newlawunder the states
Home Improvement Act.
A preliminary hearing is
scheduled on June 27 before
District Judge David Barilla in
Swoyersville.
By EDWARD LEWIS
elewis@timesleader.com
Confusion at preliminary
arraignment over mans
address proves issue for bail.
Suspect
in killing
may never
face trial
By SHEENA DELAZIO
sdelazio@timesleader.com
WILKES-BARRE Harun Ngolo will
likely never stand trial on charges he
killed his wife and injured his son with
a spear three years ago, just before Fa-
thers Day, a county judge said Friday.
Ngolo, 69, was ruled incompetent to
stand trial in 2011 due to mental health
issues and had been making some prog-
ress with treatment until recently.
A signicant decrease in cognitive
ability likely means Ngolo will never
face a jury of his peers on homicide and
aggravated assault charges. Judge Wil-
liam Amesbury said at a hearing Friday
that it is possible Ngolo will stay in a se-
cure state hospital for the rest of his life,
where he will receive treatment, also
ensuring the safety of the community.
But, we need to move this case to
some kind of nality, Amesbury told
Assistant District Attorney William
Finnegan and Ngolos attorney John
Donovan.
However, Amesbury said, he doesnt
know what the answer is.
Ngolo, of Simpson Street, Wilkes-
Barre, was charged in June 2010 for al-
legedly fatally stabbing his wife, Maria
Ngolo, and injuring his son, Moses Ngo-
lo, now 34, and then-3-year-old grand-
son.
Ngolo, a political refugee from Zaire,
Africa, used a homemade spear to at-
tack his family during an argument
over Fathers Day plans, police said.
Ngolo had been receiving treatment
at the Norristown State Hospital and
appeared at Fridays hearing via video,
sitting in a wheelchair at the Luzerne
County Correctional Facility. Ngolo has
previously attended hearings before
Amesbury in person and was able to
stand.
A registered nurse at the Luzerne
County Correctional Facility, where
Ngolo is staying in the inrmary, said
Ngolo has had a signicant decline in
mental and physical abilities and is un-
able to put words together.
Its mostly rambling a wordsalad,
Sue Ziller said. Hes unable to walk at
timeshis (condition) uctuates.
Ziller also noted other medical issues
Ngolo faces, and said that he is staying
in the prisons inrmary because of
those issues.
Amesbury urged attorneys to speak
with Ngolos doctors, and attorneys
said theyll likely seek recommenda-
tions on how to end Ngolos case since
a trial is currently not an option.
Amesbury asked for an update on
Ngolos status in 60 days, as well as a
decision attorneys have come to by
then.
Psychiatrists have previously said
Ngolo still believes his wife is alive, and
that he believes she had a baby with an-
other man. Ngolo also has told doctors
he believes people at the county prison
have killed him.
DALLAS TWP. All Natalie
Gunshannon wanted was to be paid
a fair wage for her work, she said.
Gunshannon, 27, of Dallas Town-
ship, worked at McDonalds Restau-
rant on the Dallas Highway from
April 24 to May 15. When she re-
ceived her rst paycheck, enclosed
was a Chase Bank debit card with
instructions on howto use it and the
fees attached.
Her future earnings would be de-
posited into the debit card account
and she could access her money
from there. Gunshannon never
signed the card and when she re-
turned to work she asked her super-
visor if she could be paid by check
or by direct deposit. She was told
the card was the only option.
Gunshannon, a single mother of
one daughter, quit her job at Mc-
Donalds and went to see an attor-
ney, Mike Cefalo of West Pittston. A
class-action lawsuit was led Thurs-
day in Luzerne County Court by
Cefalo on behalf of Gunshannon and
other employees, seeking damages,
fees and costs.
The suit seeks an unspecied
amount of monetary damages and
asks for punitive, compensatory and
liquidated damages, plus legal fees
and litigation costs against the com-
pany for its ill-gotten gains contrary
to justice, equity, good conscience
and Pennsylvania law.
Gunshannon said she didnt sign
the card and chose to not enroll in
the payroll system offered because
she felt the fees would be exorbitant
and actually drop her earnings be-
low minimum wage.
She was to be paid about $7.44
per hour her paystub didnt list
her hourly rate. Minimum wage is
$7.25.
According to the complaint led,
the JP Morgan Chase payroll card
lists several fees, including a $1.50
charge for ATM withdrawals, $5 for
over-the-counter cash withdraw-
als, $1 per balance inquiry, 75 cents
per online bill payment and $15 for
lost/stolen card.
Gunshannon said she had taken
her concerns to the main ofce of
the franchise holder Albert and
Carol Mueller, trading as McDon-
alds, in Clarks Summit. She was
told that the card was the only op-
tion, she said.
In a statement issued by public re-
lations coordinator Beth Dal Santo,
the Muellers declined to comment
on the suit, stating they had not
seen a copy of the complaint.
We value our employees and
everything they do for our organi-
zation, the statement added. We
are committed to providing them
the best possible work environment
so they can deliver the fast, reliable
service that our customers expect.
Cefalo called the payroll system
another example of corporate
greed.
Cefalo said the debit card method
and its fees are squeezing the most
vulnerable of our society. They make
minimum wage or a little more and
they squeeze money from them.
Cefalo said many more people
are coming forward and telling the
same stories. Pennsylvania law
states employees are entitled to
have a choice to be paid by check or
cash, he said.
When they work hard and earn
their wages, why should they have
to pay fees to collect their rightful
wages? Cefalo asked.
Gunshannon said she is looking
for another job and the rst ques-
tion she asks is how employees are
paid.
I need to receive all the money I
earn, she said.
I cant afford to lose even a few
dollars per paycheck. I just think
people should be paid fairly and not
have to pay fees to get their wages.
BILL TARUTIS/FOR THE TIMES LEADER
Natalie Gunshannon, right, gives her daughter Aine, 7, a hug outside their home in Dallas Township. Gunshannon
is suing a McDonalds franchise holder over how her pay was disbursed.
Woman sues McDonalds franchisee
By BILL OBOYLE
boboyle@timesleader.com
Fast-food chain allegedly forced
employee to accept wages via
Chase debit card with extra fees.
Laird
Brown
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com SATuRDAy, JunE 15, 2013 N E W S PAGE 4A
By SHEENA DELAZIO
sdelazio@timesleader.com
Judges to determine write-in votes
WILKES-BARRE The Lu-
zerne County Election Board
acted unjustly and unfairly
when it said it would not count
16 write-in votes for a Hazle
Township supervisor candidate,
an attorney said Friday.
Pasco Schiavo, an attorney
for Francis Boyarski, told two
county judges Friday that 16
write-in votes should be counted
for Boyarski, or Boyarski would
not receive a Republican nomi-
nation, and voters who intended
their votes to count would be
disenfranchised.
Judges Thomas Burke and
Joseph Sklarosky Jr. said they
will take Schiavo and Boyarskis
request under advisement and
issue a ruling soon.
Last week, Schiavo led a pe-
tition requesting the judges add
the votes to secure a Republican
nomination. The county board
of election on June 2 denied 14
write-in votes with only Boyar-
ski, one write-in with Butch
Boyarski and another with Eu-
gene Boyarski.
The board and its solicitor,
attorney Mike Butera, said the
county has a blanket policy that
accepts only the full rst and last
name of a write-in candidate.
Those write-in votes clearly
show, Schiavo argued, that vot-
ers intended on voting for Fran-
cis Boyarski, who has a nick-
name Butch and whose middle
name is Eugene.
Fellow supervisor candidate
Richard Wienches testied Fri-
day he believes some of Boyar-
skis votes could have been in-
tended for Boyarskis father, who
also goes by Butch Boyarski.
Butera said Wienches re-
ceived 43 Republican write-in
votes that were counted in his
total while Boyarski received 35
counted write-in votes.
Wienches and Boyarski are
vying for an open six-year term
on the Republican ballot. No Re-
publican candidates appeared on
the ballot.
Wienches noted there are
more than 500 registered Inde-
pendent voters in Hazle Town-
ship who will get a say in who
gets the seat during the Novem-
ber General Election.
Agency had three unidentied
suspects in mind, but none
can be conrmed as at fault.
By ANDREWM. SEDER
aseder@timesleader.com
DEP cant locate source of contamination
EXETERAfter more than
a year of investigation, the
state Department of Environ-
mental Protection announced
Friday that it is unable to iden-
tify whos responsible for oil
entering Hicks Creek.
DEP responded in March
2012 to reported creek con-
tamination and immediately
began investigating howa sub-
stance described as lubricat-
ing oil made it into the creek.
Standing by that creek on
Friday, DEP spokeswoman
Colleen Connolly said the de-
partment tried to trace the oil
back to its source but was not
able to denitively determine
where the oil came from and
how it got into the creek.
DEP had three suspects in
mind, but was unable to say
for sure if any of them was re-
sponsible, Connolly said. She
also declined to identify who
they were.
Within two months of the oil
being found in the creek, DEP
cited Bosco Inc. and issued a
notice of violation to Bridon
Americanfor violations discov-
ered on their properties. Both
are in the vicinity of Hicks
Creek, and the violations were
spotted during DEPs Hicks
Creek investigation.
Connolly would not say
whether those two companies
were among the three sus-
pects.
Physical evidence was gone
a month after this happened
and the oil trail just isnt lead-
ing us anywhere, Connolly
said. The only way were go-
ing to get any more evidence
is if someone comes forward,
she said, noting that the inves-
tigation remains open.
She implored anyone with
knowledge of the oil contami-
nation to contact DEP at 826-
2511. Had the culprit been
identied and sanctioned un-
der the states Clean Stream
Law, the civil penalty could
have been in the hundreds of
thousands of dollars.
The department, said Con-
nolly, spent money to keep the
oil slick from making its way
into the Susquehanna River
and spent countless man
hours on the extensive and
exhaustive investigation. The
department was able to nd
how the oil entered the water
system, with Connolly saying
a manhole on Stevens Lane
had visible signs of oil when
inspectors lifted it last March.
But the trail grew cold and
the time had come for DEP to
announce its ndings, or lack
of them.
We just came to the conclu-
sion were just not going to get
anywhere else, Connolly said.
T L V I D E O
To see and hear what DEP
spokeswoman Colleen Connolly
had to say about the Hicks Creek
investigation, go to youtube.com/
timesleadervideo
anDrEw sEDEr/THE TIMEs LEaDEr
Hicks Creek ows through a culvert near Route 92 in Exeter.
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WASHINGTON President Barack Obamas au-
thorization of military aid to the Syrian rebels dra-
matically increases U.S. support for the opposition,
the White House said Friday, while acknowledging
that it will take time for the supplies to reach ght-
ers struggling in their clashes with Syrian President
Bashar Assad.
U.S. ofcials said the new aid would include
weapons and ammunition and comes in response to
rmer evidence from the White House of chemical
weapons use by Assads regime.
Theres already material thats been owing to
the opposition and that will continue in the weeks to
come, said Ben Rhodes, Obamas deputy national
security adviser.
Obama has said the use of chemical weapons
would cross a red line, suggesting greater Ameri-
can intervention. While a small percentage of the
93,000 people reportedly killed in Syria are said to
have died from chemical weapons U.S. intelli-
gence puts the number at 100 to 150 the White
House views the deployment of the deadly agents as
a outing of international norms.
Rhodes said Obama made the decision to au-
thorize military aid to the rebels over the past few
weeks. He also defended the presidents caution on
the issue, saying these are not steps the president
takes lightly.
The full scope of the assistance authorized by the
White House is still unclear. But the administration
could give the rebels a range of weapons, including
small arms, assault ries, shoulder-red rocket-pro-
pelled grenades and other anti-tank missiles. The
opposition forces could operate most of that equip-
ment without signicant training.
In Syria Friday, the Foreign Ministry said, The
White House has issued a statement full of lies about
the use of chemical weapons in Syria based on fabri-
cated information. The United States is using cheap
tactics to justify President Barack Obamas decision
to arm the Syrian opposition.
And in Moscow, President Vladimir Putins foreign
affairs adviser said Russia not convinced with Wash-
ingtons claim that Syrian regime had used chemical
weapons against the opposition. Yuri Ushakov told
reporters the information provided by U.S. ofcials
to Russia didnt look convincing.
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com SATuRDAy, JunE 15, 2013 N A T I O N & W O R L D PAGE 5A
WASHINGTON
Anti-abortion bill altered
H
ouse Republicans have modied a
tough anti-abortion bill to include
exceptions for rape and incest after the
GOP sponsor of the legislation raised
a restorm by declaring that very few
rapes result in pregnancies.
The legislation would ban almost all
abortions after a fetus reaches the age
of 20 weeks. It is scheduled to come up
for a vote in the full House next week.
On Wednesday, when the House
Judiciary Committee considered the
legislation, sponsor Trent Franks, R-
Ariz., said that cases of rape resulting
in pregnancy are very low.
Franks later revised his remark,
saying he meant to say that later-term
abortions rarely are the result of rapes,
but Democrats pounced on his state-
ment, saying it was another example of
Republicans showing their insensitivity
toward women.
NEWTOWN, CONN.
Silence for Sandy Hook
The town where 20 children and six
educators were massacred in December
went silent for a moment Friday, six
months later, at a remembrance event
that doubled as a call to action on weap-
ons control, with the reading of names
of thousands of victims of gun violence.
The mood of the six-month marker
was decidedly more political than
private, with a group called Mayors
Against Illegal Guns holding events
in 10 states calling for lawmakers to
expand background checks and urg-
ing senators who opposed the bill to
reconsider.
Two sisters of slain teacher Victoria
Soto addressed a crowd gathered at
Edmond Town Hall in Newtown for a
26-second moment of silence, honoring
the 20 children and six adults gunned
down at the school on Dec. 14.
TEHRAN, IRAN
Strong turnout for election
Reform-minded Iranians who have
faced years of crackdowns looked
Friday to claw back a bit of ground in a
presidential election that gave them an
unexpected hero and a chance to upend
a vote that once appeared solidly in the
hands of Tehrans ruling clerics.
While Irans presidential elections
offer a window into the political peck-
ing orders and security grip inside the
country particularly since the chaos
from a disputed outcome in 2009
they lack the drama of truly high stakes
as the countrys ruling clerics and their
military guardians remain the ultimate
powers.
Election ofcials began the ballot
count after voters waited in line for
hours in wilting heat at some polling
stations in downtown Tehran and other
cities, while others cast ballots across
the vast country from desert outposts
to Gulf seaports and nomad pastures.
NORTH BAY VILLAGE, FLA.
Deck collapse investigated
Investigators began examining a
twisted pile of concrete, metal and
wood on Friday to determine why a
waterfront deck at a popular sports bar
collapsed into shallow Biscayne Bay,
injuring two dozen people gathered
to cheer the Miami Heat in the NBA
Finals.
Authorities estimated about 100
people were on the deck at Shuckers
Bar & Grill when a support on one end
apparently gave way, causing the deck
to buckle in the middle and drop about
8 feet into the bay. The scene Friday
was a tangle of partly submerged green
plastic chairs, tables, umbrellas, and
even ip-ops and cellphones lost in
the chaos of the night before.
I N B R I E F
AP PHOTO
Talk about a heavy workload
A worker hitches a ride on anothers
back through water in a dry dock
in the Charlestown Navy Yard in Bos-
ton on Friday.
Obama ups aid to Syrian rebels
Full scope of assistance unclear, but some
materials already bound for Mideast, ofcials say.
By JULIE PACE and LOLITA C. BALDOR
Associated Press
House
takes on
military
conduct
WASHINGTON The
House overwhelmingly passed
a sweeping, $638 billion defense
bill on Friday that imposes new
punishments on members of the
armed services found guilty of
rape or sexual assault as outrage
over the crisis in the military has
galvanized Congress.
Ignoring a White House veto
threat, the Republican-con-
trolled House voted 315-108
for the legislation, which would
block President Barack Obama
from closing the U.S. detention
facility at Guantanamo Bay,
Cuba, and limit his efforts to re-
duce nuclear weapons.
The House bill containing the
provisions on sex-related crimes
that the Obama administration
supports as well as the detention
policies that it vigorously op-
poses must be reconciled with a
Senate version before heading to
the presidents desk. The Senate
measure, expected to be consid-
ered this fall, costs $13 billion
less than the House bill a
budgetary difference that also
will have to be resolved.
The defense policy bill autho-
rizes money for aircraft, weap-
ons, ships, personnel and the
war in Afghanistan in the s-
cal year beginning Oct. 1 while
blocking the Pentagon from
closing domestic bases.
Shocking statistics that as
many as 26,000 military mem-
bers might have been sexually
assaulted last year and high-
prole incidences at the ser-
vice academies and in the ranks
pushed lawmakers to tackle the
growing problem of sexual as-
sault.
Both the House and Senate
were determined to shake up
the militarys culture in ways
that would ensure victims that if
they reported crimes, their alle-
gations wouldnt be discounted
or their careers jeopardized.
The House bill would require
a mandatory minimum sentence
of two years in prison for a mem-
ber of the armed services con-
victed of rape or sexual assault
in a military court.
Ofcers, commissioned war-
rant ofcers, cadets and mid-
shipmen convicted of rape,
sexual assault, forcible sodomy
or attempts to commit those of-
fenses also would be dismissed.
Enlisted personnel and noncom-
missioned warrant ofcers con-
victed of similar crimes would
be dishonorably discharged.
Efforts to reduce sexual
assaults within armed services
included in defense bill.
By DONNA CASSATA
and RICHARD LARDNER
Associated Press
BERLIN A top commander of a
Nazi SS-led unit accused of burning vil-
lages lled with women and children
lied to American immigration ofcials to
get into the United States and has been
living in Minnesota since shortly after
World War II, according to evidence un-
covered by The Associated Press.
Michael Karkoc, 94, told American au-
thorities in 1949 that he had performed
no military service during World War
II, concealing his work as an ofcer and
founding member of the SS-led Ukrai-
nian Self Defense Legion and later as an
ofcer in the SS Gali-
cian Division, accord-
ing to records obtained
by the AP through a
Freedom of Informa-
tion Act request. The
Galician Division and
a Ukrainian nationalist
organization he served
in were both on a se-
cret American government blacklist of
organizations whose members were for-
bidden from entering the United States
at the time.
Though records do not show that
Karkoc had a direct hand in war crimes,
statements frommen in his unit and oth-
er documentation conrm the Ukraini-
an company he commanded massacred
civilians, and suggest that Karkoc was
at the scene of these atrocities as the
company leader. Nazi SS les say he and
his unit were also involved in the 1944
Warsaw Uprising, in which the Nazis
brutally suppressed a Polish rebellion
against German occupation.
Polish prosecutors announced Friday
after the release of the AP investigation
that they will investigate Karkoc and
provide every possible assistance to
the U.S. Department of Justice, which
has used lies in immigration papers to
deport dozens of suspected Nazi war
criminals. The AP evidence of Karkocs
wartime activities has also prompted
German authorities to express interest
in exploring whether there is enough
to prosecute. In Germany, Nazis with
command responsibility can be
charged with war crimes even if their
direct involvement in atrocities cannot
be proven.
AP uncovers Nazi leader in US
Michael Karkoc, 94, allegedly lied
about his World War II military
service to enter country.
The Associated Press
Second victim dies after blast at La. plant
GONZALES, La. A sec-
ond victim of an explosion at
a south Louisiana chemical
plant died Friday, while fed-
eral authorities opened an
investigation to determine
the cause of the deadly blast.
Scott Thrower, 47, of St.
Amant, died at Baton Rouge
General Hospitals burn cen-
ter, State Police Capt. Doug
Cain said.
Another worker, Zach-
ary Green, 29, of Hammond,
died in Thursdays explo-
sion at the plant in Geismar
owned by Tulsa, Okla.-based
Williams Companies Inc.
Dozens of others were in-
jured.
The U.S. Labor Depart-
ments Occupational Safety
and Health Administration
is investigating. A depart-
ment spokesman and com-
pany ofcials said the cause
of the blast wasnt imme-
diately known, but the FBI
ruled out terrorism.
Right now, its really
too early to determine any-
thing, Labor Department
spokesman Juan Rodriguez
said Friday.
Williams Companies
president and CEO Alan
Armstrong said at a press
brieng in Gonzales that the
extent of the plants damage
was unknown and it was un-
clear when operations would
resume.
Louisianas health depart-
ment said 88 people were
evaluated at hospitals after
the explosion and at least 81
had been released by Friday
morning.
By LITTICE BACON-BLOOD
Associated Press
AP PHOTO
Ofcials conrmed a second person died after an explosion
in the Williams Olens Plant in Geismar, La., on Thursday.
READy, AIm
AP PHOTO
K
arl-Wilhelm Reineke, dressed in a historical uniform, prepares his cannon Friday during the Interna-
tional Championships of historical eld artillery gunners near Sondershausen, central Germany.
AP PHOTO
Obama has said the use of chemical weapons in
Syria would cross a red line, prompting more
U.S. intervention.
Karkoc
8
2
0
2
6
8
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TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com SATuRDAy, JunE 15, 2013 N E W S PAGE 6A
Hazleton Area School
Districts graduates:
Ana Maria Abreu
Anyelina Abreu
Joelsy Abreu
Richard Abreu
Jonathan Adamchick
Andrew Adams
Richard Adams
Brianna Agresta
Desai Akshil
Kader Aksu
Stephan Alas
Junior Alcantara
Paola Alcantara
Yessica Alcantara
Donovan Alford
Kiara Almanzar
Olga Almonte
Rachel Alshefski
Logan Alucci
Darisa Amparo
Reginald Anderson
Andrew Antonelli
Darianny Antonio
Franklin Anziani
Nataly Arias
Jaileny Arias
Jose Arias
Yulissa Arias
Kellie Arroyo
Tiffany Arroyo
Alexandria Ator
Ashley Attore
Rebecca Auman
Tyler Babula
Christina Badamo
Cole Balliet
Daniel Balliet
Kenneth Balliet
Robert Bankes
Gabrielle Baran
Deivon Barlow
Stephen Barna
Caitlin Barr
Xavier Barreto
Nicholas Basista
Carla Batista
Yvelisse Batista
Emelin Bautista Ceballos
Serina Bayer
Jennifer Beck
Mikayla Begg
Thomas Belusko
Elder Berroa
Ettnil Berry Matos
Yeranson Berry Matos
Alijah Betancourt
Tyler Bicking
Gabriel Bigatel
Jason Bircea
Desiree Bishop
Dakota Blashock
Alyssa Blasko
Allen Bodnar
Megan Bogansky
Brittany Bolish
Sarah Bonafair
Evelyn Bonilla
Christopher Boris
Jenelle Borneisen
Daniel Bove
Tara Brandmier
Catherine Brea
Dylan Brennan
Moises Brens
Carissa Brestowski
Stanek Brian
Jessica Brielmeier
Rosanny Brito
Yajaira Brito
Andrew Brodeur
Sara Bromley
John Brotzman
Emily Brozzoski
Thomas Bruce
Cassandra Brutosky
Gordon Buchman
Irisa Buff
Edward Bulka
Brad Burger
Jose Burgos
Katie Bye
Jonathan Caban
Edward Cabezas
Chris Cabrera
Cristyn Cabrera
Marlyn Cabrera
Jan Cabrera Fernandez
Dieufri Cabrera Moreta
Robert Caffray
Miguel Calderon
Mikel Cammisa
Anne Campanaro
Michael Canavan
Heather Caputo
Dylan Card
Glorivet Carrasco
Nicole Carrasco
Jared Carrelli
Shawn Cartwright
Leanna Caso
Marcos Castellon
Ana Castillo
Anyely Castillo
Jerry Castillo
Albaro Castro
Yessenia Castro
Brittany Catania
Eunis Ceballos
Jared Ceol
Victor Cespede
Scarlet Cespedes
Ezequiel Cespedes
Angel Cestero Ruiz
Kevin Chapman
Cody Chippi
Dominique Chirico
Amy Chivers
Kevin Chura
Shawna Chyko
Paul Collado
Jordy Colon
Daniel Conahan
Genderson Concepcion
Ian Corazza
Ana Correa
Jessica Corrigan
Serena Cortese
Gregorio Coto
Justice Coxe
Anthony Craig
Sandra Creasy
Lucas Croughn
Iesha Cruz
Justin Cruz
Nikauri Cruz
Dellines Cuello
Maria Cuevas Santiago
Callie Cundro
Rebecca Cunningham
Anthony Cussat
Rachel Czerwonka
Amira Daghstani
Brianna Dalesandro
Laura DAmato
Nicholas DAmato
Alyssa Damiano
Nicole DAndrea
Anthony DAngelo
Moreno Daniel
James Darvell
Eric Davidyock
Kyle Davis
Agatha De La Cruz
Michael De La Rosa
Flor De La Rosa Paredes
Valeska Decking
Destiny Defuso
Jared Deiter
Vanessa Delahanty
Elvis Deleon
Laura Dellisanti
Sherise Delmonico
Eidrit Delossantos
Rebecca Demko
Maria Dennis
Luis Deschamps
Axel Diaz
Fernando Diaz
Gennessys Diaz
Breanna Dietrich
Kailene Dolan
Jingwang Dong
Xiao Li Dong
Colleen Dougherty
Connor Drost
Michael Dudeck
Ashley Dudinyak
Kelly Duffy
Anna Duna
Nathaniel Durako
Mannely Duran
Ranyel Duran
Gates Dylan
Powell Dzakonski
Charles Dzuranin
Alexandra Echavarria
Taylor Egner
Jillian Ehret
Devon Eichfeld
Christopher Elliott
Robert Erb-Salzer
Olivia Errichetto
Carolyn Eskin
Nadirah Evans
Alexandra Eveland
Tyler Farley
Sara Feifer
Abel Felix
Ashlee Felix
Steven Felker
Rachel Fellin
Jeffrey Fendrick
Shawna Fenstemaker
Ariana Fernandez
Camilo Fernandez
Candace Ferrari
Sean Ferry
Richard Fessler
Jacob Fetterman
Brett Finkelstein
Sean Fisher
Laura Flaim
Steven Florentino
Jamie Flores
Dilant Flores
Christopher Ford
Katelyn Fornataro
Jamal Fowlkes
Mercedes Fox
Michael Fox
Isbeth Francisco
Jeffrey Francisco
Guerrero Pimentel
Franklin
Adam Fredmund
Meagan Freeman
Dylan French
Alexis Friendy
Stephanie Fuchs
Noelly Fuentes
Rachael Fulk
Derek Fulton
Kayla Fulton
Amanda Gabos
Nahomy Galan
Jordan Galan
Jade Gallagher
Michael Gallagher
Casey Galloway
Landon Gans
Adrian Garcia
Albania Garcia
Jhanna GarciaRoque
Travis Gardner
Jessica Garduno
Eric Garzio
Kristin Gasser
Brianna Generose
Falicia Genery
Nicholas Gentle
Ryan Gerlach
Michelle Gheorghe
Loryn Gilmore
Nikoli Giranda
Nicole Girard
Travis Glidewell
Abigail Goffa
Samuel Goldheart
Fabianny Gomez
Selina Gomez Uceta
Edy Gonzales Tejeda
Iann Gonzalez
Amanda Gordineer
Emilio Goris Perez
George Gorski
Desiree Gray
Schaub Grayson
Angelo Greco
Sophia Greco
Frederick Gregory
Erika Grula
Pamela Grullon Duran
Zaya Gruyair
Chrisvely Guerrero
Dariel Guerrero Her-
nandez
Luis Guerrero Reynoso
Juan Guevara Baquero
Thomas Gunn
Rosanna Guzman
Wesley Hammell
Brennah Hartmann
Michael Hauser
Frank Helmer
Kaitlin Helmer
Terry Helmer
Jeffrey Herman
Anthony Hernandez
Dania Hernandez
Rosaury Hernandez
Mateo
Irvania Hernandez
Mateo
Yeiling Herrera-Guzman
Brittany Hess
Jeffrey Hicks
Valerie Hierro
Zoe Hludzik
Richard Hoffer
Lauren Hoffman
John Holguin
Wendy Holguin
Sorina Horga
Vincent Hornak
Jordan Horwath
Tyler Houseknecht
Jillian Houser
Alicia Hunsinger
Carmen Irizarry
Tiffany Irizarry
Christopher Jackson
Kayla Jadush
Kaitlyn James
Katerina Jancewicz
Barrington Jane
Jennifer Jarnutowski
Briana Jastrzebski
Analvy Jimenez
Katherine Jimenez
Rachel Jimenez
Brandon Johnson
Galvez Jonathan
Brandon Jones
Guzman Beato Jose
John Jubin
Aaron Kacyon
Allison Kadelak
Kristen Karmonick
Seth Karnatski
Amanda Kaschak
Cherokee Kawalig
Zachary Kehler
Lindsey Keller
Hailey Kendall
Kevin Kesselring
Peter Kiprovski
Kyle Klein
Joseph Klemas
Randy Klocek
Ryla Knittle
Brandon Knueppel
Alaina Kokinda
Joseph Komar
Jacob Kondash
Noah Kopczynskie
Hoilko Korianne
Rachel Kotch
Connor Kotzer
Edward Kovac
Gage Koval
Louis Kowalski
Kassy Kozel
Steven Krouse
Robert Kuczynski
Stacie Kulsa
Sarah Kunetz
Richard Kuzmitsky
Aaron Lagana
Brianne Lane
Mariah Laporte
Aimee Latella
Farlyn Laureano
Priscilla Lazar
Jonathan Ledesma
Jacob Lehman
Paul Lehman
Edwin Leon Sanchez
Hannah Levine
Anthony Liene
Alyssa Lindsey
William Lingenfelter
Randy Lisnock
Dana Lloyd
Lauren Lloyd
Jaclyn Loforte
Carlos Lombert
Olivia Longo
Angeline Longo
Elizabeth Longo
Katherine Lopez
Leomar Lopez
Silvioandres Lopez
Isania Loran
Jared Luchetta
Yasmin Lugo-Figueroa
Richard Lukatch
Jabin Lutz
Johnathan Lysogorski
Jayleen Machado
Alison Machey
Alyssa Machey
Yanelis Madera
Marcos Madera
Iqra Mahmood
Cody Mahon
Eric Major
Samantha Major
Christian Maldonado
Patrick Malloy
Molly Maloney
Suzi Manculj
Estefany Mangandi
Fuentes
James Manganelli
Kenia Mansueto
Angela Marchese
Tyler Mariano
Kylie Marier
Arlee Marino
Zachary Markle
Casey Marshall
Leslye Marte
Rebecca Martine
Deiby Martinez
Elizabeth Martinez
Thomas Martonick
Kody Masters
Dustin Mastrota
Wilma Mateo
William Mathis
Doni Matrone
Michael Mattes
Bryan Matz
Miranda Matz
Amanda Maylath
Robyn Mcalarney
Alex Mcdonough
Raymond McGrade
Audrey McNelis
Sabrina Mcpherson
Ronald Medrano
Megan Mehalick
David Mehalick
Aricia Mejia Casado
Katherine Melendez
Samantha Melici
Mencido Melo
Cheribel Mena
Winifer Mena Guerra
Bryan Mendez
Evette Mendez
Francis Mendez
Melany Mendez
Daniel Mendoza
Jacob Mensinger
Laganowski Michael
Natalia Miguel
John Miller
Cody Mills
Jennifer Milore
Alysha Milore
Ryan Minnick
Michael Mischissin
Nicholas Mitcho
Torin Mizenko
Abigail Mojica
Michael Monkoski
Daniella Morales
Edgar Morales
Felix Morales
Tommy Morales
Yuleidy Morales
Maria Moran
Shaidy Moronta
Jamelisk Moronta
Michael Moronta
David Morris
Travis Mosne
Devon Motel
Yanibel Moya
Alexandra Mucci
Patricia Muller
Erika Mullin
Valerie Mussey
Joshua Mussoline
Nicholas Mussoline
Jacob Nastasee
Ricardo Navarro Espinal
Christina Nelmes
Cindy Nguyen
Samantha Nikolic
Edwin Nunez
Jose Nunez
Harry OByrne
Cameron ODonnell
Shane ODonnell
Robert OHazzo
Joshua Olenick
Raul Olivares
Cheyenne Olson
Kristen Opiary
Cyd Ortiz
Llermay Ortiz
Nicole Ott
Jordan Pagliocca
Amber Paisley
Ryan Paisley
Kellie Palko
Tyler Palma
Julia Palmieri
Maximilliano Paniagua-
Martinez
Samantha Pardi
Alyssa Parise
Lauren Parise
Ruchi Patel
Victor Patrocino
Joanne Paulino
Aaron Payne
Noah Peak
Tyler Pecora
Balbara Pena
Lizbeth Pena
Noel Peralta
Stephanie Peralta
Genett Perez
Helen Perez
Janettly Perez
Miguel Perez
Noel Perez
Dairy Perez Pena
Paul Petrill
Justin Petrill
Colby Petrilla
Alexandra Petro
Michael Petrole
Albert Petrole
Jessica Phillips
Melissa Piccione
Richard Pieri
Alberto Pilarte
Whintney Pine
Jorshlee Pinet
Jeffrey Plasencia
Darby Pliska
Kimberly Plumey
Andreas Pohlmann
Jabely Polanco
Yaniris Polanco
John Pontry
Tyler Pontry
Brittany Porreca
Lezlie Post
Max Pozzessere
Casey Prehotsky
Laura Price
Jonathon Probert
Isaac Pugh
Christopher Puhak
Jeremy Ragan
Freily Ramirez
William Ramirez
Megan Ramos
Christopher Rasinger
Jonathan Ratchko
Leo Ravina
Samantha Reimiller
Jenna Renaud
Joseph Rentko
Alexander Repetz
Celeste Reyes
David Reyes
Maria Reyes
Tyler Reyes
Julian Reynoso
Kelly Rhinesmith
Megan Rhoades
William Ringleben
Todd Ritz
Angel Rivera
Jasmine Rivera
Jonathan Rivera
Melvin Rivera
Barbara Robinson
Chabely Rodriguez
Cristal Rodriguez
Daniel Rodriguez
Edwardo Rodriguez
Fernando Rodriguez
John Rodriguez
Nelson Rodriguez
Yelisa Rodriguez
Zuleyka Rodriguez
Isanyel Rodriguez
Estevez
Alan Rodriguez Guar-
dado
Sean Rogers
Brandy Roman
Raymond Rosa
Kevin Rosario
Marianny Rosario
Stacey Rosario
Teresa Rosario
Miguel Rosario Rodri-
guez
Justine Rossi
Matthew Rossi
Marisol Rubio
Richard Ruggiero
Fantasya Ruiz
Marbella Ruiz Parra
Ricardo Saavedra
Alison Saccketti
Arileidy Salvador
Jaclyn Samsak
Jeison Sanchez
Kevin Sanchez
Yukeimy Sanchez Al-
manzar
Auribelle Santana
Ileana Santana
Jonel Santana
Raymic Santana
Steven Santana
Yohan Santana
Reybi Santos
Barlow Sarah
James Saroka
Chad Sateach
Alexander Sauer
Mariana Sava
Tara Scarcella
Kevin Scatton
Taylor Schermerhorn
Logan Schlauch
Sara Schlauch
Ryan Schoener
Keana Schoennagle
Paul Schoennagle
Nicholas Schrecengost
Taylor Scott
Stephen Seach
Vanessa Serano
Jon Seritsky
Chyra Sestoso
Jennifer Shandrick
Sara Shane
Brittany Shiner
Kevin Short
David Shutovich
Jordan Sierra
Candis Sims
Tyler Sist
Gina Sist
Taylor Sist
Taylor Skinner
Christian Skokowski
Cody Smith
Sara Smith
Aliandra Smith
Brandi Smith
Charelle Smith
Kayla Smith
Shannon Smith
Kayla Snyder
Moriah Snyder
Mark Solanick
Marvelys Solis
Kelly Sones
Alexis Sosa
Jeffrey Soto
Karina Soto
Quendry Soto
Darren Spare
Jason Spevak
Samantha Stan
Frank Stancato
April Stapleton
Mikaelyn Staruch
Tyler Steiner
Kyle Steiner
Carl Stofka
Toni Stranko
Samantha Stratchko
Courtney Straubinger
Johnathan Sullivan
Kaylee Suravicz
Samantha Sweeney
Jani Swiech
Alex Tapia
Gregory Tapia
Taylor Tarone
Cheyenne Tarselli
Graciela Tavarez
Ariardys Taveras
Jeremy Terray
Jesse Terray
Tyler Thomas
Michael Thompson
Nicholas Thrash
Anthony Tiglio
Dalton Tolerico
Juan Toro
Barbara Torres
Josue Torres
Melanie Tovar
Tyler Tranguch
Ayla Triano
Cheyenne Tuggle
Tyler Tuggle
Santa Turbi
Elizabeth Turse
Jeffery Tutko-Genery
Tasha Uliano
Laura Ulshafer
Catherine Urbanski
Belkis Urena
Marcos Urena
Thomaly Urena
Nicholas Valentine
Jennifer Vargas
Jasmine Vargason
David Velez
Laura Veloz
Adonys Veras
Caleigh Vercusky
Sarah Vigna
Joshua Vilcko
Devin Viot
Jeremy Vopava
Gerard Walck
Xin Wang
Amber Wanko
Tyler Ward
James Warrington
Kira Weikel
Zachary West
Megan Whiteley
Megan Wilkinson
Katelyn Williams
Nicholas Williams
Alyson Willis
Thomas Wills
Ross Wisniewski
James Wolfe
Alexander Wolk
Brandon Wong
Kurtis Wright
Logan Yacowatz
Jordan Yanac
Jamie Yenchick
William Youmans
Christina Yurek
Jorge Zamudio
Bradley Zanette
Lindsay Zanoline
Benjamin Zboray
Seth Zimmerman
Nicole Zoglio
Taylor Zumar
HazlEtoN arEa ClaSS of 2013
ERIC SEIDLE/FOR THE TIMES LEADER
H
azleton Area High School graduates Laura Ulshafer and Mike Canavan share a
hug after students threw their caps into the air at the conclusion of Friday nights
ceremony.
WILKES-BARRE Prosecu-
tors in the case of a teen charged
in the fatal shooting of three
people in Plymouth last summer
said in court papers led Friday
that several requests by defense
attorneys in the case should be
thrown out.
Sawud Davis, 16, and his half-
brother, 19-year-old Shawn Ham-
ilton, faces charges in connection
to the shooting. Hamilton faces
the death penalty if he is convict-
ed of rst-degree murder, while
Davis has requested his case be
transferred to juvenile court.
According to prosecutors, Da-
vis was in a Plymouth apartment
during an alleged drug transac-
tion and pulled out a .40-caliber
pistol. He red multiple rounds,
said prosecutors, killing Bradley
Swartwood, 21, Nicholas Mal-
donado, 17, both of Plymouth,
and Lisa Abaunza, 15, of Duryea,
and injuring 19-year-old Daniel
Maldonado. A trial is scheduled
for early next year.
Prosecutors said a change of
venue is not needed because a
fair and impartial jury can be
selected in Luzerne County;
that statements Davis allegedly
made to police should be used
in the case because Davis made
them upon his own free will and
choice; that evidence seized in a
search warrant was seized legally;
that the charges against Davis
should not be dismissed because
prosecutors have presented
enough evidence to charge Davis;
and that prosecutors will be
introducing prior bad acts and
prior criminal records at the time
of their trial.
WILKES-BARRE A
Luzerne County senior judge
has scheduled a new September
trial date for a woman charged
in the 2008 death of a pedestrian
crossing Wyoming Avenue in
Kingston, while at the same time
prosecutors asked for the trial to
be held sooner.
Senior Judge Charles Brown
scheduled a Sept. 23 trial date
for Megan Panowicz, 27, of
Forty Fort, charged in connection
with the Aug. 27, 2008, death of
Sharon Shaughnessy, who was
killed on Wyoming Avenue in
Kingston when she was report-
edly struck by three vehicles, one
of which was allegedly driven by
Panowicz.
Her trial was scheduled to be
held earlier this month, but her
attorneys requested a continu-
ance.
Prosecutors on Thursday asked
that a trial date be scheduled
sooner in July or August
and that defense attorneys
only requested a continuance to
further delay the case.
WILKES-BARRE A Ber-
wick man who was sentenced in
April to ve to 10 years in prison
on charges he killed an 84-year-
old in a crash in Salem Township
has appealed his sentence to the
state Superior Court.
Theodore Luciw, 51, who
pleaded guilty to a related charge,
was sentenced to the prison term
in a case in which police said he
crashed his car head-on into a
vehicle driven by Rachel Wolfe.
Luciw had a blood-alcohol
level of 0.263 percent, more than
three times the legal limit of 0.8
percent for an adult driver in
Pennsylvania, police said.
Northwest Area High Schools
graduates
Valedictorian: Amanda Jimcosky
Salutatorian: Kyleigh Wall
Tiffany Marie Adams
Stephanie Lee Allard
Justine Cassidy Amrowski
Clarissa Cecelia Anderson
Joseph Anderson
Kimberly Ashton-Ungarsky
Marisa Ann Baluski
Sabrina Leigh Baran
Jacob Edward Barchik
Alexander Daniel Barretts
James Albert Begliomini Jr.
Tyler J. Bloom
Curtis Justin Bohl
Danielle Yvone Carr
Glenn Carr Jr.
Brittnie A. Carr
Justin Clark
Kyle D. Cragle
Rachael Ann Crills
Hannah Dalmas
Richard Anthony Dillon
Destiny Lynn Drozdowski
Alisa Lynn Evans
Peter E. Evans
Danielle Joy Eyerley
Justin Kenneth Farver
Peter M. Feno
Kayla Nicole Garren
Sara D. Gleco
Alan J. Gulbierz
Harry Michael Haas
Rachael Lynne Hardy
Aleesha Marie Hildebrand
Jacob J. Hilley, Jesse Hudak
Amanda Hildur Jimcosky
Alexis R. Johnson
Kenneth E. Jones III
David Allen Keller Jr.
Brielle Lynn Killian
Taylor J. Kishbaugh
Matthew E. Korea
Daniel T. Krouse
Austin C. Leftwich
Elora Grace Lencoski
Richard Lewis
Nicholas Wayne Lugiano
Tyler Hans Matschat
Devon Tyler Mazonkey
Alyssa Rose Meeker
Tyler James Meininger
Joshua J. Mitarnowski
Jenna Danae Morris
Nicole Grace Nugent
Nathan John Parsons
Tyler William Pegarella
Anthony Joseph Politz
Morgan Elizabeth Price
Wyatt William Reese
Erica Ann Sadowski
Amanda Santamassino
Harold Leslie Saxe III
Sara A. Schechterly
Taylor Ti Schell
Loren Catherine Schemery
Joshua Thomas Scherer
Stacy Marie Schroeder
Lacey Lee Schultz
Crystal M. Seashock
Alexander B. Sirak
Robert M. Soley,
Jonathan R. Sorber
Larry Leonard Spaide
John D. Stahley
Andrew Michael Stola
Ryan J. Summers,
Willis H. Timms III
James A. Timms
Kevin D. Volkel
Kyleigh Louise Wall
Kirsten Brenna Walsh
Jesse May Wedge
Matthew S. Welliver
Tyler J. Westover
Dana Monique Wido
Alexander A. Williams
Katelyn Elizabeth Wolfe
Alivia Rae Womelsdorf
Janie Lynn Yeager
Joseph R. Young
Brandon Michael Zagata
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the Eckley Club for the donations that were sent to
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I would also like to extend a sincere thank you to
Reverend Peter Donish, the pastor of St. Marys Byz-
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for their concern of my well-being, and all who have
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Eckley Miners Village
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TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com SATuRDAy, JunE 15, 2013 N E W S PAGE 7A
FuturES look bright
FRED ADAMS/FOR THE TIMES LEADER
E
ric Filipiak sports some shades as he and fellow members of the Wyo-
ming Area class of 2013 stand in the sun at Anthony Jake Sobeski Sta-
dium in West Pittston, waiting for their graduation ceremony to begin Friday.
Wyoming Area graduated 184 seniors at the 47th annual commencement.
NorthWESt ArEA ClASS oF 2013
AMANDA HRYCYNA/FOR THE TIMES LEADER
t
aylor J. Kishbaugh, a member of the Northwest Area Senior High School Class
of 2013, smiles after receiving his diploma Friday on stage in the schools Eddie
Gayeski Memorial Gymnasium in Shickshinny. Northwest Area School District gradu-
ated 88 seniors at the 57th annual commencement.
grAdS mAkE FiNAl AdjuStmENtS
FRED ADAMS/FOR THE TIMES LEADER
m
elyssa Laureano, right, adjusts Jessica Ogrodnicks cap before
graduation ceremonies at the West Side Career and Technology
Center on Friday. Some 110 students were presented with diplomas at
the 45th annual ceremony.
COURT BRIEFS
LUZERNE Borough Coun-
cil took its rst ofcial steps
Wednesday toward joining the
new West Side Council of Gov-
ernments.
An ordinance to adopt the
COGs rules and regulations will
be advertised and likely passed
during the July council meeting.
The move is largely symbolic, as
borough ofcials have been over-
whelmingly supportive of the
organization since its inception.
Kingston passed a similar
measure at its council meeting
earlier this month.
In another regionalization-
related matter, ofcials said the
borough will still pursue the
joint purchase of a tar buggy,
which is used in road construc-
tion, with the boroughs of
Plymouth and Edwardsville. If
however, the cooperation or in-
terest from those municipalities
wanes, ofcials said Luzerne is
prepared to fund the purchase
and eventually generate revenue
by renting the equipment to oth-
er entities.
Luzerne will either pay about
$2,000 in conjunction with Ed-
wardsville and Plymouth, or
$6,100 if purchasing the tar bug-
gy individually.
In another matter, Council-
woman Judy Gober provided
updates on plans for the Charles
Street Park for the summer. Free
lunches for children 18 years of
age and younger, funded by the
Commission on Economic Op-
portunity, will be provided noon
to 1 p.m., Monday through Fri-
day, starting Tuesday.
Although the lunches are in-
tended for borough residents, no
one seeking a lunch will have to
provide identication or proof of
residence.
Theboroughs annual FunDay,
featuring activities and treats
for kids as well as an appear-
ance from Ronald McDonald,
will be 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. June 22.
Luzerne Borough
prepares to join
West Side COG
By B. Garret roGan
Times Leader Correspondent
8
2
2
7
5
7
In Loving Memory
Carol Ann Sendrick
(Ottaviani)
Happy Birthday in Heaven, Mom
June 14,1936-February 28, 1983
We little knew that morning 30
years ago that God was going to
call your name. In life we loved
you dearly, in death we do the
same. It broke our hearts to lose
you, you did not go alone; for
part of us went with you, the
day God called you home. Not a
day passes that I dont think
and pray for you.
Daughter Colleen and
son-in-law Jim
CAROLYN (CASTRIGNA-
NO) GOLEMBESKI, 86, passed
away May 11, 2013. Born Sept.
26, 1926, daughter of Rocco and
Frances Castrignano, she was a
beautiful, strong lady in mind,
body and spirit. She will be re-
membered for her love of fam-
ily, food and music especially
Ol Blue Eyes that will carry
forward for generations. Surviv-
ing are her loving husband of
65 years, Edward Golembeski;
daughters, Barbara (Mark) An-
derson, Connie Golembeski;
grandchildren, Sean and Megan
Anderson; brother, Frank Castri-
gnano.
Mass of Christian Burial
11 a.m. today in St. Patricks
Church, Wilkes-Barre. Interment
following in St. Marys Cemetery.
Luncheon reception at The Cafe
315. Memorial donations may be
made to the American Heart As-
sociation.
SAMUEL J. WEBB, 49, of
Duryea, passed away peacefully
at home Thursday evening, sur-
rounded by his loving family.
Arrangements are entrusted
to and pending from Kniffen
OMalley Funeral Home Inc., 728
Main St., Avoca.
William J. Corpy Coyne
June 12, 2013
W
illiam J. Corpy Coyne, 72,
of Pittston, passed away
Wednesday in Hospice Commu-
nity Care, Geisinger South Wilkes-
Barre.
Born on Dec. 22, 1940, he was
a son of the late William and Gen-
evieve McGarry Coyne.
He was a graduate of Pittston
High School and served in the U.S.
Army. Prior to retirement, Corpy
worked for the Pittston Housing
Authority in the maintenance de-
partment for 46 years.
He was a member of St. John
the Evangelist Church, Pittston.
Corpy was an avid walker and
attended the Pittston YMCA daily.
He loved Notre Dame football and
the Philadelphia Phillies.
He was a devoted and loving
brother, uncle, godfather, cousin
and friend. He will be truly missed.
In addition to his parents, he
was preceded in death by a broth-
er, John Coyne.
Surviving are his sister, Mary
Jane Nelson, Pittston; four neph-
ews, George Nelson, Robert Nel-
son, John Coyne and Michael
Coyne; his godson, Johnny Ozark
Jr.; his dear friend, Andrea, and
her daughter, Kelly.
Funeral services will
be 9 a.m. Monday from
the Peter J. Adonizio Fu-
neral Home, 251 William
St., Pittston, with a Mass of Chris-
tian Burial at 9:30 a.m. in St. John
the Evangelist Church, Pittston.
Interment will follow in the parish
cemetery. Friends may call 5 to 8
p.m. Sunday at the funeral home.
Online condolences may be
made at www.peterjadoniziofu-
neralhome.com.
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 2013 O B I T U A R I E S PAGE 8A
JOHN P. BOGDAN, 86, of
Kosciuszko Street, Nanticoke,
passed away Thursday evening
in the Birchwood Nursing and
Rehabilitation Center, Nanti-
coke.
Funeral arrangements
are pending from the Earl W.
Lohman Funeral Home Inc., 14
W. Green St., Nanticoke.
VALENTINE R. MONT-
EDONICO, 96, of Venice,
Fla., and a former resident of
Shavertown, died Wednesday at
Sarasota Memorial Hospital.
Arrangements are in progress
with McLaughlins The Family
Funeral Service. Full obituary
information will be published in
Sundays edition of this news-
paper and later today at www.
celebratehislife.com.
Harry J. ODell
June 9, 2013
H
arry J. ODell, of West
Pittston, passed away on
Sunday at home, surrounded by
his loving family.
He was born Aug. 15, 1933 in
Pittston, a son of the late Ger-
tude (Kern) ODell and Clarence
ODell. He attended West Pittston
schools.
Harry was a Fourth Degree
knight with the Knights of Co-
lumbus, vice president of the
Holy Name society and a member
of the Democratic Committee for
West Pittston. He was a proud
member of Immaculate Concep-
tion Church, where he served as
an usher.
Prior to retirement, he worked
for Pace Transportation and
Kingston Metal.
He leaves behind his loving
wife, Mary Ann (Campenni)
ODell; son, Harry ODell Jr.
and longtime partner, Karin Zu-
ber, Cincinnati, Ohio; daughter,
Heather and her husband, Kirk
Bonanny, Jenkins Township;
grandsons, Harrison Bonanny,
Christopher Bonanny and Greg
ODell; granddaughter, Abby
ODell; and brother, Henry ODell,
Larksville.
The family thanks the nurses
and staff from Hospice of the
Sacred Heart for the exceptional
care and compassion they provid-
ed to both Harry and our family.
All funeral services were held
at the convenience of the family.
Harry was laid to rest in West
Pittston Cemetery.
Funeral services have been en-
trusted to Graziano Funeral Home
Inc., Pittston Township. In lieu of
owers, donations may be made
in Harrys name to Hospice of
the Sacred Heart, 600 Baltimore
Drive, Wilkes-Barre, PA 18702,
or www.hospicesacredheart.org/
donations. For further informa-
tion or to express condolences to
Harrys family, please visit www.
grazianofuneralhome.com.
Mary Ann S. Ferretti
June 14, 2013
M
ary Ann S. Ferretti, 72, of
Gilbert, Ariz., and formerly
of Pittston, went to be with the
Lord, surrounded by her loving
family, on Friday at Wilkes-Barre
General Hospital, following a
long illness.
She was the wife of Robert B.
Ferretti, with whom she shared
51 years of marriage and six years
prior to marriage.
Born March 20, 1941, she was a
daughter of the late Anthony Bar-
ney and Doris Cumbo. Raised in
Pittston, she attended St. Roccos
Catholic Elementary School and
graduated from Pittston High
School in 1959.
She later married Bob and
lived in Bamberg, Germany, Forty
Fort, Harding, Dillsburg, Pa., Al-
pharetta, Ga., and most recently,
Gilbert.
She was preceded in death by
her daughter, MaryAnn, 48, of
Alpharetta, as well as her sister,
Phyllis Maffei.
Surviving, in addition to her
husband, are her children, Lola
Marie and her husband, Dave
Carrell, Sahuarita, Ariz., Robert
A. and his wife, Maria Ferretti,
Peekskille, N.Y., Anthony R. and
his wife, Stacey, Edinboro, Pa.;
seven grandchildren; sister, Jen-
nifer McNulty, Pittston; many
nieces and nephews.
Bob and his family cannot ex-
press enough thanks to the nurses
on the fth oor east wing of Wil-
kes-Barre General Hospital for the
superb service and care they gave
to Mary Ann.
A Mass of Christian Burial will
be held at 9:30 a.m. Tuesday in
St. Barbaras Parish, St. Anthony
of Padua Roman Catholic Church,
Exeter. There will be no calling
hours. Interment services will
take place in the Italian Indepen-
dent Cemetery, West Wyoming.
Funeral services have been
entrusted to Graziano Funeral
Home Inc., Pittston Township.
For further information or to
express condolences to Mary
Anns family, please visit www.
grazianofuneralhome.com.
Clyde Miller Jr.
June 12, 2013
C
lyde Miller Jr., 79, of River
Street, Forty Fort, died on
Wednesday at Kingston Com-
mons, Kingston.
Born in Wilkes-Barre, he was a
son of the late Clyde J. Miller Sr.
and Emeline Montigney Miller.
He was a graduate of Kingston
High School and played on the
football team.
He served in the U.S. Navy.
He became an electrician and
worked for West Florida Elec-
tric on the Jim Woodruff Dam.
He also worked for Kellys At-
lantic Station, Jim Thorpe, and
retired from Columbia Products,
Wilkes-Barre. After retirement,
he worked in the security depart-
ment at Misericordia University.
He was a member of the Ameri-
can Legion, Daddow Isaac Post
No. 672, Dallas.
He loved his cats, Notre Dame
football and New York Yankees
baseball.
Preceding him death, in addi-
tion to his parents, are his step-
father, Arvon Roberts, and step-
mother Esther Miller.
Surviving are his wife of 57
years, Freda Evans Miller; four
children, Carole Vassello and her
husband, Marino, Forty Fort,
Vicki Johnson and her husband,
Mark, Lake Carey, Clyde III and
his wife, Geraldine, West Wyo-
ming, and Arvon Miller, Hunlock
Creek; four grandchildren, Bon-
nie Milburn, Clarks Summit, Dan-
iele Vassello and Marino Vassello,
both of Swoyersville, and Clyde J.
Miller IV, Philadelphia; two sis-
ters, Linda Piatt and her husband,
Michael, Kingston, and Esther
Bevis and her husband, Coleman;
nieces and nephews.
Funeral will be held at
11 a.m. Monday at Hugh
B. Hughes & Son Inc. Fu-
neral Home, 1044 Wyoming Ave.,
Forty Fort, with the Rev. James
Quinn, pastor of the Bennett
Presbyterian Church, Luzerne, of-
ciating.
The interment will be in Fern
Knoll Burial Park, Dallas. Friends
may call from 2 to 5 p.m. Sunday
at the funeral home.
Memorial contributions, if de-
sired, can be made to the SPCA,
524 E. Main St., Plains Township,
PA 18702.
For information or to send the
family an online message of con-
dolence, visit the funeral homes
website at www.hughbhughes.
com.
The Times Leader
publishes free obituar-
ies, which have a 27-line
limit, and paid obituar-
ies, which can run with
a photograph. A funeral
home representative can
call the obituary desk at
(570) 829-7224, send a
fax to (570) 829-5537 or
e-mail to tlobits@times-
leader.com. If you fax
or e-mail, please call to
conrm. Obituaries must
be submitted by 9 p.m.
Sunday through Thurs-
day and 7:30 p.m. Friday
and Saturday. Obituaries
must be sent by a funeral
home or crematory, or
must name who is
handling arrangements,
with address and phone
number. We discourage
handwritten notices; they
incur a $15 typing fee.
OBI TUARY
POL I CY
AUFIERE - Maria, Mass of Chris-
tian Burial 9:30 a.m. today in St.
Joseph Marello Parish, William
Street, Pittston. Friends may call
8:30 a.m. until Mass.
BRENNAN - Jean, funeral 9:30
a.m. today at Wroblewski Funeral
Home Inc., 1442 Wyoming Ave.,
Forty Fort. Mass of Christian Burial
10 a.m. in St. Elizabeth Ann Seton
Parish, 116 Hughes St., Swoyers-
ville.
COOMBS - George, funeral servic-
es 11 a.m. Tuesday in the Town Hill
United Methodist Church, 417 Town
Hill Road, Shickshinny. Friends may
call 10 a.m. until services.
CULVER - Derek, memorial service
4 to 5 p.m. July 6 at Yeosock Fu-
neral Home, 40 S. Main St., Plains
Township.
CURRY - Thomas, funeral 9 a.m.
Monday at Paul F. Leonard Funeral
Home, 575 N. Main St., Pittston.
Mass of Christian Burial 9:30 a.m.
in Our Lady of the Eucharist Par-
ish. Friends may call 4 to 8 p.m.
Sunday.
FERRETTI - Mary Ann, Mass of
Christian Burial 9:30 a.m. Tuesday
in St. Barbaras Parish, St. Anthony
of Padua Roman Catholic Church,
Exeter.
GENSEL - Bernadine, funeral
services 9 a.m. today at Clarke
Piatt Funeral Home Inc., 6 Sunset
Lake Road, Hunlock Creek. Mass
of Christian Burial 10 a.m. in Our
Lady of Mount Carmel Church,
Lake Silkworth. Friends may call 8
a.m. until services.
GOLEMBESKI - Carolyn, Mass of
Christian Burial 11 a.m. today in St.
Patricks Church, Wilkes-Barre.
GRZYMSKI - Josephine, fu-
neral service 9:30 a.m. Monday
at Lehman Family Funeral Service
Inc., 689 Hazle Ave., Wilkes-Barre.
Mass of Christian Burial 10 a.m. in
Holy Family Church, Sugar Notch.
Friends may call 5 to 8 p.m. Sun-
day at the funeral home.
GUERRIERI - Carmine, funeral
services 9:30 a.m. today at Thom-
as P. Kearney Funeral Home Inc.,
517 N. Main St., Old Forge. Divine
liturgy 10 a.m. in St. Nicholas of
Myra Byzantine Catholic Church,
140 Church St., Old Forge.
HETTES - John Sr., funeral
services 11 a.m. today at Curtis
L. Swanson Funeral Home Inc.,
corner of routes 29 and 118, Pikes
Creek.
KAZINETZ - Loretta, funeral ser-
vices 8:30 a.m. today at Lokuta-Za-
wacki Funeral Home, 200 Wyoming
Ave., Dupont. Funeral Mass 9 a.m.
in Holy Mother Of Sorrows Church,
212 Wyoming Ave., Dupont.
LEWIS - Dale, funeral services
noon today in Braintrim Baptist
Church, Laceyville. Friends may
call 11 a.m. until services.
LEWIS - Michael Jr., celebration of
life 8:30 a.m. today at McLaugh-
lins The Family Funeral Service,
142 S. Washington St., Wilkes-
Barre. Funeral Mass 9:30 a.m. in
the Church of St. Ignatius Loyola,
Kingston.
OLSHEFSKI - Clemence, fu-
neral services 10:30 a.m. today
at George A. Strish Inc. Funeral
Home, 211 W. Main St., Glen Lyon.
Mass of Christian Burial 11 a.m. in
Holy Spirit Parish/St. Adalberts
Church. Friends may call 9:30 a.m.
until services.
SMYDEN - Josephine, funeral
services 11 a.m. today in Mountain
Top Presbyterian Church.
TRACY - Michael, Mass of Chris-
tian Burial 10 a.m. today in St.
John the Evangelist Church, Wil-
liam Street, Pittston.
FUNERALS
In Memoriams
To Better Serve Our Customers
Mon. deadline is Thurs. at 11am
Tues. deadline is Thurs. at 5pm
Wed. deadline is Fri. at 4pm
Thurs. deadline is Mon. at 4pm
Fri. deadline is Tues. at 4pm
Sat. deadline is Wed. at 4pm
Sun. deadline is Thurs. at 4pm
For more Info Call 829-7100
NOTICE
TOALL
VETERANS
and ex-service personnel who have loyally
served their country in peace and in war.
If you were honorably discharged and
live anywhere in the State of
Pennsylvania, you are now entitled to a
burial space at no cost in the veterans
memorial section at
Chapel Lawn Memorial Park
RD 5 Box 108, Dallas, PA 18612
This offer is available for a limited time
only. Special protection features are
available for your spouse and minor
children with National Transfer
Protection. This limited time offer is
also extended to members of the
National Guard and Reserve.
Space is limited.
Conditions - Burial spaces cannot be for
investment purposes. You must register
for your free burial space.
1-800-578-9547 Ext. 6001
JOSEPHINE A. GRZYM-
SKI, of Ashley, died Thursday
in Geisinger Wyoming Valley
Medical Center, Plains Town-
ship. She was preceded in death
by her sisters, Dolores Motto
and Lillian Pesta. Surviving are
her devoted husband, Anthony
Grzymski; cherished daughters,
Mary Jo (Vic) Podsadlik, Debbie
(Ed) Cunningham, Ann Marie
(Dave) Kleeman; four grandchil-
dren; brothers, Joseph, Gregory
and Godfrey Zawatski.
Funeral service is at 9:30
a.m. Monday at the Lehman
Family Funeral Service Inc., 689
Hazle Ave., Wilkes-Barre. Mass
of Christian Burial is at 10 a.m.
in Holy Family Church, Sugar
Notch, with interment in St.
Marys Cemetery. Friends may
call 5 to 8 p.m. Sunday at the
funeral home. For more informa-
tion visit www.lehmanfuneral-
home.com.
Joan M. Roberts
June 14, 2013
J
oan M. Roberts, 79, of James
Street, Kingston, died on Fri-
day at Wilkes-Barre General Hos-
pital.
Born in Wilkes-Barre, she was
a daughter of the late Charles
and Edith Reese Selober. She
graduated from Forty Fort High
School.
Joan was a bookkeeper for
Roats Hardware in Kingston
for many years. She resided in
Kingston for 60 years.
Her grandson, Bryan Barletta,
preceded her in death.
Surviving are her husband
of 60 years, Robert E. Roberts;
daughter, Sharon Roberts, Wil-
kes-Barre; two grandchildren,
Joseph Barletta Jr. and Kimberly
Barletta; many great-grandchil-
dren.
Funeral will be held at 2 p.m.
Monday from Hugh B. Hughes
& Son Inc. Funeral Home, 1044
Wyoming Ave., Forty Fort, with
the Rev. James Quinn, ofciat-
ing. The interment will be in
Chapel Lawn Memorial Park,
Dallas. Friends may call 5 to 8
p.m. Sunday at the funeral home.
For information or to send the
family an online message of con-
dolence, visit the funeral homes
website at www.hughbhughes.
com.
KIM DAVIS, 53, of South
Street, Nanticoke, passed away
Thursday in the University of
Pennsylvania Hospital, Phila-
delphia.
Funeral arrangements
are pending from the Earl W.
Lohman Funeral Home Inc., 14
W. Green St., Nanticoke.
Caroline Turel
June 14, 2013
Caroline Turel,
92, of Avoca,
passed away
Friday at the
Riverside Nurs-
ing and Reha-
bilitation Cen-
ter, Taylor.
She was born
in Avoca, April 11,1921 and was
the daughter of the late Joseph
and Carolina (Kosielny) Dudzick.
Caroline was a member of
Queen Of The Apostles Parish,
Avoca and a former member of
Ss. Peter & Paul Church where
she was active with the Altar
and Rosary Society, and very ac-
tive with all past Ss. Peter & Paul
Church events, such as making
quilts and making pierogies for
the parish picnics. She was a lov-
ing mother, grandmother, great
grandmother and sister and will
be deeply missed.
In addition to her parents, she
was preceded in death by her hus-
band Stanley Turel who died in
1996; her brother Michael, with
whom she passed on the 24th
anniversary of his death, and
brothers, Joseph, and Stanley; her
sisters, Elizabeth Dudzick, Anna
Plis, Mary Weaver, Helen Durko
and Frances Lukasik.
She is survived by her son Ron-
ald and his wife Andrea Turel,
of Avoca; grandson Joshua and
his wife Bridgit; granddaughter
Samantha and her husband Mat-
thew Pisano; great-grandchildren,
Arianna, Isabella and Levi Pisano,
and Aiden Turel.
Funeral services will be
at 9:30 a.m. Monday at from
Kiesinger Funeral Services Inc.,
255 McAlpine St., Duryea, with
a Mass of Christian Burial at 10
a.m. in Queen Of The Apostles
Parish, Hawthorne Street, Avoca,
with Fr. Phillip Sladicka ofciat-
ing. Friends may call 8:30 a.m. un-
til time of service. Interment will
be held at Ss. Peter & Paul Cem-
etery, Avoca. Online condolences
may be made to www.kiesingerfu-
neralservices.com.
Plains Township
approves police,
re radio purchase
By SUSAN BETTINGER
Times Leader Correspondent
PLAINS TWP. The
Board of Commissioners ap-
proved a motion to purchase
35 portable radios at a cost of
$40,810 under the COSTARS
program. The radios will be
used by the re and the police
departments.
The commissioners also
approved the following mea-
sures at the meeting:
The purchase of a 2013
Ford Interceptor police cruis-
er for $35, 705.19 under the
COSTARS program.
A motion awarding the
bid for sale of a portion of the
old Laurel Line property, off
of Center Drive, to George
Sincavage for $24,000.
A motion to amend the
fee resolution and prepare
a new resolution to include
storm water permit fees, sub-
ject to review and approval of
solicitor.
A motion to approve a
right-of-entry agreement with
PPL Electric Utilities for a
project on North Beech Road
near the North Main Street
intersection.
In other matters, the com-
missioners accepted the res-
ignation of James Bush from
the Planning Commission ef-
fective Aug. 2. Commissioner
Ciro Cinti thanked Bush for
his many years of service.
WILKES-BARRE Pros-
ecutors in the case of accused
murderer Hugo Selenski have
asked for additional time to le
court papers in preparation of an
August trial due to several recent
shootings in Luzerne County.
Prosecutors said in court
papers led Thursday they need
more time to le juror questions,
an exhibit list, a witness list
and a trial brief because pros-
ecutors have been tied up with
double shootings in Hazleton and
Wilkes-Barre, and a shooting in
Harveys Lake that has left a man
hospitalized.
Court papers indicate Selens-
kis attorneys do not object to the
four-day extension that prosecu-
tors requested.
A judge has not yet made a de-
cision on allowing the extension.
Selenski, 39, of Kingston
Township, is awaiting trial in
connection with the May 3, 2002,
deaths of Michael Kerkowski and
Fassett, both 38. Their bodies
were unearthed from the prop-
erty where Selenski was living in
June 2003.
WILKES-BARRE Luzerne
County Senior Judge Chester
Muroski on Tuesday jailed ve
defendants and issued arrest
warrants for 17 other people who
were found in contempt for alleg-
edly failing to pay child support.
Those who were lodged:
Todd Alford, Schwabe Street,
Freeland, $46,140; Jeffrey Oelke,
Laurel Run Road, Bear Creek
Twp., $7,801; Joel M. Figueroa,
New Grant Street, Wilkes-Barre,
$3,161; Sir Franklin Wheeling,
Parkview Circle, Wilkes-Barre,
$3,456; and Russell McRae,
Beech Street, Wilkes-Barre,
$3,083.
Those for whom a warrant
was issued: Robert Garlock,
Sand Street, Pittston, $56,404;
Rebecca Hackney, Walnut Street,
Freeland, $331; Michael Rhodes,
Mill Street, Saint Clair, $2,679;
Dennis Cosgrove Sr., Autumn
Drive, White Haven, $6,024;
Tammy Grosz, Market Street,
Berwick, $1,443; Brad Strack-
bein, Grant Street, Olyphant,
$3,328; Michael Sell, Ben-
nett Street, Kingston, $1,129;
William Long Jr., Franklin
Street, Plymouth, $4,579; Brian
Klein, Montgomery Avenue,
West Pittston, $1,376; Gerald
Pambianco, Hughes Street,
Swoyersville, $2,415; Joseph J.
Mellwig, Peacock Road, Audu-
bon, N.J., $6,497; Tyrone W. Lee,
Vine Street, Plymouth, $6,363;
Charles Wickiser, Cherry Street,
Edwardsville, $2,104; Randolph
Ozehoski, Liberty Street, Ha-
nover Township, $1,729; Michael
Rogers, Bennett Street, Luzerne,
$4,369; Shannon Chiverella,
Dundee Apartments, Hanover
Township, $1,071; Jacob Thomp-
son, Market Street, Lock Haven,
$3,752.
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TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com SATuRDAy, JunE 15, 2013 N E W S PAGE 9A
dirt and nding something.
There was no immediate
clue to the provenance of this
particular scrap of earthen-
ware. But recent analysis of
artifacts much like it has led
volunteer archaeologists and
local history enthusiasts such
as Dziak to believe that stone
foundations rst discovered
in a wooded area of Coxton
Yards near the Susquehanna
River several years ago most
likely mark the site of a fron-
tier cabin built in the mid-
1700s by the pioneering Phil-
lips family fromNewEngland.
Were feeling more and
more strongly about it, said
Al Pesotine, president of
Pittston-based Pan Cultural
Associates, an archaeological
consulting rm, who is work-
ing with the volunteers.
Members of the Frances
Dorrance Chapter of the So-
ciety for Pennsylvania Archae-
ology have been excavating a
prehistoric American Indian
site nearby since 1993. In
2009, Dziak said, some chap-
ter members began searching
for more evidence of ancient
life in the woods near the
main dig site. That diversion
led them to an altogether dif-
ferent nd: a stone wall 3 feet
below the soil.
We did nd one interest-
ing artifact in that wall, a
small teapot, Pesotine said.
It appeared to be very early
1800s.
Volunteers mostly returned
their attention to the main
site, but one man in particu-
lar showed special interest
in that buried wall. Society
member Ted Baird spent hun-
dreds of hours digging out
the subterranean foundation.
What ultimately emerged was
the square base of a structure,
with evidence of use into the
early 1900s. But off to one
side a smaller, more irregular
foundation emerged, together
with what appeared to be
even older items: iron nails,
bones, coins, buttons, beads
of the type often traded with
native tribes, and, of course,
pottery.
The artifacts we were com-
ing up with were pretty inter-
esting, Baird said. But whose
were they?
Around the 1760s, the Phil-
lips family from Rhode Island
was granted title to land in
the Wyoming Valley by a Con-
necticut charter, he said. At
that time, ownership of what
is now Northeastern Pennsyl-
vania was still contested by
the colonies of Connecticut
and Pennsylvania.
While Francis Frank Phil-
lips appears to have been the
original title holder, research
suggests that his son John
was the sites likely rst occu-
pant, Baird said.
Drawing the connection
between scattered relics and
the Phillips clan took time.
It was only within the past
year that research done by
Martin Reinbold, one of Pe-
sotines associates, honed in
on the origins of those bits of
plates and pitchers based on
comparison with databases of
preserved crockery from that
era. Among the oldest items
identied is a piece of stone-
ware believed to have been
imported from England about
1740, Pesotine said.
They were not poor peo-
ple, based on the ceramics,
he added.
They were, however, tena-
cious, Baird explained. There
almost certainly was friction
between settlers and natives,
at least until the Revolution-
ary War. John Phillips fought
in that war alongside the
famed Green Mountain Boys
of Vermont, Baird said. At one
point, Phillips was displaced
from the Coxton Yards site
when Pennsylvania settlers
drove out Connecticut set-
tlers while the two colonies
sparred over rival claims to
the region. That ght wasnt
settled until 1799, but Phillips
eventually returned to the
homestead along the Susque-
hanna.
Researchers still have much
work to do in piecing together
the story of a property, which
might have remained in use as
a home until the early 1900s,
Baird said. Accumulated lay-
ers in the foundation wall, to-
gether with later artifacts sug-
gest the site might have gone
through three or four distinct
phases, nally ending its days
as a railroad yard outbuilding
in the early- to mid-1900s.
Pesotine said volunteers
also are exploring avenues for
grant funding to help with the
work of researching and con-
serving the site and the arti-
facts, which he expects will
ultimately nd a home with
an area museum or preserva-
tion group.
The society meets regu-
larly at the Duryea Municipal
Building and holds free open
digs each Sunday at Coxton
Yards. No prior experience
with archaeology is needed.
Anyone interested in partici-
pating in the Phillips or na-
tive digs may email Baird at
tedbaird@verizon.net.
That whole area is loaded
with history, he said.
AIMEE DILGER /THE TIMES LEADER
Al Pesotine displays a hand-painted pottery shard found at the cabin site.
Continued from Page 1A
CABIN
polICe Blotter
LUZERNE A man was
arraigned Thursday on charges
he threw gasoline in another
mans face.
Benjamin Banks, 23, of
Beech Street,
Edwardsville,
was charged
by police with
aggravated as-
sault, simple
assault,
reckless en-
dangerment,
disorderly
conduct and
harassment. He was arraigned
by District Judge Michael
Dotzel in Wilkes-Barre Town-
ship and jailed at the Luzerne
County Correctional Facility
for lack of $10,000 bail.
Harry Loefer told police he
overheard Banks and another
man talking about torching
a neighbors car on Vaughn
Street on April 28.
Loefer approached the two
men; Banks allegedly punched
him in the face and threw
gasoline in his face. Banks also
swung a knife, slicing Loefers
arm, according to the criminal
complaint.
A preliminary hearing is
scheduled on June 27 before
District Judge David Barilla in
Swoyersville.
WILKES-BARRE City
police arrested Jason Taylor,
32, of Kidder Street, Wilkes-
Barre, on evidence of drunken
driving after a crash at North
Pennsylvania Avenue and
Harry Street early Thursday
morning.
Taylor was arraigned on two
counts of driving under the
inuence and one count each
of false report and forgery.
He was jailed at the Luzerne
County Correctional Facility
for lack of $7,500 bail.
Police allege Taylor was driv-
ing a 2001 Chevrolet Malibu
when he crashed into a parked
2012 Acura just after 4 a.m. Tay-
lor also struck a parked 1990
GMC truck when attempting to
back up and drive away, accord-
ing to the criminal complaint.
Taylor displayed signs of
intoxication and refused to
submit to a blood test at Geis-
inger Wyoming Valley Medical
Center in Plains Township,
police said.
Taylor initially used another
name to identify himself, po-
lice said. He was taken to the
Kingston Police Department
where an electronic LiveScan
of his ngerprints revealed his
true identity, the complaint
states.
Court records show Taylor
had drunken driving convic-
tions in 2000 and 1999.
A preliminary hearing is
scheduled on June 27 before
District Judge Martin Kane.
NANTICOKE Police in-
vestigating complaints of drug
sales in an alley near South
Walnut Street arrested a man
they say sold crack cocaine on
Wednesday.
Richard Mac Wise, 25, who
is considered homeless, was
arraigned Thursday on charges
of possession with intent to
deliver a controlled substance,
possession of a controlled
substance, false identication
to law enforcement and pos-
session of drug paraphernalia.
He was jailed at the Luzerne
County Correctional Facility
for lack of $10,000 bail.
Police said they were patrol-
ling the alley in response to
residents complaints. Wise
and another man were seen
in the alley at about 4:30 p.m.
Wednesday, and police spotted
crack cocaine inside a vehicle
under a coffee cup, according
to the criminal complaint.
The other man was not
charged.
A preliminary hearing is
scheduled on June 26 before
District Judge Donald Whit-
taker in Nanticoke.
WILKES-BARRE A
man was arraigned Thursday
on charges he urinated on a
vacant building and provided
police with a false identica-
tion.
Kareem T. Moore, 29, of
North Empire Court, Wilkes-
Barre, was charged with open
lewdness, false identication
and disorderly conduct. He
was released without bail.
Police allege Moore was
spotted urinating on a build-
ing in the second block of
South Main Street on March
16. Moore used another name
to identify himself to police,
according to the criminal
complaint.
A preliminary hearing is
scheduled on June 25 before
District Judge Rick Cronauer
in Wilkes-Barre.
PITTSTON TWP. Town-
ship police arrested a man they
said threatened to kill his sister
and her family on Wednesday.
Patrick Kelly, 39, of Wilkes-
Barre, was charged with
terroristic threats, disorderly
conduct and possession of
drug paraphernalia. He was
jailed at the Luzerne County
Correctional Facility for lack of
$7,500 bail.
Police investigated a do-
mestic disturbance on Poole
Street at about 4:40 p.m. and
encountered Kelly walking in
the middle of Norman Street,
they said.
Kelly kept placing his hands
in his pockets, where police
allege they found a pipe com-
monly used to smoke illicit
drugs. Kelly threatened to kill
everybody in his sisters house,
according to police.
A preliminary hearing is
scheduled for June 26.
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PITTSTON TOWNSHIP
The Tax Ofce will be
closed Monday through July 1.
Anyone wishing to pay taxes
during this time should do so
by mail.
Supplemental rebate values
will end June 30 for county,
municipal and school taxes.
Postmark must read June
30 when mailing rebate
payments. All else will be
returned as unacceptable.
LUZERNE Borough
garbage stickers for July to
December are available for
sale at Gerritys Supermarket,
Luzerne Shopping Center.
KINGSTON TOWNSHIP
The Board of Supervisors
approved two resolutions
Wednesday altering trafc
patterns.
Effective immediately, there
will be no left turn from North
Main Street onto state Route
309 (near Lewith & Freeman
Real Estate ofces).
Effective upon completion of
the South Main Street bridge
replacement project, trafc
exiting state Route 309 onto
South Main Street will be in a
one-way direction.
Questions regarding these
changes to trafc patterns can
be directed to the townships
Administration Ofce, 570-
696-3809.
municipal briefs
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com SUNDAY, JUNE 15,, 2013 N E W S PAGE 10A
EDITORIAL
Time to punish people
who purchase illegal guns
A
lright folks its time to end the slaugh-
ter. It seems that everyday we hear and
read about another shooting in Wilkes-
Barre, Scranton or Hazleton.
The guns used in these instances are
not legitimately purchased but rather
picked up on the street and are generally
stolen. It is a prolic business and well
patronized.
There are federal gun laws that are
not being followed. One law states that
if an illegal gun is used in a crime, the
perp has time added at sentencing for the
illegal possession. It is rarely used. The
perp does some time for another crime
and is then released to begin the fun all
over again.
I dont know about you but Im tired
of hearing about all these shootings.
Weve got to make it very unpopular to
be caught with an illegal gun. How do we
accomplish this?
We petition our lawmakers to create
a new law that says that if your caught
in possession of an illegal gun you are
immediately sent to the slammer for 15
years. No plea bargains or lengthy trials.
Your caught you do the time.
This would not be anything new.
Richmond Virginia did it some years ago
and the crime rate went down consider-
ably. Ive heard that there is interest for
this to go national. I would be the rst to
to give it my support.
So what do you think? Weve got to
stand up and say we are not going to take
it anymore!
Nick Pucino
Nanticoke
NSA should monitor real
problems, not US citizens
O
ne would think that citizens demand
more from the government where the
NSA is monitoring emails and phone calls
of millions of Americans.
Why dont they monitor the Mexican
cartel that is selling cheap drugs and
addicting our children in every city in
America. Apparently the NSA missed the
Russian Muslims allegedly responsible for
the Boston bombing. They must have had
a private line.
George J. Kochis
Kingston
SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 2013 PAgE 11A TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com S E RV I NG T HE P UB L I C T RUS T S I NC E 1 8 8 1
OTHER OPINION: WILDLIFE
Help count Pa.s
bat population
S
uMMeR ANd warm
weather are at hand,
and with the heat season
come the mosquitoes.
These pesky insects, which leave
behind itchy bites and occasion-
ally transmit disease, are as good
a reason as any to support a new
bat census.
Wildlife biologists with the
Pennsylvania Game Commis-
sion in Pennsylvania are looking
for volunteers to help count Ap-
palachian bats. The census will
help them assess the damage a
fatal disease called White-Nose
Syndrome has inicted on bat
populations in northeastern and
central states. Millions of bats
have died from this little-under-
stood ailment.
everyone from individuals to
Scout groups, 4-H clubs, and en-
vironmental organizations can
take part in the count of Penn-
sylvanias two most common bat
species, the little brown bat and
the big brown bat. Most female
bats use buildings as nurseries
where they raise their young
during the summer.
Few people understand, or
even care, what an important
role bats play in our ecosystem.
But without hundreds of thou-
sands of bats on the wing every
night, millions more mosquitoes
would plague us human beings.
One bat can consume up to 500
mosquitoes and other insects
in a single evening. Thats won-
derfully effective, nontoxic pest
control, something we all should
value in wet weather, perfect
breeding conditions for mosqui-
toes.
Remember, bats appetites
also help control the West Nile
Virus, which mosquitoes carry,
and the diseases it causes.
unfortunately, White-Nose
Syndrome has killed hundreds
of thousands of bats across the
northeastern united States. The
little-understood fungus thrives
in the kind of cold, wet caves and
abandoned mines where bats
congregate and hibernate, and
has a 90-percent fatality rate.
Scientists have been studying
the syndrome for several years,
seeking its causes and trying to
develop controls or at least slow
its fatal march. Vollunteers will
help them determine how many
bats survive.
Get over thinking of bats as
just creepy, uninvited home in-
vaders or characters in horror
ction. Remember that without
them, millions more mosquitoes
and other small insects would
ply the night skies.
Please consider counting
these small, homely but valuable
creatures before they pass into
little more than legend.
Pocono Record
MALLARD FILLMORE DOONESBURY
Payday lenders
are out for blood
T
He PAYdAY-lending
industrys buddies
have learned much
from todays depictions
of vampires as romantic gures.
Movie vampires have evolved
from creepy Bela Lugosis to
dreamy Robert Pattinsons. Simi-
larly, payday-loan outts have
been given a cosmetic makeover
in bills cleverly disguised by Har-
risburg lawmakers as consumer
protection or micro loan mea-
sures.
Only a few months ago, hard-
working religious and commu-
nity activists put a stake into the
heart of fake consumer-protec-
tion legislation. But now, it lives!
A new short-term-loan proposal
has emerged from the dark shad-
ows and is moving toward pas-
sage with supernatural speed.
Sen. Patrick Browne (R., Le-
high) led a memo on May 7
that said he would sponsor the
new bill. An actual copy of the
legislation surfaced May 31,
when it was assigned to the
banking committee. That panel
voted it out on June 4. If it now
gets past the Appropriations
Committee, a full Senate vote
would be next. If it passes the
Senate, the bill is likely to pass
the House. The lower chamber
didnt inch when it eagerly
passed the previous payday-loan
bill, so why should it now?
The new bill would allow
payday lenders to charge an-
nual interest rates exceeding
300 percent, including allowable
fees, on a 14-day loan. Borrow-
ers must give the sharks access
to their bank accounts, so the
lenders can easily drain them to
get their payments. The bill also
allows consecutive loans, which
will only drive consumers deep-
er into debt.
Short-term payday loans are
targeted at desperate consumers
who are too poor to get a conven-
tional loan. Proponents are ped-
dling the loans as needed nan-
cial instruments that can help a
family get a handle on car-repair
bills or a medical emergency.
Typically, a borrower takes out
a loan that must be repaid within
a week or two. But repaying the
loan often makes it difcult for
the borrower to pay other bills.
So, he takes out another short-
term loan. That cyclical borrow-
ing is what consumer advocates
call a debt trap. Subsequent
fees and interest payments can
push a family into insolvency.
The state Supreme Court
in 2010 upheld rules for loans
made over the Internet, saying
lenders must be licensed by the
state and may charge no more
than about 24 percent interest
on loans of $25,000 or less. If the
new legislation changes the le-
gal basis for that ruling, consum-
ers will again become prey.
Its time to shove a stake that
works into the Pennsylvania
bills heart.
The Philadelphia Inquirer
MAIL BAG | LETTERS FROM READERS
SEND US YOUR OPINION
Letters to the editor must include the writ-
ers name, address and daytime phone num-
ber for verication. Letters should be no
more than 250 words. We reserve the right
to edit and limit writers to one published let-
ter every 30 days.
Email: mailbag@timesleader.com
Fax: 570-829-5537
Mail: Mail Bag, The Times Leader, 15 N.
Main St., Wilkes-Barre, PA 18711
OTHER OPINION: SHORT-TERM LOANS
qUOTE OF THE DAY
This pain is excruciating and unbearable but
thanks to people like you, that come out and sup-
port us, we are able to get through this.
Carlee Soto
Sister of Victoria Soto, one of the victims of the Newtown, Conn. school
shootings, during a gathering at Edmond Town Hall for a 26-second moment
of silence, honoring the 20 children and six adults gunned down at the
school on Dec. 14.
Patriot Act -- roll it back, repeal it or just let it expire
ITS TIMe. Its time for President Obama
to live up to his own words. Its time for
Congress to do its job. Its time to contract
the ever-expanding national security state.
And its time to roll back the Patriot Act.
In Washington, elected ofcials are cir-
cling the wagons. The Obama administra-
tion claims that its Internet and telephone
surveillance programs are legal; the ones
we know about, indeed, are. Republicans
whove never met a national security
program they didnt love and key demo-
crats have closed ranks, arguing that the
program has had many selected successes,
many of them secret.
But just because something is legal and
can be done does that mean that it should
remain so and continue to be done? No.
Laws are made and unmade all the time.
And the argument that vast, dragnet-style
surveillance has stopped terrorists at the
lamentable expense of privacy is exactly
the same argument that the Bush admin-
istration made about torture: better to
sacrice our principles and a few people in
the hope of saving many.
That was an argument that still isnt
proven true, years after the fact. As disap-
pointing is to see major liberal gures de-
cide just to circle around their president,
saying, Well, hes our guy. We trust him.
even if hes your guy now he wont be your
guy in 2017 and last I checked we were a
nation of laws, not men. Bill Maher and
Lawrence Odonnell will likely regret their
choice to become advocates as opposed to
uninching commentators.
Arguments aside, here is a fact: The
Patriot Act, under which all of this surveil-
lance is being justied, is set to expire
in 2015. Congress extended it at the last
minute and President Obama signed the
extension into law in May 2011. After cam-
paigning against the excesses of the previ-
ous administration, the president found it
urgent enough to sign the extension using
the White House auto pen just before mid-
night though he was in Paris himself.
The law vastly expanded surveillance
in this country and abroad and provided
police powers to a wide array of agencies
on a wide array of fronts, from locking up
undocumented immigrants to empowering
the Federal Reserve Board of Governors
to act as police agents in nancial transac-
tions. And, of course, it led to the expan-
sion of widespread surveillance of phone
records and Internet trafc, messages
and content to which nearly all of us
blithely contribute.
As Colorado Sen. Mark udall has said,
Congress should now begin the process of
reviewing the Patriot Act, well prior to its
expiration. And it should do so in the most
public manner possible. The intelligence
community should not hide behind the old
sources and methods apron but instead
provide numbers, case studies and quanti-
able results, even if they are reasonably
sanitized. every legal interpretation of the
act should be open to scrutiny not hid-
den by classication.
Besides, how accurate are these data-
bases and algorithms, really? Consider two
different groups being fairly, regularly and
often mistakenly detained.
First there are pilots. In May, Gabriel Sil-
verstein was detained not once but twice
by the department of Homeland Security
as he ew his plane across the Midwest
with nary a reason given but a fruitless in-
spection by a drug dog thrown in to boot.
All that he learned was the ight prole
he willingly led t a prole in a database
known as AMOSS, which tracks and ana-
lyzes 24,000 ights a day using both FAA
and military radar. Other pilots have been
similarly detained in South Carolina and
Texas, all according to the radical Airline
Owners and Pilots Association.
Second there are air travelers. Last year,
one of the most famous actors in the world
was detained: Indian cinema star Shah
Rukh Khan was mistakenly held for two
hours after landing aboard a private jet in
White Plains, N.Y., en route to an event at
Yale university where he was to receive
an honorary fellowship. But not to be
outdone, agents at Bostons Logan Airport
mistakenly detained an Indian state of-
cial, carrying a diplomatic passport on
his way to Harvard. A British traveler was
turned away in Los Angeles for a Twitter
message that while bizarre also indicated
that he was to unearth the remains of
Marilyn Monroe.
There is more at work here, though,
than the mere accuracy of these programs.
Big things always are open to big abuse.
In 2008, ABC News reported that NSA
was listening in on the private telephone
conversations of none other than Ameri-
can soldiers in the Middle east. These
intelligence efforts are so vast and intru-
sive it is unlikely that even the handful
of informed members of Congress really
understand them. The Canadian national
and provincial governments have tried to
stop u.S. agencies from seizing records in
that country. And increasingly, Americans
living abroad who have unpaid tax bills
have their names entered into the TeCS
database by the IRS and are detained upon
arrival by Homeland Security, according to
yet another radical group the American
Institute of Certied Public Accountants.
Now, its time for the intelligence com-
munity to make its case in public. And
its time to roll back the Patriot Act, repeal
it or just let it expire.
Richard Parker writes for the NewYork Times, The
NewRepublic, the Columbia JournalismReviewand
McClatchy-Tribune.
COMMENTARY
RI CHARD PARKER
(570) 825-8508
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84/65
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81/64
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91/78
Atlanta
88/69
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78/65
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97/76
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86/70
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77/67
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77/50
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SEVEN-DAY FORECAST
HIGH
LOW
TEMPERATURES
ALMANAC NATIONAL FORECAST
PRECIPITATION
Lehigh
Delaware
Sunrise Sunset
Moonrise Moonset
Today Today
Today Today
Susquehanna Stage Chg Fld Stg
RIVER LEVELS
ACROSS THE REGION TODAY
Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation today. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Shown is
todays weather.
Temperatures are
todays highs and
tonights lows.
SUN & MOON
Key: s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy,
c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms,
r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
Wilkes-Barre
Scranton
Philadelphia
Reading
Pottsville
Allentown
Harrisburg
State College
Williamsport
Towanda
Binghamton
Syracuse
Albany
Poughkeepsie
New York
PHILADELPHIA
THE JERSEY SHORE
SUN TUE
WED THU
MON
FRI
TODAY
78
53
A shower
or thun-
derstorm
82 60
A couple
of thun-
derstorms
79 57
Partly
sunny
80 54
Partly
sunny
81 58
Clouds
and sun, a
t-storm
83 64
Partly
sunny
79 56
Mostly
sunny and
pleasant
COOLING DEGREE DAYS
Degree days are an indicator of energy needs. The more the
total degree days, the more energy is necessary to cool.
Yesterday 0
Month to date 30
Year to date 94
Last year to date 117
Normal year to date 71
Anchorage 74/57/s 77/61/s
Baltimore 82/61/s 84/65/t
Boston 80/59/s 77/62/t
Buffalo 74/59/s 77/62/t
Charlotte 86/65/s 88/65/pc
Chicago 77/67/t 82/65/t
Cleveland 74/63/pc 78/64/t
Dallas 94/76/t 97/76/s
Denver 84/58/t 87/53/s
Honolulu 88/73/pc 87/73/s
Indianapolis 84/67/pc 81/67/t
Las Vegas 101/78/s 99/77/s
Milwaukee 74/63/t 78/62/t
New Orleans 92/76/pc 90/74/s
Norfolk 83/68/s 89/70/pc
Okla. City 88/71/t 93/72/s
Orlando 92/73/t 91/73/pc
Phoenix 106/83/s 107/79/s
Pittsburgh 77/58/s 77/62/t
Portland, ME 77/53/pc 73/55/pc
St. Louis 88/72/t 87/71/t
San Francisco 66/52/pc 68/54/pc
Seattle 77/54/pc 78/54/pc
Wash., DC 84/65/s 88/69/t
Bethlehem 4.16 +0.20 16
Wilkes-Barre 6.30 +2.31 22
Towanda 4.21 +0.06 16
Port Jervis 8.91 +3.36 18
In feet as of 7 a.m. Friday.
Today Sun Today Sun Today Sun
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. 2013
June 16 June 23
June 30
First Full
Last New
July 8
5:30 a.m.
12:06 p.m.
8:38 p.m.
12:09 a.m.
THE POCONOS
Highs: 71-77. Lows: 47-53. Mostly sunny and nice today. Clear to partly
cloudy tonight. A shower or thunderstorm tomorrow afternoon.
Highs: 75-81. Lows: 59-65. Mostly sunny, pleasant and warmer today.
Mainly clear tonight.
THE FINGER LAKES
Highs: 73-79. Lows: 52-58. Mostly sunny and nice today. Partly cloudy
tonight.
NEW YORK CITY
High: 81. Low: 64. Sunshine, pleasant and warmer today. Clear to
partly cloudy tonight. A shower or thunderstorm tomorrow.
High: 82. Low: 64. Mostly sunny and delightful today. Clear to partly
cloudy tonight.
Wilkes-Barre/Scranton International Airport
through 7 p.m. Friday
High/low 74/52
Normal high/low 77/56
Record high 98 (1899)
Record low 43 (1979)
24 hrs ending 7 p.m. 0.37"
Month to date 3.05"
Normal m-t-d 1.95"
Year to date 12.84"
Normal y-t-d 15.75"
78/53
77/54
82/64
81/56
79/55
80/55
80/56
78/55
79/54
76/50
74/51
76/55
76/51
78/52
81/64
Summary: Much of the East, West, South and northern Plains will be dry
today. A few storms will dot the Florida Peninsula. Showers and locally strong
thunderstorms will reach from New Mexico to Upper Michigan.
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com SATuRDAy, JunE 15, 2013 N E W S PAGE 12A
yet to be made in many of the re-
ported crimes.
Police departments through-
out the state are required by law
to submit data to the state police,
which in turn provides it to the
FBI for a national perspective of
crime. The state data are com-
piled to inform government of-
cials and the
public about
crime and pro-
vide law en-
forcement with
information for
administrative
and operational
purposes.
The mayor
was unavailable
for comment
Friday. City
spokeswoman
Liza Prokop referred the public
to view the crime data online.
Thats the most up-to-date infor-
mation, she said.
The UCRS data for the city
showed a total of 1,540 offenses
known or reported to police as of
Friday compared to 1,622 from
a year ago. The crimes included
41 classications ranging from
murder and non-negligent man-
slaughter to disorderly conduct
and a collection of unclassied
offenses.
Overall there was an increase
in 22 of the 41 classications.
Four classications were un-
changed. There were decreases in
the remaining 15 classications.
Stolen property crimes had the
highest increase, of 933 percent,
to 31 this year from three last
year. Marijuana possession in-
creased 138 percent to 19 report-
ed offenses compared to eight.
Murder and non-negligent man-
slaughter increased 50 percent to
three from two.
Assault with a dangerous
weapon other than a knife or
rearm was unchanged at three
reported offenses. Forgery and
counterfeiting, drug sale and
manufacturing of marijuana and
driving under the inuence also
were unchanged.
There were no reports of pos-
session of synthetic drugs, forc-
ible rape and assault with a knife
or cutting instrument. Those
classications showed a 100 per-
cent decrease.
The data is comprehensive,
but probably not complete. The
general trend across the country
is about 50 percent of crimes get
reported, said Dennis Kenney,
a professor at John Jay College
of Criminal Justice in New York
City.
Still the statistics have value,
he added. It enables you to kind
of follow trends, Kenney said.
The reaction to the mayors
comment during the council
meeting was understandable, he
said, noting the publics percep-
tion of crime and the reality fre-
quently are not in sync.
During the 1970s, crime was
considered rampant in the New
York subway system, but that was
not the case, Kenney said.
In a city, crime does not occur
equally in neighborhoods. Some
neighborhoods experience more
crime than others. Not surpris-
ingly, people in the higher crime
areas have a different perception
than people in lower crime areas,
Kenney explained.
The city, however, might be
bucking the trend with the de-
crease.
Kenney said crime has been
down consistently across the
country for years, but the last
batch of numbers has not been
positive. This is the rst year its
gone up, he said.
While the citys crime infor-
mation is available, information
about police stafng is not.
A resident told council at
Thursdays meeting that only
four ofcers were on duty for
the Saturday night into Sunday
morning shift last weekend.
Prokop said Police Chief Gerry
Dessoye has never publicly com-
mented on how many patrol of-
cers are on the street at all times.
Speaking for Dessoye, Prokop
said the manpower complement
has never been comprised for
the safety of the citizens and po-
lice ofcers.
Continued from Page 1A
CRIME
Jan.1 - June 14 Jan. 1 - June 14 Percent
Offense 2012 2013 change
CRIME IN WILKES-BARRE CITY
The number of crimes committed in Wilkes-Barre City between Jan. 1 and June 14 2013
declined overall compared to the same time period in 2012. But a closer look shows crime
decreased in only 15 of 41 offenses tracked in the Pennsylvania Uniform Crime Reporting
System. An asterisk means the number increased but the percentage could not be calculated
because you cannot divide by zero.
Rape 0 8 *
Drug Sale/Mfg - Opium Cocaine 0 2 *
Drug Sale/Mfg - Other 0 5 *
Stolen Prop - Receive, possess, buy 3 31 933%
Embezzlement 1 6 500%
Offenses Against Family & Children 13 53 308%
Prostitution and Commercialized Vice 1 4 300%
Weapons - Carrying, Possession, Etc. 5 16 220%
Burglary - Attempted Forcible Entry 1 3 200%
Motor Vehicle Theft -Trucks and Buses 2 5 150%
Drug Possession - Marijuana 8 19 138%
Assault - Hands, Fist, Feet, Etc. 4 8 100%
Drug Possession -Opium Cocaine 4 8 100%
Drug Possession -Other 23 46 100%
Burglary Unlawful Entry - No Force 60 97 62%
Liquor Law 5 8 60%
Murder and Non-negligent Manslaughter 2 3 50%
Assault - Firearm 7 10 43%
Robbery - Firearm 11 14 27%
Robbery - Other Dangerous Weapon 6 7 17%
Robbery - Strong Arm (using hands, feet, etc.) 14 16 14%
Disorderly Conduct 43 46 7%
Assault - Other Dangerous Weapon 3 3 0%
Forgery and Counterfeiting 11 11 0%
Drug Sale/Mfg - Marijuana 1 1 0%
Driving Under the Inuence 59 59 0%
All Other Offenses (Except Trafc) 263 251 -5%
Larceny - Theft 414 384 -7%
Motor Vehicle Theft - Autos 41 33 -20%
Other Assaults - Not Aggravated 75 59 -21%
Drunkenness 155 119 -23%
Fraud 48 36 -25%
Burglary Forcible Entry 55 41 -25%
Sex Offenses (Except rape and prostitution) 26 16 -38%
Vandalism 202 106 -48%
Arson 2 1 -50%
Robbery Knife or Cutting Instrument 3 1 -67%
Motor Vehicle Theft - Other Vehicles 23 4 -83%
Rape by Force 17 0 -100%
Assault Knife or Cutting Instrument 10 0 -100%
Drug Possession - Synthetic 1 0 -100%
TOTAL 1,622 1,540 -5%
Mark Guydish/The Times Leader
O n T H E
W E B
Access the
Pennsylvania
Uniform Crime
Reporting
System data at
www.paucrs.
pa.gov/UCR/
ComMain.asp.
winter road-treatment mate-
rials at neighboring mainte-
nance facilities in Dupont.
Our cultures have
changed, Compton said of
the recently approved deal,
the rst of several statewide
in which PennDOT and the
Turnpike Commission will
work together and share ma-
terials to eliminate costly du-
plication.
The two facilities were a
good t for such a deal, being
located across the street
from one another, Compton
said. It means Turnpike of-
cials wont have to build a
new salt storage dome or re-
place its brine-making facili-
ty, while PennDOT will avoid
the $200,000 cost of new salt
and brine facilities. A fur-
ther $300,000 in savings will
come through sharing other
resources, Compton said.
While the PennDOT-Turn-
pike deal is the fruit of a col-
laboration initiative begun two
years ago, the future of added
funding under SB 1 is a battle
that will occupy state lawmak-
ers over the next two weeks.
The state Senate passed the
bill by a 45-1 vote on June 5.
It was the subject of a hearing
Thursday before the House
Transportation Committee,
where some speakers raised
concerns that the bill would
create hardships for consum-
ers because it would raise
funds through increased fuel
taxes, as well as increased
fees for vehicle registrations,
drivers licenses and a new
trafc-violation surcharge.
The extra $2 per week
borne by the average driver,
who drives 12,000 miles per
year, amounts to less than
the price of one gallon of gas,
Schoch said.
State Rep. Mike Carroll, D-
Avoca, a member of the trans-
portation committee, attend-
ed Fridays press conference
outside a PennDOT storage
facility, where he warned that
ailing infrastructure such as
Scrantons problem-plagued
Harrison Avenue Bridge of-
fers a vision of the type of
problems that will continue
to plague the state if funding
isnt secured.
Carroll said he remains
hopeful that the bill will
make it to the House oor for
consideration before the June
30 deadline.
State Sen. John Gordner,
R-Berwick, spoke about how
upgrades to Route 424 would
improve trafc ow and pave
the way for business growth
through better access to the
Humboldt Industrial Park.
As he has in print and in ap-
pearances elsewhere, Schoch
reiterated the grim catalogue
of consequences he predicts
will arise if the bill fails: 1,200
to 1,500 more bridges facing
weight restrictions this year,
creating hassles and extra
fuel costs for drivers and busi-
nesses; the loss of 12,000 pri-
vate-sector construction jobs,
most of which are located in
this state; and a 15 percent cut
to transit services across the
state.
This is not a political is-
sue. Its not a Republican is-
sue. Its not a Democratic
issue, Schoch said. Its a
leadership issue for Pennsyl-
vania.
Continued from Page 1A
ROADS
PETE G. WILCOX / THE TIMES LEADER
PennDOT Secretary Barry Schoch visited Hazleton Friday
to champion funding that would pay for projects such as an
extended Route 424, helping area businesses development.
the alleged armed robbery in
front of the apartment build-
ing near Susquehanna Av-
enue Thursday night.
According to the criminal
complaint:
Three men and a woman
all in their late teens and
early 20s told police they
were approached by a man
with dreadlocks in the area
of Academy Street and Carey
Avenue just after 6 p.m. They
claimed the man asked them
if they wanted to buy mari-
juana and to meet him at Car-
ey Avenue and Susquehanna
Avenue.
The four people traveled to
the street corner where the
man, identied as Glover, al-
legedly brandished a rearm
and said, Dont let it pop off,
you already know what it is.
Asecond man exited a vehi-
cle with a New Jersey license
plate that was parked nearby
and rummaged through their
pockets, taking their be-
longings. A bag the woman
was carrying was taken; she
claimed it contained $1,500,
makeup and hand sanitizer.
Another man said $1,000, a
cellphone and gift cards were
taken from him.
Police located the vehicle
parked in front of the Carey
Avenue apartment.
Glover came onto the
porch and asked why po-
lice were looking at the car,
which he said belonged to
the mother of his child.
Police said in the com-
plaint the four people identi-
ed Glover as one of the rob-
bery suspects.
Police allegedly found a
bag of heroin in a rice con-
tainer inside the apartment.
The three men and woman
who intended to buy marijua-
na were not charged.
A preliminary hearing is
scheduled on June 25 before
District Judge Rick Cronau-
er.
Continued from Page 1A
GLOVER
ing to see if anyone can iden-
tify possible funding outside the
county. We hope someone steps
forward before its too late.
Genetti said the areas munici-
pal ofcials could band together
and propose the project for fund-
ing via the states casino rev-
enues. Legislators have barred
counties from seeking gaming
funds for county government
projects.
The county Redevelopment
Authority, which is supervised
by an independent citizen board,
purchased the building six years
ago at the request of past county
commissioners.
The county gave the author-
ity $6.1 million $5.8 million
to buy the property based on
appraisals and the remainder to
start designing the renovation.
Prior county administrations
had planned to allocate another
$2 million in Community De-
velopment funding to outt the
structure for a senior center,
tourism bureau and other coun-
ty-related ofces.
County Manager Robert Law-
ton halted that plan last year,
saying he couldnt justify reduc-
ing the Community Develop-
ment business loan fund from
$11 million to $9 million for a
project that wont create jobs.
Lawton said Friday he stands
by that decision. The Com-
munity Development ofce is
stepping up promotion of its
low-interest loans because job
creation has been identied as a
top priority, and he doesnt want
to risk a shortage of funds if pro-
spective new employers surface,
he said.
The administration is open to
providing non-nancial county
assistance to advance the proj-
ect, Lawton said.
With the county funding can-
celed, the authority plans to
seek proposals from private de-
velopers interested in acquiring
and renovating the train station.
Those plans are taking longer
than anticipated because the
authority rst wants to obtain
an independent commercial ap-
praisal of the train station and
6-acre site, which also includes
a strip mall.
Only one commercial apprais-
er submitted a quote to conduct
the appraisal, and it would cost
$6,500, said acting authority Di-
rector Andrew Reilly, who also
oversees Community Develop-
ment. Reilly said he wants to ob-
tain additional quotes because
$6,500 is more than the author-
ity had planned to spend.
Reilly doesnt like to see the
station in its dilapidated state
but said the authority has no
funds. The authority still owes
the county $1.8 million for the
2001 purchase of rail track.
The train station design calls
for removal of deteriorating add-
ons and renovation of the origi-
nal brick structure.
Genetti, a history buff who
owns and maintains three old
downtown structures, includ-
ing the former Hotel Redington
built in 1906, said funding might
be obtained to strip away the
additions and seal up the sta-
tion until money is available for
repairs to the historic structure.
Put a plaque up explaining its
history and keep it mothballed
for coming years until we can
get enough funding, Genetti
said.
Continued from Page 1A
STATION
PETE G. WILCOX FILE PHOTO/THE TIMES LEADER
Thieves have
removed sec-
tions of metal
roong atop
the historic
train station
at the corner
of Market
Street and
Wilkes-Barre
Boulevard
in downtown
Wilkes-Barre.
United Penn Plaza Kingston 288-3147
Mon.-Sat. 10-5:30 Thurs. 10 -7
www.3sisters.com
Sports
SECTI ON B
THE TIMES LEADER SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 2013 timesleader.com
U P N E X T
GAME 5
San Antonio
Spurs
at
Miami Heat
8 p.m. Sunday
TV: ABC
Tucked neatly between a cou-
ple of triathlons sitting on his
summer schedule, area multi-
sport athlete Sean Robbins
wasnt certain hed compete in
this years Wilkes-Barre Duath-
lon.
Then a convincing concept
struck himjust as he began trans-
porting bike racks into town for
the event.
I thought, Oh my God, Ive
been doing this for 10 years,
picking up these bike racks,
said Robbins, a 44-year-old
Shavertown resident who is also
a member of the Wilkes-Barre
Duathlon committee. Ive done
all nine.
Why would you miss the
10th?
The 10th annual Wilkes-Barre
Duathlon begins at 7:30 a.m.
Sunday from Public Square,
continues through the Hanover
Industrial Park and ends by 10
a.m. at the Public Square finish
area. TIMES LEADER FILE PHOTO
Sean Robbins, one of top triathletes in the area, said he wont
miss Sundays Wilkes-Barre Duathlon.
W I L K E S - B A R R E D U AT H L O N
Ten years and still running
This years race will be
celebrating a decade of
excellence on Sunday.
By PAUL SOKOLOSKI
psokoloski@timesleader.com
See RUNNING, Page 5B
N B A F I N A L S N H L
Wade:
Game 5
could be
a classic
By BRIAN MAHONEY
AP Basketball Writer
SAN ANTONIO At their
best in the NBA Finals, the Mi-
ami Heat have forced turnover
after turnover, finding a gear
the San Antonio Spurs just cant
reach.
Play in
Game 5 as
they have
during their
two easy
victories in
the series,
and LeB-
ron James
d e f e n d i n g
champs will
head home
just one win
away from
another title.
But Mi-
amis best
hasnt been
carrying over
from game
to game, not
just in this series but for a while
now. So its anybodys guess
what happens Sunday in a finals
thats dead even, though the
games havent been.
I think Game 5 should be the
best game of the series, Dwyane
Wade said. Both teams should
come out knowing each other,
knowing what each other want
to do, and it should be a very
good game.
Not the way this series has
been going.
Game 1 was a thriller, neither
team able to build a double-digit
lead over four back-and-fourth
quarters before Tony Parkers
clinching basket helped the
Spurs pull out a 92-88 victory.
The teams havent delivered
a classic since. The Heat won
by 19, lost by 36 and cruised by
16. The last few minutes of each
have looked more like an Octo-
ber exhibition than a mid-June
championship clash.
With NBA Finals tied at 2-2,
Heat star says next game
could be best of series.
See NBA, Page 5B
Horton
could be
back for
Boston
U P N E X T
GAME 2
Boston Bruins
at
Chicago
Blackhawks
8 p.m. today
TV: NBCSN
CHICAGO Milan Lucic re-
members it as if it was yesterday.
Boston got Nathan Horton in
a trade with Florida three years
ago, and Bruins coach Claude Ju-
lien decided to put the forward
on a line with David Krejci and
Lucic.
It kind of
just clicked
right away,
Lucic said.
Yeah, no
kidding.
The high-
scoring line
combined for
Bostons first
two goals in
a 4-3 triple-
o v e r t i m e
loss to the
C h i c a g o
Blackhawks
in Game 1 of
the Stanley
Cup finals
Wednesday night. It was the con-
tinuation of a terrific postseason
for the three veterans, who also
helped the Bruins win the title
two years ago.
Horton, who was sidelined for
the last part of the 2011 postsea-
son by a concussion, left the se-
ries opener against Chicago with
an unspecified upper body in-
jury, but he practiced Friday and
appears to be on track to play in
Game 2 tonight.
Well have to make a decision
on him tomorrow, Julien said.
It was encouraging to see him
out there today. If he feels good
tomorrow, hes in the lineup,
simple as that.
If Horton is unable to play,
Tyler Seguin likely would move
up to the top line. He filled in for
Horton after he left Game 1, and
had a handful of prime chances
to lift Boston to the victory.
Whether its Horton or Seguin
playing with Krejci and Lucic,
the Blackhawks know they have
Bruins Nathan Horton, who
left Game 1 with an injury,
practiced on Friday.
By JAY COHEN
AP Sports Writer
See NHL, Page 5B
NIGHT FALLS
AT MERION
U. S. OPEN CHAMPI ONSHI P
Mickelson tied at top as play is suspended
AP PHOTO
Billy Horschel hits his tee shot on the eighth hole during the
first round of the U.S. Open on Friday at Merion Golf Club in
Ardmore.
Phil Mickelson finished his second round just after the horn
sounded on Friday with a birdie on the 18th hole at Merion Golf
Club.
Lefty, Horschel even for clubhouse lead
ARDMORE Phil Mickelson made his
first birdie on his last putt. Billy Horschel
never missed a green. It was all they could
do to barely break par against Merion,
which is turning out to be the real star of
this U.S. Open.
Nearly half the field did not finish the
second round when it was suspended by
darkness. Moments after the horn sounded
to stop play, Mickelson opted to finish his
round and drilled a 20-foot birdie putt for
a 2-over 72. That gave him a share of the
clubhouse lead with Horschel, who made it
as easy as possible by hitting every green in
regulation for a 67.
They were at 1-under 139.
Even with the round not finished, it was
becoming clear that this U.S. Open might
be up for grabs until the very end. Tiger
Woods, who grimaced with every shot out
of the rough because of pain in his left el-
bow, was at 3-over 143 and still very much
in the game.
I dont know how anyone is going to
separate too far from the field, Mickelson
said. There might be a hot round tomor-
row, and they might get a hot round on
Sunday, but unlikely to be the same player.
No one was hotter than Horschel, play-
By DOUG FERGUSON
AP Golf Writer
See OPEN, Page 4B
ALLENTOWN After play-
ing 18 innings on Thursday, the
New York Yankees needed help.
That meant they had to sum-
mon players from Scranton/
Wilkes-Barre. It just so happened
that two of the hottest players on
the RailRiders roster got the
call in outfielder Thomas Neal
and starting pitcher Chris Boot-
check, who was slated to start
Friday against Lehigh Valley.
That meant Bootchecks re-
placement was 23-year-old Jose
Ramirez, making his Triple-A
4
IRONPIGS
1
RAILRIDERS
T R I P L E - A B A S E B A L L
Ramirez solid in debut;
SWB falls to IronPigs
See RIDERS, Page 5B
By DAVE ROSENGRANT
drosengrant@timesleader.com
www.timesleader.com TIMES LEADER PAGE 2B SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 2013 S C O R E B O A R D
ON THE MARK
By MARK DUDEK
For The Times Leader
Quality card this evening at The Mohegan Sun at Pocono Downs,
with six divisions of the Stallion Series for three-year old colt &
gelding trotters the main attraction. Lets throw in a Preferred Pace
& Trot for good measure and you have yourself some fantastic rac-
ing for sure!
BEST BET: DYNAMIC YOUTH (11TH)
VALUE PLAY: VICTORYDAYZ WILWIN (5TH)
POST TIME 6:30 p.m.
All races one mile
First-$12,000 Clm.Pace;clm.price $15,000
3 Tamayo M.Miller 1-8-5 Can come right back 7-2
2 Get It Now G.Napolitano 7-3-5 Pena trainee takes the early loot 3-1
5 Taxed J.Morrill 3-2-2 First start off the claim 9-2
4 Cruznwithdabigdog E.Carlson 2-6-2 Just missed at 15-1 4-1
6 Card Hustler K.Wallis 1-1-2 Wallis comes to PD 8-1
9 Dear Mac A.McCarthy 2-4-7 Post a major knock 6-1
7 Anais Kicker M.Kakaley 7-2-4 Been a hot commodity 10-1
8 Awesome Abe T.Buter 5-2-6 Winless in 2013 15-1
1 Gritty Millie Boy M.Romano 7-6-3 Sliding downhill 20-1
Second-$20,000 The Stallion Series
3 San Donato T.Buter 5-3-1 More is expected 3-1
5 Woody M.Simons 2-3-7 Simons gets live drive 9-2
4 Ruddy Rusty B.Zendt 5-3-3 Zendt in from the Meadows 4-1
7 Marat M.Romano 7-1-2 Won two back in Stallion Series 7-2
2 Shermans Creek J.Pavia 5-2-2 Knocking on the door 5-1
1 Wartech H.Parker 2-8-8 Broke in last two starts 8-1
6 Cashco J.Morrill 5-3-6 Save your coin 10-1
8 MMs Rosebud G.Napolitano 6-8-6 Another with bad habits 12-1
Third-$14,000 Clm.Pace;clm.price $20,000
3 Cutty Shark E.Carlson 3-1-8 Wins wide open affair 4-1
1 Veal Marsala A.McCarthy 2-4-8 Worthy from the pole 7-2
7 Barn Art M.Miller 2-2-1 The one to catch 3-1
8 St Lads Kingpin G.Napolitano 7-5-1 A risky proposition 8-1
5 Midnight Gambol J.Morrill 6-1-2 2nd start since purchase 15-1
9 Dry Gulch M.Kakaley 1-5-4 Long road to haul 9-2
4 St Pete Star T.Buter 4-5-7 Burned cash last few 6-1
2 This Is Wyatt B.Miller 2-1-1 Newcomer from Harrington 10-1
6 Rocinante A.Napolitano 5-9-7 Last of them all 20-1
Fourth-$20,000 The Stallion Series
1 Devries Hanover M.Kakaley 1-1-7 Worth the gamble 4-1
7 Cantab Abs T.Buter 4-3-3 Right there if ace isnt right 9-2
6 Hampton Beach J.Morrill 4-2-4 Takes money with Morrill 6-1
4 Me And Cinderella G.Napolitano 5-4-3 Good check getter 5-2
5 Sailer Eddie A.McCarthy 7-2-7 From the Oakes barn 3-1
8 Boy Of Mine H.Parker 2-5-8 Favored three of last fve 12-1
3 The Traveler B.Miller 5-4-2 Gets a fat tire 10-1
2 Hep M.Miller 1-3-8 Big step up for him 15-1
Fifth-$16,000 Clm.Pace;clm.price $25,000
4 Victorydaze Wilwin M.Kakaley 5-1-6 Darkhorse of the night 5-1
1 Arts Delight T.Buter 2-4-4 A threat from the wood 4-1
6 Best Ears J.Morrill 1-5-3 Jims choice over #2 & #5 6-
8 Brookstone G.Napolitano 1-5-7 Comes off a career mile 3-1
3 Beach Boy Tiger A.McCarthy 1-5-8 Sat dream trip in that score 5-2
2 Sir Howies Z Tam B.Miller 1-7-3 Brett in for the evening 10-1
5 Ladys Bag Man E.Carlson 6-3-3 Notch below these 15-1
7 Major Grace M.Simons 3-1-4 Minor chance 12-1
9 Late Nite Flight M.Miller 8-8-6 Wrong time of day 20-1
Sixth-$20,000 The Stallion Series
5 Team Six M.Miller 1-1-x Looked super in debut 5-1
1 Herecomesthenight M.Simons 1-2-6 Ships in sharp 4-1
4 Atlas Peak J.Takter 7-1-4 Deserving chalk 3-1
8 Bambino Glide J.Pavia 2-3-4 Capable trotter when right 10-1
2 Shockoe Hanover M.Kakaley 7-2-8 Burke shipper 9-2
3 Panamanian Hanover J.Morrill 4-2-2 Showed more trot at two 7-2
7 Spiro De Vie D.Rawlings 7-2-1 Rawlings still learning 8-1
6 Dixie Rebel R.Allen 3-7-1 Tough spot for maiden 12-1
Seventh-$15,000 Cond.Pace;n/w $11,000 last 5
2 Sunfre Blue Chip J.Morrill 4-4-3 Raced well in Rooney Final 3-1
5 Duel In The Sun T.Biter 1-6-3 Showed big pace as freshman 4-1
6 A Sweet Ride A.McCarthy 3-1-6 Showed spunk in PD debut 6-1
7 Poker Hat G.Napolitano 2-4-8 Hails from Pena stable 8-1
1 Southern Sport M.Miller 2-6-7 A good 2nd at 9-1 odds 9-2
3 P L Fighter M.Kakaley 7-6-2 First time lasix user 7-2
4 Born To Rockn Roll E.Carlson 1-9-6 Jumps up off the upset 15-1
8 Andy Roo B.Miller 7-3-4 Much better last season 10-1
9 Mr Coolie B.Simpson 4-7-6 Cold indeed 20-1
Eighth-$20,000 The Stallion Series
7 Arthurs Turn J.Pavia 2-1-1 Turns some heads 9-2
2 Hall Of Muscles M.Kakaley 2-4-3 Kakaley hot of late 3-1
6 Vitamin Hanover T.Buter 9-2-7 Harder having good campaign 5-1
8 One Line Guy M.Simons 4-2-7 Slows a bit in fnal stanza 4-1
4 Classicality B.Zendt 2-1-2 Just 1-for-19 lifetime 8-1
3 Text Winner B.Miller 4-6-9 Left off the ticket 7-2
1 Prince Lauxmont W.Long 8-3-1 Not stakes caliber 10-1
5 Downhill Racer H.Parker 5-3-7 Down and out 12-1
Ninth-$19,000 Cond.Pace;n/w $19,500 last 5
4 Outrageous Art M.Kakaley 1-7-5 His time to shine 3-1
5 Mcsocks J.Morrill 2-5-1 Versatile pacer 9-2
2 Martial Bliss G.Napolitano 2-1-3 Gaining consistency 7-2
3 Summer Camp B.Miller 5-2-3 Cant fnd that stride 4-1
1 White Mountain Top T.Buter 7-3-7 Sent by team Buter 6-1
6 Four Starz Kyle A.Napolitano 1-3-1 Speedy veteran 10-1
7 Lettherockbegin H.Parker 1-3-1 In with a tough group 8-1
9 Artache Hanover A.McCarthy 4-2-5 Again saddled outside 15-1
8 Laurent Hanover M.Miller 9-2-5 Trounced 20-1
Tenth-$25,000 Preferred Pace
1 Erle Dale N A.McCarthy 1-4-1 Ready, willing & able 7-2
2 Escape The News M.Kakaley 1-3-1 One to beat if on game 5-2
4 Bet On The Law J.Pavia 3-2-1 Nice turn of foot 9-2
3 Hurrikane Kingcole B.Miller 9-5-2 Freakish talent 3-1
6 Musselsfrmbrussels G.Napolitano 1-4-2 Back up to top level 6-1
7 Holdingallthecards T.Buter 5-4-2 Level below these 8-1
5 Flem N Em N J.Morrill 7-3-1 Field fller 12-1
Eleventh-$21,000 Cond.Pace;n/w 10 pm races life
2 Dynamic Youth A.McCarthy 4-1-7 The best bet 5-2
9 Steelhead Hanover J.Pavia 2-2-1 Remains a sharp pacer 8-1
4 Bestjetyet J.Morrill 3-1-1 Ultra-consistent 7-2
1 Arthur G.Napolitano 7-3-3 Finally gets a better draw 6-1
5 Diamond Cowboy B.Miller 5-1-2 Morrill opted off 4-1
6 Take It Back Terry M.Kakaley 5-2-5 Lacks winning steam 5-1
8 Keemosabe T.Buter 7-2-6 Yonkers invader 12-1
3 All Week E.Carlson 5-1-1 Best work done at Del 15-1
7 DJ Lance A.Napolitano 9-1-2 Broke in comeback race 20-1
Twelfth-$25,000 Preferred Trot
4 Guccio J.Takter 3-2-4 Reason Takter is here 5-2
7 DWs NY Yank M.Kakaley 1-2-4 Race is for place 4-1
1 In Your Room M.Simons 1-1-3 Never better 5-1
5 Lightning Storm G.Napolitano 7-1-2 Can he make next step? 6-1
9 Real Babe T.Jackson 3-1-1 Superb in early season 12-1
3 Keystone Thomas J.Pavia 3-1-2 Done well for Pavia stable 8-1
2 Opening Night T.Buter 5-6-5 Seems to be off a bit 7-2
6 Fox Valley As H.Parker 7-4-5 Left behind 5-1
8 For You Almostfree B.Miller 4-8-4 Not worth the price 20-1
Thirteenth-$19,000 Cond.Pace;n/w $19,500 last 5
6 Ideal Matters G.Napolitano 3-1-1 Back in winning hands 9-2
3 Mustang Art A.McCarthy 6-1-3 Look for assertive effort 3-1
4 B N Bad J.Morrill 6-3-4 Cant be discarded 7-2
9 Trend Spotter M.Kakaley 2-1-2 Done well for Burke 6-1
5 Strange Hanover E.Carlson 3-3-1 Gamer 15-1
1 Aliveandwell N M.Miller 5-1-1 Best of rest 8-1
2 Bullet Bob J.Pavia 7-2-3 Becoming a dud 4-1
8 Aussie Reactor A T.Buter 5-1-5 Empty from here 10-1
7 Alex Bullville B.Simpson 5-3-4 Struggled vs easier 20-1
Fourteenth-$15,000 Cond.Pace;n/w $11,000 last 5
3 Quik Jolt B.Simpson 1-4-5 Makes it back to back 3-1
8 Reckless Ric A.McCarthy 4-2-3 First off the wings 4-1
6 Rockin The House M.Kakaley 4-7-4 Former Open pacer 7-2
4 Road Untraveled M.Simons 3-4-1 Simons recent purchase 10-1
7 Atta Boy Dan J.Morrill 4-2-3 Note the new pilot 8-1
5 Spunky Monkey T.Buter 5-6-8 Sits in 9-2
2 Sharp West Hanover J.Morrill 7-4-1 Dull 15-1
1 Chicago Hanover B.Miller 9-6-7 Wrong part of town 6-1
9 Mosee Terror E.Carlson 8-5-2 Never gets a call 20-1
Fifteenth-$20,000 The Stallion Series
1 Celebrity Stimulus T.Jackson 1-6-3 Controls from the pole 3-1
3 Big Short M.Simons 5-5-2 Simons picks up stakes mount 7-2
7 Markup Hanover T.Schadel 3-1-2 Speedy colt 9-2
8 Born To Fight B.Zendt 6-1-8 Wings clipped a bit 4-1
2 Racer X B.Simpson 9-4-4 Simpson trains and steers 10-1
4 Raven De Vie J.Morrill 3-9-4 Struggling in preps 8-1
5 Recon J.Oscarsson 3-8-4 Off since Oct 5-1
6 Early Boy H.Parker 4-3-8 One more race to go 12-1
Sixteenth-$20,000 The Stallion Series
4 Glister Hanover J.Morrill 1-6-4 Blisters the oval 3-1
1 Sentry A.McCarthy 3-3-4 Race is for second 4-1
6 Arctic Tale M.Kakaley 7-1-8 Another Burke pupil 9-2
5 Maxamillus B.Miller 3-7-3 Raced well in Currier & Ives 3-1
8 Three Crow Mo B.Zendt 1-1-2 Looking for three straight 12-1
7 Blueridge Volo J.Pavia 1-3-5 Needs more seasoning 10-1
2 Candid Photo C.Poliseno 6-3-8 No pictures in sight 6-1
3 Classical Caviar R.Romanetti 7-5-7 See you tomorrow 15-1
L AT E S T L I N E
Major League Baseball
National League
FAVORITE LINE UNDERDOG
at New York -125/+115 Chicago
Los Angeles -155/+145 at Pittsburgh
at Atlanta -185/+175 San Francisco
St. Louis -185/+175 at Miami
at Cincinnati -145/+135 Milwaukee
at Colorado -135/+125 Philadelphia
Arizona -115/+105 at San Diego
American League
at Baltimore -110/+100 Boston
at Texas -110/+100 Toronto
at Tampa Bay -155/+145 Kansas City
Detroit -175/+165 at Minnesota
Chicago -150/+140 at Houston
at Los Angeles -125/+115 New York
at Oakland -120/+110 Seattle
Interleague
Washington -120/+110 at Cleveland
NBA Finals
Sunday
FAVORITE LINE O/U UNDERDOG
Miami 1 (187)at San Antonio
NHL Finals
FAVORITE LINE UNDERDOG
at Chicago -150/+130 Boston
B U L L E T I N B O A R D
TODAYS EVENTS
No events
SUNDAY, JUNE 16
AMERICAN LEGION BASEBALL
Senior Division
(All games 1 p.m. unless noted)
Hazleton vs. Greater Pittston at Atlas Field
Plains vs.Wilkes-Barre at Gibby Field
Mountain Post A vs. Back Mountain at Miseri-
cordia (Tambur Field), double-header
Nanticoke vs. Mountain Post B at Mountain Post
West Side vs. Tunkhannock at Tunkhannock
H.S., double-header
AUTO RACING
10:30 a.m.
ESPN2 NASCAR, Nationwide Series, qualify-
ing for Alliance Truck Parts 250, at Brooklyn, Mich.
12:30 p.m.
SPEED NASCAR, Sprint Cup, Happy Hour
Series, fnal practice for Quicken Loans 400, at
Brooklyn, Mich.
2:15 p.m.
ABC NASCAR, Nationwide Series, Alliance
Truck Parts 250, at Brooklyn, Mich.
3 p.m.
NBCSN IndyLights, Milwaukee IndyFest, at
West Allis, Wis. (same-day tape)
4 p.m.
NBCSN IndyCar Series, Milwaukee IndyFest,
at West Allis, Wis.
4:30 p.m.
SPEED Rolex Sports Car Series, Diamond
Cellar Classic, at Lexington, Ohio
7 p.m.
ESPN2 NHRA, qualifying for Thunder Valley
Nationals, at Bristol, Tenn. (same-day tape)
8 p.m.
BASEBALL
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL Suspended
Arizona RHP Ian Kennedy 10 games, INF Eric
Hinske fve games and Kirk Gibson one game
and L.A. Dodgers RHP J.P. Howell, INF/OF Skip
Shumaker and hitting coach Mark McGwire two
games and manager Don Mattingly and RHP Ron-
ald Belisario one game for their parts in Tuesdays
brawl. Named Chris Conroy umpire.
American League
BALTIMORE ORIOLES Optioned RHP Kevin
Gausman to Norfolk (IL). Recalled RHP Jake Ar-
rieta from Norfolk.
BOSTON RED SOX Optioned RHPs Alfredo
Aceves and Alex Wilson to Pawtucket (IL). Re-
called RHP Rubby De La Rosa from Pawtucket.
Agreed to terms with C Jake Romanski; RHPs
Taylor Grover and Kyle Martin; 2B Carlos Asuaje
and Reed Gragnani; and OF Forrestt Allday on
minor league contracts.
CHICAGO WHITE SOX Sent OF Dewayne
Wise to Charlotte (IL) for a rehab assignment.
CLEVELAND INDIANS Agreed to terms with
RHP Casey Shane and LHP Matthew Whitehouse
on minor league contracts. Sent RHP Blake Wood
to Lake County (MWL) for a rehab assignment.
DETROIT TIGERS Reinstated OF Austin
Jackson from the 15-day DL. Optioned OF Avisail
Garcia to Toledo (IL). Agreed to terms with RHPs
Jonathon Crawford, Brett Huber, Johnnie Kirkland,
Zac Reininger, Tanner Bailey, Buck Farmer, Calvin
Drummond, Jonathan Maciel, Austin Pritcher and
Scott Sitz; LHPs Ryan Beck and Joe Mantiply; Cs
Austin Green and Duncan McAlpine; OFs Kasey
Coffman and Ben Verlander; SS Curt Powell; 1B
Dominic Ficociello; and 2B Taylor Johnson on mi-
nor league contracts.
KANSAS CITY ROYALS Agreed to terms
with 1B Dennis Raben on a minor league contract.
LOS ANGELES ANGELS Assigned 3B
Chris Nelson outright to Salt Lake (PCL). Agreed
to terms with RHPs Keynan Middleton, Harrison
Cooney, Grant Gordon, Ryan Etsell, Brian Locon-
sole, Trevor Foss, Alan Busenitz, Michael Smith,
Alex Blackford, Clinton Sharp, Dan Tobik and
Benjamin Carlson; OFs Riley Good, Chad Hin-
shaw, Mark Shannon, Miguel Hermosillo, Taylor
Johnson, Michael Fish, Eric Aguilera and Brandon
Bayardi; LHPs Nate Smith, Jonah Wesely, Cole
Swanson, Matt Hernandez and Colin OKeefe;
SSs Angel Rosa, Alex Allbritton, Jon Pellant and
Nathan Goro; Cs Stephen McGee, Cambric Moye
and Eric Weiss; and 3Bs Cal Towey and Garrett
Cannizaro on minor league contracts.
MINNESOTA TWINS Agreed to terms with
RHP Cody Eppley on a minor league contract.
NEW YORK YANKEES Placed INF Kevin
Youkilis on the 15-day DL. Optioned 3B David Ad-
ams and RHP Adam Warren to Scranton/Wilkes-
Barre (IL). Selected the contracts of OF Thomas
Neal and RHP Chris Bootcheck from Scranton/
Wilkes-Barre. Transferred INF Eduardo Nunez to
the 60-day DL. Assigned LHP Cesar Cabral out-
right to Trenton (EL).
OAKLAND ATHLETICS Optioned LHP
Hideki Okajima to Sacramento (PCL). Selected
the contract of RHP Dan Otero from Sacramento.
Transferred LHP Brett Anderson to the 60-day DL.
Agreed to terms with OF Billy McKinney and SS
Chad Pinder on minor league contracts.
SEATTLE MARINERS Sent 1B Justin Smoak
to Tacoma (PCL) for a rehab assignment. Agreed
to terms with C Henry Blanco. Designated C Kelly
Shoppach for assignment.
TAMPA BAY RAYS Optioned RHP Jake
Odorizzi to Durham (IL). Reinstated RHP Alex
Cobb from the bereavement list.
TEXAS RANGERS Sent 2B Ian Kinsler to
Frisco (TL) for a rehab assignment.
TORONTO BLUE JAYS Assigned 3B Andy
LaRoche outright to Buffalo (IL).
National League
ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS Agreed to
terms with OFs Zachary Esquerra and Taylor
Ratliff; SSs Ryan Gebhardt and Randy McCurry;
3B Jordan Parr; 1B Ryan Kinsella; C Grant Nel-
son; and RHPAlex Byo on minor league contracts.
CHICAGO CUBS Optioned LHP Brooks
Raley to Iowa (PCL).
CINCINNATI REDS Agreed to terms with
LHP Zach Duke on a minor league contract.
COLORADO ROCKIES Placed INF Troy Tu-
lowitzki on the 15-day DL. Recalled INF Josh Rut-
ledge from Colorado Springs (PCL). Traded OF
Carl Thomore to the Chicago White Sox. Agreed
to terms with RHPs Jerad McCrummen, Matt Pier-
pont and Konner Wade; OFs Michael Tauchman
and Sean Dwyer; 3B Michael Benjamin; and LHP
Alex Rodriguez on minor league contracts.
LOS ANGELES DODGERS Designated C
Ramon Hernandez for assignment. Reinstated C
A.J. Ellis from the 15-day DL.
MIAMI MARLINS Sent RHP Henderson Alva-
rez to Jupiter (FSL) for a rehab assignment.
NEW YORK METS Agreed to terms with
RHPs Kevin McGowan, Ricky Knapp, Brent Mc-
Minn, Gaither Bumgardner and Cameron Griffn;
OFs Champ Stuart and Patrick Biondi; INFs Luis
Guillorme and Jeff McNeil; C Colton Plaia; and 1B
Zachary Mathieu.
PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES Optioned RHP
Tyler Cloyd and INF Cesar Hernandez to Lehigh
Valley (IL). Recalled UT Michael Martinez and
LHP Jake Diekman from Lehigh Valley. Agreed to
terms with RHP Mark Meadors, Mark Leiter, Mat-
thew Southard, Will Morris, Christopher Burgess,
Matt Soren, Tyler Buckley, David Whitehead, Lee
Ridenhour and Shane Martin; LHPs Christopher
OHare, Cody Forsythe and Rob Marcello; 3Bs
Sam Dove and Logan Pierce; OFs Cord Sand-
berg, Justin Parr and Nick Ferdinand; and Cs
Andrew Knapp and Corey Bass on minor league
contracts.
PITTSBURGH PIRATES Sent RHP Jeanmar
Gomez to Indianapolis (IL) for a rehab assign-
ment. Agreed to terms with LHP Blake Taylor, INFs
Trae Arbet and Danny Collins, RHP Shane Carle
and C Max Rossiter on minor league contracts.
ST. LOUIS CARDINALS Optioned RHP Mi-
chael Wacha to Memphis (PCL). Reinstated RHP
Jake Westbrook from the 15-day DL. Agreed to
terms with RHPs Mike Mayers, Andrew Pierce,
Kyle Grana and Kyle Webb; LHP Chase Brook-
shire; OFs James Bosco and Brian Vigo-Suarez
and C Alex DeLeon on minor league contracts.
SAN DIEGO PADRES Optioned LHP Tommy
Layne and OF Jaff Decker to Tucson (PCL). Rein-
stated RHP Huston Street from the 15-day DL. Ac-
quired INF Pedro Ciriaco from Boston for a player
to be named or cash considerations. Designated
INF James Darnell for assignment.
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS Designated RHP
Ramon Ramirez for assignment. Optioned 1B
Brett Pill to Fresno (PCL). Recalled C Hector San-
chez and RHP Jake Dunning from Fresno.
WASHINGTON NATIONALS Sent 2B Danny
Espinosa to Syracuse (IL) for a rehab assignment.
BASKETBALL
National Basketball Association
NBA Fined Miami C Chris Bosh $5,000 for
violating the leagues anti-fopping rules during
Thursdays game.
FOOTBALL
National Football League
ATLANTA FALCONS Signed CB Robert Al-
ford.
BUFFALO BILLS Signed QB EJ Manuel.
CHICAGO BEARS Signed OTA.J. Lindeman
to a three-year contract.
KANSAS CITY CHIEFS Claimed DE Austen
Lane off waivers from Jacksonville. Released DT
Daniel Muir.
MIAMI DOLPHINS Signed OL Dallas Thom-
as.
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS Released PK
David Ruffer.SEATTLE SEAHAWKS Agreed
to terms with QB Tarvaris Jackson on a one-year
contract.
L O c A L c A L E N D A R
w h AT S O N T v
T R A N S A c T I O N S
Maximum Impact Sports Training
Summer Camps will be at Plains
Little League (Tokach Field) from
June 17-21, Jenkins Township Little
League Fields from June 24-27,
Hazleton Township Little League
Fields from July 15-19 and Minooka
Babe Ruth Fields from July 22-26.
The camps runs from 9 a.m. to 3
p.m. The cost is $115 for non-league
members and $100 per week for
league members where the camp is
hosted. There is also a half day op-
tion that runs from 9 a.m. to noon
and costs $65 per week. There will
also be a Max Impact All Star Tune
Up July 8-12 from 9 a.m. to noon
at the Max Impact Facility. The cost
is $50 per week. If interested, call
822-1134 to reserve a spot.
Nanticoke Area Basketball will
have its summer basketball camp
for both boys and girls entering
grades 2-9. The boys session runs
from June 17-21, while the girls
session runs from June 24-28.
Both sessions will run daily from 9
a.m. to noon. The camp will focus
on the fundamentals of the game
with an emphasis on shooting the
ball properly. In addition, there will
be daily skills competitions, three-
on-three and five-on-five games,
and other activities. The coaching
staffs of the Nanticoke boys and
girls programs will conduct the
camp, which will be held at the
Nanticoke Area School District
gyms. Information and an applica-
tion are available online at www.
gnasd.com or call 740-6049.
REGISTRATIONS/TRYOUTS
Ed-Lark Hurricanes Football and
Cheer Signups are on the follow-
ing dates: Today from noon to 4
p.m.; Thursday, June 20, 5 p.m. to
7 p.m. Signups will be at the Larks-
ville Borough building. The cost is
$40 for the first child and $5 for
each additional child.
Pocono Region Baseball will be
holding tryouts for the upcoming
2013 Keystone State Games that
will be held August 1st through Au-
gust 4th in Harrisburg. Scholastic
Division is for any player who will
be entering into 11th or 12th grade
during the 2013-14 school year.
The Junior Scholastic Division is
for any player who will be enter-
ing 9th or 10th grade. Tryouts will
be held at Christian Field in South
Wilkes-Barre today and Sunday.
Additional tryouts will be held
June 22 and 23 at Christian Field.
Tryouts will run from 8 to 10:30
a.m. on each day. Interested play-
ers should register ahead by going
to keystonegames.com. Contact
Sean Foley at 574-6541 with any
questions.
South Wilkes Barre Mini Mohawk
Football Signups will be held
today from 1 - 3 p.m. at Minor Park
for ages 6-14. Cost is $70 per child
and $90 per family.
REGISTRATIONS/TRYOUTS
Father Charles Mulrooney Memo-
rial Golf Tournament will be held
by the Ancient Order of Hibernians,
St. John Neumann Division 2 of
Wilkes-Barre, today at Edgewood
in the Pines Golf Course in Drums.
Format is captain and crew. There
will be a shotgun start at 8 a.m.
The entry fee is $80 per golfer,
which includes cart, buffet dinner,
refreshments, prizes, longest drive
and closest to the pin contests.
Immediately following the golf,
the awards dinner will be held at
CrisNics Irish Pub, 189 Barney St.
Wilkes-Barre. Hole sponsorships
are available for $50. Patron spon-
sors are $25. Funds this year will
be benefiting the divisions scholar-
ship and charitable funds. For more
information, call Jim at 362-1350
or Bob at 779-4335.
Fathers Club 100 will be host-
ing its Inaugural Golf Tournament
today at Wilkes-Barre Golf Course,
Bear Creek Twp. Fathers Club 100
is the Charter Organization for
Cub Scout Pack 100, Boy Scout
Troop 100, and Venture Crew 100
in Plains. Proceeds from the golf
tournament will be used to up-
grade and install a new heating and
air condition unit at the facilities
used by these groups.
Heights Packers Football and
Cheerleading Registrations for
boys and girls between the ages
of 6-12 will be held at Coal Street
Pavillion on June 16, and June 30
between 2-4 p.m. Must be 6 years
old by August 1 and provide a copy
of birth certificate for each child
and a physical form completed by
first practice. If you have any ques-
tions please email us at height-
spackers68@yahoo.com . Cost for
registration are as follows: $35 for
one child, $50 for two children and
$65 per family. All information may
also be found on our website at
http://www.heightspackers.webs.
com/.
Wyoming Valley Conference Boys
Volleyball Senior All-Star Game is
today at 3 p.m. at Holy Redeemer.
Players should arrive at 5 p.m. First
and second team all-stars must
be present to receive trophies and
certificates. Awards will be given
out at 6 p.m. The game will follow.
Admission is free.
SPEED TORC Series, at Bark River, Mich.
COLLEGE BASEBALL
3 p.m.
ESPN2 World Series, game 1, Mississippi
State vs. Oregon State, at Omaha, Neb.
8 p.m.
ESPN World Series, game 2, Indiana vs.
Louisville, at Omaha, Neb.
GOLF
Noon
NBC USGA, U.S. Open Championship, third
round, at Ardmore, Pa.
HIGH SCHOOL SOFTBALL
2 p.m.
PCN, PIAA Class 2A Championship Brandy-
wine Heights vs. Riverside, from Penn State Uni-
versity (taped Friday)
4 p.m.
PCN, PIAA Class 4A Championship Ne-
shaminy vs. Canon McMillan, from Penn State
University (taped Friday)
6 p.m.
PCN, PIAA Class A Championship Williams
Valley vs. Neshannock, from Penn State Univer-
sity (taped Friday)
8 p.m.
PCN, PIAA Class 3A Championship Valley
View vs. Fort LeBoeuf, from Penn State University
(taped Friday)
MLB
1 p.m.
WPIX Chicago Cubs at N.Y. Mets
4 p.m.
CSN Philadelphia at Colorado
MLB Regional coverage, Boston at Baltimore
or San Francisco at Atlanta
ROOT L.A. Dodgers at Pittsburgh
7 p.m.
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
DETROIT RED WINGS Agreed to terms with
F Drew Miller on a three-year contract.
NASHVILLE PREDATORS Traded F Bobby
Butler to Florida for D T.J. Brennan.
American Hockey League
AHL Approved the relocation of the Peoria
Rivermen to Utica, N.Y.
COLLEGE
WESTERN ATHLETIC CONFERENCE Named
Jeff Hurd commissioner.
BROWN Named Todd Beckerman wrestling
coach.
U.S. Open Championship
Fridays Results
At Merion Golf Club, East Course
Ardmore, Pa.
Purse: TBA ($8 million in 2012)
Yardage: 6,996; Par: 70
(a-amatuer)
Partial Second Round
Billy Horschel 72-67139
Phil Mickelson 67-72139
Luke Donald 68-72140
Steve Stricker 71-69140
Justin Rose 71-69140
John Senden 70-71141
Nicolas Colsaerts 69-72141
Mathew Goggin 68-74142
Tiger Woods 73-70143
Rory McIlroy 73-70143
Gonzalo Fernandez 71-72143
Ernie Els 71-72143
Matt Bettencourt 72-71143
Geoff Ogilvy 74-70144
Bo Van Pelt 73-71144
Edward Loar 73-71144
Russell Knox 69-75144
Scott Langley 75-70145
Kyle Stanley 71-74145
K.J. Choi 70-76146
Jamie Donaldson 73-73146
Webb Simpson 71-75146
Hideki Matsuyama 71-75146
Paul Lawrie 76-71147
Lee Westwood 70-77147
Carl Pettersson 72-75147
Adam Scott 72-75147
Bio Kim 72-75147
Bubba Watson 71-76147
Matt Kuchar 74-73147
David Howell 77-71148
Peter Hedblom 70-78148
Martin Kaymer 76-72148
a-Michael Weaver 74-74148
Kevin Chappell 72-76148
Josh Teater 74-74148
Steven Alker 73-75148
Alistair Presnell 73-75148
Morten Orum Madsen 74-74148
Jim Herman 76-72148
Dustin Johnson 71-77148
Brandt Snedeker 74-74148
Justin Hicks 76-73149
a-Chris Williams 75-74149
Michael Thompson 71-78149
Brian Stuard 75-75150
Morgan Hoffmann 76-74150
Casey Wittenberg 79-71150
Kevin Streelman 72-78150
a-Steven Fox 76-74150
Zach Johnson 74-77151
D.A. Points 77-74151
Sang Moon Bae 77-74151
a-Gavin Hall 74-77151
a-Max Homa 73-78151
Brendan Steele 76-76152
David Toms 75-77152
Marcus Fraser 79-73152
Francesco Molinari 78-74152
Luke Guthrie 73-79152
Brandon Brown 75-77152
Keegan Bradley 77-75152
Marc Leishman 78-75153
Graeme McDowell 76-77153
Thongchai Jaidee 79-74153
Branden Grace 70-83153
Jordan Spieth 77-76153
Jung-Gon Hwang 75-78153
Estanislao Goya 71-83154
Scott Piercy 78-76154
Eddie Pepperell 77-77154
Jesse Smith 73-81154
Darren Clarke 80-75155
Angel Cabrera 74-81155
Jose Maria Olazabal 75-81156
Jim Furyk 77-79156
Joe Ogilvie 75-81156
Russell Henley 77-80157
Adam Hadwin 81-76157
Thorbjorn Olesen 79-79158
Yoshinobu Tsukada 78-80158
Zack Fischer 82-76158
Matt Harmon 78-81159
Brandon Crick 81-78159
John Nieporte 78-84162
Ryan Sullivan 81-82163
a-Grayson Murray 83-81164
Louis Oosthuizen 75WD
Leaderboard
SCORE THRU
1. Billy Horschel -1 F
1. Phil Mickelson -1 F
3. Cheng-Tsung Pan E 9
3. Steve Stricker E F
3. Ian PoulterE 14
3. Justin Rose E F
3. Luke Donald E F
8. Michael Kim +1 11
8. Charley Hoffman +1 13
8. John Senden +1 F
8. Jerry Kelly +1 12
8. Nicolas Colsaerts +1 F
G O L f
FOX N.Y. Yankees at L.A. Angels
MINOR LEAGUE BASEBALL
6:30 p.m.
SE2, WYLN Scranton/Wilkes-Barre at Lehigh
Valley
NHL
8 p.m.
NBCSN Playoffs Stanley Cup Finals, game
2, Boston at Chicago
NHL Playoffs
STANLEY CUP FINALS
(Best-of-7; x-if necessary)
Chicago 1, Boston 0
Wednesday, June 12: Chicago 4, Boston 3, 3OT
Saturday, June 15: Boston at Chicago, 8 p.m.
Monday, June 17: Chicago at Boston, 8 p.m.
Wednesday, June 19: Chicago at Boston, 8 p.m.
x-Saturday, June 22: Boston at Chicago, 8 p.m.
x-Monday, June 24: Chicago at Boston, 8 p.m.
x-Wednesday, June 26: Boston at Chicago, 8 p.m.
AHL Playoffs
CALDER CUP FINALS
BEST OF 7
Grand Rapids 3, Syracuse 1
Saturday, June 8: Grand Rapids 3, Syracuse 1
Sunday, June 9: Grand Rapids 6, Syracuse 4
Wednesday, June 12: Grand Rapids 4, Syracuse
2
Friday, June 14: Syracuse 3, Grand Rapids 2
Saturday, June 15: Syracuse at Grand Rapids, 7
p.m.
x-Tuesday, June 18: Grand Rapids at Syracuse,
7 p.m.
x-Thursday, June 20: Grand Rapids at Syracuse,
7 p.m.
NBA Finals
(Best-of-7; x-if necessary)
San Antonio 2, Miami 2
Thursday, June 6: San Antonio 92, Miami 88
Sunday, June 9: Miami 103, San Antonio 84
Tuesday, June 11: San Antonio 113, Miami 77
Thursday, June 13: Miami 109, San Antonio 93
Sunday, June 16: Miami at San Antonio, 8 p.m.
Tuesday, June 18: San Antonio at Miami, 9 p.m.
x-Thursday, June 20: San Antonio at Miami, 9 p.m.
B A S k E T B A L L
h O c k E Y
International League
North Division
W L Pct. GB
Pawtucket (Red Sox) 38 27 .585
Buffalo (Blue Jays) 34 31 .523 4
Lehigh Valley (Phillies) 35 32 .522 4
Rochester (Twins) 31 36 .463 8
RailRiders 29 36 .446 9
Syracuse (Nationals) 27 38 .415 11
South Division
W L Pct. GB
Durham (Rays) 42 25 .627
Norfolk (Orioles) 38 29 .567 4
Gwinnett (Braves) 28 40 .412 14
Charlotte (White Sox) 27 40 .403 15
West Division
W L Pct. GB
Indianapolis (Pirates) 45 23 .662
Columbus (Indians) 33 34 .493 11
Louisville (Reds) 32 35 .478 12
Toledo (Tigers) 28 41 .406 17
Fridays Games
Pawtucket 1, Buffalo 0, 1st game
Louisville 5, Norfolk 3, 1st game
Columbus 5, Charlotte 2, 1st game
Toledo 7, Syracuse 6
Lehigh Valley 4, RailRiders 1
Indianapolis at Durham, late
Gwinnett at Rochester, 7:15 p.m.
Buffalo at Pawtucket, 2nd game, late
Louisville at Norfolk, 2nd game, late
Columbus at Charlotte, 2nd game, late
Todays Game
Buffalo at Pawtucket, 6:05 p.m.
RailRiders at Lehigh Valley, 6:35 p.m.
Toledo at Syracuse, 7 p.m.
Louisville at Norfolk, 7:05 p.m.
Indianapolis at Durham, 7:05 p.m.
Gwinnett at Rochester, 7:05 p.m.
Columbus at Charlotte, 7:15 p.m.
Sundays Games
Louisville at Norfolk, 1:05 p.m.
Buffalo at Pawtucket, 1:05 p.m.
Gwinnett at Rochester, 1:05 p.m.
RailRiders at Lehigh Valley, 1:35 p.m.
Toledo at Syracuse, 2 p.m.
Columbus at Charlotte, 2:15 p.m.
Indianapolis at Durham, 5:05 p.m.
B A S E B A L L
Pocono Downs Results
First - $9,000 Pace 1:52.2
2-Island Shark (An Napolitano) 10.40 5.80 4.80
5-Dragon Tattoo (Au Siegelman) 33.80 27.20
3-Fox Valley Wyatt (Ma Miller) 12.20
EXACTA (2-5) $197.80
50 CENT TRIFECTA (2-5-3) $1,683.20
h A R N E S S R A c I N G
50 CENT TRIFECTA (10 Cent) $420.80
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (2-5-3-4) $18,779.80
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (10 Cent) $938.99
Second - $13,000 Pace 1:51.3
6-Bandolito (Ma Romano) 3.20 2.20 2.10
3-Special Spy (Ho Parker) 3.80 2.60
1-Ralbar (Jo Pavia Jr) 4.00
EXACTA (6-3) $10.20
50 CENT TRIFECTA (6-3-1) $38.80
50 CENT TRIFECTA (50 Cent) $9.70
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (6-3-1-4) $214.60
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (10 Cent) $10.73
DAILY DOUBLE (2-6) $17.20
Third - $13,000 Trot 1:55.4
3-Boadicea Hanover (Ma Kakaley) 4.40 3.00 2.40
6-Doc Boyce (Th Jackson) 3.60 2.40
1-Equinox Barbara (Ga Dowse) 2.40
EXACTA (3-6) $17.40
50 CENT TRIFECTA (3-6-1) $55.40
50 CENT TRIFECTA (50 Cent) $13.85
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (3-6-1-9) $142.60
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (10 Cent) $7.13
PICK 3 - 15% TAKEOUT (2-6-3) $53.40
Fourth - $9,000 Pace 1:50.3
2-Im The Pied Piper (Ma Kakaley) 4.40 3.40 2.60
4-Bittersweet Champ (Ga Dowse) 7.00 3.80
8-Ideal Romance (Br Simpson) 14.40
EXACTA (2-4) $32.20
50 CENT TRIFECTA (2-4-8) $330.00
50 CENT TRIFECTA (50 Cent) $82.50
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (2-4-8-6) $1,016.00
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (10 Cent) $50.80
Fifth - $13,000 Trot 1:56.2
8-Dewey Luvs Britt (Ke Oscarsson) 22.00 5.60
3.60
6-Only In My Dreams (Mi Simons) 3.60 2.40
7-Dinero Fishman (Ma Miller) 2.60
EXACTA (8-6) $102.00
50 CENT TRIFECTA (8-6-7) $517.60
50 CENT TRIFECTA (50 Cent) $129.40
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (8-6-7-9) $2,437.00
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (10 Cent) $121.85
Scratched: Man About Time
Sixth - $4,500 Pace 1:52.3
1-Bond Blue Chip (Er Carlson) 11.40 3.40 2.80
6-Thomas John N (Ma Kakaley) 2.80 2.20
8-Kels Return (An McCarthy) 3.00
EXACTA (1-6) $35.60
50 CENT TRIFECTA (1-6-8) $213.60
50 CENT TRIFECTA (50 Cent) $53.40
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (1-6-8-9) $3,078.20
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (10 Cent) $153.91
PICK 3 - 15% TAKEOUT (2-8-1) $127.20
Seventh - $9,000 Trot 1:56.0
5-Lets Go Baby Go (An McCarthy) 6.80 4.20 3.80
6-Victors Future (Th Jackson) 14.60 12.00
3-Stretch Limo (Ma Kakaley) 3.00
EXACTA (5-6) $103.20
50 CENT TRIFECTA (5-6-3) $395.20
50 CENT TRIFECTA (50 Cent) $98.80
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (5-6-3-4) $5,233.40
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (10 Cent) $261.67
Eighth - $9,000 Pace 1:55.0
5-Yankee Tattler (Ma Miller) 28.40 11.20 4.20
8-Scirocco Caliegirl (Er Carlson) 51.00 23.40
2-Terror In Motion (Ge Napolitano Jr) 2.10
EXACTA (5-8) $907.40
50 CENT TRIFECTA (5-8-2) $5,505.00
50 CENT TRIFECTA (50 Cent) $1,376.25
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (5-8-2-1) $4,146.40
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (10 Cent) $207.32
Ninth - $9,000 Trot 1:54.4
9-Windsun Galliano (An McCarthy) 9.80 5.40 3.00
4-Bob N Tony (Ma Miller) 7.00 3.40
1-Habanero (Ty Buter) 2.40
EXACTA (9-4) $69.00
50 CENT TRIFECTA (9-4-1) $130.20
50 CENT TRIFECTA (50 Cent) $32.55
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (9-4-1-3) $3,980.20
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (10 Cent) $199.01
PICK 3 - 15% TAKEOUT (5-5-ALL) $62.20
PICK 3 - 15% TAKEOUT (5-ALL-9) $62.20
PICK 3 - 15% TAKEOUT (ALL-5-9) $62.20
Tenth - $11,000 Pace 1:49.2
5-Fools Gold (Ty Buter) 16.20 6.40 5.40
6-Jj Shark (Ma Kakaley) 4.20 3.40
4-Ideal Ike (Ma Miller) 10.20
EXACTA (5-6) $50.60
50 CENT TRIFECTA (5-6-4) $265.00
50 CENT TRIFECTA (50 Cent) $66.25
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (5-6-4-7) $925.40
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (10 Cent) $46.27
Eleventh - $11,000 Trot 1:57.0
6-Commander K (Ty Buter) 7.60 4.40 3.00
3-Sonny Mcdreamee (Br Simpson) 5.20 2.80
5-Dream Lake (Ma Romano) 3.00
EXACTA (6-3) $34.40
50 CENT TRIFECTA (6-3-5) $169.80
50 CENT TRIFECTA (50 Cent) $42.45
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (6-3-5-9) $3,948.80
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (10 Cent) $197.44
Twelfth - $13,000 Pace 1:54.0
2-Beach Terror (Jo Pavia Jr) 24.60 4.60 3.80
3-Uf Rockin Dragon (Ge Napolitano Jr) 2.20 2.10
7-Mr Bricks (An McCarthy) 8.80
EXACTA (2-3) $46.80
50 CENT TRIFECTA (2-3-7) $361.40
50 CENT TRIFECTA (50 Cent) $90.35
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (2-3-7-5) $1,881.40
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (10 Cent) $94.07
PICK 3 - 15% TAKEOUT (5-6-2) $350.80
Scratched: Double Mctwist
Thirteenth - $11,000 Trot 1:53.4
8-Summer Indian (Ma Kakaley) 13.40 5.20 3.40
4-House On Fire (Mi Simons) 9.00 4.40
2-Justherighttouch (Er Carlson) 7.40
EXACTA (8-4) $154.60
50 CENT TRIFECTA (8-4-2) $572.20
50 CENT TRIFECTA (50 Cent) $143.05
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (8-4-2-6) $3,262.40
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (10 Cent) $163.12
Fourteenth - $9,000 Pace 1:52.3
5-Up Front Tim T (Ma Miller) 27.20 8.20 3.40
2-American Gi (Au Siegelman) 4.40 2.40
1-DdHt-Woodmere Ultimate (Er Carlson) 2.10
8-DdHt-Light Up The Sky (Ma Kakaley) 2.10
EXACTA (5-2) $146.80
50 CENT TRIFECTA (5-2-1) $336.00
50 CENT TRIFECTA (50 Cent 5-2-1) $84.00
50 CENT TRIFECTA (5-2-8) $290.40
50 CENT TRIFECTA (50 Cent 5-2-8) $72.60
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (5-2-1-8) $533.40
10 CENT SUPERFECTA(10 Cent 5-2-1-8) $26.67
10 CENT SUPERFECTA (5-2-8-1) $644.20
10 CENT SUPERFECTA(10 Cent 5-2-8-1) $32.21
LATE DOUBLE (8-5) $90.00
Total Handle-$249,000
SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 2013 PAgE 3B TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com S P O R T S
THURSDAYS LATE BOX
Orioles 5, Red Sox 4
Boston Baltimore
ab r hbi ab r hbi
Ellsury cf 5 0 0 1 McLoth lf 3 0 0 0
Victorn rf 6 0 1 0 Machd 3b 7 1 2 1
Pedroia 2b 5 0 1 0 Markks rf 6 2 1 0
D.Ortiz dh 5 1 1 1 A.Jones cf 6 0 1 0
Napoli 1b 1 0 1 0 C.Davis 1b 6 0 2 2
Carp 1b 3 1 1 1 Wieters c 6 0 2 1
JGoms ph-lf 1 0 0 0 Hardy ss 4 0 0 0
Nava lf-1b 5 1 1 0 Valenci dh 5 1 2 1
Sltlmch c 5 1 1 0 Dickrsn ph-dh 1 0 1 0
Mdlrks 3b 5 0 2 0 Flahrty 2b 6 1 1 0
Drew ss 4 0 0 1
Totals 45 4 9 4 Totals 50 512 5
Boston 000 200 200 000 04
Baltimore 003 010 000 000 15
Two outs when winning run scored.
E-Victorino (1), Middlebrooks (8), Wieters (3).
DP-Baltimore 1. LOB-Boston 4, Baltimore 16. 2B-
Napoli (21), Middlebrooks (13), Valencia (5), Dick-
erson (4), Flaherty (6). HR-D.Ortiz (14), Carp (7),
Valencia (4). SB-Ellsbury (30). CS-Ellsbury (3).
S-McLouth. SF-Drew.
IP H R ER BB SO
Boston
Doubront 4 2-3 7 4 3 1 5
F.Morales 1 1-3 1 0 0 0 1
A.Miller 2 0 0 0 2 4
Tazawa 1 1-3 1 0 0 0 0
Breslow 2-3 0 0 0 1 1
A.Wilson L,1-1 2 2-3 3 1 1 1 2
Baltimore
Gausman 5 1-3 6 2 2 0 5
Matusz BS,3-3 1 1-3 3 2 2 0 1
Tom.Hunter 2 1-3 0 0 0 0 2
ODay 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 2
Patton 2-3 0 0 0 0 0
Ji.Johnson 1 0 0 0 0 0
McFarland W,1-0 1 0 0 0 0 1
HBP-by F.Morales (McLouth), by Doubront
(C.Davis, A.Jones).
MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
NATIONAL LEAGUE
BATTING-YMolina, St. Louis, .353; Tulowitzki,
Colorado, .347; Segura, Milwaukee, .339; Scuta-
ro, San Francisco, .332; MCarpenter, St. Louis,
.327; CGomez, Milwaukee, .326; GParra, Arizona,
.322.
RUNS-CGonzalez, Colorado, 52; Votto, Cincin-
nati, 52; MCarpenter, St. Louis, 51; Choo, Cincin-
nati, 48; Holliday, St. Louis, 48; Fowler, Colorado,
47; Goldschmidt, Arizona, 44; JUpton, Atlanta, 44.
RBI-Goldschmidt, Arizona, 59; Phillips, Cincinnati,
54; CGonzalez, Colorado, 52; Tulowitzki, Colora-
do, 51; Craig, St. Louis, 49; DBrown, Philadelphia,
48; Bruce, Cincinnati, 45.
HITS-Segura, Milwaukee, 87; GParra, Arizona,
84; YMolina, St. Louis, 83; MCarpenter, St. Louis,
82; Votto, Cincinnati, 81; Craig, St. Louis, 79;
ECabrera, San Diego, 78; CGomez, Milwaukee,
78.
DOUBLES-Bruce, Cincinnati, 21; YMolina, St.
Louis, 21; GParra, Arizona, 21; Pence, San Fran-
cisco, 20; MCarpenter, St. Louis, 19; McCutchen,
Pittsburgh, 19; DanMurphy, New York, 19.
TRIPLES-CGomez, Milwaukee, 8; Segura, Mil-
waukee, 8; CGonzalez, Colorado, 6; Span, Wash-
ington, 6; Hechavarria, Miami, 5; ECabrera, San
Diego, 4; Lucroy, Milwaukee, 4; DWright, New
York, 4.
HOME RUNS-DBrown, Philadelphia, 19; CGon-
zalez, Colorado, 18; Tulowitzki, Colorado, 16;
Goldschmidt, Arizona, 15; JUpton, Atlanta, 15;
PAlvarez, Pittsburgh, 14; Beltran, St. Louis, 14;
Gattis, Atlanta, 14.
STOLEN BASES-ECabrera, San Diego, 30;
SMarte, Pittsburgh, 20; Segura, Milwaukee, 19;
Pierre, Miami, 17; McCutchen, Pittsburgh, 15; Re-
vere, Philadelphia, 15; CGomez, Milwaukee, 13;
Pence, San Francisco, 13.
PITCHING-Wainwright, St. Louis, 10-3; Corbin,
Arizona, 9-0; Zimmermann, Washington, 9-3;
Lynn, St. Louis, 8-1; Marquis, San Diego, 8-2; Lee,
Philadelphia, 8-2; Minor, Atlanta, 8-2.
STRIKEOUTS-Samardzija, Chicago, 104; Harvey,
New York, 102; AJBurnett, Pittsburgh, 99; Wain-
wright, St. Louis, 97; Kershaw, Los Angeles, 96;
SMiller, St. Louis, 91; Lee, Philadelphia, 89.
SAVES-Grilli, Pittsburgh, 23; Mujica, St. Louis,
19; Kimbrel, Atlanta, 18; Chapman, Cincinnati, 17;
RSoriano, Washington, 17; Romo, San Francisco,
16; League, Los Angeles, 13.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
BATTING-MiCabrera, Detroit, .358; CDavis, Bal-
timore, .338; Mauer, Minnesota, .332; JhPeralta,
Detroit, .329; Pedroia, Boston, .325; HKendrick,
Los Angeles, .324; Loney, Tampa Bay, .318.
RUNS-MiCabrera, Detroit, 51; AJones, Baltimore,
47; Trout, Los Angeles, 47; CDavis, Baltimore, 46;
Longoria, Tampa Bay, 45; Pedroia, Boston, 45;
Machado, Baltimore, 43.
RBI-MiCabrera, Detroit, 69; CDavis, Baltimore,
56; Encarnacion, Toronto, 55; Fielder, Detroit, 52;
Napoli, Boston, 49; DOrtiz, Boston, 49; AJones,
Baltimore, 45.
HITS-Machado, Baltimore, 92; MiCabrera, Detroit,
91; Pedroia, Boston, 86; AJones, Baltimore, 84;
HKendrick, Los Angeles, 82; CDavis, Baltimore,
81; Trout, Los Angeles, 80.
DOUBLES-Machado, Baltimore, 28; CDavis, Bal-
timore, 21; Napoli, Boston, 21; Mauer, Minnesota,
20; Pedroia, Boston, 20; Trout, Los Angeles, 20;
Donaldson, Oakland, 19; AJones, Baltimore, 19;
Longoria, Tampa Bay, 19; Seager, Seattle, 19.
TRIPLES-Ellsbury, Boston, 6; Trout, Los Ange-
les, 6; Gardner, New York, 4; LMartin, Texas, 4;
Andrus, Texas, 3; Drew, Boston, 3; DeJennings,
Tampa Bay, 3.
HOME RUNS-CDavis, Baltimore, 21; MiCabrera,
Detroit, 18; Encarnacion, Toronto, 18; ADunn, Chi-
cago, 17; Cano, New York, 16; NCruz, Texas, 16;
Bautista, Toronto, 15; Trumbo, Los Angeles, 15.
STOLEN BASES-Ellsbury, Boston, 30; McLouth,
Baltimore, 22; Andrus, Texas, 16; Kipnis, Cleve-
land, 14; Trout, Los Angeles, 14; Crisp, Oakland,
13; AlRamirez, Chicago, 13.
PITCHING-Buchholz, Boston, 9-0; Scherzer, De-
troit, 9-0; Colon, Oakland, 8-2; MMoore, Tampa
Bay, 8-2; Verlander, Detroit, 8-4; Masterson,
Cleveland, 8-5; 5 tied at 7.
STRIKEOUTS-Darvish, Texas, 127; Scherzer,
Detroit, 106; FHernandez, Seattle, 102; Verlander,
Detroit, 101; AniSanchez, Detroit, 98; Masterson,
Cleveland, 92; Shields, Kansas City, 90.
SAVES-Rivera, New York, 23; JiJohnson, Bal-
timore, 23; Nathan, Texas, 20; AReed, Chicago,
19; Balfour, Oakland, 17; Wilhelmsen, Seattle, 16;
Perkins, Minnesota, 15.
This Date In Baseball
June 15
1902 Corsicana defeated Texarkana 51-3 in a
Texas League game. Nig Clark of Corsicana took
advantage of the small park and hit eight homers.
Some telegraph operators, thinking there was a
mistake, reported the score as 5-3.
1925 The Philadelphia Athletics went into the
last half of the eighth inning trailing 15-4 and
scored 13 runs to defeat Cleveland 17-15.
1938 Four days after no-hitting the Boston
Braves, Johnny Vander Meer of the Cincinnati
Reds pitched his second straight no-hit game,
defeating the Dodgers 6-0 in the frst night game
played in Brooklyn.
1952 The St. Louis Cardinals, down 11-0 enter-
ing the ffth inning, came back for a 14-12 triumph
over the New York Giants in the frst game of a
doubleheader and set a National League record
for best comeback.
Jeter back
fielding
and hitting
Day after shortstop is cleared
for more activity, he talks to
field at minor league complex.
TAMPA,Fla. Yankees short-
stop Derek Jeter resumed hitting
and fielding drills Friday for the
first time since mid-April, a day
after receiving medically clear-
ance to increase his rehabilita-
tion program for a broken left
ankle.
Jeter hit off a tee and took
swings at underhand soft toss in
an indoor cage before fielding 13
grounders on the grass in front
of the infield dirt and 23 more at
deep shortstop. He made throws
to first on some of the grounders
hit to him on the grass.
They gave the green light, so
thats encouraging, Jeter said.
Im looking forward to it.
Eduardo Nunez, who strained
a muscle on his left side while
filling in for Jeter, took swings
and fielded grounders with the
Yankees captain.
Everything is a progression,
Jeter said. Do more each and
every day. As soon as I can do it,
Ill do it. As soon as I can come-
back, Ill be back.
Jeter is working out at the
Yankees minor league in Tampa,
Fla.
In terms of everyday sched-
ule, I dont know what that is,
Jeter said. Its more of taking it
one day at a time.
Jeter was examined Thursday
by Dr. Robert Anderson in Char-
lotte, N.C. and recieved clear-
ance to progress into baseball
activities.
The 13-time All-Star hasnt
played this season after break-
ing his ankle while lunging for
a grounder in the AL champi-
onship series opener against
Detroit on Oct. 13 and having
surgery a week later. He started
onfield workouts Jan. 28 and was
limited to five spring training
games and 11 at-bats because of
soreness. A new break was dis-
covered during a scan on April
18.
New York expects him to re-
turn sometime after the All-Star
break in mid-July.
Third baseman Alex Rodri-
guez, coming back from hip sur-
gery in January, took 84 swings
in batting practice, displaying
power to all fields. A-Rod also
took 33 grounders at third and
has started making throws to
first and second. He ended the
fielding session by charging
in several times to field slow
grounders and a simulated bunt.
Rodriguez also did six hard
sprints at around 90 feet in the
outfield.
Outfielder Curtis Granderson,
out with a broken left hand, said
he will be examined next week
in New York. He is throwing
balls but not catching them, and
he is running in the outfield.
Michael Pineda, who missed
last season after right shoulder
surgery, threw in an extended
spring training intrasquad game
at Steinbrenner Field, the Yan-
kees spring training ballpark in
Tampa. He pitched in his first
minor league game last Sunday
for Class A Tampa.
By MARK DIDTLER
Associated Press
Orioles 2, Red Sox 0
Boston Baltimore
ab r hbi ab r hbi
Ellsury cf 4 0 0 0 McLoth lf 2 1 0 0
Victorn rf 3 0 1 0 Machd 3b 4 0 3 0
Pedroia 2b 4 0 0 0 Markks rf 4 0 0 0
D.Ortiz dh 3 0 0 0 A.Jones cf 4 0 1 1
Carp 1b 3 0 0 0 C.Davis 1b 3 1 1 1
Nava lf 2 0 0 0 Wieters c 3 0 0 0
Iglesias ss 4 0 2 0 Hardy ss 3 0 0 0
Mdlrks 3b 3 0 0 0 Dickrsn dh 3 0 0 0
D.Ross c 3 0 0 0 Flahrty 2b 3 0 0 0
Totals 29 0 3 0 Totals 29 2 5 2
Boston 000 000 000 0
Baltimore 011 000 00x 2
DP-Baltimore 1. LOB-Boston 7, Baltimore 8. 2B-
Iglesias (8), Machado 2 (30). HR-C.Davis (22).
SB-McLouth (23).
IP H R ER BB SO
Boston
Dempster L,4-7 7 2-3 5 2 2 5 4
Uehara 1-3 0 0 0 0 1
Baltimore
Tillman W,7-2 6 3 0 0 4 3
ODay H,11 1 0 0 0 0 1
Tom.Hunter H,7 1 0 0 0 0 0
Ji.Johnson S,24-28 1 0 0 0 0 1
Tillman pitched to 1 batter in the 7th.
HBP-by Ji.Johnson (Nava). WP-Dempster.
Umpires-Home, Cory Blaser; First, Jeff Nelson;
Second, Ed Hickox; Third, Jim Joyce.
T-2:43. A-39,158 (45,971).
Indians 2, Nationals 1
Washington Cleveland
ab r hbi ab r hbi
Span cf 2 0 0 0 Bourn cf 5 0 1 0
Berndn lf 3 0 0 0 Kipnis 2b 5 0 2 1
Zmrmn dh 4 0 1 0 Swisher 1b 3 0 1 0
AdLRc 1b 4 0 0 0 Raburn dh 3 1 1 1
Werth rf 4 0 0 0 CSantn c 2 0 1 0
Dsmnd ss 3 0 0 0 MrRynl 3b 4 0 0 0
Tracy 3b 3 0 0 0 Brantly lf 4 0 0 0
KSuzuk c 2 1 0 0 Aviles ss 4 0 0 0
Lmrdzz 2b 3 0 1 0 Stubbs rf 3 1 1 0
Totals 28 1 2 0 Totals 33 2 7 2
Washington 001 000 000 1
Cleveland 000 100 001 2
One out when winning run scored.
LOB-Washington 5, Cleveland 11. 2B-Kipnis (14).
HR-Raburn (8). SB-Span (7), Bourn (10). S-Span.
IP H R ER BB SO
Washington
G.Gonzalez 7 3 1 1 4 8
Clippard 1 2 0 0 1 2
Abad L,0-1 1-3 2 1 1 0 0
Cleveland
Masterson 7 2 1 1 4 10
Allen 1 0 0 0 0 2
J.Smith W,3-0 1 0 0 0 0 1
WP-Masterson.
Umpires-Home, Brian Knight; First, Dan Iassogna;
Second, Mark Carlson; Third, Gerry Davis.
T-2:49. A-30,824 (42,241).
Pirates 3, Dodgers 0
Los Angeles Pittsburgh
ab r hbi ab r hbi
Puig rf 4 0 2 0 Presley lf 4 1 1 0
Punto 3b 3 0 1 0 RMartn c 3 1 1 0
AdGnzl 1b 4 0 0 0 McCtch cf 4 1 2 2
HRmrz ss 4 0 0 0 GJones 1b 3 0 0 0
M.Ellis 2b 4 0 1 0 GSnchz 1b 1 0 1 0
Ethier cf 3 0 1 0 Walker 2b 3 0 1 1
A.Ellis c 3 0 0 0 PAlvrz 3b 3 0 1 0
HrstnJr lf 3 0 1 0 Snider rf 3 0 0 0
Fife p 1 0 0 0 Barmes ss 3 0 0 0
L.Cruz ph 1 0 0 0 Locke p 2 0 1 0
Howell p 0 0 0 0 Inge ph 1 0 0 0
Uribe ph 1 0 0 0 Melncn p 0 0 0 0
Guerrir p 0 0 0 0 Grilli p 0 0 0 0
PRdrgz p 0 0 0 0
Totals 31 0 6 0 Totals 30 3 8 3
Los Angeles 000 000 000 0
Pittsburgh 002 000 01x 3
DP-Pittsburgh 2. LOB-Los Angeles 5, Pittsburgh
7. 2B-Hairston Jr. (4), McCutchen (20), P.Alvarez
(5). CS-Presley (1). SF-Walker.
IP H R ER BB SO
Los Angeles
Fife L,1-2 5 6 2 2 3 4
Howell 2 0 0 0 0 1
Guerrier 0 2 1 1 0 0
P.Rodriguez 1 0 0 0 0 2
Pittsburgh
Locke W,6-1 7 2 0 0 1 5
Melancon H,20 1 2 0 0 0 2
Grilli S,24-24 1 2 0 0 0 2
Guerrier pitched to 2 batters in the 8th.
WP-P.Rodriguez.
Umpires-Home, Hunter Wendelstedt; First, Alan
Porter; Second, Mike Estabrook; Third, Greg Gib-
son.
T-2:46. A-36,878 (38,362).
Marlins 5, Cardinals 4
St. Louis Miami
ab r hbi ab r hbi
M.Carpenter 2b5 1 1 0 Pierre lf 4 1 2 0
Beltran rf 4 0 1 0 Lucas 3b 3 1 0 0
Holliday lf 4 2 1 0 Stanton rf 4 0 3 2
Craig 1b 4 1 2 1 Ozuna cf 4 0 0 0
Y.Molina c 4 0 1 1 Dietrich 2b 4 1 1 0
Freese 3b 3 0 1 1 Hechavarria ss4 2 1 0
Jay cf 3 0 1 1 Dobbs 1b 4 0 1 1
Kozma ss 3 0 0 0 Mathis c 3 0 1 1
Descalso ph 1 0 0 0 Fernandez p 3 0 1 1
Westbrook p 2 0 0 0 Qualls p 0 0 0 0
J.Kelly p 0 0 0 0 M.Dunn p 0 0 0 0
Wigginton ph 1 0 0 0 Cishek p 0 0 0 0
K.Butler p 0 0 0 0
Siegrist p 0 0 0 0
Ma.Adams ph 1 0 0 0
Totals 35 4 8 4 Totals 33 510 5
St. Louis 200 001 010 4
Miami 020 120 00x 5
E-M.Carpenter (5), Lucas (2). DP-St. Louis 2,
Miami 1. LOB-St. Louis 6, Miami 6. 2B-Freese
(9), Jay (9), Pierre (7), Stanton 2 (5), Dobbs (6),
Mathis (3). SB-Pierre (18).
IP H R ER BB SO
St. Louis
Westbrook L,2-2 5 8 5 3 1 0
J.Kelly 1 1 0 0 0 0
K.Butler 1 1 0 0 0 1
Siegrist 1 0 0 0 0 1
Miami
Fernandez W,4-3 7 6 3 2 2 10
Qualls H,2 2-3 2 1 1 0 1
M.Dunn H,8 1-3 0 0 0 0 1
Cishek S,8-10 1 0 0 0 0 1
HBP-by Westbrook (Lucas).
Umpires-Home, Phil Cuzzi; First, Tom Hallion;
Second, Chris Guccione; Third, Ron Kulpa.
T-2:48. A-15,403 (37,442).
Blue Jays 8, Rangers 0
Toronto Texas
ab r hbi ab r hbi
MeCarr lf 4 0 0 1 Profar 2b-ss 4 0 1 0
RDavis lf 0 0 0 1 Andrus ss 3 0 0 0
Bautist rf 5 0 0 0 LGarci 2b 1 0 1 0
Encrnc dh 4 2 2 0 Brkmn dh 4 0 1 0
Lind 1b 4 1 2 1 Beltre 3b 3 0 2 0
ClRsms cf 3 2 1 3 N.Cruz rf 2 0 0 0
MIzturs 3b 4 0 2 1 G.Soto c 3 0 0 0
Arencii c 4 1 1 1 McGns 1b 3 0 0 0
Bonifac 2b 4 1 2 0 Gentry cf 3 0 0 0
Kawsk ss 2 1 1 0 LMartn lf 3 0 0 0
Totals 34 811 8 Totals 29 0 5 0
Toronto 000 410 111 8
Texas 000 000 000 0
DP-Toronto 3. LOB-Toronto 3, Texas 3. 2B-
Encarnacion 2 (12), M.Izturis (7), Bonifacio (11).
3B-Kawasaki (3). HR-Col.Rasmus (11), Arencibia
(13). CS-Bonifacio (3). S-Kawasaki. SF-R.Davis.
IP H R ER BB SO
Toronto
Buehrle W,3-4 7 4 0 0 1 7
Loup 1 0 0 0 0 1
Oliver 1 1 0 0 0 0
Texas
Grimm L,5-5 7 2-3 10 7 7 2 4
McClellan 1 1-3 1 1 1 0 1
Umpires-Home, Eric Cooper; First, Paul Schrieber;
Second, Chad Fairchild; Third, Jeff Kellogg.
T-2:08. A-37,203 (48,114).
Royals 7, Rays 2
Kansas City Tampa Bay
ab r hbi ab r hbi
AGordn lf 4 2 1 0 Joyce rf 4 1 2 1
Hosmer 1b 4 1 1 0 Zobrist 2b 2 1 0 0
S.Perez c 5 1 2 2 KJhnsn 3b 4 0 0 0
BButler dh 4 0 2 3 Longori dh 4 0 2 1
L.Cain cf 3 0 0 0 Loney 1b 4 0 0 0
MTejad 3b 3 0 0 0 DJnngs cf 3 0 2 0
Mostks 3b 1 0 0 0 Fuld lf 1 0 0 0
Francr rf 3 1 1 0 Scott ph-lf 1 0 0 0
EJhnsn 2b 4 1 2 1 Loaton c 4 0 0 0
AEscor ss 4 1 1 1 YEscor ss 4 0 0 0
Totals 35 710 7 Totals 31 2 6 2
Kansas City 100 040 002 7
Tampa Bay 200 000 000 2
E-A.Escobar (9). DP-Kansas City 1, Tampa Bay
1. LOB-Kansas City 7, Tampa Bay 7. 2B-Hosmer
(11), S.Perez (11), Joyce (11), Longoria (20),
De.Jennings (15). 3B-E.Johnson (1). HR-Joyce
(13). SB-E.Johnson (10). S-Fuld. SF-B.Butler.
IP H R ER BB SO
Kansas City
Mendoza W,2-3 6 6 2 2 2 3
Crow H,11 2-3 0 0 0 0 2
Collins H,8 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 2
K.Herrera 1 0 0 0 2 2
Tampa Bay
M.Moore L,8-3 5 1-3 7 5 5 4 4
J.Wright 1 2-3 0 0 0 0 1
Farnsworth 1 0 0 0 0 2
Rodney 1 3 2 2 0 0
Mendoza pitched to 2 batters in the 7th.
HBP-by M.Moore (A.Gordon). WP-Crow.
Umpires-Home, Mike Winters; First, Mark Weg-
ner; Second, Laz Diaz; Third, Tim Timmons.
T-2:59. A-13,407 (34,078).
Cubs 6, Mets 3
Chicago New York
ab r hbi ab r hbi
DeJess cf 2 0 1 3 Vldspn 2b 3 0 0 0
Sweeny cf 3 0 0 0 JuTrnr ph-2b 2 0 0 0
SCastro ss 4 0 0 0 DnMrp 1b 5 1 2 2
Schrhlt rf 4 1 1 1 DWrght 3b 3 0 3 0
ASorin lf 4 0 0 0 Duda lf 3 0 1 1
Rizzo 1b 4 2 3 0 Byrd rf 3 0 1 0
DNavrr c 4 1 2 0 Buck c 4 0 0 0
Valuen 3b 3 1 1 1 Quntnll ss 3 0 0 0
Barney 2b 4 1 1 1 Lagars cf 4 1 1 0
EJcksn p 2 0 0 0 Marcm p 2 0 0 0
Borbon ph 1 0 0 0 Ardsm p 0 0 0 0
Russell p 0 0 0 0 Cowgill ph 1 1 1 0
Marml p 0 0 0 0 Edgin p 0 0 0 0
Hairstn ph 1 0 0 0 Burke p 0 0 0 0
Gregg p 0 0 0 0 Niwnhs ph 1 0 0 0
Totals 36 6 9 6 Totals 34 3 9 3
Chicago 140 001 000 6
New York 001 000 200 3
DP-Chicago 1. LOB-Chicago 4, New York 8. 2B-
Rizzo (19), Valbuena (9), Cowgill (2). 3B-DeJesus
(2), Lagares (1). HR-Schierholtz (9).
IP H R ER BB SO
Chicago
E.Jackson W,3-8 6 5 1 1 3 7
Russell 1 4 2 2 0 1
Marmol H,5 1 0 0 0 0 1
Gregg S,8-8 1 0 0 0 0 1
New York
Marcum L,0-8 5 2-3 7 6 6 1 4
Aardsma 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 2
Edgin 1 2 0 0 0 1
Burke 1 0 0 0 0 1
HBP-by E.Jackson (Byrd). WP-Russell.
Umpires-Home, Gary Cederstrom; First, Vic
Carapazza; Second, Lance Barrett; Third, Lance
Barksdale.
T-3:16. A-32,208 (41,922).
Reds 4, Brewers 3
Milwaukee Cincinnati
ab r hbi ab r hbi
Aoki rf 4 0 1 0 Choo cf 4 1 1 1
Segura ss 5 0 1 0 DRonsn lf 4 0 0 0
CGomz cf 5 0 1 0 Phillips 2b 5 0 1 1
ArRmr 3b 5 1 1 0 Bruce rf 4 1 1 1
YBtncr 1b 5 0 0 0 Frazier 3b 4 1 1 0
LSchfr lf 5 0 3 0 Hannhn 1b 3 0 0 1
Maldnd c 4 1 1 2 Cozart ss 4 1 1 0
Gennett 2b 5 1 3 1 Hanign c 4 0 2 0
Lohse p 2 0 0 0 Arroyo p 1 0 0 0
Axford p 0 0 0 0 LeCure p 0 0 0 0
JFrncs ph 1 0 1 0 Chpmn p 0 0 0 0
FrRdrg p 0 0 0 0 Votto ph 0 0 0 0
Kintzlr p 0 0 0 0 Simon p 0 0 0 0
McGnzl p 0 0 0 0
Badnhp p 0 0 0 0
Totals 41 312 3 Totals 33 4 7 4
Milwaukee 001 001 010 03
Cincinnati 110 001 000 14
One out when winning run scored.
E-Y.Betancourt (4), Gennett (1), Frazier (3), Co-
zart 2 (6). DP-Cincinnati 2. LOB-Milwaukee 11,
Cincinnati 8. 2B-C.Gomez (16), L.Schafer (5),
Gennett (1), Choo (18). HR-Maldonado (3), Gen-
nett (1), Bruce (11). SB-Choo (7), Frazier (4). S-
Lohse, Arroyo 2. SF-Hannahan.
IP H R ER BB SO
Milwaukee
Lohse 6 5 3 1 1 3
Axford 1 1 0 0 1 1
Fr.Rodriguez 1 0 0 0 0 1
Kintzler 2-3 0 0 0 0 1
Mic.Gonzalez 1-3 0 0 0 2 0
Badenhop L,0-3 1-3 1 1 1 0 0
Cincinnati
Arroyo 7 2-3 12 3 2 1 5
LeCure 1-3 0 0 0 0 0
Chapman 1 0 0 0 0 2
Simon W,5-2 1 0 0 0 0 1
HBP-by Arroyo (Maldonado). WP-Lohse.
Umpires-Home, Rob Drake; First, Joe West; Sec-
ond, Sam Holbrook; Third, Clint Fagan.
T-3:12. A-35,138 (42,319).
Giants 6, Braves 0
San Francisco Atlanta
ab r hbi ab r hbi
GBlanc cf 5 1 2 2 Smmns ss 4 0 1 0
Abreu 2b 4 1 0 0 Heywrd rf 4 0 0 0
Posey c 5 2 3 1 J.Upton lf 4 0 0 0
Pence rf 4 1 2 1 FFrmn 1b 3 0 1 0
BCrwfr ss 3 0 2 1 McCnn c 3 0 0 0
Belt 1b 4 0 0 0 BUpton cf 2 0 0 0
AnTrrs lf 4 0 0 0 Uggla 2b 3 0 0 0
Arias 3b 4 1 2 0 CJhnsn 3b 3 0 1 0
Bmgrn p 3 0 0 0 Medlen p 1 0 0 0
HSnchz ph 1 0 0 0 RJhnsn ph 1 0 0 0
SRosari p 0 0 0 0 A.Wood p 0 0 0 0
Varvar p 0 0 0 0
DCrpnt p 0 0 0 0
JSchafr ph 1 0 0 0
Totals 37 611 5 Totals 29 0 3 0
San Francisco 111 010 200 6
Atlanta 000 000 000 0
E-An.Torres (4). DP-San Francisco 1, Atlanta 1.
LOB-San Francisco 7, Atlanta 3. 2B-Posey 3 (19),
Pence (21), B.Crawford (14), Arias (1). HR-G.
Blanco (1). SB-B.Upton (4).
IP H R ER BB SO
San Francisco
Bumgarner W,6-4 7 2 0 0 1 10
S.Rosario 2 1 0 0 0 2
Atlanta
Medlen L,3-7 6 9 4 4 0 4
A.Wood 1 1 2 2 3 2
Varvaro 1 1 0 0 0 0
D.Carpenter 1 0 0 0 0 0
Balk-A.Wood.
Umpires-Home, Gary Darling; First, Jerry Meals;
Second, Paul Emmel; Third, Bruce Dreckman.
T-2:44. A-45,833 (49,586).
S TA N D I N G S S TAT S
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division
W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Away
Boston 41 28 .594 5-5 L-2 21-14 20-14
Baltimore 39 29 .574 1 6-4 W-2 19-14 20-15
New York 37 29 .561 2 6-4 L-3 19-13 18-16
Tampa Bay 35 32 .522 5 3 4-6 L-3 20-15 15-17
Toronto 30 36 .455 9 7 7-3 W-3 16-17 14-19
Central Division
W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Away
Detroit 36 28 .563 6-4 L-1 22-10 14-18
Cleveland 33 33 .500 4 4 3-7 W-3 19-12 14-21
Kansas City 32 33 .492 4 5 9-1 W-3 17-16 15-17
Minnesota 29 34 .460 6 7 5-5 L-1 15-15 14-19
Chicago 28 35 .444 7 8 4-6 L-1 16-14 12-21
West Division
W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Away
Oakland 41 27 .603 7-3 W-3 21-10 20-17
Texas 38 29 .567 2 3-7 L-4 19-12 19-17
Seattle 29 38 .433 11 9 5-5 L-1 18-17 11-21
Los Angeles 28 38 .424 12 9 3-7 W-1 15-18 13-20
Houston 23 44 .343 17 15 3-7 W-1 10-23 13-21
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division
W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Away
Atlanta 39 28 .582 4-6 L-4 21-8 18-20
Washington 33 33 .500 5 6 5-5 L-1 18-13 15-20
Philadelphia 32 35 .478 7 8 5-5 W-1 16-15 16-20
New York 24 38 .387 12 13 2-8 L-2 13-22 11-16
Miami 20 46 .303 18 19 5-5 W-1 12-22 8-24
Central Division
W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Away
St. Louis 43 24 .642 5-5 L-1 19-12 24-12
Cincinnati 41 27 .603 2 5-5 W-1 23-11 18-16
Pittsburgh 40 27 .597 3 5-5 W-1 24-12 16-15
Chicago 27 38 .415 15 12 4-6 W-2 15-21 12-17
Milwaukee 27 39 .409 15 12 6-4 L-1 16-20 11-19
West Division
W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Away
Arizona 37 29 .561 5-5 W-1 17-14 20-15
San Francisco 35 31 .530 2 4 6-4 W-2 21-11 14-20
Colorado 35 32 .522 2 5 5-5 L-2 21-16 14-16
San Diego 32 34 .485 5 7 6-4 W-3 19-14 13-20
Los Angeles 28 38 .424 9 11 4-6 L-2 19-20 9-18
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Thursdays Games
Oakland 3, N.Y. Yankees 2, 18 innings
Baltimore 5, Boston 4, 13 innings
Kansas City 10, Tampa Bay 1
Toronto 3, Texas 1
Philadelphia 3, Minnesota 2
Fridays Games
Baltimore 2, Boston 0
Cleveland 2, Washington 1
Kansas City 7, Tampa Bay 2
Toronto 8, Texas 0
Chicago White Sox at Houston, 8:10 p.m.
Detroit at Minnesota, 8:10 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees at L.A. Angels, 10:05 p.m.
Seattle at Oakland, 10:05 p.m.
Saturdays Games
Boston (Lackey 3-5) at Baltimore (F.Garcia 3-3),
4:05 p.m.
Toronto (Dickey 5-8) at Texas (Lindblom 0-1), 4:05
p.m.
Kansas City (Guthrie 7-3) at Tampa Bay (Cobb
6-2), 4:10 p.m.
Chicago White Sox (Joh.Danks 1-2) at Houston
(Harrell 4-7), 7:15 p.m.
Detroit (Ani.Sanchez 6-5) at Minnesota (Deduno
2-1), 7:15 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees (D.Phelps 4-3) at L.A. Angels (Han-
son 3-2), 7:15 p.m.
Seattle (F.Hernandez 7-4) at Oakland (Griffn 5-5),
7:15 p.m.
Washington (Zimmermann 9-3) at Cleveland (Ka-
zmir 3-4), 7:15 p.m.
Sundays Games
Washington at Cleveland, 1:05 p.m.
Boston at Baltimore, 1:35 p.m.
Kansas City at Tampa Bay, 1:40 p.m.
Chicago White Sox at Houston, 2:10 p.m.
Detroit at Minnesota, 2:10 p.m.
Toronto at Texas, 3:05 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees at L.A. Angels, 3:35 p.m.
Seattle at Oakland, 4:05 p.m.
Mondays Games
Kansas City at Cleveland, 7:05 p.m.
Colorado at Toronto, 7:07 p.m.
Baltimore at Detroit, 7:08 p.m.
Oakland at Texas, 8:05 p.m.
Chicago White Sox at Houston, 8:10 p.m.
Seattle at L.A. Angels, 10:05 p.m.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Thursdays Games
St. Louis 2, N.Y. Mets 1
Chicago Cubs 6, Cincinnati 5, 14 innings
Washington 5, Colorado 4
San Francisco 10, Pittsburgh 0
Philadelphia 3, Minnesota 2
Fridays Games
Pittsburgh 3, L.A. Dodgers 0
Cleveland 2, Washington 1
Chicago Cubs 6, N.Y. Mets 3
Cincinnati 4, Milwaukee 3, 10 innings
Miami 5, St. Louis 4
San Francisco 6, Atlanta 0
Philadelphia at Colorado, 8:40 p.m.
Arizona at San Diego, 10:10 p.m.
Saturdays Games
Chicago Cubs (Feldman 5-5) at N.Y. Mets (Niese
3-5), 1:10 p.m.
L.A. Dodgers (Kershaw 5-4) at Pittsburgh (Cump-
ton 0-0), 4:05 p.m.
San Francisco (Gaudin 2-1) at Atlanta (Minor 8-2),
4:05 p.m.
Milwaukee (Gallardo 5-6) at Cincinnati (H.Bailey
4-4), 4:10 p.m.
Philadelphia (Pettibone 3-2) at Colorado (Chat-
wood 3-1), 4:10 p.m.
St. Louis (Lynn 8-1) at Miami (Koehler 0-4), 4:10
p.m.
Washington (Zimmermann 9-3) at Cleveland (Ka-
zmir 3-4), 7:15 p.m.
Arizona (Miley 4-5) at San Diego (Richard 1-5),
10:10 p.m.
Sundays Games
Washington at Cleveland, 1:05 p.m.
Chicago Cubs at N.Y. Mets, 1:10 p.m.
Milwaukee at Cincinnati, 1:10 p.m.
St. Louis at Miami, 1:10 p.m.
L.A. Dodgers at Pittsburgh, 1:35 p.m.
Arizona at San Diego, 4:10 p.m.
Philadelphia at Colorado, 4:10 p.m.
San Francisco at Atlanta, 8:05 p.m.
Mondays Games
Chicago Cubs at St. Louis, 7:05 p.m.
Washington at Philadelphia, 7:05 p.m.
Colorado at Toronto, 7:07 p.m.
N.Y. Mets at Atlanta, 7:10 p.m.
Pittsburgh at Cincinnati, 7:10 p.m.
Miami at Arizona, 9:40 p.m.
San Diego at San Francisco, 10:15 p.m.
N AT I O N A L L E A g U E R O U N D U P
AP PHOTO
The Pittsburgh Pirates Andrew McCutchen hits a double in front
of Los Angeles Dodgers catcher A.J. Ellis to drive in two runs in
the third inning of a game on Friday in Pittsburgh.
Pirates, Locke blank
reeling Dodgers, 3-0
The Associated Press
PITTSBURGH Jeff Locke
allowed just two hits over seven
innings and the Pittsburgh
Pirates edged the Los Angeles
Dodgers.
Locke (6-1) struck out five
and walked one to win his sixth
straight decision while shaving
his ERA to 2.19. Andrew Mc-
Cutchen hit a two-run double in
the third inning off Stephen Fife
(1-2).
Jason Grilli worked out of a
two-on, no-out jam in the ninth
for his National League-leading
24th save.
The Dodgers played without
manager Don Mattingly, who
served a one-game suspension
for his role in the brawl with Ar-
izona earlier in the week. Bench
coach Trey Hillman filled in for
Mattingly. Los Angeles has lost
five of six to fall a season-worst
10 games under .500 (28-38).
Marlins 5, Cardinals 4
MIAMI Rookie Jose Fer-
nandez outpitched a rusty Jake
Westbrook, and the team with
the worst record in the majors
beat the team with the best
record.
Fernandez had a career-high
10 strikeouts in seven innings,
and the Miami Marlins spoiled
Westbrooks return from an
elbow injury by defeating the St.
Louis Cardinals.
The 20-year-old Fernandez
(4-3) became the first pitcher
under the age of 21 to strike out
10 or more since Felix Hernan-
dez with Seattle in 2007. Rely-
ing heavily on breaking balls, he
threw a career-high 107 pitches
and allowed three runs, two
Cubs 6, Mets 3
NEW YORK David DeJesus
hit a bases-loaded triple before
injuring his shoulder when he
crashed into the outfield wall,
and the Chicago Cubs beat the
New York Mets behind resurgent
starter Edwin Jackson.
Nate Schierholtz homered
and Anthony Rizzo had three
hits for Chicago in the opener of
a three-game series between big-
market teams trying to rebuild.
Jackson (3-8) went six innings
for his second consecutive win,
allowing one run and five hits
while striking out seven.
Reds 4, Brewers 3
CINCINNATI Jay Bruce
homered off Burke Badenhop
with one out in the 10th inning,
rallying the Cincinnati Reds to
a victory over the Milwaukee
Brewers in a game full of errors
and wasted chances.
It was Cincinnatis second
straight extra-inning game. The
Reds fell 6-5 in 14 innings at
Wrigley Field on Thursday, leav-
ing their bullpen depleted.
Giants 6, Braves 0
ATLANTA Madison
Bumgarner allowed two hits
in seven innings and combined
with Sandy Rosario for a three-
hit shutout in the San Francisco
Giants victory.
Bumgarner (6-4) was domi-
nant in earning his second
straight win. The left-hander did
not allow a baserunner for 4 2-3
innings before losing his bid for
a perfect game in the fifth and
shot at a no-hitter in the sixth.
Bumgarner matched his
season high with 10 strikeouts
while one walk.
A M E R I C A N L E A g U E R O U N D U P
Tillman, Davis lead Orioles
to victory over Red Sox
The Associated Press
BALTIMORE Chris Till-
man took a two-hitter into the
seventh inning, Chris Davis hit
his major league-leading 22nd
home run and the Baltimore
Orioles blanked the Boston Red
Sox 2-0 Friday night in a duel
between the top two teams in
the AL East.
Manny Machado had three
hits for the Orioles, who have
won five of six including
the first two in this four-game
series. Baltimore moved within
1 games of the division-lead-
ing Red Sox, the closest the
Orioles have been to first place
since May 13.
Tillman (7-2) allowed three
hits and four walks in six-plus
innings. The right-hander per-
mitted only one runner to get
past second base in winning his
third straight start.
Indians 2, Nationals 1
CLEVELAND Jason Kip-
nis run-scoring fielders choice
in the ninth inning lifted the
Cleveland Indians to a victory
over the Washington Nationals.
With runners on second and
third and one out, Kipnis hit a
hard ground ball to the right
side. First baseman Adam La-
Roche made a diving backhanded
stop and fired a throw to catcher
Kurt Suzuki, but Drew Stubbs
slid in with the winning run.
Royals 7, Rays 2
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.
Luis Mendoza pitched six
innings to win for the first time
in six starts and Elliot Johnson
had another big hit against his
former team, leading the Kansas
City Royals to a victory over the
Tampa Bay Rays.
Mendoza (2-3) gave up two
runs and six hits and three Roy-
als relievers pitched three hit-
less innings as the Royals held a
13th straight opponent to three
runs or fewer. Mendoza last won
May 13.
Blue Jays 8, Rangers 0
ARLINGTON, Texas Mark
Buehrle threw seven shutout
innings, Colby Rasmus and
J.P. Arencibia homered, and
the Toronto Blue Jays handed
the Texas Rangers their fourth
straight loss.
Buehrle (3-4) improved to
13-5 against the Rangers. The
left-hander gave up four singles
and equaled his season high
with seven strikeouts to win his
first road game of the year.
Rasmus hit a three-run shot
in the fourth, and Arencibia
capped the inning with a solo
shot as the Blue Jays won for
the sixth time in eight games.
www.timesleader.com TIMES LEADER PAGE 4B SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 2013 S P O R T S
Tiger says he played well; Rory is set for the weekend
ARDMORE Their toil over, Tiger
Woods and Rory McIlroy shook hands
and hung together on the green, both
survivors.
Across Merions 10th green, their
playing partner, Adam Scott, wasnt
done yet. He had a putt to make.
And he missed it.
It was that kind of afternoon for the
worlds third-ranked player and much
of the U.S. Open field. But No. 1 and 2
walked off together to sign their cards,
sharing some words and a few laughs,
neither complaining about getting away
from the second round of the Open at
three-over.
Long day, and Im hungry, Woods
said after going even par over 25 holes,
completing his first round and also
shooting an even-par 70 in the second
round.
Just outside the scorers tent, Woods
and McIlroy passed the standard-bearer
holding the scores from the group just
ahead. No survivors from that bunch:
Furyk +16 McDowell +13 Z John-
son +11.
Im very happy, McIlroy said of his
own second-round 70. Right in there
for the weekend. I dont think Ill be too
far away by the end of the day.
Scott had begun the day at 3-under,
6 strokes ahead of Woods, but managed
three bogeys and a double in his morn-
ing seven holes, then shot 75 in the
afternoon, putting him at 7-over, four
behind Woods and McIlroy. Getting
overaggressive, Scott hit one ball out
of bounds on the 15th and almost hit a
second, except it settled in the rough a
foot inbounds.
All day, Woods showed a fuller un-
derstanding of how to attack Merion.
He didnt attack it. A number of times,
Woods was behind his playing partners,
hitting irons off tees while they chose
hybrids or 3-woods. He was willing to
hit longer irons into greens, understand-
ing hed more likely be putting from 20-
30 feet than from inside 10 feet.
On Merions front nine in the after-
noon, Woods also scrambled effectively,
needing just 13 putts over those nine
holes. Woods birdied both par-5s, al-
though he drove in the rough at No. 2
and hit his second shot in the left rough
at No. 4, converting a terrific approach
from there. He made a 12-footer for par
at No. 5, a 4-footer for bogey at No. 7
after stubbing a chip, and saved par at
No. 8 with another 8-footer.
Theyve really tried to protect the
golf course, with it being as soft as it is,
Woods said.
And theyve given us some really, re-
ally tough pins.
The difference from the first round
was startling. Some pins seemed hid-
den in pine trees.
Theyre trying to protect par,
Woods said.
Somebody pointed out to Woods that
the USGA had said the U.S. Open is not
about the winning score. Did he buy
that?
No, Woods said.
McIlroy took the other side.
McIlroy and Woods both thought
wind was another factor keeping scores
high.
We got it right in the stiff breeze,
Woods said of playing the tougher late
holes in the morning. It was playing
hard.
Listening to him, youd have thought
Woods shot 80.
I played well, Woods admitted.
I just made a couple of mistakes out
there, but I really played well.
Its unclear howmuch Woods is affect-
ed by pain in his left elbow. He shook it
a couple of times Thursday after shots
from the rough, and also let his left arm
fly off the club a couple of times late Fri-
day after slightly wayward shots.
Woods did say for the first time that
hed hurt the elbowat the Players Cham-
pionship last month, offering no detail.
By MIKE JENSEN
The Philadelphia Inquirer
Donald remains in hunt
after rough 2nd round
ARDMORE Luke Donald
holed out a chip for birdie on the
short par-3 13th to reach 4 under
and top the leaderboard in the
U.S. Open.
Not for long.
He bogeyed Nos. 4-7 to totally
spoil his round Friday. Donald
was at 4 under Thursday before
play was suspended, and finished
with a 2-under 68 on Friday. He
added a 72 in the second round
to leave him even par for the
tournament.
The English star had a run of
five bogeys in six holes on his
back nine in the second round.
The greens have been tricky
to read all week, he said. They
seem to be breaking a little bit
more than Im seeing, hence a
couple of lip outs. But you try not
to panic in U.S. Opens.
Donald, playing in his 10th
U.S., has never won a major. The
former world No. 1 played a pair
of practice rounds last week at
Merion to get used to the course.
He even posed for a photo with
David Graham, winner of the
1981 U.S. Open at Merion.
I asked him, Whats the se-
cret? Donald said. And he said,
Keep it in the short stuff. Obvi-
ously, I think most of us know
that and its all about doing it.
The 35-year-old Donald failed
to make the cut last year in the
U.S. Open at the Olympic Club
in San Francisco because of
putting failures. He has never
finished better than 12th in an
Open (2006) and missed the cut
three times since his 2002 debut.
He was 45th in 2011 and 47th in
2010.
Donald and Lee Westwood
are the only players to be No. 1
without having won a major.
Hes glad to at least be in the
hunt this year.
I havent played very well, but
when I saw this place last week,
I thought it was a good fit for my
game, he said. Its nice to come
here and feel like Im swinging
pretty well and Ive got a chance.
So, hopefully, I can throw a good
one in tomorrow and really be in
the mix come Sunday.
DOUBLE DIP: Carl Pettersson
saw double on No. 5.
Pettersson had to check his
backswing after an errant shot
from No. 2 rolled his way and
smacked his ball off its spot.
Pettersson stopped his swing and
backed off the ball, chuckling at
the truly bizarre shot.
The wayward ball came from
Brandon Crick. He had to hit
from where the ball landed.
Pettersson placed the ball at
its original spot. He probably
wished his ball was whacked into
the cup he had a bogey on the
par-5 hole.
Luckily, I wasnt in my
downswing, because if I would
have missed the ball, it would
have been, I dont know what the
ruling would have been on that,
he said. But it might not have
been good. I regripped and hit a
decent shot after that.
LAWRIE HONOR: Paul
Lawrie fought back with a 71
and feared he would miss the
cut. The day wasnt a total loss.
Hours later, the former British
Open champion was among
those selected for the Order of
the British Empire in the Queens
Birthday Honors.
More that his performance
on the course, the Scot was
recognized for his foundation
that helps pay for kids to get
into sport. It started with golf
and now includes soccer, rugby
and some tennis.
I wanted to do it before I
won the Open, but I didnt think
I was a big enough name and
didnt think sponsors would be
interested or the kids would
want to participate in the
events, Lawrie said. All of
a sudden, I win the Open. Its
getting pretty big and growing
every year, but I have to say a
lot of people do a lot of good
work.
Lawrie holds the major cham-
pionship record for the largest
comeback in the final round,
making up 10 shots in the final
round at Carnoustie in 1999,
and beating Jean Van de Velde
and Justin Leonard in a playoff.
Its a huge honor, Lawrie
said.
LOCAL FAVORITE: Jim
Furyk had the home crowd on
his side.
He just failed to deliver a
performance worth cheering for
Friday.
Furyk, born in the nearby
Philly suburb of West Chester
and raised in Lancaster, shot a
9-over 79. Furyk, the 2003 U.S.
Open champion, wont be add-
ing a second one to the collec-
tion. He hadnt played Merion
Golf Club since the 1989 U.S.
Amateur.
It showed, he said. I didnt
do a great job with my prep.
I felt like I was ready coming
here but I obviously played very
poorly. It was probably my last
putting performance in the last
three or four years.
For years, Furyk hosted the
one-day Exelon Invitational at
various stops throughout the
state. His event was the only
professional golf even that the
Philadelphia area had on a
yearly basis.
He hasnt held the informal
exhibition since 2009 and
doesnt expect it to return. And
he doesnt know when hell play
again in the area.
I never really played well at
the tournaments here, he said.
Its a bummer. I crossed the
state at Oakmont for a couple
of championships. At 43, theres
not going to be another tourna-
ment here at Merion.
OOVER AND OOST: Louis
Oosthuizen withdrew from the
U.S. Open with a hip injury.
The 2010 British Open cham-
pion strained a hip flexor while
shooting a 5-over 75 in the first
round and pulled out before his
second round tee time Friday.
Oosthuizen said the problem
affected his swing to the point
that he was advised he risked
further damage if he kept play-
ing.
The South Africans best
finish at the U.S. Open came in
2011, when he tied for ninth.
By DAN GELSTON
AP Sports Writer
AP PHOTO
Rory McIlroy, left, and Tiger Woods
walk across the 10th green after
putting during the second round of
the U.S. Open at Merion Golf Club on
Friday in Ardmore.
Merion is
proving to be
a huge test
By JOE JULIANO
The Philadelphia Inquirer
ARDMORE After the rain
poured down on Merion Golf
Club last Friday and again on
Monday, it prompted laments
that scores on the softer layout
would be the lowest in U.S. Open
history, and even the hallowed
single-round record score in a
major of 63 would be shattered,
maybe more than once.
Well, were almost halfway
home in the weather-delayed
113th national championship,
and nearly everyone is struggling
to break par at the famed East
Course, which measures fewer
than 7,000 yards.
A course that supposedly was
only to show its teeth by being
firm and fast has stood up and
bit the worlds best players time
and again. The rough is brutal.
The greens, though receptive, are
more difficult to read than most,
and some are almost impossible
to hit in regulation.
Combine that with the mental
wear and tear of an Open and
youre left with only two play-
ers Phil Mickelson and Billy
Horschel from the original
field of 156 who are under par for
two days.
It tests every aspect of your
game, said Rory McIlroy, who
shot a 70 playing with Tiger
Woods and Adam Scott. Youve
got to drive it well. Where these
pins are, youve got to hit great
iron shots, youve got to be very
tactical. Youve got to be mentally
really well there and have a good
game plan.
There were people talking
about 62s and 63s at the start of
the week. I mean, I never sawthat
at all. I still think that something
very little under par is going to
win this week.
Statistics compiled by the U.S.
Golf Association for Round One
showed less than one-quarter of
the field was able to hit in regu-
lation the greens at the fifth and
18th, both 500-yard par-4s, and
less than 30 percent on the long
par-4 sixth. The rough on the 11th
hole penalizes any player who
nestles a ball in it by .83 strokes.
The course played almost one
stroke higher, 75.1675, on Friday
than it did on Thursday when
the average was 74.3077. Much
of that could be attributed to a
fresher wind and hole locations
that some players felt pushed the
envelope.
We knew they were going to
be in (severe) areas but we didnt
think they were going to be as se-
vere as they are, said Woods, who
matched par-70. A lot of guys are
missing putts and blowing them
by the holes because obviously it
would be a little more difficult try-
ing to protect par.
Obviously, Merion is torment-
ing the contestants, not the other
way around.
I think its because of the dif-
ficulty when you miss, said John
Senden, who fired a 71 Friday.
The rough is so long here com-
pared to any event Ive played,
any other U.S. Open. Its just de-
manding. Theres a lot of slope, a
lot of tilt on the greens.
ing in his first U.S. Open since
he was a 19-year-old in college.
Nothing is tougher than Mer-
ion, the little course in the tony
suburbs of Philadelphia that
even in rain-softened conditions
is showing plenty of might. And
to think there was chatter at the
start of the week about the po-
tential for the first 62 in major
championship history.
Perhaps next time you guys
will believe when we say its
really not that easy, that its re-
ally not that easy, Geoff Ogilvy
said after a 70. That put him at
4-over 144, which gave himand
dozens of others a legitimate
shot going into the weekend.
Luke Donald (72), Justin
Rose (69) and Steve Stricker
(69) were at even-par 140.
The surprise were a pair of
amateurs Michael Kim of
Cal and Cheng-Tsung Pan of
Taiwan. They were 2 under for
their round and among those
who didnt finish.
The long day, brought on by
storm delays on Thursday, be-
gan with cool conditions and
patches of light rain that even-
tually gave way to sunshine.
That led players to wonder
how much tougher Merion will
be once it starts to dry out.
Its not as easy as people
think, defending champion
Webb Simpson said after a 75
put him six shots behind the
clubhouse lead. I heard 15, 16
under floating around. And its
going to be a normal U.S. Open
winning score, I think.
Horschel hit all 18 greens in
regulation, a stellar achieve-
ment at a regular tour event,
let alone the U.S. Open. It sent
USGA officials searching for
hours to find the last time any-
one failed to miss a green in the
toughest test in golf. Records of
that detail only go back as far
as 1989. That last documenta-
tion of someone doing that was
Johnny Miller when he closed
with a 63 at Oakmont to win in
1973.
David Grahamused his putter
on every hole three from the
fringe when he shot 67 to win
the 1981 U.S. Open at Merion.
I didnt know I hit every
green until I walked off 18,
Horschel said. Its a cool thing.
But like I said, its not the first
time Ive hit all 18 greens. Ive
done it plenty of times in my
career. Obviously, its at a U.S.
Open, but I think the softness
of the greens helped that.
Pan played nine holes and was
even par, along with Ian Poul-
ter, who was plodding along in
plaid at 1 under for his round
through 14 holes. John Senden
of Australia had a 71 and Nicolas
Colsaerts of Belgium shot 72 to
finish at 1-over 141.
Mickelson, equipped with a
full night of rest after his cross-
country trip Wednesday from
his daughters eighth-grade
graduation in San Diego, began
with a three-putt bogey and ap-
peared ready to pull away with
a shot that nearly spun back
into the hole at No. 8.
He missed the birdie putt
from 4 feet. Then he hit a beau-
tiful tee shot over the water to
a dangerous front pin on the
par-3 ninth to about 7 feet. He
missed that one, too.
Lefty three-putted from 20
feet on No. 12, and then flew
a wedge over the green into a
plugged lie for bogey on the
par-3 13th. He kept battling
until ending on a sweet note.
With that birdie putt on his fi-
nal hole, Mickelson was under
par through 36 holes for the
seventh time in the U.S. Open.
The previous six times, he was
a threat to win on Sunday.
Mickelson has five silver med-
als as a runner-up, and all he
wants is another chance.
I just like being in the mix,
he said. I think its fun hav-
ing a chance heading into the
weekend. The way I have con-
trol off the tee and as good as
the putter is even though it
didnt show today Im very
excited about the opportunity
this weekend.
Horschel doesnt lack for
confidence, even though the
26-year-old from Florida won
for the first time on the PGA
Tour just two months ago in
New Orleans. He is an explo-
sive player, capable of running
off birdies without notice. For
this championship that meant
keeping the ball in play.
His only bogey was on the
13th hole, the short par 3 and
the easiest at Merion.
I was not in the zone, trust
me, Horschel said. This golf
course, even though its soft, is
still a tough golf course. I know
what in the zone is for me. I
dont get nervous, I just see the
shot and go. And I saw the shot
and I went with it, but I was
still nervous with a lot of them.
Your misses here can be bad if
you miss in the wrong spot.
Grahams great round won
himthe U.S. Open. Horschel still
has a long way to go. Consider-
ing this packed leaderboard, it
feels as though the tournament
hasnt even started.
For all his travails, Woods
was only four shots behind.
So was Rory McIlroy, who also
had a 70.
It tests every aspect of your
game, McIlroy said. There
were people talking about 62s
and 63s at the start of the week
and, I mean, I never saw that at
all. I still think that something
very little under par is going to
win this week. If or if not that,
around even par.
Indeed, the real winner so far
has been Merion.
For such a short course it
measured 6,901 yards from tee
to wicker basket this centu-
ry-old track had everyones at-
tention.
You were convinced it was
going to be scoring records and
62s and obnoxious scoring,
Ogilvy said. Did one player
say that? Not many, anyway.
The players said it was pretty
hard, didnt they? Today was
hard.
Everything looked like a grind
for Woods, who said he first
hurt his left arm at The Players
Championship he didnt say
where or how when he won
at the TPC Sawgrass a month
ago. He dangled the arm and oc-
casionally grimaced with shots
out of the rough on No. 12, No.
4 and No. 8.
AP PHOTO
Phil Mickelson waits to putt on the 18th green during the second round of the U.S. Open golf
tournament at Merion Golf Club in Ardmore.
OPEN
Continued from Page 1B
SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 2013 PAgE 5B TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com S P O R T S
Thats right, there are dead-
lines for finishing each stage of
the USAT-sanctioned duathlon,
which includes a 3-mile run, 16-
mile bike and concludes with
another 3-mile run. Competitors
must finish the first run by 8:15
a.m., the bike by 9:15 a.m. and
the concluding run by 10 a.m.
After eight years of steady top
three finishes, Robbins finally
won last years event in his ninth
try with a time of 1:13.52 while
Heidi Glovack won the womens
division in 1:27.47. Jeff Miller, a
former nemesis of Robbins in the
late 2000s, set the course record
of 1:02.54 in 2010 while Kelly Ci-
ravolo of Shavertown holds the
womens mark of 1:20.25 set in
2011.
That the event has lasted this
long is both a surprise and a trib-
ute to the race organizers.
Its pretty exciting to think it
got to the 10th, Robbins said.
The first one was nerve-wrack-
ing you dont know whos
going to participate. Now, every-
ones got kind of their routine.
They know their role.
The role of the race has always
been to benefit the areas youth
fitness. It began as a joint effort
by the Wilkes-Barre YMCA and
the Jewish Community Center
as a way to raise money for the
Wilkes-Barre areas youth organi-
zations in 2004.
We wanted it to be a multi-
sport event, Robbins said, not
just a 5K, for a couple different
reasons. We wanted to get peo-
ple involved in doing multi-sport
events. And to start taking them
in the direction so they maybe
can try the (Wilkes-Barre) Tri-
athlon someday.
Its a good opportunity for
somebody who might be inter-
ested to get started.
Interested runners and bikers
can still get in on the fun.
The registration fees for
the race are $65 for individual
competitors and $100 for relay
teams, but registration closes
at 3 p.m. today at the Wilkes-
Barre YMCA. Packet pickups
will be held from 1-3 p.m. today
at the Wilkes-Barre YMCA on
Northampton Street and from
6:15-7 a.m. Sunday under the
tent near the races starting point
on Public Square.
Although race director Nicky
Pachucki said the field has never
gone higher than 200 partici-
pants, the race will be capped at
350 competitors to keep logistics
manageable.
Participants are encouraged to
arrive no later than 30 minutes
prior to the races start.
Ive only won it once, weve
gotten some good duathletes
here who have performed really
well, Robbins said. Each year it
brings in money. And that money
has gone to help kids programs.
Its been a success.
RUNNING
Continued from Page 1B
You lose a game like we did
in Game 2 and we come back
and beat them in Game 3 and
look like they looked last night,
thats what drives me crazy, be-
cause as coaches you try to pre-
vent that, Spurs coach Gregg
Popovich said Friday during a
conference call. Neither team
practiced.
You like to be on a little bit
more of an even keel and per-
form the same way each night,
and the only thing I can tell my-
self after all these years is, youre
dealing with people, with emo-
tions and not robots, Popovich
said. They come out and they
all play hard, but theres that
little intangible, that little spark
of intensity or back against the
wall, or a little bit of fear that
just seems to kick in when
youve lost the previous game.
And when you find teams that
can get over that, those are the
championship teams.
Its the most uneven stretch
of the NBA Finals since 2005,
according to STATS, when San
Antonio and the Detroit Pistons
swapped four straight games
decided by 15 or more points to
open the series.
Back then, the Spurs could
depend on Tim Duncan, Tony
Parker and Manu Ginobili to get
them righted. But now Parker
has a shaky hamstring, Ginobi-
lis shot and confidence are even
shakier, and San Antonio might
need a throwback performance
from Duncan in what could be
his last home game in a storied
finals career.
If they dont get more from
Tim Duncan, Sunday is the
Spurs last stand, Hall of Famer
Charles Barkley said on NBA
TVs postgame show.
Duncan knows that what the
Spurs really need is to take bet-
ter care of the basketball. Their
17 turnovers led to 19 Miami
points in Game 2, and they gave
the Heat 23 points with their 19
turnovers Thursday.
Thats a big problem, Dun-
can said. When we lose, thats
the big deal right there.
A healthy Parker would help.
He started strong in Game 4
while playing with a strained
right hamstring but couldnt
maintain it in the second half.
Hes hoping the two-day break
between games will strengthen
his stamina.
Its going to be huge for me,
Parker said after the game. Ob-
viously, definitely got fatigued in
the second half. Those two days
Im going to make sure I do a lot
of treatment and to get 100 per-
cent. Tonight, I was not 100 per-
cent. By Sunday, thats my goal,
to be good to go.
The Spurs can only help their
Big Three looks as good as Mi-
amis was on Thursday.
With 33 points and 11 re-
bounds from James, 32 points
from Wade, and 20 points and
13 rebounds from Chris Bosh,
the Heat rode the top-heavy bal-
ance thats supposed to deliver
multiple titles to Miami.
But the team that sustained
its excellence for 27 straight vic-
tories during the regular season
hasnt even been able to do it for
consecutive games lately. Dou-
ble-digit victories in Games 3
and 5 of the Eastern Conference
finals were followed by losses,
as was their first victory in this
series.
Well, Game 5 is going to be
a big game, Bosh said. I think
we just have to stay in the place
that were in.
As usual, that may depend on
James. After taking unusually
long to get going in Games 2
and 3, he was out quick Thurs-
day, making it clear the game
was not going to be played on
the Spurs terms.
I gave it everything I had,
James said. I was just playing
as hard as I could until the tank
was empty and thats howits go-
ing to have to be for the rest of
this series.
Of the previous 27 times the
finals were tied at 2-2, the Game
5 winner went on to take the
series 20 times. The Heat lost
in this situation two years ago
in Dallas, and the Mavericks
finished them off in Game 6 in
Miami.
Wade has never gone the dis-
tance in his three previous NBA
Finals, but kept mentioning
Thursday that there were three
games left, as if expecting this
series to reach a Game 7.
NBA
Continued from Page 1B
to do a better job of defending
that line.
I think thats a line that has
most of the offensive abilities
that the good line should have,
Chicago defenseman Niklas Hjal-
marsson said. They got a big
body with Lucic and Horton is a
pretty big guy, too, and Krejcis a
good playmaker and good shot,
too. So theyre obviously one of
the best lines in the league, if not
the best.
Its going to be a fun chal-
lenge to play against them again
tomorrow and see how it goes.
Hjalmarsson was wrestling
with Horton in front of the Chi-
cago net during a Boston power
play in the first overtime when
the wing skated off with the
injury. It appeared to be a seri-
ous problem at the time, since
Horton decided at that pivotal
moment that he was unable to
continue.
But Horton managed to prac-
tice on the eve of Game 2 and
didnt appear to be inhibited in
any way. He was not made avail-
able to the media, but just his
presence at practice seemed to
provide a lift for the Bruins.
Its great. Hes a big part of
this team and really missed him
in the overtime after he went
down, Krejci said. So its good
to see him back on the ice.
Krejci and Horton each had
an assist when Lucic beat Corey
Crawford for the first goal of the
series in the first period. Krejci
set up Lucic in the second, and
he fired it into the net for his fifth
goal of the playoffs.
Krejci leads the NHL with nine
goals and 14 assists in the post-
season. Horton has seven goals
and 11 assists in the playoffs, and
Lucic also has 11 assists.
I just think were going out
there and having fun and were
moving the puck well, Lucic
said. Were shooting it when we
get those opportunities. Were
skating well. Were doing good
things on the forecheck and the
offensive zone, and also weve
been able to play pretty sound
defensively. That is kind of the
transition into our success for
our line.
The 27-year-old Krejci is the
engine behind that success. The
gifted center has a deft touch
and a knack for creating oppor-
tunities for his teammates. He
has at least 23 assists in each
of the last five years, including
a career-high 51 for the 2008-09
season.
Krejci also is a proven play-
off performer. He had 12 goals
and 11 assists during the 2011
title run. His considerable skill
is a major reason why Julien
isnt concerned about who plays
alongside him in Game 2.
Hes a pretty smart player,
Julien said. He just wants play-
ers to move and he finds them. I
dont think its a big challenge for
David. I dont think its a big chal-
lenge for whoever plays with him.
All you got to do is the right thing:
get open and hell find you.
When it comes to defending
Bostons top line, Chicago wants
to improve in a couple of differ-
ent areas. A missed check by
Hjalmarsson played a role in the
first goal in the series opener,
and Lucic was open again for his
second score.
NHL
Continued from Page 1B
L E g I O N B A S E B A L L
Nanticoke takes down Back Mountain
The Times Leader staff
Nanticoke scored all four runs
in the third inning to pick up a
4-1 win over Back Mountain in
Legion play on Friday.
Nick Deno earned the win,
throwing a complete-game
three-hitter. Three Back Moun-
tain pitchers combined to hold
Nanticoke to three hits as well.
Greg Petorak and Connor Bal-
loun doubled in the loss.
Back Mountain AB R H BI 2B 3B HR
Nigel Stearns 3 1 1 0 0 0 0
Deep Patel ss 3 0 0 0 0 0 0
Greg Petorak 3b 3 0 1 1 1 0 0
John Strausser 1b 3 0 0 0 0 0 0
Cody Paraschak c 3 0 0 0 0 0 0
C.J. Carey ss 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Connor Balloun p 1 0 1 0 1 0 0
Scott Bean p 1 0 0 0 0 0 0
Dylan Pilger rf 3 0 0 0 0 0 0
Nick Oley 2b 2 0 0 0 0 0 0
Kyle Baker lf 1 0 0 0 0 0 0
Lee Eckart ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 0
Totals 24 1 3 1 2 0 0
Nanticoke AB R H BI 2B 3B HR
Zach Kollar ss 2 1 1 0 0 0 0
Larry Youngblood ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 0
Christian Pack 2b 4 1 0 0 0 0 0
Mickey Ferrence rf 2 1 0 0 0 0 0
Nick Deno p 2 0 0 0 0 0 0
Mike Blazaskie cf 2 0 1 0 0 0 0
Matt Kuhl ph 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Joe Yudichak c 3 0 0 0 0 0 0
Bob Briggs 3b 1 0 0 0 0 0 0
Tyler Myers 3b 1 1 0 0 0 0 0
Jeff Jezewski lf 1 0 0 0 0 0 0
Jack Windt ph 1 0 1 0 0 0 0
Morgan Higgs 1b 2 0 0 0 0 0 0
Mike Bugonowicz 1b 1 0 0 0 0 0 0
Totals 23 4 3 0 0 0 0
Back Mountain 100 0000 1
Nanticoke 004 000x 4
Back Mountain IP H R ER BB SO
Patel (L) 2.1 1 4 2 5 1
Balloun 1.2 1 0 0 0 3
Bean 2.0 1 0 0 0 3
Nanticoke IP H R ER BB SO
Deno (W) 7.0 3 1 1 2 6
Swoyersville 10,
Wilkes-Barre 0
Chris Nixon and C.J. Yakimo-
wicz combined on a six-inning
shutout for Swoyersville.
Ryan Hogan had two of Swoy-
ersvilles 12 hits as 11 different
players recorded a hit in the
win.
Wilkes-Barre AB R H BI 2B 3B HR
Yurkoski 3b 3 0 1 0 0 0 0
Preston c 3 0 1 0 0 0 0
Owen lf 3 0 1 0 0 0 0
Conrad 1b 2 0 0 0 0 0 0
Zionce cf 2 0 0 0 0 0 0
Amesbury p 2 0 0 0 0 0 0
Leighton 2b 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Kendra 2b 2 0 0 0 0 0 0
Williamson ss 2 0 1 0 0 0 0
Lovecchio rf 1 0 0 0 0 0 0
Totals 20 0 4 0 0 0 0
Swoyersville AB R H BI 2B 3B HR
Leonard 2b 2 0 1 0 0 0 0
Labashosky 2b 2 0 1 0 0 0 0
N. Hogan lf 3 1 1 2 1 0 0
Sabecky lf 1 0 0 0 0 0 0
R. Hogan c 3 2 2 1 1 0 0
Reyes c 1 1 1 0 0 0 0
Pechulis dh 2 1 1 1 0 0 0
Yakimowicz p 1 0 1 0 0 0 0
Worlinsky ss 0 1 0 0 0 0 0
Gregory ss 1 0 1 1 1 0 0
McCue 1b 2 1 1 1 0 0 0
Brodie 1b 1 0 0 1 0 0 0
M. Zielen cf 2 1 1 2 0 0 0
Flaherty rf 1 0 0 0 0 0 0
Zavada 3b 2 1 0 0 0 0 0
Stayer rf 3 1 1 0 0 0 0
Totals 27 10 12 9 3 0 0
Wilkes-Barre 000 000 0
Swoyersville 500 401 10
Wilkes-Barre IP H R ER BB SO
Amesbury (L) 3 5 5 4 1 0
Lovecchio 1 5 4 4 2 0
Owen 2 2 1 1 2 1
Swoyersville IP H R ER BB SO
Nixon (W) 3 3 0 0 1 3
Yakimovicz 3 1 0 0 0 2
debut. The righty fared well
in the outing, but was still hit
with the loss as the RailRid-
ers fell to Lehigh Valley 4-1 at
Coca-Cola Park.
Ramirez, who is ranked
No. 13 by MLB on the orga-
nizations top prospects list,
struggled a bit in the first in-
ning, needing 25 pitches to get
through and throwing just 12 of
them for strikes. He didnt give
up any hits, but walked two and
had three-ball counts on four of
the five IronPigs batters. He
also got two Ks in the frame
but stayed focused.
The 23-year-old showed
good control in 42 1-3 innings,
including nine appearances and
eight starts for Double-A Tren-
ton, allowing just 15 walks and
fanning 50. In his first Triple-A
outing, however, he didnt get
the calls.
Overall, despite four walks,
he whiffed five, giving up just
three hits and two runs.
That was the same ol Jose,
said SWB catcher J.R. Murphy,
who caught Ramirez Friday
and has done it many times
this season with the Thunder.
He was throwing hard. He was
locating his fastball well to-
night. His changeup was just as
good as normal and his slider
was better than it has been this
season.
The first hit Ramirez gave up
was a leadoff single to Darin
Ruf in the bottom of the fourth.
Cody Overbeck followed with
a double to put Lehigh Valley
runners on second and third.
A groundout by Josh Fields
brought home Ruf and gave the
IronPigs a 1-0 lead. After get-
ting the second out, Cameron
Rupp boomed a double to the
gap in left-center bringing in
Overbeck for a 2-0 lead.
When Neal was called up,
a replacement on the roster
wasnt immediately available.
Melky Mesa was also unavail-
able, nursing an injury after
crashing into the wall at PNC
Field earlier in the week.
So when left fielder Ronnier
Mustelier left the game in the
bottomof the third, utility play-
er Addison Maruszak shifted to
left, Dan Johnson moved from
first to third and Bobby Wilson
played first for the first time
this season.
Maruszak, who has played
nearly every position on the
field, stepped into left for the
first time as a pro. That inexpe-
rience showed while trying to
tack down a few hits, including
a triple to the gap in left-center
by Leandro Castro that scored
a run.
Johnson, playing a third
for the first time this season,
dropped a pop-up that allowed
a runner to reach in the same
inning to give the IronPigs a
4-1 lead.
Josh Bell crushed a solo
home run in the top of the fifth
to get the RailRiders within
one at 2-1 in the fifth. But the
IronPigs got it back in the next
half inning when Cody Asche
clubbed his seventh homer of
the season to extend the lead
back to two at 3-1.
One of the positives for the
RailRiders on the night was
the pitching of Dellin Betanc-
es. The right-handed reliever
tossed a pair of hitless innings.
The only baserunner he al-
lowed was on Johnsons error.
Betances also fanned four as
his velocity sat in the mid 90s.
He located his breaking ball
really well and he was unhitta-
ble, Murphy said of Betances.
He threw it for strikes at the
beginning of counts and put
guys away with it at the end of
counts. If hes doing that and
also throwing mid-upper 90s
hes gonna be really tough.
RIDERS
Continued from Page 1B
T h E T. L . E x P R E S S
The IronPigs took the second
straight game of the four-game
series versus the RailRiders on
Friday, 4-1. The RailRiders record
fell under .500 on the road mov-
ing to 16-17. The teams meet again
today and SWB will have to deal
with Phillies rehabbing catcher
Carlos Ruiz in Lehigh Valleys
lineup.
RailRiders at the plate: Josh Bell
hit a solo home run to account
for the teams lone run and one
of SWBs four hits. Cody Grice
doubled, while Addison Maruszak
and Zoilo Almonte chipped in
singles.
RailRiders on the mound: Jose
Ramirez got the call-up to make
his Triple-A debut. The 23-year-
old did OK in the outing, despite
walking four. He gave up two
runs on three hits and fanned
five in four innings. Graham
Stoneburner lasted just 1-plus
innings in relief of Ramirez giving
up two runs on three hits. Dellin
Betances pitched hitless sixth and
seventh innings with the only bas-
erunner allowed coming via error.
He fanned four in his outing. Matt
Daley tossed a perfect ninth.
Riding the Rails: In moves made
on Friday, outfielder Thomas Neal
and Fridays supposed starter
Chris Bootcheck were promoted
to New York, while right-hander
Adam Warren was optioned to
Triple-A. Fridays starter Jose
Ramirez was promoted from
Trenton to get the start for the
RailRiders.
The IronRail Series: Prior to
Thursdays series beginning,
the RailRiders and IronPigs an-
nounced the beginning of the
IronRail Trophy. The winner of
the 16-game season series will
be the recipient of a trophy that
is currently being constructed
of reconditioned railroad track
iron. In addition to receiving the
trophy, the general manager who
is on the receiving end of the loss
will have to sing a song dressed in
a fat lady suit. That song will be
played on the video board after
every home team victory in the
series in 2014 and beyond.
Todays Game: The RailRiders
and IronPigs meet for the third
time of the four-game series
tonight at 6:35 at Coca-Cola Park.
Todays Probables: Scranton/
Wilkes-Barre LHP David Huff
(3-1, 3.73) vs. IronPigs LHP Raul
Valdes (0-1, 4.26)
On Deck: The teams wrap up
their series on Sunday. From
there, the RailRiders head back
home to open a three-game set
with Rochester at PNC Field
beginning with a doubleheader
on Monday.
On The Radio: All games can be
heard on WYCK 1340-AM, 1400-
AM, 100.7-FM
On TV: The next telecast by
WQMY (My Network TV) will be
for the second game of a day/
night doubleheader on Saturday,
June 22 from PNC Field.
How They Scored
IRONPIGS FOURTH: Darin Ruf
singled. Cody Overbeck doubled,
Ruf to third. Cody Overbeck
grounded out to score Ruf.
Leandro Castro grounded out.
Cameron Rupp doubled driving
in Overbeck. Rupp to second on
a wild pitch. Pete Orr flied out.
IRONPIGS 2-0
RAILRIDERS FIFTH: Cody Grice
struck out. Josh Bell homered. Al-
berto Gonzalez struck out. Walter
Ibarra flied out. IRONPIGS 2-1
IRONPIGS FIFTH: Jermaine
Mitchell grounded out. Cesar
Hernandez grounded out. Cody
Asche homered. Darin Ruf
walked. Cody Overbeck flied out.
IRONPIGS 3-1
RAILRIDERS SIXTH: Josh Fields
singled. Leandro Castro tripled.
Dellin Betances relieved Graham
Stoneburner. Cameron Rupp
struck out. Pete Orr reached on
catching error by third baseman
Dan Johnson. Jermaine Mitchell
popped out. Cesar Hernandez
struck out. IRONPIGS 4-1
BROOKLYN, Mich. Brad
Keselowski was asked to pick
one word to describe a lap at
Michigan International Speed-
way.
Fast, the defending Sprint
Cup champion said. This is,
to me, the fastest track we have
and it might be in speed, but
it definitely is in feel.
MIS is in its second year with
a newly paved surface, and
drivers are again making 200
mph laps look almost routine.
Carl Edwards topped Sprint
Cup qualifying Friday with a
lap of 202.452 mph.
That run came a year after
Marcos Ambrose won the pole
at MIS at 203.241 mph the
first time since 1987 the 200
mph mark was broken during
qualifying for NASCARs top
series.
The new track is super fun
to race on, Edwards said. The
pavement seems like it has aged
more in a year than a lot of new
track surfaces have, and hope-
fully we can keep developing a
Goodyear tire and keep making
it softer and softer to where it
becomes the old Michigan here
in a year or two. I think that is
going to be awesome.
Edwards topped qualifying
for the first time this season.
He had the pole in May at Tal-
ladega as well, but that was be-
cause qualifying was rained out
and the field was set by prac-
tice speeds.
Hes second in the Sprint
Cup standings.
Kurt Busch was second in
qualifying, followed by Kasey
Kahne. Points leader Jimmie
Johnson was 17th, one spot be-
hind Keselowski.
Edwards started second
last weekend at Pocono, but
finished 18th. Now, his No.
99 Ford looks capable of a big
weekend.
The engine is a big part of
it, and today the engine group
came through huge, Edwards
said. You cant hide a bad
engine out there on that race-
track. That is a big racetrack
where big power means some-
thing, and same thing with
the aero program. We have to
keep moving forward but that
is cool. There is not a faster car
in the place than our car today
and that is a big deal.
Dale Earnhardt Jr., who
won at MIS last June to snap a
streak of 143 Cup races without
a victory, qualified 12th.
Busch is coming off a sev-
enth-place showing at Pocono
his second top-10 finish in
the last three races. Hell start
in the top two Sunday for the
fourth time this year.
Its just a good feeling to
be on the front row four times
this year, Busch said. So
were just going to keep rolling.
To be second, thats qualifying,
now weve just got to step into
the race, and thats where weve
got to close the deal.
A U T O R A C I N g
Edwards tops Cup qualifying
AP PHOTO
Carl Edwards holds the pole-sitter flag after qualifying for
Sundays NASCAR Sprint Cup series auto race at Michigan
International Speedway on Friday.
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NEW CAR 694 WYOMING AVE., KINGSTON 287-2117 USED CAR 662 WYOMING AVE., KINGSTON 288-0319
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www.timesleader.com TIMES LEADER PAGE 6B SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 2013 S P O R T S
C O L L E G E S P O R T S
Miami staffers attend Day 2
of NCAA infractions hearing
INDIANAPOLIS Univer-
sity of Miami school officials,
former football assistants and
the ACC commissioner attend-
ed the second day of the NCAA
hearing Friday in the massive
infractions case against the
Hurricanes.
School President Donna Sha-
lala and Atlantic Coast Confer-
ence Commissioner John Swof-
ford attended the hearing again
with the NCAA Committee of
Infractions.
Former football assistants
Clint Hurtt and Aubrey Hill
were among the first to arrive
for the session at a downtown
hotel.
All the officials declined com-
ment before the proceedings
began and at the lunch break.
They are defending the Hur-
ricanes against allegations that
could bring severe sanctions be-
cause of improper benefits pro-
vided by former booster Nevin
Shapiro.
The NCAA alleges improper
benefits went to 72 players,
three recruits and 12 friends
and family members. Shapiro
is serving a 20-year sentence for
his role in a $930 million Ponzi
scheme.
Hurtt and Hill, who are ac-
cused of violating the NCAA
unethical conduct rule, were
done for the day before lunch.
Hurtt, now the defensive line
coach at Louisville, allegedly
received and distributed imper-
missible benefits and provided
false and misleading informa-
tion during the investigation.
The NCAA said Hill and
Hurtt allowed recruits to stay
at their homes for no cost dur-
ing unofficial visits, and helped
arrange social events such as
meals where Shapiro took care
of the bill.
Shapiro has said he gave
coaches, players and recruits
cash, memorabilia, strip-club
outings, yacht rides and paid
for prostitutes.
Most of Shapiros claims in-
volved the football program,
though others also involved the
Hurricanes mens basketball
team.
On Thursday, the session
lasted 9 1/2 hours. Athletic
director Blake James, football
coach Al Golden and former
basketball coach Frank Haith
attended the hearing. Basket-
ball assistants Jake Morton and
Jorge Fernandez also were pres-
ent Thursday.
The Committee on Infrac-
tions typically releases its re-
port six to eight weeks after the
hearing.
By DAN GELSTON
AP Sports Writer
F O O T B A L L
C-USA female official
working toward NFL
INDIANAPOLIS India-
napolis Colts linebacker Robert
Mathis wasnt all that thrilled be-
ing called for an offside penalty
on the final day of minicamp this
week.
Im not exactly happy with
that, Mathis said with a laugh.
The official that made the call?
Sarah Thomas, who is on her
way toward becoming the first
permanent female official in the
NFL. It could happen as early as
the 2014 season.
Im certain I cant make ev-
erybody happy, Thomas said of
that call on Mathis.
Thomas spent three days at
the Colts minicamp as part of the
NFLs officiating development
program, and league officials say
she would be the first woman
to reach NFL fields through the
program. Shes expected to join
the Colts in training camp next
month and could call some pre-
season games this year.
Once completing the develop-
ment program, Thomas could
get a shot at the regular season
if a spot becomes available. That
wouldnt happen until a cur-
rent official retires or leaves the
league.
Its just something that hap-
pened, said Dean Blandino, the
NFLs vice president of officiat-
ing. She was in our pipeline for
a while.
Last year, Shannon Eastin be-
came the first woman to be an
official in both a preseason and
regular-season NFL game. She
was a line judge in the Rams-
Lions season opener, among the
replacements hired during the
officials lockout.
Eastin, who started officiat-
ing high school games before
moving up to colleges, owns a
company called SE Sports Offi-
ciating, which trains officials in
football and basketball.
Last summer, the NFL Ref-
erees Association said Eas-
tin shouldnt be allowed to work
league games because she has
been in the World Series of Pok-
er. If Eastin is hired permanent-
ly, the NFLs gambling policy
would bar her from participating
in such events.
Thomas is an official with
Conference USA and has been
for the past eight seasons. She
still has some steps to take be-
fore she can get to the NFL.
There are interviews and
background checks to be done,
and she will be evaluated during
any NFL camps and preseason
games she handles as well
as during the upcoming college
football season.
Just like a player, its a big step
for an official to go to the next
level.
Its similar from when a play-
ers jumps from college to the
NFL, Blandino said. Getting
used to that type of speed is im-
portant.
AP FILE PHOTO
Line judge Sarah Thomas is making her way toward becoming the
first female official in the NFL. It could happen as early as the
2014 season.
By JIMJOHNSON
Associated Press
OFFERS END 7/1/2013
USED CAR 662 WYOMING AVE., KINGSTON 288-0319
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36 Month Lease, Tax & Registration Additional. All Incentives Applied. Total due at at
signing $3119. 12,000 Allowable Miles Per Year must be approved thru Ally S & ATier
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NEW CAR 694 WYOMING AVE., KINGSTON 287-2117
110 Lost
LOST. Mothers
ring, multi-stone.
Childrens names on
ring. Sentimental
value. Reward.
570-823-2325.
135 Legals/
Public Notices
ESTATE NOTICE
NOTICE IS HEREBY
GIVEN that Letters
Testamentary have
been issued to M.
Sharon Randolph,
426 Huntsville
Road, Dallas, PA
18612 in the Estate
of Marian P. Row-
lands, Deceased,
who died on March
15, 2013, late of Dal-
las Township,
Luzerne County,
Pennsylvania. All
creditors are
requested to pres-
ent their claims and
all persons indebted
to the decedent will
make payment to
the aforementioned
Executrix or her
attorney.
ROSENN, JENKINS
& GREENWALD,
L.L.P.
15 S. Franklin Street
Wilkes Barre, PA
18711-0075
150 Special Notices
MONTY MONTY SA SAYS YS
This golf course is
tough. Gentle Ben
and John the
Intern talked to
Rory and Tiger
about the condi-
tions...Merion is a
monster. Agreed.
409 Autos under
$5000
CHEVROLET `03
MALIBU
82,000 miles, V6,
cold AC, 26 MPG,
premium wheels,
CD player, shines
and runs like new.
Garage kept, very
well maintained.
Same owner,
last 10 years.
$4,975 Firm.
570-592-0997
412 Autos for Sale
FORD`08 MUSTANG,
COUP,4,250 miles,
V8, 5 speed manual
Transmission,Vapor
Charcoal metallic
exterior, dark Char-
coal interior. Rear
deck spoiler, hood
air scoop. AM/FM
stereo, 6 CD, in
dash MP3,$20,000.
570-256-3983
MERCURY `04
GRAND MARQUIS GS
Excellent condition,
leather interior, all
power, well main-
tained, regularly
serviced. 25mpg
highway. Asking
$4,500.
(570)639-1390
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
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522 Education/
Training
Hazleton Area
School District
CHEMISTRY TEACHER
Current chemistry
certification is
required. Acts 24
(82), 34, 114 &151
clearances, pre-
employment drug
test and physical
with TB test are
required prior to
employment.
Please send letter
of interest, applica-
tion, resume, certifi-
cation, clearances
and letters of rec-
ommendation to:
Dr. Craig Butler,
Assistant Superin-
tendent, HASD
Administration
Building, 1515 West
23rd Street, Hazle
Township, PA 18202
no later than June
27, 2013 by 3:00
pm.
HASD is an EOE.
542 Logistics/
Transportation
Drivers:
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CLASS A CDL
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Make up to
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FORTY FORT
71 Slocum Street
Sun, June 16, 8-2
Clothing, new jig-
saw puzzles, bed-
ding, shoes, lamp,
palm plant, mini
greenhouse, win-
dow blinds, porch
shades & more.
No Early Birds
LAUREL RUN
3779 Laurel Run Rd
Sat., June 15, 9-12
Good quality baby &
kids items from
newborn through
school-age includ-
ing: "Cars" bike &
scooter, toys,
games, puzzles,
books, strollers,
highchair, car seats,
blankets & more.
MOUNTAIN TOP
1448 S. MAIN RD
SAT., 6/15
8AM-1PM
Ladies purses,
accessories, kids
clothes, shoes,
housewares &
more.
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
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SHAVERTOWN
47 Druid Hills Dr.
Sat., June 15, 7-2
Sun., June 16, 9-2
EVERYTHING
MUST GO!
Tools, tons of
household & furni-
ture, clothing, out-
door equipment &
furniture, all kinds of
kids stuff, new
home center items
& materials & more!
DIR: Take Center St.
by Burger King to
Pioneer, right up hill
to Druid, 1st house
on left.
WILKES-BARRE
NEIGHBORHOOD
54 MOYALLEN ST
ALSO ON GROVE &
DANA STREETS
8AM-2PM
Trains, coins, Tools,
Hess Trucks dolls,
steins old comic
books, pure copper
bars, to much to
mention.
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
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906 Homes for Sale
KINGSTON
JAMES STREET
4 bedrooms,
3 baths. Large
living room with
fireplace, dining
room with built-n
breakfront. Kitchen,
den & laundry room
on 1st floor. Large
master bedroom
with fireplace &
walk in closet.
Screened in porch
on side, wide deck
on upper part of
yard, central air,
gas heat. Walk in
wine cooler in
basement,
two car garage
For an appointment
call 570-288-5571
906 Homes for Sale
WILKES-BARRE
COMPLETELY REN-
OVATED
Quiet area, 3 bed-
rooms, 2 baths,
large eat in kit-
chen, dining & liv-
ing rooms, walk in
closet, huge
bonus room.
Recent roof, new
boiler, up-graded
plumbing & elec-
tric. New carpet-
ing & vinyl, huge
backyard, drive-
way, front & rear
porch, patio, new
windows.
Appraised at
$86,900, for sale
at $54,900.
610-389-8226
WYOMING
146 East 7th Street
FOR SALE BY
OWNER
Two story, 3 bed-
rooms & 1 bath.
New foyer, tiled
kitchen & modern
bath. New laminate
floors. Deck with
fenced in yard.
Gas heat.
Motivated seller.
Reduced Price
$130,000
570-817-3312
912 Lots & Acreage
ONEDIA NEW YORK
11.5 ACRES
Asking $20,000
Call 570-256-8618
Looking for that
special place
called home?
Classified will address
Your needs.
Open the door
with classified!
WEST WYOMING
FIFTH STREET MANOR
Two building lots in
beautiful, estab-
lished development.
Call for information.
570-814-1316
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
WHITE HAVEN
Route 940. Large 2
bedroom near I-80
& PA Tpke. Fresh
paint, w/w carpet,
stove & refrigerator.
Water, sewer &
garbage included.
No pets. $600 +
electricity & security
deposit.
570-443-9639
WILKES-BARRE
For lease, available
immediately, 1 large
bedroom, 1 bath-
room, refrigerator
and stove, washer/
dryer provided.
$550/month plus
utilities, references
and security.
570-735-4074
Leave message
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on an automobile?
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WILKES-BARRE
LAFAYETTE GARDENS
SAVE MONEY THIS YEAR!
113 Edison Street
Quiet neighbor-
hood.
2 bedroom apart-
ments available for
immediate occu-
pancy. Heat & hot
water included.
1 Bedroom$550
2 Bedroom$650.
Call Jazmin
962 Rooms
WILKES-BARRE
1 room. Security
deposit required,
back ground check.
$350 month.
347-693-4156
746 Garage Sales/
Estate Sales/
Flea Markets
746 Garage Sales/
Estate Sales/
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746 Garage Sales/
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1-800-Next-Honda
570-341-1400
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City 28MPG
Highway 39MPG
1109 N. Church Street (Rt. 309) Hazle Twp., PA 18202
www.fairwaysubaru.com 570-455-7733
Mon. - Fri. 8:30am-8pm; Sat. 8:30am-3pm; Sun. Closed
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This Price. ***Tier One Credit Approval Required. Not Responsible ForTypographical Errors. Offer Ends 7/01/13.
AUTOMATIC
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$
249
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42 MONTHS
MSRP $25,961
$1,300 Down Payment
$0 Security Deposit
$249 First Months Lease Payment
$1,549Total Due at Lease Signing
OR BUY FOR
$
23,995
*
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PlusTax &Tags.
DDB 01
ax &Tags.
1
R.J. BURNE
1205-1209 Wyoming Avenue, Scranton
(570) 342-0107 1-888-880-6537
www.rjburnecadillac.com
Mon-Thurs 9-8 Fri 9-5 Sat 9-4
*TAX & TAGS EXTRA NC + Non-Certied
1205 Wyoming Ave. RJ Burne Cadillac
From Wilkes-Barre to Scranton
Expressway 8 Blocks on
Wyoming Avenue
EX
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288-9187
Gardeners Choice for Creativity
Visit and explore the areas finest in rare and unusual Perennials,
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7 miles. Stop at sign - go straight
1 mile, turn right at Silo Rd.
Take 118 go thru Sweet Valley,
bear left, go straight 3 miles, to
second 4 way stop sign. Turn
right 1 mile past Golf Course.
DIRECTIONS
2
1
6
9
6
6
Tues, Thur, Fri, Sat 10-5, Sun 11-5
288-9187
For Directions agmap.psu.edu/businesses/6461
or
SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 2013 PAgE 7C TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com S P O R T S
N H L
By chance, Ronald Popeye
Jones bumped into Joe Sakic in
the weight room of the arena in
Denver way back when.
It shouldnt have been a big
deal. After all, Jones Denver Nug-
gets and Sakics Colorado Ava-
lanche shared the Pepsi Center.
Jones, a 6-foot-8 power for-
ward, had more than casual con-
versation in mind for their first
meeting almost 13 years ago,
though. He told Sakic, a two-
time Stanley Cup winner, that he
had two young boys who wanted
to play hockey and no clue how
to help them.
He looked at me all the way
up and into my eyes, Jones said.
He saw how big I was. He said,
Hes going to be huge. Make
sure he knows how to skate.
So Jones signed up his boys,
including youngest, Seth, for
skating lessons. Sakics small
piece of advice turned around
one boys direction.
Now, its Seths turn to return
the favor for an organization.
The 18-year-old Jones has
grown into one of the top pros-
pects in hockey and is the con-
sensus No. 1 pick in the NHL
draft later this month.
That pick belongs to the Ava-
lanche now led by Sakic, the
teams former captain who was re-
cently promoted to executive vice
president of hockey operations.
All the goals hes set as a
hockey player, Popeye said,
hes been able to accomplish.
Hows that for a proud pop?
Popeye, Seths mother and
other friends and relatives will
attend the June 30 draft at the
Prudential Center in Newark,
N.J. Popeye worked last season
as an assistant coach with the
Brooklyn Nets and lives about 20
minutes from the draft site.
Dad was a second-round pick,
41st overall. Seth could be the
first black player ever taken No.
1 in the NHL draft.
Im trying to embrace it,
Seth said. Its going to be fun in
New Jersey, for sure. I cant wait
to share those experiences with
my family.
It may be a pretty big family
reunion in Denver. Jones older
brother, Justin, also played hock-
ey and they all got along with
Patrick Roys family as they grew
up. The Roys and Joneses were
close and spent time at each oth-
ers houses, in fact. And it just
so happens that Roy a former
goaltender who also won a Stan-
ley Cup with the Avalanche
was just hired to coach Colorado
after the rebuilding franchise
missed the playoffs.
Jones is a heck of a player,
Roy said. No matter what the
decision for our organization
are we going to keep first overall,
are we going to move first overall,
whatever were going to do, we
know that the team that picks
first, second or third are going to
get three outstanding players.
Jones, Nathan MacKinnon and
Jonathan Drouin are expected to
go 1-2-3 in the draft. The Florida
Panthers hold the second draft
pick and the Tampa Bay Light-
ning are No. 3.
Based on talent and need,
Jones shouldnt drop past the Av-
alanche. The 6-foot-4, 206-pound
defenseman met with members of
the Avalanche scouting team last
month before moving on to the
NHL draft combine in Toronto.
He would become the first
American picked No. 1 since Chi-
cagos Patrick Kane in 2007 and
seventh overall. In a sport where
the majority percentage of players
are white, its that slice of history
he would make as the first black
selected No. 1 topping Evander
Kane, picked fourth 2009 that
means so much to both of them.
I dont think about it too
much, Seth said. Hopefully, I
can encourage young African-
Americans to play hockey and
try it when theyre at a young
age. Its definitely a white-dom-
inated sport. But there are a lot
more that are starting to play.
Kane, Pittsburghs Jarome
Iginla, Philadelphias Wayne
Simmonds and Washingtons
Joel Ward are among the more
prominent black players in the
NHL. Ward was the victim of a
series of racist tweets during last
years playoffs after scoring the
winning goal in Game 7 against
Boston. During a preseason
game last year, a fan threw a ba-
nana on the ice at Simmonds.
Those are gloomy signs that,
unlike the other big three sports,
tolerance is a still a problem.
Theres never been one racial
thing that happened to him,
Popeye said. I think his team-
mates always accepted him for
Seth Jones the hockey player, the
great teammate, the great team
player. He never put himself
above anybody. Theyve always
accepted him for who he was
and never looked at race.
Popeye Jones son looks like top overall pick
Portland Win-
terhawks de-
fenseman Seth
Jones, center,
goes to the net
in Saskatoon,
Saskatchewan.
Jones, the
son of former
NBA basketball
player Ronald
Popeye Jones,
is likely to be
No. 1 pick in the
NHL draft.
By DAN GELSTON
AP Sports Writer
AP FILE PHOTO
NEW YORK If you can hold a
headstand for at least 10 minutes, com-
municate in Sanskrit and enjoy down-
ing wheatgrass and tequila shots on
Fridays for work-life balance, Lulule-
mon has a job for you.
After a rocky few months, the com-
pany is seeking a new CEO. Lululemon
has posted a joke-lled want ad that
it says shows its fun and irreverent
brand.
The ad comes as the Canadian com-
panys stock has slid 19 percent after
it announced Monday that its current
CEO plans to leave.
In March, Lululemon suffered a pub-
lic relations nightmare after pulling
too-sheer yoga pants from shelves. The
company is known for its $100 yoga
pants.
Lululemon posted a sign on its Face-
book page and in stores Thursday read-
ing CEOWanted, Apply Within. Ajob
listing on its website says, You report
to no one, you are the CEO (duh).
The company love(s) that our
stores and social media teams are not
afraid to spark a conversation in our
communities, Lululemon said in a
statement.
RBC Capital markets analyst How-
ard Tubin said Lululemons ad should
not be taken too seriously.
Its in keeping with the fun and ir-
reverent way they like to approach their
business, Tubin said. Its a quirky way
of them addressing the situation.
Lululemons CEO, Christine Day, has
said she would stay until a successor is
named. Under her leadership over the
past ve years, Lululemon has grown
annual revenue from $274 million
to $1.4 billion. It has more than 200
stores.
Lululemon stock fell 56 cents to
$66.28 in afternoon trading. Its down
about 14 percent in 2013.
K
BUSINESS
PAGE 8B
IN BRIEF
Miners plans new branch
The Miners Bank announced that
it will lease a building along Route 93
in Conyngham, with plans to open a
branch this summer. It would be the
Pottsville-based banks rst full-service
branch in Luzerne County.
Currently, there are four Schuylkill
County branches and a loan produc-
tion ofce in the CAN DO Renaissance
Center in Hazleton.
The branch will open as soon as
regulatory approval is received. It is
expected that this approval will be
granted within 45 days.
Obama backs broadband
The White House says President
Barack Obama is taking advantage of
advances in the wireless industry to
help create jobs.
Obama issued a presidential memo-
randum Friday directing federal agen-
cies to be more efcient in their use
of radio spectrum and to make more
capacity available to satisfy the grow-
ing demand for broadband Internet.
Theres also a $100 million in-
vestment in spectrum-sharing and
advanced communications. And a
Spectrum Technology Day is being
planned to call attention to advances
in spectrum-sharing and other innova-
tions to satisfy demand.
The White House says the an-
nouncements build on a program
Obama launched recently to bring
high-speed digital connections to
practically all U.S. students to improve
teaching and learning.
Factory production weak
U.S. factories barely increased their
output in May after two months of
declines, a sign that manufacturing
is providing little support for the
economy.
The Federal Reserve said Friday
that factory production rose only 0.1
percent in May from April. Output fell
0.4 percent in April and 0.3 percent in
March.
Factories produced more autos,
computers and wood products last
month, offsetting declines in the
production of furniture and primary
metals.
Manufacturing output has risen only
1.7 percent in the past 12 months.
Manufacturers are still struggling
to cope with the ongoing weakness
of global demand, said Paul Dales,
senior U.S. economist at Capital
Economics.
THE TIMES LEADER SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 2013 timesleader.com
GAS PRICES
YESTERDAY MONTH AGO YEAR AGO
Average price of a gallon of
regular unleaded gasoline:
RECORD
$3.43 $3.42 $3.36
$4.05
7/17/08
Source: AAA report for the Scranton/Wilkes-Barre/Hazleton area
IMF: Economy better, but spending cuts a drag
Report says tax hikes, budget reduc-
tion will shave about 1.5 percentage
points from growth.
By CHRISTOPHER S. RUGABER
AP Economics Writer
WASHINGTON The U.S. econo-
my is on sounder footing than it was
a year ago but is still being restrained
by government spending cuts and tax
increases, the International Monetary
Fund said Friday.
The IMFs annual report on the U.S.
economy noted that the underlying
fundamentals are gradually improving:
Home prices and construction are ris-
ing, household nances have strength-
ened and employers are steadily add-
ing jobs. The outlook was much more
optimistic than IMFs 2012 report.
There are signs that the U.S. re-
covery is gaining ground and becom-
ing more durable, Christine Lagarde,
the IMFs managing director, said in a
written statement.
Still, the IMF forecasts economic
growth of only 1.9 percent this year,
the same as its April forecast. That
would be down from 2.2 percent in
2012. And its below many private
economists expectations that the U.S.
economy will grow more than 2 per-
cent this year.
The IMF says the tax increases and
spending cuts that kicked in this year
will shave about 1.5 percentage points
from growth. The international lend-
ing organization had opposed the
steep federal spending cuts that began
on March 1.
The reduction in the U.S. budget
decit has been excessively rapid and
ill-designed, the IMFs report says.
Congress should cancel the $85 bil-
lion in spending cuts, the report urged,
and replace them with longer-term
reductions in entitlement programs,
such as Social Security, that would
weigh less on the economy.
The IMF also expects the Federal
Reserve will maintain its bond pur-
chases through the end of the year and
will very gradually reduce themnext
year. The bond purchases are intended
to lower long-term interest rates and
encourage more borrowing, investing
and spending.
Some economists expect the Fed
might begin to reduce its purchases
as early as its September meeting. But
Lagarde argued that there is no need
to rush.
Chrysler
puts freeze
on pensions
By SARAH SKIDMORE
Associated Press
Chrysler Group LLC said Friday
that it is freezing the pensions of
roughly 8,000 U.S. salaried employ-
ees at the end of the year.
The U.S. automaker said it is
making the move to stay in line
with industry trends and to comply
with IRS regulations.
The Auburn Hills, Mich.-based
company declined to detail the spe-
cics of the IRS issue, but said it is
currently in compliance. Company
spokeswoman Shawn Morgan said
the compliance matter is not relat-
ed to underfunding of the pension.
U.S. companies in general have
moved away from traditional, or
dened benet, pensions due
to the cost. General Motors made
a similar move last year when it
froze traditional pension benets
for 19,000 salaried workers hired
before 2001. Such pensions guaran-
tee a specic payment to retirees.
Chrysler said that all of its af-
fected employees will be shifted to
a dened contribution plan. It also
lowered the age at which employ-
ees can begin claiming all of their
retirement savings to 58 from 62.
The company closed its pension
plans to new participants at the
start of 2004. The freeze does not
affect those hired from that point
forward, or those who have already
left the company or retired. All of
the benets accrued through Dec.
31 will remain in place, and em-
ployees will not lose what they
have earned to that point.
Chrysler, majority owned by Ital-
ian company Fiat, has 65,500 em-
ployees worldwide.
AUTO I NDUSTRY
Help wanted: Lululemons cheeky CEO ad
By MAE ANDERSON
AP Retail Writer
AP PHOTO
A woman walks past the Lululemon Athletica store in New York. The company posted a joke-lled CEO opening.
TO READ THE AD
Go to www.lululemon.com/about/ca-
reers/job-details/?jobId=006856
Company has posted a joke-lled
listing that it says shows its fun
and irreverent brand.
JPMorgCh 53.13 -1.04 +21.7
JacobsEng 55.83 +.30 +31.1
JohnJn 84.91 ... +21.1
JohnsnCtl 37.57 -.33 +22.5
Kellogg 64.24 +.01 +15.0
Keycorp 10.41 -.27 +23.6
KimbClk 97.86 +.29 +15.9
KindME 83.53 +.20 +4.7
Kroger 34.79 -.27 +33.7
Kulicke 11.48 -.09 -4.3
L Brands 50.79 -.20 +7.9
LancastrC 80.33 -1.33 +16.1
LillyEli 52.05 +.20 +5.5
LincNat 34.53 -.89 +33.3
LockhdM 107.70 -.27 +16.7
Loews 44.58 -.41 +9.4
LaPac 16.72 -.41 -13.5
MDU Res 25.10 +.04 +18.2
MarathnO 34.38 +.01 +12.1
MarIntA 40.77 -.32 +9.4
Masco 20.79 -.15 +25.4
McDrmInt 8.96 -.08 -18.7
McGrwH 54.73 -.34 +.1
McKesson 114.29 +.44 +17.9
Merck 47.95 +.05 +17.1
MetLife 43.97 -.94 +33.5
Microsoft 34.40 -.32 +28.8
MorgStan 25.83 -.54 +35.1
NCR Corp 33.16 -.41 +30.1
NatFuGas 61.18 +.04 +20.7
NatGrid 58.67 -.04 +2.1
NY Times 10.59 -.16 +24.2
NewellRub 27.17 +.03 +22.0
NewmtM 33.19 -.47 -28.5
NextEraEn 79.73 +.60 +15.2
NiSource 29.11 +.30 +17.0
NikeB s 61.89 +.13 +19.9
NorflkSo 76.17 -.83 +23.2
NoestUt 42.13 +.20 +7.8
NorthropG 82.88 +.02 +22.6
Nucor 44.70 -.54 +3.6
NustarEn 45.32 +1.27 +6.7
NvMAd 13.69 +.03 -10.0
OGE Engy 68.18 +.70 +21.1
OcciPet 91.89 -1.15 +19.9
OfficeMax 11.11 -.04 +28.9
Olin 24.10 -.57 +11.6
ONEOK 44.34 -.29 +3.7
PG&E Cp 45.17 +.30 +12.4
PPG 153.83 -1.44 +13.7
PPL Corp 29.13 +.14 +1.7
PVR Ptrs 27.19 +.26 +4.7
Pfizer 29.09 +.01 +16.0
PinWst 57.55 +.23 +12.9
PitnyBw 14.59 ... +37.1
Praxair 117.91 +1.22 +7.7
PSEG 32.63 +.05 +6.6
PulteGrp 20.86 -.08 +14.9
Questar 24.01 +.03 +21.5
RadioShk 3.32 -.06 +56.6
Raytheon 67.41 -.26 +17.1
ReynAmer 48.42 +.26 +16.9
RockwlAut 86.69 +.05 +3.2
Rowan 33.44 -.18 +6.9
RoyDShllB 67.72 -1.15 -4.5
RoyDShllA 65.45 -.89 -5.1
Ryder 62.09 -.21 +24.4
Safeway 24.36 -.46 +34.7
Schlmbrg 71.60 -.86 +3.3
Sherwin 183.09 -1.39 +19.0
SilvWhtn g 23.07 -.15 -36.1
SiriusXM 3.27 -.02 +13.1
SonyCp 19.88 -1.15 +77.5
SouthnCo 44.49 -.16 +3.9
SwstAirl 13.87 -.11 +35.4
SpectraEn 34.34 +.26 +25.4
SprintNex 7.32 ... +29.1
Sysco 34.47 -.08 +9.8
TECO 17.33 -.02 +3.4
Target 69.03 -.56 +16.7
TenetHlt rs 46.67 -.46 +43.7
Tenneco 45.48 -.31 +29.5
Tesoro 57.16 -1.16 +29.8
Textron 26.50 -.10 +6.9
3M Co 111.03 -.17 +19.6
TimeWarn 57.47 -.44 +20.2
Timken 57.73 +.01 +20.7
Titan Intl 17.61 -.41 -18.9
UnilevNV 40.11 -.41 +4.7
UnionPac 157.02 +.07 +24.9
UPS B 85.91 -.41 +16.5
USSteel 17.89 -.26 -25.0
UtdTech 94.02 -.27 +14.6
VarianMed 68.88 -.70 -1.9
VectorGp 15.87 -.17 +6.7
ViacomB 66.77 -.18 +26.6
WestarEn 31.63 +.05 +10.5
Weyerhsr 28.29 -.32 +1.7
Whrlpl 129.24 +1.42 +27.0
WmsCos 33.31 -.39 +1.7
Windstrm 8.31 +.11 +.4
Wynn 135.14 -1.38 +20.1
XcelEngy 29.42 +.14 +10.1
Xerox 9.10 ... +33.4
YumBrnds 71.11 -.50 +7.1
Mutual Funds
Alliance Bernstein
CoreOppA m 15.92 -.09 +13.9
GlblRskAllB x 15.11 -.03 -1.5
American Cent
IncGroA m 31.93 -.15 +18.0
ValueInv 7.41 -.05 +17.1
American Funds
AMCAPA x 24.40 -.63 +14.9
BalA m 22.34 -.11 +10.5
BondA m 12.69 +.02 -1.1
CapIncBuA x 55.38 -.62 +6.8
CpWldGrIA x 40.09 -.60 +9.4
EurPacGrA m42.78 -.29 +3.8
FnInvA m 46.14 -.28 +13.8
GrthAmA m 38.73 -.21 +12.8
HiIncA m 11.32 +.03 +2.5
IncAmerA x 19.30 -.19 +8.7
InvCoAmA m 34.10 -.19 +14.0
MutualA x 31.88 -.28 +13.6
NewPerspA m34.33 -.24 +9.8
NwWrldA m 54.70 +.03 +0.4
SmCpWldA m44.63 -.16 +11.8
WAMutInvA m35.92 -.21 +15.7
Baron
Asset b 56.31 -.22 +15.2
BlackRock
EqDivI 22.07 -.14 +11.3
GlobAlcA m 20.80 -.09 +5.4
GlobAlcC m 19.30 -.09 +5.0
GlobAlcI 20.92 -.09 +5.5
CGM
Focus 34.94 -.23 +19.2
Mutual 31.94 -.24 +12.4
Realty 30.83 +.20 +5.4
Columbia
AcornZ 33.40 -.19 +11.1
DFA
EmMkCrEqI 18.75 -.06 -7.4
EmMktValI 27.15 -.18 -8.2
DWS-Scudder
EnhEMFIS d 10.86 +.11 -3.5
HlthCareS d 31.71 -.13 +21.6
LAEqS d 29.40 -.31 -10.1
Davis
NYVentA m 40.49 -.30 +16.4
NYVentC m 38.89 -.29 +16.0
Dodge & Cox
Bal 87.77 -.36 +13.0
Income 13.76 +.03 0.0
IntlStk 37.47 -.10 +8.2
Stock 142.90 -.87 +17.7
Dreyfus
TechGrA f 36.21 -.20 +5.0
Eaton Vance
HiIncOppA m 4.57 +.01 +3.1
HiIncOppB m 4.58 +.02 +2.8
NatlMuniA m 9.77 +.01 -2.8
NatlMuniB m 9.77 +.01 -3.2
PAMuniA m 8.98 -.03 -0.8
FPA
Cres d 31.32 -.10 +11.3
Fidelity
AstMgr20 13.32 ... +2.0
Bal 21.72 -.09 +8.0
BlChGrow 56.31 -.23 +14.8
Contra 86.38 -.41 +12.4
DivrIntl d 32.09 -.15 +7.2
ExpMulNat d 24.32 -.15 +11.1
Free2020 14.93 -.03 +5.0
Free2030 15.16 -.04 +6.8
GrowCo 106.12 -.48 +13.8
LatinAm d 40.37 -.22 -12.8
LowPriStk d 45.73 -.22 +15.8
Magellan 82.76 -.47 +13.5
Overseas d 35.11 -.12 +8.6
Puritan 20.82 -.08 +7.7
TotalBd 10.76 +.02 -0.6
Value 90.03 -.36 +17.9
Fidelity Advisor
NewInsI 25.89 -.13 +12.5
ValStratT m 33.54 -.13 +14.0
Fidelity Select
Gold d 22.57 -.34 -39.0
Pharm d 17.82 -.02 +20.5
Fidelity Spartan
500IdxAdvtg 57.87 -.35 +15.2
500IdxInstl 57.88 -.34 +15.2
500IdxInv 57.87 -.34 +15.2
TotMktIdAg d 47.44 -.27 +15.4
First Eagle
GlbA m 51.28 -.24 +5.5
FrankTemp-Franklin
CA TF A m 7.33 +.01 -0.8
Income C m 2.33 -.01 +5.8
IncomeA m 2.31 ... +6.1
FrankTemp-Mutual
Discov Z 32.07 -.17 +12.0
Euro Z 22.76 -.02 +7.7
Shares Z 25.56 -.13 +13.7
FrankTemp-Templeton
GlBondA m 13.15 +.03 -0.3
GlBondAdv 13.11 +.03 -0.2
GrowthA m 21.71 -.11 +11.7
Harbor
CapApInst 47.11 -.19 +10.8
IntlInstl 64.79 -.59 +4.3
INVESCO
ConstellB m 23.34 -.09 +10.0
GlobQuantvCoreA m12.86-.08+13.0
PacGrowB m 20.47 -.18 +0.9
JPMorgan
CoreBondSelect11.86+.03 -0.6
YTD
Name NAV Chg %Rtn
YTD
Name NAV Chg %Rtn
YTD
Name NAV Chg %Rtn
YTD
Name NAV Chg %Rtn
YTD
Name NAV Chg %Rtn
YTD
Name NAV Chg %Rtn
52-WEEK YTD
HIGH LOW NAME TKR DIV LAST CHG %CHG
52-WEEK YTD
HIGH LOW NAME TKR DIV LAST CHG %CHG
Combined Stocks
AFLAC 57.51 +.05 +8.3
AT&T Inc 35.91 -.39 +6.5
AbtLab s 36.81 +.11 +17.5
AMD 3.94 -.01 +64.2
AlaskaAir 56.02 -.91 +30.0
Alcoa 8.12 -.08 -6.5
Allstate 46.87 -.54 +16.7
Altria 35.58 -.18 +13.2
AEP 45.51 -.41 +6.6
AmExp 72.97 -2.24 +27.4
AmIntlGrp 45.38 -.56 +28.6
Amgen 97.42 -1.09 +13.0
Anadarko 86.11 -1.34 +15.9
Annaly 13.65 -.08 -2.8
Apple Inc 430.05 -5.92 -19.2
AutoData 68.01 -.27 +19.5
Avnet 34.00 +.34 +11.1
Avon 22.86 -.07 +59.2
BP PLC 42.84 -.25 +2.9
BakrHu 46.03 -.92 +12.7
BallardPw 1.80 -.04+194.6
BarnesNob 19.37 -.07 +28.4
Baxter 70.60 -.15 +5.9
Beam Inc 65.35 +.13 +7.0
BerkH B 114.16 -.83 +27.3
BigLots 32.86 -.27 +15.5
BlockHR 28.63 -.28 +54.2
Boeing 101.83 -.33 +35.1
BrMySq 46.80 -.37 +45.2
Brunswick 30.65 -1.25 +5.4
Buckeye 67.30 +.55 +48.2
CBS B 47.72 +.36 +25.4
CMS Eng 27.40 +.20 +12.4
CSX 24.94 -.12 +26.4
CampSp 44.79 +.25 +28.4
Carnival 33.84 -.08 -8.0
Caterpillar 83.87 -1.27 -6.4
CenterPnt 23.71 +.09 +23.2
CntryLink 36.04 +.11 -7.9
Chevron 120.28 -1.38 +11.2
Cisco 24.09 -.26 +22.6
Citigroup 49.22 -1.07 +24.4
Clorox 85.39 +.04 +16.6
ColgPalm s 58.82 +.36 +12.5
ConAgra 34.09 -.10 +15.6
ConocoPhil 61.03 -.62 +5.2
ConEd 57.82 +.26 +4.1
Corning 14.92 -.17 +18.2
CrownHold 42.44 -.06 +15.3
Cummins 116.13 -2.14 +7.2
DTE 66.87 -.17 +11.4
Deere 84.88 -.72 -1.8
Diebold 32.31 +.06 +5.6
Disney 63.80 -.50 +28.1
DomRescs 56.04 -.36 +8.2
Dover 78.60 -.01 +19.6
DowChm 34.01 -.64 +5.2
DryShips 1.82 -.05 +13.8
DuPont 52.68 -1.20 +17.1
DukeEn rs 67.64 +.15 +6.0
EMC Cp 24.76 +.05 -2.1
Eaton 64.58 -.25 +19.2
EdisonInt 47.15 +.40 +4.3
EmersonEl 56.14 -.61 +6.0
EnbrdgEPt 30.15 +.15 +8.1
Energen 54.02 +.09 +19.8
Entergy 68.47 -.41 +7.4
EntPrPt 60.19 +.37 +20.2
Ericsson 11.91 +.01 +17.9
Exelon 30.63 -.08 +3.0
ExxonMbl 90.58 -.75 +4.7
FMC Corp 62.57 -.50 +6.9
Fastenal 47.69 -.87 +2.2
FedExCp 99.12 -.46 +8.1
Fifth&Pac 21.57 -.09 +73.3
FirstEngy 38.33 -.25 -8.2
Fonar 6.31 -.04 +45.6
FootLockr 34.77 +.31 +8.3
FordM 15.37 -.21 +18.7
Gannett 24.99 -1.61 +38.8
Gap 41.48 +.09 +33.6
GenCorp 15.29 -.17 +67.1
GenDynam 78.00 -.07 +12.6
GenElec 23.52 -.16 +12.1
GenMills 49.29 +.27 +21.9
GileadSci s 52.23 +.28 +42.2
GlaxoSKln 52.49 -.37 +20.7
Hallibrtn 42.93 -.15 +23.8
HarleyD 53.13 -.34 +8.8
HarrisCorp 49.82 -.17 +1.8
HartfdFn 29.20 -.85 +30.1
HawaiiEl 24.88 +.13 -1.0
HeclaM 3.41 -.12 -41.5
Heico 51.36 -.21 +14.7
Hess 65.97 -.88 +24.6
HewlettP 24.74 -.19 +73.6
HomeDp 76.59 +.06 +23.8
HonwllIntl 78.18 -.13 +23.2
Hormel 40.13 +.31 +28.6
Humana 80.93 -.53 +17.9
INTL FCSt 17.69 -.27 +1.6
ITW 70.24 -.25 +15.5
IngerRd 56.43 +.18 +17.7
IBM 202.20 -1.57 +5.6
IntPap 45.35 -.26 +13.8
Name Last Chg %YTD Name Last Chg %YTD Name Last Chg %YTD Name Last Chg %YTD Name Last Chg %YTD Name Last Chg %YTD
Stocks of Local Interest
96.16 76.11 AirProd APD 2.84 96.35 +1.01 +14.7
43.09 32.75 AmWtrWks AWK 1.12 41.01 +.13 +10.4
47.82 37.63 Amerigas APU 3.36 47.44 +.42 +22.5
33.28 23.75 AquaAm WTR .76 31.34 +.02 +23.3
35.04 24.38 ArchDan ADM .76 33.08 -.31 +20.8
435.36 341.98 AutoZone AZO ... 423.34 +3.84 +19.4
13.99 6.90 BkofAm BAC .04 13.07 -.14 +12.6
30.85 20.01 BkNYMel BK .60 29.13 -.35 +13.3
22.68 4.80 BonTon BONT .20 20.50 -.57 +68.6
60.70 43.65 CVS Care CVS .90 59.03 -.24 +22.1
70.45 39.01 Cigna CI .04 68.16 -1.27 +27.5
43.43 35.58 CocaCola s KO 1.12 40.34 -.07 +11.3
43.74 29.79 Comcast CMCSA .78 39.74 -.01 +6.4
30.17 25.50 CmtyBkSy CBU 1.08 28.71 -.64 +4.9
51.29 22.45 CmtyHlt CYH .25 49.87 -1.31 +62.2
61.96 40.06 CoreMark CORE .76 61.25 -.04 +29.4
60.08 43.59 EmersonEl EMR 1.64 56.14 -.61 +6.0
62.50 37.10 EngyTEq ETE 2.58 57.00 -.90 +25.3
10.13 4.95 Entercom ETM ... 9.83 -.18 +40.8
15.75 11.14 FairchldS FCS ... 13.54 +.18 -6.0
5.15 3.46 FrontierCm FTR .40 4.22 -.02 -1.4
19.72 13.06 Genpact G .18 18.83 -.10 +21.5
9.81 5.14 HarteHnk HHS .34 8.85 -.24 +50.0
91.99 67.19 Hershey HSY 1.68 89.15 +1.26 +23.4
43.84 24.76 Lowes LOW .72 41.16 -.02 +15.9
107.41 77.68 M&T Bk MTB 2.80 102.51 -1.05 +4.1
103.70 83.31 McDnlds MCD 3.08 98.42 -.46 +11.6
32.10 24.27 Mondelez MDLZ .52 29.81 -.16 +17.1
22.89 18.92 NBT Bcp NBTB .80 20.04 -.36 -1.1
30.29 6.00 NexstarB NXST .48 30.65 +.68 +189.4
73.23 53.36 PNC PNC 1.76 71.00 -.76 +21.8
33.55 27.32 PPL Corp PPL 1.47 29.13 +.14 +1.7
22.54 12.93 PennaRE PEI .72 19.33 +.10 +9.6
84.78 67.39 PepsiCo PEP 2.27 82.13 +.15 +20.0
96.73 82.10 PhilipMor PM 3.40 92.12 -.46 +10.1
82.54 59.07 ProctGam PG 2.41 78.03 -.40 +14.9
73.56 44.96 Prudentl PRU 1.60 70.48 -1.22 +32.2
3.20 .95 RiteAid RAD ... 3.09 -.06 +127.2
26.17 14.16 SLM Cp SLM .60 22.98 -.28 +34.2
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Canadian Dollar 1.0173 -.0009 -.09% .9865 1.0263
USD per Euro 1.3340 -.0005 -.04% 1.3159 1.2600
Japanese Yen 94.34 -.53 -.56% 83.46 79.27
Mexican Peso 12.7123 -.0281 -.22% 12.7661 14.0102
6MO. 1YR.
CURRENCY CLOSE PVS. %CH. AGO AGO
Copper 3.20 3.19 +0.61 -12.56 -5.33
Gold 1387.30 1377.60 +0.70 -18.19 -14.73
Platinum 1447.40 1447.10 +0.02 -10.35 -2.68
Silver 21.95 21.58 +1.72 -31.87 -23.60
Palladium 729.80 729.35 +0.06 +4.14 +16.01
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DOW
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S&P 500
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RUSSELL 2000
981.38
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6-MO T-BILLS
.08%
-.01
10-YR T-NOTE
2.13%
-.02
CRUDE OIL
$97.85
+1.16
q q q q p p q q
q q q q q q q q
NATURAL GAS
$3.73
-.08
6MO. 1YR.
METALS CLOSE PVS. %CH. AGO AGO
K
AT Home
THE TIMES LEADER SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 2013
SECTI ON C
timesleader.com
SANDRA SNYDER
WALL TO WALL
Why Ill gladly
pay more for
my haircuts
IN MY NEXT life I
want to be a law-
maker.
Nevermind the
drama that will come
from people despis-
ing me because they
dont agree with me.
As regards one of my favorite issues
taxes I can take it. In a nutshell,
Id like to join the crusade storm the
city Square, as it were and ght the
good ght to eliminate property taxes.
Especially now that the nasty R
word, reassessment, rears its ugly head
once more, and politicos are inquiring
when we might get to ride this crazy
train AGAIN. How quickly ow the
four years, eh? Yes, its already been
that long since so many nastygrams ar-
rived in mailboxes across this fair land,
causing everything from mild heart
palpitations to toxic sticker shock
unless you were one of the lucky ones
living in a lush, lovely and large home
you know could pull a pretty penny
tomorrow yet perhaps was eyeballed
by a guy or gal with eyelash-crusted
corneas on judgment day.
How else to explain how some of
our areas most dashing domiciles got
stamped as in no better than average
condition and in a few cases even as
low as poor?
You can probably guess mine was
not among them. For some reason
my circa-1940s shelter was initially
categorized as practically new con-
struction and otherwise labeled rather
grandiosely by my assessor, which, of
course, quickly had me on the appeals
line with the rest of the unfortunate
souls forced to trash-talk their own
places. (No wonder mine likes to lash
out at me.)
But thats not my point. Today, I
merely wish to agree with the county
ofcials who say another reassessment
is NOT yet necessary. Why? Because it
happens to be my fervent hope that by
the time re-reassessment IS in order,
property taxes, at least of the school
variety, will be history. That one-time
pipe dream is edging closer to reality
as certain lawmakers rally round the
cause. The piper would still get paid,
but the bitter pills would come in
smaller doses.
Sure, it might sound scary that
school funding could come from, in ad-
dition to higher income tax, increased
levies on cigarettes, liquor, non-staple
groceries and services, but Ill take it,
and I dont say that selshly. I dont
smoke, so no harm there, but I do
like my wine and would have to pony
up more for the pleasure. Haircuts
would pinch more, too and not by
mere pennies for someone who, left
unchecked, could quickly understudy
Rapunzel. Face it, most of us wont get
rich by not paying property taxes.
What we will get, we can hope, is a
little more justice (and perhaps some
new neighbors). After all, where is
the fairness in the fact that well-main-
tained exteriors (which, speaking of,
benet our neighbors and the com-
munity at large, on many levels) cost
more annually in taxes than grandiose
interiors, which give more personal
pleasure? And how, possibly, is it fair
for someone who hasnt seen our in-
sides to determine our sale-fetch from
our outsides? Whens the last time
you made an offer on a house without
darkening its doorway?
I know, deep questions. Hardly. So,
the problem? My guess? Not enough
people making noise. Join me in some
good old-fashioned banging of sts and
more. Call it old-time New Years Eve.
Bring extra pots and pans.
Reach Sandra Snyder at ssnyder@timesleader.
comor 831-7383.
AIMEE DILGER PHOTOS/THE TIMES LEADER
A collapsing outhouse sits in the backyard at Tara Klings home in Eckley Miners Village. Her family has roots in
the historic mining town dating back to the 1860s.
E
CKLEY Visitors to Eck-
ley Miners Village during the
sites annual Patch Town Days
celebration this weekend are
often surprised to learn that a handful of
residents still choose to make their homes
here.
For Tara Kling, 42, living in Eckley is
part of her familys legacy. Kling moved to
the former mining village in 2000.
My grandmother (Pauline Ellis) had
lived here. When she died, they told me
that if anyone in the family wanted the
house, they could move in because of the
historical link. Since I was the only grand-
kid that didnt own their own house, I was
able to move in, she said.
In recent years, Kling has traced her
familys roots to Eckley back to 1860. I
dont even know how many grandfathers
back that is. I think it was my fourth great-
grandfather, she said.
Despite the history her family shares
with the town, the thought of living in
Eckley wasnt always in the forefront of
her mind, the former Buck Mountain,
Carbon County, resident said.
Now that Im here, I cant see me ever
actually leaving.
Life in Eckley recalls a simpler time.
Kling has a good sense of humor about
her uneven oors, low ceilings and re-
ally, really tiny bathroom. The draft in
the winter can make staying warm dif-
cult. Kling said she will often pile snow
against the sides of the home to block out
cold winds.
And things are quieter now than she
recalls from when her grandmother lived
there.
Right now, its very quiet, she said.
I think there might be around 15 or 18
of us (living in Eckley). At one time, the
street in front of our house was the only
way to get from Weatherly to Freeland.
They built a bypass around the town, so
we dont even have through trafc.
Outside of its historic value, Eckley is
essentially like any other neighborhood.
All of the neighbors all kind of watch
out for each other, she said. For the
most part, if you go for a walk in the eve-
ning and somebodys out, youll stop and
talk. We kind of keep to ourselves.
Residents, she said, are planning ways
to band together and help Eckley native
George Gera. A June 4 re destroyed the
Eckley Miners Village is no longer just for miners
By CHRISTOPHER J. HUGHES
chughes@timesleader.com
WILKES-BARRE Summer is a
great time to enjoy food from the
grill, an evening around the re pit
or a few reworks should you feel
adventurous during the holidays.
But each of those summertime
activities presents very real dangers
for residents throughout Northeast-
ern Pennsylvania.
Wilkes-Barre Fire Chief Jay Del-
aney said the issues that face the
Wilkes-Barre Fire Department are
no different than those in other com-
munities in the region, but the city
does have some ordinances in place
to keep residents safe.
First of all, there are no safe re-
works, Delaney said. Something
as simple as a sparkler can burn at
1,000 degrees.
Delaney suggested that families
seek out public reworks displays
like those put on at Kirby Park to
avoid the risk of injuries at home.
Residents also should be aware
that it is illegal in the city of Wil-
kes-Barre to use a grill on a porch
or patio with an awning or similar
covering above it, and grills should
be placed well away from the struc-
ture at least ve feet.
You want to make sure grills
dont have a buildup of fat or any
substance that might burn, Del-
Take care dont get burned by summer
Grill fires, electrical overloads top list of concerns for fire departments
By CHRISTOPHER J. HUGHES
chughes@timesleader.com
Using extension cords to power certain appliances, particularly air conditioners
in summer, is playing with re.
Could you live this
simple life?
See ECKLEY, Page 2C
See BURNED, Page 2C
GRUMPOS WAREHOUSE
Website www.grumposwarehouse.com
825-9166
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A ROLL
home the 85-year-old was born
in.
He lived here his entire life,
Kling said. I knewhimfromthe
time that I was a kid. When we
moved in, we would talk to him
because he sits on his porch a
lot.
Patch Town Days, which will
take place from10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
today and Sunday, is a chance to
show non-residents what life is
and was like in town.
Theyll ask us if we have
electricity or indoor plumbing,
Kling said of those who pass
through. A lot of people come
here because they just want to
know. Visitors usually have
no idea that the village has
residential rental properties, she
added.
Kling doesnt have cable tele-
vision and said, I think that
freaks most of the people out. In
most cases, I dont even miss it
that much.
The town can be hard to nd
using global positioning sys-
tems, too. Eckleys mailing ad-
dress is in Weatherly, Carbon
County, and many dont know
to search for the mining vil-
lage under attractions. Living
off the grid, so to speak, can be
nice, until the UPS guy is try-
ing to nd you, Kling said with
a laugh.
Shes changed very little about
the house her grandmother oc-
cupied until her death at age 81.
The one thing that was here
when I moved in I had to get rid
of. It was her coal stove that she
cooked on, she said. I didnt
feel that I was a good enough
cook to use it.
Kling recalled her grandfa-
thers garden in the sizable back
yard on her property and ad-
mits she didnt have the green
thumbs needed to plant one of
her own.
Those living in Eckley often
would trade goods with one an-
other, Kling said.
Basically, they relied on
neighbors, she said. We still
have a lot of apple trees, pear
trees, chestnut trees and black-
berries and raspberries. Im al-
ways out walking, picking some-
thing.
Kling lives in the mining vil-
lage with her boyfriend, Ed
Shephard, and daughter Zoe
Kling, 20. Zoe works in the Eck-
ley gift shop and is always learn-
ing new things about the town.
I only have one daughter. Im
not sure what her take on any of
it would be, if she would actually
like to live here or not, she said.
Ive never met anybody without
history that really would love to
live here. They always say wed
have to be crazy to stay here as
long as we do.
If youre a history buff and
you kind of know what youre
getting into, she added, this
might be for you.
aney added.
Grills also should not be left
unattended.
These are common-sense
things, he said. But we will
respond to several grill res dur-
ing the summer.
The city passed an open-burn-
ing ordinance in 2011 that calls
for nes of up to $250 if a resi-
dent is conducting an unregulat-
ed outdoor re or burning any
vegetation or garbage.
Several exemptions to the or-
dinance apply. Residents may
use traditional sources of fuel
such as charcoal or untreated
wood for outdoor grills; un-
treated wood may be used in a
contained re pit covered by a
screen. Fires cannot be larger
than one foot high and two feet
in length and width, and the re
must be at least 15 feet away
from combustible materials and
adjacent property lines.
Open burning for ceremonial
or religious purposes also is
allowed, but burning is not al-
lowed between midnight and 6
a.m. without authorized written
consent.
Along with outdoor re haz-
ards, Delaney said, reghters
have responded to two major
electrical res caused by over-
loaded extension cords in the
past month.
Its been an ongoing issue,
Delaney said. Its not just in
Wilkes-Barre. Its everywhere.
Weve had two really bad res
just in the last three weeks tied
to the use of extension cords.
Delaney said narrow-gauge
wires can quickly heat up and
cause a re if too much power
is drawn through an extension
cord.
The safest thing is to directly
use a receptacle. If you have to
use an extension cord, use the
right gauge, he said.
Delaney said hair dryers,
curling irons and air condition-
ers draw enormous amounts of
power. All of these things are
really not designed to be used
with extension cords, he said.
Electric overloads like the
ones Delaney described were
found to be the cause of res
at 398 Scott St. on May 22 and
at the Interfaith Heights apart-
ments on June 3.
People need to think twice
about using two or three exten-
sion cords or using that propane
grill on their porch, he said.
The bathroom inside Tara Klings Miners Village
home is a tiny, cramped space.
Tara Kling, right, and her daughter, Zoe, have lived in a home in Eckley Miners Village since 2000.
IF YOU GO
What: Patch Town Days, a celebration of anthracite-region customs
with tours, demonstrations, living history and entertainment.
Where: Eckley Miners Village, Highland Road, off Route 940, Carbon
County
When: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday and Sunday
Cost: $10, $9 seniors, $6 children
More info: 636-2070
Tara Kling holds a pay stub from one of her grandfa-
thers who worked in the coal mines at Eckley.
Tara Kling looks over photographs of her family members who have lived in her home in Eckley Miners Village. The family
has traced its roots there back to the 1860s.
AIMEE DILGER PHOTOS/THE TIMES LEADER
To keep with the historic feel, electric meters are
hidden in a small wooden closet outside homes at
the Eckley Miners Village.
www.timesleader.com TIMES LEADER PAGE 2C SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 2013 A T H O M E
ECKLEY
Continued from Page 1C
BURNED
Continued from Page 1C
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Q: The
water in
my house
in Avalon,
N.J., has
developed a
rotten-eggs
odor. I rst
noticed it
after Sandy
hit, when a friend took me to the
Shore to check the house.
I thought at the time the odor
might have been caused by the
storm affecting the water quality,
but when I was there this week-
end, the smell was still apparent
in all the water faucets.
It is stronger in the hot water,
but that is probably because hot
water releases gas more easily
than cold.
I have read that this gas is not
necessarily a health threat, and
the only step I have taken so far
is to buy lots of bottled water for
drinking and cooking.
I really have no idea where to
begin to nd the solution to the
problem. I asked my neighbors,
and none of them has noticed
any odor.
A: The best explanation for the
rotten-egg smell hydrogen sul-
de gas, which occurs naturally
in groundwater comes from a
D.C.-area company called Magno-
lia Plumbing, Heating & Cooling:
www.magnoliaplumbing.com:
The odor also can be produced
by sulfur bacteria or chemical
reactions inside water heaters, or
by pollution, which is probably
the case, at least initially, with
Sandy.
The rotten-egg smell does not
mean your water is unsanitary,
except in the rare case that the
gas is caused by sewage pollu-
tion.
Hydrogen sulde gas in the air
can be harmful in high concentra-
tions, Magnolias plumbers say.
When removing the gas from
the water, which is possible, its
important to vent the gas outside
so it doesnt collect in low-lying
places like well pits, basements,
or in enclosed areas like well
houses.
How can you nd the problem,
and correct it? This is where
calling your plumber becomes an
important step.
If the rotten-egg smell only
comes out of hot-water faucets,
theres probably a problem with
the water heater.
If the smell is coming from
both faucets but only comes from
water that has been treated by
a water softener, the problem is
most likely sulfur bacteria in the
water softener.
If the smell comes on strong
when either the hot or cold
faucets are rst turned on, but di-
minishes after a little while, you
probably have sulfur bacteria in
the well or distribution system.
If the smell is strong when
you rst turn the faucets on and
doesnt go away, theres prob-
ably hydrogen sulde gas in the
groundwater.
While Im a fan of do-it-your-
self, I limit what I do to things
that are relatively routine or
provide a great deal of satisfac-
tion, such as building a coffee
table or a bookcase or painting
the dining room or the exterior
of the house.
I leave the important stuff to
professionals, and you should,
too.
Its worth the money to get it
done properly and quickly, rather
than try to do it yourself and end
up having to spend even more to
extricate yourself from a situa-
tion you have made much worse.
The rotten-eggs smell has an
obvious source. Your plumber,
experienced with Shore houses,
will nd it.
Questions? Email Alan J. Heavens at
aheavens@phillynews.comor write to
himat The Inquirer, Box 8263, Phila-
delphia, PA19101. Volume prohibits
individual replies.
Leave it to the professionals to handle that reeking faucet water
8
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MAKE LIFE A
LITTLE SWEETER

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SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 2013 PAGE 4C TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com C O M M U N I T Y N E W S
Photographs and information must
be received two full weeks before
your childs birthday.
Your information must be typed
or computer-generated. Include
your name and your relationship
to the child (parent, grandparent
or legal guardians only, please),
your childs name, age and birth-
day, parents, grandparents and
great-grandparents names and
their towns of residence, any sib-
lings and their ages. Dont forget to
include a daytime contact phone
number. Without one, we may be
unable to publish a birthday an-
nouncement on time.
We cannot guarantee return of
birthday or occasions photos and
do not return community-news
or publicity photos. Please do not
submit precious or original profes-
sional photographs that require
return because such photos can
become damaged, or occasionally
lost, in the production process.
Email your birthday announce-
ment to people@timesleader.com
or send it to: Times Leader Birth-
days, 15 North Main St., Wilkes-
Barre, PA 18711-0250. You also may
use the form under the People tab
on www.timesleader.com.
Childrens birthdays (ages 1-16) will be published free of charge
GUIDELINES
Isabella N. Rockwell
Isabella Nencetti Rockwell,
daughter of Matthew and Tori
Bruce Rockwell, Belmont, N.C., is
celebrating her 14th birthday to-
day, June 15. Isabella is a grand-
daughter of Robert and Francine
Nencetti Lawton, Kingston;
Raymond and Simone Rockwell,
Scotia, N.Y.; and Dewey and Sue
Bruce, Jupiter, Fla.
Isabella G. Dessoye
Isabella Grace Dessoye,
daughter of James and Lauren
Dessoye, Pittston, is celebrating
her fourth birthday today, June
15. Isabella is a granddaughter
of Richard and Carol Powell,
Wilkes-Barre, and James and
Linda Dessoye, Pittston. She is
a great-granddaughter of Ann
Marie Dessoye, Duryea, and
Thirza Powell and Bettie Jones,
both of Wilkes-Barre. Isabella has
a brother, Jameson, 1.
Luke Wendolowski
Luke Wendolowski, son of Ray
and Kelly Wendolowski, Moun-
tain Top, is celebrating his fth
birthday today, June 15. Luke is
a grandson of Barbara Byorick,
Nanticoke; the late Frank Byorick;
and the late Ann and Raymond
Wendolowski, Dickson City. He
has four brothers, Robby, Ryan,
Matthew and Max, and a sister,
Haley Rae.
Zachary McEntee
Zachary McEntee, son of Karen
and Richard McEntee, Dallas,
celebrated his 11th birthday
June 14. Zachary is a grandson
of John and Patricia Konopki,
Trucksville, and William and
Florence McEntee, Lehman. He
is a great-grandson of the late
William and Ruth Rolison and the
late Helena McEntee. Zach has a
sister, Alyssa, 22, and a brother,
Josh, 18.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY!
EXETER: After 84 years, the
Congregation of the Oblates of
St. Joseph will no longer serve
St. Anthony Church. A Mass of
Thanksgiving will be celebrated
at 10:30 a.m. on June 23 at St.
Anthonys Church of St. Barbara
Parish. His Excellency, Bishop
Joseph Bambera, Bishop of
Scranton, will celebrate the
Mass. A social will follow until
2 p.m. in the parish center.
HONESDALE: St. Padre Pio
Prayer Group will gather for
monthly devotions at 2 p.m. on
Sunday at St. Mary Magdalen
Church, 416 Church Street. The
Rev. William J. P. Langan, host
pastor and spiritual director,
will lead the faithful in prayer
for all priests followed by the
recitation of the rosary. Sister
Elizabeth Brody will read from
the sacred Scripture.
The Book of Special Inten-
tions invoking the intercession
of St. Pio will be presented and
special intention prayers will be
offered. The Sacrament of the
Anointing of the Sick will be
administered to the seriously ill
or those about to have surgery.
The Chaplet of Divine Mercy
will be chanted at 3 p.m., fol-
lowed by vespers, benediction
of the blessed sacrament and in-
dividual blessing with the relic
of St. Pio. All are welcome.
HORSHAM: North Anthra-
cite Council of the League of
Ukrainian Catholics is sponsor-
ing a bus trip to the 22nd an-
nual Ukrainian Folk Festival at
the Ukrainian American Sport
Center, Tryzub, on Aug. 25.
The event, which takes
place from noon to 8 p.m., will
highlight a concert of Ukrainian
folk dancers and musicians from
Ukraine and the United States.
Ukrainian ethnic foods, stan-
dard picnic fare, baked goods,
cool refreshments, Ukrainian
arts and crafts bazaar and chil-
drens fun area will be available.
The 55 passenger A.J. Limo
Coach bus will pick up at 9
a.m. in Berwick; 9:45 a.m. in
Edwardsville; and 10:15 a.m.
in Scranton. Cost is $35 per
person, which includes admis-
sion ticket to the festival. Full
advance, nonrefundable pay-
ment reserves a seat.
For reservations contact
Janina in Berwick at 759-2824
or Andrew in the Wilkes-Barre
area at 822-5354.
MOUNTAIN TOP: St. Paul
Lutheran Church will celebrate
Music Appreciation Sunday
on June 23. There will be one
service only at 9:30 a.m.
A late spring church clean-up
will take place at 9 a.m. today.
Emphasis will be on cleaning
the outside church property.
IN BRIEF
Second-grade parish and CCD students of Our Lady of Hope Parish, Wilkes-Barre, recently took part in
the crowning of the statue of the Blessed Mother Mary with a special tribute to her during the month of
May. Participants, from left, rst row, are Bria Shuella, Maxx Kebles, Sarah Kebles, Jacob Shinal, and Janice
Sidlowski, catechist. Second row: Hayden Moody, assistant; the Rev. John S. Terry, pastor; Logan Atcavage;
Austin Zabresky; Rylee ODonnell; and Karl Kopczynski.
Our Lady of Hope holds May crowning
St. John Evangelical Lutheran Church, 231 State St., Nanticoke, and St. Mark Lutheran Church, Pond
Hill, recently held a joint service of Pentecost, where seven parishioners conrmed their baptism. After
completing course work, they were conrmed by Pastor Debra North at a service attended by family and
friends. The honorees were presented with commemorative gifts by the council presidents. A reception
took place after the service. Participants, from left, rst row, are Angela Cragle, Seth Gulich, Savanna Kalin-
owski, Brandon Kessler, Anthony Ragazzo, Jaclyn Victor and Hunter Yale. Second row: the Rev. North.
Churches celebrate conrmation
Several string students from Wyoming Seminarys instrumental
music department played at the Mass for Pentecost Sunday at Gate
of Heaven Church in Dallas. In addition to a prelude and another in-
strumental piece during the Mass, the string players accompanied the
congregational and choral singing throughout the service. Members
of the choir from Our Lady of Victory Church, Harveys Lake, joined
the Gate of Heaven adult choir for the service. The choir was directed
by Anthony J. Kubasek, music director and liturgy coordinator, Gate
of Heaven Church, and director of instrumental music, Wyoming
Seminary. String players, from left: Charlie Wang, Peoples Republic
of China; Kelly Platt, Dallas; Kevin Platt, Dallas; Scott Kwiatek, Lake
Ariel; and Jeanne Gensel, Germany.
Seminary students perform at Gate of Heaven Church
Michael R. Dale Jr.
Michael Richard Dale Jr., son
of Adria Knecht and Michael
Dale, Wilkes-Barre, is celebrat-
ing his fourth birthday today,
June 15. Michael is a grandson
of Jeanenne Knecht and Louise
Usloski, both of Wilkes-Barre.
Katlynne M. Borosky
Katlynne May Borosky, daugh-
ter of Jeffrey and Jeanette,
Exeter, is celebrating her ninth
birthday today, June 15. Katlynne
is a granddaughter of Martha and
Joseph Borosky, Plains Township,
and Colleen Reiser and the late
John Reiser, Wilkes-Barre.
Kayci Rafalko
Kayci Rafalko, daughter of
Ronald and Elizabeth Rafalko,
Pittston, is celebrating her 12th
birthday today, June 15. Kayci is
a granddaughter of Ann Marie
Rafalko and the late Raymond
Rafalko Sr., Scranton. She has a
sister, Trina, 16.
See BRIEFS, Page 5C
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A picnic-style lunch will be


served for the volunteers after
the clean-up. A sign-up sheet is
available in the Fellowship Hall.
MOUNTAIN TOP: Christ
United Methodist Church is
holding a free childrens carnival
from 3-6 p.m. on June 23 on the
front lawn of the church, 175 S.
Main Street.
The carnival is geared for
children ages 3-10, but all are
welcome. There will be face
painting, carnival games, prizes,
popcorn and a bounce house.
The carnival is being held to
jump start Jesus Fun Fair, the
Vacation Bible School, which
will be held 6-8:30 p.m. June
24-28 for all children ages 3 and
potty trained to sixth grade.
The Vacation Bible Schools
mission project this year is the
Ronald McDonald House and a
goodwill donation barrel will be
available at the carnival.
For more information, call the
church at 570-474-6060.
SHICKSHINNY: Patterson
Grove, 1128 Bethel Hill Road,
recently announced the follow-
ing Sunday night vespers. All
vespers begin at 7:15 p.m.
June 30, Jim Pall, SCI Dallas,
Huntsville United Methodist
Church; July 7, Karen Allen Ur-
banski, St. Paul United Method-
ist Church, Penn State campus
ministry; July 14, Joe Kadke,
executive director, prison
outreach of Delaware, chaplain,
Howard R. Young CI; July 21,
Stevan Atanasoff, Williamstown
United Methodist Church; Aug.
18, Daniel Dennis, Otterbein
United Methodist Church,
Carlisle; Aug. 25, Joe Buxton,
Wilkes-Barre/Scranton district
superintendent; and Sept. 1, Jay
Saxe, Chapel.
For more information or
directions, call Joan Franklin at
925-0244.
BRIEFS
Continued from Page 4C
SATURDAY, JUNE 15 2013 Page 5C TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com C O M M U N I T Y N E W S
310 Allegheny Street, White Haven
570.956.1174
Located in That Corner Mall
Wednesday 5pm - 8pm
Saturday 12pm - 5pm
Sunday 10am - 3pm
and by appointment any day of the week
Reconditioned
Quality Furniture at
Affordable Prices
Allegheny
Furniture Showroom
Unique Pieces from Antique to Modern
Religious Service Calendar
To AdvertiseYour Church, Call Caitlin, 970-7374
Apostolic Baptist Bible Episcopal Lutheran Orthodox
Apostolic Faith
Tabernacle
536 Village Rd, Orange
Pastor Frank Chorba
333-5172
Sunday School 10 a.m.
Sunday Evening
Worship 7 p.m.
Bible Study
Wednesday 7:30 p.m.
Messages-To-Go Ministry
apostolicfaith.net
MEADE ST.
BAPTIST
50 S. Meade St.
Wilkes-Barre, PA
Chester F. Dudick, Pastor
(570) 820-8355
SUNDAY SCHOOL
9:30 a.m.
WORSHIP SERVICE
10:30 a.m.
PRAYER, BIBLE STUDY
& PIONEER CLUB
Wed 6:30 p.m.
WOMENS FELLOWSHIP
2nd Tuesday of the month
6:30 p.m.
AFTERNOON
FELLOWSHIP
12 noon last Sunday of the
Month
EXPOSITORY PREACHING:
EXPLAINING GODS TRUTH,
ONE VERSE AT A TIME.
Christ
Fellowship
Church Of
Plymouth
246 E. Main St.,
Plymouth, PA
(570) 779-4210
Sunday Worship
10:30 a.m.
Wednesday night bible study
and prayer 7 p.m.
Sunday School and
Nursery provided
We are a Christian bible church
teaching the plain truth of Gods
word as we prepare
for our eternal future.
River Of Life
Fellowship
Church
22 Outlet Road
Lehman, PA
675-8109
www.rolfministries.org
Sunday School 9:15am
Service 10:30am
Nursery provided
Thursday Night
6:30pm Bible study
& Youth Groups
Coffee house
Fridays 6 to 9 pm
with live music.
St. Martin
In-The-Fields
3085 Church Rd.,
Mountaintop
Rev. Dan FitzSimmons
CHORAL EUCHARIST
10AM
HEALING SERVICE
Last Sunday
each month
Serving through Faith,
Praise & Good Works
ST. CLEMENT &
ST. PETERS
EPISCOPAL
CHURCH
165 Hanover St., W-B
822-8043
The Rev. John C.
Major Priest-In-Charge
Holy Eucharist 9am
Sunday School 9:00am
WELCOME ALL TO
GROW IN GODS LOVE
www.stclementstpeter.org
Episcopal
Holy Trinity
Lutheran Church
813 Wyoming Avenue, Kingston
Saturday
Contemporary Holy Communion 5:30
Sunday
Traditional Holy Communion 10:00
Rev. Paul Metzloff
Handicapped Accessible
Messiah
Lutheran Church
453 S. Main Street, W-B
Rev. Mary E. Laufer
Sunday Holy Communion
8:00 and 10:45 a.m.
St. Johns
Lutheran Church
410 S. River St.
Wilkes-Barre
Worship
9:30 AM
Ofce Phone 823-7139
St. Marks
Lutheran Church
56 S. Hancock St., W-B
Pastor - Rev. Mary Lauffer
Sunday Worship 9:15 a.m.
Sunday School 10:15 a.m.
St. Matthew
Lutheran Church
667 N. Main St., W-B
822-8233
Worship Schedule:
Sun 7:30 a.m. 9:45 a.m.
Sunday School 10:45 a.m.
Adult Bible Class 11:00 a.m.
Rev. Gary Scharrer
Chairlift Available
Missouri Synod
St. Peters
Lutheran Church
1000 S. Main St., W-B
823-7332
Reverend
David Szeto
Sun. Worship 9 AM
Sunday School &
Adult Bible Study 10:30 AM
Missouri Synod
Mennonite
Nanticoke
Christian
Fellowship
112 Prospect St.
Sunday Celebration 9:30 a.m.
Sunday School - Sept. - May
9:00 a.m.
Pastor D. Pegarella
735-1700
Nazarene
Mountain View
Church Of The
Nazarene
WE HAVE MOVED!!
52 E. 8th Street, Wyoming
Pastor Bryan Rosenberg
Sunday Worship
9 am
Childrens Church &
Child Care Provided.
570-821-2800
Everyone is Welcome!
Saint Mary
Antiochian
Orthodox Church
905 South Main Street
Wilkes-Barre
Very Rev, David Hester
Deacon John Karam
Saturday - Great Vespers 6 p.m.
Sunday - Divine Liturgy 10 a.m.
Parish Ofce 824-5016
All Are Welcome
Website:
www.antiochian.org
Presbyterian
First United
Presbyterian
Church
115 Exeter Ave.,
West Pittston
654-8121
Worship 11:00 AM
at St. Cecilias Roman
Catholic Church, Wyo-
ming Avenue, Exeter
Rev. James E.
Thyren, Pastor
Primitive
Methodist
New Life
Community
Church
570 South Main Rd.,
Mountaintop, PA
868-5155
Pastor Dave Elick
Sunday School 9:30 a.m.
Sunday Worship Service
8:30 a.m. & 10:30 a.m.
Bible Services
Wed. 7 p.m.
All Are Welcome
United Methodist
Central United
Methodist
65 Academy Street, W-B
Rev. Dr. Paul C. Amara
SUN. WORSHIP SERVICE
11:15 am
Sunday School 9:45 a.m.
Child Care Provided
For Infants
& Toddlers
822-7246
Askam United
Methodist
Church
2811 S. Main St., Hanover Twp.
Pastor:
George Price
570-823-6467
Sunday Services
at 9 A.M.
Kids Korner
available during worship.
Dallas United
Methodist
4 Parsonage Street, Dallas
Pastor:
Rev. Robert G. Wood
675-0122
Summer Church Service
9:15 & 10:30 A.M.
675-5701
Handicapped Accessible
Luzerne United
Methodist Church
446 Bennet St., Luzerne
Sunday Worship
10:30 a.m.
Church School
during Worship
Carol E. Coleman
Pastor 287-6231
Shavertown United
Methodist Church
shavertownumc.com
163 N. Pioneer Ave.,
Shavertown
Phone-a-prayer 675-4666
Pastor:
Rev. M. Lynn Snyder
Organ/Choir Director
Deborah Kelleher
Saturday Service 5:30 p.m.
Chapel Service
Sunday Service
10 a.m. - Worship Service
Prayer & Praise
Service - 2nd Monday
of the month at 7 p.m.
Nursery Care
Available during
Sunday Service
For more information call
the ofce at
570-675-3616
Trucksville United
Methodist
Marian E. Hartman, Pastor
Dr. Stephen L. Broskoske,
Director of Music
Making Disciples for
Jesus Christ
Sunday Worship Schedule
8:30 a.m. and 10:00 a.m.
17 West Church RD off Route
309, Trucksville at Carverton RD
Nursery available for children
birth through kindergarten.
Vacation Bible School
August 18-22 5:30-8:30pm
Grief Support 7PM
3rd Wednesday Every Month
Phone: 570- 696-3897
Fax: 570-696-3898
Email:
ofce@trucksvilleumc.com
Unity
Unity: A Center for
Spiritual Living
140 S. Grant St., W-B
Rev. Dianne Sickler
Sunday Service &
Childrens Church
10 a.m.
Church 824-7722
Prayer Line 829-3133
www.unitynepa.com
Forty Fort
Presbyterian
Church
1224 Wyoming Ave., Forty Fort
Pastor William Lukesh
287-7097
Sunday School 9:15 a.m.
Sunday Worship 10:30 a.m.
6 p.m. Praise Band
Handicap Accessible
Nursery Provided
Air Conditioned
Visitors Welcome
Loyalville United
Methodist Church
Loyalville Rd.
Lake Township
Sunday Worship
9:30 am
570-477-3521
St. Johns
Lutheran
Nanticoke
231 State St.
Ofce 735-8531
www.NanticokeLutheran.org
Rev. Debby North
Holy Communion
Sunday 8 am & 9:30 am
Christian Education
10:30 am
Christian Coffee House
Every 4th Fri 7-9PM
Catholic
PARISH OF ST.
ANDRE BESSETTE
Vigil (Saturday)
4:00 p.m. at Holy Saviour
Worship Site,
56 Hillard St, East End
(570)823-4988
5:30 p.m. at St. Stanislaus
Worship Site,
668 N. Main St., North End
Sunday
8:30 a.m. at St. Stanislaus
Worship Site,
668 N. Main St., North End
10:30 a.m. at Holy Saviour
Worship Site,
56 Hillard St, East End
Weekday Mass
7:00 a.m. at Holy Saviour
Worship Site,
56 Hillard St, East End
8:00 a.m. at St. Stanislaus
Worship Site,
668 N. Main St., North End
Confessions
3:00 p.m. at Holy Saviour
Worship Site,
56 Hillard St, East End
4:30 p.m. at St. Stanislaus
Worship Site,
668 N. Main St., North End
Catholic
Holy Cross Episcopal Church
373 N. Main Street, W-B
Father Timothy Alleman, Rector
SUNG SUNDAY EUCHARIST - 9:00 AM
SUNDAY SCHOOL - 9:00 AM
SATURDAY HOLY EUCHARIST - 4:30 PM
WEDNESDAY - 7:00 PM
HEALING SERVICE & HOLY EUCHARIST
St. John The
Baptist Church
126 Nesbitt St.
Larksville, PA 18651
570-779-9620
A WELCOMING, GROWING,
FAITH COMMUNITY
Saturday 4 p.m.
Sunday
7 a.m., 9 a.m. & 11 a.m.
Ample, Easy Parking
Handicapped Accessible
Confessions:
Saturday 3 p.m.
Firwood United
Methodist Church
Cor. Old River Rd. &
Dagobert St.
Rev. Barbara Pease
Safe Sanctuary Policy
Sunday School
9:45
Morning Service
11:00 a.m.
Handicap
Elevator
Available
You are invited to
attend.
823-7721
Holy Trinity
Russian
Orthodox Church
Orthodox Church In America
401 East Main St., W-B
Phone: 825-6540
Rev. David Shewczyk
Sunday Divine Liturgy 9:00 a.m.
Feast Days 9:00 a.m.
Saturday Vespers:
Summer 6:00 p.m. - Winter 4:00 p.m.
First
Presbyterian
Church
S. Franklin &
Northhampton Sts., W-B
10:00 a.m. Worship
Rev. Dr. Robert M.
Zanicky, Minister
Air Conditioned Sanctuary
Nursery provided
Handicapped Access
John Vaida -
Minister of Music
Pamela Kerns -
Christian Education
Director
A Friendly Inclusive,
& Welcoming Church
Audio Sermons
available on the web
www.fpcwb.com
Wyoming
Presbyterian
Church
Wyoming Ave.
at Institute St.,
570-693-0594
Laura Lewis, Pastor
Worship Service: 11 a.m.
Sunday School: 10 a.m.
Forty Fort United
Methodist Church
Church Ofce 287-3840
Wyoming & Yeager Ave
Rev. Dr. PhilipT. Wanck
Handicapped Accessible
Sat. 5pm
Praise and Worship
Service Sun. 8:30 a.m.
Early Summer Worship
(June 9-Sep 1)
10 amTraditional
Worship
Prayer Line
283-8133
Friends &
Quakers
Friends & Quakers
Stella Prebyterian
Church
1700 Wyoming Ave.
Forty Fort
570-824-5130
11 am
Worship
http://northbranch.
quaker.org
Wyoming United
Methodist
376 Wyoming Ave
Rev. Marcelle Dotson
Sunday Worship 10:30 a.m.
Sunday School 10:30 a.m.
570-693-2821
Ample Parking
United Church
Of Christ
St. Lukes UCC
471 N. Main St.
Wilkes-Barre 822-7961
Rev. Justin Victor
Sunday Worship
10:00 A.M.
Sunday School
10:15 A.M.
Communion Service
the 1st Sunday of
every month.
TRANSPORTATION: CALL
Catholic
Independent
Second Welsh
Congregational
Church
475 Hazel St., Wilkes-Barre
829-3790
Sunday Services 9:30 a.m.,
10:45 a.m. Sunday School
6 p.m. Sunday Eve
Wednesday 7 p.m. Bible Study
Prayer and Youth Groups
Limited Van Service
Available, Please Call.
Independent...
Fundamental...
Friendly
Wyoming Ave.
Christian
881 Wyoming Ave.,
Kingston
570-288-4855
Pastor Dennis Gray
Come Hear The
Word Of God,
Let It Change
Your Life!
Sunday School
9:45 a.m.
Morning Worship
11 a.m. Communion
Every Sunday
Sunday Evening
Worship At 7 p.m.
Wednesday Bible
Study 7:00 p.m.
ELEVATOR
ACCESSIBLE
Baptist
Tabernacle
63 Division St., W-B
Interim Pastor:
Richard McIntyre
Sunday Worship 9:30 a.m.
Sunday School 9:45 a.m.
570-823-3083
Slocum Chapel
1024 Exeter Avenue
Exeter, PA 18643
Pastor Guy Giordano
(570) 388-5213
SUNDAY SERVICES
Intercessory Prayer
9:30am
Worship Service
10:00am
Sunday School/
Nursery Provided
WEDNESDAY SERVICES
Bible Study & Prayer 7pm
Visitors Welcome!
Encounter Christ in a
historical church in a
new & relevant way.
Assembly of God
340 Carverton Rd. Trucksville
Pastor Dan Miller
570-696-1128
www.bmha.org
SUNDAY
Morning Worship
(Main Sanctuary)
8:00AM, 9:45AM, 11:00AM
(Harvest Cafe Bldg)
9:45AM, 11:00AM
Kids Church
8:00AM & 11:00AM
Sunday School: 9:45AM
SUNDAY EVENING
WORSHIP
(Main Sanctuary) 6:30PM
WEDNESDAY EVENING
(Harvest Cafe Bldg)
FUEL Youth Ministry 6:30PM
We have various Ministries
available for Men, Women,
Youth and Children.
SUNDAY SERVICES
Celebration Service
10:15AM
Sunday School 9AM
Christian Education 9AM
Kidz Church
10:15AM
Intercessory Prayer 8:15AM
Sunday Evening 6:30PM
TUESDAY
Womens Bible
Study 10AM
WEDNESDAY
Family Night
Ministries 7PM
THURSDAY
Evidence Youth
Group 6:30PM
570-829-0989
www.wilkesbarreag.com
First Assembly
Of God
424 Stanton Street
Wilkes-Barre, PA 18702
Dallas Baptist
Harveys Lake
Highway, Dallas
639-5099
Pastor Jerry Branch
Sun. Worship 9:15 & 10:30 am
www.dallasbaptist
church.org
Nebo Baptist
Church of
Nanticoke
75 Prospect St.
Nanticoke 735-3932
Pastor Tim Hall
www.nebobaptist.org
Worship Service
Sun. 8:30 a.m. & 11 a.m.
Sun School 9:45 a.m.
Nursery Junior Church
Youth Groups
Great Bible Seminars
Everyone is Welcome
Christian
Grace
Community
Church
A Bible Teaching Ministry
Memorial Hwy. Dallas
Sunday Services:
11 a.m., 6 p.m.
(570) 675-3723
www.gracechurchdallas.org
Parker Hill
Community
Church
667 N. River St.
Plains
Sundays
10:30 a.m.
570-822-1111
parkerhill.org
CHRIST UNITED
METHODIST
CHURCH
175 S. Main Road
Mountain Top
Pastor Rev.
Stephen Sours
Sunday Worship
8:30 & 10:45 am
Sun School 9:30 am
Nursery Available
570-474-6060
Trinity
Presbyterian
105 Irem Rd, Dallas
Worship Service:
10:00 a.m.
Pastor
Kathleen
Jamhoury
Nursery Provided
570- 675-3131
Holy
Resurrection
Cathedral
Orthodox Church In America
591 N. Main St.,
Wilkes-Barre
Very Rev. Joseph
Martin, Pastor
570-822-7725
Saturday Vespers 6:00 p.m.
Sunday Divine Liturgy 8:30 a.m.
Feast Day
Vespers 6 p.m.
Feast Day
Divine Liturgy 9:00 a.m.
ALL ARE WELCOME
web site: www.oca.org
Good Shepherd
Lutheran Church
190 S. Main Street, W-B
Pastor Peter D. Kuritz
Pastor Janel D. Wigen
Saturday Service
5:00 p.m.
Sunday Service
9:30 a.m.
Worship
570-824-2991
Lutheran
NEW LIFE
COMMUNITY CHURCH
301 Delaney St.
Hanover Township
LOOK/LEARN/LOVE/LEAD
Sunday School
9:30 am
Worship Service
10:30 am
Nursery/Childrens
Church
570-NEW-LIFE
(639-5433)
Pastor:
Gideon Gaitano
newlifefamily.org
Presbyterian United Methodist
Bible
Christ
Community
Church
100 West Dorrance St.
Kingston, PA 18704
Sunday School/ABF
9:30 a.m.
Sun Worship 10:30 a.m.
Radio Ministry
Searching the Scriptures
Sunday 7:30-8:30 AM
WRKC 88.5 FM
website: www.ccchurchtoday.org
Pastor: John Butch
Phone: 283-2202
Cross Creek
Community Church
Sunday Services 9am &
10:45am
With Jr. Church & Nursery
Available.
Wed 6:30 Family Night
with Awana for ages 18
months - 6th grade.
College & Career,
CrossRoads for Teens,
Deaf Ministry, Small
Groups, Mens & Womens
Ministry, Groups.
Celebrate Recovery for
Hurts, Habits, Hang-Ups -
Tuesdays 6:30pm
Discover the difference!
370 Carverton Road,
Trucksville 696-0399
www.crosscreekcc.org
High Point Baptist
Church
For the Glory of God and the
Proclamation of His Word
1919 Mountain Road, Larksville
570-371-4404
www.highpoint church.info
SUNDAY
9:30AM Bible
Studies for All Ages
10:30AM Worship
and Rootz
Childrens Ministry
WEEKLY
Small Group Bible
Studies Adult/Teen
Ministries Cub Scouts/
American Heritage
Girls
www.highpointchurch.info
Living Hope
Bible Church
35 S. Main St.
Plains, PA
Pastor Mark DeSilva
Sunday Service
10:00 a.m.
Sunday School for
all ages 9:00 a.m.
Mid Week Bible
Study every Wed
at 6:30pm
Youth Group Mens
& Womens
Bible Studies
For information call
570-406-4295
www.lhbcpa.org
WHERE HOPE COMES
TO LIFE AND THE
SON ALWAYS SHINES
First Baptist
Church
Water Street Pittston
654-0283
Rev. James H. Breese, Pastor
Sunday Worship
9:30 a.m.
Childrens Sun School
9:45 a.m.
Adult/Teen Sun School
10:45 a.m.
Bible Study/Prayer
Meeting Wed at 7:15 p.m.
Chairlift Available
www.fbcpittston.org
Welsh Bethel
Baptist
Parish & Loomis St. W-B
Sunday Worship 10 a.m.
Sunday School 11:15 a.m.
Bible Study Wed 6:30 p.m.
Pastor Don Hartsthorne
822-3372
Mt. Zion
Baptist Church
105 HILL ST...WILKES-BARRE
Sunday School 9:30 a.m.
Sunday Service 11 a.m.
We offer Childrens Church
Prayer Service Wednesday 7p.m.
Bible Study Wednesday 8 p.m.
Rev. Michael E. Brewster, Pastor
Baptist
ST. ELIZABETH ANN
SETON PARISH
116 Hughes St.,
Swoyersville
Masses:
Saturday
4:00 & 5:30 pm
Sunday
8:30, 10:00, 11:30 am
Daily: 8:00 am
Confessions:
Saturday 3:15 pm
www.setonpa.com
287-6624
CHRIST FELLOWSHIP
CHURCH
OF PLYMOUTH
246 E. Main St.
Plymouth, PA
(570) 779-4210
Sunday Worship
10:30 a.m.
Wednesday night
bible study and
prayer 7 p.m.
Sunday School and
Nursery provided
We are a Christian
bible church
teaching the plain
truth of Gods word
as we prepare for
our eternal future.
Christian
First Baptist
52 E. 8th Street Wyoming
Sunday School All Ages 9:30
Worship Service 10:45 a.m.
Tues. 7 p.m. prayer meeting
693-1754
Visitors Welcome
St. Pauls
Lutheran Church
474 Yalick Road
(Route 118)
Dallas, PA
Rev. Charles Grube
Sat. Worship
5:30 PM
Sunday Worship
9:30 AM
570-675-3859
SAINT MARYS CHURCH OF THE
IMMACULATE CONCEPTION
Our Lady of Fatima Parish
134 S. Washington Street, Wilkes-Barre
(570) 823-4168
Saturday 4:00 PM
Sunday 8 AM, 10 AM, 12:10 PM & 7PM
Monsignor Thomas V. Banick, Pastor
PRAISE
JESUS
Tree of Life
Christian
Fellowship
167 East State Street
Nanticoke, PA
A Church
Unashamedly in
love with The LORD
JESUS
CHRIST
Sunday 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday 7:00 p.m.
570-735-4737
www.treeoifefellowship.net
BEL L ES
C O N S TRUC TIO N C O . IN C .
PA012959
824- 7220
NATIO NAL AW ARD
W INNING C O M PANY
FREE ES TIM ATES
S IDING ,W INDO W S
& C ARPENTRY
THE BES T RO O FING ,
Your Power Equipment
Headquarters
CubCadet Stihl Ariens
Troybilt Gravely
Lawntractors Mowers Trimmers
Blowers and more
2965 Memorial Hwy., Dallas
570-675-3003
Blowers and more
EQUIPMENT
WEBER PREMIUM GAS GRILLS
2013
Natural Gas Models In Stock
THE ULTIMATE
GRILLING EXPERIENCE
Featuring: Spirit Genesis Summit
Weber Q Series and Weber quality charcoal grills
www.dundeegardensinc.com
Take I-81 to Exit 164 to Nanticoke (Exit 3)
SANS SOUCI PARKWAY, HANOVERTWP., PA 735-5452
FACE SUMMER FLAWLESSLY
Botox, Dermal Filler, Laser Hair Removal,
Skin Tightening, Cellulite Reduction,
Chemical Peels & Massage Therapy
311 Market St.
Kingston, PA 18704
(570) 970-4772
www.skinspawb.com
Xeomin 10 free units with every 20 units purchased.
$100 Off Restylane Lip Enhancement
www.owertent.com
570-693-0617
Best Quality
New Guinea
Imaptiens
Only $1.98 ea.
Not Affected By
Impatiens Downey Mildew
We have a large
selection of
Quality Annuals,
Perennials,
Patio Pots and
Hanging Baskets
BEL L ES
C O N S TRUC TIO N C O .
C AL L
824- 7220
FREE Trip le Pa ne
Up gra d e o n a ll
Plygem L ifestyle
W ind o w s
PA012959
ENERG Y S AVING S
W INDO W S AL E
Maximum Efficiency& Sound Control
Ro o fing & S id ing
Exp erts To o !
NO LIMIT
FATHERS DAY SPECIALS
CHAIN SALE
BUY 1 GET 1 FREE!!
CASH AND CARRY ONLY
$
24.
00
$
29.
00
$
31.
00
$
33.
00
14 Chain
16 Chain
18 Chain
20 Chain
excludes 1/4 pitch & 404
VALLEY POWER EQUIPMENT AND RENTAL
Your Authorized Full Service Dealer
WILKES-BARRE
Rt. 309, W-B. Twp. Blvd. Next To The Big Cow 823-2017 Mon.-Fri. 8-5 Sat. 8-1
www.valleypower.com
LAST
DAY
Dry, Itchy Eyes?
Dr. Michele
Domiano
Dry Eye Syndrome Covered By Most Insurances
Dont just watch a movie, experience it!
All Stadium Seating and Dolby Surround Sound
ALL FEATURES NOW PRESENTED IN DIGITAL FORMAT
825.4444 rctheatres.com
3 Hrs. Free Parking At Participating Park & Locks with Theatre Validation
(Parenthesis Denotes Bargain Matinees)
All Showtimes Include Pre-Feature Content
Avoid the lines: Advance tickets available from Fandango.com
Rating Policy Parents and/or Guardians (Age 21 and older) must
accompany all children under 17 to an R Rated feature
*No passes accepted to these features.
**No restricted discount tickets or passes accepted to these features.
***3D features are the regular admission price plus a surcharge of $2.50
D-Box Motion Seats are the admission price plus an $8.00 surcharge
First Matinee $5.50 for all features (plus surcharge for 3D features).
Man Of Steel in RealD 3D/DBox
Motion Code Seating - PG13 - 150 min -
(12:15), (3:55), 7:10, 10:10
**Man Of Steel in RealD 3D - PG13
- 150 min - (12:15), (3:55), 7:10, 10:10
*Man Of Steel 2D - PG13 - (12:00), (1:45),
(3:40), (5:00), 7:00, 8:30, 10:00
*This Is The End - R - 110 min - (1:30),
(4:00), 7:15, 9:40
The Internship PG13 125 min
(1:00), (1:45), (3:35), (4:20), 7:00, 7:40, 9:35,
10:15
The Purge R 95 min
(12:40), (2:45), (4:50), 7:30, 9:45
Now You See Me PG13 120 min
(1:30), (4:15), 7:05, 9:35
After Earth PG13 105 min
(2:00), (4:20), 7:25, 9:45
Fast & Furious 6 PG13 135 min
(12:50), (1:30), (3:40), (4:20), 7:00, 7:25,
9:50, 10:10
Epic PG 110 min
(12:30), (3:00), 7:15, 9:40
The Hangover 3 R 105 min
(12:45), (3:00), (5:15), 7:40, 9:55
*Star Trek Into Darkness RealD 3D
PG13 140 min
(1:15), (4:15), 7:30, 10:20
Special Events
World War Z & World War Z RealD 3D -
8pm on Thursday, June 20th
Monsters University & Monsters University in RealD 3D -
8pm on Thursday, June 20th
HOURS: Tues. 12-5
Wed. - Fri. 10-5 Sat. 10-2
Midway Between Tunkhannock & Dallas
570-298-2150
DELIVERY &
INSTALLATION
AVAILABLE
Change Your
Drafty Old Fireplace
Into An Effcient Heat Source
Call for an in home evaluation or
stop in our showroom to see our burning
displays and talk to our knowledgeable staff.
Many styles and sizes to choose from for a custom look.
Fireplace Gallery
www.owertent.com
570-693-0617
Best Quality
New Guinea
Imaptiens
Only $1.98 ea.
Not Affected By
Impatiens Downey Mildew
We have a large
selection of
Quality Annuals,
Perennials,
Patio Pots and
Hanging Baskets
colorworldooring.net
$
18
99
/
$
26
99
PAINT
$
1
29
sq.
ft.
99

sq.
ft.
$
2
99
sq.
ft.
$
1
29
sq.
ft.
99

&
UP
CARPETING
VINYL
WOOD
LAMINATE
TILE
Plush or
Berber Style
Assorted
Varieties
3/4 Red Oak
Pre-nished
Patterns
& Colors
Ceramic
Floor Tile
Flat Interior Porch
PITTSTON
701 Pittston By-Pass
655-6284
SCRANTON
1919 Pittston Ave.
342-8884
IN GROUND POOL
FILL-INS
Free Estimates Licensed Insured
(570) 760-4797
Complete Demolition
All Materials Removed
Metal Walls Extracted
Vinyl, Fiberglass,
Wire & Piping Removed
Option to Save Concrete
Patio Around Pool
7
8
6
2
7
0
ALL JUNK CARS &
TRUCKS WANTED
VITO & GINO
288-8995
Forty Fort
Highest Prices Paid In Cash.
Free Pickup. Call Anytime.
8
2
0
2
2
5
MOVIE LISTINGS @ WWW.GARDENDRI VEIN.COM
OPEN FRI, SAT, &SUN
2 SCREENS WITH DOUBLE FEATURES
MOVIE ADMISSION: $6 ADULTS - $3 CHILDREN
FLEA MARKET SUNDAYS 6AM-3PM
FIND US ON FACEBOOK OR FOLLOW US ON TWITTER
DRIVE-IN
RT. 11 HUNLOCK CREEK
(570) 735-5933
RT. 11 HUNLOCK CREEK (570) 735-5933
$7 Adults - $5 Children
MOVIE STARTSAT 8:45PM
*
FLEA MARKET SUNDAYS 6AM-3PM
Find Us On Facebook At Garden Drive-In
Follow Us On Twitter At @gardendriveinpa
MOVIES ON FRI., SAT., AND SUN.
Screen 1
Man of Steel PG-13
Fast and Furious 6 PG-13
Screen 2
The Internship PG-13
Hangover 3 R
*
MANOF STEEL(XD-3D) (PG-13)
12:30PM 3:50PM 7:10PM
10:20PM NEW MOVIE
You must be 17 with ID or accompanied by a parent to attend R rated features.
Children under 6 may not attend R rated features after 6pm
**Note**: Showtimes marked with a \\ indicate reserved seating.
AFTEREARTH(DIGITAL) (PG-13)
10:35AM1:00PM3:55PM6:25PM9:25PM
BEFOREMIDNIGHT (DIGITAL) (R)
10:40AM1:15PM4:25PM7:20PM
9:55PMNEWMOVIE
EPIC(3D) (PG)
1:30PM7:00PM
EPIC(DIGITAL) (PG)
10:55AM4:15PM9:30PM
FAST&FURIOUS6 (DIGITAL) (PG-13)
1:05PM4:05PM7:05PM10:05PM
GREAT GATSBY, THE(2013) (3D)(PG-13)
(2:20PMNOTONSUN6/16 ORWED
6/19) (9:00PMNOTONWED6/19)
GREAT GATSBY, THE(2013)
(DIGITAL) (PG-13)
(11:10AMNOTONSUN6/16 ORWED
6/19) (5:45PMNOTONWED6/19)
HANGOVERPARTIII, THE(DIGITAL)(R)
12:15PM2:45PM(5:15PM7:45PM
NOTONWED6/19) (10:25PMNOT
ONWED6/19 ORTHURS6/20)
INTERNSHIP, THE(DIGITAL) (PG-13)
10:25AM12:20PM3:05PM4:20PM
5:55PM8:40PM10:10PM
IRONMAN3 (DIGITAL) (PG-13)
1:25PM7:15PM
MANOF STEEL(3D) (PG-13)
11:10AM1:10PM2:30PM4:30PM
5:50PM7:50PM9:10PMNEWMOVIE
MANOF STEEL(DIGITAL) (PG-13)
10:30AM11:50AM1:50PM3:10PM
5:10PM6:30PM8:30PM9:50PM
NEWMOVIE
NOWYOUSEEME(DIGITAL) (PG-13)
11:00AM12:25PM1:45PM3:15PM
4:40PM6:10PM7:30PM9:05PM10:30PM
PURGE, THE(DIGITAL) (R)
10:30AM11:40AM12:40PM1:50PM
3:00PM4:10PM 5:20PM6:35PM7:40PM
8:50PM10:00PM
STARTREKINTODARKNESS(3D) (PG-13)
11:20AM5:30PM
STARTREKINTODARKNESS(DIGITAL)(PG-13)
2:25PM(8:45PMNOTONTHURS. 6/20)
THISISTHEEND(DIGITAL) (R)
11:35AM12:55PM2:15PM3:35PM
4:55PM 6:15PM7:35PM8:55PM10:15PM
6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30
0
News World
News
News-
watch 16
Paid
Prog.
Zero Hour Chain
(N) (CC) (TVPG)
Zero Hour Suspen-
sion (TVPG)
Mistresses Pilot
(CC) (TV14)
News Castle
(TVPG)

It Takes a Thief
Project X (TVPG)
It Takes a Thief (CC)
(TVPG)
The Quick and the Dead (R, 95)
Sharon Stone, Gene Hackman.
News-
watch 16
Inside
Edition
News The Lost
Tribe
6
News Evening
News
Entertainment This
Week (TVPG)
The Mentalist (CC)
(TV14)
Blue Bloods Greener
Grass (TV14)
48 Hours Highway
of Tears (TV14)
News at
11
TBA
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2013 U.S. Open Golf Champi-
onship Third Round. (N) (CC)
Jeopardy! Chicago Fire Ambi-
tion (TV14)
Law & Order: Special
Victims Unit
Saturday Night Live
(CC) (TV14)
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FOX 56
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(TVPG)
Lost in Space (CC)
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Star Trek Balance of
Terror (TVPG)
King Kong Escapes (G, 68) Rhodes
Reason, Mie Hama, Linda Miller.
L
ODonnell Burt Bacharachs Best (My
Music Presents) (CC) (TVG)
Magic Moments: The Best of 50s Pop
Musicians perform. (CC) (TVG)
Doo Wop Discoveries (My Music) R&B and
pop vocal groups. (CC) (TVG)
U
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(TVPG)
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(TV14)
Big Bang
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Theory
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Guy (CC)
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Futurama Futurama Star Wars: The
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Old Chris-
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tine
X
The Sum-
mer
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Player
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News News
10:30
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(CC) (TV14)

Monk (CC) (TVPG) Monk Deadly group


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Monk (CC) (TVPG) Psych Vick and her
sister battle. (TVPG)
Psych A string of
robberies. (TVPG)
Psych (CC) (TVPG)
#
News Evening
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Book
Paid
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The Mentalist (CC)
(TV14)
Blue Bloods Greener
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48 Hours Highway
of Tears (TV14)
News Criminal
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Meet the
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There
Yet?
There
Yet?
Burn Notice Long
Way Back (TVPG)
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AMC
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16 Blocks (PG-13, 06) Bruce Willis,
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16 Blocks (PG-13, 06) Bruce Willis,
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AP
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(:01) The Glades
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Us Part
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Adam Sandler.
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I Love You, Man (R, 09) Paul
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(:40) Jes-
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You Again (PG, 10) Kristen Bell,
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When in Rome (PG-13, 10) Kristen
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Notes From Dad (13) Eddie Cibrian,
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HIST
Swamp People (CC)
(TVPG)
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Pawn
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House
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Girl Fight (11) Anne Heche, James
Tupper, Jodelle Ferland. (CC)
Gone Missing (13) Daphne Zuniga,
Gage Golightly. Premiere. (CC)
A Mothers Nightmare (12) Annabeth
Gish, Jessica Lowndes. (CC)
MTV
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lousness
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lousness
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lousness
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lousness
Jackass 3.5 (R, 11) Johnny Knox-
ville, Bam Margera, Ryan Dunn.
Jackass 3D (R, 10) Johnny Knox-
ville, Bam Margera. Premiere.
NICK
Sponge-
Bob
Sanjay,
Craig
Odd Par-
ents
Sam &
Cat (CC)
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Cat (N)
Marvin
Marvin
Big Time
Rush
Wendell &
Vinnie
The
Nanny
The
Nanny
Friends
(TVPG)
(:33)
Friends
OVAT
Culture Pop Elvis: Rock n Royalty
(CC) (TVPG)
Songwriter (R, 84) Willie Nelson, Kris
Kristofferson, Melinda Dillon.
Johnny Cash at Folsom Prison (CC)
(TVPG)
SPD
(4:30) Rolex Sports Car Series
Racing Mid-Ohio. (N)
SPEED
Center
TORC: The Off Road Championship From
Bark River Off Road Raceway. (N)
NASCAR Racing Richard Petty: A
Racers Life
SPIKE
National Treasure: Book of
Secrets (4:15) (PG, 07)
Remember the Titans (7:36) (PG, 00) Denzel Washing-
ton, Will Patton, Donald Adeosun Faison.
National Treasure: Book of
Secrets (PG, 07)
SYFY
The Mist (5:30) (R, 07) Thomas
Jane, Marcia Gay Harden. (CC)
Sinbad Pilot (CC)
(TVPG)
Sinbad (CC) (TVPG) Primeval: New World
(TV14)
The Mist (R, 07)
Thomas Jane.
TBS
King of
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Queens
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Theory
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Limitless (6:45) (11) Bradley Cooper. Premiere.
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TOON
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Show
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the Hill
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docks
TRVL
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The Manster (62) Peter Dyneley, Jane
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YOUTO
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lina
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www.timesleader.com TIMES LEADER PAGE 6C SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 2013 T E L E V I S I O N
TV TALK TODAY6 a. m.
C N B C Opt i Ons act i On
6 a.m. FNC FOX and Friends
saturday (N)
7 a.m. 3 cBs this morning: sat-
urday Irans presidential election;
Queen Elizabeth IIs birthday;
caffeine; Lynda Obst; Gary Clark
Jr. (N)
7 a.m. 28 today Todays consum-
er; triplets; Man of Steel. (N)
7:30 a.m. 53 teen Kids news
Sports coaches; garbage; ticks;
historic aircraft; strange law; teen
magician. (N) (TVG)
8 a.m. 16 Good morning america
(N)
9 a.m. 22 cBs this morning:
saturday Irans presidential
election; Queen Elizabeth IIs
birthday; caffeine; Lynda Obst;
Gary Clark Jr. (N)
10 a.m. FNC Bulls and Bears (N)
10:30 a.m. FNC cavuto on Busi-
ness (N)
11 a.m. FNC Forbes on FOX (N)
11:30 a.m. FNC cashin in (N)
2 p.m. FNC the Journal Editorial
Report (N)
2:30 p.m. FNC FOX news Watch
(N)
4 p.m. FNC cavuto on Business
4:30 p.m. FNC cashin in
5 p.m. FNC the Five A rotating
ensemble of ve FOX personali-
ties will discuss the current news
stories of the day. (N)
6 p.m. CNN the situation
Room
7 p.m. 22 Entertainment this
Week (TVPG)
7 p.m. FNC FOX Report (N)
8 p.m. FNC Huckabee (N)
9 p.m. FNC Justice With
Judge Jeanine (N)
UNIVERSAL SUDOKU
MINUTE MAZE
W I T H O M A R S H A R I F & T A N N A H H I R S C H
CRYPTOQUOTE
GOREN BRIDGE
B Y M I C H E A L A R G I R I O N & J E F F K N U R E K
JUMBLE
B Y H O L I D A Y M A T H I S
HOROSCOPE
CROSSWORD
PREVIOUS DAYS SOLUTION
HOW TO CONTACT:
Dear Abby: PO Box 69440, Los Ange-
les, CA 90069
For more Sudoku go to www.timesleader.com
O N T H E W E B
Dear Abby: I am 25,
and my boyfriend
and I have been
together since high
school. We have now
decided to take our
relationship to the
next level by living
together.
When I brought up the idea to my
mother a few months ago, she was
against it. She said if I do this it will
change my relationship with her. My
boyfriend and I are college graduates,
have good jobs and are self-support-
ing. If things work out between us,
we will most likely be getting married
next year.
I am an only child and I dont want
to hurt my mother or have our re-
lationship change, but I want to be
able to live my own life. I would like
her support, but dont know how to
tell her what we have decided or if it
would be worth breaking the special
bond between my mother and me.
Only Child in California
Dear Only Child: Stop beating
around the bush and tell your mother
what your plans are. At 25, you are
old enough and this relationship
has gone on long enough that
moving in together is a natural pro-
gression toward a permanent commit-
ment. Her resistance is based on fear
of what your independence from her
will mean to her.
However, if you truly cant decide
whether cutting the umbilical cord is
worth it, then keep things as they are
and remain her little girl forever.
Dear Abby: I am a teenager who
has liked this guy for a long time.
Recently he asked me out, and I was
ecstatic at first. I still like him, but
every time I think about him or Im
around him, or anything about him
comes up, I get this horrible nausea.
How can I like him but he makes me
feel ill? Is there a way to remedy this?
Lovesick in Phoenix
Dear Lovesick: Anxiety can cause
someone to have the symptoms you
have described. You appear to be suf-
fering from an extreme case of young
love, and there is no medication that
can cure it. Try to remain calm, and
your symptoms should subside.
Dear Abby: Your column often pro-
vides helpful tips to your readers.
May I suggest that you remind those
who are, or know someone who is,
college-bound never to hesitate to
apply for as many scholarships as pos-
sible regardless of how small.
My local conservation association
has been giving scholarships for
11 years. Some years we get no ap-
plicants! The amounts are $500 and
$1,000. This money could pay for
books, lab fees or go toward tuition,
but we get few applicants. These add
up and can help to reduce the college
debt burden we hear so much about.
Its never too soon to start. There
are middle school and high school
contests, too. NOW is the time for
students to start their college funds
with all the prizes and scholarships
they can accumulate.
Helping the Next Generation
Dear Helping: Im sure many fami-
lies will thank you for this reminder.
Readers, many small scholarships are
available and the thing to do is
talk to your school counselor and re-
search online or at your local library.
DEAR ABBY
A D V I C E
Daughter who wants to live with boyfriend doesnt get moms support
To receive a collection of Abbys most memo-
rable and most frequently requested po-
ems and essays, send a business-sized, self-
addressed envelope, plus check or money
order for $3.95 ($4.50 in Canada) to: Dear
Abbys Keepers, P.O. Box 447, Mount Mor-
ris, IL 61054-0447. (Postage is included.)
ARIES (March 21-April 19). Your
friendships are important to you,
and so youll put up with people
even when getting along with
them is more work than it should
be. Time will give you a better
perspective on this.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20). The
way you give your love defies
categories and rational analysis,
and yet its real. Your feelings
and the response you see in oth-
ers are more real than anything
that can be measured.
GEMINI (May 21-June 21). People
want to be proud of their lives
and feel that they conduct them-
selves with dignity. It benefits
you to be aware of each persons
need to feel important.
CANCER (June 22-July 22). You
put your faith in those who walk
their talk and dont have to
broadcast what kind of person
they are, because its rather
obvious.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). The zany
ideas zinging inside your head
will not fly in the face of reason.
In fact, they will harmonize quite
nicely with what makes sense.
Offbeat solutions can be quite
effective.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). This is
your heart talking: Liking and
loving are not the same. Liking
originates in the mind with over-
tones in the heart, and loving
lives in the heart, sometimes
without the minds approval.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). There
are those who believe that if you
cant explain what you know, you
dont know it. They are wrong.
There is a wealth of knowledge
that lies at a deeper level than
the one where words exist.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). The
schedule is tight, but dont
despair. Share your work with-
out apology, as though it were a
valuable gift. A job you find tire-
some will be a joy and an educa-
tion for someone else.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21).
The fairy godmother wont show
up on time. So dont wait for her.
Book the event, get the outfit
together, and arrange transpor-
tation. When you least expect it,
youll get an extra dose of magic.
Better late than never.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19).
Someone drops their guard and
welcomes you into a wacky,
personal world. This is an honor,
really. Enjoy the tour, and gather
a few pictures and souvenirs
along the way.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18).
Youre developing a new image.
Youll give some thought this
weekend to who you are now
and what your purpose is in your
current circumstance.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20).
Manipulation can influence for a
time, but it all falls apart if the
manipulator isnt there to keep
pulling the right strings. You rec-
ognize manipulation and call it
into the light.
TODAYS BIRTHDAY (June 15).
Unless you attempt the impos-
sible, youll never know how
amazing you are. In July, youll
hone your vision of domestic life,
and in August, it comes together.
An intense course of training will
ready you for a financial oppor-
tunity in October. Follow your
social conscience in December.
Your lucky numbers are: 30, 1, 11,
24 and 49.
SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 2013 PAGE 7C TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com D I V E R S I O N S
ANNUAL GOLF
TOURNAMENT
KUNKLE FIRE COMPANYS
FRIDAY JUNE 28, 2013 AT THE IREM COUNTRY CLUB
Dinner will be held at the Irem Country Club
Pavilion Immediately following the tournament
(Dinner is a pig/chicken BB-Q)
For further information contact 570-675-3334
Captain and Crew
Shotgun Start at 12:30 pm
Registration Starts at 11:30 am
Cost $100 per golfer
(Price includes green fees, cart, dinner and prizes)
RAFFLES
PRIZES
HOLE IN ONE
TOP 3 FLIGHT
AWARDS
POKER RAFFLE
610 Nanticoke Street, Hanover Twp.
Phone 570-825-9720 Fax 570-825-1939
www.lucasfarms.org
LUCAS FARMS
Hours Open 7 Days A Week
9:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.M.
SHICKSHINNY LOCATION
NOW OPEN 7 DAYS PER WEEK
FRESH FRUITS & VEGETABLES AT GREAT PRICES!
SALE STARTS SAT. 6/15 ENDS FRI. 6/21
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$
1
29
lb.
WHITE PEACHES
$
1
29
lb.
BUNCH
CUCUMBERS 3/
89

BAG
MEADOWS AUXILIARY
(Rain date June 22)
MeadowsNursing&RehabilitationCenter
4 East Center Hill Rd. Dallas
675-8600 ext. 195 or 115
ALL PROCEEDS BENEFIT RESIDENTS OF MEADOWS
Enjoy Lunch
At Our Outdoor
Pavilion
Bake Sale
&
Entertainment
29
TH
ANNUAL
OVER 120 VENDORS
RAFFLE BASKETS
ODDS & ENDS
BOOKS PLANTS
CRAFTS JEWELRY
SO MUCH MORE!
Saturday June 15th, 2013 9:00 AM - 3:00 PM
Market onthePond
YOU MAY BE ABLE TO GET
YOUR MONEY BACK!!!
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your losses from 2008!!!
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June 21, 22, 23, 2013
Celebrate the beauty, splendor,
and cultural signicance of a regional treasure,
the Susquehanna River
SUNDAY JUNE 23
Dragon Boat Racing
10:00 AM to 3:00 PM
SOJOURN ON THE RIVER
Mandatory safety training will be given to all participants before the launch by the Outtters.
Friday, June 21, 4-7pm -
West Pittston to Wilkes-Barre
Saturday, June 22, 8am-2pm -
Harding to Wilkes-Barre
Sunday, June 23, 8am-2pm -
Wilkes-Barre to Hunlock Creek
To Register for the Sojourn
Contact One of the Outtters
ENDLESS MTN. OUTFITTERS
at 570-746-9140 www.emo444.com
SUSQUEHANNA KAYAK & CANOE RENTAL
at 570-388-6107 www.kayaktheriver.com
For More Information and Directions to the Park:
Penn State Cooperative Extension
570-825-1701 or 602-0600
Visit www.riverfrontparks.org
Photo by M. Burnside
Te Wilkes-Barre Riverfront Parks
Committee Presents RiverFest 2013
FRI JUNE 21
Opening Ceremonies & Concert on the Commons
Wilkes-Barre River Common
Millennium Circle Portal 6pm - 9pm
Opening Ceremonies, Free Concerts on the Commons,
Free Family Fishing, Paint a Community Mural,
PAAmerican Water Childrens Art Exhibit, Food Vendors
& More.
Live Musical Performances: Classic Rock Express
& Don Shappelle and the Pickups
River Trip - Paddle from West Pittston to Wilkes-Barre
(4pm-7pm)
SAT JUNE 22
Festival at Nesbitt Park Noon - 5pm
Enjoy an Afternoon of Fun & Activities for All Ages!
Childrens Art & Nature Programs, Live Mammals
Program (2pm), Pony Rides, Bounce House, Guided
Nature Hikes, Kayaking Demos, Dragon Boat Team
Training, Food Vendors & More.
River Trip - Paddle from Harding to Wilkes-Barre (8am-2pm)
Polka On The River Common 6pm - 8:30pm
Stanky and the Coal Miners
SUN JUNE 23
Awaken the Dragons 10am - 3pm
View Local Dragon Boat Racing Teams on the Susquehanna
River.
River Trip - Paddle from Wilkes-Barre to Hunlock Creek (8am-
2pm)
Proud Sponsor
of the
2013 Wyoming Valley RiverFest Sponsors
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 2013 PAGE 1D
WHEELS
HE TIMES LEADER
Style, Class, Excellence
MOTORWORLD DRIVE, JUST OFF INTERSTATE 81, WILKES-BARRE
SALES HOURS: MONDAY - FRIDAY: 9AM-8PM SATURDAY: 9AM-5PM
SUNDAY: OPEN FOR OUTDOOR BROWSING NOON - 5PM
WWW.MOTORWORLDGROUP.COM
North Eastern Pennsylvanias y
#1 Luxury Vehicle Destination
www.motorworldacura.com
*ALL OFFERS SUBJECT TO MANUFACTURER CHANGES. PRIOR SALES EXCLUDED. FINANCING IS ON SELECT MODELS WITH APPROVED CREDIT.
0.9% APR FINANCING FOR 36 MONTHS = $17.06/$1,000 FINANCED. 1.9% APR FINANCING FOR 60 MONTHS = $17.50/$1,000 FINANCED.
PHOTOS ARE FOR DISPLAY PURPOSES ONLY. DEALER IS NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR TYPOGRAPHICAL ERRORS.
PAYMENTS INCLUDE ALL REBATES AND INCENTIVES. SEE DEALER FOR DETAILS. ALL OFFERS EXPIRE 6/30/13.
NEW 2014 Acura
RRRRRRRRLLLLLLLLXXXXXXXX
MODEL # YD2HCJNW
*LEASE IS BASED ON 36 MONTHLY PAYMENTS AT 10K MILES PER YEAR WITH $999 DOWN PAYMENT PLUS TAX, TAGS, TITLE, $131 PROCESSING FEE AND FIRST
MONTHS PAYMENT DUE AT LEASE SIGNING WITH APPROVED CREDIT THRU DEALER DESIGNATED LENDER. GAP INSURANCE INCLUDED. RESIDUAL $24,296.25.
- 6CL I VTECH ENGINE
- 6 SPEED AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION
WITH GRADE LOGIC
- LEATHER INTERIOR
- POWER MOONROOF
- BLUETOOTH
- VEHICLE STABILITY ASSIST
- ADVANCED COMPATIBILITY
ENGINEERING
GAP INSURANCE INCLUDED IN LEASE
NEW 2013 Acura
MMMMMMMMDDDDDDDDXXXXXXXX
PLUS TAX & TAGS FOR 36 MONTHS*
$
425
LEASE FOR
MODEL # CU2F4CJW
*LEASE IS BASED ON 36 MONTHLY PAYMENTS AT 10K MILES PER YEAR WITH $999 DOWN PAYMENT PLUS TAX, TAGS, TITLE, $131 PROCESSING FEE AND FIRST
MONTHS PAYMENT DUE AT LEASE SIGNING WITH APPROVED CREDIT THRU DEALER DESIGNATED LENDER. GAP INSURANCE INCLUDED. RESIDUAL $18,843.00.
- 201HP I VTECH ENGINE
- 5 SPEED AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION
WITH GRADE LOGIC
- LEATHER INTERIOR
- POWER MOONROOF
- BLUETOOTH
- VEHICLE STABILITY ASSIST
- ADVANCED COMPATIBILITY
ENGINEERING
GAP INSURANCE INCLUDED IN LEASE
NEW 2013 Acura
TTTTTTTTSSSSSSSSXXXXXXXX
PLUS TAX & TAGS FOR 36 MONTHS*
$
299
LEASE FOR
MODEL # DE1F5DJNW
*LEASE IS BASED ON 36 MONTHLY PAYMENTS AT 10K MILES PER YEAR WITH $999 DOWN PAYMENT PLUS TAX, TAGS, TITLE, $131 PROCESSING FEE AND FIRST
MONTHS PAYMENT DUE AT LEASE SIGNING WITH APPROVED CREDIT THRU DEALER DESIGNATED LENDER. GAP INSURANCE INCLUDED. RESIDUAL $16,344.95.
- I VTECH ENGINE
- AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION
WITH GRADE LOGIC
- DUAL ZONE AUTO CLIMATE CONTROL
- POWER MOONROOF - BLUETOOTH
- VEHICLE STABILITY ASSIST
- ADVANCED COMPATIBILITY ENGINEERING
- XENON HEADLIGHTS
- MULTI VIEW REAR CAMERA
GAP INSURANCE INCLUDED IN LEASE
NEW 2013 Acura
IIIIIIIILLLLLLLLXXXXXXXX
PLUS TAX & TAGS FOR 36 MONTHS*
$
239
LEASE FOR
MODEL # UA8F2DJW
*LEASE IS BASED ON 36 MONTHLY PAYMENTS AT 10K MILES PER YEAR WITH $999 DOWN PAYMENT PLUS TAX, TAGS, TITLE, $131 PROCESSING FEE AND FIRST
MONTHS PAYMENT DUE AT LEASE SIGNING WITH APPROVED CREDIT THRU DEALER DESIGNATED LENDER. GAP INSURANCE INCLUDED. RESIDUAL $22,080.00.
- I VTECH ENGINE
- 6 SPEED AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION
- LEATHER INTERIOR
- POWER MOONROOF - BLUETOOTH
- VEHICLE STABILITY ASSIST
- ADVANCED COMPATIBILITY ENGINEERING
- SEQUENTIAL SPORT SHIFT AUTOMATIC
WITH PADDLE SHIFTERS
- FULLY INDEPENDENT SPORT-TUNED SUSPENSION
GAP INSURANCE INCLUDED IN LEASE
NEW 2013 Acura
TTTTTTTTLLLLLLLL
PLUS TAX & TAGS FOR 36 MONTHS*
$
329
LEASE FOR
NOW!
IN STOCK
FINANCING FOR 24 TO 36 MONTHS
0.9
%
APR
FINANCING FOR 37 TO 60 MONTHS
1.9
%
APR
on All New 2013 Acura ILX, TSX, TL & RDX models*
www.motorworldgroupmercedes.com
Certied Pre-Owned LowAPRRates
*Eligible customers will receive up to 3 months payment credit on their current lease with a lease or
nance of any new 2013 or 2014 Mercedes-Benz vehicle through Mercedes-Benz Financial Services.
Certain exclusions apply. See dealer for details.
Buying a Mercedes-Benz is an investment. Heres an exceptional opportunity.
UP TO 3 MONTHS
PAYMENT CREDIT*
ON YOUR CURRENT MERCEDES-BENZ FINANCIAL SERVICES LEASE
WITH THE PURCHASE OF A NEW 2013 OR 2014 MERCEDES-BENZ.
As low as 1.9% for 36 mos. & 2.99% for 66 mos. Available On: C, E, CLS, CLK, M, S
Plus Tax for
27 Months
$42,355 MSRP
$369*
LEASE FOR
$4,063 Total Due at Delivery. SECURITY DEPOSIT INCLUDED.
$2,899.00 Cap Cost. 10K MILES PER YEAR.
RESIDUAL $30,072.00.
C300 Sport Sedan 4MATIC AWD
New 2013 Mercedes-Benz
Plus Tax for
36 Months
$59,195 MSRP
$619*
LEASE FOR
$4,464 Total Due at Delivery. SECURITY DEPOSIT INCLUDED.
$3,050.00 Cap Cost. 10K MILES PER YEAR.
RESIDUAL $36,701.00.
E350 Sedan 4MATIC AWD
New 2014 Mercedes-Benz
Plus Tax for
24 Months
$44,195 MSRP
$419*
LEASE FOR
$4,713 Total Due at Delivery. SECURITY DEPOSIT INCLUDED.
$3,499.00 Cap Cost. 10K MILES PER YEAR.
RESIDUAL $30,937.00.
GLK350 SUV 4MATIC AWD
New 2013 Mercedes-Benz
Plus Tax for
30 Months
$54,375 MSRP
$619*
LEASE FOR
$5,313 Total Due at Delivery. SECURITY DEPOSIT INCLUDED.
$3,899.00 Cap Cost. 10K MILES PER YEAR.
RESIDUAL $34,256.00.
ML350 SUV 4MATIC AWD
New 2013 Mercedes-Benz
*ALL PRICES AND PAYMENTS, PLUS TAX, TAG AND TITLE. PHOTOS ARE FOR DISPLAY PURPOSES ONLY. DEALER NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR
TYPOGRAPHICAL ERRORS. PRIOR SALES EXCLUDED. FINANCING AVAILABLE WITH APPROVED CREDIT. MINIMUM FINANCED $15K WITH
APPROVED CREDIT THRU DESIGNATED LENDER. SUBJECT TO MANUFACTURER PROGRAM CHANGES. FINANCING ON SELECT PRE-OWNED MODELS.
QUALIFIED CUSTOMERS ONLY. SEE DEALER FOR DETAILS. ALL OFFERS EXPIRE 6/30 /13.
2010 MERCEDES-BENZ C300 SEDAN SPORT 4MATIC AWD
STK# BP16072, 26,868 MI .............................................................................. SALE PRICE $27,292
2010 MERCEDES-BENZ C300 SEDAN SPORT 4MATIC AWD
STK# BP16073, 24,822 MI .............................................................................. SALE PRICE $27,558
2010 MERCEDES-BENZ C300 SEDAN SPORT 4MATIC AWD
STK# BP16059, 9,539 MI ................................................................................ SALE PRICE $28,791
2010 MERCEDES-BENZ GLK350 SUV 4MATIC AWD
STK# T31146A, 33,865 MI ............................................................................... SALE PRICE $33,469
2010 MERCEDES-BENZ ML350 SUV 4MATIC AWD
STK# BP16070, 39,480 MI .............................................................................. SALE PRICE $36,931
2013 MERCEDES-BENZ C300 SPORT SEDAN 4MATIC AWD
STK# BS0510, 10,367 MI ................................................................................. SALE PRICE $38,999
2011 MERCEDES-BENZ ML350 SUV 4MATIC AWD
STK# B10126A, 33,092 MI............................................................................... SALE PRICE $39,993
2011 MERCEDES-BENZ ML350 BLUETEC SUV 4MATIC AWD
STK# BP16061, 30,060 MI............................................................................... SALE PRICE $41,479
2011 MERCEDES-BENZ GL550 SUV 4MATIC AWD
STK# B10103A, 38,400 MI............................................................................... SALE PRICE $61,479
www.motorworldlexus.com
LEASE FOR
27MONTHS
Plus Tax + Tags*
MSRP: $57,335
$
579
*LEASE IS BASED ON 27 MONTHLY PAYMENTS AT 10K MILES PER YEAR WITH $3,879 DUE AT SIGNING PLUS TAX, TAGS, TITLE AND
$131 DEALER PROCESSING CHARGE DUE AT LEASE SIGNING. ZERO SECURITY DEPOSIT REQUIRED. RESIDUAL IS $37,268.00 (AWD).
NEW2013 LEXUS RX450h HYBRID
LEASE FOR
27MONTHS
Plus Tax + Tags*
MSRP: $39,782
$
349
*LEASE IS BASED ON 27 MONTHLY PAYMENTS AT 10K MILES PER YEAR WITH $3,499 DUE AT SIGNING PLUS TAX, TAGS, TITLE AND
$131 DEALER PROCESSING CHARGE DUE AT LEASE SIGNING. ZERO SECURITY DEPOSIT REQUIRED. RESIDUAL IS $27,636.00.
NEW2013 LEXUS ES350
LEASE FOR
27MONTHS
Plus Tax + Tags*
MSRP: $56,277
$
479
*LEASE IS BASED ON 27 MONTHLY PAYMENTS AT 10K MILES PER YEAR WITH $3,099 DUE AT SIGNING PLUS TAX, TAGS, TITLE AND $131 DEALER PROCESSING CHARGE DUE AT
LEASE SIGNING. ZERO SECURITY DEPOSIT REQUIRED. LEASE INCLUDES $2,500 LFS CASH. RESIDUAL IS $38,268.00.
NEW2013 LEXUS GS350
LEASE FOR
27MONTHS
Plus Tax + Tags*
MSRP $46,800
$
399
*LEASE IS BASED ON 27 MONTHLY PAYMENTS AT 10K MILES PER YEAR WITH $3,399 DUE AT SIGNING PLUS TAX, TAGS, TITLE AND $131 DEALER PROCESSING CHARGE DUE AT
LEASE SIGNING. ZERO SECURITY DEPOSIT REQUIRED. LEASE INCLUDES $1,500 LFS CASH. RESIDUAL IS $31,356.00.
NEW2013 LEXUS RX350AWD
*PRIOR SALES EXCLUDED. ALL PRICES AND PAYMENTS ARE PLUS TAX, TAGS, TITLE AND $131 DEALER PROCESSING CHARGE.
ALL LEASES ARE ALL WITH ZERO SECURITY DEPOSIT.
**FINANCING IS AVAILABLE ON SELECT MODELS WITH APPROVED CREDIT THROUGH LEXUS FINANCIAL SERVICES.
1.9% APR FINANCING FOR 48 MONTHS = $17.95/$1,000 FINANCED. ALL OFFERS ARE SUBJECT TO CREDIT APPROVAL.
SEE DEALER FOR DETAILS. OFFERS EXPIRE 6/30/13.
NOWGET 1.9%APRFOR48MONTHSOR
2.9%APRFOR60MONTHS!*
ITSYOURTURN
T H E C P O S A L E S E V E NT
ENDS JULY 1
1.9%APRFINANCINGAVAILABLE**
1.9%APRFINANCINGAVAILABLE**
2010 LEXUS GS350
STK# L12115A, 37K MI, LEATHER, SUNROOF, AWD..................................................................SALE PRICE $28,999
2010 LEXUS RX350
STK# L12154A, 47K MI, LEATHER, SUNROOF, AWD..................................................................SALE PRICE $30,999
2010 LEXUS RX350
STK# T12133A, 30K MI,LEATHER SUNROOF............................................................................SALE PRICE $31,978
2010 LEXUS RX350
STK# L12129A , 29K MI, LEATHER, SUNROOF, AWD.................................................................SALE PRICE $32,415
2012 LEXUS RX350
STK# LS0524 , 16K MI, LEATHER, SUNROOF, AWD...................................................................SALE PRICE $39,799
*PRICES & PAYMENTS ARE PLUS TAX, TAGS, TITLE AND $131 DEALER PROCESSING CHARGE. PHOTOS ARE FOR DISPLAY PURPOSES ONLY.
DEALER NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR TYPOGRAPHICAL ERRORS. ALL PRICES INCLUDE APPLICABLE REBATES AND/OR INCENTIVES. SEE DEALER FOR DETAILS.
PRIOR SALES EXCLUDED. ALL OFFERS SUBJECT TO MANUFACTURER PROGRAM CHANGES. PRICES AVAILABLE ON ADVERTISED VEHICLES ONLY.
MILEAGE CHARGE OF $.25/MILE OVER 30K MILES. LESSEE PAYS FOR EXCESS WEAR. NOT AVAILABLE WITH SOME OTHER OFFERS.
SECURITY DEPOSIT IS NOT REQUIRED AT TIME OF DELIVERY. TO QUALIFY FOR CONQUEST REBATE YOU MUST BE IN A NON-GM LEASE.
SEE DEALER FOR DETAILS. ALL OFFERS EXPIRE 6/30/13. MOTORWORLD CADILLAC, 150 MOTORWORLD DRIVE, WILKES BARRE, PA 18703.
MOTORWORLD
CADILLAC
www.motorworldgm.com
*LEASE IS BASED ON 36 MONTHLY PAYMENTS AT 10K MILES PER YEAR WITH $1,995 DOWN PLUS TAX, TAGS, TITLE AND
$131 DEALER PROCESSING CHARGE WITH APPROVED CREDIT THROUGH ALLY BANK. LEASE INCLUDES $1,000 LUXURY LEASE CONQUEST REBATE.
LEASE FOR
$
299
PLUS TAX/TAGS FOR 36 MONTHS*
CADILLAC ATS AWD 2.0T
NEW 2013 STOCK # - C3789
$1,000 LUXURY LEASE
CONQUEST REBATE
CADILLAC XTS FWD LUXURY COLLECTION
NEW 2013
STOCK # - C3734
WAS = $53,215
MOTORWORLD DISCOUNT = $2,327
SELECT MODEL BONUS = $3,000
LUXURY LEASE CONQUEST = $1,000
NOW $
46,888*
LEASE FOR
$
699
PLUS TAX/TAGS FOR 39 MONTHS*
*LEASES ARE BASED ON 39 MONTHLY PAYMENTS AT 10K MILES PER YEAR WITH $2,495 DUE AT SIGNING PLUS TAX, TAGS, TITLE AND
$131 DEALER PROCESSING CHARGE WITH APPROVED CREDIT THROUGH US BANK. LEASE INCLUDES $3,000 LUXURY LEASE CONQUEST REBATE.
STOCK # - C3651
CADILLAC ESCALADE AWD LUXURY COLLECTION
NEW 2013
*LEASE IS BASED ON 36 MONTHLY PAYMENTS AT 10K MILES PER YEAR WITH $1,995 DOWN PLUS TAX,TAGS, TITLE AND
$131 DEALER PROCESSING CHARGE WITH APPROVED CREDIT THROUGH US BANK. LEASE INCLUDES $1,000 LUXURY LEASE CONQUEST REBATE.
LEASE FOR
$
489
PLUS TAX/TAGS FOR 36 MONTHS*
CADILLAC CTS SEDAN LUXURY AWD
NEW 2013 STOCK # - C3686
$1,000 LUXURY LEASE
CONQUEST REBATE
*LEASE IS BASED ON 36 MONTHLY PAYMENTS AT 10K MILES PER YEAR WITH $1,995 DOWN PLUS TAX, TAGS, TITLE AND
$131 DEALER PROCESSING CHARGE WITH APPROVED CREDIT THROUGH US BANK. LEASE INCLUDES $1,000 LUXURY LEASE CONQUEST REBATE.
LEASE FOR
$
319
PLUS TAX/TAGS FOR 36 MONTHS*
CADILLAC CTS COUPE AWD
NEW 2013 STOCK # - C3790
$1,000 LUXURY LEASE
CONQUEST REBATE
*LEASE IS BASED ON 36 MONTHLY PAYMENTS AT 10K MILES PER YEAR WITH $1,995 DOWN PLUS TAX, TAGS, TITLE AND
$131 DEALER PROCESSING CHARGE WITH APPROVED CREDIT THROUGH US BANK. LEASE INCLUDES $1,000 LUXURY LEASE CONQUEST REBATE.
LEASE FOR
$
439
PLUS TAX/TAGS FOR 36 MONTHS*
CADILLAC SRX LUXURY COLLECTION AWD
NEW 2013 STOCK # - C3785
$1,000 LUXURY LEASE
CONQUEST REBATE
CADILLAC SRX LUUXUR X Y COLLECTIO
NEW 2013
$1,0
MotorWorld Cadillac 1-866-356-9383
150 Motorworld Drive, Wilkes-Barre, PA 18703
MotorWorld Lexus 1-866-356-9383
150 Motorworld Drive, Wilkes-Barre, PA 18703
MotorWorld Acura 1-866-356-9383
150 Motorworld Drive, Wilkes-Barre, PA 18703
MotorWorld 1-866-356-9383
150 Motorworld Drive, Wilkes-Barre, PA 18703
412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale
Find A NewFriend
In The Times Leader Classied
To place an ad call 829-7130
100
ANNOUNCEMENTS
110 Lost
ALL JUNK
VEHICLES
WANTED!!
CALL ANYTIME
HONEST PRICES
FREE REMOVAL
CA$H PAID
ON THE SPOT
570.301.3602
BEST PRICES
IN THE AREA
CA$H ON THE $POT,
Free Anytime
Pickup
570-301-3602
570-301-3602
CALL US!
TO JUNK
YOUR CAR
LOST. Mothers
ring, multi-stone.
Childrens names on
ring. Sentimental
value. Reward.
570-823-2325.
110 Lost
All
Junk
Cars &
Trucks
Wanted
Highest
Prices
Paid In
CA$H
FREE
PICKUP
570-574-1275
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
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in classified
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120 Found
LIKE
NEW
Used Tires
&
Batteries
for $20
& Up
VITOS
&
GINOS
949 Wyoming Ave.
Forty Fort
288-8995
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
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in classified
is the best way
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135 Legals/
Public Notices
ESTATE NOTICE
NOTICE IS HEREBY
GIVEN that Letters
of Administration
have been granted
in the Estate of
LEONARD H. BORIS,
late of the Borough
of White Haven,
Luzerne County,
Pennsylvania, who
died February 1st,
2013. All persons
indebted to said
Estate are request-
ed to make payment
and all those with
claims or demands
are to present the
same to the Admin-
istratrix, Patricia F.
Boris, in care of her
attorney,
c/o Joseph R.
Lohin, Esquire
Suite 206,Park Bldg.
400 Third Avenue
Kingston, PA 18704
LINEUP
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135 Legals/
Public Notices
ESTATE NOTICE
Estate of Edward
Fielding, Late of
Jackson Township,
Luzerne County,
Pennsylvania,
Deceased.
LETTERS TESTA-
MENTARY on the
above estate have
been granted to the
undersigned. All
persons indebted to
said Estate are
requested to make
immediate payment
and those having
legal claims to
present the same
without delay to:
Joan Titus, Thomas
K. Jones, Jean
Lawson Laity,
EXECUTORS, 2750
Trenton Road,
Levittown, PA
19056.
Harry J. Agzigian,
Esquire
2750 Trenton Road
Levittown, PA
19056
(215) 547-6330
LINEUP
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INCLASSIFIED!
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135 Legals/
Public Notices
LEGAL NOTICE
The Wilkes-Barre
Area School District
is soliciting sealed
proposals for
ANNUAL FOOD
SERVICE SMALL-
WARES, until 3:00
P.M., Thursday,
June 27, 2013. All
proposals shall be
addressed to
Leonard B. Przy-
wara, Secretary,
730 South Main
Street, Wilkes-
Barre, PA 18711-
0375. The envelope
containing the Bids
to be marked,
FOOD SERVICE
BID. Proposals will
be opened publicly
on Thursday, June
27, 2013 at 3:00
PM in the Board
Room, 730 S. Main
Street, Wilkes-
Barre, The Board of
School DIrectors
reserves the right
to reject any and all
proposals.
By Order of the
Board
James G. Post
PURCHASING
AGENT
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135 Legals/
Public Notices
ESTATE NOTICE
NOTICE IS HEREBY
GIVEN that Letters
Testamentary have
been issued to M.
Sharon Randolph,
426 Huntsville
Road, Dallas, PA
18612 in the Estate
of Marian P. Row-
lands, Deceased,
who died on March
15, 2013, late of Dal-
las Township,
Luzerne County,
Pennsylvania. All
creditors are
requested to pres-
ent their claims and
all persons indebted
to the decedent will
make payment to
the aforementioned
Executrix or her
attorney.
ROSENN, JENKINS
& GREENWALD,
L.L.P.
15 S. Franklin Street
Wilkes Barre, PA
18711-0075
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NORTHEAST PA TOP JOBS
The following companies are hiring:
Your company name will be listed on the front page
of The Times Leader Classieds the rst day your ad
appears on timesleader.com Northeast PA Top Jobs.
For more information contact The Times Leader sales
consultant in your area at 570-829-7130.
Find your next
vehicle online.
timesleaderautos.com
Find the
perfect
friend.
Call 829-7130
to place your ad.
The Classied
section at
timesleader.com
ONLYONE LEADER. ONL NNNL NL NNNNLYONE NNNNNNNNNN LEA LE LLLE LE LE LE LE E LE LE LE E DER DDD .
timesleader.com
Friendship
House
PAGE 2D SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 2013 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
135 Legals/
Public Notices
135 Legals/
Public Notices
150 Special Notices
135 Legals/
Public Notices
150 Special Notices
135 Legals/
Public Notices
LEGAL NOTICE
INVITATION FOR BIDS
The Earth Conservancy will receive bids
for the Hanover 9 Phase 2 Areas B, C,
and D Reclamation Projects in Hanover
Township until 12:00 p.m. (local time) on
the 22th day of July, 2013 at the Earth
Conservancy office located at 101 South
Main Street, Ashley, PA 18706. Bids will be
opened and publicly read aloud at their
offices at 12:15 p.m.
CONTRACT DOCUMENTS, including a
PROJECT MANUAL, may be examined and
obtained at Earth Conservancy, 101 South
Main Street, Ashley, PA 18706.
PROJECT MANUAL is in one binding and
drawing set. Bidders may secure a PRO-
JECT MANUAL upon payment of one hun-
dred dollars ($100.00). (Please add
$20.00 for U.S. Mail delivery or $45.00 for
FedEx delivery without a FedEx account.)
All construction work is included in one
Prime Contract.
Checks shall be made payable to Earth
Conservancy, and will not be refunded. A
pre-bid conference will be held at the
offices of Earth Conservancy on July 12th
at 10:00 a.m.
Each BID, when submitted, must be
accompanied by a "Bid Security" which
shall not be less than ten percent (10%) of
the amount of the BID. A Non-Collusion
Affidavit of Prime Bidder (NCAB-1), and
Statement of Bidders Qualifications (BQ-1)
shall also be submitted with the Bid.
Bidders attention is called to the fact that
not less than the minimum wages and
salaries in accordance with the provisions
of the Davis-Bacon Wage Act and con-
tained in the Contract documents, must be
paid throughout the duration of this proj-
ect.
The Labor Standards, Wage Determination
Decision and Anti-Kickback regulations
(29 CFR, Part 3) issued by the Secretary of
Labor are included in the Contract Docu-
ments of this project and govern all work
under the Contract.
Non-discrimination in Employment Bid-
ders on this work will be required to com-
ply with the Presidents Executive Order
11246 and will be required to insure that
employees and applicants for employment
are not discriminated against on the basis
of their race, color, national origin, sex,
religion, age, disability or familial status in
employment or the provisions of services.
The Contractor, in accordance with Exec-
utive Order 11625 and 12138, must utilize
to the greatest extent feasible minority
and/or women owned business concerns
which are located within the municipality,
county or general trade area.
Earth Conservancy is an Equal Employ-
ment Opportunity Employer.
The successful Bidder will be required to
furnish and pay for a satisfactory Perfor-
mance Bond and a Labor and Material
Payment Bond.
The Earth Conservancy reserves the right
to reject any or all bids and to waive infor-
malities in the Bidding.
BIDS may be held by OWNER for a period
not to exceed ninety (90) days from the
date of the opening of BIDS for the pur-
pose of reviewing the BIDS and investigat-
ing the qualifications of Bidders, prior to
awarding of the CONTRACT.
LEGAL NOTICE
INVITATION TO BID
The Commission on Economic Opportunity
(CEO) will accept sealed bids, which must
include all of the following installed servic-
es:
-Blown, side-wall cellulose insulation
-Loose-fill fiberglass (attic) insulation
-Polyurethane 2-part (basement rim joist)
spray foam insulation
A prebid meeting will be held at the Com-
mission on Economic Opportunitys Main
Office, 165 Amber Lane, Wilkes-Barre, PA,
18702 at 4:00 p.m., Thursday June 20,
2013, to review the scope of work and
pertinent policies and procedures. Bid
specification packages will be available at
the prebid meeting; or, interested bidders
may obtain a package by telephoning or
mailing the Weatherization Director, Com-
mission on Economic Opportunity, 32-34
West Union Street, Kingston, PA 18704;
telephone number (570) 288-8458.
Applications and formal bids must be
received by 5:00 p.m. EST on Thursday,
June 27, 2013. All packages must be
clearly marked (BID FOR WEATHERIZA-
TION SERVICES).
Bids will be opened at 2:00 p.m. on Friday,
June 28, 2013 at the CEO Main Office.
CEO reserves the right to reject any or all
bids; otherwise the bid will be awarded to
the lowest responsible bidder whose bid
conforms to all the materials terms and
conditions of this invitation.
Octagon Family
Restaurant
375 W Main St, Plymouth, PA 18651
570-779-2288
W Weekend S eekend Special pecial
$13.95 $13.95 for a Large Plain
Pie & a Dozen Wings
Dine in only. Valid Saturday & Sunday.
One coupon per party/table.
Cannot be combined with any other offers.
Home of the Original O-Bar Pizza
AUTO
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
468 Auto Parts
VITO & GINOS
LIKE NEW
USED TIRES &
BATTERIES
$20 & UP
570-288-8995
Forty Fort
472 Auto Services
$ WANTED JUNK $
VEHICLES
LISPI TOWING
We pick up 822-0995
WANTED
Cars & Full Size
Trucks. For prices...
Lamoreaux Auto
Parts 477-2562
472 Auto Services
All
Junk
Cars
&
Trucks
Wanted
Highest
Prices
Paid In
CA$H
FREE
PICKUP
570-574-1275
LAW
DIRECTORY
Call 829-7130
To Place Your Ad
Dont Keep Your
Practice a Secret!
310 Attorney
Services
BANKRUPTCY
FREE CONSULT
Guaranteed
Low Fees
Payment Plan!
Colleen Metroka
570-592-4796
Mention this ad
when you call!
DIVORCE No Fault
$295 divorce295.com
Atty. Kurlancheek
800-324-9748 W-B
310 Attorney
Services
FREE Bankruptcy
Consultation
Payment plans.
Carol Baltimore
570-283-1626
SOCIAL SECURITY
DISABILITY
Free Consultation.
Contact Atty. Sherry
Dalessandro
570-823-9006
135 Legals/
Public Notices
LEGAL NOTICE
DEADLINES
Saturday
12:30 on Friday
Sunday
4:00 pm on
Friday
Monday
4:30 pm on
Friday
Tuesday
4:00 pm on
Monday
Wednesday
4:00 pm on
Tuesday
Thursday
4:00 pm on
Wednesday
Friday
4:00 pm on
Thursday
Holidays
call for deadlines
You may email
your notices to
mpeznowski@
civitasmedia.com
or fax to
570-831-7312
or mail to
The Times Leader
15 N. Main Street
Wilkes-Barre, PA
18711
For additional
information or
questions regard-
ing legal notices
you may call
Marti Peznowski
at 570-970-7371
or 570-829-7130
145 Prayers
SAINT JUDE
NOVENA
May the sacred
heart of Jesus be
praised, adored &
glorified throughout
the world forever.
St. Jude pray for
us. St. Therese
pray for us. C.O.
150 Special Notices
ADOPT: Adoring,
secure couple
longs to adopt
your newborn.
Safe, beautiful
life forever.
Love awaits.
Lori & Craig
888-773-6381
Expenses Paid
ADOPTING
YOUR NEWBORN
is our dream.
Endless love, joy,
security awaits.
Maryann and Matt
888-225-7173
Expenses Paid
< < < < < <
What a beautiful
day for Eric and
Megans Oyster
Wedding! Pool-
side cocktails, a
five course sit
down meal and
great drinks
and music!
bridezella.net
FOSTER PARENT(S)
NEEDED
IMMEDIATELY
for teens or sibling
groups.
Compensation,
training, and 24
hour on-call sup-
port provided.
Please call
FRIENDSHIP
HOUSE (570)
342-8305 x 2058.
Compensation up
to $1200.00 per
month per child.
GUARDIAN
ANGEL
Hardtimes uponyou?
Down on your luck?
Need help & dont
know where to turn?
We care and are
willing to help. Serious
problems only. Write
to: PO Box 3238, W.
Pittston, PA 18643
IF YOURE NOT
SELLING YOUR
JUNK VEHICLES
OR HEAVY
EQUIPMENT,
TRACTORS, TRAILERS,
SCHOOL BUSSES, DUMP
TRUCKS TO
HAPPY HAPPY TRAILS TRAILS
YOURE LOSING
MONEY
570-760-2035
570-542-2277
Free Pick up!
MONTY MONTY SA SAYS YS
This golf course is
tough. Gentle Ben
and John the
Intern talked to
Rory and Tiger
about the condi-
tions...Merion is a
monster. Agreed.
330 Child Care
DAYCARE
In my Kingston home.
Licensed. Accepting
Co-ordinated Childcare
570-283-0336
Experienced Mom
will watch your
children in my
home. Summer
care also avail-
able. Dont pay
day care rates for
the same quality
of care. Exeter
area. 262-2827
380 Travel
Black Lake, NY
Come relax & enjoy
great fishing &
tranquility at its finest.
Housekeeping
cottages on the water
with all the
amenities of home.
NEED A VACATION?
Call
Now!
(315) 375-8962
daveroll@black
lakemarine.com
www.blacklake4fish.com
BROADWAY
SHOW
BUS TRIPS
WICKED
Wed. Aug. 7
$180
(Orchestra Seats)
MOTOWN ON
BROADWAY
Wed. Aug 7th
$159
Orchestra Seats
JERSEY BOYS
Wed. Aug. 7th
$129
(Front Mezz)
Pick Ups from
Pittston &
Wilkes-Barre
Park & Rides
CALL ROSEANN
@ 655-4247
To Reserve
Your Seats
CAMEO
HOUSE
BUS TOURS
Sun., July 21
NYC
N.Y. Botanical
Garden
Wild Medicine
Healing Plants From
Around The World.
Dinner in the Real
Little Italy - Arthur
Ave. Bronx
Sat., August 24
Note new date
WILMINGTON
DELAWARE
Neumors Mansion
& Brunch
2013 SCHEDULE
AVAILABLE
PLEASE CALL
570-655-3420
or email
anne.cameo@
verizon.net
OR GO TO
www.
cameohouse
bustours.com
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
FUN GETAWAYS!
Yankees/
Tampa Bay 6/23
OLD TIMERS DAY
Phillies vs. Mets
6/23
Knoebels Park
6/26
9/11 Memorial
with free time in
NYC - 7/6
Kutztown
Folk Festival 7/6
Boston/Salem &
Gloucester
4 Day - 7/11-14
Taylor Swift
Concert - 7/19
1-800-432-8069
NYC
JUNE SPECIAL
$25.
GO SEE A
BROADWAY
PLAY AT THE
RIGHT PRICE!!
JUNE 26 WED
Chicago $99
Cinderella $109
JUNE 29 SAT.
Jersey Boys
$139
Matilda $155
WATKINS GLEN
WINE FESTIVAL
7/13 $63
ATLANTIC CITY
7/5 & 7/7 $36.
Park/Ride
R309/R315
RAINBOW
TOURS
570-489-4761
380 Travel
NEW SHIPS
ON SALE
at TENENBAUMS
TRAVEL now!
NCLs Breakaway
from only $734.00
per person
Royal
Caribbeans
Quantum of the
Seas from only
$1074.00
per person
Departs New York
to the Bahamas
Rates are per per-
son, based on two
sharing one cabin,
subject to availabili-
ty and change.
Call 570.288.8747
for more info!
406 ATVs/Dune
Buggies
HAWK UTILITY ATV
NEW!! Full size
adult ATV. Strong 4
stroke motor. CVT
fully automatic
transmission with
reverse. Electric
start. Front & rear
luggage racks.
Long travel suspen-
sion. Disc brakes.
Dual stage head
lights. Perfect for
hunters & trail rid-
ers alike.$1,995
takes it away.
570-817-2952
TOMAHAWK
ATV, 110 CC. Brand
New Tomahawk
Kids Quad. Only
$695 takes it away!
570-817-2952
Wilkes-Barre
Boat? Car? Truck?
Motorcycle? Air-
plane? Whatever it
is, sell it with a
Classified ad.
570-829-7130
409 Autos under
$5000
CHEVROLET `03
MALIBU
82,000 miles, V6,
cold AC, 26 MPG,
premium wheels,
CD player, shines
and runs like new.
Garage kept, very
well maintained.
Same owner,
last 10 years.
$4,975 Firm.
570-592-0997
CHEVROLET 97
LUMINA
V-6, automatic nice,
only 56,000 miles.
MUST SELL! $2,750.
OBO (570) 760-0511
LINCOLN 99
CONTINENTAL
107,000 miles. Fully
loaded, sunroof,
alpine radio system
6 disc CD. $1,500
OBO, Call:
David - 735-7412
PONTIAC `87 GRAND
PRIX
79,800 original
miles, needs some
work. $800.
(570) 288-0728
PONTIAC `99
BONNEVILLE
Automatic, 4 door,
Spacious, with CD
player. New anti-
lock brakes & new
starter. Great
engine, runs fine.
Will need new tires
& minor repair.
$1,500 firm.
(570)852-7746
SATURN `99 SL
Engine rebuilt, new
radiator & hoses.
4 new tires.
Inspected through
11/13. $1,500
570-472-1149
TOYOTA `00 RAV4
LIMITED
New engine, 154K,
new a/c and com-
pressor. Good
Condition. Asking
$3,400
(570) 824-9057
412 Autos for Sale
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
HYUNDAI 03
SANTA FE, 4X4
Sunroof.
SUPER NICE!
$4,995.
Call for details
570-696-4377
BUICK `97 LESABRE
Excellent running
condition, mainte-
nance free. $3,200.
570-287-0600
412 Autos for Sale
ACME AUTO SALES
343-1959
1009 Penn Ave
Scranton 18509
Across from Scranton Prep
GOOD CREDIT, BAD
CREDIT, NO CREDIT
Call Our Auto Credit
Hot Line to get
Pre-approved for a
Car Loan!
800-825-1609
www.acmecarsales.net
11 AUDI S5 CONV.
Sprint blue, black
/ brown leather
int., navigation,
7 spd auto turbo,
AWD
08 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX
blue, auto, V6
07 BUICK LUCERNE
CXL, silver, grey
leather
06 VW JETTA GLS
blue, auto, sunroof
06 DODGE STRATUS SXT
black, auto 4 cyl
06 HYUNDAI SONATA
gls grey, auto,
4 cyl
06 AUDI A8L
grey, blue leather,
navigation AWD
05 INFINITI GX35
AWD grey, black,
leather, sunroof
05 CHEVY MONTE
CARLO LT
white V6
05 AUDI A6
All Road. Green
2 tone, leather
AWD
05 VW JETTA GLS
grey, black leather,
sunroof, alloys
03 SUZUKI AERO
Silver, 5 speed
02 VW BEETLE GLS
lime green 5 speed,
4 cylinder
00 PLYMOUTH HIGHLINE
purple, auto,
4 cyl.
73 PORSCHE 914
green & black, 5
spd, 62k miles.
SUVS, VANS,
TRUCKS, 4 X4s
08 JEEP PATRIOT
SPORT black, 4
cyl. 5 speed 4x4
08 FORD EDGE SE
white V6 AWD
07 GMC YUKON 4X4
DENALI black, 3rd
seat, Navigation
07 DODGE CARAVAN
SXT green,
4 door, 7 pass
mini van
06 MERCURY MARINER
silver, V6, AWD
06 JEEP COMMANDER
LTD blue, grey, 3rd
seat, leather 4x4
06 PONTIAC TURRANT
red, grey leather
AWD
06 CHEVY EQUINOX LT
grey, V6, AWD
06 HONDA PILOT EX
silver, 3rd seat,
4x4
06 CHEVY 1500
SILVERADO REG CAB
truck red, 4x4
06 NISSAN XTERRA
black, V6, 4x4
06 JEEP GRAND
CHEROKEE LAREDO,
gold, V6 4x4
06 DODGE RAM 1500
QUAD CAB, Black,
V8, 4x4 truck
06 CHEVY TRAILBLAZER
LS, SILVER, 4X4
05 DODGE DURANGO
SXT blue, 3rd seat
4x4
05 CHEVY TRAILBLAZER
white, V6, 4x4
05 CHEVY COLORADO
CLUB CAB grey
4x4 truck
05 CHRYSLER TOWN &
COUNTRY TOURING,
blue, 7 passenger
mini van
05 FORD ESCAPE XLT
Red, V6 4x4
05 TOYOTA SIENNA LE
gold, 7 passenger
mini van
05 HYUNDAI TUSCON LX
green auto, AWD
04 JEEP GRAND
CHEROKEE LAREDO
silver V6, 4x4
04 CHEVY AVALANCHE
LT green, grey
leather, 4 door
4x4 truck
03 DODGE RAM 1500
SLT QUAD CAB
white & grey,
4x4 truck
03 FORD EXPEDITION
XLT silver, 3rd
seat, 4x4
03 NISSAN PATHFINDER
black V6 4x4
03 MITSUBISHI
OUTLANDER XLS
red, V6, 4x4
02 MERCURY
MOUNTAINEER PREMIER
black, tan leather
3rd row seat awd
02 TOYOTA TUNDRA
SR5 XCAB TRUCK
white 4x4
01 FORD ESCAPE XLT
red, 4 door, 4x4
01 DODGE DAKOTA
CLUB CAB SPORT
blue, V6, 4x4
truck
99 FORD F150 SUPER
CAB, silver 4x4
truck
CADILLAC 04 DEVILLE
Blue/tan cloth,
moon roof, heated
seats. 104k miles.
Extended Warranty.
$7,450
444 Market St.
Kingston
MAFFEI
Auto Sales
570-288-6227
CHEVROLET `08 AVEO
4 door, hatchback,
Alpine stereo, low
mileage. A good
college car. A must
see! $6,000
570-218-2006
Say it HERE
in the Classifieds!
570-829-7130
CHEVROLET `86
CORVETTE
Automatic, black
with red interior.
66,350 miles, ZR
tires. All options.
$7,650. Call after 3
p.m. 570-868-3866
FORD`08 MUSTANG,
COUP,4,250 miles,
V8, 5 speed manual
Transmission,Vapor
Charcoal metallic
exterior, dark Char-
coal interior. Rear
deck spoiler, hood
air scoop. AM/FM
stereo, 6 CD, in
dash MP3,$20,000.
570-256-3983
412 Autos for Sale
LEOS AUTO SALES
93 Butler Street
Wilkes-Barre, PA
570-825-8253
Ford 98
Explorer XLT
4 door, 6 cyl., auto,
sun roof, leather,
4WD. Good
condition
$1,950
Chevy 97 Blazer
4 door, 6 cyl., auto,
4WD, new tires.
Very good
condition.
$1,850
Current Inspection
On All Vehicles
DEALER
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
FORD 05 FREE
STYLE
3rd seat. AWD.
One Owner.
$4,995
Call for details
570-696-4377
VITOS
&
GINOS
Auto Sales
949 Wyoming
Ave, Forty Fort
288-8995
00 Toyota
Corolla
4 door, 4 cylin-
der, automatic.
Runs great.
$2,995
Grand Cherokee
V8. Runs great.
Power windows
& doors.
$2,495
96 F150 Pickup.
auto, runs good.
$1,995
96 Pontiac
Grand Prix.
White, air,
power windows
& brakes, 4
door, runs good,
106K. $2,395
01 Ford Taurus
SES
4 door, air, power
doors & win-
dows.
$2,995
99 Chevy S10
Blazer 4 door,
power windows,
doors & seats.
126,000 miles.
$2,995
03 Ford Wind-
star 4 door, all
power options.
96,000 miles.
$3,400
04 Nissan
Armada, 7 pass-
enger. 4wd.
Excellent condi-
tion. $10,900
09 Mercedes
GL450, 7 pass-
enger. Too many
options to list. 30K
miles. Garage
kept. Cream puff.
$42,500
FINANCING
AVAILABLE
Buying
Junk Cars
Used Cars
&Trucks
Highest Prices Paid
574 -1275
HONDA `05 CR-V
4x4, silver, moon-
roof, keyless entry,
new tires. One
owner, garage kept.
59,000 miles, auto-
matic. Show Room
Condition. $13,500
570-899-3874
HONDAS
ACCORD 12 LX
Grey/grey cloth,
9,445 miles.
Factory Warranty
$18,995
ACCORD 10 LX
Burgundy/tan cloth.
15k miles.
One owner
Factory Warranty
$16,495.
CIVIC 09 EX
Brown/tan cloth.
moon roof, 42k
miles. Warranty.
$13,900
444 Market St.
Kingston
MAFFEI
Auto Sales
570-288-6227
412 Autos for Sale
LINCOLN `98
TOWN CAR
SIGNATURE SERIES
One owner, 72,600
miles, excellent
condition. $3,600.
570-498-1804
WANTED!
ALL
JUNK
CARS!
CA$H
PAID
570-301-3602
MERCURY `04
GRAND MARQUIS GS
Excellent condition,
leather interior, all
power, well main-
tained, regularly
serviced. 25mpg
highway. Asking
$4,500.
(570)639-1390
NISSAN 07 MAXIMA SL
Grey/black leather,
moonroof, 4 new
tires, 74k miles.
Extended Warranty.
$13,495
444 Market St.
Kingston
MAFFEI
Auto Sales
570-288-6227
NISSAN 08 ROGUE
All Wheel Drive 4-
cylinder. Automatic
Power Windows &
Locks, Cruise Con-
trol, etc. MP3 com-
patible! Only 49k!
Garage kept. Must
see and drive!
$14,900. Call
570-696-9009
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
NISSAN 01 ALTIMA
GXE
4 cyl. 5 speed.
ECONOMY!
$2495.
570-696-4377
OLDSMOBILE `99
BRAVADA
New parts. Needs
some body work.
$3,400
(570)760-2791
TOYOTA 04 CELICA GT
112K miles. Blue,
5 speed. Air,
power
windows/locks,
CD/cassette, Key-
less entry, sun-
roof, new battery.
Car drives and
has current PA
inspection. Slight
rust on corner of
passenger door.
Clutch slips on
hard acceleration.
This is why its
thousands less
than Blue Book
value. $6,500
OBO. Make an
offer! Call
570-592-1629
GET THE WORD OUT
with a Classified Ad.
570-829-7130
VOLKSWAGEN `04
TOUAREG
One owner, super
clean, V8, All
options, 102,000
miles. $9,500, OBO
570-814-3666
VOLKSWAGENS
JETTA 05 GL
Gray, black cloth,
80k, warranty,
$7,995
JETTA 04 GLS
1.8T, silver/black
leather, moon roof,
84k, warranty.
$7,695
JETTA 03 GLS
1.8T, red/black
cloth, moon roof,
108k, warranty.
$6,755
444 Market St.
Kingston
MAFFEI
Auto Sales
570-288-6227
415 Autos-Antique
& Classic
JEEP WILLYS
1949 CJ3
Flat head, new
starter, alternator,
battery, radiator,
muffler, tail pipe,
wires, seats, newer
end, rear spring,
paint. Looks good,
runs really good!
$7,500
(570) 735-3479
MAZDA `88 RX-7
CONVERTIBLE
1 owner, garage
kept, 65k original
miles, black with
grey leather interior,
all original & never
seen snow. $6,995.
Call 570-237-5119
PONTIAC `78
TRANS AM
Red on white, T-
Tops, 400/500,
AOD, 3:42 Posi,
Nitrous, Classic,
Modified Stock,
show and go. 5k on
drivetrain. Excellent
condition, in and
out, New paint.
570-443-7757
439 Motorcycles
HARLEY
DAVIDSON 08
Screaming Eagle
Springer, 110
Crystal, copper and
black onyx. Vance
and Hines, fuel pac,
3 chrome fore-
ward controls.
Exterior chrome
custom seat, dark
brown, chrome bolt
covers, sissy bar,
LED lights. Only
2,400 miles.
Garage kept with
cover. $22,500
Joe, 570-332-1246
A Must See.
Harley Springer
Softail 01
8,900 miles, Vance
& Hines Pipes, soft
bags, luggage rack,
wind shield, all
chrome. Excellent
condition. $12,900
570-751-3036
Line up a place to live
in classified!
SCOOTER 12
All ready to ride,
electric start, auto-
matic transmission,
disk brakes, rear
luggage trunk,
under seat storage,
around 100 mpg,
fully street legal, all
ready to go! only
$1,595. Call
570-817-2952
SUZUKI 01 VS 800
GL INTRUDER
Garage kept, no
rust, lots of
chrome, black with
teal green flake.
Includes storage
jack & 2 helmets.
$3600
570-410-1026
442 RVs & Campers
LAYTON 89
FIFTH WHEEL
28, needs work.
Great for hunter.
$1,200.
570-441-2494
451 Trucks/
SUVs/Vans
DODGE `97 B3500
Ram, Van, full-size
V8, Automatic.
Good Condition.
93,000 miles. Must
Sell! $3,800 OBO.
(570)760-0511
451 Trucks/
SUVs/Vans
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
CHEVY 05
TRAILBLAZER
4x4. Sunroof.
Extra Clean!
$5,995.
570-696-4377
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
DODGE 06 DAKOTA
CLUB CAB
6 speed. EXTRA
SHARP! $5495.
570-696-4377
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
ENVOY GMC 03
4X4, 3rd row
Seat
SHARP SUV!
$5,995.
570-696-4377
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
FORD 00
WINDSTAR SEL
Leather,
LIKE NEW!
$3,495.
570-696-4377
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
FORD 02 TAURUS
Auto, V6. NICE,
NICE CAR!
$3,495.
Call for details
570-696-4377
Selling your
Camper?
Place an ad and
find a new owner.
570-829-7130
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
FORD 04 ESCAPE
4x4 1 Owner.
Extra Sharp SUV!
$5495
570-696-4377
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
GMC 04 SIERRA 4X4
Ladder rack, tool
box, ONE OWNER.
Bargain Price!
$5,495
570-696-4377
HONDA `05
ELEMENT LX
4 wd, auto, 58k
miles, excellent
condition. $11,000
(570)472-9091
451 Trucks/
SUVs/Vans
HONDA 09 PILOT 4X4 EX
V6, XM satellite
radio, climate con-
trol, seating for 8,
trailer towing pack-
age, roof rails, fog
lights, black with
gray interior, 5
speed automatic,
6CD premium
sound, showroom
condition & kept in
heated garage,
48,000 miles, bal-
ance of factory war-
ranty until 3/10/14.
Asking $19,900.
570-779-5175
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
JEEP 06
COMMANDER
(LIMITED)
WHITE
(PRICED TO SELL)
MANY EXTRAS,
LUGGAGE RACK,
TOWING
PACKAGE.
CUSTOM
FITTED RUBBER
MATS. GREAT
CONDITION
$11,800. CALL:
570-709-7210
451 Trucks/
SUVs/Vans
LEXUS 05 RX330
AWD, grey/black
leather.
Excellent condition,
90k miles.
$15,995
444 Market St.
Kingston
MAFFEI
Auto Sales
570-288-6227
1518 8th Street
Carverton, PA
Near Francis
Slocum St. Park
MAZDA 02 TRIBUTE
Auto, V6. Sharp
Clean SUV!
$4,495.
Call for details
570-696-4377
457 Wanted to Buy
Auto
All
Junk
Cars &
Trucks
Wanted
Highest
Prices
Paid In
CA$H
FREE
PICKUP
570-574-1275
Sell your own home!
Place an ad HERE
570-829-7130
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 2013 PAGE 3D
K E N P OL L OCK N IS S A N
229 M UN DY S TRE E T
W IL K E S -BA RRE , P A .
1-8 66-70 4-0 672 K E N P OL L OCK
w w w.ke n polloc kn is s a n .c om
N IS S A N
Th e #1 N is s a n De a le rin N .E. PA **
*Ta x a nd Ta g a d d itio na l. Prio rSa les Ex c lu d ed . N o tR es po ns ib le fo rTypo gra phic a l Erro rs . All reb a tes & inc entives a pplied . **0 % APR in lieu o f reb a tes .
As k fo rd eta ils . **As perN is s a n M o nthly Sa les V o lu m e R epo rta s o f M a rc h 2 0 13 . All Pric es b a s ed o n im m ed ia te d elivery IN STO CK V EHICLE O N LY. All o ffers ex pire 6 /3 0 /13 .

DE CIS ION S DE CIS ION S


Y
O
U
R
C
H
O
I
C
E
STK# N23536
M O DEL#13113
V IN# 258003
M SRP $23,925
$
249
*
P ER M O.
P lu s Ta x.
L EAS E FO R
20
A VA ILA B LE
A T TH IS P R IC E!
*$249 Perm o n th p lu s ta x, 36 m o n th lea s e; 12,000 m iles p eryea r; Res id u a l= $14355; M u s tb e a p p ro ved thru
NM AC @ T ier1; 0 Ca s h Do w n o rT ra d e E q u ity (+) p lu s regis tra tio n fees ; T o ta l d u e @ d elivery= 0.
$600 Nis s a n E q u ip m en tAllo w a n ce In clu d ed .
20 13 N EW N IS S AN ALTIM A 2.5S
S ED AN
SA VE
$4,000
O FF M SR P O N A LL NISSA N
A LTIM A 2.5 O R 3.5S,SVS
O R SLS IN STO C K O NLY
$
19,925
B U Y FO R
P L U S
O R
20 13 N EW N IS S AN R O G U E S
AW D
+ T/T
W / $50 0 N IS S AN R EB ATE, $50 0 N M AC CAP TIVE & $60 0 EQ U IP M EN T AL L O W AN CE (S EL ECT M O D EL S O N LY)
4 C yl,C V T,A /C ,P W ,
P D L,C ruise,Tilt,Zero
G ravity S eating,Floor
M ats & M uch M ore!
STK# N22710
M O DEL#22213
V IN# 602320
M SRP $25,150
20
A VA ILA B LE
A T TH IS P R IC E!
$
249
*
P ER M O.
L EAS E FO R
$
20 ,150
B U Y FO R
P L U S
O R
+ T/T
W / $10 0 0 N IS S AN R EB ATE, $50 0 N M AC CAP TIVE CAS H & $230 0 EQ U IP M EN T AL L O W AN CE (S EL ECT M O D EL S O N LY)
4 C yl,C V T,A /C ,P W ,
P D L,C ruise,Tilt,
B luetooth,Floor M ats
& M uch M ore!
*$249 Perm o n th p lu s ta x, 39 m o n th lea s e; 12,000 m iles p eryea r; Res id u a l= $13581; M u s tb e a p p ro ved thru
NM AC @ T ier1; 0 Ca s h Do w n o rT ra d e E q u ity (+) p lu s regis tra tio n fees ; T o ta l d u e @ d elivery= 0.
$1075 Nis s a n L ea s e Ca s h, $2300 Nis s a n E q u ip m en tAllo w a n ce (S electM o d els On ly) In clu d ed .
SA VE
$5,000
O FF M SR P O N EVER Y NISSA N
R O G U E IN STO C K O NLY !
STK# N23653
M O DEL#12013
V IN# 717632
M SRP $18,440
$
229
*
P ER M O.
P lu s Ta x.
L EAS E
FO R
2
A VA ILA B LE
A T TH IS P R IC E!
*$229 Perm o n th p lu s ta x, 36 m o n th lea s e; 12,000 m iles p eryea r; Res id u a l= $10,695.20; M u s tb e a p p ro ved
thru NM AC @ T ier1; 0 Ca s h Do w n o rT ra d e E q u ity (+) p lu s regis tra tio n fees ; T o ta l d u e @ d elivery= 0.
$750 Nis s a n E q u ip m en tAllo w a n ce (S electM o d els On ly) In clu d ed .
20 13 N IS S AN S EN TR A S S ED AN
$
16,440
B U Y FO R
P L U S
O R
+ T/T
W / $50 0 N IS S AN R EB ATE & $750 EQ U IP M EN T AL L O W AN CE (S EL ECT M O D EL S O N LY)
4 C yl,C V T,A /C ,P W ,P D L,
C ruise,Tilt,Floor M ats,
S plash G uards & M uch M ore!
STK# N23047
M O DEL#20213
V IN# 211325
M SRP $23,050
$
249
*
P ER M O.
P lu s Ta x.
L EAS E
FO R
8
A VA ILA B LE
A T TH IS P R IC E!
*$249 Perm o n th p lu s ta x, 39 m o n th lea s e; 12,000 m iles p eryea r; Res id u a l= $13,369; M u s tb e a p p ro ved
thru NM AC @ T ier1; 0 Ca s h Do w n o rT ra d e E q u ity (+) p lu s regis tra tio n fees ; T o ta l d u e @ d elivery= 0.
$1000 Nis s a n E q u ip m en tAllo w a n ce (S electM o d els On ly) In clu d ed .
20 13 N IS S AN JU K E S AW D
$
19,999
B U Y FO R
P L U S
O R
+ T/T
W / $50 0 N M AC CAP TIVE CAS H & $10 0 0 EQ U IP M EN T AL L O W AN CE (S EL ECT M O D EL S O N LY)
4 C yl,Turbo,A W D ,A lloys,
A M /FM /C D ,P W ,P D L,
C ruise,Tilt & M uch M ore!
STK# N23095
M O DEL#16113
V IN# 817180
M SRP $34,440
$
329
*
P ER M O.
P lu s Ta x.
L EAS E
FO R
3
A VA ILA B LE
A T TH IS P R IC E!
*$329 Perm o n th p lu s ta x, 39 m o n th lea s e; 12,000 m iles p eryea r; Res id u a l= $19,630.80; M u s tb e a p p ro ved
thru NM AC @ T ier1; 0 Ca s h Do w n o rT ra d e E q u ity (+) p lu s regis tra tio n fees ; T o ta l d u e @ d elivery= 0.
$1000 Nis s a n L ea s e Reb a te & $2350 Nis s a n E q u ip m en tAllo w a n ce (S electM o d els On ly) In clu d ed .
20 13 N IS S AN M AX IM A 3.5S
S ED AN
$
27,440
B U Y FO R
P L U S
O R
+ T/T
W / $150 0 N IS S AN R EB ATE
V -6,C V T,A /C ,S unroof,
P ow er S eat,P W ,P D L,C ruise,
Tilt,A lloys & M uch M ore!
STK# N23462
M O DEL#25613
V IN# 659036
M SRP $45,220
$
479
*
P ER M O.
P lu s Ta x.
L EAS E
FO R
10
A VA ILA B LE
A T TH IS P R IC E!
*$479 Perm o n th p lu s ta x, 36 m o n th lea s e; 12,000 m iles p eryea r; Res id u a l= $24,418.80; M u s tb e a p p ro ved thru
NM AC @ T ier1; $2294.50 Ca s h Do w n o rT ra d e E q u ity (+) p lu s regis tra tio n fees ; T o ta l d u e @ d elivery= $2499.
20 13 N IS S AN P ATH FIN D ER P L ATIN U M
4X 4
$
39,999
B U Y FO R
P L U S
O R
+ T/T
W / $10 0 0 N IS S AN R EB ATE & $50 0 N M AC CAP TIVE CAS H
V -6,C V T,D ualP anelR oof,D ual
H eadrest D V D s,Touch S creen
N avi,H eated S eats,B ose S ound,
A llP ow er,& M uch,M uch M ore!
STK# N21314
M O DEL#23812
V IN# 204724
M SRP $45,060
$
425
*
P ER M O.
P lu s Ta x.
L EAS E
FO R
O NLY 2 O TH ER 2012
NISSA N M U R A NO S
A VA ILA B LE!
*$425 Perm o n th p lu s ta x, 39 m o n th lea s e; 12,000 m iles p eryea r; Res id u a l= $22,530; M u s tb e a p p ro ved
thru NM AC @ T ier1; 0 Ca s h Do w n o rT ra d e E q u ity (+) p lu s regis tra tio n fees ; T o ta l d u e @ d elivery= 0.
$1500 Nis s a n L ea s e Reb a te & $1000 Cu s to m erBo n u s Ca s h In clu d ed .
20 12 N IS S AN M U R AN O L E AW D
SA VE O VER
$10,000
O FF M SR P O N
A FU LLY EQ U IP P ED
2012 NISSA N M U R A NO LE!
$
34,999
B U Y FO R
P L U S
O R
+ T/T
W / $30 0 0 N IS S AN R EB ATE, $50 0 N M AC CAP TIVE & $10 0 0 CU S TO M ER B O N U S CAS H
V 6,C V T,P latinum Edition,D ualH eadrest
D V D s,H eated Front & R ear S eats,N avigation
Touch S creen,D ualM oonroof,20 In.A lloy
W heels,P w r.Liftgate,& M uch,M uch M ore
STK# N21338
M O DEL#36412
V IN# 308223
M SRP $36,005
*S a le Price p lu s ta x a n d ta gs .
20 12 N IS S AN TITAN S V
CR EW CAB 4X 4
SA VE
$9,000
O N TH IS LA ST
R EM A INING NISSA N
TITA N SV C R EW C A B !
$
26,999
B U Y
FO R + T/T
W / $350 0 N IS S AN R EB ATE & $50 0 N M AC CAP TIVE CAS H
V 8,A uto,A /C ,P W ,
P D L,C ruise,Tilt,
A lloys,S plash G uards
& Floor M ats
SA VE
$3,000
O N A LL NEW
2013 NISSA N JU KES
IN STO C K O NLY !
SA VE
$7,000
O R M O R E O N A LL NEW
2013 NISSA N M A XIM A S
IN STO C K O NLY !
SA VE $8500 - STK#N22441
SA VE $9200 - STK#N22620
O FF M SR P !!
3 O TH ER 2012 NISSA N
TITA NS A VA ILA B LE
SA VE $8000 - STK#N22264
SA VE $9000 - STK#N22541
SA VE 10,000 - STK#N23060
O FF M SR P
SA VE
$5,000
O FF M SR P O N A LL
2013 NISSA N P LA TINU M
P A TH FINDER S
SA VE
$2,000
O N A LL NEW
2013 NISSA N SENTR A S
IN STO C K O NLY !
PAGE 4D SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 2013 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale
8
2
2
6
8
7
of Scranton - NEPA
www.rjburnecadillac.com
2007 STS by Cadillac
2009 DTS Luxury by Cadillac
Silver/Leather, Sunroof,
Navigation, Chrome Wheels,
Only 44,802 Miles, 1-Owner
$18,997
Black/Black Leather Sunroof, Chrome Wheels
XM, Onstar, Memory Settings Heated and
Cooled Seats, Only 29,538 Miles
$25,999
Radiant Silver/Titanium Leather,
Heated & Cooled Seats, XM,
OnStar, Sensors
2009 DTS Luxury by Cadillac
$18,999
Gray/Leather, Chrome Wheels, Sunroof
XM, Onstar, Heated Cooled Seats
SPECIAL OF THE WEEK
2010 DTS Luxury by Cadillac
$18,990
Thunder Gray/Leather Sunroof, XM,
Onstar Heated Seats Memory Settings
All Wheel Drive, Only 19203 Miles
2010 CTSAWD Luxury by Cadillac
$26,990
2 to choose From
White Diamond/Cashmere Sunroof, Heated
& Memory Settings, All Wheel Drive, XM,
Onstar, Only 22,087 Miles in the word
2009 CTS Luxury AWD
$26,999
By Cadillac, Black/Black Navigation,
Sunroof Heated & Cooled Seats XM, Onstar,
Memory Settings Only 29,991 miles!
2010 DTS Premium by Cadillac
$28,990
Platinum/ Leather, Ultra View Sunroof,
Navigation, Heated Seats, Memory
Settings, All Wheel Drive, XM, OnStar
2010 SRX Luxury AWD by Cadillac
$29,990
Vanilla Latte/Shale Leather,
AWD, XM, OnStar, Memory &
Heated Seats, Only 19,455 miles
2011 STSAWD by Cadillac
$31,991
Black/Black Leather 22
Chrome Wheels, Navigation,
XM, Onstar, Sunroof
2012 Escalade AWD by Cadillac
$59,992
2009 DTS Luxury By Cadillalc
DK Blue/ Leather Sunroof -
Chromes XM, Onstar, Heated
Seats Memory Settings
$21,999
2011 CTSAWD
6 to choose From
Leather, XM, Onstar,
Premium Car 5Yrs/50,000 mir
$25,991
R.J. BURNE
1205-1209 Wyoming Avenue, Scranton
(570) 342-0107 1-888-880-6537
www.rjburnecadillac.com
Mon-Thurs 9-8 Fri 9-5 Sat 9-4
*TAX & TAGS EXTRA NC + Non-Certied
1205 Wyoming Ave. RJ Burne Cadillac
From Wilkes-Barre to Scranton
Expressway 8 Blocks on
Wyoming Avenue
E
X
P
W
A
Y
WYOMING AVE.
8
1
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 2013 PAGE 5D
PLATINUM CERTIFIED:
3Year/ 100,000 Mile Warranty
125-Point Inspection
Full Service Dealership
Body Shop Parts
Accessories Service Sales
339 HIGHWAY 315
PITTSTON, PA
1-800-223-1111
CLOSE TO
EVERYWHERE
Hours:
M-F 9-8pm
Sat 9-5pm
www.KenPollockCertified.com
*All Prices Plus Tax, Tags, & Fees. Art Work For Illustration Purposes Only. Dealer Not Responsible For Typographical Errors. 3 Year / 100,000 Mile Limited Powertrain Warranty On 2008 Models And Newer With Less Than 75,000 Miles.
90 Day / 3,000 Mile Limited Powertrain Warranty On 2004 Models And Newer With Less Than 100,000 Miles. **2007 Models 72 Months @ 4.69%; 2008 Models 72 Months @ 3.94%; 2009 Models 72 Months @ 3.14%;
2010/2011 Models 72 Months @ 2.89%; 2012/2013 Models 72 Months @ 2.64%. All Rates Based On Approved Tier 1 Credit. All Payments Includes Tax, Tags, And Fees And $2,000 Cash Down Or Trade. Sale Ends 6/21/13.
339 HIGHWAY 315, PITTSTON, PA 1-800-223-1111
KEN POLLOCK
PLATINUM CERTIFIED
P
RE-OW
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O
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Stk# P15046A, Automatic, Power
Windows & Locks, Great On Gas
$
10,399
*
OR
$
142
PER
MO.**
2009 Toyota Corolla
LE Sedan
STK# T15140 Power Windows & Locks, Automatic, A/C, CD
$
10,999
*
OR
$
153
PER
MO.**
2008 Dodge Avenger
Sedan
2012 Toyota
Corolla Sedan
Stk# P15096, LE Package,
Automatic, PW, PL, 1-Owner
$
14,499
*
OR $
199
PER
MO.**
2012 Dodge Avenger
SXT Sedan
Stk# P15094, Chrome Wheels,
Automatic, PW, PL, 1-Owner
$
14,799
*
OR $
205
PER
MO.**
2012 Toyota Yaris
Sedan
Stk# P15056, Power Windows &
Locks, Automatic, A/C
$
12,799
*
OR $
174
PER
MO.**
2012 Chevrolet
Impala Sedan
Stk# P15117, Bucket Seats,
Keyless Entry, 1-Owner
$
14,499
*
OR $
199
PER
MO.**
2012 Chevrolet
Impala
Stk# P15117, LT Package, Alloys,
Power Seat, 1-Owner
$
14,899
*
OR $
209
PER
MO.**
Stk# V1070A, Leather,
Moonroof, V6, Alloys, Auto
$
14,999
*
OR $
215
PER
MO.**
2010 Toyota
Camry LE Sedan
Stk# P15124, Alloys, Power
Windows & Locks, Low Miles
$
14,999
*
OR $
213
PER
MO.**
2012 Nissan
Altima S Sedan
Stk# P15051, Power Windows
& Locks, CD, 1-Owner
$
15,299
*
OR $
215
PER
MO.**
2011 Chevrolet
HHR
Stk# P15045, LT Package,
Power Windows & Locks
$
12,999
*
OR $
179
PER
MO.**
2012 Volkswagen
Jetta Sedan
Stk# P15012, 1-Owner, Power
Windows & Locks, CD, Automatic
$
14,799
*
OR $
205
PER
MO.**
2012 Honda Civic
Sedan
Stk# P15119, LX Package, Automatic,
Power Windows & Locks, Cruise
$
15,899
*
OR $
226
PER
MO.**
2012 Nissan
Sentra S Sedan
Stk# P15011, Automatic, Power
Windows & Locks, CD, 1-Owner
$
13,499
*
OR $
187
PER
MO.**
2012 Chevrolet
Malibu Sedan
Stk# P15008, Sunroof, Automatic,
Alloys, Power Windows & Locks
$
14,799
*
OR $
205
PER
MO.**
2012 Hyundai
Sonata
Stk# P15033, Power Windows &
Locks, 1-Owner, Cruise, CD
$
15,699
*
OR $
219
PER
MO.**
P
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PLATINUM CERTIFIED HIGH LINE
2007 Volvo S80
Sedan
Stk# P150068, Heated Leather,
Rear Park Assist, Moonroof
$
16,499
*
OR $
249
PER
MO.**
2011 Lexus CT
200H Wagon
Stk# P14965, Hybrid! Leather,
Navigation, Sunroof
$
24,999
*
OR $
369
PER
MO.**
2012 Inniti G37X
AWD
Stk# P15109, Heated Leather, Back
Up Camera, Moonroof, 1-Owner
$
27,899
*
OR $
418
PER
MO.**
2010 Volvo S80
Sedan
Stk# P15104, Executive Package, V8,
Leather, Moonroof, All Wheel Drive
$
27,999
*
OR $
422
PER
MO.**
2010 Volvo XC90
AWD
Stk# V1029A, Dual Headrest DVDs,
Sunroof, Heated Leather, 1-Owner
$
28,999
*
OR $
439
PER
MO.**
2012 Mercedes
C300 4Matic Sedan
Stk# P15076, Sport Pkg,
Navigation, Power Seat, Low Miles
$
30,999
*
OR $
467
PER
MO.**
2011 Volvo XC90
AWD
Stk# P154067, Heated Leather,
Moonroof, 1-Owner, Power Seats
$
33,999
*
OR $
518
PER
MO.**
VALUE VEHICLE OUTLET
2004 Pontiac
Grand Prix
Stk# V1085A, Automatic, Power
Windows & Locks, Alloys
$
6,499
*
Stk# P14750B, Only 61K Miles,
Power Windows & Locks, Alloys
$
6,999
*
Stk# P15023A, Automatic, Power
Windows & Locks, Alloys
$
7,399
*
Stk# P15017, Automatic,
Power Windows & Locks, CD
$
8,499
*
Stk# P15022A,
Automatic, Alloys, PW, PL
$
8,999
*
Stk# V1031A, Moonroof, Leather,
Only 80K Miles
$
9,899
*
Stk# P15200, A/C, Power Windows
& Locks, Low Miles
$
9,999
*
Stk# P15073A, Platinum Pkg,
Leather, Alloys
$
9,999
*
2004 Chevy
Malibu Sedan
2006 Volvo S40
Sedan
2007 Nissan
Altima Sedan
2002 Ford
Mustang GT Coupe
2004 Volvo XC90
AWD SUV
2009 Chevy
Cobalt Coupe
2004 Nissan
Pathnder 4x4
2013 Kia Sportage
SUV AWD
Stk# P14978, Alloy Wheels,
Power Windows & Locks
$
19,999
*
OR $
291
PER
MO.**
2010 Ford Edge
SUV AWD
Power Windows & Locks,
Alloys, All Wheel Drive
$
20,499
*
OR $
299
PER
MO.**
2011 Nissan
Rogue SL AWD
Stk# P14996, Navigation, Leather,
Sunroof, Rear Camera
$
20,999
*
OR $
306
PER
MO.**
2013 Kia Sorento
SUV AWD
Stk# P14966, 3rd Row Seating,
Alloy Wheels, 1-Owner
$
21,799
*
OR $
319
PER
MO.**
2011 Honda CRV
SE AWD
Stk# P15103, Special Edition, Alloy
Wheels, Low Miles! All Wheel Drive
$
21,999
*
OR $
323
PER
MO.**
2012 Nissan
Pathnder SV 4x4
Stk# P15092, Rear View Camera,
3rd Row, Alloys, PW, PL
$
24,899
*
OR $
369
PER
MO.**
2013 Chevy Silverado
Crew Cab 4x4
Stk# P14985, LT Package, 5.3L V8,
Bedliner, Power Windows & Locks
$
25,999
*
OR $
387
PER
MO.**
2011 Nissan Titan
Crew Cab 4x4
Stk# P15083, Pro-4X Package,
Bluetooth, Alloys, Tow Pkg
$
28,799
*
OR $
435
PER
MO.**
2009 Honda Accord
EX-L Sedan
2012 Suzuki SX4
Sportback 5Dr
Stk# P14741, Sport Package,
Alloy Wheels, Automatic
$
15,999
*
OR $
225
PER
MO.**
2012 Kia Optima
Sedan
Stk# P15007, LX Package, Alloys,
Automatic, PW, PL, 1-Owner
$
16,499
*
OR $
233
PER
MO.**
2012 Suzuki
Kizashi AWD
Stk# S2288A, All Wheel Drive, CVT
Automatic, Only 4K Miles!
$
16,999
*
OR $
243
PER
MO.**
2010 Jeep Liberty
Limited 4x4
Stk# P14976, Heated Leather,
Alloys, Power Windows & Locks
$
16,799
*
OR $
242
PER
MO.**
2012 Jeep
Liberty Sport 4x4
Stk# P14927A, Chrome Package,
Automatic, PW, PL, CD
$
16,999
*
OR $
243
PER
MO.**
2011 Mitsubishi
Endeavors AWDs
Stk# P15052, Automatic, Power
Windows & Locks, 1-Owner
$
17,499
*
OR $
253
PER
MO.**
2008 Chevrolet
Equinox LTZ AWD
Stk# V1020A, Heated Leather,
Moonroof, Chrome Package, 1-Owner
$
17,999
*
OR $
269
PER
MO.**
2012 Dodge
Grand Caravan
Stk# P15095, SXT Package, Alloys,
1-Owner, Bucket Seats
$
18,499
*
OR $
271
PER
MO.**
PAGE 6D SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 2013 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
VALLEYCHEVROLET.COM
VALLEY
CHEVROLET
821.2772 1.800.444.7121
valleychevrolet.com
601 Kidder Street, Wilkes-Barre, PA
YOU CAN FIND US
ON FACEBOOK &
TWITTER!

Scan From
Mobile Device
For More Specials
We Accept
ALL Trades!
Cars, Trucks, ATVs, Campers,
Boats, Motorcycles...
You
Bring It...
WELL
TRADE IT!
* All prices plus tax & tags. All lease payments are plus tax & tags. Prices & lease payments include all applicable rebates; Competitive Lease Ofer (if applicable); Business Choice Rebate (if applicable); All Star Edition incentive (if applicable);
Truck Loyalty Bonus Cash (if applicable);Trade-in Bonus Cash (if applicable); Competitive Lease Private Ofer (if applicable); CRUZE - Lease for $139 per mo. plus tax for 36 mos., 12K miles per year, $2,559 at lease signing to well qualifed
buyers; any applicable lease incentives have been applied. EQUINOX - Lease for $189 per mo. plus tax for 36 mos., 12K miles per year, $3,119 at lease signing to well qualifed buyers; any applicable lease incentives have been applied. MALIBU
- Lease for $159 per mo. plus tax for 36 mos., 12K miles per year, $3,189 due at lease signing to well qualifed buyers; any applicable lease incentives have been applied. SILVERADO - Lease for $299 per mo. plus tax for 39 mos., 12K miles per
year, $2999 (cash or trade) due at lease signing to well qualifed buyers; any applicable lease incentives have been applied. CAMARO - Lease for $229 per mo. plus tax for 36 mos., 12K miles per year, $2,199 due at lease signing to well qualifed
buyers; any applicable lease incentives have been applied.TRAVERSE - Lease for $249 per mo. plus tax for 36 mos., 12K miles per year, $2,509 (cash or trade) due at lease signing to well qualifed buyers; any applicable lease incentives have
been applied. Not responsible for typographical errors. Pictures for illustration purposes only; See dealer for warranty details. Prices & payment ofers end 7/1/13.
Stk. #13631. 1.8 VVT DOHC 4Cyl., 5 Speed
Manual Trans., Stabilitrak, Air, PW, PDL, Onstar, XM
Satellite, Bluetooth, Tinted Glass, Remote Panic Alarm
$
14,499
*
Sale
Price
Starting
At
MSRP $14,995 MSRP $14,995
2013 CHEVY
SONIC LS
AUTOMATIC CRASH RESPONSE
EMERGENCY
NO MATTER WHAT HAPPENS ON THE ROAD, WE CAN HELP
SECURITY
ONSTAR FMV CAN HELP GET YOU BACK ON THE ROAD QUICKLY
NAVIGATION
GET DIRECTIONS AT THE TOUCH OF A BUTTON
CONNECTIONS
ONSTAR FMV OFFERS BUILT-IN WIRELESS CALLING SERVICE
BLUETOOTH

BLUETOOTH WIRELESS TECHNOLOGY


TO GUARANTEE OUR QUALITY, WE BACK IT
100,000-MILE/5-YEAR
POWERTRAIN WARRANTY
Whichever comes rst. See dealer for limited warranty details.
2013 CHEVY
SPARK LS
Stk. #13424, Ecotech 1.2L 4 Cyl., 4 Speed Auto.
Trans., Air, PW, Tinted Glass, Onstar w/ Turn-By-Turn
Navigation, Stabilitrak, Rear Spoiler, Rear Defroster
Stk. #14006, Silver Topaz Metallic, Ecotech 2.5L DOHC 6 Speed Automatic, PW,
PDL, Tinted Glass, Extended Range Remote Keyless Entry, Air Conditioning, 6-way
Power Driver Seat, OnStar w/Turn-by-Turn Navigation, Color Infortainment Display,
Stabilitrak, Cruise, XM & HD Radio, Bluetooth
ALL NEW 2014 CHEVY
IMPALA LS
2013 CHEVY
CRUZE LS
Stk. #13445, 1.8L 4 Cyl., 5 Speed Manual Transmission, Air
Conditioning, Tilt Steering, PW, PDL, Bluetooth for Phone,
OnStar w/ Turn-By-Turn Navigation, XM Satellite Radio,
Remote Keyless Entry, Stabilitrak, Premium Cloth Seating
MSRP $17,940
2013 CHEVY
CAMARO LS COUPE
Stk. #13020, 3.6L SIDI 6 Speed Manual Transmission, PW,
PDL, Air, Rear Spoiler, Limited Slip Dierential,
18 Heritage Steel Wheels, Onstar w/ Turn-By-Turn
Navigation, XM Satellite Radio, Bluetooth, AM/FM/CD
MSRP $24,245
2013 CHEVY
TRAVERSE LS FWD
#13407, 3.6L V6 6 Speed Auto., A/C, 2nd/3rd Row Split
Bench Seat, Rear Vision Camera, Onstar w/ turn-by-turn
navigation, XM Satellite, Color Touch AM/FM Radio w/
CD Player, Rear Spoiler, Heated Mirrors
MSRP $32,185
2013 CHEVY
EQUINOX LS FWD
Stk. #13730, 2.4L DOHC 4 Cyl., 6 Speed Automatic, A/C,
Onstar w/ Turn-By-Turn Navigation, Bluetooth for Phone,
AM/FM/CD, 17 Aluminum Wheels, PW, PDL, Cruise,
Remote Keyless Entry, XM Satellite Radio
$
189
*
PER MO.
FOR 36 MOS.
OR Lease
For Only
$
22,999
*
MSRP $25,015
Stk. #13584, ECOTEC 2.5L DOHC 6 Speed Automatic,
PW, PDL, Air, P. Mirrors, Tinted Glass, Stabilitrak, XM
Satellite Radio, Onstar w/ Turn-By-Turn Navigation,
Compass Display, 16 Aluminum Wheels, Tilt & Telescopic
Steering Column
MSRP $22,805
$
159
*
PER MO.
FOR 36 MOS.
OR Lease
For Only
$
19,899
*
2013 CHEVY
MALIBU LS
2013 CHEVY
SILVERADO
1500 EXT CAB 4X4
$
299
*
PER MO.
FOR 39 MOS.
OR Lease
For Only
$
26,999
*
Stk. #13213, Vortec 5.3L V8, 6 Speed Automatic, Locking Rear Dierential,
Trailering Pkg., Aluminum Wheels, Dual Zone A/C, Bluetooth, CD w/ USB
Port, PW, PDL, EZ-Lift Tailgate, Onstar, XM Satellite, Cruise & More
ALL STAR EDITION
MSRP $37,355
2013 CHEVY
SILVERADO
1500 CREW CAB 4X4
Stk. #13194, 5.3L V8 6 Speed Auto., A/C, XM Satellite
Radio, OnStar w/ Turn-by-Turn Navigation, Remote Start
Pkg., PW, PDL, Cruise, Power Heated Mirrors
$
29,999
*
Sale Price Starting At
$
13,499
*
Sale
Price
Starting
At
$
26,999
*
Sale
Price
Starting
At
$
139
*
PER MO.
FOR 36 MOS.
$$$
OR Lease
For Only
$
16,599
*
Sale Price
Starting At
$
229
*
PER MO.
FOR 36 MOS.
OR Lease
For Only
$
22,699
*
Sale Price
Starting At
$
249
*
PER MO.
FOR 36 MOS.
OR Lease
For Only
$
29,497
*
Sale Price
Starting At
Sale Price
Starting At
Sale Price
Starting At
Sale Price
Starting At
MSRP $37,390
0% APR
For 60 Mos.
Available
0% APR
For 60 Mos.
Available
0% APR
For 60 Mos.
Available
0% APR
For 60 Mos.
Available
NOW IN
STOCK!
ALL NEW
2014
CHEVY
SILVERADO
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 2013 PAGE 7D
506 Administrative/
Clerical
OFFICE CLERK
Multi-line auto deal-
ership has an imme-
diate opening avail-
able for an office
clerk. Duties
include data man-
agement, vehicle
sales processing,
and overall Dealer
Management Sys-
tem interaction.
Ideal candidate will
have office experi-
ence, a strong will-
ingness to learn,
and must be very
comfortable using
computers, espe-
cially Microsoft
Office. We provide
a fast-paced pleas-
ant work environ-
ment, extensive
training and sup-
port, and a strong
compensation/ben-
efit package. Send
your resume and
salary requirements
to Anne D. Bazil at:
WYOMING VALLEY
MOTORS
P.O. BOX 1308
KINGSTON, PA
18704
Fax: 570-718-6201
adbazil@wyoming
valleymotors.com
RECEPTIONIST
Full time position
for busy automo-
tive dealership.
Some Satur-
days required.
Must be able to
handle multi-line
phone system.
Must be neat,
outgoing and
very people
oriented.
Computer skills
a plus.
Benefits include:
Blue Cross/Blue
Shield Health
Coverage
Vacation * 401k
Retirement Plan
Send resume to:
Box 4415
c/o Times Leader
15 N. Main Street
Wilkes-Barre, PA
18711
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
SALES DEPARTMENT
ADMINISTRATOR
Highway equipment
& supply company
has an immediate
opening for a sales
department admin-
istrator at Drums,
Pa. This position will
provide direct
administrative sup-
port to manage-
ment in the field
sales group. The
administrator would
be responsible for a
wide variety of
administrative situa-
tions involving cleri-
cal and administra-
tive functions of the
sales department.
Full benefit package
is included in this
position. Please
send resume to:
Highway equipment
& supply company
PO Box 127
Drums, PA 18222
Or email to:
bobp@hwyequip.com
509 Building/
Construction/
Skilled Trades
CARPENTERS
3+ years
experience. Must
have valid drivers
license. Local, year
round work avail-
able. Apply at
197 Courtdale Ave.,
Courtdale or call
570-287-5313
522 Education/
Training
Hazleton Area
School District
CHEMISTRY TEACHER
Current chemistry
certification is
required. Acts 24
(82), 34, 114 &151
clearances, pre-
employment drug
test and physical
with TB test are
required prior to
employment. Please
send letter of inter-
est, application,
resume, certifica-
tion, clearances and
letters of recom-
mendation to: Dr.
Craig Butler, Assis-
tant Superintendent,
HASD Administra-
tion Building, 1515
West 23rd Street,
Hazle Township, PA
18202 no later than
June 27, 2013 by
3:00 pm.
HASD is an EOE.
522 Education/
Training
SECONDARY ENGLISH
TEACHER
(Full Time Position
beginning 2013-
2014 school year)
Grades 9 thru 12
MUSIC EDUCATION
TEACHER
(Half Time Position
beginning 2013-
2014 school year)
Grades 9 thru 12
Applicant must
possess a valid PA
Teaching Certificate
Deadline for
applications-
July 5, 2013
Please Send:
Cover Letter,
Resume, College
Transcripts, Act 34,
114, 151 Clearances,
Standard PA Teach-
ing Application
Mrs. Nancy Tkatch
Administrative
Director
West Side Career
& Technology
Center
75 Evans St
Kingston, PA 18704
E.O.E
Let the Community
Know!
Place your Classified
Ad TODAY!
570-829-7130
527 Food Services/
Hospitality
Healthcare
Services Group at
Kingston
Healthcare Center
is currently accept-
ing resumes for the
Food Service
Director Posi-
tion. A certified
dietary manager
credidation
preferred, but not
required. Email
resume to:
mike.turak@hcsgcorp.com
or fax to
800-858-2398
ROUNDSMAN/
COLD PREP
NO Nights or
Weekends
Temporary Position
Full time Mon-Fri
5:30am-2:00pm
Jack of all trades
position for corpo-
rate cafe. Experi-
ence required. We
offer a competitive
salary & benefits.
For consideration
call 570.820.1446
EOE-M/F/DV
533 Installation/
Maintenance/
Repair
LOOKING FOR
CAREER CHANGE?
WE PROVIDE INITIAL &
ONGOING TRAINING.
OUR TECHNICIANS
APPLY FERTILIZER, LIME
& WEED PREVENTATIVES
AS WELL AS INSECT
CONTROL & TURF AERA-
TION SERVICES FOR RES-
IDENTIAL & COMMER-
CIAL CUSTOMERS.
FULL TIME WORK
MONDAY-FRIDAY
8 AM 5 PM
MUST HAVE GOOD MATH
SKILLS, CLEAN DRIVING
RECORD & PASS PHYSI-
CAL & DRUG TEST.
APPLY ONLINE AT:
WWW.GRASSHOPPER
LAWNS.COM
OR STOP IN FOR
APPLICATION AT:
470 E. STATE STREET
LARKSVILLE, PA 18651
QUESTIONS? EMAIL
BRIAN PHILLIPS AT:
GRASSHOPPER.JOBS
@GMAIL.COM
LAWN CARE
TECHNICIAN
Office Max Office Max
Hazleton Hazleton
Distribution Center
Positions available
Distribution Lead
Specialist,
Powered Industrial
Truck Technician,
2nd Shift Mainte-
nance Mechanic
Interested Candi-
dates may apply at
www.OfficeMax.com
/careers
OfficeMax is an
Equal Opportunity
Employer and has
been named one of
2013's World's
Most Ethical
Companies by
Ethisphere Institute
538 Janitorial/
Cleaning
CUSTODIANS/
HOUSEKEEPERS
Wyoming Seminary
is seeking full-time
and part-time cus-
todians/housekeep-
ers. Please reply to:
Physical Plant Man-
ager, Wyoming
Seminary, 201 N.
Sprague Ave.,
Kingston, PA 18704.
No phone calls
please. EOE.
542 Logistics/
Transportation
DISPATCHER
Due to a retirement
we are in need of an
experienced truck-
load carrier dis-
patcher. Excellent
salary & benefits.
Apply in person
Calex
58 Pittston Ave.,
Pittston, Pa. or
email resume to:
hr@
calexlogistics.com
EOE
542 Logistics/
Transportation
DRIVER
Experienced
Limousines/Sedans.
Part-time. Days/
Nights/Weekends.
Knowledge of major
airports and NYC
recommended.
570-288-5466
Drivers:
BOLUS BOLUS
FREIGHT FREIGHT SYSTEMS SYSTEMS
CLASS A CDL
DRIVERS
Make up to
$1200 Weekly!
Immediate
openings for:
Day-Trip/Local
N.E. Regional
Over-The-Road
Monday to Friday
No Weekends
No Touch Freight
Friendly Dispatch
Flexible Schedule
More home time!!
Excellent
Mileage Pay
Plus:
Safety Bonus
Stop/Detain Pay
Accessorial $$$
Also
Part-Time Runs.
Weekend Runs.
Holidays, Vacation,
Health Packages,
401K,& much more!
Call at:
(570) 342-1903
1-800-444-1497
www.bolusfreight.com
HEAVY TRUCK DRIVER
Apply in person at
Solomon Container
Service
495 Stanton St.
Wilkes-Barre
570-829-2206
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
MECHANIC/TECH
Mechanical ability
and experience
with automotive
electronics. Apply:
197 Main Street
Luzerne,PA
Monday-Friday
8am-4:30pm
545 Marketing/
Product
RELATIONSHIP
MANAGER
A local not-for-profit
agency is seeking
an energetic and
outgoing profes-
sional with excellent
computer, written
and verbal skills to
join our develop-
ment team. Must
be able to build and
maintain effective
working relation-
ships with donors,
volunteers and
staff. Office and
relationship man-
agement skills, plus
2 years of develop-
ment/sales experi-
ence are required.
Bachelors degree
and data manage-
ment experience
preferred.
c/o Times Leader
Box 4420
15 N. Main Street
Wilkes-Barre, PA
18711
548 Medical/Health
Pennsylvania
MENTOR
is seeking
DIRECT SUPPORT
PROFESSIONALS
in Kingston, PA
area: The primary
responsibility is to
assist adults with
intellectual disabili-
ties in their homes.
Full time and Part
time positions
are available.
Applicants must be
available to work
overnights and
weekends. Appli-
cants must possess
a valid PA drivers
license and a high
school diploma
or equivalency.
Duties include:
Personal hygiene
& grooming
Household chores
and upkeep
Meal preparation
& Cooking
Administration of
Medication
Community Inte-
gration & Outings
Peer interactions &
socialization
Engaging individu-
als in activities to
increase skills and
independence
Working with
individuals on
their treatment
plan goals
Providing
transportation
for individuals
Please forward
resumes to
Randi Farr at
Randi.Farr@the
mentornetwork.com
RSAs,
Housekeeping,
Receptionist,
Activities Direc-
tor (requires
experience) &
activities aid
dietary aides.
Apply in Person
No Phone Calls
TIFFANY COURT
700 Northampton St
Kingston, PA
548 Medical/Health
FULL TIME
CUSTOMER RELATIONS
Kingston Office
We need a courte-
ous multitasking
professional who
will be conscien-
tious in registering
and helping
patients begin and
complete their visit.
If you consistently
strive to do high
quality work effi-
ciently in a fast
pace environment
while providing
friendly service,
we want you to
become part of our
team.
APPLY ONLINE:
www.icarespecialists.com
SUBMIT RESUME:
HR Dept.
703 Rutter Ave.
Kingston, PA 18704
Fax: 570.287.2434
551 Other
FOSTER FAMILIES
WANTED
who will open
their hearts and
homes to foster
children of all
ages. Compen-
sation, support &
training provided.
Call FCCY
800-747-3807.
EOE
STAFF NEEDED FOR 8
WEEK DAY CAMP
Lifeguards, Canoe-
ing, Kayacking, and
Archery Instructors
needed.
Call Rick Evans at
947-6766 for an
appointment
WELLNESS COACHES
WANTED
We are a 30 yr old
Health & Wellness
company expand-
ing in the area. We
are seeking highly
motivated, ener-
getic individuals to
join our team as
personal wellness
coaches. NO expe-
rience necessary!
Part time & Full
time positions
available. Please
sent your
information to:
mosisan@aol.com
554 Production/
Operations
PRODUCTION WORKER
Local manufactur-
ing company, seek-
ing persons to fill a
temporary position,
which may lead to a
permanent position.
Candidate must be
prepared to join
existing shift work-
ing teams. Although
not essential, previ-
ous manufacturing
experience is pre-
ferred. Pre-employ-
ment medical
exam/ drug screen-
ing required.
Send resume to:
The Times Leader
Box 4410
15 N. Main St.
Wilkes-Barre, PA
18711
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
557 Project/
Program
Management
WORKING
SUPERVISOR
AND MACHINE
OPERATORS
BAYARD PRINTING
GROUP
with three produc-
tion facilities, is a
rapidly expanding
printer who has
been in business
for over 50 years.
We have full time
career opportuni-
ties available at our
Plymouth facility.
We are looking for
a working supervi-
sor and machine
operators for our
bindery/finishing
department. Expe-
rience is preferred,
but we will train
highly motivated
individuals looking
for a career oppor-
tunity. We offer a
very competitive
compensation
package including
medical, dental,
vision, life, disability
insurances and a
401k plan.
For consideration
please e-mail
dmorehart@
bayardprinting.com
or send to
301 W. Main St.,
Plymouth,PA 18651
We are a drug free
work environment.
560 Quality
Assurance/Safety
QUALITY CONTROL
TECHNICIAN
Local manufactur-
ing company has an
opening for a tem-
porary position,
which may lead to a
permanent position,
for an experienced
Quality Control
Technician. Respon-
sibilities include
testing and record
keeping from raw
materials through
finished product to
guide production.
Shift work required.
Prior test lab expe-
rience preferred.
Knowledge of
Microsoft Office
is a plus.
Pre-employment
medical exam/drug
screening required.
Send Resume To:
The Times Leader
Box 4405
15 N. Main St.
Wilkes-Barre, PA
18711
566 Sales/Retail/
Business
Development
B2B SALES REP
Growing company
looking for B2B
Sales Rep. Looking
for a well spoken,
motivated and
dependable person
to join our team!
Mon-Fri 9am-5pm
Interested candi-
dates should call
570-408-9260
Starting pay $8
hour plus
commission
Gateway Ford
in Tunkhannock is
expanding and
we need a Sales
Consultant and
Experienced Ser-
vice Technician to
join our team.
We offer health
insurance, paid
vacation and ford
certified training.
Call 570-836-3135
Email
gtwford@epix.net
Ask for Paul
NOW HIRING:
AUTOMOTIVE
SALES
CONSULTANT
&
SERVICE
TECHNICIAN
600
FINANCIAL
610 Business
Opportunities
Existing Local
Coffee & Donut
Shop For Sale
Confidential
Inquiries. Call JP
@ 570-371-8613
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
JAN-PRO
COMMERCIAL
CLEANING OF
NORTHEASTERN PA
Concerned
about your
future?
BE YOUR OWN BOSS
Work Full or
Part time
Accounts
available
NOW
throughout
Luzerne &
Lackawanna,
Counties
We guarantee
$5,000. to
$200,000
in annual billing.
Investment
Required
Were ready
Are you?
contact JAN-
PRO for more
info and about
VetConnection
(Discount for
Vets)
5 7 0 - 8 2 4 - 5 7 7 4
Jan-Pro.com
WILKES-BARRE
531 Scott St.
After 38 years the
owner is retiring!
Turn key night
club/bar, with
restaurant potential
in a PRIME location.
2 bars with addi-
tional licensed out-
side patio space.
Owner is open to
creative financing.
MLS 13-2446
$59,900
John Shelley
570-702-4162
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
630 Money To Loan
We can erase
your bad credit -
100% GUARAN-
TEED. Attorneys
for the Federal
Trade Commission
say theyve never
seen a legitimate
credit repair opera-
tion. No one can
legally remove
accurate and timely
information from
your credit report.
Its a process that
starts with you and
involves time and a
conscious effort to
pay your debts.
Learn about manag-
ing credit and debt
at ftc. gov/credit. A
message from The
Times Leader and
the FTC.
700
MERCHANDISE
702 Air
Conditioners
AIR CONDITIONER
Amcor ultra clean
portable $125.
570-417-2653
AIR CONDITIONER.
Emerson, 5000
BTU. Works great.
$40. 570-735-6527
BIKES Boy & Girl
Huffy 28 great for
the shore with car
rack and baskets
$65 570-417-2653
SNOW BLOWER 20
discharge chute
hand push $50.
570-417-2653
706 Arts/Crafts/
Hobbies
AIR CRAFT, RC,
complete, Katana
50, includes JR
Radio, X9503. 10 CC
gas engine, digital
servos, flight box.
Lots of spare parts.
Flight Ready! $1,000
570-218-2006
708 Antiques &
Collectibles
$ ANTIQUES BUYING $
Old Toys, model kits,
Bikes, dolls, guns,
Mining Items, trains
&Musical Instruments,
Hess. 474-9544
ANTIQUES
One item or entire
contents of homes.
CASH PAID
570-814-3371
570-328-4420
ANTIQUES, DESK,
brown wood, 7
drawers, 31Lx 48x
24W. $300.
570-654-4440
BARBERS CHAIR,
Vintage Koken.
Reupholstered, very
good, all work. $650
TABLES, (1) solid
cherry coffee and
(2) solid cherry end
$280. 855-2506
BASEBALL CARDS,
(800) 1994 DonRuss
$6. (800) 1989,
Topps $6. (800)
1993, Topps $6.
(800) 1987 Topps,
$6. (800) 1991
Upper Deck $6.
(800) 1990 Topps
$6, (800) 1994
Fleer, $6. (413) 1991
Topps, $3. (430)
1992 Score, $3.
570-313-5214
570-313-3859
COINS, Washington
quarters, 1938-P-
1 939- D- 1 940- S,
1949-P-1955-P. $60.
570-287-4135
PLANET JR.
ATTACHMENTS,
including plows, cul-
tivator, sweeps,
harrows etc. 40
pieces $200. Old
potato shovel $25.
Log rolling tool, $40.
Wheelbarrow with
steel front wheel
$25. Log rolling tool.
OBO 570-693-1918
RECORD PLAYER,
Antique. $25.
570-822-3425
RECORDS, (400)
45s, 78s, LPs.
From the 60s, 70s
and 80s, $1 each.
570-829-2411
RODNEY AND
FRIENDS, Rodney,
Randy, Rhonda and
Ramona, $25 for all.
ALF hand puppets,
with records. $25
for all. 779-3841
Leave a message.
TAP 12 Budweiser
tap $8. 50 beer
openers .50 each. 2
folding tables $1. &
$2. 4 8 carriage
wheels $1. 30 small-
er wheels Free. 1
metal & wood swing
$5. metal wheelbar-
row $4. 1 50 gallon
burn barrels no bot-
tom $3. 200 beer &
soda cans .25 each.
25 old bottles .50
each. 3 pair ladies
shorts $1. each. 3
pair ladies long
pants $1. each.
Antique iron $10.
kerosene torch $5.
Antique brace & bits
$3. each. 33 1/3
country & modern
record $1. each.
570-823-6986
710 Appliances
DISHWASHER. GE.
$75, STOVE, electric
Spectra $125. Both
5 years old and in
great shape.
570-902-9805
DRYER, Kenmore,
Gas. Good condi-
tion. $125. DEHU-
MIDIFIER, automat-
ic, mint condition.
$75. 570-825-4031
710 Appliances
REFRIGERATOR,
Gibson white, no
frost top freezer,
$100, Dehumidifier,
$75, Deep Fryer,
extra large, $30
570-902-5598
SMALL appliances,
$ 6. each toasters &
$1 each toaster
oven all in good
working condition.
570-735-6638
VACUUM, Kirby
Classic, with rug
renovator $50. OBO
570-693-1918
712 Baby Items
BABY STROLLER
Graco very good
condition $20.
570-735-6638
CRIB Bellini high
end convertible in
natural. Feature s
expert craftsman-
ship made with pre-
mium quality woods,
safety certification,
stationary rails,
huge storage draw-
er that pulls out
under the crib. Must
sell!! $200 obo.
570-310-1197
STROLLER. Baby
Trend. Full size, fold-
able, Print suitable
for boy or girl.
Excellent condition
$25. 570-735-6527
TV childrens giraffe
9.6 flat screen LCD
perfect for a nursery
or childs room. TV
enclosed within a
soft, plush giraffe.
Wonderfully tactile &
safe. Oversized
control buttons
designed for tiny fin-
gers. C $50 OBO. 4
Childrens jungle
animals/ theme pic-
tures. Each picture
is 9X9 perfect for
a nursery or a chil-
drens room. All are
in excellent condi-
tion. $40 OBO.
718-839-5599.
714 Bridal Items
BR I DA L GOWN.
Maggie Sottero.
Never worn; tags
still attached. Size 8
Color Ivory. $450
570-693-4629
716 Building
Materials
LOUVERED DOORS,
4 bi-fold, three, 6,
5 and 2-4. $100 all
570-822-1824.
PRESSURE TREAT-
ED Wood pieces
2x8x6 average,
25 pieces $20.
570-693-1918
726 Clothing
WOMENS CLOTH-
ING, jeans, pants,
(4) jackets, (1) jean
jacket. Tops, all
excellent condition.
Must See! $20.
570-655-1808
730 Computer
Equipment &
Software
VISIT OUR WEBSITE!
We have all your
printer ink needs
and save up to half
off your local store.
We also ship
Nationwide. Give us
a call Toll Free#
855-250-5196
www.keystone
inkandmore.com
732 Exercise
Equipment
BIKE, dirt. Mens 26
speed. Schwinn,
new condition, 26.
$140, 570-655-2154
BIKE, dirt. Mens 26
speeds, front sus-
pension, Schwinn,
26. $140, 655-2154
TREADMILL Weslo
Cadence, good
condition. $60.
570-655-0952
TREADMILL. Excel-
lent condition. $150
570-820-7117
742 Furnaces &
Heaters
HEAT your entire
home, water, and
more with an OUT-
DOOR WOOD FUR-
NACE from Central
Boiler. B & C Out-
door Wood Furnace,
LLC. 570-477-5692
STOVE. Alaska Stok-
er coal with water
jacket for hot water.
All pipes and circu-
lator pump. Good
condition. $550
570-256-3677
744 Furniture &
Accessories
5 GLIDER/ROCKER
chairs with 5
ottomans, cush-
ioned seats and
back, $50 each.
COFFEE TABLE,
$40, END TABLES,
(3) $25 each. BED-
ROOM SET, double
bed, dresser, chest
of drawers, night
stand, $150. END
TABLE, $25. SOFA
TABLE, 48x15,
$40. 570-675-2679
BAR, 5 1/2 and 2
stools. $100.
570-735-4892
BEDROOM SUITE
French Provincial.
Queen size bed,
dresser with mirror,
chest, 2 end tables.
$400. 570-288-
7287 or 466-0683
CHAIR, cushion
couch, lift out of
seat and recline.
Good condition.
Electric and battery.
$100. 570-825-4031
CHAIRS, for a dining
room, (2), cloth
padded. new. $50
for both. 489-2675
COUCH. Sectional,
blue, 4 recliners.
Excellent condition.
$900 OBO
570-820-7117
744 Furniture &
Accessories
CHAIRS, (2)
Genuine
leather, cus-
tom made
recliners.
Taupe color,
like new. $550
each.
570-675-5046
CHAISE LOUNGE
Couch in beige
microsuede.
Comes with one
scatter/throw pillow.
Beige slip cover is
changeable. Comes
from a pet-free and
non-smoking home.
MUST SELL!!! $125
OBO. Call 310-1197
CHEST of drawers,
$20. TABLE, and
chairs for kitchen,
$20. LOVE SEAT,
$25. 19 TV, $50.
Free table lamp with
one purchase of any
item. 570-822-3425
COFFEE TABLE,
Oak, with 3 glass
inserts. Excellent
shape. $40. BOOK
SHELF, 5 shelves,
Sauder, $40. CAVA-
LIER CHEST, Cedar,
Antique, Very nice.
1928, $600. NEG.
570-829-2599
DINING ROOM set.
solid wood table
and chairs, leaf and
pad. $350. CASE,
golf club, hard travel
case, $30
570-357-8089
To place your
ad Call Toll Free
1-800-427-8649
D I N I N G R O O M
table, 6 chairs,
china, 2 leaves,
$500. KITCHEN
SET, table 5 chairs,
2 leafs, $200, BED-
ROOM SUITE, black
lacquer. dresser,
night stand,
armoire, $100,
ENTERTAINMENT
CENTER, oak finish,
$100. Best offers
accepted. 287-4741
DRESSER, 9 draw-
ers, with mirror.
Solid wood. Brown
with black trim. $75.
570-706-5179
ENTERTAINMENT
UNIT, $200. PATIO
FURNITURE, out-
door, $75.
570-954-6044
KITCHEN TABLES,
retro, both for $100
Double bed head-
board & footboard,
$25, dresser with
mirror, $50 OBO.
570-693-1918
MATTRESS SALE
We Beat All
Competitors Prices!
Mattress Guy
Twin sets: $159
Full sets: $179
Queen sets: $239
All New
American Made
570-288-1898
MATTRESS
SETS! BRAND
NEW $ave 60%-
80% on factory
direct mattresses,
THESE ARE NOT
USED or re-manu-
factured. KINGS
$250-QUEENS
$170 FULLS $130-
TWINS $100 -
MUST LIQUIDATE
IMMEDIATELY!
BEDROOM FURNI-
TURE starts at
$299 a set! Sleigh
beds $299! YOU
WILL NOT BE DIS-
APPOINTED Call
570-406-2009
PATIO FURNITURE,
four piece wicker
set. Like new, used
one year. Includes
cushions covers,
and a round glass
table with 7.5
umbrella. $300.
570-740-7446
SOFA BED. 2 years
old, moving must
pick up 6/8-6/9.
FREE 570-829-1456
SOFA, clean, FREE
822-9697.
TABLE and chairs,
$25. CHAIR, for an
office $10. 814-1842
TABLE. Kitchen, 4
chairs, dark wood.
Excellent $150
570-735-4892
TABLES. Coffee and
2 end. French
Provincial, all wood,
medium pecan. Very
good condition.
$225 570-474-2606
TV/audio stand, nat-
ural wood top, alu-
minum frame, glass
shelves, excellent
condition! Has
space to support all
of your compo-
nents. 3 fixed open
shelves and has a
cord-and-cable
management sys-
tem in the back for
easy setup. MUST
SELL!! $75 OBO.
Call 310-1197 today!
WYOMING
Garage/
Yard Sale!!
2010 Wyoming Ave.
(Off Stites St.,
Across from the
Forty Fort airport)
Fri. & Sat., 9 to 1
Making room for
the car, and clean-
ing up the house
and attic, a little bit
of everything!
752 Landscaping &
Gardening
HEDGE CUTTER,
Home Lite, Pole
trimmer, #44160.
Long Hande elec-
tric, like new. $50.
570-489-2675
RIDING MOWER,
John Deere, LX 172.
Just serviced, with
manual. Excellent
condition. $750.
570-878-2849
754 Machinery &
Equipment
GENERATOR. 400
watt portable. 2
year warranty, $360
Firm. 570-788-2388
754 Machinery &
Equipment
L AWN MOWE R .
Craftsman Self pro-
pelled. Excellent
condition, comes
with bagger. Barely
used. $200
570-788-5005
L AWN MOWE R .
Yardman, 22 cut,
$75 firm, Hedge
Hog, Black & Deck-
er, $20, Chipper-
shredder, Sears
$150, Saw, 10
mitre, $60. After 3
570-655-3197
MILLING/DRILLING
MACHINE. Heavy
duty. 2 hp, 110 volts,
12 speeds. Variable
table power feed,
like new, bench
model on stand.
$900. 570-899-1910
756 Medical
Equipment
PATIENT
HYDRAULIC LIFT,
with polyester mesh
sling with commode
opening. New $450.
P OWE R CHA I R .
Golden Compass.
Includes fully
charged battery and
cord. 2 speeds,
$425.
570-474-6549
P OWE R CHA I R .
Jazzy. Good condi-
tion, batteries,
approximately 1
year old. $475
570-288-3231 - Joe
WHEELCHAIR Jazzy
powered wheel
chair, fairly new,
needs battery.
$350 or best offer.
570-829-2411
758 Miscellaneous
FREE AD POLICY
The Times Leader
will accept ads for
used private
party merchan-
dise only for items
totaling $1,000 or
less. All items must
be priced and state
how many of each
item. Your name
address, email and
phone number must
be included. No
ads for ticket
sales accepted.
Pet ads accept-
ed if FREE ad
must state FREE.
You may place your
ad online at
timesleader.com,
or email to
classifieds@
timesleader.com or
fax to 570-831-7312
or mail to Classified
Free Ads: 15 N.
Main Street, Wilkes-
Barre, PA.
SORRY NO
PHONE CALLS.
FREE AD POLICY
The Times Leader
will accept ads for
used private
party merchan-
dise only for items
totaling $1,000 or
less. All items must
be priced and state
how many of each
item. Your name
address, email and
phone number must
be included. No
ads for ticket
sales accepted.
Pet ads accept-
ed if FREE ad
must state FREE.
You may place your
ad online at
timesleader.com,
or email to
classifieds@
timesleader.com or
fax to 570-831-7312
or mail to Classified
Free Ads: 15 N.
Main Street, Wilkes-
Barre, PA.
SORRY NO
PHONE CALLS.
All
Junk
Cars
&
Trucks
Wanted
Highest
Prices
Paid In
CA$H
FREE
PICKUP
570-574-1275
ANTIFREEZE and
coolant. Prestone, 3
gallons, $5 each
3/$13. 655-2154
AQUARIUM TANK,
30X12, $25.
CHEST FREEZER, 5
Cu.Ft., $50.
570-675-2679
BAR, L shape, 7
swivel back chairs,
must assemble,
$400. AWNING, alu-
minum, $125, TIRE,
Firestone, $50.
CHEST, storage,
$25. 570-826-0076
BOOK WREATHS,
(2) Vintage, home
made, large $35,
small, $25.
570-829-2599
BOWS church wed-
ding bows pew dec-
orations $7. each.
Kitchen curtains
assorted $2.50 pair.
Bath towels $2.
each. 474-5653
CAGES, Pet small
$20, large, $25.
FENCE, dog, new in
box, $150
570-655-2154
CHAIRS, commode
$5, potty, $5, Scale,
$5, Salad Bowl, $5,
Steam pot, $25,
Container, $5, Lug-
gage, $5.
570-574-5985
DOG FENCE. Wire-
less. New in box.
$150. 570-693-4219
758 Miscellaneous
COMPUTER. 15 Dell
flat screen with key-
board, speaker set.
$75. BATH TUB.
American Standard
Princeton Premium,
right handed,
almond. 80x30x14.
Still in shipping box.
$375. 570-574-1395
CURIO CABINET,
with light, Dark
cherry finish, 5 glass
shelves. 75H,
23W, asking $175.
570-639-3151
ESTATE SALE
LEFTOVERS
DESK PHONE, black
rotary, bell system,
western electric,
$25, TYPEWRITER,
60s, Sperry Rand
Manual, $25, LIGHT
FIXTURE, Florescent
8 with bums and
extra ballast. $30.
OBO
570-829-7859
FAN, steel window,
with expandable
sides and exhaust
features. $25.
570-693-1918
FLAT BED TRAILER
6x4x12 load car-
rying area, 2,000
lbs payload, 15
tires, split ramp
gates, 4 tongue, 2
coupler metal side
rails. $700. Very
good condition.
570-457-4547
G O L F C L U B S ,
Ladies. Various, $75
CABINET Crafts-
man, rolling, $75,
WADERS, ladies and
mens, never worn,
$25 a pair, VEST,
Fishing, Cabelas,
never worn, $15
570-332-2715
HUTCH. (1) large Agi
Plastics group calf
hutch. $300. Good
for housing calfs,
mini horses, goats,
sheep or poultry.
TANKS, 2 stock,
$100. 570-351-6145
INSULATION, Differ-
ent types, call for
details. 3 rolls, $25
a roll, 11 rolls $30 a
roll. CURIO cabinet,
$75, CHAIR mat,
$30, SOFA, chair
and ottoman, $75,
TIRE, BF Goodrich,
215/75/R14, $20,
TUB, stone laundry,
$45, TOOL BOx,
metal for trucks,
$45. 570-868-4444
INSULATORS, glass,
all colors, 40 total.
$100. 489-2675
BEST PRICES
IN THE AREA
CA$H ON THE $POT,
Free Anytime
Pickup
570-301-3602
570-301-3602
CALL US!
TO JUNK
YOUR CAR
POOL 18 Intex
above ground 42
deep used a sea-
son, brand new,
never used pump,
ladder, paid $500.
Asking $350. Little
Tikes table & chair
set $10. 817-7307
REFRIGERATOR,
Frigidaire, 10 cubic
ft., top mount freez-
er with ice maker,
like new. Asking
$375. 284-2487
RIMS set of 4 16
chrome rims with
tires & lug nuts. Like
new & ready to
mount. Bought 1
year ago for $950 at
Sears. 5 bolt pattern
& locks sacrifice
$290 Firm.
570-313-5538
ROSARIE BEADS,
(200) $3 each.
570-829-2411
SAFE on wheels,
Sentry, rotary com-
bination. 19deep,
12wide and 14
high, $100.
570-288-0924
SCALE: digital price
computing food
weight kitchen scale
new in box $60.
Commercial Food
/Meat Slicer, new
unopened box
$300. MEAT SLICER
commercial, new in
unopened box
$300. 570-562-1801
SEWING MACHINE
wit cabinet, $200.
BOOKS, Children
and adult. $.25 to
$1. TRAYS, 3 differ-
ent types, $3-$5.
DOUBLE QUILT, $5.
570-954-6044
SHAMPOOER,
Hoover Rug, used
twice, $50, TREAD-
MILL, $100, SOFA
BED, chair and 2
ottomans. Royal
blue, $250.
570-333-4250
SNOW THROWER,
MTD, 2 cycle, new
skid plates, auger
pads, new belt and
rebuilt carburator.
$150. 288-0294
STOCKPOT, 3
pieces, 12 qt., with
steamer basket.
New in the box.
$20. 570-655-2154
TELEVISION/Audio
Stand, chaise
couch, lounge, crib.
$425. 570-310-1197
TIRES (2) Winter-
force snow. 75/70R
/ 13, mounted on 92
Geo Prizm rims.
Like new, $100 for
all. 570-825-8438
TIRES, Bridgestone
Blizzak (4) 8/32
treads, 225/50R17.
$50 each. 814-8010
WATERBED, King
Size, $25. ROLLER
SKATES, size 9,
ladies, $3. BOTTLE
DISPENSERS, $10.
KENNEL, for dogs,
chain links, 6-6x6
panels, $125. JACK-
ET, Budwieser,
NASCAR, size,
Large, $20.
570-814-1842
Looking for that
special place
called home?
Classified will address
Your needs.
Open the door
with classified!
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
Need a Roommate?
Place an ad and
find one here!
570-829-7130
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
PAGE 8D SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 2013 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
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TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 2013 PAGE 9D
412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale
8
2
2
6
8
3
04 CHEVROLET IMPALA
A rare nd only 19,000 miles, Carfax Certied, Local Trade,
Obviously rarely driven, V6, Power Drivers Seat,
Premium Sound System and more............................... $8,900
11 DODGE CALIBER HEAT
Former Chrysler Executive Vehicle, Sport appearance group,
Heated Front Seats, Power Heated Mirrors, Fog Lamps, Front &
Rear Passenger Side impact protection,
Sirius Satelite Radio ........................................ NOW$15,400
08 SUZUKI XL-7 AWD LUXURY
Priced $1,500 below Kelly Blue Book, Moonroof,
Third Row Seat, Heated Leather Seats,
All Wheel Drive.............................................................$12,900
12 DODGE AVENGER SXT PLUS
Only 10,128 Miles, Rear Spoiler, V-6,
6 Speed Automatic, Keyless Entry,
Limited Edition Interior .................................... NOW$18,900
10 MAZDA 3I TOURING
Only 23,630 Miles, Graphite Mica Exterior,
Bluetooth, iPod/MP3 Input, Automatic,................... $15,500
02 DODGE RAM 1500 SLT 4X4
Local Trade, Just 32,662 Miles, V8 Automatic, Fog
Lamps, Rear Sliding Window, Great Shape..............$10,900
11 JEEP PATRIOT LATITUDE 4X4
Former Chrysler Group Executive Vehicle, Heated Front
Seats, Remote Start System, Power Heated Mirrors,
Fog Lamps, Trailer Tow Prep Group,
Only 22,755 Miles............................................. NOW$19,900
13 JEEP WRANGLER SPORT 4X4
1 Owner, Local Trade, Former Personal Vehicle of
Dealership Team member, Barely Used under
500 miles.........................................................................$24,400
12 JEEP COMPASS LIMITED 4X4
Former Chrysler Executive Vehicle, In Dash Navigation,
Leather Seating, Heated Front Seats,
Only 20,327 Miles.............................................. NOW$21,900
13 TOYOTA TACOMA DOUBLECAB 4X4
Like New, Local Trade, Only 4,000 Miles, TRD
Off Road Pkg., Backup Camera, 6 Cylinder,
Automatic ......................................................................$29,900
12 DODGE CHARGER
V6 8 Speed Automatic will give you awesome
MPG for a car of this type.
All Speed traction control............................. $21,700
13 CHRYSLER TOWN & COUNTRY TOURING
2 to pick from, Only 15,000 miles, Rear DVD, Leather Seating,
Power Drivers Seat, Power Side Sliding Doors,
Rear Backup Camera, Bluetooth Audio ..........NOW$25,900
12 DODGE JOURNEY
Former Chrysler Company Vehicle, Never Titled, Equipped
with 3rd Row Seating, Rear Air & Heat, Traction Control,
Four Wheel Antilock Brakes, Aluminum
Wheels, Heated Power Mirrors................... $19,300
07 DODGE NITRO SXT 4X4
Local Trade, 6 Speed, 6 Cylinder, Deep
Tinted Rear Sunscreen Glass....................... $11,900
11 DODGE CALIBER MAINSTREET
Former Chrysler Company Executive Vehicle, Only 22,585 Miles,
Automatic, Keyless Entry, Power Heated Mirrors,
Chillzone Storage, Fog Lamps................................... $15,900
11 JEEP LIBERTY 4X4 70TH ANNIVERSARY EDITION
Former Chrylser Employee Lease Vehicle, Leather Seating, Garmin
Navigation System, Heated Front Seats,
Exterior Chrome accents................................. NOW$19,500
12 JEEP LIBERTY LIMITED JET SKYSLIDER 4X4
Former Chrysler Executive Vehicle, Low Miles,
Retractable Panoramic Roof, Leather Seating,
Navigation........................................................... $26,900
11 CADILLAC CTS AWD
Only 24,138 miles, All Wheel Drive, Leather Seating, Available
Satellite Radio, OnStar Onboard
Communication System..............................................$23,900
13 MAZDA CX-5 AWD TOURING
1 Owner, Local Trade, All Wheel Drive, Power Moonroof,
Rear Backup Camera, BOSE Sound System................................. $23,500
13 RAM 1500 QUAD CAB SLT 4X4
V8, Automatic, Power Windows and Locks, Sirius
Satellite Radio, Keyless Entry..................................................... $28,800
12 DODGE JOURNEY SXT AWD
All Wheel Drive, Third Row Seating, 6 Cylinder,
Automatic, Keyless Start, CD/Satellite Radio..........$20,900
12 DODGE GRAND CARAVAN CREW
Rear DVD, Third Row Seat, Rear Air and Heat,
Rear Backup Camera, Remote Start System,
Power Liftgate .............................................................$23,700
11 JEEP PATRIOT LATITUDE X 4X4
Leather Heated Front Seats, Fog Lamps, Power
Drivers Seat, Heated Mirrors,
Sirius Satellite Radio ...................................................$18,600
11 JEEP COMPASS LATITUDE 4X4
Former Chrysler Executive Vehicle, heated Front Seats, Remote Start
System, Premium Sound Group with 9 Boston Aucostic
Speakers, Keyless Entry, Power Heated Mirrors ...........$20,400
12 RAM 1500 CREW CAB LONGHORN 4X4
Former Chrysler Company Vehicle,Only 13,837 Miles, Heated/
Cooled Leather Seats, Navigation, Bluetooth,
Chrome Wheels, Remote Start ................................. $40,400
2012 DODGE
GRAND CARAVAN
CREW
STK#CR356750
NOW
$23,700
Prices are Plus Tax, Registration Fees and Documentation Fees. All payments are for 72 months to qualied buyers with excellent credit @ 6.99 APR. Your rate may
Vary depending on credit rating status. $2499 down payment or trade equity. In addition to tax and registration, doc fees. Must take delivery by 6/21/13
2012 HYUNDAI
TUCSON GLS AWD
NOW
$20,900
WE HAND PICK THE BEST NEW CAR TRADE-INS & LEASE TURN-INS &
SELL THEM RIGHT HERE IN TUNKHANNOCK AT A FRACTION OF THEIR
ORIGINAL PRICE. THEY DRIVE LIKE NEW BUT COST THOUSANDS LESS.
www.TunkAutoMart.com
11 RAM 2500 POWER WAGON CREW CAB 4X4
A Rare Find! This Power Wagon has Navigation,
Moonroof, Uconnect Handsfree
Communication, Remote Start,
Luxury Group.................................................. $39,900
12 RAM 2500 CREW CAB SLT 4X4
Only 21,296 Miles, Automatic, Trailer Hitch,
Remote Start, Keyless Entry......................... $32,800
12 CHRYSLER 200 CONVERTIBLE
6 Speed Automatic, Power Convertible Top, Rear Window
Defroster, Security Alarm, Power 6 Way
Drivers Seat, SiriusXM Satellite Radio............ $19,600
12 JEEP LIBERTY SPORT 4X4
Deep Tinted Rear Sunscreen Glass, Fog Lamps, Security
Alarm, Power Mirrors, Sirius Satellite Radio,
V6, Automatic ................................................... $21,600
11 JEEP LIBERTY LIMITED 4X4
Former Chrysler Company Vehicle, Only 26,592 Miles,
Leather Seating, Sunroof,
GPS Navigation .............................................. $23,300
12 RAM 1500 EXPRESS CREW CAB 4X4
Former Chrysler Employee Demo, HEMI V8, 6 Speed
Automatic, Class IV Trailer Hitch, Fog Lamps, Chrome
Tubular Sidesteps, 20 Chrome Clad
Wheels, Remote Keyless Entry.................... $31,300
13 CHRYSLER 200S HARD TOP CONVERTIBLE
Former Chrysler Company Car Featured In Deep
Cherry Red, Retractable Roof, Heated Leather
Trimmed Seating, GPS Navigation, Remote Start,
V6 w/6 Speed Automatic
Transmission .................................................. $28,800
12 CHRYSLER 300S V8 AWD
Former Chrysler Company Vehicle, All Wheel Drive,
Unique Custom Leather Red Seating that is usually
found on SRT models, Blindspot/Crosspath Detection,
5.7 HEMI V8 with Fuel Saving MDS,
Only 8,337 Miles.............................................. $32,900
13 CHRYSLER 300S AWD GLACIER
A Rare Limited Glacier Edition, Never Been Titled,
Save From Thousands Compared To A Brand New
One, Garmin Navigation, Dual Pane
Panoramic Sunroof, Beats Audio by
Dr. Dre Only 12 Miles..................................... $36,850
12 CHRYSLER 300C AWD
This All Wheel Drive Gloss Black 300C is a Former
Chrysler Company Car Equipped With Just About Every
Available Option and Harman Kardon Audio Ground
Breaking Featuring 18 Premium Speakers, Garmin
Navigation, Panoramic Sunroof. See Our
Website For More Details. ............................. $35,500
Clearance Priced
For Quick Sale!
DONT RISK PAYINGTOO MUCH SOMEWHERE ELSE!
Tunkhannock Auto Mart
www.tunkautomart.com
888-323-6924
OPEN FRIDAYS
TIL 8:00 PM!
Jeep

2012 JEEP
COMPASS
LIMITED 4X4
STK#CU472556
NOW
$19,900
NOW
$23,400
NOW
$28,400
2012 JEEP GRAND
CHEROKEE
LAREDO 4X4
STK#CD513762
STK#DG338923
2012 JEEP WRANGLER
UNLIMITED 4 DOOR 4X4
STK#CL185777
NOW
$28,900
2012 JEEP COMPASS
LIMITED 4X4
STK#CD524304
NOW
$23,600
NOW
$21,700
NOW
$29,900
STK#CC265942
2011 HYUNDAI
SONATA LIMITED
NOW
$19,900
2012 DODGE
DURANGO CREW
AWD
STK#CC163297
NOW
$34,700
STK#BH133182
2012 VOLKSWAGEN
CC SPORT
STK#CE503430
NOW
$21,800
2012 DODGE
CHARGER
STK#CH295410
2013 TOYOTA TACOMA
DOUBLECAB TRD 4X4
STK#DM110422
NOW
$23,600
STK#86114379
2008 SUZUKI XL-7
AWD LUXURY
NOW
$12,900
STK#CK10703
2012 CHEVROLET
SILVERADO 1500
LT 4X4
V8
NOW
$21,400
2013 DODGE GRAND
CARAVAN SXT
STK#DR516420
LOW
MILES REAR DVD
THIRD ROW
SEAT
LEATHER
SEATING
THIRD
ROW
SEAT
NOW
$19,600
2012 CHRYSLER 200
TOURING CONVERTIBLE
STK#CN179976
ONLY
22,500
MILES
More Values...
Hand Picked Just for You!
ONLY
15,538
MILES
V6
NOW
$8,900
2004 CHEVY IMPALA
STK#49201933
NOW
$15,900
2012 FIAT 500C
CONVERTIBLE
STK#130228I
LEATHER
SEATING
STK#CD573890
2012 JEEP PATRIOT
SPORT 4X4
NOW
$17,600
1 OWNER
POWER
WINDOWS &
LOCKS
2011 CADILLAC
CTS AWD
NOW
$23,900
STK#130219B
2012 GMC YUKON
DENALI AWD
STK#CR158450
NOW
$46,900
REAR
DVD
NOW
$15,900
2011 DODGE CALIBER
MAINSTREET
STK#BD264568
ONLY
19,000
MILES
STK#DL644945
NOW
$24,400
2013 JEEP
WRANGLER
SPORT 4X4
AS LOWAS
$229
NAVIGATION
ALL WHEEL
DRIVE
ONLY
22,585
MILES
2013 KIA SORRENTO
LX AWD
S
O
L
D
ONLY
10,357
MILES
ONLY
4,067
MILES
ONLY
242
MILES
ONLY
7,674
MILES
1-800-223-1111 Hours: Monday-Friday 9-8pm ; Saturday 9-5pm
339 HIGHWAY 315, PITTSTON, PA
CLOSE TO
EVERYWHERE
$
269
LEASE
FOR
ONLY:
Per
Mo.
Plus Tax
* 24 Months, 10,000 Miles Per Year with $1,396.92 down plus $603.07 fees = $1,999.99 total due at delivery.
Residual $22,956.50. Must qualify tier 1. Zero security deposit. Ofer good through 7/1/2013.
2.5 Liter, Turbo-Charged 5 Cylinder w/ 250HP, 6-Speed Geartronic Automatic
Transmission w/ Sport Mode, Independent Front and Rear Suspension, Disc
Brakes, High Performance Audio System, Sirius Satellite Radio, Child Safety
Locks, Volvo Sensus w/ 7-Inch Color, LCD Monitor, Sport Seating, Bluetooth
Hands Free Phone Interface
www.VOLVOofWBS.com

YOUR VOLVO DEALER


FOR ALL OF NORTHEAST
PENNSYLVANIA
FWD
New 2013 Volvo S60 T5
Sedan
MSRP $32,795
STK# V1076
*
COCCIA
COCCIA COCCIA
FORD - LINCOLN
GUARANTEED LOWEST PRICES!
300
300 300
VEHICLES IN STOCK VEHICLES IN STOCK
OVER OVER
100
100 100
PRE-OWNED VEHICLES PRE-OWNED VEHICLES
OVER OVER
2012 PRESIDENT S
2012 PRESIDENT S 2012 PRESIDENT S
AWARD WINNER!
AWARD WINNER! AWARD WINNER!
CALL US AT 570-823-8888 CALL US AT 570-823-8888
VISIT US AT COCCIACARS.COM VISIT US AT COCCIACARS.COM
#1
#1 #1
VOLUME FORD & LINCOLN
DEALER IN NEPA FOR OVER
24
24 24
CONSECUTIVE
YEARS
CONVENIENTLY LOCATED
BETWEEN SCRANTON &
WILKES-BARRE
CHECK
CHECK CHECK
US OUT
US OUT US OUT
BEFORE
BEFORE BEFORE
YOU
YOU YOU
BUY!
BUY! BUY!
PAGE 10D SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 2013 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
503 Accounting/
Finance
503 Accounting/
Finance
533 Installation/
Maintenance/
Repair
533 Installation/
Maintenance/
Repair
533 Installation/
Maintenance/
Repair
533 Installation/
Maintenance/
Repair
542 Logistics/
Transportation
548 Medical/Health
566 Sales/Business
Development
542 Logistics/
Transportation
548 Medical/Health
566 Sales/Business
Development
542 Logistics/
Transportation
548 Medical/Health
Contract Administrator
Fehlinger Construction Group, LLC is currently
seeking applicants for the position of Construction
Administrator for our Shavertown, PA office.
Duties and responsibilities will include providing
administrative support to the Project Managers, Direc-
tor of Operations, and the Vice President and Presi-
dent; assist in the preparation, review and administra-
tion of contract agreements relating to construction
projects; manage all bid subscription services,
preparing all bid documents, contracts, sub-contracts,
Purchase Orders, billings and sub-contractor
insurance requirements.
Applicant should have a minimum of 3 years
experience in the construction industry along with
knowledge of Microsoft Office software and account-
ing procedures. Knowledge of HCSS HeavyJob soft-
ware and PennDot ECMS is helpful but not required.
Please submit your resume along with references via
email to Anthony Barbose, Director of Operations at
tbarbose@fehlingerconstruction.com
SAPA EXTRUSIONS Mountain Top, PA
330 Elmwood Avenue, Crestwood Industrial Park
Mountain Top, PA 18707
Sapa is the worlds leading supplier of value added aluminum profiles solutions to the
construction, transport, domestic, office and engineering sectors and has an exciting
opportunity for high potential professionals. These position offers significant upward
potential for the motivated individual in a leading multinational company that has over
14,500 employees in operations in 19 countries.
Quality Supervisor
Provide detailed analysis of quality trends and issues, and analysis of production data.
Define extrusion dimensional capabilities.
Supervise the activity of Quality Assurance Technicians.
Monitor and improve quality system to meet customer needs, internal goals, ISO and TS standards.
Engage in root cause analysis, corrective actions, and verification.
Provide problem solving techniques and train others to utilize.
Facilitate best practices by writing procedures or auditing existing practices.
MUST HAVE AUTOMOTIVE TS16949 EXPERIENCE
Maintenance Manager
Develop and implement maintenance strategies to improve equipment reliability and minimize
unplanned downtime.
Plans maintenance operations, establishing priorities and sequences for manufacturing equipment
repairs, improvements, and preventive maintenance.
Reviews operational schedules and coordinates maintenance activities to ensure production and
quality of products meets both internal and external customer specifications.
Reviews production and operating reports and resolves operational, manufacturing, and maintenance
problems to ensure minimum costs and prevent operational delays.
Inspects machines and equipment to ensure specific operational performance and optimum
utilization.
Develops or revises standard operational and working practices and observes workers to ensure
compliance with standards
Knowledge of Industrial electrical systems and PLC controls
Manufacturing Engineer
Support continuous fabrication production lines.
Identify and lead improvement activities, develop preventative and corrective actions,
Troubleshoot mechanical and electrical issues in support of production.
Knowledge of lean manufacturing principles and experience with 3D CAD software is preferred.
Degree in Engineering and PLC experience is a must.
Key requirements
SafetyComply with Health, Safety & Environmental requirements
Work ExperienceMinimum of three to five years of Manufacturing experience
LanguageFluency in English
Able to communicate orally and in writing effectively with Managers, supervisors, peers and
subordinates
Other SkillsStrong leadership, communication, organizational, analytical and interpersonal skills
Ability to think outside the box and on your feet.
Send your resume and salary requirements, to:
frank.koller@sapagroup.com frank.koller@sapagroup.com No phone calls / principles only
Sapa is a Equal Opportunity employer
DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC
WORKS POSITION AVAILABLE
THE BOROUGH OF WEST PITTSTON,
LUZERNE COUNTY, PA is seeking applications
for the Union position of Full-Time Department of
Public Works Driver/Laborer. Qualified candi-
dates must be of 18 years of age or older, have
a valid drivers license, able to lift a minimum of
30 pounds, and operate various types of equip-
ment, experience in performing Municipal road
maintenance and snow removal on Borough
properties and streets, willing to perform various
work assignments and have a demonstrated
commitment to safety. Preference will be given
to candidates having at least 2 years or more
prior work history and experience as a Depart-
ment of Public Works employee and are strong-
ly encouraged to apply.
Interested applicants must send a resume and
cover letter on or before June 21, 2013 to:
West Pittston Borough Council
C/O Borough Manager
555 Exeter Avenue, West Pittston, PA 18643
The Municipality of West Pittston Borough is an
Affirmative Action/Equal Employment Opportuni-
ty Employer and does not discriminate on the
basis of race, color, national origin, sex, religion,
age, disability or family status in employment or
the provision of services.
8
2
2
7
5
1
Partner with AEX Group to become part of the
Mid-Atlantics Premier Precision Courier Service!
Through AEX you can become part of the dynamic, customer-
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pharmaceutical and nancial companies!
Join the winning team today!
Call Now!
484-768-1453
Routes are immediately available for:
Sprinter Vans!
Minivans! SUVs! Cargo Vans!
Immediate Openings for a Box Truck/Straight Truck
INDEPENDENT
CONTRACTOR DRIVERS!
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Se Habla Espanol!
Exciting Career Opportunities available at
Friendship House!!!!
Friendship House is currently looking for Licensed Professionals
to work with children in our School Based Behavioral Health
Teams, Northeast Regional Autism Center and Connections,
Child and Family Counseling Center in Scranton!!
Qualifications for available positions include:
LSW, LCSW, Licensed Behavior Specialist, LPC, Licensed
Psychologist, NCC, CRNP, and more!!!!!
Masters Level position, Clinical Specialist, available;
no license required!
Bachelor Level positions also available, including
Therapeutic Staff Support and Direct Service Professionals,
and Behavioral Health Workers!!!
Experience working directly with children required. Both Full
and Part-Time positions available!!!
Send resume to:
recruiter@friendshiphousepa.org
OR
1509 Maple Street
Scranton, PA 18505
For information, visit us on-line at www.friendshiphousepa.org
SALES SALES
CAREER OPPORTUNITY
EXPERIENCED SALES PERSONS
WANTED TO SERVICE NEW
AND EXISTING ACCOUNTS.
COMPANY BENEFITS, VACATION
AND PAID TRAINING. IF YOU WANT
A CAREER AND NOT A JOB CALL
675-3283
TO SCHEDULE AN INTERVIEW
MON-FRI OR VISIT
www.cmseast.com
758 Miscellaneous
WEDDING BOWS,
for Church Pugs,
12x12, white Satin,
handmade. $4
each. HANDBAG,
Dolce & Gabanna,
with dust bag,
bought in Italy. $150.
DINNER WARE,
Stoneware, dish-
washer and oven
safe, 64 pieces.
$35. COFFEE POT,
Farberware, Makes
55 cups. $30.
570-654-4440
WOOD STOVE,,
New, $200, Tape,
wheel measuring,
$50, SPRAY GUN,
Craftsman, $75,
BOW, Compound,
$200, Cabinet, gun,
$85, China Service
for 8, $85, Coffee
Urn, 42 cup, $55,
Tuner, $150, CD
player, $100. Call
details on all of the
above. 735-2236
762 Musical
Instruments
ORGAN, electric,
Thomas Trouba-
dour, 186. Free.
Call: 570-836-4636
PIANO. Acrosonic
upright with bench.
Good condition.
$300 OBO. Must
pick up Swoyersville
570-899-1963
PIANO. Kimball
upright. 25 years
old. Looks great and
sounds great,
needs to be tuned.
Includes original
padded bench. $199
570-823-2903
770 Photo
Equipment
MONO-POD, Man-
frotto, model 681B
Excellent. $50 OBO
570-788-2388
776 Sporting Goods
BASEBALLS, 22
new Wilson base-
balls in box $50. 1
dozen new softballs
$25. 4 wooden
bats. $25 OBO
570-693-1918
BOAT, 12 ft. alu-
minum, includes
trailer, 2 motors,
one gas and one
electric. 2 uphol-
stered seats with
backs. $875.
570-542-5930
GOLF CLUBS. Lefty.
with woods, driver,
putter, bag. Excel-
lent condition. $100
570-417-1502
KAYAK OLD TOWN
with paddle & life
jacket $300.
570-836-0833
POTOMAC KAYAK,
NEW. $150.
570-814-1842
778 Stereos/
Accessories
CD HOLDER. Power
Tower 200 from
Sharper Image.
Holds 200 CDs.
turns automatically.
$50. 570-825-3784
Collect cash, not dust!
Clean out your
basement, garage
or attic and call the
Classified depart-
ment today at 570-
829-7130!
780 Televisions/
Accessories
TELEVISION TELEVISION
48 TV and 2
shelf stand.
HD, BBE, Digi-
tal. $350
570-675-5046
after 6 PM
784 Tools
AIR COMPRESSOR,
for a car. 12-volt.
New in the box, $10.
570-655-2154
LADDER, West Way
166 folding, multi
purpose, $80, SAW,
Scroll, Sears $50,
SAW, Power Band,
71/2, $50
570-417-7097
LOG SPLITTER,
vertical/horizontal.
Used only 30 hours.
Garage kept, excel-
lent condition. Paid
$1,200, asking
$700. 379-3829
SAW, Craftsman cir-
cular, $60,
BUFFER/POLISHER,
$75, BLADE SET,
bimetal reciprocat-
ing saw set, $30, 2
pack set for wood,
$12, DRILL DRIVER,
Craftsman, $70,
SANDER, $30, SAW,
Dewalt reciprocat-
ing, $90
570-474-6442
SAW, Craftsman
professional scroll
with stand. 20
throat. Incl. stand
and manual, $125,
ROUTER/SHAPER,
Delta, manual, $125
SAW, Black & Deck-
er radial arm, stand,
$100. 570-362-
0823/655-2020
SNOW PLOW, for
mower, Craftsman,
$30. SNOW BLOW-
ER, Craftsman $125
570-814-1842
786 Toys & Games
HOCKEY TABLE. Full
size, excellent con-
dition. $125.
570-474-2806
PLAYHOUSE Step 2
doorway playhouse.
doorbell, mail slot,
peephole in door.
can be used in any
doorway or stand
alone. $15.
570-883-7049
788 Stereo/TV/
Electronics
TV, Emerson, Flat
screen, 42, new.
$300, OBO.
ADAPTER, Netgear,
G54/N150, wireless,
USB. 570-829-2599
790 Swimming
Pools/Hot Tubs
POOL MOTOR, 1.5
hp, SAND FILTER,
$150, STEPS, wed-
ding cake. $150
570-825-5781
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
POOL. 15 round alu-
minum. 5 deep,
very good. Small
deck, ladder, filter,
pump (rebuilt last
year), solar cover
and cleaning equip-
ment. $175.
570-902-5244
796 Wanted to Buy
Merchandise
LAWN MOWER,
gently used, push
type with mulch/rear
bag. 570-675-0528
After 5:30.
WANTED
JEWELRY
WILKES BARREGOLD
( 570) 48GOLD8
( 570) 484- 6538
Highest Cash Pay-
Outs Guaranteed
Open 6 Days
a Week
10am- 6pm
Cl osed Thursdays
1092 Highway 315 Blvd.
( Pl aza 315)
315N, 1/ 2 mi l e
bef ore Mohegan
Sun Casi no
We Pay At Least
80% of the London
Fix Market Price
for All Gold Jewelry
WilkesBarreGold.com
or email us at
wilkesbarregold@
yahoo.com
London PM
Gold Price
June 14- $1,391.25
800
PETS & ANIMALS
810 Cats
KITTENS. (4) FREE
to a loving home.
570-735-4292
815 Dogs
BEAGLE PUPPIES
7 weeks old, AKC
Registered. First
shots and wormed.
$250 each.
570-441-3501
ENGLISH BULL
DOG AKC
REGISTERED
female 13 months
old with papers
$1,800 neg. Serious
Inquires only.
Contact (570)
313-2236.
GERMAN SHEPHERD
PUPPIES
AKC Registered. 1st
shots and wormed.
Parents on
premises. $450
NO CHECKS.
570-328-4966
POMERANIAN
Puppies
AKC registered.
1 male, orange
and white. All
Shots & wormed.
14 weeks, $300
570-864-2643
ROTTIES HUSKIES
Yorkies, Chihuahuas
Labs & More
Bloomsburg
389-7877
Hazleton 453-6900
Hanover 829-1922
YORKIE PUPPY
Female, CKC, 12
weeks. Non-shed-
ding & hypo-aller-
genic, all shots.
$850
570-436-5083
835 Pets-
Miscellaneous
GUINEA PIGS. Free
to good home. 2
young females,
friendly. Includes
cage, food and all
accessories.
570-883-7261
900
REAL ESTATE
FOR SALE
906 Homes for Sale
Having trouble
paying your mort-
gage? Falling
behind on your
payments? You
may get mail from
people who promise
to forestall your
foreclosure for a fee
in advance. Report
them to the Federal
Trade Commission,
the nations con-
sumer protection
agency. Call 1-877-
FTC-HELP or click
on ftc.gov. A mes-
sage from The
Times Leader and
the FTC.
DALLAS
Perrins Marsh
106 acres,
Approximately, 80
acres of water and
26 acres of land
with ranch home
and pole barn. Full
gas lease transfers
with property.
Partially located in
Wyoming and
Luzerne Counties.
Truly a rare find!
MLS# 12-3026
$419,000
Call Cindy King
570-690-2689
www.cindykingre.com
Signature Properties
570-675-5100
HUNLOCK CREEK
Over 36 Acres of
trails and views.
This meticulously
maintained property
features 2 Ranch
Homes with
Attached Garages,
Detached 2-Car
Garage, and ponds.
Walk-out basement
with coal burner.
Additional 30.09
acres can be
purchased.
MLS#13-1889
$429,000
Call Cindy King
570-690-2689
www.cindykingre.com
Signature Properties
570-675-5100
HANOVER
Ideal location in
Hanover Township.
Close to high
school and shop-
ping. This duplex
offers a new fur-
nace, newer roof,
most replacement
windows, large
yard, garage with
work area and off-
street parking for a
great price.
MLS# 13-757
$59,000
Call Cindy King
570-690-2689
www.cindykingre.com
Signature Properties
570-675-5100
DALLAS
FINANCING AVAILABLE!
2,300 sq. ft. +!
Totally remodeled
kitchen, ceramic tile
floors &, back
splash, new appli-
ances, granite
counters, new roof
& porch windows,
finished hardwoods.
$279,900
570-793-0140
SCRANTON
HOUSE FILPPERS
INVESTORS
Scranton 2 Unit
Duplex. $6,000. 1/2
double, new bath,
$2,000. Send SASE
to Porter, P.O. box
69, Chinclilla, PA
18410
906 Homes for Sale
BEAR CREEK
Spaciously satisfy-
ing from the open
kitchen/eating area,
impressive.
Fireplace in great
room to an expand-
ed family room, you
will enjoy life more
in this picturesque
4 bedroom in Laurel
Brook Estates.
MLS#13-1587
$395,000
Arlene Warunek
570-714-6112
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-696-1195
DALLAS
PRICE
REDUCTION
Beautiful home in a
lovely setting in the
Village of Orange. 2
or 3 bedrooms, 1st
floor bedroom,
hardwood flooring,
large eat in kitchen,
1st floor laundry,
2nd floor cedar
closet. Detached
garage, barn style
shed with loft, many
upgrades. New fur-
nace, kitchen floor &
recently drilled pri-
vate well & PIX
plumbing. Dont
wait, make this
home yours & enjoy
serenity on the back
deck. $109,900
MLS# 13-283
Call/text Donna Cain
947-3824 or
Tony Wasco
855-2424
570-901-1020
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
DALLAS
FOR SALE
BY OWNER
9 Westminster Dr.
4 bedroom brick
ranch. 2,800 sq. ft.
Totally renovated. 2
1/2 car garage. Low
taxes, corner lot.
See ZILLOW for
details. $274,000.
Call 570-878-3150
906 Homes for Sale
DALLAS DALLAS
16 Westminster Dr.
You CAN judge a
book by its cover!
Attractive both
inside and out with
many upgrades and
all of the must
haves. Such as
hardwood floors,
modern kitchen-
baths, lower level
rec room for addi-
tional living space
and so much more!
Lovely rear con-
crete patio with
above ground pool
MLS 13-1373
$189,900
Jay A. Crossin
Extension 23
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
Looking to buy a
home?
Place an ad here
and let the
sellers know!
570-829-7130
DALLAS DALLAS
19 Glen Riddle Lane
Peaceful surround-
ings overwhelm the
senses when you
step foot on this
lovely property.
Tudor style 2 story
with 4 bedrooms
and 2.5 baths, fami-
ly room with fire-
place. Accessible
outdoor deck from
kitchen, family room
Basement area can
be finished off for
additional living
space.
MLS 13-1818
$284,500 $284,500
Jay A. Crossin Jay A. Crossin
Extension 23 Extension 23
CROSSIN CROSSIN REAL REAL
EST ESTA ATE TE
570-288-0770 570-288-0770
DALLAS
Newberry Estate -
The Greens
4,000 sq. ft. condo
with view of ponds
& golf course. Three
bedrooms on 2
floors. 5 1/2 baths, 2
car garage & more.
$425,000
MLS# 12-1480
Besecker Realty
570-675-3611
906 Homes for Sale
DALLAS
3 Crestview Drive
Sprawling multi-
level, well-con-
structed and contin-
uously maintained.
5,428 sq. ft. of living
space. Living room
and formal dining
room with two-way
gas fireplace and
hardwood flooring.
Eat-in kitchen with
island. Florida room
with flagstone floor.
5 bedrooms, 4
baths, 2 half-baths.
Lower level rec-
room with fireplace
and wet bar leads to
heated, in-ground
pool. Beautifully
landscaped two-
acre lot. $525,000.
MLS#13-1309
Call Joe Moore
570-288-1401
DALLAS
Beautiful well kept 2
story Colonial fea-
tures 3,900 square
feet, 5 bedrooms,
3.5 baths, hard-
wood & tile floors,
gorgeous entry
foyer, built-in POOL,
fenced yard,
3 car garage.
ONE YEAR HOME
WARRANTY
INCLUDED.
MLS 13-1932
$469,000
Tracy Zarola
574-6465
696-0723
DALLAS
NEWBERRY ESTATE
Exceptional 4 bed-
room, 3 bath town-
house. Hardwood
floors. Bright & airy
kitchen. Finished
lower level with
walk-out to patio.
Enjoy carefree living
with swimming, golf
& tennis amenities.
MLS#13-2185
$199,000
Call Geri
570-862-7432
696-0888
DALLAS
Oak Hill
19 Sunset Drive.
3 bedroom, 2 bath
rancher with gas
hot water base-
board heat. Central
air conditioning. 12
x 24 three season
porch. Gorgeous
rear yard. Over-
sized 2 car garage.
(PHFA financing:
$4,400 dn, $671
mo., 4% int., 30
yrs.) MLS # 13-1939.
$144,900.
Ask for Bob
Kopec, Humford
Realty 822-5126.
906 Homes for Sale
DALLAS
45 Old Grandview
Ave. Immaculate 3
bedroom, 2 3/4
bath, attached 2
car garage, Bi-
Level is close to
Dallas Area
schools, shopping
and 309/415. Each
bedroom boasts
double closets.
Lower level family
room with fireplace,
and LL laundry.
Landscaped, new
roof, screened
porch and patio.
MLS#13-626
$199,500
Barbara Mark
696-5414
Smith Hourigan
Group
696-1195
Find Something?
Lose Something?
Get it back where it
belongs
with a Lost/Found ad!
570-829-7130
DRUMS
PRICE
REDUCTION!
BEECH MTN. LAKES
Charming 3 bed-
room, 2 bath 1,800
sq. ft. home with
lower level office,
family room & laun-
dry. Propane fire-
place, 2 car garage.
Quiet cul-de-sac,
right near lake.
MLS# 13-916
$164,500
Dana Distasio
570-715-9333
DRUMS
Bright, sunny raised
ranch with beauti-
fully landscaped
yard. Cul-de-sac
location. Large oak
kitchen with sky-
lights and beamed
ceiling in dining
area. Woodburning
fireplace in the liv-
ing room. Large
Master bedroom
suite. Family room,
hobby room, huge
garage and deck.
Call Mary Ann
Desiderio
570-715-7733
$172,500
MLS#13-1638
Smith Hourigan
Group
Mountain Top
570-474-6307
DURYEA
154 Pettebone St.
3 bedroom, 1.5,
Bath, New Every-
thing! (12-2287)
$114,900
Listed by:
Chris Shiner
O'BOYLE REAL
ESTATE, LLC
570.586.2911
906 Homes for Sale
DUPONT
$84,895
137 Lidys Road
Large 4 bed-
room, 2 story
home with new
roof and chim-
ney liner in April
2013. Plenty of
living space for
the price. www.
atlasrealtyinc
.com
MLS 13-215
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
P
E
N
D
I
N
G
DUPONT
PENDING PENDING
334 Lidy Road
2 bedroom Ranch
with a large yard,
could be cute little
home with TLC.
www.atlasrealty-
inc.com.
MLS 13-2077
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
FELL TWP.
RENT TO OWN
2 story single home
& garage in nice
neighborhood.
Own for only $295/
month for 12 years.
No money down, no
interest. Send
SASE to Porter, P.O.
Box 69, Chinchilla
PA 18410
906 Homes for Sale
DUPONT
REDUCED
$68,500
424 Simpson St.
Good condition
Cape Cod. 3 bed-
room, 1 full bath in
quiet neighborhood.
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-4357
Brian
Harashinski
570-237-0689
Say it HERE
in the Classifieds!
570-829-7130
DURYEA
$339,900
316 Raspberry
Rd.
Blueberry Hills
Like new 2 story
home with first
floor master
bedroom and
bath. Inground
pool on nice
corner lot with
fenced in yard.
Sunroom, hard-
wood floors, 2
car garage, full
unfinished
basement
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 13-610
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
S
O
L
D
906 Homes for Sale
DURYEA
Commercial or
Residential
Great opportunity to
live and work in the
same location OR
maintain current
tenant & rent out
the store front!
Spacious two floor,
3 bedroom living
quarters with large
open concept com-
mercial/office store
front. Newer roof,
separate utilities
&200 AMP electrical
service.
$65,000
CALL CHRISTINE
(570) 332-8832
613-9080
DURYEA
REDUCED
$85,900
226 Church St.
Large 2 story with 3
bedrooms and 2 full
baths. Extra large
room sizes, stained
glass and natural
woodowork. Not
flooded in 2011.
MLS #13-190. For
more information
and photos visit
atlasrealtyinc.com.
Call Charlie
829-6200
EXETER
$69,900
OPEN HOUSE
SUN. 6/16
12-1:30 PM
1156 Wyoming Ave.
Large home with 4
bedrooms, yard
with detached 2 car
garage, private
yard. Home needs
a little updating but
a great place to
start! www.atlasre-
altyinc.com
MLS 13-865
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 2013 PAGE 11D
PAGE 12D SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 2013 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
www.MattBurneHonda.com
2013 Honda
Civic LX Sedan
Thank You To Our Customers
0
.9%
APR FINANCING
NOWAVAILABLE!
*On select models to qualied
buyers for limited term.
2013 PILOT EX 4WD
MPG
17 City
24 HWY
**Lease 36 Months through AHFC. $0 Down Payment.
1st payment, tax, and tags due at delivery. Residual $19,494.00
Per Mo.
Lease
ease 36 Months through AHFC $0 Down Payment
Per Per
LLea
* *
Model #YF4H4DEW 250-hp (SAE Net),
3.5-Liter, 24-Valve, SOHC i-VTEC

V-6 Engine
Variable Torque Management 4-Wheel Drive
System (VTM-4) 18-Inch Alloy Wheels
Power Windows/Locks Fog Lights
Anti-Lock Braking System (ABS) i-MID with
8-inch WQVGA (480x320) Screen, Customizable
Feature Settings and Rearview Camera with
Guidelines Bluetooth HandsFreeLink

Tri-Zone Automatic Climate Control System


with Humidity Control and Air Filtration
Drivers Seat with 10-Way Power Adjustment,
Including Power Lumbar Support
229-Watt AM/FM/CD Audio System with 7
Speakers, Including Subwoofer 2-GB CD
Library Bluetooth

Streaming Audio
USB Audio Interface
2013 ACCORD LX SEDAN
MPG
27 City
36 HWY
***Lease 36 Months through AHFC. $0 Down Payment.
1st payment, tax, and tags due at delivery. Residual $13,962.00
Model #CR2F3DEW
185-hp (SAE Net), 2.4-Liter,
16-Valve, DOHC i-VTEC

4-Cylinder
Engine with Direct Injection
Vehicle Stability Assist
TM
(VSA

)
with Traction Control Continu-
ously Variable Transmission (CVT)
16-Inch Alloy Wheels Dual-Zone
Automatic Climate Control with
Air-Filtration System Rearview
Camera with Guidelines Blu-
etooth

HandsFreeLink

Pandora

Internet Radio Compatibility USB


Audio Interface MP3/Auxiliary
Input Jack i-MID with 8-inch
WQVGA (480x320) Screen and
Customizable Feature Settings
2013 Honda CR-V LX
LEASES BASED ON APPROVED CREDIT TIER 1 THRU AHFC. MILEAGE BASED ON 2012 EPA MILEAGE ESTIMATES. USE FOR COMPARISON PURPOSES ONLY.
DO NOT COMPARE TO MODELS BEFORE 2008. YOUR ACTUAL MILEAGE WILL VARY DEPENDING ON HOW YOU DRIVE AND MAINTAIN YOUR VEHICLE. OFFERS EXPIRE 7/8/2013.
MPG
28 City
39 HWY
*Lease 36 Months through AHFC. $0 Down Payment. 1st payment, tax, and tags due at delivery. Residual $12,248.10
Per Mo.
Lease
PPP r Per
LLea
*
Model #FB2F5DEW 140-hp (SAE Net), 1.8 Liter, 16 Valve, SOHC i-VTEC

4 Cylinder Engine 5 Speed Automatic Transmission Air


Conditioning with Air Filtration System i-MID with 5 inch LCD Screen and Customizable Feature Settings Rear View Camera with Guide-
lines Bluetooth

HandsFreeLink
3
SMS Text Message Function
4
Power Windows and Door Locks Vehicle Stability Assist
TM
(VSA

) with
Traction Control Anti-Lock Braking System (ABS) Cruise Control Illuminated Steering Wheel Mounted Cruise, Audio, Phone and i-MID
Controls 160-Watt AM/FM/CD Audio System with 4 Speakers Pandora

Internet Radio Compatibility


5
Bluetooth

Streaming Audio
3

USB Audio Interface


6
MP3/Auxiliary Input Jack Exterior Temperature Indicator Security System with Remote Entry and Trunk Release
$0 DOWN
PAYMENT
Per Mo.
Lease
*Lease 36 Months through AHFC $0 Down Payment
Per Mo. Per Mo.
LLease
* **
$0 DOWN
PAYMENT
MPG
22 City
30 HWY
****Lease 36 Months through AHFC. $0 Down Payment.
1st payment, tax, and tags due at delivery. Residual $15,920.00
Model #RM4H3DEW
185-hp (SAE Net), 2.4-Liter,
16-Valve, DOHC i-VTEC

4-Cylinder
Engine Automatic Transmission
Real Time AWD with Intelligent
Control System
TM
Vehicle Stability
AssistTM (VSA

) with Traction
Control Multi-Angle Rearview
Camera with Guidelines
Bluetooth

HandsFreeLink
USB Audio Interface
Remote Entry System
160-Watt AM/FM/CD Audio
System with 4 Speakers
Pandora

Radio Compatibility
Bluetooth

Streaming Audio
Per Mo.
Lease
$0 DOWN
PAYMENT
**Lease 36 Months through AHFC $0 Down Payment
Per Mo. Per Mo.
LLease
* ***
$0 DOWN
PAYMENT
Open Monday - Thursday 9-9
Friday & Saturday 9-5
Call: 1-800-NEXTHonda View Prices at www.mattburnehonda.com
Hondas
1110 Wyoming Ave,
Scranton, PA
1-800-NEXT-Honda
570-341-1400
*Certifed Hondas have 1 yr - 12k, Basic Warranty & 7yr - 100k Powertrain from orig. inservice date.
ACCORDS
09 ACCORD EX SDN Red, 53K ..........................NOW $16,502
10 ACCORD EX CPE 5SP Red, 15K.................NOW $16,538
10 ACCORD EXL CPE Gray, 29K........................NOW $18,943
11 ACCORD SE SDN Black, 31K .........................NOW $18,762
12 ACCORD LX SDN Black, 21K .........................NOW $18,400
10 ACCORD LX SDN Silver, 26K .........................NOW $15,676
10 ACCORD EXL CPE White, 65K ......................NOW $15,771
10 ACCORD EX SDN Navy, 30K..........................NOW $18,231
10 ACCORD EXL V6 SDN Gray, 30K ...............NOW $19,312
10 ACCORD LX SDN Silver, 19K .........................NOW $17,613
10 ACCORD EXL V6 Diamond, 21K......................NOW $19,381
ODYSSEY
08 ODYSSEY EX Slate, 45K ......................................NOW $17,986
11 ODYSSEY EXL Black, 36K ...................................NOW $27,154
10 ODYSSEY EX Navy, 32K.......................................NOW $20,646
MATT BURNE Honda
MATT BURNE Honda MATT BURNE Honda
MATT BURNE Honda PRE-OWNED CENTER
THE PRICE DROP
Continues....
YOUR
NICE
TRADE
HERE!
FIT
10 FIT SPORT Ice Blue, 29K........................................NOW $14,950
CRV 4WD
11 CRV SE White, 25K...............................................NOW $19,535
11 CRV SE Sage, 28K ...............................................NOW $19,586
11 CRV LX Gray, 28K................................................NOW $22,628
10 CRV EX Black, 35K...............................................NOW $20,381
09 CRV EXL Black, 58K............................................NOW $18,452
11 CRV EX Silver, 29K...............................................NOW $20,786
11 CRV EX Titanium, 27K...........................................NOW $20,842
11 CRV EXL Red, 13K .............................................NOW $24,950
10 CRV EXL Red, 43K .............................................NOW $20,950
11 CRV EX Black, 37K...............................................NOW $21,500
CIVICS
10 CIVIC LX SDN Lt Blue, 32K ..............................NOW $14,643
10 CIVIC LXS SDN White, 46K.............................NOW $14,495
10 CIVIC EX CPE Black, 42K ................................NOW $14,782
11 CIVIC EX CPE Red, 20K..................................NOW $15,620
12 CIVIC LX CPE Black, 12K.................................NOW $16,627
10 CIVIC EX SDN Black, 24K................................NOW $15,757
12 CIVIC EX CPE Gray, 24K .................................NOW $16,964
10 CIVIC EX SDN Red, 15K .................................NOW $16,750
11 CIVIC EXL SDN Titanium, 16K .........................NOW $17,886
10 CIVIC LX CPE Black, 46K.................................NOW $13,511
10 CIVIC LX SDN Lt Blue, 20K ..............................NOW $15,626
11 CIVIC LX SDN Silver, 25K................................NOW $15,943
10 CIVIC EX SDN Navy, 30K ................................NOW $15,682
PILOT 4WD
09 PILOT LX Cherry, 77K .........................................NOW $17,992
08 PILOT EX Gray, 48K ...........................................NOW $18,997
11 PILOT EX Black, 36K ..........................................NOW $24,976
11 PILOT EXL Red, 44K.........................................NOW $26,831
08 PILOT EX Silver, 43K ..........................................NOW $19,474
12 PILOT LX Silver, 24K...........................................NOW $26,580
All Vehicles Clearly Marked w/ Best Price
EXL, Blue, 73K $16,428
07 HONDA CRV 4WD
Burgandy, 58K, Was $19,750
Now $19,432
07 HONDA PILOT
EX4-DVD 4WD
White, 52K
Now $11,950
08 PONTIAC G6
SE SDN
Gray, 132K Silver, 67K, Was $9,750
As Traded $6,950 Now $7,924
04 TOYOTA COROLLA
S SDN
03 FORD
EXPLORER 4WD
Silver, 76K, Was $16,950
Now $15,999
07 HONDA ODYSSEY
EXL - DVD
Gray, 78K
Now $14,500
06 HONDA CRV
SE 4WD
Black, 9K, Was $16,950
Now $15,891
10 FORD FUSION
SE SEDAN
Gray, 48K, Was $10,950
Now $10,426
08 HYUNDAI
ELANTRA SDN
Sage, 48K, Was $12,500
Now $11,430
08 MERCURY MILAN
PREMIER SDN
Navi, White, 13K, Was $16,950
Now $15,992
12 NISSAN SENTRA
SE SDN
SE, 5 Spd., Red, 29K, Was $18,950
Now $17,947
07 NISSAN FRONTIER
XCAB 4WD
Gray, 97K, Was $10,450
Now $9,783
07 HONDA CIVIC
LX SDN
06 FORD
500 SE SDN
Red, 101K
Now $6,950
12 KIA
SOUL
Gray, 17K, Was $17,500
Now $16,999
12 ACURA
MDX AWD
Gray, 14K, Was $36,500
Now $35,987
06 HONDA ACCORD
EXL SDN
Silver, 107K, Was $11,995
Now $10,966
Silver, 96K, Was $12,500
Now $11,748
07 HONDA ACCORD
SE SDN
12 HONDA
CRZ HYBRID
Under 1000 Miles, Was $21,135
Now $19,970
Black, 71K, 3 Rows
Now $8,950
03 GMC ENVOY
SLE 4WD
Gray, 77K, Was $10,950
Now $9,965
06 NISSAN
ALTIMA SDN
Navy, 73K, Was $10,950
Now $10,462
04 JEEP LIBERTY
SPORT 4WD
Gray, 86K, Was $11,950
Now $11,403
06 HONDA CIVIC
LX SEDAN
Red, 63K, Was $11,750
Now $11,432
08 JEEP PATRIOT
SPORT 4WD
Silver, 85K, Was $13,500
Now $11,748
04 TOYOTA
HIGHLANDER AWD
Gray, 26K, Was $15,950
Now $16,660
12 TOYOTA CAMRY
LE SDN
Touring, White, 52K, Was $16,500
Now $15,551
10 CHRYSLER
TOWN & COUNTRY
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 2013 PAGE 13D
412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale
PAGE 14D SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 2013 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
522 Education/
Training
522 Education/
Training
522 Education/
Training
522 Education/
Training
518 Customer
Support/Client Care
518 Customer
Support/Client Care
518 Customer
Support/Client Care
518 Customer
Support/Client Care
503 Accounting/
Finance
503 Accounting/
Finance
Education
McCann School Of Business & Technology
Is Seeking Adjunct Instructors In:
Accounting - Day/Eve
Business Administration - Day/Eve
Psychology - Master's Degree Required- Day/Eve
Math - Master's Degree Required - Day/Eve
Medical Technologists ASCP certified - Day/Eve
Medical Assistant - Day/Eve
Health Info Technology/Medical Administrative
- Day/Eve
Please Send Resume To:
TJ.Eltringham@McCann.Edu
No Phone Calls Please
8
2
3
0
5
9
Amazon is an Equal Opportunity Employer.
Amazon is now hiring
Fulfillment Associates
in Hazleton!
www.WorkAtAmazonFulfillment.com
APPLY ONLINE:
Successful candidates will be required to pass a
post-offer, pre-employment drug screen and
background check. Applicants must be at least
18 years old and have obtained HS diploma or
equivalent.
Competitive pay
Comprehensive benefits
Company stock
STAFF ACCOUNTANT
First Keystone Community Bank has an
immediate opening for a full-time Accountant.
The successful candidate will be responsible for
preparation of monthly and quarterly financial
statements; account reconciliations; analyzing
and researching financial statements for trends,
profitability and efficiency, and compliance with
legal and regulatory requirements, GAAP and
internal policies and procedures.
Candidates must possess a Bachelors degree in
Accounting or related field and have a desire to
excel in a dynamic and customer-driven
environment. Successful candidate should have
a minimum of two years accounting experience
preferably with a banking or finance related
institution. Position requires a strong knowl-
edge and application of GAAP; intermediate
skill level with Microsoft Office products and
overall computer skills; proficiency in analyzing
and interpreting financial statements; a proven
history of teamwork; excellent written, verbal
and interpersonal communication skills with all
internal and external contacts;and organizational
and time management skills.
We offer competitive compensation and an
excellent benefit package. Please send rsum
and cover letter with salary requirements to:
First Keystone Community Bank
Human Resource Department
111 West Front Street, Berwick, PA 18603
EO/AA Employer
906 Homes for Sale
EDWARDSVILLE
Beautiful, Large
Brick Home with 5
bedrooms, 2 full
baths, 2 car gar-
age, large fenced-in
yard, sunporch.
Patio, lots of closets
& storage. Hard-
wood floors, large
kitchen with appli-
ances, 1st floor bed-
room suite. 2nd
kitchen in base-
ment. Was an old
rectory so has much
room to entertain.
Must see this home
to appreciate all it
has to offer. No
Water 2011 Flood.
MLS# 12-1536
$184,500
Linnea Holdren
570-371-1798
S E L E CT GROUP
5 7 0 - 4 5 5 - 8 5 2 1
570-455-8521
GET THE WORD OUT
with a Classified Ad.
570-829-7130
906 Homes for Sale
EDWARDSVILLE
Priced to sell!
Charming home on
a nice tree lined
street. 3 bedrooms
1 bath, great room
sizes. Large eat in
kitchen, 1 bedroom
offers a walk in clos-
et, hardwood floors
in bedrooms, 3 year
old above ground
pool with deck, pool
comes with an
extra, brand new,
liner, modern bath-
room. A great home
at a great price just
waiting for its new
owner. Sold as is;
inspections are for
buyer information
only.
MLS #13-2085
$47,900
Call/text Donna Cain
947-3824 or
Tony Wasco
855-2424
570-901-1020
906 Homes for Sale
EXETER
$89,900
206 Cedar St.
Neat and tidy one
story Ranch home
with large unfin-
ished basement
which could make a
great family room.
Rear carport for off
street parking. Low
maintenance home
with 5 rooms, 3
bedrooms.
www.atlasrealty-
inc.com
MLS 13-1914
Colleen Turant
570-237-0415
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
906 Homes for Sale
EXETER
$89,900
19 Thomas St.
4 bedroom, 2 bath
with 2 car garage
on quiet street.
Super yard, home
needs TLC, being
sold AS IS.
www.atlasrealty-
inc.com.
MLS 13-317
Call Tom
570-262-7716
MOUNTAINTOP
Townhome
Nice end unit on
large corner lot.
laminate floors in
dining room,
ceramic tile floors in
kitchen and baths.
New stainless steel
appliances. New LG
front loading steam
washer, back up
generator system.
$117,900. NEG.
570-262-0486
906 Homes for Sale
Exeter
303 Bluebell Court
Very nice, 2-story
townhouse with a
brick front. 3 bed-
rooms, 1.5 baths,
eat-in kitchen with
laminate floor and
oak cabinets. Fin-
ished lower level,
gas heat and cen-
tral air. MLS#13-786
$119,900
Call Annie Dreesen
570-905-0253
It's that time again!
Rent out your
apartment
with the Classifieds
570-829-7130
WARRIOR RUN
2 story, 2 bedroom
with fenced in yard,
all appliances
included. $51,900
Call Ed Appnel
570-817-2500
906 Homes for Sale
EXETER
362 Susquehanna
Avenue
Completely remod-
eled, spectacular,
2 story Victorian
home, with 3 bed-
rooms, 1.5 baths,
new rear deck, full
front porch, tiled
baths & kitchen,
granite counter-
tops. All cherry
hardwood floors
throughout, all new
stainless steel
appliances & light-
ing. New oil fur-
nace, washer/dryer
in first floor bath.
Great neighbor-
hood, nice yard.
$174,900 (30 year
loan, $8,750 down,
$739/month, 30
years @ 3.25%)
NOT IN FLOOD
Call Bob at
570-654-1490
Sell your own home!
Place an ad HERE
570-829-7130
906 Homes for Sale
EXETER TWP.
NEW PRICE
Stately brick 2
story, with in
ground pool, cov-
ered patio, finished
basement, fireplace
& wood stove. 3
car attached gar-
age, 5 car
detached garage
with apartment
above.
MLS #11-1242
$499,000
Call Joe 613-9080
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
906 Homes for Sale
EXETER
13 Thomas Street
Handicap accessi-
ble. 2 bedroom
rancher with vinyl
siding. Modern
kitchen and walk-in
shower. Central air
conditioning. One
car garage. 3
season porch. Nice
fenced rear yard.
MLS # 13-2428.
$95,000.
Ask for
Bob Kopec
Humford Realty,
Inc.
570-822-5126.
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
906 Homes for Sale
FORTY FORTY FORT FORT
1426 Wyoming Ave.
You will fall in love
with the grand Vic-
torian with magnifi-
cent entry foyer,
modern kitchen
with new counter
tops, enclosed 3
season side and
rear porch. Reno-
vated large front
porch, off street
parking and so
much more! Prop-
erty could also be
Professional office
in home use.
MUST SEE
MLS 12-3604
$199,900 $199,900
Jay A. Crossin Jay A. Crossin
Extension 23 Extension 23
CROSSIN CROSSIN REAL REAL
EST ESTA ATE TE
570-288-0770 570-288-0770
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
906 Homes for Sale
GLEN LYON
194-196 E. Main St.
Large home with
mother in law suite
that can either be
open to the rest of
the house or closed
off with its own
entrance and used
as an apartment.
This home has vinyl
siding, newer elec-
trical, replacement
windows, large yard
and 2 car garage.
Home offer a 1st
floor master and
bath, 3 fireplaces
and tons of room.
Come check out all
the possibilities for
yourself.
MLS 13-2419
$87,500
John Polifka
570-704-6846
FIVE MOUNTAINS
REALTY
570-542-2141
Looking for that
special place
called home?
Classified will address
Your needs.
Open the door
with classified!
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 2013 PAGE 15D
GARAGE & YARD
SALES
The listed Garage Sales below can be
located on our interactive Garage Sale
map at timesleader.com. Create your
route and print out your own turn-by-
turn directions to each local sale.
SPONSORED BY:
GET THE APP ON IPHONE OR ANDROID TEXT NEPAGS
to 52732 Messaging and Data Rates may apply. 5
Add to route
140 S Grant Street,
Wilkes-Barre
ASHLEY
17 Conyngham St
Fri., Sat. & Sun, 9-6
Entire contents of
two family house &
garage. New wash-
er & dryer, furni-
ture, glassware,
pictures, antiques,
full sets of china,
new womens
clothing, inground
pool items, lamps,
mirrors, kitchen-
ware, outdoor furni-
ture, small appli-
ances. Cash Only.
No Early Birds.
Something for
Everyone. No rea-
sonable offer
refused. Everything
Must Go Soon!
ATTENTION VENDORS
Decorative/Sea-
sonal/Accent
Pieces for sale.
Purchase sepa-
rately or all.
Call 675-5046
after 6PM
BACK MOUNTAIN
704 Coon Road
Franklin Township
Sat., June 15, 9 to 2
Small appliances,
carpet shampooer,
Psaltz Graff,
Designer handbags,
Womens shoes,
Christmas and
Home Decor. Too
much to list, Dont
Miss This One!
CARVERTON
UUCWV CHURCH
Across the Mt.
Olivet Cemetery, 1/4
mile from Frances
Slocum State Park
Entrance.
Sat., June 15, 8-12
Childrens clothing
& toys, household
items, kitchen
goods, RR china,
books, holiday
items, Mary Kay
products, sporting
goods, towels,
bedding & much
more!
COURTDALE
57 WHITE ROCK
TERRACE
SAT. 6/15 ONLY
8:00am -12:30 pm.
Furniture,
Household items,
kids bike, and
much more!
DALLAS
178 thru 196 East
Overbrook by Lum's
Fernbrook Inn
8AM Multi Family
Sale Collectibles,
Clothing,Children's
books, Household,
Antiques, much
more
DALLAS
220 OVERBROOK
June 15, 8 to 1
Everything must
go, you want it, we
have it! priced to
sell...too much to
list, toys, christmas,
antiques, crafts,
household, sports
DALLAS
329 COUNTRY
CLUB RD.
8-3
HBA ITEMS, GIRLS
CLOTHES, HOUSE-
HOLD, COMPUTER,
ELECTRONIC,
POWER TOOLS,
TOO MUCH TO LIST
Say it HERE
in the Classifieds!
570-829-7130
DALLAS
4 E. Center Hill Rd.
29th ANNUAL
MARKET ON THE POND
120 VENDORS
Sat. June 15th
9 am - 3 pm
MEADOWS NURSING &
REHAB CENTER
(Across from Mis-
ericordia University)
570-675-8600,
ext. 115 or 195
Rain date: 6/22
DALLAS
JUNE 15 8-1
92 Lehman Avenue
(off Huntsville)
Children's (hi chair,
pack n play,
toys,etc), furniture,
electronics, cloth-
ing, household and
much more!
DALLAS
Saturday, June 15th
9am to 3pm
41 Old Grandview
Avenue
Household items,
speakers, tools,
kids dirt bike, office
chair/supplies, toys,
used Hess trucks,
log splitter, fire-
place accessories,
Free firewood and
much, much more!
DALLAS
The Pines
20 McAuley Drive
Sat., June 15, 9 - 3.
Entire contents of
house for sale.
Everything must go.
Walk over from the
Market on the
Pond!
DRUMS
317 North Hunter
Highway. (Rt. 309
Across from Evans
Road House) Sat.,
June 15, 8 to 12.
Building materials,
windows, doors,
counter tops, used
lumber decking,
Honda air compres-
sor, Wacker Jump-
ing Jack Camper,
Grill, chandeliers,
lock sets, golf balls.
DRUMS
Brookview Estates
Huge Development
Sale
June 15, 8am-12pm
Multi-Family
Rt. 309, turn in at
Energy Tech.
EDWARDSVILLE
65 Cook Street
Larkmount; Satur-
day; 8am-2pm
Vintage furniture,
complete set vin-
tage Franciscan
Desert Rose China
with glass wear
American Girl,
Fenton, Brighton,
Coach, Oreck,
Jewelry, and MORE!
EDWARDSVILLE
681 Main Street
Thurs., 10 to 5
Fri., 10 to 7
Sat. & Sun., 8 to 8
Mon., 10 to 5
VENDORS WANTED
$10 a day, outside.
Starting at $50 per
month inside.
EXETER
9 West Packer Ave.
Sat., June 15, 8 to 2
Something for
Everyone!
EXETER
233 Harland Street
Sat., June 15, 8 to 2
Kids clothes, toys,
DVDs, CDs, col-
lectibles, household
items, and some-
thing for everyone!
EXETER
STRAWBERRY
FESTIVAL &
FLEA MARKET
First Presbyterian
Church
of West Pittston
being held
St. Cecilia
1700 Wyoming Ave
Exeter
Sat., June 15th
11am to 5pm
Rain or Shine
Refreshments are
available.
FORTY FORT
1170 Wyoming Ave.
Sat., June 15, 8 to 1
Clothing, including
maternity and baby,
jewelry, household,
and furniture.
FORTY FORT
37 Yates St.
(Off Wyoming Ave.)
Sat. June 15,
8:00-3:00
Remaining contents
of lovely home.
Sofa, chairs, tables,
lamps, stereo,
Kitchen set, kitchen
items, beds,
dressers,
Mirrors, picnic
table, porch furni-
ture, Holiday,
wheelchair, tools.
Womans clothing.
Too much to list, all
priced to sell!
FORTY FORT
67 Hughes Street
Fri., June, 14, 8-1:30
Sat., June 15, 8 to 2
Rain or Shine!
Childrens toys and
clothes, ladies
clothes, all good
items! Hunting and
Fishing rods, reels
and lure (some old).
Set of Boat oars,
many plumbing
items, hand and
power tools, Deer
Drag Sled, ATV
ramps, gas grill
cover, and many
more good items!
FORTY FORT
71 Slocum Street
Sun, June 16, 8-2
Clothing, new jig-
saw puzzles, bed-
ding, shoes, lamp,
palm plant, mini
greenhouse, win-
dow blinds, porch
shades & more.
No Early Birds
Hanover Township
17 Adams Street
Sat., June 22, 8-2
Household items,
bedroom furniture,
electronics, clothes,
pictures, baby
items, odds and
ends, holiday deco-
rations, tools, and
car parts.
Hanover Township
3 Prince Street
Sat., June 15, 8-4
Hand, power, plas-
ter Tools, New
Pampered Chef,
half price, House-
hold, Retro and
Antique furniture,
Hale kitchen/ hutch,
China and Linens,
3 TVs and more!
KINGSTON /
EDWARSDVILLE
77 Bellas St
NEIGHBORHOOD
SALE
Fri., & Sat. 9 to 1
HANOVER TWP.
3 Raymond Drive
Sat., June 15, 9-1
Furniture, garden &
hand tools, bric-a-
brac, wall hangings.
HARVEYS LAKE
2263 Lakeside Dr.
Pole 204, near
Sandy Beach
Sat & Sun, 9-3.
Antiques, furnish-
ings, clothing, col-
lectibles, household
items, tools, exer-
cise equipment.
KINGSTON
16 S. Thomas Ave.
Sat., June 15, 8-12
Tool boxes, miter
saw, golf, fishing,
bikes, NASCAR,
weed wacker.
KINGSTON
239 Schuyler Ave
Sat., June 15, 9-3
for information call
570-332-1246.
Oak bedroom set, 2
TVs, Harley David-
son pool table, mar-
ble coffee table,
end tables, tree
stand, 35 mounted
animals.
Lots More,
Too Much To List!
KINGSTON
285,286 & 225
Wright Ave.
Sat., June 15, 9-1
Household items,
bedding, childrens
clothes & shoes,
toys, DS games &
much more.
Everything Priced
to Sell!
KINGSTON
32 W. Walnut St.
Sat., June 15, 9 to 1
Everything reason-
ably priced. First
come, first served!
KINGSTON
328 Butler Street
Sat, June 15, 8-1
clothing & acces-
sories, household,
books, videos, toys,
small electrics &
much more!
KINGSTON
34 N. Landon Ave.
Sat., June 15, 9-3
Girls clothes - 6
months & up, baby
gear, 2 bikes,
mens clothes (XL),
books, VHS tapes,
living room chair,
housewares &
much more!
KINGSTON
406 Schuyler Ave.
Sat., June 15, 9 to 2
Wide assortment
for everyone!
KINGSTON
96-98 CHESTER ST
SAT., JUNE 15TH
8:30 AM TO 1 PM
EVERYTHING
MUST GO!
KINGSTON
52 South Gates Ave.
Sat. & Sun., 9 to 3
No Early Birds!
Too many items to
list and lots of
ladies clothing.
KINGSTON
563 Westmoreland
Ave.
SAT., JUNE 15TH
8 AM TO 1 PM
Furniture, toys,
games, CDs, books,
videos, exercise
weights.
KINGSTON
571 Ford Avenue
Sat., June 15, 8-3
Seasonal decora-
tions, household
goods, something
for everyone!
KINGSTON
644 Charles Ave.
Saturday June 15
8 a.m. to 4 p.m.
DIRECTIONS:
From Wyoming Ave.
or Rutter Ave.
to E. Dorrance To
Charles
Entire Contents
Of Nice Home.
Including beautiful
curio cabinet, like
new leather sofa
& love seat, recliner,
like new sectional
sofa, nice dining
room set, glass top
coffee tables, Asian
style trunks &
chests glass -ware,
prints, designer
items, patio furni-
ture, Parabody gym
system, Precor
elliptical and much
more!
SALE BY COOK &
COOK ESTATE
LIQUIDATORS
www.cookand-
cookestateliquida-
tors.com
KINGSTON
660 Tioga Ave.
Sat.,June 15, 9-1
Electronics, appli-
ances, decor,
clothes & toys
LARKMOUNT
MANOR
LARKSVILLE
Neighborhood Sale
25+ Families
Main Street
Edwardsville to
Church St.
Sat June 15
8am-2pm
rain date June 22
LARKSVILLE
287 Church St
HUGE MULTI
FAMILY YARD &
GARAGE SALE
Fri. & Sat. 8am-3pm
Antiques, furniture,
tools, plants, crafts,
jewelry, sewing.
LAUREL RUN
3779 Laurel Run Rd
Sat., June 15, 9-12
Good quality baby &
kids items from
newborn through
school-age includ-
ing: "Cars" bike &
scooter, toys,
games, puzzles,
books, strollers,
highchair, car seats,
blankets & more.
Need a Roommate?
Place an ad and
find one here!
570-829-7130
LEHMAN
Victory Baptist
Church on Market
St., Near Lehman-
Jackson Elementary
Saturday the 15th
8:00AM - 3:00PM
All size clothing,
household, toys,
collectibles, furni-
ture, NHL Jerseys,
31, Homemade
baked goods &
craft sale!
LUZERNE
Building was sold
jewelry cases,
china, collectibles
furniture, Prices
lowered daily!
205 Main Street.
Month of June
12th through 15th
19th through 22nd
11 am to 5 pm
MOUNTAIN TOP
103 Greystone Dr.
Sat. June 15
8am-2pm
Table and chairs,
computer items,
clothing for all,
household, kids
items, Xmas,
Hallmark, plus
much more!
MOUNTAIN TOP
107 & 110,
Brookhollow Road
Sat., June 15, 8 to 1
(off 309 at McDon-
alds, make 1st left.)
Exercise, Tele-
scope, Too many
items to list!
MOUNTAIN TOP
12 Magnolia Road
Grandview Manor
Saturday, June 15
9am to Noon
Auto Accessories,
Computer-Electron-
ics, Furniture,
Generator, Holiday
Decor, Household
Goods, Ladies
Clothes, Lawn/
Garden Tools,
Office Supplies,
Radios, Sound
System, Sporting
Goods, Tools,
Toys/Games, TV
And More. Also
Offering Rare Vin-
tage Collectibles:
(Disney, Nabisco,
Nascar, NFL,
Seraphim Angels)
MOUNTAIN TOP
1448 S. MAIN RD
SAT., 6/15
8AM-1PM
Ladies purses,
accessories, kids
clothes, shoes,
housewares &
more.
MOUNTAIN TOP
266 Hemlock
Terrace, Sat., 8 to 1
House hold items,
and much more,
too many items
to list!
MOUNTAIN TOP
37 Valley View Drive
Fri. & Sat., 8 to 1
Wire dog crate, toy
box and toys,
books, clothes and
household items.
SWOYERSVILLE
169 Hemlock St.
Sat., June 15, 8-12
Wooden picnic
table, odds & ends.
Great Prices!
MOUNTAIN TOP
47 and 51
Greystone drive
Fri., 14 & Sat.,15,
8 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Tools, gym equip-
ment, household,
toys, and lumber.
MOUNTAIN TOP
51 Brook Lane
Sat., June 15, 8 to 1
Solid wood dining
room table and
chairs, gas grill, pic-
nic table and Much
Much More!
MOUNTAIN TOP
54 Dale Drive
Sat., 9am-2pm.
Many items are
new, all items to
good condition.
Priced to sell fast.
King mattress,
stained glass light,
brass music stand,
wedding supplies,
new sheets, decor,
seeds, dining table
&chairs, golf clubs
and much more.
MOUNTAIN TOP
596 S. MAIN RD
Sat., June 15th
9 am to 2 pm
Sharp steam clean-
er, vacuum, bird-
houses, luggage,
painted vases
MOUNTAINTOP
5030 Nuangola Rd.
SAT., JUNE 15TH,
8-1,
HUNTING CLOTHES
AND SUPPLIES,
VINTAGE ITEMS,
ART SUPPLIES,
PLANT TREE,
PORCH SWING,
PLANTING POTS,
CLOTHING, MISC.
NANTICOKE
64 Coal Street
Sat., 8 to 3 and
Sun., 8 to 1
All contents of
home must go.
Cash only.
OLD FORGE
191 DRAKES LANE
Saturday June 15
9AM-4:30PM
DIRECTIONS: OFF
MAIN STREET
Entire
Contents Of
Home & Garage
including two rooms
full of new &
vintage army sur-
plus, including
coats, camo pants,
shirts, jackets,
socks, belts,
boots, helmets,
mre's & acces-
sories, hundreds of
items, lots of books
including military &
historical, lots of
glassware, kitchen-
ware, furniture, holi-
day, numerous hand
and power tools,
loads of lawn and
garden tools, weed
eaters, new tires,
torpedo heater,
chain hoist, auto
items,truck tool box,
Dewalt radial saw
and much more!
CREDIT CARDS
ACCEPTED!
COOK & COOK
ESTATE
LIQUIDATORS
www.cookand-
cookestateliquida-
tors.com
WEST WYOMING
300 West 3rd St.
Sat., June 15, 8 to 1
Collectibles, and
antiques, something
for everyone!
PLAINS
13 Diana St
Off River St.
Fri. & Sat. 9-2
Storm door, shut-
ters, leaf blower,
small appliances,
womens clothing
(m & l), Christmas
items & much
more!
PLAINS
98 Burke St
Saturday, 8am-2pm
N. Main to Powell,
2nd side street on
right. TV, books,
clothes, household,
tire cover & more!
PLYMOUTH
22 E. Shawnee Ave.
Fri. & Sat., 8 to 2
Antiques, linens,
Knick-knacks,
books, household/
kitchen items, Male/
Female clothes,
Prints/ frames,
items of older home
and Much More!
PLYMOUTH
COMMUNITY
FLEA MARKET
Saturday, June 22,
2013 from 8a-2p.
$10 a table and set
up is at 7am. Both
families and
vendors welcome.
Contact Mary @
779-4237 or
Darnetta @
417-2840 to
reserve a spot.
Sponsored by
Plymouth
Neighborhood
Watch.
PLYMOUTH
First Reformed
Church
33 Willow Street
Thurs., Fri. & Sat.
9 to 3.
Saturday bag day
12 to 3.
PLYMOUTH
NEIGHBORHOOD
BLOCK SALE
PALMER &
JEANETTE STREETS
10+ FAMILIES
SAT., 6/15, 9-1
SHAVERTOWN
270 Ferguson Ave.
Saturday 8am-2pm.
Household items,
toys, games,
clothing, jewelry,
car items and much
more!
SHAVERTOWN
291 Crane Road
Take Carverton to
Manor to Crane Rd.
All Day Friday, 12-7
Saturday, 9-12
Girls clothing size 6-
12, boys/teen size
12-16, womens size
sm/med. Sets &
separates, many
still with tags! Step
2 Play Kitchen, Lego
Sets, Barbies,
child's rocker,
wooden doll cradle,
Cinderella Barbie
castle, NEW Keurig
in unopened box,
Oreck wood/tile
floor cleaner, much
more!
NICE ITEMS!
GOOD PRICES!
Need a Roommate?
Place an ad and
find one here!
570-829-7130
SHAVERTOWN
47 Druid Hills Dr.
Sat., June 15, 7-2
Sun., June 16, 9-2
EVERYTHING
MUST GO!
Tools, tons of
household & furni-
ture, clothing, out-
door equipment &
furniture, all kinds of
kids stuff, new
home center items
& materials & more!
DIR: Take Center St.
by Burger King to
Pioneer, right up hill
to Druid, 1st house
on left.
SHAVERTOWN
Methodist Church
163 North Pioneer
Parking lot sale
Sat. June 22 9-3
RENT YOUR SPACE
Includes 8 table for
$10 plenty of park-
ing. 570- 675-3616
or 570-696-9079
WEST PITTSTON
IMMACULATE
CONCEPTION
CHURCH SCHOOL
605 Luzerne Ave.
Sat., June 15, 8-12
Something for the
Entire Family!
childrens toys,
household & sports
items, jewelry,
holiday decorations
& more!
WEST WEST WYOMING WYOMING
6th Street
OPEN YEAR ROUND
SP SPACE ACE
A AV VAILABLE AILABLE
INSIDE & OUT INSIDE & OUT
Acres of Acres of
parking parking
OUTSIDE
SPACES
$10
Saturday
10am-2pm
Sunday
8am-4pm
WILKES-BARRE
195 McLean St.
Saturday June 15th,
8am to 3pm.
Clothing, house-
hold, decor, sea-
sonal, jewelry, etc.
WILKES-BARRE
221 S. Sherman St.,
Sat., June 15, 8 to 1
Assorted house
hold Merchandise,
clothing, jewelry,
and Much More!
WILKES-BARRE
250 WILKES-BARRE
TWP BLVD.
Across from
Applebees
Sat., 6/15 8am-2pm
HUGE SELECTION
BABY CLOTHES &
ACCESSORIES!!!!
girls clothing 0-3T
& other baby items
Something For All!
WILKES-BARRE
319-321 E. South St.
Sat. & Sun. 8 to 3
Electric lawn
mower, dining room
table and chairs,
clothes, lamps,
books, canning
supplies, antique
lamps and ceiling
fixtures, sewing
machine, AVON
bottles, gas stove,
gate leg table and
chairs, house hold,
and lots more!
WILKES-BARRE
40 Mundy Street
Sat., June 15, 9-12
Toys, kitchenwares
& household.
WILKES-BARRE
68 SYLVANUS ST.
JUNE 15 & 16
9 AM TO 3 PM
Toys, clothes,
useful items.
WILKES-BARRE
841 South Main St.
Sat., 8 to 5 &
Sun., 10 to 5, Hot
tub $400, Inflatable
pool, metal enter-
tainment center,
antiques, jewelry,
table set, Much
more for everyone!
WILKES-BARRE
GROVE ST.
Sat 6/15 9am -
2pm Cleaning out
the garage: tools,
nails, screws,
clamps, wrench-
es, auto repair &
electrical supplies.
Housewares
include storage
containers,
kitchen tools &
glasses.
WILKES-BARRE
NEIGHBORHOOD
54 MOYALLEN ST
ALSO ON GROVE &
DANA STREETS
8AM-2PM
Trains, coins, Tools,
Hess Trucks dolls,
steins old comic
books, pure copper
bars, to much to
mention.
WILKES-BARRE/SOUTH
66 Corlear St.
By Meyers HS
Sat., June 15, 8-2
Household, blank
DVDs, copy paper,
heirloom tomato
plants, office &
computer supplies,
electronics & more.
Many brand new
items. Something
for Everyone!
WYOMING
366 Monument Ave
Sat. June 15, 8-2
Exercise equip-
ment, tools,
Christmas items,
books & audio
books, girls clothes
& shoes & more!
WYOMING
3RD ANNUAL
Monument Ave.
between 7th & 8th
Streets
Sat., 6/15, 8-2 pm
Collectibles, a/c
unit, floor mate,
baby gear, Lionel,
comics, Little
Tykes, books,
DVDs, toys
WYOMING
Garage/
Yard Sale!!
2010 Wyoming Ave.
(Off Stites St.,
Across from the
Forty Fort airport)
Fri. & Sat., 9 to 1
Making room for
the car, and clean-
ing up the house
and attic, a little bit
of everything!
Need a Roommate?
Place an ad and
find one here!
570-829-7130
PAGE 16D SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 2013 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale
548 Medical/Health
412 Autos for Sale
548 Medical/Health
412 Autos for Sale
548 Medical/Health
412 Autos for Sale
551 Other
566 Sales/Business
Development
522 Education/
Training
468 Auto Parts
506 Administrative/
Clerical
551 Other
566 Sales/Business
Development
522 Education/
Training
468 Auto Parts
506 Administrative/
Clerical
551 Other
566 Sales/Business
Development
551 Other
*Leases: 39 mos., 10,000/yr., Tier 1 Credit Approved, $2999 due @ signing.
Payments plus tax. All Rebates Applied. See Dealer for Details.
6/30/13
6/30/13
6/30/13
6/30/13
6/30/13
6/30/13
2013 Buick Verano
STK# 2285
Lease For
$
199per mo.*
+ Tax
MSRP $23,975
2013 Buick Regal Turbo
STK# 2275, Premium I
Lease For
$
259per mo.*
+ Tax
MSRP $33,540
2009 Buick Enclave CXL AWD
Leather Seating, Moonroof, Navigation,
Chrome Wheels, Local One Owner, 75K Miles
$
22,995
*
2013 Buick Lacrosse
STK# 2213, Leather Group
Lease For
$
355per mo.*
+ Tax
MSRP $36,955
2006 GMC Sierra X-Cab 4x4
SLE Equipment, High Miles - Low Price
2013 Buick Encore AWD
In Transit, Premium Group
Lease For
$
329per mo.*
+ Tax
MSRP $33,030
2013 GMC Terrain SLE1 AWD
STK# 2286
Lease For
$
226per mo.*
+ Tax
MSRP $28,880
2010 Ford Escape XLT 4x4
Local Trade, Black Beauty,
Just 45K Miles
2010 Chevy Impala LT
Local One Owner, 41K Miles,
Moonroof, Rear Spoiler
2006 Chevy Impala LS
Black Beauty, Local Trade,
2009 Chevy Silverado X-Cab Z-71 4x4
Local One Owner, 75K Miles,
Hurry On This One!
2000 Buick Park Avenue
Local Trade, Extra Clean,
High Miles-Low, Low Price
2007 Chrysler Town & Country
Local New Car Trade, Just Serviced,
90K Miles
$
6,995
*
As-Traded
$
16,995
*
$
14,995
*
$
11,995
*
$
20,995
*
$
5,995
*
$
7,995
*
The Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center is currently
accepting Applications for full-time Registered and Licensed
Practical Nurses at the VA Medical Center, Wilkes-Barre, PA.
Registered Nurses
Emergency Room
Medical/Surgical
ICU
Operating Room
Short Procedure Unit (SPU)
Community Living Center (Geriatrics)
Licensed Practical Nurses
Medical/Surgical
Community Living Center (Geriatrics)
Registered Nurses BSN Preferred (not required). Interested
applicants must submit the following information: Application for
Nurses and Nurse Anesthetists, VAF 10-2850a; Declaration for
Federal Employment, OF-306; Curriculum Vitae, copy of Nursing
Degree, and License Verification. ACLS/BCLS Certification
documentation required upon joining the VA Medical Center staff
or within the first 3-months of employment.
Licensed Practical Nurses must be a graduate of a school of
practical or vocational nursing and hold a current, full, active and
unrestricted License. Interested applicants must submit VAF
10-2850c, Application for Associated Health Occupations, OF-306
Declaration for Federal Employment and a copy of your current
license. BCLS Certification documentation required upon joining
the VA Medical Center staff or within the first 3-months of
employment.
In addition to a competitive salary, we offer paid, vacation/sick
leave, health and life insurance coverage and an attractive
retirement package including a tax deferred savings plan.
For Application forms or additional information please call
(570) 824-3521, EXTENSION 7209 (570) 824-3521, EXTENSION 7209
Please mail your complete application package to:
DEP DEPAR ARTMENT TMENT OF OF VETERANS VETERANS AFF AFFAIRS AIRS
Medical Center (05) Medical Center (05)
1 11 11 11 East End Boulevard, 1 East End Boulevard, W Wilkes-Barre, P ilkes-Barre, PA A 1871 18711 1
VA IS AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY
Would you like to deliver newspapers
as an Independent Contractor
under an agreement with
THE TIMES LEADER?
Call Terry to make an appointment
at 570-829-7138
Routes Currently Available:
KINGSTON
SWOYERSVILLE
WILKES-BARRE
LEE PARK
PLYMOUTH
WAPWALLOPEN
Discover an exceptional opportunity to deliver
quality healthcare to Americas Veterans
Part-Time/Full-Time Housekeeping Aids
The VA Medical Center Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania is currently
accepting applications from PREFERENCE ELIGIBLE
VETERANS for Part-T Part-Time/Full-T ime/Full-Time Housekeeping ime Housekeeping Aids Aids in
the Environmental Management Service.
Additional information regarding PREFERENCE ELIGIBLE
VETERANS can be located at:
(http://www.opm.gov/policy-data-oversight/veterans-services/
vet-guide/) or contact Human Resources.
Varying shifts to include weekends and holidays. In addition to a
starting rate of $14.25 per hour, we offer vacation/sick leave,
health and life insurance coverage and an attractive retirement
package including a tax deferred savings plan.
Interested applicants must submit the following information:
Resume; Declaration for Federal Employment, OF-306; and
Member 4 copy of DD 214
(additional documentation may be required).
For additional information please call
(570) 824-3521, EXTENSION 7209
Please mail your complete application package to:
DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS AFFAIRS
Medical Center (05)
1111 East End Boulevard
Wilkes-Barre, PA 18711
VA IS AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER
713 North State St.
Clarks Summit, PA 18411
570-586-6676
www.chermakauto.com
$
43,995
Silver , Gray Heated & Cooled Leather
3.5l 6cyl, Auto Trans, AWD
Navigation, Sunroof, Alloy Wheels
Fog Lamps, Back Up Camera
1 Owner Car 9k Miles
Chermak
Suzuki/Saab
Valley Chevrolet featuring our brand new,
state of the art showroom & service complex
with the regions largest inventory of new Chevrolets
SALES CONSULTANTS NEEDED
We are seeking individuals that are interested in
becoming part of a great sales team. Team-oriented,
hard working, personable individuals.
Valley Chevrolet offers a full training program, a very rewarding
pay plan that includes a weekly salary, 401K Retirement Plan,
Blue Cross/Blue Shield & a 5 day work week.
Automotive sales experience a plus but not necessary.
Please apply in person to:
Blake Gagliardi, Sales Manager or Rick Merrick, Sales Manager
VALLEY CHEVROLET
VALLEY CHEVROLET
601 Kidder Street, Wilkes-Barre, PA
DALLAS SCHOOL DISTRICT - EOE
is accepting applications for the following
teaching positions for the 2013-2014 School
Year:
Full Time
High School Technology Education
Elementary
Long Term Substitutes
Middle School English
Middle School Special Ed
Elementary
If a complete application packet is on file,
please submit a letter of interest only. All
others submit a complete application packet.
For details visit the Employment page of the
district web site, www.dallassd.com. All
application packets must be received by
Deadline: June 24, 2013.
AS ALWAYS ***HIGHEST PRICES***
PAID FOR YOUR UNWANTED
VEHICLES!!!
DRIVE IN PRICES
Call for Details (570) 459-9901
Vehicles must be COMPLETE!!
PLUS ENTER TO WIN $500 CASH!!
DRAWINGTO BE HELD LAST DAY
OF EACH MONTH
www.wegotused.com
AUTOMOTIVE CASHIER
221 ConynghamAve.,Wilkes-Barre
570-821-2778
PARTTIME
VALLEY CHEVROLET
SERVICE COMPLEX
Position includes data-entry,
fling & automotive service
cashier duties.
Phone skills a plus.
Saturdays required.
Send resume to:
pkarnafel@kenwallace.com
906 Homes for Sale
HUNTINGTON TWP.
Immaculate Cape
Cod in the country
with a beautiful
view. Three bed-
rooms, Florida room
& eat in kitchen.
MLS #13-1664
$159,900
Ken Williams
542-8800
Five Mountains
Realty
570-542-2141
906 Homes for Sale
JENKINS TOWNSHIP
HIGHLAND HILLS
FABULOUS VIEW!
3 bedroom, 3.5
bath, bi-level. Stain-
less kitchen with
granite counter-
tops. Porcelain tile
& laminate through-
out. In-ground pool.
Economical heating.
$219,900
Call 570-655-8034
906 Homes for Sale
NANTICOKE
38 E. Union Street
Nice single, 3 bed-
rooms, gas heat,
large yard.
Central location.
Affordable @
$64,900
TOWNE &
COUNTRY
REAL ESTATE
Call
570-735-8932 or
570-542-5708
906 Homes for Sale
HANOVER TWP.
Lyndwood Gardens
Newer 2 story.
kitchen with island &
breakfast area open
to family room with
fireplace. Formal
dining room, living
room, master suite
& 3 additional bed-
rooms with main
bath on second
floor. 2 car garage.
Fenced yard. Deck.
Central air. Home
warranty included.
MLS# 12-3070
$249,900
Call Linda
(570) 956-0584
Coldwell Banker
Rundle Real Estate
570-474-2340,
ext 19
Say it HERE
in the Classifieds!
570-829-7130
906 Homes for Sale
HANOVER TWP.
209 Constitution
Avenue
Meticulously main-
tained 4 bedroom, 2
story, vinyl sided, 5
year old home situ-
ated on a generous
lot. Large, modern
kitchen, 3 baths, 1st
floor family room, 2
car garage, deck
and soooo much
more!
MLS #11-2429
$269,900
Call Florence
Keplinger @
715-7737
Smith Hourigan
Group
474-6307
906 Homes for Sale
GOULDSBORO
BIG BASS LAKE
REDUCED
$120,000.
This large Chalet
has a full kitchen on
the ground floor
with full bath. Great
for two families to
share, or in-laws
quarters. In Big
Bass Lake Commu-
nity with indoor &
outdoor pools, club
house, gym & lake-
front beaches. Con-
veniently located
near Rts. 380, 435
& 307.
Call Tom
cell 516-507-9403
570-842-2300
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
HANOVER TWP.
291 Vanessa Drive
DIR: From Wilkes-
Barre to Sans Souci
Parkway, left on St.
Marys Rd, right on
Sively, left on Mark
Hill Rd., left on
Vanessa Drive.
Property is the last
home on the left.
Custom built colo-
nial two-story. 4
bedrooms, 4 baths,
two vehicle garage.
View of the Wyo-
ming Valley. Located
on a dead end, pri-
vate street, just
minutes from the
Wyoming Valley
Country Club, Han-
over Industrial Park,
& public transporta-
tion. Sun room, fam-
ily room with wood
burning fireplace,
hardwood floors on
1st & 2nd floors, 1st
floor laundry room &
bathroom. Central
cooling fan. Lower
level recreation
room with bar, lots
of closets & stor-
age, coal/wood
stove, office/5th
bedroom & bath.
MLS #12-4610
PRICE REDUCED
TO
$269,900
Louise Laine
283-9100 x20
283-9100
906 Homes for Sale
HANOVER TWP.
Extraordinary
quality built
4000+ sq. ft.
Home - rear yard
with stone patio
backs up to the 8th
Fairway of the
Wyoming Valley
Country Club!
Custom cherry eat-
in kitchen with
island, formal living,
dining & family
rooms have custom
hardwood floors,
1st floor family room
has Vermont Stone
fireplace & wet bar,
1st floor Master
Suite has his & her
dressing rooms &
powder rooms
opening to a tiled
master bath with
jetted tub & sepa-
rate tiled shower.
Second floor has 3
additional bed-
rooms with walk in
closets, 2 full baths
& large attic, gigan-
tic lower level family
room has stone
fireplace, seated
bar area with sink &
mirrored back-
splash, workout
area & powder
room. Stunning
landscaping with an
indoor & outdoor
speaker system,
oversized 2 car
garage & under-
ground sprinkler
system.
$395,000
Call Pat today @
570-287-1196
Smith Hourigan
Group
570 287-1196
HANOVER TWP.
NEW LISTING!
Like new town-
home. 3 bedrooms,
2.5 bath; two-story
townhome featuring
a two-story Great
room, hardwood
flooring throughout,
gas fireplace, gran-
ite tops, stainless
steel appliances,
maple glazed cabi-
nets in the kitchen
and a two-car
garage.
MLS #13-1960
$245,000
Maribeth Jones
696-6565
696-2600,
Ext. 210
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
HARDING
$214,900
605 Apple Tree Rd
Beautiful. Over 1
acre setting for this
all brick, 2 bedroom
Ranch, 2 car
attached garage
and 3 car
detached. Modern
kitchen with center
island and granite
countertops, mod-
ern tile bath with
seated shower,
central air, gas fire-
place, sun porch,
full basement. This
could qualify for
100% financing
through a rural
housing mortgage.
www.atlasrealty-
inc.com
MLS 13-1729
Lu Ann
570-602-9280
906 Homes for Sale
HARVEYS LAKE
PRICE REDUCED!
22 Wood Street
Nice cottage with
lake rights, close
to the public boat
dock. New kitchen
& living room ceil-
ings & insulation
just completed.
Enjoy this place
during the Summer
months or year
round. Recently
updated with new
roof & floors.
MLS# 12-3820
$64,900
Pat Doty
394-6901
696-2468
HARVEYS LAKE
205 Lakeside Drive
3 bedroom 3 bath,
Lake Front Cape
Cod with very spa-
cious rooms. Cen-
tral air, first floor
master bedroom
and oversized dock
with boatslip. Home
also features a two
car garage. There is
a sewer hookup.
Permit already in
place for the
Lakeshore. Build
your boathouse this
summer! $ 480,000
Make an Offer!
MLS# 12-1362
Mark Nicholson
Or Buz Boback
570-696-0724
Lewith & Freeman
Real Estate, Inc.
570-696-6400
HARVEYS LAKE
30 Pine Street
4 bedroom contem-
porary with a very
happy open floor
plan. Plenty of natu-
ral light and high
quality finishes.
Nestled in a private
setting. The beauti-
ful in ground pool
even has its own
cabana with a full
bath. This home
also features natu-
ral cedar exterior
and a two car
garage. $324,000.
MLS# 13-1330
Mark Nicholson
570-696-0724
Lewith & Freeman
Real Estate, Inc.
570-696-6400
HUGHESTOWN
reduced
$189,900
184 Rock St.
Spacious brick
Ranch with 3 bed-
rooms, large living
room with fireplace.
3 baths, large Flori-
da room with AC.
Full finished base-
ment with 4th bed-
room, 3/4 bath,
large rec room with
wet bar. Also a
cedar closet and
walk up attic. www.
atlasrealtyinc.com
MLS 12-3626
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
LAFLIN
$254,900
24 Fordham Road
Great Split Level in
Oakwood Park,
Laflin. 13 rooms, 4
bedrooms, 2 1/2
baths. 2 car garage
and large corner
lot. Lots of space
for the large or
growing family.
www. atlasrealty-
inc.com
MLS 13-452
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
Collect cash, not dust!
Clean out your
basement, garage
or attic and call the
Classified depart-
ment today at 570-
829-7130!
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 2013 PAGE 17D
906 Homes for Sale
HUGHESTOWN
REDUCED
$59,900
64 Center St.
Large 4 bedroom
with master bed-
room and bath on
1st floor. New gas
furnace and water
heater with updated
electrical panel.
Large lot with 1 car
garage, nice loca-
tion. www.atlasreal-
tyinc.com.
Must be sold to
settle estate
MLS 13-294
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
JENKINS TWP.
$129,900
689 R. Westmin-
ster Very private
2 bedroom
home located on
1.48 acres. Cen-
tral air,
screened in
porch, 1.5
baths, large liv-
ing/dining room,
extra 1 story
building could
be converted
into 2 car
garage. 16x8
screened in
porch, fresh
paint.
www.atlas
realtyinc.com.
MLS 13-1622
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
P
E
N
D
I
N
G
JENKINS TWP.
46 Old Mill Road
Stunning English
Tudor in a desirable
neighborhood.
Modern kitchen
with cherry cabi-
nets, stainless steel
appliances, island
with Jenn air and
tile floor. Separate
glass surrounded
breakfast room.
Family room with
gas fireplace, and
hardwood floors.
Formal dining room
with bay window.
French doors
throughout. Master
bedroom suite with
master bath, walk-
in closet and sepa-
rate sitting room.
Lower level rec-
room and office.
Two car garage.
Pittston Area
School District.
MLS#13-1076
Price Reduced
$298,000
Call
Sandra Gorman:
570-696-5408
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-696-1195
JENKINS TWP.
$239,000
Updated bi-level
with 2nd story mas-
ter suite addition
features a jetted
tub, separate show-
er, water closet &
two huge walk in
closets! Lower level
has 2nd kitchen &
can function as an
in-law suite. Fire-
place in 1st floor
family room, all new
windows, central air
& corner lot.
This is a Must See!
Call Christine
332-8822
613-9080
KINGSTON
$139,900
129 S. Dawes Ave.
Three bedroom, 2
bath cape cod with
central air, new
windows, doors,
carpets and tile
floor. Full concrete
basement with 9'
ceilings. Walking
distance to Wilkes
Barre. Electric and
Oil heat. MLS #12-
3283. For more
information and
photos visit
www.atlasrealty-
inc.com.
Call Tom
570-262-7716
906 Homes for Sale
KINGSTON
561 MERCER AVE.
This roomy 2-Story
includes a modern
kitchen & bath, liv-
ing & dining rooms,
3 bedrooms & a
family room in the
lower-level. The
yard is small, but
there is generous
off-street parking.
Enjoy the outdoors
from your 15 x 10
two-tier deck, or the
new front porch.
This home includes
2 free-standing gas
stoves. For more
details & to view the
photos online, go to:
www. pr udent i al
realestate.com &
enter PRU8N9T9 in
the Home Search.
Listed at $94,500.
MLS#13-1538.
Call today to
schedule a private
showing.
Mary Ellen Belchick
696-6566,
Walter Belchick
696-2600 ext. 301.
696-2600
KINGSTON
Charming three
bedroom 2 story
featuring pretty
living room. Formal
dining room. New
kitchen with stain-
less steel appli-
ances. Beautiful
hardwood floors.
Third floor bonus
room. Gas heat.
Private drive
provides plenty of
off street parking.
MLS# 13-754
$111,900
Call Ruthie
570-714-6110
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-287-1196
KINGSTON KINGSTON
80 James St.
This stately 4 bed-
room, 1.5 bath
Kingston home has
the WOW factor!
Meticulously well
cared for with old
world touches
throughout. Like a
stained glass win-
dow, built ins and
tiled fireplace in liv-
ing room. Kitchen is
modern eat in with
washer/dryer closet
for convenience.
Large front porch,
rear deck and
detached garage.
MLS 13-1761
$289,000 $289,000
Jay A. Crossin Jay A. Crossin
Extension #23 Extension #23
CROSSIN REAL CROSSIN REAL
EST ESTA ATE TE
570-288-0770 570-288-0770
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
KINGSTON
JAMES STREET
4 bedrooms,
3 baths. Large
living room with
fireplace, dining
room with built-n
breakfront. Kitchen,
den & laundry room
on 1st floor. Large
master bedroom
with fireplace &
walk in closet.
Screened in porch
on side, wide deck
on upper part of
yard, central air,
gas heat. Walk in
wine cooler in
basement,
two car garage
For an appointment
call 570-288-5571
LAFLIN
$109,000
147 Haverford Drive
Nicely kept 2 bed-
room, 1.5 bath
townhome in desir-
able neighborhood.
Great looking family
room in lower level.
Spacious rooms
with plenty of clos-
ets. Outdoor patio
with pavers and
trees for privacy.
Carpet, tiled kitchen
counter and AC unit
are ALL NEW! Move
in condition. www.
atlasrealtyinc.com
MLS 13-909
Call Terry
570-885-3041
906 Homes for Sale
LAFLIN
$229,000
7 Concord Drive
Beautifully main-
tained 2 story in
Oakwood Park. 3
bedrooms, 2.5
baths with 2 car
garage and private
rear yard. Mature
landscaping,
gas/electric heat
with central air.
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 13-2215
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
To place your
ad Call Toll Free
1-800-427-8649
LAFLIN
3 bedroom Bi-Level
situated on lovely
lot with formal din-
ing room, lower
level family room
with gas fireplace,
central air, conven-
iently located to
interstates &
Casino.
A must see!
MLS #13-1100
$199,000
Marie Montante
881-0103
288-9371
LAFLIN
PRICE REDUCED!
OAKWOOD PARK
If you like comfort &
charm, youll love
this sparkling 4,100
+ sq. ft. 5 bedroom,
4 bath two story tra-
ditional home in per-
fect condition in a
great neighborhood.
Nothing to do but
move right in. Off-
ers formal living &
dining rooms, 1st
floor family room
with fireplace, gran-
ite countertops in
kitchen & baths,
lower level recre-
ation room with fire-
place & wet bar.
MLS #13-549
Only $324,900
Call
Barbara Metcalf
570-696-0883
570-696-3801
LAFLIN
new price
$124,900
111 Laflin Road
Nice 3 edroom, 1.5
bath Split Level
home with hard-
wood floors, 1 car
garage, large yard
and covered patio
in very convenient
location. Great curb
appeal and plenty
of off street park-
ing. Rt. 315 to light
@ Laflin Rd. Turn
west onto Laflin Rd.
Home is on left.
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-2852
Keri Best
570-885-5082
LAFLIN
PRICE REDUCED
$360,000
10 Fairfield Drive
Exceptional & spa-
cious custom built
cedar home with
open floor plan and
all of the amenities
situated on 2 lots in
picturesque setting.
Create memories in
this 5 bedroom, 4
bath home with 18
ceiling in living
room, gas fireplace,
granite kitchen,
large 2 story foyer,
huge finished lower
level for entertain-
ing with bar/full
kitchen & wine cel-
lar. Inground pool &
hot tub. Directions:
Rt 315 to Laflin Rd.,
right onto Oakwood
Dr., right onto Ford-
ham Rd, left onto
Fairfield Dr., home
is on the right.
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-4063
Call Keri Best
570-885-5082
906 Homes for Sale
LARKSVILLE
$149,900
511 E. State St.
Everything you
need is in this
house. 4 bedrooms,
lower level family
room, den open
living/dining room,
nice yard with
above ground pool
and covered patio,
extra parking. 1 car
garage. Very well
maintained home.
Move right in!
MLS 13-2432
CALL COLLEEN
Job Seekers are
looking here!
Where's your ad?
570-829-7130 and
ask for an employ-
ment specialist
LARKSVILLE
OPEN HOUSE!!!
Sat., June 15th
Noon-2PM
Cutie with a large
lot. Nice kitchen.
Roomy living room.
Well kept home.
Seller will give a
carpet allowance
for second floor
carpet. Great
starter home- why
pay rent when you
can buy? This
would also make a
super investment
property.
MLS# 12-3707
$49,900
Tracy Zarola
696-0723
696-3801
MOCANAQUA
Nice 2 bedroom
Cape Cod with oak
kitchen cabinets,
walk in closet,
Anderson windows,
attic, sunroom,
open front porch,
10 X 14' rear deck
& detached garage.
Live in yourself or
use as rental.
Owner will consider
reasonable offer.
MLS# 12-2532
$62,000
Call Ken Williams
570-542-8800
Five Mountains
Realty
570-542-2141
MOOSIC
REDUCED
$87,500
R. 1104 Springbrook
Cape Cod home
with endless possi-
bilities. 3-4 bed-
room, 1 bath, cen-
tral air, plenty of
storage. Enclosed
porch, garage with
carport. Situated on
3 lots. Directions: 1-
81, Exit 180 Moosic
(Rt. 11) L. onto 502,
straight 1/2 mile.
Turn R onto 8th St.,
up hill, turn left,
house 3rd on right.
www.atlasrealty-
inc.com
MLS 13-607
Call Keri Best
570-885-5082
MOUNTAINTOP
GLEN SUMMIT
Beautiful private
setting surrounds
this 4,200 sq. ft. two
story. Cherry kit-
chen, 2nd floor rec
room, 4 bedrooms
& 3 1/2 baths.
Nature at the door
with wildlife, plus
hiking & biking trails.
MLS#13-1233
$249,900
Call Dave @
570-715-7750
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-474-6307
NANTICOKE
R. 395
E. Washington St.
Nice double block.
Two bedrooms
each side. Sepa-
rate heat & electric.
Close to College.
Affordable @
$49,500
Towne & Country
R.E. Co.
735-8932
or 542-5708
906 Homes for Sale
MOUNTAINTOP
46 Red Maple Ave.
Located in a quiet
community this
home offers many
amenities including
large yard, deck,
central air & shed
with electric. Inside
you will find a bright
kitchen open to din-
ing room, updated
full bath, spacious
family/rec room &
office. Newer roof &
gutters top off this
great property.
MLS#13-1650
$187,000
Call Jim Banos
570-991-1883
for appointment.
Coldwell Banker
Rundle Real
Estate
570-474-2340
MOUNTAINTOP
Search No More!
This five-year old
home is exquisitely
designed. Every
room has gorgeous
details & lots of
upgrades. The land-
scape is breathtak-
ing & the location
could not be better.
This home truly
stands out in
every way!
MLS# 13-1359
$364,500
Robert Altmayer
570-793-7999
Rundle
Real Estate
570-474-2340
MOUNTAIN TOP
Expansive 4 bed-
room 2 story on
nearly 3 acres
offers incredible
views! Modern
kitchen with new
quartz counters,
family room with
fireplace, new hard-
wood on first floor,
new heat pump,
first floor bedroom,
finished lower level,
3 car garage re-
tractable awning on
deck & more! Call
for an appointment
today!
MLS 13-251
$465,000
Call Linda Gavio
(570) 956-0584
Coldwell Banker
Rundle Real Estate
570-474-2340,
ext. 19
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
NANTICOKE
$124,500
WOW A MODERN
RANCH! King size
brick Ranch located
on the outskirts of
Nanticoke, Open
floor plan with large
sunny sunken living
room, tiled kitchen,
formal dining room
3 bedrooms. Bath
with tiled garden
tub and glass
shower. Finished
lower level with fire-
place, 3/4 bath with
laundry area and
carport. Newer
roof, furnace and
electrical. Newly
landscaped back
yard. Must See
MLS 12-4107
Michele Hopkins
570-540-6046
NANTICOKE
Perfect opportunity
in Nanticoke. Move
in ready home that
has it all. Great
kitchen, huge living
room/dining room
combo, generous
bedroom sizes, fin-
ished room in base-
ment, covered
deck, nice yard, &
in a great section of
town. If you are
looking in Nanticoke
this house has to
be put on the top of
your list.
MLS#13-1374
$110,000
Call Dave, Jr.
885-2693
Rubbico Real
Estate
826-1600
906 Homes for Sale
NANTICOKE
265 Kirmar Park-
way. 3 bedroom
Cape Cod style
home on large lot
with off street park-
ing. 1st floor master
bedroom, 2 season
sunroom, partial fin-
ished basement,
fenced yard, lots
of storage, large
modern eat in
kitchen.
MLS 13-1077
$89,900
ANTONIK &
ASSOCIATES,
INC.
Patricia Lunski
570-735-7497
NANTICOKE
393 E. Noble St.
Check out this 4
bedroom, 1.5 bath
home with 1 car
detached garage.
This home features
a Jacuzzi tub,
newer roof, fur-
nace, hot water
heater, replacement
windows, fenced
yard and large
covered deck.
MLS 13-613
$77,900
Call John Polifka
570-704-6846
FIVE MOUNTAINS
REALTY
570-542-2141
NANTICOKE
PRICE
REDUCTION
260-262
E. Green Street
Double Block
Plenty of parking
with paved back
alley. Close to
LCCC. New roof
installed in 2007
along with a kitchen
& bath update
in #260.
MLS #13-694
$59,900
Call Dana Distasio
570-715-9333
NANTICOKE
Modern, well main-
tained 4 bedroom
home in move in
condition. Covered
patio, in ground
pool, private fenced
yard, ductless air,
vinyl siding.
Immaculate!
MLS# 13-534
REDUCED TO
$154,900
Call Ann Marie
Chopick
570-288-6654
Looking for that
special place
called home?
Classified will address
Your needs.
Open the door
with classified!
NANTICOKE
REDUCED!
$64,900
245 East Ridge St.
Great home in move
in condition. Modern
kitchen & bath, din-
ing room, living
room, 3 bedrooms,
Appliances, de-
tached garage in
rear of lot. Alu-
minum siding.
$64,900
Shown by
appointment
CAPITOL
REAL ESTATE
Call
John Vacendak
Your Neighborhood
Professional
570-735-1810
570-823-4290
NANTICOKE
1210 S. Hanover St.
Large 3 bedroom 1
bath home with a
big yard. Possible
off street parking in
the back off the
alley. This home has
replacement win-
dows on the second
floor and awnings
over the windows.
This will be a great
home with a little
TLC. MLS# 13-2093
$59,900
John Polifka
570-704-6846
FIVE MOUNTAINS
REALTY
570-542-2141
906 Homes for Sale
NANTICOKE
Seller will enter-
tain all reason-
able offers.
117-119 Park St.
off Hanover Street
(Double Side x Side)
A great Double
Block house, in
good condition,
great investment
opportunity,
separate utilities
2 bedrooms each
side, Vinyl siding,
gas heat, hot water
baseboard, Large
lot, new fencing.
"THIS IS AN ESTATE,
NO SELLERS
DISCLOSURE".
HOUSE BEING
SOLD IN "AS IS
CONDITION",
ALL TEST, INSPEC-
TIONS, are for
informational
purposes only.
Shown to qualified
buyers. Need extra
notice to show,
tenant occupied
one side.
Call for appointment
and any other
questions.
Capitol
Real Estate
John Vacendak
Broker
Your neighborhood
Professional
570-735-1810
579-823-4290
NANTICOKE
1472 S. Hanover St.
Well maintained
bi-level house fea-
tures 2 bedrooms,
1 3/4 baths, recre-
ation room with
propane stove. Wall
to wall, 3 season
porch. Profession-
ally landscaped
yard. Storage
shed, new appli-
ances, ceiling fans.
Close to LCCC.
REDUCED!
$145,000
Call 570-735-7594
or 570-477-2410
OPEN HOUSE!
SAT. & SUN
15 & 16, 12-3
DALLAS
23 Idlewood Dr.
3/4 bedrooms, 2.5
baths, Central Air,
Gas Heat, Large
Cherry Kitchen.
Ceramic,
Hardwood, Carpet.
Lots of closets,
storage & unfin-
ished basement.
Beautiful land-
scape. New roof &
water heater.
Large 3 Car
Garage. $325,900
Call 570-675-4700
PARSONS
JUST LISTED
$134,900
35 Wyndwood Dr.
Like new 2 bed-
room, 2 bath
attached ranch.
Upgraded kitchen,
vaulted living
room, sunroom,
master bedroom
www.35wyndwood
.com Call Mark
215-275-0487
C-21 TRES
610-485-7200
ext 142
Collect cash, not dust!
Clean out your
basement, garage
or attic and call the
Classified depart-
ment today at 570-
829-7130!
PITTSTON
$134,900
15 High St.
Well kept newly
remodeled, 2 story
home, with modern
kitchen, central air,
new triple pane
replacement win-
dows and custom
made blinds for
each window.
Home is in move in
condition, with plas-
ter walls and design
ceilings, plus much,
much more. A
MUST SEE!
MLS 13-1088
Fred Mecadon
570-817-5792
906 Homes for Sale
PITTSTON
$89,900
57 Dewitt St.
Cute Cape Cod with
3 bedrooms, vinyl
replacement win-
dows, Pergo floor-
ing and walk up
attic. Put this one
on your list.
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 13-1038
CALL CHARLIE
570-829-6200
PITTSTON
PRICE REDUCTION
Lots of room to
breathe in this spa-
cious 2 story with an
open floor plan.
New gas furnace,
replacement win-
dows, dual zone
heat. First floor is
updated, 2nd floor
needs modernizing.
MLS #13-405
$90,000
Call Arlene Warunek
570-714-6112
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-696-1195
PITTSTON
Home For Sale!
Owner Assists With
Closing Costs.
Charming, modern
2 story home. 3
bedrooms, 1.5
baths. 1st floor
laundry room,
Large eat-in
kitchen with
Granite counter
tops, oak cabinets
and hardwood
floors. Formal living
room, and formal
dining room with
vaulted ceiling. Gas
heat, central air,
alarm system,
garage with an
attached shed,
beautiful sun room
with skylights,
patio, a paved
drive way, and a 2
year old roof.
All appliances
included.
Move In
Condition!
Available July 1.
$129,900
570-417-3781
PITTSTON
PRICE REDUCTION
$179,900
69 Curtis St.
Spacious 3 bed-
rooms home, rebuilt
in 1980 with 2 full
baths and a 3/4
master bath. Pri-
vate pool area with
brand new liner, 2
car garage with 1/2
bath and full 2nd
story for hobby
room, etc. Located
at the end of dead
end street, affords
lots of privacy.
www.atlasrealty-
inc.com
MLS 13-2079
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
PITTSTON
REDUCED
$106,900
67 Carroll St.
The WOW factor!
Move right in and
enjoy this renovat-
ed home with no
worries! 3 bed-
rooms with lots of
closet space. 2 full
baths including a 4
piece master bath
with custom tile
work, open floor
plan with modern
kitchen with island,
corner lot with off
street parking and
nice yard. Come
and take a look!
www.atlasrealty-
inc.com
MLS 13-863
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
906 Homes for Sale
PITTSTON
REDUCED
$109,000
25 Swallow St.
Grand 2 story home
with Victorial fea-
tures, large eat in
kitchen with laun-
dry, 3/4 bath on
first floor, 2nd bath
with claw foot tub,
lots of closet
space. Move in
ready, off street
parking in rear.
MLS 12-3926
Call Colleen
570-883-7594
PITTSTON
REDUCED
$99,900
328 S. Main St.
3 story Victorial
with 10 rooms, 4
bedrooms, 2 baths,
2 car garage with
newer driveway.
Central air, large
yard. www.atlasre-
altyinc.com
MLS 13-1073
Call T Call Tom om
570-262-7716 570-262-7716
PLAINS
''Busy People
Compatible''. Enjoy
the daily conven-
ience of living in the
vicinity of what's
happening
''Woodcrest
Estates''. Move in
ready, finished
lower level, relax on
rear deck with view
of Mohegan Sun.
MLS#13-1110
$120,000
Arlene Warunek
570-714-6112
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-696-1195
PLAINS
Cozy Two Bedroom
in the heart of
Plains! Eat in
kitchen with mod-
ern bath, large bed-
rooms. Fenced in
yard & large open
basement.
MLS#13-1954
$89,900
Call Dave, Jr.
885-2693
Rubbico Real
Estate
826-1600
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
PLAINS
39 Slope St
For sale by owner,
3 bedrooms, 1 1/2
baths, modern eat-
in kitchen, large
deck, off street
parking on a 50 X
150 lot, nice neigh-
borhood, all appli-
ances included.
Asking $92,000
call 310-1697
for appointment
PLAINS
REDUCED
$209,900
4 Spruce Ave.
BIRCHWOOD HILLS
3 bedrooms, 3
baths. Hardwood
floors, central air.
Finished basement
with fireplace, great
yard, super loca-
tion. www.atlas
realtyinc.com.
MLS 13-1251
Call T Call Tom om
570-262-7716] 570-262-7716]
906 Homes for Sale
PLAINS TOWNSHIP
FOR SALE BY OWNER
3 bedroom ranch, 1
1/2 baths, large eat
in kitchen. Family &
sun rooms. Fin-
ished basement
with laundry room,
1.5 car garage. Lots
of storage & closet
space. New roof,
service panel &
newer appliances.
Hardwood floors &
vinyl siding. 1 mile
from Wyoming Val-
ley Mall & VA Hospi-
tal. Easy access to
I-81 & 315.
$177,900
(570)824-6533
PLAINS TWP
$189,900
20 Nittany Lane
Affordable 3 level
townhome features
2 car garage, 3
bedrooms, 3.5
baths, lower level
patio and upper
level deck, gas fire-
place, central air
and vac and stereo
system www.atlas-
realtyinc.com
MLS 13-871
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
PLYMOUTH
NEW LISTING
433 FAIRVIEW ST.
A great home in a
nice neighborhood,
well out of the flood
zone. Watch the
sunrise & other
great views from
the front porch.
Modern kitchen with
vaulted ceiling,
modern bath, living
& dining rooms, & 2
generous bed-
rooms. Updates
include: new roof,
windows, front door,
lighting, wall-to-wall
carpeting, interior
/exterior painting,
security system,
etc. Off-street
parking & large,
level yard with
mature trees &
flowering bushes.
For more details &
to view the photos
online, go to:
www. pr udent i al
realestate.com &
enter PRU5B4G9 in
the Home Search.
Listed at $79,500
MLS#13-2080
Mary Ellen Belchick
696-6566,
Walter Belchick
696-2600 ext. 301.
696-2600
SHAVERTOWN
$197,500
60 Vonderheid St.
Well maintained
traditional colonial
minutes from the
cross valley in a
quiet neighborhood.
7 rooms with 3
bedrooms and 2
baths, fireplace,
large yard, & deck.
Kitchen and bath-
rooms recently ren-
novated and MORE!
Call Andy
570-762-4358
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
SHICKSHINNY LAKE
Have you always
dreamed of owning
a lakefront home?
Don't miss the
opportunity to own
this stunning 3,000
sq. ft. 3 bedroom, 3
bath home w/100'
lakefront with dock.
Offers attractive
Florida room with
vaulted ceiling over-
looking the lake,
plus formal living
room with fireplace,
dining room, family
room with fireplace,
den & 2 car garage.
Power boat for
water skiing & jet
skiing permitted.
MLS# 13-310
$339,900
Call
Barbara Metcalf
570-696-0883
570-696-3801
Land for sale?
Place an ad
and SELL
570-829-7130
Sell your own home!
Place an ad HERE
570-829-7130
Find Your Ideal
Employee! Place an
ad and end the
search!
570-829-7130
ask for an employ-
ment specialist
Motorcycle for sale?
Let them see it here
in the Classifieds!
570-829-7130
PAGE 18D SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 2013 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
906 Homes for Sale
SUGARLOAF
Beautiful home in a
beautiful location.
2003 custom built
Cape Cod offers
4.89 cleared acres.
Heated in ground
pool, 3 full baths, 1st
floor master bed-
room & laundry & an
modern kitchen. 2
car attached gar-
age with bonus
room above. Close
to Humboldt Indus-
trial Park & Eagle
Rock Resort.
MLS# 13-894
$309,000
Call/text Donna Cain
947-3824 or
Tony Wasco
855-2424
570-901-1020
SWOYERSVILLE
$119,900
115 Hemlock St.
Lots of updates in
this roomy Cape
Cod in a desirable
neighborhood.
Large eat in kitchen
with new flooring.
Finished basement
with theater/rec
room. Large level
yard. Priced to sell!
MLS 12-4231
Call Kevin Sobilo
570-817-0706
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
SWOYERSVILLE
$129,900
77 Scott St.
Ranch in excellent
condition with 3
bedrooms, 1 bath,
roof in 2004,
kitchen in 2003,
newer windows,
great lot. Move in
condition. Ductless
a/c units.
MLS 13-2171
Tom Salvaggio
570-262-7716
SWOYERSVILLE
STEEPLECHASE
50 Grandville Drive
Outstanding 3 bed-
room, 2 1/2 bath
townhouse out of
the flood zone.
Formal dining room,
family room, master
bedroom suite, pri-
vate guest suite
also on upper level.
Central air and cen-
tral vacuum. Deck,
garage + many
extras. Freshly
painted and carpet-
ed, so move right in!
$169,900
MLS # 13-195.
Ask for Bob Kopec
Humford Realty Inc
570-822-5126
SWOYERSVILLE
Amazing view of the
valley from this
lovely 2 bedroom
home. Nice room
sizes, parquet floor-
ing in Living room,
out of flood zone,
big fenced in back
yard includes large
storage shed and a
beautiful deck over-
looking a peaceful
wooded area, mod-
ern kitchen, off
street parking PLUS
room to expand if
needed. All this plus
a 1 year home
warranty!
MLS#13-2279
$110,900
Call/text Donna Cain
947-3824 or
Tony Wasco
855-2424
570-901-1020
WILKES-BARRE
Totally redone two
bedroom. with
Custom kitchen and
ex large bath. New
hot air furnace. Off
street parking with
detached one car
garage.
MLS #12-4619
$69,900
Call Dave, Jr.
885-2693
Rubbico
Real Estate
826-1600
906 Homes for Sale
WILKES-BARRE
NEW LISTING!
Spacious brick
ranch home boasts
3 large bedrooms,
1.5 baths. New car-
pet in bedrooms &
living room. New
flooring in kitchen.
Large deck with
above ground pool.
Recently installed
new roof, furnace &
water heater.
MLS# 13-1887
$120,000
Christine Pieczynski
696-6569
WAPWALLOPEN
359 Pond Hill
Mountain Road
4 bedroom home
features a great
yard with over 2
acres of property.
Situated across
from a playground.
Needs some TLC
but come take a
look, you wouldnt
want to miss out.
There is a pond at
the far end of the
property that is
used by all sur-
rounding neighbors.
This is an estate
and is being sold as
is. No sellers prop-
erty disclosure. Will
entertain offers in
order to settle
estate. MLS 11-962
$49,900
Call Karen
Coldwell Banker
Rundle Real Estate
570-474-2340
WEST PITTSTON
$109,900
OPEN HOUSE
SUN. 6/16 AND 6/23
2:30 - 4PM
214 FREMONT ST.
Very well cared for
3 bedroom home in
move in condition.
Large eat in
kitchen, nice yard,
freshly painted bed-
rooms with new
carpet. Newer win-
dows. Not Flooded
www.atlasrealty-
inc.com
MLS 13-2032
Colleen Turant
570-237-0415
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
WEST PITTSTON
Lovely four square
home with great
curb appeal.
Beautiful chestnut
woodwork through-
out from the two
way staircases,
French doors from
foyer & built in
bookcases separat-
ing the living & din-
ing rooms. Relax
on the flagstone
front porch.
MLS#13-2038
$205,000
Arlene Warunek
570-714-6112
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-696-1195
WEST PITTSTON
PRICE REDUCED!
Mt. Zion Road.
Single family two
story - a place for
kids! Four bed-
rooms & bath up-
stairs. 1st floor has
formal dining room,
living room, family
room & laundry
room. Master bed-
room & bath added
to the 1st floor.
Good sized kitchen.
2,126 sq. ft. total on
1 acre. Wyoming
Area School Dis-
trict.
MLS # 13-700
$119,900
Call Ruth K. Smith
570-696-5411
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-696-1195
906 Homes for Sale
WEST WYOMING
$74,500
384 Tripp St.
3 bedroom, 1 bath,
2 story with large
kitchen, dining room
and living room. Pri-
vate rear yard, nice
neighborhood gas
heat. www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 13-2179
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
WEST WYOMING
$74,500
384 Tripp St.
3 bedroom, 1 bath,
2 story with large
kitchen, dining room
and living room. Pri-
vate rear yard, nice
neighborhood gas
heat. www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 13-2179
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
ATLAS REALTY,
INC.
570-829-6200
WEST WYOMING
$99,900
1565 Shoemaker
Avenue
Well taken care of
Cape Cod with 3
bedrooms, 1 bath,
hardwood floors,
detached 1 car
garage.
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 13-2280
Tom Salvaggio
570-262-7716
WHITE HAVEN
501 Birch Lane
Beautiful 4 bed-
room, 3 bath. Enjoy
the amenities of a
private lake, boat-
ing, basketball
courts, etc. The
home has wood
floors and carpeting
throughout. French
doors in the kitchen
that lead you out to
the large rear deck
for entertaining. The
backyard has 2 utili-
ty sheds for storage
MLS 12-1695
NEW PRICE
$174,900
Call Karen
Coldwell Banker
Rundle Real Estate
570-474-2340
WILKES BARRE
PRICE REDUCED
$49,900
735 N. Washington
Street
Spacious 2 story, 3
bedrooms with 2 ca
detached garage,
good starter home,
needs TLC. MLS #12
3887. For more
information and pho
tos visit www.atlasre
altyinc.com.
Call Tom
570-262-7716
Looking to buy a
home?
Place an ad here
and let the
sellers know!
570-829-7130
WILKES BARRE
REDUCED
$39,900
61 Puritan Lane
Are you spending
more than $400/mo
on rent?? Owning
this home could
cost you less! With
3 bedrooms and a
fenced in yard, this
home makes a per-
fect place to start
your homeowner-
ship experience.
Ask me how!
MLS #12-1823. For
more information
and photos visit
www.atlasrealty-
inc.com.
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
906 Homes for Sale
WILKES- BARRE
$112,000
43 Richmont Ave.
Worth more than
listed price, this 3
bedroom, 2 bath
Cape Cod home
has central air,
hardwood floors,
fenced yard, above
ground pool, mod-
ern kitchen and
baths. www.atlasre-
altyinc.com
MLS 13-789
Tom Salvaggio
570-262-7716
WILKES-BARRE
$174,900
105 Plymouth Ave.
This lovely Bi-level
home features 3
bedrooms, 1 and
1/2 bathrooms, in
ground pool with
pool bar and deck,
central air. Hard-
wood floors, gas
fireplace, finished
lower level, fenced
in yard and 2 year
garage with ONE
YEAR HOME WAR-
RANTY. (directions:
Old RIver Road to
Dagobert, at 2nd
stop sign turn R
onto Plymouth Ave.
Home is on left in
2nd block)
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 13-2144
Keri Best
570-885-5082
GET THE WORD OUT
with a Classified Ad.
570-829-7130
WILKES-BARRE
$52,900
247 Lehigh St.
Cozy 2 story move
right in, gas heat,
central air, 3 bed-
rooms, 1 bath.
www.atlasrealty-
inc.com
MLS 13-1510
Tom Salvaggio
570-262-7716
WILKES-BARRE
$62,400
42 Bradford St.
Well maintained,
move in ready!
MLS 13-1531
Kevin Sobilo
570-817-0706
WILKES-BARRE
$72,500
319 N. Washington
Street.
Large 3 story home
with 3 bedrooms of
each of the 2nd and
3rd floors. Hard-
wood floors in living
room and dining
room, gas heat,
first floor laundry. 1
3/4 baths, large eat
in kitchen, central
vac, alarm system,
low taxes.
MLS 13-2348
CALL COLLEEN
WILKES-BARRE
$72,900
35 Hillard St.
STOP WASTING
MONEY!! If you are
paying more than
$600/month rent
you need to look at
this house. Your
mortgage, taxes
and insurance could
be less!!! Ask me
how! Move in con-
dition 3 bedroom
home with nice
yard, modern
kitchen and 1st floor
laundry. For more
info and photos
visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-1655
Colleen Turant
570-237-0415
906 Homes for Sale
WILKES-BARRE
$87,500
Best of both
worlds...Commer-
cial space plus 2-3
bedroom home
complete with
detached garage
and off street park-
ing with yard.
Home has been
nicely remodeled
with 1 3/4 baths,
hardwood floors,
move in condition.
Commercial space
is 14x26 with end-
less possibilities.
www. atlasrealty
inc.com
MLS 13-982
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
WILKES-BARRE
$99,900
77 Schuler St.
NOTHING to do but
move right in! This
home has every-
thing you need...3
bedrooms, 2.5
baths, large fenced
in yard, screened in
porch, off street
parking, quiet
neighborhood.
Home recently
remodeled inside &
out. www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 13-467
Call Colleen
570-237-0415
WILKES-BARRE
PRICE REDUCED
TO
$79,900
Charming Cape Cod
style home with nice
curb appeal. Loc-
ated on a tree lined
street near parks,
schools & shopping.
Deceptively large
with 4 bedrooms,
two baths, fireplace
in the living room, 2
car garage, corner
lot. Needs some
updating, but has
great potential.
MLS#13-1295
Karen Ryan
283-9100, ext. 14
283-9100
WILKES-BARRE
PRICE
REDUCTION
Charming 1,000+
sq. ft. 2 bedroom,
1/1/2 bath with sep-
arate driveway on a
quiet street. Lower
level was finished
for former business
- has separate
entrance, 1/2 bath
& electric base-
board heat (not
included in
total sq. ft).
MLS #13-1592
$49,000
Dana Distasio
570-715-9333
WILKES-BARRE
Beautiful Cape Cod
3 bedrooms, 2.5
baths, garage,
hardwood floors,
freshly painted, new
counter/tops, sinks,
faucets, fenced
yard, move in
condition, in a
great location.
MLS 13-1652
$149,900
Call Dave, Jr.
885-2693
Rubbico Real
Estate
826-1600
WILKES-BARRE
COMPLETELY RENO-
VATED
Quiet area, 3 bed-
rooms, 2 baths,
large eat in kit-
chen, dining & liv-
ing rooms, walk in
closet, huge
bonus room.
Recent roof, new
boiler, up-graded
plumbing & elec-
tric. New carpet-
ing & vinyl, huge
backyard, drive-
way, front & rear
porch, patio, new
windows.
Appraised at
$86,900, for sale
at $54,900.
610-389-8226
906 Homes for Sale
WILKES-BARRE
Motivated Sellers!
Features 3 bed-
rooms, 1 3/4 baths,
off street parking,
landscaped fenced
yard. Tiled kitchen
& baths. Hardwood
in family room, living
room & master bed-
room. Custom built
closets in master
bedroom. New insu-
lation throughout
home.
Must See!
MLS #13-1693
$114,000
Call Evelyn Hogan
262-5956
WILKES-BARRE
296 N. Main St.
Elegance and
charm. Absolutely
pristine, highly pol-
ished woodwork,
hardwood floors,
trim. French doors,
fireplace, newer
roof, furnace, wiring
and replacement
windows. A unique-
ly solid home with
conspicuous archi-
tectural beauty.
Very refined.
MLS 13-1775
$133,000
Ronald Kozak
570-675-5100
WILKES-BARRE
66 Catlin Ave.
Very well kept Cape
Cod 3 bedroom
home. Basement
easily finished off,
all new Pella win-
dows. Newer roof.
New water heater,
zoned heat. Was
not flooded in 2011.
Lighted crawl
spaces. Tons of
storage. Large cov-
ered deck, fenced
in yard. Nice neigh-
borhood, quiet
street. A must see
MLS 12-4420
$115,000
Jackie Roman
Extension #39
CROSSIN REAL
ESTATE
570-288-0770
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
WILKES-BARRE
REDUCED PRICE
$242,000
75 Mercedes Drive
Beautifully kept split
level in desirable
Barney Farms. 3
car attached
garage, finished
basement & attic.
Landscaped lot,
covered deck with
custom pull down
shades. Hard-
wood living room,
formal dining room
both freshly paint-
ed, cathedral ceil-
ings in living room &
kitchen. Full wet
bar in finished
basement, walk out
patio for your
parties/cookouts.
MLS#12-1874
Ann Devereaux
570-212-2038
Classic
Properties
570-587-7000
790 Northern Blvd.
Clarks Summit,
PA 18411
WILKES-BARRED
Move right into this
nice clean well
maintained 14 room
6 bedroom home
with grand foyer
and staircase.
Interior recently ren-
ovated, 5 fireplaces,
4 pocket doors,
Chestnut wood trim,
heated sun room,
large rear deck.
Handicap entrance
& first floor bath &
laundry. Private rear
yard. New roof, all
replacement win-
dows. Hardwood
floors, wood work
throughout, built in
kitchen cabinets,
butler staircase &
much more.
Must See!
MOS #13-1901
$137,000
Castrignano
Realty
570-824-9991
906 Homes for Sale
WILKES-BARRE
37 Flick Street
Nice 2 possibly 3
bedroom home with
a large driveway
and garage. This
home has a newer
kitchen and a full
bath with laundry
area on the 1st
floor. There is a
nice yard and deck
for your outside
enjoyment. There is
a newer furnace
and roof also.
Come and check it
out. MLS# 13-2103
$45,000
John Polifka
570-704-6846
FIVE MOUNTAINS
REALTY
570-542-2141
Looking for that
special place
called home?
Classified will address
Your needs.
Open the door
with classified!
WYOMING
146 East 7th Street
FOR SALE BY
OWNER
Two story, 3 bed-
rooms & 1 bath.
New foyer, tiled
kitchen & modern
bath. New laminate
floors. Deck with
fenced in yard.
Gas heat.
Motivated seller.
Reduced Price
$130,000
570-817-3312
YATESVILLE
$139,900
617 Willowcrest Dr.
End unit. 2 bed-
room townhome
with master bath on
2nd floor. Needs a
little TLC.
MLS 13-569
Call Tom
570-262-7716
YATESVILLE
$69,900
9 Pittston Ave
2 story home
located in a very
privet setting. 3
bedrooms, 1.5
baths and work-
shop attached
to living space,
great for home
business or the
hobbyist. Low
taxes, great
community.
Garage has 1
detached space
and 1 built in.
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 13-1009
CALL CHARLIE
570-829-6200
P
E
N
D
I
N
G
YATESVILLE
REDUCED
$169,900
603 Willowcrest Dr.
Super end unit
townhouse, no
fees. 2 bedrooms,
3 baths, central air,
electric heat, cathe-
dral ceiling with
skylights. Large
family room with
propane stove and
its own ductless
air. MLS 13-482
Call Tom
570-262-7716
909 Income &
Commercial
Properties
LEASE SPACE
Kingston Koral
Complex
Great for Wellness
Center Businesses.
Custom leases are
available.
4300SF Warehouse
Space available,
can be divided and
are built to Suit.
MLS#12-3041
Call Cindy
570-690-2689
www.cindykingre.com
570-675-4400
909 Income &
Commercial
Properties
NANTICOKE
Working restaurant
with 2-Unit
Apartments for
additional income.
Restaurant includes
all commercial
restaurant equip-
ment, tables and
chairs. Space fea-
tures take-out area
and additional din-
ing room with seat-
ing for approx. 30.
Side lot can hold up
to approx. 6 cars
with expansion.
Each Apartments
rents for $475/per
month.
MLS#13-1900
$129,900
Call Cindy King
570-690-2689
www.cindykingre.com
Signature Properties
570-675-5100
BEAR CREEK
$149,900
1255 Laurel Run Rd.
Bear Creek Twp.,
large commercial
garage/warehouse
on 1.214 acres with
additional 2 acre
parcel. 2 water
wells. 2 newer
underground fuel
tanks. May require
zoning approval.
For more info and
photos visit:
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-208
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
DURYEA
REDUCED
$29,900
93 Main St.
Four units. 3 resi-
dential and one
storefront.Great
corner location,
flood damaged
home being sold as
is. For more info
visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 12-1948
Call Tom
570-262-7716
HANOVER TWP.
COMMERCIAL
LEASE
8,500 sq. ft. building
$4,000/month, ten-
ant pays utilities.
Building Ready for
many uses. Owner
will build to suit.
Custom Leases
Available. Property
has 5 garage bays,
office space & plen-
ty of parking and
fenced side yards.
Heated with rest-
rooms. unlimited
potential.
MLS #13-63
Call Today!
Cindy King
570-690-2689
www.cindykingre.com
Signature Properties
570-675-5100
HUNTINGTON
MILLS
Great Old 80 Acre
Farm, Location Next
to Northwest High
School with approx.
35 acres of fields &
45 acres wooded.
Small pond, barn,
old farmhouse with
out buildings (in
poor condition - little
or no value) plenty
of road frontage.
MLS #13-807
$312,000
Call Richard Long
406-2438
570-675-4400
Say it HERE
in the Classifieds!
570-829-7130
SWEET VALLEY
3.8 acres, zoned B2
commercial with
home & pond.
Priced for quick
sale. High traffic
area Located at the
intersection of
Rt. 118 & Main Road.
$89,000
Call Richard Long
406-2438
675-4400
909 Income &
Commercial
Properties
KINGSTON
Great opportunity
for this 2,900 sq. ft.
professional office
building in high traf-
fic area. Last used
as a veterinary clin-
ic, but is easily
adapted for other
uses. See how this
space can be used
for you! Open
entry space, individ-
ual offices, full base-
ment for storage,
central air, and gas
heat. Parking for 12
cars.
MLS-12-416
$339,000
Call Rhea for
details
570-696-6677
NANTICOKE
Newly remodeled,
immaculate office
building. 1,600 sq.
ft, central air, plenty
of parking, abun-
dant storage areas,
h a n d i c a p p e d
accessible.
MLS #13-667
$79,900
Dana Distasio
570-9333
PITTSTON
$129,900
224 William St.
Are you a hair-
dresser or barber?
Need a space for
an in home busi-
ness? This might be
just what youre
looking for. Well
maintained 4 bed-
room home with
salon (previously a
barber shop for 60
years). Very well
established, high
visibility location
and additional home
with 3 bedrooms
currently rented to
a tenant. Must be
sold as one pack-
age. www.atlasreal-
tyinc.com
MLS 13-216
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
PITTSTON
$129,900
224 William St.
Are you a hair-
dresser or barber?
Need a space for
an in home busi-
ness? This might be
just what youre
looking for. Well
maintained 4 bed-
room home with
salon (previously a
barber shop for 60
years). Very well
established, high
visibility location
and additional home
with 3 bedrooms
currently rented to
a tenant. Must be
sold as one pack-
age. www.atlasreal-
tyinc.com
MLS 13-216
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
PITTSTON
68 William St.
Great investment
property with 3
units and separate
utilities. Each unit
has 2 entrances
and washer hook
up. Roof is 5 years
old. For more info
visit: www.atlas
realtyinc.com.
MLS 12-1897
$69,900
Call Tom
570-262-7716
909 Income &
Commercial
Properties
PITTSTON AREA
$134,900
Well established
meat and deli store
with large variety of
specialty items for
sale. Homemade
sausage, porketta-
prosciutto, to men-
tion a few. Owners
will sty on to teach.
give recipes and
contacts. Also a
newly remodeled
apartment above
store and 4 car
garage to help pay
the mortgage.
MLS 13-535
For an appointment
call:
Fred Mecadon
570-817-5792
PLYMOUTH
$52,900
New Listing! Afford-
able for you!. Set
back off Main st.,
this double block
has had many
updates. Unit #1:
formal dining room
2 bedrooms, 1 bath
and deck. Unit #2:
spacious open floor
plan, large living
room, formal dining
room, genuine
hardwood floors, 4
bedrooms with new
carpeting, 1.5
baths, lots of closet
space and enclosed
balcony.
MLS 13-1176
Michele Hopkins
570-540-6046
SWOYERSVILLE
Great investment
property. On corner
lot. Close to all
major highways &
conveniences.
Bring all offers. 1
unit needs to be
updated & you are
all done.
MLS #13-1983
$160,000
Call Pat Doty at
570-394-6901
570-696-2468
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
WEST NANTICOKE
$139,900
30 E. Poplar St.
Multi - Family
5 apartments and a
2 car garage, all
rented. Off street
parking for 8 cars.
Great investment.
www.atlasrealty-
inc.com
MLS 13-680
Tom Salvaggio
570-262-7716
WEST SIDE
Well established
Italian Restaurant
on the West Side
with seating for 75.
Business only
includes good will,
all furniture and fix-
tures, all kitchen
equipment and
delivery van for
$150,000. Building
sold separately.
Restaurant on 1st
floor and 2 bed-
room luxury apart-
ment on 2nd floor
for $250,000.
www.atlasrealty
inc.com
MLS 12-3433
Call Charlie
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
Wanna make your
car go fast? Place
an ad in Classified!
570-829-7130.
Boat? Car? Truck?
Motorcycle? Air-
plane? Whatever it
is, sell it with a
Classified ad.
570-829-7130
Purebred Animals?
Sell them here with a
classified ad!
570-829-7130
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 2013 PAGE 19D
906 Homes for Sale 906 Homes for Sale 906 Homes for Sale 906 Homes for Sale 906 Homes for Sale
906 Homes for Sale 906 Homes for Sale 906 Homes for Sale 906 Homes for Sale 906 Homes for Sale
Everything you need on the rst
oor great master with French
doors to its own patio, family room
and breakfast nook with great
views and a great kitchen layout
that is convenient to the utility and
powder room and walk-in pantry.
Study and dining rooms complete
a great rst oor. The second oor
can be what you want it to be.
Bedrooms, media and storage are
all good uses of the space. We are
a custom design and build group
that can modify this or any plan
to t your family perfectly. Build
this home on one of our lots for
$315,000 all included.
See our spec in River shore, West
Pittson or breathtaking view lots
at Eagle View in Jenkins Township.
Call 881-2144
909 Income &
Commercial
Properties
WILKES-BARRE
Everything is Ready!
Just bring your busi-
ness to this great
location with over
15,000 sq. ft. of
parking space. The
building is equipped
for fast food,
restaurant, pizza,
carry-out, etc. Will
rent with option to
buy. Excellent
opportunity for the
right party!
$269,000
Call Ruth
@ 570-696-1195
or 570-696-5411
Smith Hourigan
Group
912 Lots & Acreage
BEAR CREEK
LOT FOR SALE
Wonderful opportu-
nity! Beautiful 3.45
acre wooded build-
ing lot for your new
home. Has a 200
frontage on a paved
road. Lot needs well
and septic. $37,500
MLS#13-157
Call Mary Ann
Desiderio
570-715-7733
Smith Hourigan
Group
Mountain Top
570-474-6307
DALLAS
VACANT LAND
1.19 acres in nice
Back Mountain
location. Septic &
well will be
required. Seller will
provide perc test
on this parcel.
MLS#11-268
$59,500
Call Rhea Simms
for details
570-696-6677
570-696-3801
DALLAS
GREENBRIAR
RETIREMENT COMMUNI-
TY
Only eight
lots left. Custom
design you home
the way you want it.
Call 570-675-1300
912 Lots & Acreage
DALLAS
VIEWMONT ACRES
All this 2.8+ acre lot
needs is your vision
for your dream
home. Located in a
quiet country set-
ting, this partially
cleared lot has a
great view of the
mountains. Septic is
already on site and
ready for Summer
building.
MLS #13-1705
Only $65,000
Call
Barbara Metcalf
570-696-0883
570-696-3801
DALLAS
BROWN MANOR
VACANT LAND
Attention builders!
Six lots available in
subdivision - rang-
ing from .4 to 1.3
acres each.
Access to public
sewer & water.
MILS#13-1144
$212,000
Call Rhea Simms
for details
570-696-6677
570-696-3801
DALLAS TOWNSHIP
63 acres with about
5,000 roadfront on
2 roads. All Wood-
ed. $385,000. Call
Besecker Realty
570-675-3611
DALLAS TOWNSHIP
2 acres $39,900 or
7 acres $89,900,
blacktop road,
soil tested
and approved for
building. Nice
woods, great
views, wide
frontage, great
property/neighbor-
hood for kids, #1
rated Dallas School
District. Call
570-245-6288
LAKE TOWNSHIP
32 acres, wooded
& cleared. Well, 6
room older house,
currently rented.
No Realtors.
570-675-2572
MOUNTAIN TOP
Church Road
2 acres + or -, all
utilities. $59,900.
570-474-5418 or
570-709-6304
912 Lots & Acreage
EARTH CONSERVANCY
Land For Sale
Price Reduction
61 +/- Acres
Nuangola $88,000
46 +/- Acres
Hanover Twp.
$69,000
Highway
Commercial KOZ
Hanover Twp. 3+/-
Acres 11 +/- Acres
Wilkes-Barre Twp.
Acreage Zoned
R-3
Sugar Notch Lot
$11,800
See Additional
Land for Sale at:
www.earth
conservancy.org
Call: 570-823-3445
Find Something?
Lose Something?
Get it back where it
belongs
with a Lost/Found ad!
570-829-7130
LAFLIN
$32,900
Lot#9
Pinewood Dr
Build your new
home in a great
neighborhood. Con-
venient location
near highways, air-
port, casino and
shopping
156 X 110 X 150 X 45
DIRECTIONS Rt 315
to laflin Rd; make
left off Laflin Rd onto
Pinewood Dr. Lot is
on corner of
Pinewood Dr. and
Hickorywood Dr.
MLS 13-23
atlas realtyinc.com
Call Keri Best
570-885-5082
LAFLIN
$99,500
2.44 acres of land
zoned R-3 for town-
house or could be
used for single fam-
ily building lots (with
approval). Public
water and sewer
available.
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
MLS 13-1389
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
MOUNTAIN TOP
VACANT LAND
2.87 wooded
acres located in
the Ice Lakes
MLS #13-1498
$89,900
Call
Evelyn Hogan
262-5956
912 Lots & Acreage
KINGSTON
COMMERCIAL
PROPERTY
New on Market
Highly visible corner
lot1900 square
foot building with
large front win-
dowsoff street
parking for 8 cars.
Gas heat and cen-
tral air. Can be used
for retail or office.
Ready for occupan-
cy. MLS 13-1772
$215,000
Call Rhea Simms
570-696-6677
570-696-3801
MOUNTAIN TOP
Unbelievable Buy!
1/3 acre building lot
with water & sewer.
$18,900 Call Dave @
570-715-7750
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-474-6307
To place your
ad call...829-7130
MOUNTAIN TOP
LAND
Outstanding building
lot located in pre-
mier development.
220' of usable
waterfront on the
lower ice lake,
water views, pri-
vate .75 acre lily
pond. Partially clear
ed with mature for-
sythia bushes &
dogwood trees. I
would love to take
you on a guided
walk around this
lovely property!
$225,000
Call Christine @
332-8832
613-9080
NEWPORT TWP.
LOTS LOTS - - LOTS LOTS - - LOTS LOTS
1 mile south of
L.C.C.C.
Established
developement with
underground utili-
ties including gas.
Cleared lot. 100
frontage x 158.
$35,000.
Lot 210 frontage
158 deep on hill
with great view
$35,000.
Call 570-736-6881
912 Lots & Acreage
ONEDIA NEW YORK
11.5 ACRES
Asking $20,000
Call 570-256-8618
ROSS TWP.
Beautiful 40 acre
wooded parcel on
both sides of
the road.
MLS#12-2239
$200,000
Call Ken Williams
570-542-8800
Five Mountains
Realty
570-542-2141
SHAVERTOWN
Beautiful 1 acre
building lot located
in established back
Mountain sub-divi-
sion. Buy now and
start building your
dream home in the
spring. Lot has
underground utili-
ties, public sewer
and private well.
MLS #13-137
$62,400
Christine Pieczynski
696-6569
696-2600
SHICKSHINNY
23+/- acres of
wooded land and
farmland with barn
in good condition
and a nice travel
trailer. Well on
property.
MLS#12-2572
$115,000
Ken Williams
542-8800
Five Mountains
Realty
542-2141
Line up a place to live
in classified!
SHICKSHINNY LAKE
Build your dream
home on this
attractive 1.2 acre
level lot with lake
privileges. Priced to
sell. HOA FEE
IS $140 YEARLY.
MLS#13-40
$50,000
Call
Barbara Metcalf
570-696-0883
570-696-3801
SWOYERSVILLE
100 x 150, cleared,
surveyed level
building lot. Utilities
are available.
$24,900.
Call: 570-288-4899
912 Lots & Acreage
SHICKSHINNY LAKE
CHOICE LOCATION
Central water, low
($140) association
dues. Priced to sell!
MLS# 11-1269
$159,900
Call Dale Williams
Five Mountains
Realty
570-256-3343
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
WEST WYOMING
FIFTH STREET MANOR
Two building lots in
beautiful, estab-
lished development.
Call for information.
570-814-1316
912 Lots & Acreage
WEST PITTSTON
3 bedroom split
level in lovely neigh-
borhood. Two lower
levels have been re
novated due to
flood of 2011. New
electrical/plumbing
/heat. New carpet in
living & family
rooms. Kitchen fea-
tures Corian coun-
tertops & stainless
appliances. Open
concept on main
level with garage
level family room,
laundry & storage.
Nice size backyard.
Come take a look!
$130,000
Call Christine @
332-8832
613-9080
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
912 Lots & Acreage
WYOMING/EXETER
BUILDING LOTS
FOR SALE
$35,000 - $39,900
Build your new
home here. 2 new
developments,
prices range from
$35,000 to
$39,900. Public
water sewer & gas
available. NOT in
flood zone. Lot
sizes range from
50x100 to 80x105.
www.atlas
realtyinc.com
CALL CHARLIE
570-829-6200
Looking for that
special place
called home?
Classified will address
Your needs.
Open the door
with classified!
915 Manufactured
Homes
COUNTRY LIVING
105 COUNTRY
VILLAGE.
Mobile home in
Dallas School
District. All new
appliances, Full
length deck and
shed. Central air,
must see.
$14,900. or best
offer.
570-991-7028
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
HUNLOCK CREEK
2 and 3 bedroom
mobile homes for
sale. Newly reno-
vated, move in con-
dition, located in
Country Crest
Mobile Home Park.
Lot rent $307.
Homes start at
$20,000. Call
570-477-2845
PITTSTON TWP.
RENT TO OWN
2 bedroom, clean,
needs no work.
remodeled through-
out. Minutes from
I-81 and PA Turn-
pike. $9,500
570-471-7175
610-767-9456
915 Manufactured
Homes
GOULDSBORO
EAGLE LAKE
FOR SALE
This is a 2008 Park
Model in beautiful
Eagle Lake. Walk to
the pool, tennis
courts & basketball
courts. This is the
most beautiful
Community in the
Pocono's. Swim in
the huge pool or lay
in the sand at one
of the lake front
beaches.
$45,000
Call Tom
516-507-9403
570-842-2300
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
Need a Roommate?
Place an ad and
find one here!
570-829-7130
PAGE 20D SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 2013 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
944 Commercial
Properties
944 Commercial
Properties
944 Commercial
Properties
944 Commercial
Properties
944 Commercial
Properties
THE OFFICE CENTERS
5 Kingston Locations
Full Service Leases Custom Design Renovation Various Size Suites Available
Medical, Legal, Commercial Utilities Parking Janitorial
Full Time Maintenance Staff Available
For Rental Information call 570-287-1161
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
962 Rooms
IN THE HEART OF WILKES-BARRE
1 BEDROOM
APARTMENTS AVAILABLE
MARTIN D. POPKY APARTMENTS
61 E. Northampton St.
Wilkes-Barre, PA 18701
Affordable Senior Apartments
Income Eligibility Required
Utilities Included! Low cable rates;
New appliances; Laundry on site;
Activities! Curbside Public Transportation
Please call
570-825-8594
D/TTY 800-654-5984
EAST
MOUNTAIN
APARTMENTS
The good life...
close at hand
Regions Best
Address
1 & 2 Bedroom Apts.
822-4444
www.EastMountainApt.com
1, 2 & 3 Bedroom Apts.
288-6300
www.GatewayManorApt.com
KINGSTON
SDK GREEN
ACRES HOMES
11 Holiday Drive
A Place To
Call Home
Spacious 1, 2 & 3
Bedroom Apts.
Gas heat included
FREE
24 hr. on-site Gym
Community Room
Swimming Pool
Maintenance FREE
Controlled Access
Patio/Balcony
and much more...
570-288-9019
www.sdkgreen
acres.com
Call today for
move-in
specials.
WILKES-BARRE
EXCELLENT
DOWNTOWN
LOCATION!!!
STUDIO, 1 & 2
BEDROOMS
Equipped Kitchen
Free Cable
Wall to Wall Carpeting
570-823-2776
Monday - Friday,
9 a.m. - 1 p.m.
1 & 2 BR
Apts
2 & 3 BR
Townhomes
Wilkeswood
Apartments
www.liveatwilkeswood.com
570-822-2711
MELODY
MOTEL
From - $39.99/night
$189.99/week + tax
2530 East End Blvd.
Rt. 115 S Wilkes-Barre
570-829-1279
themelodymotel.com
Wif Microwave Fridge
S
T
O
P

S
T
A
Y

S
A
V
E
906 Homes for Sale 906 Homes for Sale
(570) 885-2474
3 Bedrooms, 2 tile baths, hardwood oors, granite counter tops
Conveniently located just o Route 315
Minutes to Route 81, the Cross Valley Expressway or Wilkes-Barre
$199,900
NOW AVAILABLE!
Residential Lots Also Available
927 Vacation
Locations
AUBURN, PA
Cottage on
Crescent Lake.
Furnished, walk out
basement, air con-
ditioning, laundry,
oil, propane, dock
deck, $125,000
607-729-8206
930 Wanted to Buy
Real Estate
Business Owner
seeks Lease/Option
on Executive
Mountain Top
home;
3/4 Bedrooms.
440-836-2150
938 Apartments/
Furnished
WILKES-BARRE
FULLY FURNISHED
1 BEDROOM
Short or long term
Excellent
Neighborhood
Private Tenant
Parking
$600 includes all
utilities. No pets.
570-822-9697
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
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WILKES-BARRE
VICTORIAN CHARM
34 W. Ross St.
Fully furnished,
1st floor, 1 bed-
room, all appli-
ances and most
utilities included.
Secure, private off
street parking.
Historic building is
non smoking/no
pets. Base rent
$700/mo. Securi-
ty, references
required. View at
houpthouse.com
570-762-1453
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
AVOCA
Modern 1 bedroom,
off-street parking,
washer/dryer hook
up, appliances,
dishwasher, built-in
bookcases. $435/
month + utilities.
Call 908-310-3900
BACK MOUNTAIN
2 bedroom, large
modern eat in
kitchen, bath, car-
peting, large deck,
ample parking, No
Pets. $595.
570-696-1866
DALLAS
2 bedroom, 2 story
house for rent.
$700/ month plus
utilities. Gas heat.
Off street parking.
One year lease, first
months rent, secu-
rity deposit and
credit check
required.
No smoking and
no pets. Call:
570-675-8776.
DALLAS
2nd floor, 2 bed-
room. Includes heat,
water & garbage.
off street parking.
No pets/no smok-
ing., $650/month +
1 month security.
570-690-1591
DALLAS
HI-MEADOWS
APARTMENTS
1075 Memorial Hwy.
Low & Moderate
Income Elderly
Rentals Include:
*Electric Range &
Refrigerator
*Off Street Parking
*Community Room
*Coin Operated
Laundry *Elevator.
*Video Surveilence
Applications
Accepted by
Appointment
570-675-5944
8 a.m. - 4 p.m.
TDD Only,
1-800-654-5984
Voice Only,
1-800-654-5988
Handicap Accessi-
ble
Equal Housing
Opportunity
DALLAS
MEADOWS
APARTMENTS
220 Lake St.
Housing for the
elderly & mobility
impaired; all utilities
included. Federally
subsidized program.
Extremely low
income persons
encouraged to
apply. Income less
than $12,450.
570-675-6936,
TDD800-654-5984
8 am-4 pm, Mon-Fri.
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
HANDICAP ACCESSIBLE
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
EXETER
2 bedrooms, 1 floor,
car port, no pets,
no smoking, sewer
included, available
July 1st.
$470/month.
570-362-8989
FORTY FORT
Large 2nd floor
apartment, 1 bed-
room, 1 bath, living
room, kitchen. All
appliances, includ-
ing washer/dryer.
Water/sewer includ-
ed. Off street park-
ing. Fireplace. Con-
venient location.
$600/month + secu-
rity. Call Don at
570-814-5072
GLEN LYON
1 bedroom, 2nd
floor apt. Living
room, kitchen, full
bath, heat, hot
water & garbage
fee included. Tenant
pays electric. $575/
month + security.
Call or text
201-304-3469
GLEN LYON
KEN POLLOCK
APARTMENTS
41 Depot Street
Low and Moderate
Income Elderly
Rentals Include:
* Electric Range &
Refrigerator
* Off Street Parking
* Community Room
* Coin Operated
Laundry
* Elevator
* Video Surveilance
Applications
Accepted by
Appointment
570-736-6965
8:00 a.m. - 4 p.m.
TDD Only,
1-800-654-5984
Voice Only,
1-800-654-5988
Handicap Accessi-
ble
Equal Housing
Opportunity
HANOVER TOWNSHIP
1st floor
2 bedroom,stove,
refrigerator, private
deck, washer/dryer
hookup. Heat,
garbage and
sewer included.
$660/month
570-842-1264
HANOVER TOWNSHIP
West End Road
Clean & bright
3 bedroom apart-
ment. Heat, water,
garbage & sewer
included with appli-
ances. Off street
parking. No pets,
non smoking, not
section 8 approved.
References, securi-
ty, first and last
months rent.
$725/month
570-852-0252
HANOVER TWP.
1 bedroom with
large attic for stor-
age. Off street
parking. Sewer &
appliances includ-
ed. Pets consider-
ed. $400/month + 1
month security. Call
570-606-7884 after
9am & before 9pm
or 570-256-7837
before 9am & after
9pm.
HANOVER TWP.
2 bedroom, 1st
floor, with back
room for storage.
Off street parking.
Private rear
entrance. Water,
sewer, hot water &
appliances includ-
ed. Pets consid-
ered. $550/month
+ 1 month security.
570-606-7884 after
9:00 a.m. &
before 9 pm.
570-256-7837
before 9 am &
after 9 pm
HANOVER TWP.
3 bedrooms, 1.5
bath, no pets. $850
+ utilities, 1st month,
last month + securi-
ty deposit.
Call 570-417-3427
HANOVER TWP.
Brand new, 3 bed-
rooms, 1 bath, 2nd
floor, terrace, wash-
er, dryer, stove &
refrigerator. Off
street parking.
Water, garbage &
sewer included.
$700 + electric. De-
posit, security and
references.
MUST SEE!
Call 570-417-5977
GET THE WORD OUT
with a Classified Ad.
570-829-7130
HANOVER TWP.
LEE PARK
Freshly painted,
spacious, 3 bed-
room, 2nd floor,
washer/dryer hook-
up in kitchen, no
pets. $625/month +
utilities, 1st, last
& security.
TRADEMARK
REALTY GROUP
570-954-1992
HARVEYS LAKE
1 & 2 bedroom ,
wall to wall carpet,
appliances, Lake
rights. Off street
parking. No pets.
Lease, security and
references.
570-639-5920
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
INKERMAN
55 Main Street
2nd floor, 1 bed-
room. Stove, refrig-
erator, water, heat,
garbage stickers
included. $450/
month + $400
security.
570-654-9520
KINGSTON
116 or 118 Main St.
Near Kingston Cor-
ners. 2nd floor,
newly remodeled,
4 rooms, bath, laun-
dry room. Walk up
attic, water, sewer
& parking. No pets.
No smoking. $525 &
$575 + utilities.
570-288-9843
KINGSTON
1st Floor, recent-
ly renovated, 2
bedrooms, with
washer & dryer
hook-up, $650
per month, plus
utilities, water
and sewer
included. Off
street parking.
570-443-0770
KINGSTON
27 First Ave.
Large 5 room
apartment, 2 bed-
rooms, 1.5 baths,
kitchen appliances,
washer/dryer in half
bath. 2nd floor. No
pets. $750/month
+ utilities.
570-288-5600
or 570-479-0486
KINGSTON
E. E. W Walnut alnut St. St.
2nd floor. Located in
quiet neighborhood.
Kitchen, living room,
dining room, sun-
room, bath, 3 bed-
rooms; 2 large & 1
small. Lots of clos-
ets, built-in linen
closet & hutch.
Hardwood & car-
peted floors. Fire-
place. Storage
room. Yard. Washer
/ dryer, stove /
fridge. Heat and hot
water included. 1
year lease + securi-
ty. $950
570-283-4370
KINGSTON
Available July 15th
Renovated, large
kitchen & living
room, 2 bedrooms,
all appliances, dish-
washer, laundry.
Hardwood floors,
private parking,
deck. Quiet, con-
venient neighbor-
hood, soundproof-
ing. Close to Col-
leges, Montessori,
Sem, stores, high-
way. $810. No
smoking, cats con-
sidered. No Section
8. 610-389-8226
KINGSTON
Deluxe, quiet, airy
3 bedroom, 2nd
floor, 1.5 baths &
office. All applian-
ces, washer/dryer
in unit. Wall-to-
wall, C/A, garage,
attic, no pets/no
smoking, lease.
570-287-1733
KINGSTON
E. WALNUT ST.
Light, bright, 3rd
floor, 2 bedrooms,
elevator, carpeted,
entry system.
Garage. Extra stor-
age & cable TV
included. Laundry
facilities. Air Con-
ditioned. Fine
neighborhood.
Convenient to bus
& stores. No
pets. References.
Security. Lease.
No smokers
please. $785 +
utilities. Call.
570-287-0900
KINGSTON
Spacious 2 bed-
room. Living & din-
ing rooms. Off
street parking. All
new appliances.
Gas heat. Water &
sewer included.
$575 + utilities,
security & refer-
ences. No pets,
no smoking. Call
570-239-7770
Collect cash, not dust!
Clean out your
basement, garage
or attic and call the
Classified depart-
ment today at 570-
829-7130!
KINGSTON
Wyoming Avenue
3rd floor, 1 bedroom
offstreet parking.
No pets. $450/
month + utilities. Call
570-287-9631
or 570-696-3936
LEE PARK
Hanover Twp.
2nd floor, 1 1/2
bedrooms, living
room, rear porch,
washer & dryer.
Water, garbage &
sewer included. No
pets. $450/month.
1st, last, security &
references.
570-606-3256
LUZERNE
1 bedroom, wall to
wall, off-street
parking, coin laun-
dry, water, sewer &
garbage included.
$495/month +
security & lease.
HUD accepted.
570-687-6216 or
570-954-0727
LUZERNE COUNTY
RENTALS
Available Now!
Available Now!
1 Studio Apt.,
2 Bed, 3 Bed
and, 4 Bed
$550, $600, $650,
$725 and $900.
Call 570-901-1020
option 4.
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
MINERS MILLS
1 1/2 bedrooms,
washer/dryer hook-
up, recently redone,
heat/water includ-
ed. Quiet neighbor-
hood with yard &
screened in back-
porch. No pets.
$475 + security. Call
430-0175 after 6:00
MOUNTAIN TOP
1 & 2 BEDROOM
APARTMENTS
recently painted &
carpeted. $600/
month & up includ-
ing some utilities.
570-854-8785
Let the Community
Know!
Place your Classified
Ad TODAY!
570-829-7130
MOUNTAIN TOP
IMMEDIATELY
AVAILABLE 2ND
FLOOR UNIT!
1 bedroom apart-
ments for elderly,
disabled. Rents
based on 30% of
ADJ gross income.
Equal Housing
Opportunity. TTY711
or 570-474-5010
This institution is an
equal opportunity
provider &
employer.
MOUNTAIN TOP
IMMEDIATELY
AVAILABLE 2ND
FLOOR UNIT!
1 bedroom apart-
ments for elderly,
disabled. Rents
based on 30% of
ADJ gross income.
Handicap Accessi-
ble. Equal Housing
Opportunity. TTY711
or 570-474-5010
This institution is an
equal opportunity
provider &
employer.
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
MOUNTAIN TOP
1st floor. 5 rooms.
Sun porch. Wall to
wall. Off street park-
ing. $800/ month -
heat, water,
sewage & garbage
paid by owner. NO
PETS! 474-5568
NANTICOKE
125 East Green St.
Cozy 2 bedroom
featuring fresh
paint, modern
kitchen &
washer/dryer hook
up. No smoking or
pets. $465/ month,
+ utilities. Call
(570)466-6334
NANTICOKE
3 bedroom, all
appliances includ-
ed. No pets, no
smoking. $650/
month + 1st, last
& security.
570-578-8580
NANTICOKE
LEXINGTON LEXINGTON
VILLAGE VILLAGE
2 bedroom, 1
bath apartments.
Refrigerator,
stove,
dishwasher &
washer/dryer
provided.
Attached garage.
Pet friendly.
Water, sewer &
trash included.
59 Agostina Drive
570-735-3500
NANTICOKE
Very clean, nice 1
bedroom. Heat, hot
water & garbage
fees included.
Washer/dryer avail-
able, stove, refrig-
erator, air condi-
tioning. No pets/no
smoking. $525 +
security.
Call 570-542-5610
PITTSTON
Modern 2 bedroom
2nd floor apartment
with gas heat. New
deck. $500. month
plus utilities. Conven
iently located. No
Pets. No Smoking.
Call Rae
570-714-9234
Need a Roommate?
Place an ad and
find one here!
570-829-7130
PITTSTON
Modern 2 bedroom
air conditioned, 2nd
floor. Includes
stove & refrigerator.
Laundry hook-up.
garage available, off
street parking.
Heat, sewer, water
& garbage included.
$695/month + sec-
urity & lease. No
smoking or pets.
570-430-0123
PITTSTON
Quiet neighbor-
hood, 2 bedroom,
hardwood floors &
ceramic tile, all new
appliances, no pets.
$600/month +
utilities & security.
(570)357-1383
PLAINS
Modern 2 bedroom,
1 bath, 2nd floor
apartment. Kitchen
with appliances.
New carpet.
Conveniently locat-
ed. No smoking - no
pets. Call Rae
570-714-9234
PLYMOUTH
Large 1 bedroom
apartment. $500/
month + security
deposit. Heat,
water, sewer, fridge
& range included.
Call Bernie at
ROTHSTEIN REALTORS, INC.
288-7594
655-4815
SHAVERTOWN
One bedroom, living
room & kitchen
apartment. Security
required. No pets.
$500/month + util-
ities. Call
Jolyn Bartoli
570-696-5425
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-696-1195
SHEATOWN
NANTICOKE AREA
2nd floor apart-
ments for rent.
Available
immediately.
Call 570-333-4627
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
SHICKSHINNY
(1 mile north of
town) Efficiency, on
Rte. 11. Includes
heat, air, garbage,
satellite TV & water.
Coin-op washer/dry
er available. Tenant
pays electric. $575/
month + security.
Appliances. Plenty
of parking.
570-793-9530
TRUCKSVILLE
TRUCKSVILLE MANOR
APARTMENTS
170 Oak Street
Low and Moderate
Income Elderly
Rentals Include:
*Electric Range &
Refrigerator
*Off Street Parking
*Coin Operated
Laundry
Applications
Accepted by
appointment
570-696-1201
8a.m. - 4p.m.
TDD only,
1-800-654-5984
Voice Only,
1-800-654-5988
Handicap Accessi-
ble
Equal Housing
Opportunity
WEST PITTSTON
2nd floor, 2 bed-
room, washer/dryer,
fridge and stove,
dishwasher, central
air, electric heat, no
pets, $600 Call John
570-654-1909
WEST PITTSTON
Beautiful LARGE
2nd floor efficiency.
Washer/dryer, hard-
wood, full kitchen
and bath. Access to
full attic, spacious
closets. Great loca-
tion, pets nego-
tiable. Out of flood.
Must see! Gas,
heat, water and
sewer included in
rent. $550.
267-745-8616
WEST PITTSTON
GARDEN VILLAGE
APARTMENTS
221 Fremont St.
Housing for the
elderly & mobility
impaired; all utilities
included. Federally
subsidized
program. Extremely
low income persons
encouraged to
apply. Income less
than $12,450.
570-655-6555
TDD800-654-5984
8 am-4 pm
Monday-Friday.
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
HANDICAP ACCESSIBLE
WEST WYOMING
425 West 8th Street
1ST FLOOR. 2 bed-
room with off street
parking, washer/
dryer hook up,
stove & refrigera-
tor. No pets.
$550/mo + security.
Sewer & garbage
included, other
utilities by tenant.
570-829-3752
leave message
WHITE HAVEN
Route 940. Large 2
bedroom near I-80
& PA Tpke. Fresh
paint, w/w carpet,
stove & refrigerator.
Water, sewer &
garbage included.
No pets. $600 +
electricity & security
deposit.
570-443-9639
WILKES-BARRE
Mayflower
Crossing
Apartments
570.822.3968
1, 2, 3 & 4
Bedrooms
- Light & bright
open floor plans
- All major
appliances included
- Pets welcome*
- Close to everything
- 24 hour emergency
maintenance
- Short term
leases available
Call TODAY For
AVAILABILITY!!
www.mayflower
crossing.com
Certain Restrictions
Apply*
WILKES-BARRE
First floor, 3 bed-
room, 2 bath, secu-
rity system, gas
heat. $525.
570-825-0394
After 5 p.m.
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
WILKES-BARRE /
KINGSTON
Efficiency 1 & 2
bedrooms. Includes
all utilities, parking,
laundry. No pets.
From $390 to $675.
Lease, security
& references.
570-970-0847
WILKES-BARRE
1 bedroom, large
living room, eat in
kitchen, closets,
fridge and stove.
Hot water, sewer
and heat included.
$550 + security
Section 8 accepted
570-301-8200
WILKES-BARRE
2 bedroom, 1 bath
apartment near
General Hospital.
No Pets. $525 +
utilities, first, last +
security deposit.
570-417-3427
WILKES-BARRE
2 bedrooms, 1
bath, refrigerator,
stove & dishwash-
er, washer/dryer
hookup, off-street
parking, No Pets
$575/ month, plus
security and
utilities.
Call 570-650-1575
WILKES-BARRE
21 Catlin Ave
2 bedroom. AC,
Heat & hot water.
New range, stove
and fridge.
Tenant pays elec-
tric. Close to school
and transportation
$700 a month.
570-825-3360 or
646-391-4638
It's that time again!
Rent out your
apartment
with the Classifieds
570-829-7130
WILKES-BARRE
264 Academy St.
1.5 bedrooms, new-
ly renovated build-
ing. Washer & dryer
available. $650/mo.
includes heat, hot
water & parking.
646-712-1286
570-855-4744
WILKES-BARRE
2nd floor - 4 nice
rooms. Only one
quiet apartment
below. Has stove,
refrigerator, washer
& dryer. All widows
are newer vinyl
thermal pane. Steel
insulated entry
doors with dead-
bolts. Excellent pri-
vacy. Small back
porch. Water &
sewer included.
Close to town & bus
stop. $525/month +
heat & electric.
570-650-3803
WILKES-BARRE
2nd floor, 2 bed-
room, freshly paint-
ed, washer/dryer
hook up. $475+
security and utilities.
No Pets.
570-822-7657
WILKES-BARRE
3 bedroom, 1st
floor. All appliances
included, washer/
dryer in basement.
Lots of storage, off
street parking,
hardwood floors &
new windows.
$650/month + utili-
ties & security.
Call Brian at
570-299-0298
WILKES-BARRE
425 S. FRANKLIN ST.
APARTMENTS
FOR RENT!
For lease. Available
immediately, wash-
er/dryer on premis-
es, no pets. We
have studio, 1 & 2
bedroom apart-
ments. On site
parking. Fridge &
stove provided.
24/7 security cam-
era presence & all
doors electronically
locked.
1 bedroom - $450.
2 bedroom - $550.
Water & sewer paid
1 month security
deposit. Email
obscuroknows@
hotmail.com or Call
570-208-9301
after 9:00 a.m. to
schedule an
appointment
WILKES-BARRE
447 S. Franklin St.
1 bedroom with
study, off street
parking, laundry
facility. Includes
heat and hot
water, hardwood
floors, appliances,
Trash removal.
$580/mo Call
(570) 821-5599
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
WILKES-BARRE
CENTER CITY
200 BLOCK OF
S. FRANKLIN ST.
Newly renovated
in historical build-
ing. 1500 sq. ft.
luxury apt. 2 bed-
rooms, 2 baths,
granite kitchen,
dining room, liv-
ing room, laundry
room. off street
parking. No pets
$850 month +
utilities. 570-905-
7234 after 5 pm
WILKES-BARRE
For lease, available
immediately, 1 large
bedroom, 1 bath-
room, refrigerator
and stove, washer/
dryer provided.
$550/month plus
utilities, references
and security.
570-735-4074
Leave message
Find Something?
Lose Something?
Get it back where it
belongs
with a Lost/Found ad!
570-829-7130
WILKES-BARRE
HISTORIC WHEELMAN
439 S. Franklin St.
Two apartments
available.
(1) 1 bedroom,
hardwood floors,
A/C, marble bath.
security system,
laundry, off street
parking. $675 $675
(1) Unique studio.
Sun porch, hard-
wood floor, security
system and laundry.
Off street parking.
$550 $550
570-821-5599
WILKES-BARRE
LAFAYETTE GARDENS
SAVE MONEY THIS YEAR!
113 Edison Street
Quiet neighborhood.
2 bedroom apart-
ments available for
immediate occu-
pancy. Heat & hot
water included.
1 Bedroom$550
2 Bedroom$650.
Call Jazmin
570-822-7944
WILKES-BARRE
Newly renovated 2
bedroom, 1 bath,
refrigerator & stove.
washer/dryer hook
up, $650/month +
utilities.
570-237-5397
WILKES-BARRE
PARK AVENUE
2nd floor, 1 bedroom.
Water included.
$500 + utilities,
security & lease. No
pets. 570-472-9494
WILKES-BARRE
PLAINS, WYOMING
KINGSTON
AVAILABLE RENTALS:
WILKES-BARRE:
single 3 bedroom
brick home. Yard,
new carpeting,
appliances included.
WYOMING: 1st floor
2 bedroom apt.
stove, refrigerator
included Nice neigh-
borhood !
PLAINS: 3 bed-
room + bonus room
yard, off street
parking, refrigera-
tor, stove included.
KINGSTON
1 bedroom 2nd floor
No Pets. Lease.
Credit Check
Call Tina Randazzo
8am-5pm
570-899-3407
WILKES-BARRE SOUTH
SECURE BUILDINGS
1 & 2 bedroom
apartments.
Starting at $440
and up. References
required. Section 8 OK
570-357-0712
WILKES-BARRE
STUDIO NEAR WILKES
Wood floors, park-
ing, no pets, short
term OK. $425, all
utilities included.
570-826-1934
WILKES-BARRE/SOUTH
Near Wilkes U.
1 bedroom apart-
ment. A lot of closet
space. Hardwood
floors, water &sewer
included. Coin Op
Laundry. $465 +
security &references
570-908-9720
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
WILKES-BARRE
1 bedroom
water included
2 bedroom
single
2 bedroom
water included
3 bedroom,
single
4 bedroom,
large
HANOVER
2 bedroom 1/2
double.
4 bedroom
double
LUZERNE
1 bedroom,
water included.
PITTSTON
Large 1 bed
room water
included
OLD FORGE
2 bedroom,
water included
PLAINS
1 bedroom,
water included
McDermott &
McDermott
Real Estate
Inc. Property
Management
570-675-4025
(direct line)
Mon-Fri. 8-7pm
Sat. 8-noon
WYOMING
FIRST FLOOR
One Bedroom
Apartment. $435
dollars/mo.plus utili-
ties. security
deposit required, 1
year lease. No pets
or smoking New
gas heating system.
Large yard, nice
neighborhood call
570-760-7504 for
appointment.
944 Commercial
Properties
COURTDALE
COMMERCIAL
WAREHOUSE
LEASE
Multi-combo square
foot available. (2)-
5,000 SF units (1)
2,300 SF units.
Available for lease
or any combination.
5,000 SF/ $1,500 a
month/ no CAM
charges.
Tenant pays utilities.
Heated warehouse
space with two
bays, two loading
docks, office, and
bathrooms. Plenty
of parking.
Call Cindy King
570-690-2689
www.cindykingre.com
Signature Properties
570-675-5100
DOLPHIN PLAZA
Rte. 315
2,400 Sq. Ft.
1,200 Sq. Ft.
Professional office
space. Will divide
office / retail
Call 570-829-1206
GLEN LYON GARAGE
3 bay garage, new
roof & new garage
doors. Over 1,200
sq. ft. $395/month.
Call 570-881-0320
KINGSTON
Commercial Garage
with office. 1,250 sq.
ft., 12 ceilings, 10
garage door, office
area, bathroom.
$550 + utilities.
570-947-3292
KINGSTON
BUSINESS PARK
Almost 1/2 acre
fenced for outdoor
storage of cars,
machinery equip-
ment, trailers, etc.
Includes a job trail-
er. $850/month +
utilities.
570-947-3292
OFFICE SPACE
ROUTE 309
W-B TWP. BLVD.
700 or 1,000 sq. ft.
private offices, con-
ference room, cen-
tral air, gas heat,
parking. High Traffic
& professional area.
Across from Price
Chopper close to
Rte. 81 ramps.
$700/month. + sec.
570-822-7359
944 Commercial
Properties
PITTSTON
COOPERS CO-OP
Lease Space
Available, Light
manufacturing,
warehouse,
office, includes
all utilities with
free parking.
I will save
you money!
PITTSTON TWP.
$1,750/MONTH
3002 N. Twp Blvd.
Medical office for
rent on the Pittston
By-Pass. Highly vis-
ible location with
plenty of parking.
$1,800 sq. ft. of
beautifully finished
space can be used
for any type office
use. $1,750/ mo.
plus utilities.
MLS 13-098
Call Charlie
570-829-6200
SWOYERSVILLE
NEW LISTING
Busy, high visibility
location. Body
shop, garage, car
lot. Situated on
over 1 acre with
9,000 sq. ft. of
Commercial Space.
$389,900
Call Joe
613-9080
613-9080
315 PLAZA
1,750 SQ. FT. &
2,400 SQ.FT
OFFICE/RETAIL
2,000 FT.
Fully Furnished
With Cubicles.
570-829-1206
Need to rent that
Vacation property?
Place an ad and
get started!
570-829-7130
WILKES-BARRE
BEST $1 SQ. FT.
LEASES YOULL
EVER SEE!
Warehouse, light
manufacturing. Gas
heat, sprinklers,
overhead doors,
parking for 30 cars.
Yes, that $1
sq. ft. lease!
We have 9,000
sq.ft., 27,000 sq.ft.,
and 32,000 sq. ft.
Can combine.
There is nothing
this good!
Sale or Lease
Call Larry @
570-696-4000 or
570-430-1565
947 Garages
KINGSTON
5 car garage, 1,500
sq, ft, bathroom,
electric possible.
10 CEILINGS,
BLOCK WALLS, I-
beams, new roof.
great Area. Avail-
able Immediately
$500/month.
610-389-8226
KINGSTON
REAR 57 SHARPE ST.
Garage bay for rent.
26.5 long x 11.5
wide. Electric lights.
One over-head door
& individual entry.
$100/month.
570-760-8806
950 Half Doubles
ASHLEY
3 bedrooms, 6
rooms total, carpet-
ed, nice basement,
porches, fenced
yard. Off street
parking, $525/
month+utilities,
Security Deposit
570-824-7354
DURYEA
8 rooms total, a
quiet neighborhood,
a large yard, 2 car
garage and drive-
way. 3 bedrooms, 2
bath, finished base-
ment, all appliances
included, $750/
month, utilities not
included. Security &
references required
570-928-7675
TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 2013 PAGE 21D
950 Half Doubles
EDWARDSVILLE
3 bedroom, clean,
gas heat, updated.
stove &fridge. No
pets. $725/mo +
utilities, security.
570-406-7522
HANOVER TWP.
6 rooms, 3 bed-
rooms, wall to wall
carpeting, fenced in
yard, newly remod-
eled. $510/month +
utilities & security.
Call (570) 472-2392
KINGSTON
3 BEDROOMS, 1
bath, new carpet
and appliances,
$725/mo. No pets
no smoking.
352-255-8011
KINGSTON
3/4 bedrooms.
Convenient location
in quiet residential
neighborhood.
Heat, utilities and
outside mainte-
nance by tenant.
No Pets or Smok-
ing. 1 month securi-
ty, 1 year lease
ROSEWOOD ROSEWOOD REAL REALTY TY
287-6822 287-6822
KINGSTON
87 W. Union St.
2 bedrooms, 1
bath, W/W carpet,
Washer/Dryer
hookup, off street
parking, no dogs,
not section 8
approved. Security,
lease, references.
$575/mo. plus utili-
ties. 570-256-3199
KINGSTON
HALF-DOUBLE
61 North Welles St.
3 bedrooms 1 bath,
eat-in kitchen with
appliances. Wash-
er/Dryer. Backyard,
good neighborhood.
No Pets No Smok-
ing. $600 a month+
Utilities, one month
security and
references.
570-639-1796
MOCANAQUA
2 bedroom, water
& sewer included.
$525/month. Sec-
tion 8 considered.
Call 570-899-6104
NANTICOKE
Half Double
2 bedroom, 1 bath,
attic, stove, dryer
and a washer hook
up. Off street park-
ing for 2 cars.
Cable and all
utilities included.
$750 + security.
570-780-7984
Looking to buy a
home?
Place an ad here
and let the
sellers know!
570-829-7130
PLYMOUTH
2 bedroom, com-
puter room, gas
heat, all appliances
included. No Pets,
no smoking. $650
plus utilities and
security. Available
June 1. After 6pm
570-474-5989
WEST PITTSTON
Quiet street, off
street parking. 1
bedroom, computer
room, washer/dryer
hookup, dry base-
ment. NO PETS.
Non-smoker.
$624/month plus
security and
1 year lease.
Call Mike after 4PM
570-760-1418
WILKES-BARRE
Double Block for
Rent. 1 or 2 bed-
rooms available.
Includes heat, hot
water and sewer.
Off street parking.
Security required.
Background Checks
570-706-1197
WYOMING BORO
2 Bedrooms, off
street parking,
stove included, very
clean & modern,
NON SMOKERS
only, no pets. Avail-
able 7/1/13. $650 +
utilities and security.
690-0168 or 855-
4108.
953Houses for Rent
AVOCA
2 bedrooms, 1 bath,
Manufactured
house. Remodeled,
wall to wall, stove,
refrigerator, wash-
er/dryer, air, off-
street parking, yard.
No pets. $475. Call
570-947-5113
DALLAS/
BACK MOUNTAIN
TOWNHOUSE
3 Bedroom/2 baths.
Reserved Parking.
Refrigerator, dish-
washer, microwave.
hardwood floors,
plenty of closets,
large unfinished
basement. Large
outdoor deck. Very
private, very quiet.
$1,300 per month, 1
year lease. No pets
/no smoking.
570-762-3640.
Available 15 June.
EXETER
Wildflower Village
3 bedroom Town-
house, end unit with
garage. Gas heat,
central air, kitchen
with appliances.
Hardwood floors,
fenced yard. No
smoking. Garbage/
yard maintenance
included. Approved
pets allowed with
security $1,200/mo.
+ utilities + security.
570-407-3600
953Houses for Rent
HARVEYS LAKE
2 small bedrooms,
All appliances.
Security & first
months rent.
Available July 10th
NO PETS. $700.
570-762-6792
HARVEYS LAKE
Enjoy living in this
beautiful 2 bedroom
ranch home. Includ-
es Sandy Beach
Club access within
walking distance.
Front porch,
stream, sunporch &
private back yard
surrounded by rho-
dodendrons. No
pets. Credit check
required.
$1,000/month.
Call Donna Klug
570-696-5406
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-696-1195
KINGSTON
3 bedroom, all
appliances, finished
lower level, garage.
$1,050/month + utili-
ties & security. No
pets. 570-675-3712.
MOUNTAIN TOP
4 bedroom, 3 bath
house. Newer
kitchen, hardwood
floors, deck & patio.
1 year lease. No
smoking or pets.
Credit check
required.
$1,350/month.
Call Pam Soucy
570-715-7732
Smith Hourigan
Group
570-474-6307
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
SHICKSHINNY
2 or 3 bedroom,
deck with view,
fenced yard, sec-
tion 8 welcome.
$575 month.
570-814-8299
THORNHURST
MUST SEE!!!
Large 4 bedrooms,
3.5 baths house for
rent. Perfect for
multi-generation.
$900 month +
utilities. 2 months
security plus
references.
718-916-9872
WILKES-BARRE
Clean, 2 bedroom,
duplex. Stove,
hookups, parking,
yard. No pets/no
smoking.
$475 + utilities.
570-868-4444
WILKES-BARRE
Single family, 3 bed-
room, washer/dry-
er hookup. Fenced
in yard. $750 + utili-
ties & security.
570-814-7562
WILKES-BARRE
Very clean, cozy
remodeled house. 3
bedrooms, 1 bath,
all appliances,
washer/dryer
hookup, pets ok,
small fenced in
yard. $600/month +
utilities & security.
570-831-5351
959 Mobile Homes
JENKINS TOWNSHIP
Affordable New &
Used Homes For
Sale & Rental
Homes Available.
HEATHER HIGHLANDS
MHC 109 Main St
Inkerman, PA
570-655-9643
962 Rooms
KINGSTON HOUSE
Nice, clean
furnished room,
starting at $340.
Efficiency at $450
month furnished
with all utilities
included. Off
street parking.
570-718-0331
WILKES-BARRE
1 room. Security
deposit required,
back ground check.
$350 month.
347-693-4156
965 Roommate
Wanted
NANTICOKE
2 males looking for
3rd roommate to
share 3 bedroom
apartment.
$75/week. Call
570-578-2644.
971 Vacation &
Resort Properties
HARVEYS LAKE
Furnished Summer
Home. College stu-
dents welcome in
Sept. Lake rights.
Weeks still available
for July & August.
570-639-5041
SPRINGVILLE, PA
Lake Front Cottage
Simplicity on
Schooley Pond
Fishing, Boating,
Swimming & Relax-
ing. Boats included.
$700/week. Call
570-965-9048
WYOMING COUNTY
Vacation cabin for
Summer Use near
Tunkhannock. Must
have All Wheel
Drive, Room for six.
Weekly or Monthly.
570-836-3752
CALL AN EXPERT
CALL AN EXPERT
Professional Services Directory
1006 A/C &
Refrigeration
Services
STRISH A/C
Ductless / Central
Air Conditioning
Free Estimates
Licensed & Insured
570-332-0715
1015 Appliance
Service
A.R.T. APPLIANCE
REPAIR
We service
all major
brands.
570-639-3001
1024 Building &
Remodeling
1ST. QUALITY
CONSTRUCTION CO.
Roofing, siding,
gutters, insulation,
decks, additions,
windows, doors,
masonry &
concrete.
Insured & Bonded.
Senior Citizens Discount!
State Lic. # PA057320
570-606-8438
ALL OLDERHOMES
SPECIALIST
825-4268.
Remodel / Repair
Kitchens and
Baths
CORNERSTONE
CONSTRUCTION
Roofing Siding
Carpentry
40 yrs experience
Licensed & Insured
PA026102
Call Dan
570-881-1131
www.davejohnson
remodeling.com
Baths/Kitchens
Carpentry A to Z
570-819-0681
FIND OUT
HOW TO
BECOME A
MEMBER OR
CALL FOR A
QUALIFIED
CONTRACTOR
Building Industry
Association Of
NEPA
411 MAIN ST.,
KINGSTON, PA
18704
Contact:
Janet Campis
www.bianepa.com
570-287-3331
For All of Your
Remodeling Needs.
Will Beat Any Price!
BATHROOMS,
KITCHENS,
ROOFING, SID-
ING, DECKS,
WINDOWS, etc.
25 Yrs. Experience
References. Insured
Free Estimates.
(570) 332-7023
1024 Building &
Remodeling
Shedlarski Construction
HOME IMPROVEMENT
SPECIALIST
Licensed, insured &
PA registered.
Kitchens, baths,
vinyl siding & rail-
ings, replacement
windows & doors,
additions, garages,
all phases of home
renovations.
Free Estimates
570-287-4067
1039 Chimney
Service
A-1 ABLE
CHIMNEY
Rebuild & Repair
Chimneys. All
types of Masonry.
Liners Installed,
Brick & Block,
Roofs & Gutters.
Licensed &
Insured
570-735-2257
CHIMNEY REPAIRS
Parging. Stucco.
Stainless Liners.
Cleanings. Custom
Sheet Metal Shop.
570-383-0644
1-800-943-1515
Call Now!
CHRIS MOLESKY
CHIMNEY SPECIALIST
New, repair, rebuild,
liners installed.
Cleaning. Concrete
& metal caps.
Small masonry jobs
570-328-6257
1042 Cleaning &
Maintainence
CLEANING SERVICE
Available 7am-Noon
Call 570-233-1953
DEB & PATS
CLEANING
SERVICE
We Are Bonded
& Insured
Free Estimates
570-793-4773
DEB & PATS
CLEANING
SERVICE
We Are Bonded
& Insured
Free Estimates
570-793-4773
1054 Concrete &
Masonry
A STEP-UP MASONRY
PA094695
Specializing in All
Types of Masonry.
Stone, Concrete
Licensed & Insured
Free Estimates
Senior Discount
570-702-3225
B.P. Home Repairs
570-825-4268
Brick, Block,
Concrete, Sidewalks,
Chimneys, Stucco.
New Installation &
Repairs
AAAAAAHH!!!
Why Scream?! Call
UNLIMITED!
MASONRY CONCRETE
CONTRACTORS
call today for your
Free Estimate!
570-582-4719
1054 Concrete &
Masonry
D. PUGH
CONCRETE
All phases of
masonry &
concrete. Small
jobs welcome.
Senior discount.
Free estimates.
Licensed & Insured
288-1701/655-3505
NEPA MASONRY, INC.
Stonework - stucco
- concrete - patios
- pavers - brick -
block - chimneys
www.nepa
masonryinc.com
570-466-2916
570-954-8308
WYOMING VALLEY
MASONRY
Concrete, stucco,
foundations,
pavers, retaining
wall systems,
flagstone, brick
work, chimneys
repaired. Senior
Citizens Discount
570-287-4144
or 570-760-0551
1057Construction &
Building
GARAGE
DOOR
Sales, service,
installation &
repair.
FULLY
INSURED
HIC# 065008
CALL JOE
570-735-8551
Cell 606-7489
1084 Electrical
SLEBODA ELECTRIC
Master electrician
Licensed & Insured
Service Changes &
Replacements.
Generator Installs.
8 6 8 - 4 4 6 9
1093 Excavating
All Types Of
Excavating,
Demolition &
Concrete Work.
Lot clearing, pool
closing & retain-
ing walls, etc.
Large & Small Jobs
FREE ESTIMATES
(570) 760-1497
1099 Fencing &
Decks
ACTION FENCE
SPRING SALE:
Discounts on wood,
vinyl, chain link,
aluminum and
more! Call today for
a FREE ESTIMATE!
570-602-0432
1129 Gutter
Repair & Cleaning
GUTTER CLEANING
Window Cleaning
Pressure washing
Insured
570-288-6794
Say it HERE
in the Classifieds!
570-829-7130
1132 Handyman
Services
ALL PHASE HANDYMAN
SERVICE
You Name It,
We Can Do It!
Over 30 Years
Experience in
General
Construction
Licensed & Insured
570-313-2262
EVANS HOME
IMPROVEMENTS
Lending a hand
since 1975.
All types of
remodeling projects!
570-824-6871
1135 Hauling &
Trucking
A A C L E A N I N G
A1 Always hauling,
cleaning attics, cellar,
garage, one piece or
whole Estate, also
available 10 &20 yard
dumpsters.655-0695
592-1813or287-8302
AAA CLEANING
A1 GENERAL HAULING
Cleaning attics,
cellars, garages.
Demolitions, Roofing
&Tree Removal.
FreeEst. 779-0918or
542-5821; 814-8299
A CLEAN HOUSE IS A
HAPPY HOUSE!
ALL KINDS OF
HAULING & JUNK
REMOVAL
SUMMER CLEAN UP!
TREE/SHRUB TREE/SHRUB
REMOV REMOVAL AL
DEMOLITION DEMOLITION
Estate Cleanout Estate Cleanout
Free Estimates
24 HOUR
SERVICE
SMALL AND
LARGE JOBS!
570-823-1811
570-239-0484
A.S.A.P Hauling
Estate Cleanouts,
Attics, Cellars,
Garages, were
cheaper than
dumpsters!.
Free Estimates,
Same Day!
570-855-4588
ALWAYS READY
HAULING
Property & Estate
Cleanups, Attics,
Cellars, Yards,
Garages,
Construction
Sites, Flood
Damage & More.
CHEAPER THAN
A DUMPSTER!!
SAME DAY
SERVICE
Free Estimates
570-301-3754
Find homes for
your kittens!
Place an ad here!
570-829-7130
1135 Hauling &
Trucking
KARPOWSKI
HAULING
We Do Clean Outs,
Basements, Attics,
Garages & Trash
Removal.
Free Estimates.
Wilkes-Barre & Sur-
rounding Areas.
570-266-9364
Mikes $5-Up
Hauling Junk &
Trash from Houses,
Garages, Yards, Etc
826-1883 472-4321
WILL HAUL ANYTHING
Clean cellars,
attics, yards &
metal removal.
Call Jeff
570-735-3330
570-762-4438
1162 Landscaping/
Garden
BITTO
LANDSCAPING &
LAWN SERVICE
25+ Years Exp.
Landscape designs,
retaining walls,
pavers, patios,
decks, walkways,
ponds, lighting,
seeding, mulch, etc.
Free Estimates
570-288-5177
FOLTZ LANDSCAPING
Skid-Steer
Mini Excavating
New Landscapes/
Lawns. Retaining
walls/patios.
Call: 570-760-4814
KELLERS LAWN CARE
CLEANUPS
Landscaping,
mowing, mulching,
trimming, planting.
Commercial
& Residential.
570-332-7016
NEED HELP NEED HELP
LAWN CUT?
LEAVES RAKED?
GENERAL YARD
WORK?
MULCHING?
Responsible Senior
student.
Mountain Top,
White Haven,
Drums &
Conygham area.
Call Justin
570-868-6134
PA Landscaping &
Lawn Service Inc.
Lawn Cutting
Shrub Trimming,
Mulching
Landscaping
Services
25+ Years Exp.
570-287-4780
palandscaping@
verizon.net
TOUGH BRUSH
& TALL GRASS
Mowing, edging,
mulching, shrubs &
hedge shaping.
Tree pruning. Gar-
den tilling. Spring
Clean Ups. Leaf
removal. Weekly &
bi-weekly lawn
care.
Fully Insured
Free Estimates
570-829-3261
1165 Lawn Care
AFFORDABLE
LAWN SERVICES
Greater Pittston
Area.
Mowing, Mulching &
Deck Washing.
Call 570-885-5858
or 570-954-0438
for Free Estimate
GARDEN TILLING
Aerate &
De-thatch Lawns
Starting at $49
SENIOR DISCOUNTS
Call 237-2609
1189 Miscellaneous
Service
Water Damage
Restoration, Mold
Testing and
Remediation
Service with Integrity
TEEM Environmental
Services, Inc.
Old Forge, Pa.
570-457-1894
or 457-6164
PA#085152
1195 Movers
BestDarnMovers
Moving Helpers
Call for Free Quote.
We make moving easy.
BestDarnMovers.com
570-852-9243
1204 Painting &
Wallpaper
A & N PAINTING
SUMMER SPECIAL
$100 + materials for
average size room.
18 years experience
Exterior Painting,
Power washing,
Deck Staining.
570-820-7832
DANIELS PAINT AND
WALL COVERING
Lic. PA100671 & Ins.
20 YEARS EXP.
570-604-2961
DAVE WITKOSKY
PAINTING
Interior/Exterior
Free estimates,
30 yrs experience
570-826-1719
or
570-704-8530
JACOBOSKY PAINTING
Need a new look,
or just want to
freshen up your
home or business?
Let us splash your
int./ext. walls with
some vibrant colors!
Reasonable prices
with hard workers.
FREE ESTIMATES!
570-328-5083
M. PARALI S PAI NTI NG
Int/ Ext. painting,
Power washing.
Professional work
at affordable rates.
Free estimates.
570-288-0733
Wanna make your
car go fast? Place
an ad in Classified!
570-829-7130.
1204 Painting &
Wallpaper
Serra Painting
Book Now For
Summer & Save. All
Work Guaranteed
Satisfaction.
30 Yrs. Experience
Powerwash & Paint
Vinyl, Wood, Stucco
Aluminum.
Free Estimates
You Cant Lose!
570-822-3943
1213 Paving &
Excavating
*DRIVEWAYS
*PARKING LOTS
*ROADWAYS
*HOT TAR & CHIP
*SEAL COATING
Licensed and
Insured. Call
Today For Your
Free Estimate
570-474-6329
Lic.# PA021520
1252 Roofing &
Siding
FRANK J.
CONSTRUCTION
Roofing Specialists
27 Years Experience
Licensed & Insured.
570-709-9180
J.R.V. ROOFING
570-824-6381
Roof Repairs & New
Roofs. Shingle, Slate,
Hot Built Up, Rubber,
Gutters & Chimney
Repairs. Year Round.
Licensed/Insured
FREE Estimates
*24 Hour
Emergency Calls*
Jim Harden
570-288-6709
New Roofs &
Repairs, Shingles,
Rubber, Slate,
Gutters, Chimney
Repairs. Credit
Cards Accepted
FREE ESTIMATES!
Licensed-Insured
EMERGENCIES
SPRING ROOFING
McManus
Construction
Licensed, Insured.
Everyday Low
Prices. 3,000
satisfied customers.
570-735-0846
1336 Window
Cleaning
PJs Window
Cleaning &
Janitorial
Services
Windows, Gutters,
Carpets, Power
washing and more.
INSURED/BONDED.
pjswindowcleaning.com
570-283-9840
GET THE WORD OUT
with a Classified Ad.
570-829-7130
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8 LINES
STARTING AT
PAGE 22D SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 2013 TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale
412 Autos for Sale 412 Autos for Sale
8
2
1
4
7
4
197 West End Road, Wilkes-Barre, PA 18706
570-825-7577
YOMING VALLEY
AUTO SALES INC. AAAA
SERVICED, INSPECTED, & WARRANTIED
FINANCING AVAILABLE
www.WyomingValleyAutos.com
MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM
BEST DEALS PERIOD!
07 SUBARU LEGACY 1 OWNER.....
$
8,950
05 MAZDA 3 79K.............................................
$
8,250
08 NISSAN VERSA.................................
$
7,950
07 CHEVY COBALT 75K......................
$
7,425
04 NISSAN ALTIMA................................
$
7,450
04 HYUNDAI SANTA FE 63K..........
$
6,975
07 KIA SPECTRA EX 79K...................
$
6,950
05 CHRYSLER SEBRING 68K.......
$
6,850
06 CHRYSLER TOWN & COUNTRY 88K........
$
6,475
07 PONTIAC G5..........................................
$
6,450
01 VW JETTA 72K........................................
$
5,950
08 SUZUKI FORENZA 81K................
$
5,925
01 FORD ESCAPE XLT......................
$
5,225
03 HYUNDAI ELANTRA GT MOONROOF.......
$
4,950
01 MITSUBISHI SPYDER CONV....
$
4,900
02 VW CABRIO ..........................................
$
4,475
01 KIA SPORTAGE.................................
$
4,475
00 BUICK CENTURY 72K....................
$
4,450
00 MERCURY SABLE LS ...............
$
4,175
02 PONTIAC SUNFIRE .....................
$
3,995
00 HYUNDAI SONATA 86K................
$
3,975
99 VW BEETLE Low Miles......................
$
3,950
98 SUBARU LEGACY GT ..............
$
3,950
02 HYUNDAI ACCENT GL .............
$
3,825
1553 Main Street, Peckville, PA 18452
PRESTIGE
ONE AUTO
WEBUY
VEHICLES!
Call Dan Lane @ 570-489-0000
*Tax, tags & license fees not included.
2003 Audi 225hp Coupe 87791 ................................. $11,990
2004 BMW 330Ci Convertible 80128..................... $13,499
2002 Chevy Corvette 19123....................................... $23,999
2011 Chevry Equinox 42062 ....................................... $18,888
2004 Chevy LS Ext. MiniVan 90840................................ $5,400
2006 Chrysler PT CRZR 63774 ................................... $6,999
2003 Dodge Ram 1500 quad 83805 ...................... $12,890
2007 Ford e350 pass 56256...................................... $13,999
2006 Ford XLT crew 4x4 72345................................ $17,999
2005 Ford Must GT Convertible 32500................. $18,999
2006 Ford Must V6 Convertible 110258.................. $9,376
2007 Ford Must GT Coupe 32569............................ $18,498
2005 GMC Canyon Z85 crew 70275....................... $13,999
2005 Harley-Davis 1200 cc Other 10622................ $7,899
2011 Honda CR-Z EX 6M Coupe 5870.................... $16,650
2007 Hyundai Sant Fe SE 80013.............................. $11,999
2010 Mazda CX-7 Grand 19752................................ $19,999
2012 Mazda 3i Sport Sedan 3963.......................... $15,995
2003 Mercedes-B C230 Coupe 84555...................... $9,499
2008 Mercedes-B C300 Sedan 87884 ................... $17,999
2007 Mercedes-B CLK550 Convertible 45000... $26,999
2007 Mini Cooper S 46153........................................ $14,568
2005 Nissan 350Z Touring Convertible 27203... $18,999
2006 Nissan Frontier SE 75941................................ $14,999
2006 Pontiac Grand Prix 58656 .................................. $8,999
2003 Porsche Boxter S Convertible 26998.......... $24,998
2009 Subaru Impreza AWD 2.5i Wagon 54935 . $12,980
2009 Suzuki SX4 AWD SUV 30482............................ $12,999
2012 Volkswagen Beetle 2.5L 30751.................... $15,999
2012 Volkswagen Jetta SE 32392 .......................... $15,899
2010 Volkswagen Tiguan SE 22065........................ $17,599
2006 Audi A4.................................................................. $18,989
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